Minggu, 15 Juni 2014

One Developer's Experience With Real Life Bitrot Under HFS ; Dell Exec Calls HP's New 'Machine' Architecture 'Laughable'

 
 
How Will Apple iOS 8 and Swift Change the Way You Code?
Take our short survey to let us know how the latest announcements from Apple will impact your development strategy.  
Learn More!

 
Cyber Security Intelligence Index
An effective cyber security strategy calls for the latest intelligence on the kinds of attacks that are occurring, who is committing them, and how often they are happening. Get expert insight into a range of security statistics, based on monitoring tens of billions of security events that occurred at 3,700 organizations around the world. 
Learn More!

  
From the so-really-it's-both-plus-and-minus department
New submitter jackjeff (955699) writes with an excerpt from developer Aymeric Barthe about data loss suffered under Apple's venerable HFS+ filesystem. HFS+ lost a total of 28 files over the course of 6 years. Most of the corrupted files are...
 
From the one-on-every-desktop department
alphadogg (971356) writes "Microsoft has been forced to start using its global stock of IPv4 addresses to keep its Azure cloud service afloat in the U.S., highlighting the growing importance of making the shift to IP version 6. The newer version...
 
From the color-everyone-surprised department
jfruh (300774) writes HP's revelation that it's working on a radical new computing architecture that it's dubbed "The Machine" was met with excitement among tech observers this week, but one of HP's biggest competitors remains extremely...
 
From the and-how-will-this-play-out department
mpicpp (3454017) writes with an update from Ars Technica to this story: "The Illinois man who made headlines when he was detained for parodying the town's mayor on Twitter sued the Peoria politician and local police, claiming on Thursday that his...
 
From the heard-the-ending-sucked department
mrspoonsi (2955715) writes with word of a new extension to European consumer protection laws: Previously, anyone who bought a product online was allowed seven business days during which they were able to change their mind and return the product...
 
From the all-musical-instruments-are-technology department
An anonymous reader writes This article in The New York Times shows the clash of purists and people who desire to experiment with "new technology" available to them. The geek in me is really curious about this concept of a digital orchestra (with...
 
From the only-stability-is-volatility department
An anonymous reader writes With the debacle of Mt. GoX, Bitcoin's future was looking a little murky. But in a significant mainline acceptance, Expedia has said they will begin accepting Bitcoins as a form of payment. At first, they will accept it...
 
From the cat-detector-vans-are-on-the-way department
ktetch-pirate (1850548) writes Earlier this week, Nominet launched the .uk domain to great fanfare, but hidden in that activity has been Nominet's new policy of exposing personal domain owners' home addresses. Justification is based on a site...
 
From the turning-a-ship-takes-a-while department
An anonymous reader writes with an article at InfoWorld that points out that TrueCrypt may have melted down as a project, but hasn't disappeared altogether: Importing and exporting data from Amazon Simple Storage Service still requires TrueCrypt,...
 
From the finally-some-competition department
New submitter meghan elizabeth (3689911) writes Why stop at just mimicking biology when you can biomanufacture technologically improved humans? 3D-printed enhanced "superorgans"—or artificial ones that don't exist in nature—could be...
 
From the security-still-needed-note department
An anonymous reader writes MIT researchers believe the solution to misuse and leakage of private data is more transparency and auditability, not adding new layers of security. Traditional approaches make it hard, if not impossible, to share data...
 
From the stuff-runs-downhill department
Rambo Tribble (1273454) writes Adding to the well-known fish-killing effects deforestation has in increasing turbidity and temperature in streams, a study published in Nature Communications, (abstract, PDF access), demonstrates deforestation...
 
From the makes-me-go-all-pitter-patter department
mpicpp (3454017) writes "Google is planning to release a new product called Google Fit that will aggregate health data from various devices and apps, according to a report Thursday from Forbes. Fit will use available APIs to pull biometric...
 
From the seemed-so-promising department
esarjeant (100503) writes "I guess it shouldn't come as a total surprise, but Netflix has gone from not issuing new developer keys to announcing the entire [public API] program will be shut down. It's a real shame they are going to be taking this...
 
From the clearing-the-table department
Dave Knott (2917251) writes Montreal-based gaming company Amaya Gaming Group Inc. has agreed to purchase privately held Oldford Group, the owner of online poker websites PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker, for $4.9 billion. The deal marks the end of...
 
 
 

Follow us on
Facebook Twitter Google+
You are subscribed to this Resource Newsletter as nkhairun19@gmail.com .
 
To change your preferences - receive this in html or text, visit the Preference Center!
 
To unsubscribe, click here or send an email to: unsubscribe-47676@elabs10.com
 
Slashdot  |  594 Howard Street,  Suite 300  |  San Francisco, CA  94105

To view our Privacy Policy click
here.
 

 

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar