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Slashdot -
2 hours and 34 minutes ago
Milo_Mindbender writes "I've recently gotten ahold of an old Altos 586 Xenix system (a late '80s
Microsoft flavor of Unix) that has one of the first multi-user BBS systems in the US on it, and I
want to salvage the historical BBS posts off it. I'm wondering if anyone remembers what format
Xenix used on the 10MB (yes MB) IDE hard drive and if it can still be read on a modern Linux
system. This system is quite old, has no removable media or ethernet and just barely works. The
only other way to get data off is a slow serial port. I've got a controller that should work with
the disk, but don't want to tear this old machine apart without some hope that it will work. Anyone
know?"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
2 hours and 58 minutes ago
Hugh Pickens writes "The San Francisco Chronicle reports that last year a Long Beach law firm
received an e-mail from a Hong Kong businessman seeking help collecting debts from American
customers. After a month of signing paperwork and exchanging telephone calls, the attorney received
word that one debtor had sent a $200,000 cashier's check to pay off his balance. The attorney
deposited it in his firm's account, subtracted his $10,000 fee and wired the remaining $190,000 to
his Hong Kong client. Then the attorney's bank called and told him the $200,000 check had bounced.
'They send me a nice, big, worthless check,' says the attorney. In this case, the bank was able to
prevent the wire transfer from reaching its destination, but attorneys say they are on the
receiving end of sophisticated scams with increasing frequency that include attacks to steal client
data that can be sold or used to learn the details of future litigation."
Read
more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
5 hours and 54 minutes ago
Barence writes "As embarrassing as it may seem, an eggy smell in a server room needn't mean
broaching the delicate subject of hygiene with a colleague. It can actually be a signal that
something is about to go wrong with your server setup, as this consultant discovered after days of
assuming questionable personal habits were to blame. The culprit? An expiring UPS device, sending
out its own unique warning signal."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
6 hours and 45 minutes ago
dogbolter writes "South Australian Attorney General, Michael Atkinson, infamous for the banning of
R18+ rated games and the censoring of political comment in Australia, has quit. The recent South
Australian election provided a massive swing against Atkinson's governing labor party. As a direct
result of the South Australian election result, he is standing down. Hopefully someone with half a
clue will assume the vacant post and overturn the decision to ban adult oriented computer games."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
8 hours and 49 minutes ago
MojoKid writes "Shigeru Miyamoto, who has had a hand in some of Nintendo's most popular titles,
recently offered that he is working hard to turn Nintendo's DS line of handheld gaming machines
into tools for schools. The DS already has a nice line of educational software titles that help
users learn, and he thinks that this could really be a huge benefit to schools looking for
alternative ways to educate students of a new generation. The company has already managed to get
them into Japanese elementary schools."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
11 hours and 45 minutes ago
alphadogg writes "Novell's CEO wrote to customers Saturday telling them that the software company
has rejected a $2 billion bid by hedge fund Elliott Associates to take it private. He called the
offer 'inadequate' and said Novell will review alternatives. Novell has struggled financially even
as it has reinvented itself from its NetWare network operating roots into an open source (SUSE and
Ximian) and management and security software company. Revenue fell 10% during its most recent
fiscal year (wrapped up in October) and its net losses widened. CEO Hovsepian's total compensation
fell 17% to $5.7 million."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
14 hours and 50 minutes ago
MichaelSmith writes "I code on the tram, going to and from work, and I noticed that there are a lot
of WiFi access points along the way. So one week I made it my job to write an automatic scanner
which runs from a cron job every minute during commuting times. My backup script pushes the new AP
names to my web server and you can read it online. It is a mixture of the straightforward, naive
and funny, with a few pop culture references along the way. The first column in the file is the
number of access points with that name. The second column is the AP name, in brackets to pick up
white space." Why can't "Dress Me Slowly" and "Domestic Bliss" just share an AP?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
15 hours and 57 minutes ago
Hugh Pickens writes "The Telegraph reports that British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is about to
announce that within a year everyone in Great Britain will be given a personalized webpage for
accessing Government services as part of a plan to save billions of pounds by putting all public
services online. The move could see the closure of job centers and physical offices dealing with
tax, vehicle licensing, passports and housing benefit within 10 years as services are offered
through a single digital gateway. [This] 'saves time for people and it saves money for the
Government — the processing of a piece of paper and mailing it back costs many times more
than it costs to process something electronically,' says Tim Berners-Lee, an advisor to the Prime
Minister. However, the proposals are coming under fire from union leaders who complain that
