Senin, 28 Juli 2014

Linus Torvalds: 'GCC 4.9.0 Seems To Be Terminally Broken'; Satellite Images Show Russians Shelling Ukraine

 
 
IDF14 San Francisco: It Is a Whole New IDF.
Catch every insight, every demo, and every connection at this year's premier Intel event, IDF14 San Francisco. Not to mention the IDF14 Showcase--one of the best networking opportunities anywhere, filled with exhibitors and decision makers from both startups and industry leaders. Register now for the full pass for only $995, use promo code CMKSDM to get all three days of expert keynotes, innovative technical sessions, and the chance to get hands-on with the latest industry inventions. Or be our guest with a complimentary day-pass using promo code CDPSDM.
Learn More!

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

  
From the you'll-never-believe-what-he-actually-said department
hypnosec (2231454) writes to point out a pointed critique from Linus Torvalds of GCC 4.9.0. after a random panic was discovered in a load balance function in Linux 3.16-rc6. in an email to the Linux kernel mailing list outlining two separate but...
 
From the national-brotherhood-week department
An anonymous reader writes with an unpleasant statistic from France, quoting David Corchia, who heads a service employed by large French news organizations to sift through and moderate comments made on their sites. Quoting YNet News: Corchia...
 
From the one-for-all-and-what's-the-password? department
U.S. officials today made public satellite imagery which they say proves that Russian forces have been shelling eastern Ukraine in a campaign to assist rebel groups fighting Ukraine's government. The U.S. Office of the Director of National...
 
From the maybe-apple-fans-are-driven-by-pheremones department
Harvard economics professor Sendhil Mullainathan takes a look in the New York Times at interesting correlations between the release dates of new phones and OSes and search queries that indicate frustration with the speed of the phones that people...
 
From the give-it-a-piece-of-my-mind department
New submitter Christian Gainsbrugh (3766717) writes I work at a company that is currently transitioning all our servers into the cloud. In the interim we have half a rack of server space in a great datacenter that will soon be sitting completely...
 
From the here's-a-description-of-the-thing-you-want-undescribed department
The Wall Street Journal lists 26 questions that Google and other search providers have been asked (in a meeting in Brussels earlier this week) to answer for EU regulators, to pin down what the search engine companies have done to comply with...
 
From the we-are-all-augmented department
hweimer (709734) writes "German long jumper Markus Rehm has written sports history yesterday, becoming the first disabled athlete to win a national able-bodied championship. His jump to 8.24 meters put him on the 9th place of the current season...
 
From the stick-it-in-your-ear department
Bose has taken issue with some of the technology embodied in products in Apple's newly acquired Beats line of headphones. As Ars Technica reports, Bose is suing Apple, claiming that the Beats products violate five Bose patents, covering noise...
 
From the oh-no-big-deal department
jrepin (667425) writes "The government of the autonomous region of Valencia (Spain) earlier this month made available the next version of Lliurex, a customisation of the Edubuntu Linux distribution. The distro is used on over 110,000 PCs in...
 
From the we-may-or-may-not-have-done-that department
The Washington Post reports in a short article on the sometimes strange, sometimes strained relationship between spy agencies like the NSA and CIA and law enforcement (as well as judges and prosecutors) when it comes to evidence gathered using...
 
From the it-might-be-this-knob-or-maybe-that-one department
mdsolar (1045926) writes "Engineers at American nuclear plants have been much better at calculating the risk of an internal problem that would lead to an accident than they have at figuring the probability and consequences of accidents caused by...
 
From the this-one-weird-trick department
tsu doh nimh (609154) writes KrebsOnSecurity looks at a popular service that helps crooked online marketers exhaust the Google AdWords budgets of their competitors.The service allows companies to attack competitors by raising their costs or...
 
From the only-tax-dollars-after-all department
MarkWhittington (1084047) writes "While participating in a panel called "The US Space Enterprise Partnership" at the NewSpace Conference that was held by the Space Frontier Foundation on Saturday, SpaceX Chief Operating Officer Gwynne Shotwell...
 
From the in-space-no-one-can-hear-you-access-facebook department
Space.com gives an overview of the training that four astronauts are undergoing over 9 days submerged off the coast of Florida near Key Largo. The training mission, dubbed NEEMO 18, is one step toward a proposed (mid-2020s) mission to actually...
 
From the hook-it-to-anything department
An anonymous reader writes with a link to an intriguing device highlighted at Hackaday (it's an Indiegogo project, too, if it excites you $90 worth, and seems well on its way to meeting its modest goal): The DPT Board is something that may be 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