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Slashdot -
2 hours and 39 minutes ago
Hugh Pickens writes "The NY Times reports that American companies like Applied Materials are moving
their research facilities and engineers to China as the country develops a high-tech economy that
increasingly competes directly with the United States. Applied Materials set up its latest solar
research labs in China after estimating that China would be producing two-thirds of the world's
solar panels by the end of this year and their chief technology officer, Mark R. Pinto, is the
first CTO of a major American tech company to move to China. 'We're obviously not giving up on the
US,' says Pinto. 'China needs more electricity. It's as simple as that.' Western companies are also
attracted to China's huge reservoirs of cheap, highly skilled engineers and the subsidies offered
by many Chinese cities and regions, particularly for green energy companies. Applied Materials
decided to build their new $250 million research facility in Xi'an after the city government sold
them a 75-year land lease at a deep discount and is reimbursing the company for roughly a quarter
of the lab complex's operating costs for five years."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Slashdot -
3 hours and 28 minutes ago
An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from Reuters: "Google, Inc. accused Viacom, Inc. of
secretly uploading its videos to YouTube even as the media conglomerate publicly denounced the
online video site for copyright infringement, according to court documents made public on
Thursday." As "statements from the corporate counsel's office" go, this post on the YouTube blog is
pretty hot reading.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
4 hours and 18 minutes ago
An anonymous reader writes "Banks will be offering a new service at the end of the year that will
let customers take a photo of a paper check and have it be deposited in their bank accounts, making
the smartphone one step closer to an ATM."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
4 hours and 44 minutes ago
1sockchuck writes "Are data center operators ready to abandon hot and cold aisles and submerge
their servers? An Austin startup says its liquid cooling enclosure can cool high-density server
installations for a fraction of the cost of air cooling in traditional data centers. Submersion
cooling using mineral oil isn't new, dating back to the use of Fluorinert in the Cray 2. The new
startup, Green Revolution Cooling, says its first installation will be at the Texas Advanced
Computing Center (also home to the Ranger supercomputer). The company launched at SC09 along with a
competing liquid cooling play, the Iceotope cooling bags."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
5 hours and 8 minutes ago
bonch writes "Agencies under the Obama administration cite security provisions to withhold
information more often than they did under the Bush administration. For example, the 'deliberative
process' exemption of the Freedom of Information Act was used 70,779 times in 2009, up from the
47,395 of 2008. Amusingly, the Associated Press has been waiting three months for the government to
deliver records on its own Open Government Directive."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
5 hours and 35 minutes ago
lee1 writes "It turns out that the U.K. has a DNA database — for dogs. And this database was
recently used to apprehend a South London gang member who used his dog to catch a 16-year-old rival
and hold him while he stabbed him to death. The dog was also accidentally stabbed, and left blood
at the scene. The creation of human DNA databases has led to widespread debates on privacy; but
what about the collation of DNA from dogs or other animals?"
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more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
5 hours and 56 minutes ago
Techman83 writes "After years of changing between AVG Free + Avast, it's coming time to find a new
free alternative for friends/relatives who run Windows. AVG and Avast have been quite good, but are
starting to bloat out in size, and also becoming very misleading. Avast recently auto updated from
4.8 to 5 and now requires you to register (even for the free version) and both are making it harder
to actually find the free version. Is this end of reasonable free antivirus, or is there another
product I can entrust to keep the 'my computer's doing weird things' calls to a minimum?"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
6 hours and 19 minutes ago
An anonymous reader writes "D-Shape, an innovative new 3-D printer, builds solid structures like
sculptures, furniture, even buildings from the ground up. The device relies on sand and magnesium
glue to actually build structures layer by layer from solid stone. The designer, Enrico Dini, is
even talking with various organizations about making the printer compatible with moon dust, paying
the way for an instant moonbase!"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
6 hours and 37 minutes ago
mikesd81 writes "In the first federal appeals court opinion dealing with 'sexting,' a three-judge
panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled Wednesday that parents
could block the prosecution of their children on child pornography charges for appearing in
photographs found on some classmates' cellphones. Miller vs. Mitchell (PDF) began in 2008 when
school officials in Tunkhannock, Pa., discovered seminude and nude photographs of some female
students on other student's phones. George Skumanick Jr., the DA at the time, said the students and
their parents could be prosecuted if they did not participate in an after-school 'education
program.' The unanimous ruling of the judges, Thomas L. Ambro, Michael A. Chagares and Walter K.
