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  1. Black Holes Don’t Trap Information Forever
    sciencehabit writes “New calculations suggest that black holes are not a one-way street. Anything that falls into them may eventually come out. The findings lend important support to quantum gravity, but fly in the face of Einsteinian relativity. They also support Stephen Hawking’s reluctant admission that information couldn’t be destroyed by black holes. Penn State researcher Ahbay Ashtekar was quoted saying, ‘Once we realized that the notion of space-time as a continuum is only an approximation of reality, it became clear to us that singularities are merely artifacts of our insistence that space-time should be described as a continuum.’ Let the physics infighting begin.”

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  2. Streamlining and Testing RFID Technology
    Multiple readers have written to let us know that an experiment at the upcoming Hackers on Planet Earth (HOPE) conference will use RFID to track the movements of at least 1,500 registrants for the duration of the conference. Those movements will be transmitted onto screens which “show in real-time where people go, with whom they associate, for how long and how often.” The system will also be used for games which involve manipulation of the available data. Meanwhile, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a method for testing large quantities of RFID tags, which may serve to greatly speed distribution.

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  3. Microsoft and OLPC Agree To Put XP On the XO Laptop
    Apro+im points out a NYTimes report which states that Microsoft and the OLPC project have officially agreed to put Windows XP on the XO laptop. While Microsoft has been working toward this for some time, analysts began to think a deal was more likely after Walter Bender resigned from the project and was replaced by Charles Kane. Former OLPC security developer Ivan Krstic had a lot to say about Windows on the XO as well. From the Times: “Windows will add a bit to the price of the machines, about $3, the licensing fee Microsoft charges to some developing nations under a program called Unlimited Potential. For those nations that want dual-boot models, running both Windows and Linux, the extra hardware required will add another $7 or so to the cost of the machines, Mr. Negroponte said. The project’s agreement with Microsoft involves no payment by the software giant, and Microsoft will not join One Laptop Per Child’s board. ‘We’ve stayed very pure,’ Mr. Negroponte said.

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  4. Details for Guitar Hero 4 Released
    GameSpot is reporting that details for Guitar Hero 4 have been released. The biggest news seems to be that the new release will be adding drums and vocals a la Rock Band. The new drums are to offer three pressure-sensitive pads (which can tell if you are just tapping or really wailing), two elevated cymbals, and a pedal. “The details in Game Informer also clear up the mystery surrounding the ‘innovation’ which Activision promised was coming to the Guitar Hero series in a recent earnings report conference call. The article outlines the game’s studio mode, which will give users a variety of ways to create their own songs. Players will be able to jam along with one of the game’s existing tracks, record songs as they’re played, or meticulously detail note charts.”

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  5. Moving Toward a Single Linux UI?
    Anonymous writes “With the releases of Fedora 9, Hardy Heron and OpenSuSE 11 so close together, it’s looking more than ever like an evolution to a common interface for major Linux distributions. Here’s a compilation of screen shots and descriptions that make it appear to be the case. Would this be a good thing or a bad thing?” There are plenty of other options out there, of course, even considering only Linux distros that are based on Gnome and KDE, and plenty of wilder (or at least less common) desktops to choose from besides.

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  6. Comcast, Cox Slow BitTorrent Traffic All Day
    narramissic writes “A study by the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems found that Comcast and Cox Communications are slowing BitTorrent traffic at all times of day, not just peak hours. Comcast was found to be interrupting at least 30% of BitTorrent upload attempts around the clock. At noon, Comcast was interfering with more than 80% of BitTorrent traffic, but it was also slowing more than 60% of BitTorrent traffic at other times, including midnight, 3 a.m. and 8 p.m. Eastern Time in the U.S., the time zone where Comcast is based. Cox was interfering with 100% of the BitTorrent traffic at 1 a.m., 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. Eastern Time. Comcast spokeswoman Sena Fitzmaurice downplayed the results saying, ‘P-to-p traffic doesn’t necessarily follow normal traffic flows.’”

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  7. Online Quiz As a Gateway to P2P
    Andy Guess points out an interesting approach taken by a Missouri university to limiting (and limiting legal exposure because of) on-campus, on-line copyright violations, as described at Inside Higher Ed: “In order to download (or upload) files on any peer-to-peer network whatsoever, all on-campus users at Missouri S&T have to pass an online quiz on copyright infringement. But not just once. Passing the test — with a perfect score — enables peer-to-peer access for six hours on the user’s on-campus registered machines.”

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  8. David Pogue Gushes Over the Chumby
    stoolpigeon writes “IHT is running a David Pogue review of the Chumby. The Chumby is a small computer embedded in a soft case. The Chumby hardware and OS are open, and the review mentions that the device already has a large developer following, cranking out new widgets for owners. Pogue is obviously quite taken with the Chumby and gives a good introduction to a device that may be the inspiration for a new generation of hackers.”

