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    <title>Slashdot</title>
    <link>http://slashdot.org</link>
    <description>News feeds provided by Newslookup.com</description>
    <language>en</language>
    <lastBuildDate>Fri, 25 Jul 2008 22:40 EDT</lastBuildDate>
    <item>
       <title>Lack of Bandwidth Oversight Damages HDTV Quality</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/346222447/article.pl</link>
       <description>mattnyc99 writes &quot;Over at Popular Mechanics, Glenn Derene has a great new column investigating the lawless lands of broadcast television, where the quality of the picture that ends up on your expensive hi-def set is determined by a bunch of fuzzy math. Quoting: 'In fact, there's no real regulation over high-definition picture quality at all &amp;mdash; &quot;none whatsoever,&quot; one industry consultant told me. And that's part of the reason why different HD stations often have wildly varying levels of picture quality that change from one moment to the next. Behind the scenes, content producers, broadcasters and cable and satellite providers are engaged in a constant tug-of-war over bandwidth and video quality, with no hard metrics to even define what looks acceptable. Even officials at HBO, where Generation Kill looks pretty fantastic on my TV, bemoaned the lack of a silver bullet ... for now.'&quot;</description>
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       <title>ISP Embarq Monitors User Traffic</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/346136401/article.pl</link>
       <description>Deli Korkmaz writes &quot;The Washington Post reports that Sprint-Nextel spin-off Embarq, currently the US's fourth largest DSL provider, monitored Internet activity on some 26,000 customers in Kansas using deep-packet inspection technology NebuAd in order to deliver targeted advertising to users' desktops. CNet provides coverage as well. The House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce is investigating whether any privacy laws were broken. Users were informed of this test and invited to opt out only via Embarq's online Privacy Policy; a mere 15 subscribers did so.&quot;</description>
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       <title>San Francisco DA Discloses City's Passwords</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/346103400/article.pl</link>
       <description>snydeq writes &quot;The office of San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris has made public close to 150 usernames and passwords used by various departments to connect to the city's VPN. The passwords were filed this week as Exhibit A in a court document arguing against a reduction in $5 million bail in the case against Terry Childs. Though they placed the passwords in the public record, city prosecutors do seem to think that they are sensitive. InfoWorld's Paul Venezia, who has been following the case closely, provides further analysis of the technical details in the city's case. 'By themselves, [the passwords] would not be enough to allow anyone to access the network via VPN,' Venezia writes, 'but the fact that the city entered them into evidence is quite shocking. At the very least, they'll have to shut down their VPN access for awhile until they've changed them all and modified the configurations of some large number of VPN clients.'&quot;</description>
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       <title>Microsoft Blesses LGPL, Joins Apache Foundation</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/346082988/article.pl</link>
       <description>Penguinisto writes &quot;According to a somewhat jaw-dropping story in The Register, it appears that Microsoft has performed a trifecta of geek-scaring feats: They have joined the Apache Software Foundation as a Platinum member(at $100K USD a year), submitted LGPL-licensed patches for ADOdb, and have pledged to expand their Open Specifications Promise by adding to the list more than 100 protocols for interoperability between its Windows Server and the Windows client. While I sincerely doubt they'll release Vista under a GPL license anytime soon, this is certainly an unexpected series of moves on their part, and could possibly lead to more OSS (as opposed to 'Shared Source') interactivity between what is arguably Linux' greatest adversary and the Open Source community.&quot; (We mentioned the announced support for the Apache Foundation earlier today, as well.)</description>
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       <title>What To Expect In KDE 4.1</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/346041749/article.pl</link>
       <description>andrewmin writes &quot;Recently, Gnome's been gaining a lot of ground on its KDE counterpart in the desktop environment wars. The KDE developers were hoping to change this with KDE 4, the new radical release of KDE, but it was not to be. KDE 4.0 was buggy and unstable, leaving everyone except the hard-core KDE lovers. Mainly, this was because it just didn't work most of the time. However, the developers were not without hope. They promised that KDE 4.1 would be more stable and fix all the holes and problems with KDE 4.0. That time is coming soon: in just four days, K Desktop Environment 4.1 will be released to the Linux masses.&quot; A release candidate for 4.1 came out just over a week ago, with binaries available &quot;for some Linux distributions, and Mac OS X and Windows.&quot;</description>
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       <title>Delivering 8K VFX Shots For the Dark Knight</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345996886/article.pl</link>
       <description>agent4256 writes &quot;Barbara Robertson over at Studio Daily put forth this article featuring the technical background for the production of The Dark Knight. With most of the film shot with IMAX cameras (producing a theoretical resolution of 18k), the studios could not handle the size. Instead, they cut the resolution by more than half, down to 8K, the maximum resolution for scanned film. 'A single 8K frame requires 200 MB of data,' Franklin says. 'So we had to upgrade our whole infrastructure. We needed faster network speeds to move data around, massively beefed up servers, and &amp;mdash; the most important thing &amp;mdash; a new compositing solution.' To give you an idea of how far technology has taken us: 'In 1999, when we worked on Pitch Black [released in 2000], we needed to access 2 TB of data,' Franklin says. 'This show used over 100 TB of data.'&quot;</description>
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       <title>Thirst For Coltan Fueling African Conflict</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345967510/article.pl</link>
       <description>MetaPhyzx writes &quot;According to an article put forth by the Toward Freedom website, the metallic ore known as columbite-tantalite or coltan for short is fueling conflict in central Africa. The relevance to us who read news for geeks: Coltan is in quite a few consumer electronics; the article references the Sony Playstation series.&quot; As reader fahrvergnugen points out in the comments below, there's reason to more than doubt the currency of the claims in the above-linked article, as outlined in a post at Joystiq.</description>