Stapleton, criticized the district attorney's reliance on the girls' presence in the photographs as
a basis for the potential charges. 'Appearing in a photograph provides no evidence as to whether
that person possessed or transmitted the photo,' said the opinion, by Judge Ambro."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Slashdot -
7 hours and 21 minutes ago
SpuriousLogic writes "A team of researchers have created a 'quantum state' in an object billions of
times larger than ever before. From the article: 'Such states, in which an object is effectively in
two places at once, have until now only been accomplished with single particles, atoms and
molecules. In this experiment, published in the journal Nature, scientists produced a quantum state
in an object billions of times larger than previous tests. The team says the result could have
significant implications in quantum computing.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
7 hours and 58 minutes ago
eldavojohn writes "Two months ago, Tim Berners-Lee unveiled a UK Government data project with the
goal to make government data more useful for everyone. Today he is calling on the rest of the world
governments to become more transparent with their nonsensitive data. After only a few months, his
project boasts around forty applications for using government data (screen shot example here). The
BBC article notes the interesting uses of public data in India and Brazil that are disappointingly
lacking in other countries — even the United States. Hopefully the US's data.gov will evolve
to hosting apps instead of just data."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
8 hours and 39 minutes ago
Garrett Fox writes "University of Cincinnati researchers describe a method of getting
photosynthesis from a high-surface-area foam containing enzymes that produce sugar using light and
CO2 (abstract). Oddly, the foam itself is derived from a species of frog. More interesting is that
the technique doesn't use whole cells or apparently even chloroplasts. The researchers claim
'chemical conversion efficiencies approaching 96%,' as well as tolerance for deliberately high-CO2
environments."
Read more
of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
8 hours and 44 minutes ago
krou writes "Sir Ian McKellen has revealed that filming for The Hobbit and its sequel is scheduled
to begin in July, and will take approximately a year to complete. Casting is now 'taking place in
LA, London and New York,' and [director Guillermo] Del Torro is already 'living in Wellington,
close to the Jacksons' and the studio in Miramar.' Apparently the script is still being worked on,
and 'the first draft is crammed with old and new friends, again on a quest in Middle-earth.' The
planned sequel to The Hobbit is to be an original story not written by Tolkien, covering the 60
years between The Hobbit, and The Lord of the Rings."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
9 hours and 44 minutes ago
MrShaggy writes "Credit Suisse made headlines this summer when it estimated that YouTube was
costing Google a half a billion dollars in 2009 as it streamed 75 billion videos. But a new report
from Arbor Networks suggests that even though Google is approaching 10 percent of the net's
traffic, it's got so much fiber optic cable it is simply trading traffic, with no payment involved,
with the net's largest ISPs. 'I think Google's transit costs are close to zero,' said Craig
Labovitz, the chief scientist for Arbor Networks and a longtime internet researcher. Arbor
Networks, which sells network monitoring equipment used by about 70 percent of the net's ISPs,
likely knows more about the net's ebbs and flows than anyone outside of the National Security
Agency."
Read
more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
10 hours and 26 minutes ago
Interoperable writes "The status of sharing music in Canada is, to some extent, ambiguous. This is
partly due to a levy imposed on blank media, CD-Rs and cassette tapes, that compensates artists and
the recording studios for a loss of revenue due to copying. Legislation proposed by the NDP and
supported by the Bloc Quebecois would extend that levy to cover MP3 players with the intent of
decriminalizing audio file sharing for Canadian citizens. The proposed legislation, however, faces
opposition from the governing Conservative party; the Liberal party has agreed to discuss the
proposed bill."
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more of this story at Slashdot.

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