Senin, 08 Desember 2014

Can a Felon Work In IT?; James Watson's Nobel Medal Sells For $4.1 Million

 
 
Do Not Be Surprised When Your Servers Fail
Proactively monitor server health with SolarWinds server monitoring Increase visibility to manage, predict, & maximize server performance Click to learn more about SolarWinds Server & Application Monitor 
Learn More!

 
The NES30 Bluetooth Controller: A Gaming Classic, Reinvented
Slashdot Deals: Every detail of the NES30, right down to the graphics printed on the front, is meant to mimic the original NES gamepad design. The only difference here is Bluetooth or USB connectivity, 2 additional action buttons and 2 shoulder buttons which help to make this controller compatible with games from a variety of systems. 
Learn More!

  
From the orange-is-not-the-new-big-blue department
First time accepted submitter Lesrahpem writes I'm a felon with several prior misdemeanor convictions from an immature time in my life. I've since cleaned up my act, and I want to go back into the IT sector. I keep running into potential employers...
 
From the in-a-world-where-pants-are-optional department
An anonymous reader writes: Science fiction author Charlie Stross has a thoughtful post about an awkward aspect of the genre: too often, books set in the distant future seem far too familiar to us. Our culture evolves quickly — even going...
 
From the pay-up department
An anonymous reader writes Scientist James Watson, who has issues with women, Africans, and the scientific community, has became the only living Nobel laureate to sell his medal after it fetched over $4 million at auction. "Watson told Nature that...
 
From the i-bet-fresh-laptop-batteries-would-work-even-better department
mrspoonsi sends news of an IBM study (PDF) which found that discarded laptop batteries could be used to power lights in areas where there's little or no electrical grid. Of the sample IBM tested, 70% of the used batteries were able to power an LED...
 
From the moore's-law-makes-liars-of-us department
Nicola Hahn writes Over the course of the Snowden revelations there have been a number of high profile figures who've praised the merits of encryption as a remedy to the quandary of mass interception. Companies like Google and Apple have been...
 
From the click-and-drive department
An anonymous reader writes Tesla decided not to build its new $5 billion battery factory in Texas, but the company still wants to sell its electric cars directly over the Internet there. The automaker hopes that the possibility of future...
 
From the what's-old-is-new department
mikejuk writes A new games console is being launched based on the classic Sinclair ZX Spectrum from the 80s. Within days of the start of its Indiegogo campaign all of the 1000 Limited Edition Spectrum Vegas had been claimed but there is still the...
 
From the do-your-own-work department
alphadogg writes Cisco has filed two lawsuits against data center switch competitor Arista Networks for allegedly violating its intellectual property. One suit is for patent infringement, which charges Arista with violating 14 Cisco patents for 12...
 
From the divvying-up-the-ether department
dkatana points out an article arguing that the governments should stop further auctions of 4G spectrum because it reduces infrastructure investment from carriers and makes net neutrality more difficult to regulate. Quoting: The FCC recently...
 
From the time-to-get-up department
An anonymous reader writes NASA's New Horizons spacecraft awoke from hibernation on Saturday and sent a radio confirmation that it had successfully turned itself back on one and a half hours later. The spacecraft has been traveling for nine years...
 
From the hiding-under-heisenberg department
New submitter cyberspittle sends this research report from the University of Michigan: An odd, iridescent material that's puzzled physicists for decades turns out to be an exotic state of matter that could open a new path to quantum computers and...
 
From the speed-is-power department
HughPickens.com writes On 30 August 2012, Hollywood star Clint Eastwood took the stage to lambast President Obama. What ensued was an odd, 11-minute monologue where Eastwood conversed with an empty chair upon which an imaginary Barack Obama sat....
 
From the know-what-I'm-saying? department
KentuckyFC writes The global popularity of Twitter allows new words and usages to spread rapidly around the world. And that has raised an interesting question for linguists: is language converging into a global "netspeak" that everyone will end up...
 
From the paying-the-price department
mdsolar notes that New Mexico has asked the US Department of Energy to pay over $54 million in fines stemming from violations that led to the indefinite closure of the nation's only underground nuclear waste repository. The state Environment...
 
From the forget-about-it department
An anonymous reader points out this story about what has happened since the Supreme Court of Canada's ruling on the warrantless disclosure of subscriber information to law enforcement from ISPs. "A funny thing happens when courts start requiring...
 
 
 

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