thousands of public sector workers would be made jobless and pointed to the Government's poor
record of handling personal data. 'Cutting public services is not only bad for the public who use
services but also the economy as we are pushing people who provide valuable services on the dole,'
says one union leader."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
17 hours ago
suraj.sun writes with this excerpt from Ars Technica: "Mozilla has announced the availability of an
experimental new add-on for Firefox that is designed to import information about the user's
contacts from a variety of Web services and other sources. The add-on makes contact details easily
accessible to the user and can also selectively supply it to remote Web applications. ... After the
add-on has imported and indexed the user's contact data, it becomes available to the user through
an integrated contact management tool that functions like an address book. One of Mozilla's first
experiments is an autocompletion feature that allows users to select a contact when they are typing
an e-mail address into a Web form. ... To make the browser's contact database accessible to Web
applications, the add-on uses the W3C Contacts API specification."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
18 hours and 4 minutes ago
Crazzaper writes "When the iPad launched, a lot of people who didn't care about tablets came out to
bash Apple's new device. These same people said 'I would have bought it if it had a full OS,' but
in reality full OS tablets existed before the iPad rumors even started. This article gives an
interesting perspective on why this happened, and argues that there's five big reasons why more
powerful tablets exists but no one cares."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
18 hours and 37 minutes ago
NotesSensei writes "My kids are learning Chinese in school. While the grammar is drop-dead simple,
writing is a challenge since there is no relation between sound and shape of the characters. I
would like to know if there good techniques (using technology or not) to help memorize large amount
of information, especially Chinese characters. Most of the stuff I googled only helps on learning
speaking."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
19 hours and 5 minutes ago
SJrX writes "CBC news is reporting that Peter Watts has indeed been convicted of Assaulting border
guards, (discussed here). He will be sentenced April 26th."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
20 hours and 7 minutes ago
theodp writes "Newsweek's Daniel Lyons confesses to being mystified by all the people tending to
their virtual farms and virtual pets on Facebook. Even stranger, he says, is their willingness to
spend real money to buy virtual products, like pretend guns and fertilizer, to gain advantage in
these Web-based games. Pretend products are a serious business, estimated to grow to $1.6B next
year, and have captured the attention of economists and academics who view the virtual economy as a
lab for modeling behavior in the real world. Still, Lyons can't help but question whether the kind
of people who spend hours online taking care of imaginary pets are representative of the rest of
the population. 'The data might be "perfect" and "complete,"' says Lyons, 'but the world from which
it's gathered is anything but that.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Slashdot -
21 hours and 6 minutes ago
m.ducharme writes "The CBC is reporting that the Supreme Court of Canada has handed down a decision
quashing a search warrant used to obtain the computer of a man accused of possession of child porn.
'Urbain P. Morelli maintained his charter rights were violated when police searched his computer
for child pornography after a technician who had visited his home to work on the machine expressed
concerns to police.' What the Slashdot community may find notable about this decision is the
distinction drawn between 'accessing' and 'possessing' digital images, most particularly the
recognition that a user does not 'possess' cached data. From the decision: '[35] When accessing Web
pages, most Internet browsers will store on the computer's own hard drive a temporary copy of all
or most of the files that comprise the Web page. This is typically known as a "caching function"
and the location of the temporary, automatic copies is known as the "cache." While the
configuration of the caching function varies and can be modified by the user, cached files
typically include images and are generally discarded automatically after a certain number of days,
or after the cache grows to a certain size. [36] On my view of possession, the automatic caching of
a file to the hard drive does not, without more, constitute possession. While the cached file might
be in a "place" over which the computer user has control, in order to establish possession, it is
necessary to satisfy mens rea or fault requirements as well. Thus, it must be shown that the file
was knowingly stored and retained through the cache.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Slashdot -
22 hours and 9 minutes ago
bizwriter writes "Apple has upset the e-book pricing cart by agreeing to a so-called agency model,
where the publisher sets the price and the seller takes a cut. This goes contrary to the degree of
control Amazon likes, so although it apparently gave in to Macmillan back in February, it turns out
that Amazon continues twisting arms. The problem publishers face is that Apple has a
most-favored-nation clause, so it gets the best deal that the publishers offer. If the publishers
give in to Amazon, then they also have to provide the same terms to Apple."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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