Sabtu, 07 Juni 2014

Canada Poised To Buy 65 Lockheed Martin F-35 JSFs; GM Names and Fires Engineers Involved In Faulty Ignition Switch

 
 
Why Security and the Cloud Are a Perfect Match
Security protects your key devices from malware, viruses and other nasty threats. Cloud technology is a simple way to use sophisticated software without the day-to-day hassles of updates and maintenance. Independently, security and the cloud have lots of benefits, but they are better together.  
Learn More!

 
Benefits from the Consumerization of IT
What does consumerization really mean and why does it matter? Understand the basics to accurately identify the practical implications and benefits for your organization.  
Learn More!

  
From the time-to-fly department
Freshly Exhumed (105597) writes 'Canada is poised to buy 65 Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jets, sources familiar with the process told Reuters. A detailed, 18-month review of Canada's fighter jet needs has concluded that the...
 
From the dirty-money department
theodp (442580) writes '"It is hard to imagine any more heinous way of earning money than by benefiting from racism," writes Rick Cohen, who argues that Donald Sterling and the NBA owners are being unjustly enriched by Sterling's racism, which led...
 
From the bet-you-didn't-think-you'd-be-in-the-headlines-for-ignoring-an-email department
An anonymous reader writes 'Thirteen people have died because of faulty ignition switches in General Motors vehicles. The company has recalled 2.6 million cars, paid a $35 million fine, and set up a fund to compensate the victims. Now, an internal...
 
From the start-calling-it-word-engineering department
An anonymous reader writes "A new report from the Modern Language Association focuses on the decline of Ph.D. programs in the humanities over the past several years. "These programs have gotten both more difficult and less rewarding: today, it...
 
From the not-so-fast department
StartsWithABang (3485481) writes 'Earlier this week, attempts to cut NASA's budget were defeated, and it looks like the largest space agency in the world will actually be getting nearly a 2% budget increase overall. While common news outlets are...
 
From the write-once-run-nowhere department
smaxp writes: "Intel has solved the problem of ARM-native incompatibility. But will developers bite? App developers now frequently bypass Android's Dalvik VM for some parts of their apps in favor of the faster native C language. According to...
 
From the also-known-as-scientists department
vossman77 writes: 'According to the Chicago Tribune, "Lego will produce a limited-edition box set called Research Institute, featuring three female scientists in the act of learning more about our world and beyond." The concept received 10,000...
 
From the markets-solve-many-things department
An anonymous reader writes 'Talk about regulatory capture! As radio station WTOP reports, "The Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles says that ride services Lyft and Uber are violating state law and must stop operating immediately. The DMV sent...
 
From the so-say-we-all department
malachiorion writes: "Remember when, about a month ago, Stephen Hawking warned that artificial intelligence could destroy all humans? It wasn't because of some stunning breakthrough in AI or robotics research. It was because the Johnny...
 
From the good-news-for-apple department
Lucas123 writes 'A study released at the Telematics Detroit 2014 conference revealed the obvious: Most people don't want more distracting embedded apps in their cars; they just want essential apps like navigation and music to be intuitive to use...
 
From the if-you-can't-trust-huge-corporations-who-can-you-trust department
An anonymous reader sends a report from Vice which alleges that a trade group for internet service providers is building support for its crusade against net neutrality by funding opinion pieces and letters that masquerade as legitimate public...
 
From the mainly-just-late-night-infomercial-spokepeople department
CowboyRobot writes: 'In ACM's Queue, Thomas Wadlow argues that "Whom you trust, what you trust them with, and how much you trust them are at the center of the Internet today." He gives a checklist of what to look for when evaluating any system for...
 
From the you-can-trust-us department
theodp writes 'Politico reports that parents have mobilized into an unexpected political force to fight the data mining of their children, catapulting student privacy to prominence in statehouses. Having already torpedoed the $100 million, Bill...
 
From the back-in-the-day department
mrspoonsi (2955715) writes 'Researchers have found evidence of the world that crashed into the Earth billions of years ago to form the Moon. Analysis of lunar rock brought back by Apollo astronauts shows traces of the "planet" called Theia. The...
 
From the get-off-his-lawn department
redletterdave writes: "'Project Xanadu,' designed by hypertext inventor Ted Nelson to let users build documents that automatically embed the sources they're linking back to and show the visible connections between parallel webpages, was released...
 
 
 

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