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  9. Changing a School’s Tech Disposal Policy?
    An anonymous reader writes “I attend a state university where a new building has recently been put in, and a new budget put in place. They have decided to upgrade all the computer systems involved in the department, with a few slight exceptions. From my limited understanding, State policy is that we cannot just let things go, they have to be sent back to the state capital in order to take them off the books. Then they put them in the dumpster. I feel that this is a huge waste of useful machines (some are merely two years old), but I know not how to change this. Any suggestions, or does anyone know where Illinois dumps used tech?”

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  10. Judge in Capitol v. Thomas Considers New Trial
    Jay Maynard writes “The judge in Capitol Records v. Thomas said today he’s thinking about granting a new trial because he may have committed a ‘manifest error of law’ in his jury instructions. He says that his instruction that simply uploading music to a P2P network without any proof that anyone actually downloaded it may conflict with a case in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals that said ‘infringement of [the distribution right] requires an actual dissemination.’ Briefs are due by May 29, with oral argument July 1. The judge invited friend of the court briefs by May 29, as well.” NewYorkCountryLawyer links to the Judge’s order itself (PDF), in which the Judge notes that he may (in NYCL’s words) “have overlooked controlling Eighth Circuit authority, the case of National Car Rental v. Computer Associates, which held that you can’t have a violation of the ‘distribution right’ without an ‘actual dissemination of copies or phonorecords.’” Update: 05/15 18:54 GMT by T : Note that while the linked story as well as Jay Maynard’s summary use the term “upload,” Thomas wasn’t uploading the files themselves, only making them available.

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  11. Air Force Aims for Control of ‘Any and All’ Computers
    Noah Shachtman on Wired.com’s Danger Room reports that Monday, the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson AFB introduced a two-year, $11 million effort to put together hardware and software tools for ‘Dominant Cyber Offensive Engagement.’ ‘Of interest are any and all techniques to enable user and/or root level access,’ a request for proposals notes, ‘to both fixed (PC) or mobile computing platforms … any and all operating systems, patch levels, applications and hardware.’ This isn’t just some computer science study, mind you; ‘research efforts under this program are expected to result in complete functional capabilities.’ The Air Force has already announced their desire to manage an offensive BotNet, comprised of unwitting participatory computers. How long before they slip a root kit on you?

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  12. Early Review Calls New Indiana Jones Film Dreadful
    bowman9991 writes “Hope this one isn’t true! An early negative review calls the upcoming “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” movie predictable, lacking in tension, and a fan’s worst nightmare. SFFMedia believes this new Indiana Jones movie could create a similar reaction a lot of people experienced after watching the first of the last three Star Wars movies, ‘The Phantom Menace’: you wait for years and years, the anticipation building, and then it’s so awful it taints your view of the original movies. Of course George Lucas was involved with Star Wars too.” The SFFMedia piece refers to this review on Ain’t it Cool News. The trailer I saw (before Iron Man) actually looked great to me, so I’m taking this with a grain of salt.

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  13. Securing Your Notebook Against US Customs
    Nethemas the Great points out a piece from Bruce Schneier running in the UK’s Guardian newspaper with some tips for international travelers on securing notebook computers for border crossings. A taste of the brief article: “Last month a US court ruled that border agents can search your laptop, or any other electronic device, when you’re entering the country. They can take your computer and download its entire contents, or keep it for several days. … Encrypting your entire hard drive, something you should certainly do for security in case your computer is lost or stolen, won’t work here. The border agent is likely to start this whole process with a ‘please type in your password.’ Of course you can refuse, but the agent can search you further, detain you longer, refuse you entry into the country and otherwise ruin your day.”

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  14. Shuttleworth Calls For Coordinated Release Cycles
    voodoosws points out on Mark Shuttleworth’s blog Shuttleworth’s call for synchronized publication of Linux distributions, excerpting: “There’s one thing that could convince me to change the date of the next Ubuntu LTS: the opportunity to collaborate with the other, large distributions on a coordinated major / minor release cycle. If two out of three of Red Hat (RHEL), Novell (SLES) and Debian are willing to agree in advance on a date to the nearest month, and thereby on a combination of kernel, compiler toolchain, GNOME/KDE, X and OpenOffice versions, and agree to a six-month and 2-3 year long term cycle, then I would happily realign Ubuntu’s short and long-term cycles around that. I think the benefits of this sort of alignment to users, upstreams and the distributions themselves would be enormous. I’ll write more about this idea in due course, for now let’s just call it my dream of true free software syncronicity.”

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  15. 3 Rugged Notebooks Take a Beating
    bsk_cw writes “Brian Nadel got a chance to try to destroy three ‘fully rugged’ notebooks and get paid for it — Computerworld had him drop, spray, drown, bake, shake, and freeze notebooks from General Dynamics Itronix, Getac, and Panasonic. All three suffered some damage, but only the Getac M230 actually died as a result. Brian made videos of the tests (which were apparently done in his home, including his kitchen).”

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