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       <title>SF Not an Exception In Giving IT Too Much Control</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345924329/article.pl</link>
       <description>CWmike writes &quot;The city of San Francisco's IT department is certainly not the exception when it comes to allowing just one person to have unfettered rights to make password and configuration changes to networks and enterprise systems. In fact, it's a situation fairly common in many organizations &amp;mdash; especially small to medium-size ones, IT managers and others cautioned in the wake of the recent Terry Childs incident.&quot;</description>
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       <title>JavaScript: The Good Parts</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345885174/article.pl</link>
       <description>Anita Kuno writes &quot;JavaScript: The Good Parts is about the good parts of JavaScript and how to use them. This book takes a realistic look at the strengths and weaknesses of JavaScript and tells you how to use it to its best advantage. The code samples deal with the language and its merits &amp;mdash; creating web pages is not discussed. How to understand the language, to execute the operations you want, is the focus of the book, not how to make rounded corners. The author, Douglas Crockford says, 'My microwave oven has tons of features, but the only ones I use are cook and the clock. And setting the clock is a struggle. We cope with the complexity of feature-driven design by finding and sticking with the good parts.'&quot; Keep reading for the rest of Anita's review.</description>
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       <title>No Gap Found In Math Abilities of Girls, Boys</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345840970/article.pl</link>
       <description>sciencehabit writes &quot;For anyone who still believes that boys are better at math than girls, a massive new study published today in Science shows there's no difference. 'Among students with the highest test scores, the team did find that white boys outnumbered white girls by about two to one. Among Asians, however, that result was nearly reversed. Hyde says that suggests that cultural and social factors, not gender alone, influence how well students perform on tests.' But the researchers do note a disturbing trend towards omitting harder kinds of math questions from standardized tests.&quot;</description>
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       <title>Craigslist Forced To Reveal a Seller's Identity</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345809411/article.pl</link>
       <description>mi writes &quot;The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts has won a judgment compelling Craigslist to reveal the identity of 'Daniel,' who tried to sell two tickets to the Oscar ceremony recently. The plaintiff's argument against such sales is scary and can be taken very far very quickly: 'If you don't know who's inside the theater, it's very difficult to provide security.' Craigslist's handling of the case may be even scarier, however &amp;mdash; instead of fighting tooth-and-nail for the user's privacy, as we expect Google, Yahoo, and AOL, and even credit-card issuers to do, Craigslist simply did not show up in court and lost by default.&quot;</description>
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       <title>Programmer's File Editor With Change Tracking?</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345835803/article.pl</link>
       <description>passionfingers writes &quot;My business users regularly have to tweak large (&amp;gt;32MB text) data files manually. Overlords charged with verifying the aforementioned changes have requested that the little people be provided with a new file editor that will track changes made to a file (as a word processor does). I have scouted around online for such an animal, but to no avail &amp;mdash; even commercial offerings like UltraEdit32 don't offer such a feature. Likewise on the OSS side of the fence, where I expected a Notepad++ plugin or the like, it appears that the requirements to a) open a file containing a large volume of text data and b) track changes to the data, are mutually exclusive. Does anyone in the Slashdot community already have such a beast in their menagerie? Perhaps there is there a commercial offering I've missed, or could someone possibly point me to their favorite (stable) OSS project that might measure up?&quot;</description>
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       <title>&quot;Last Lecture&quot; CMU Professor Randy Pausch Dies</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345766949/article.pl</link>
       <description>Many readers are sending in word that Randy Pausch has died at 47. The charismatic young college professor celebrated life despite a death sentence from pancreatic cancer in a remarkable speech widely known as the &quot;Last Lecture.&quot; The video went viral and has been downloaded by over 10 million people.</description>
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       <title>Patch DNS Servers Faster</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345727813/article.pl</link>
       <description>51mon writes &quot;Austrian CERT used data from one of their authoritative DNS server to measure the rate at which the latest DNS patch (source port randomization) is being rolled out to larger recursive name servers. While about half the traffic (PDF) they receive is now using source port randomization, their data suggest that this is due to ISPs who roll out such fixes immediately. The rate of patching has fallen to disappointingly low levels since. If your ISP isn't patched, perhaps it is time to switch.&quot; After details of the DNS vulnerability leaked, researchers |)ruid and HD Moore released attack code; ZDNet's security blog has an analysis.</description>
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       <title>Hacked Oyster Card System Crashes Again</title>
       <link>http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/345695455/article.pl</link>
       <description>Barence sends along PcPro coverage of the second crash of London's Oyster card billing system in two weeks. Transport for London was forced to open the gates and allow free travel for all. &quot;There is currently a technical problem with Oyster readers at London Underground stations which is affecting Oyster pay as you go cards only,&quot; explains the TfL website. This follows the first crash two weeks ago, which left 65,000 Oyster cards permanently corrupted. Speculation is increasing that the crashes may be related to the hacking of the Oyster card system by Dutch researchers from Radboud University, though TfL denies any link. Plans to publish details of the hack were briefly halted when the makers of the chip used in the system sued the group, although a judge ruled earlier this week that the researchers could go ahead. During the court action, details briefly leaked on website Wikileaks.</description>
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