Virtual Reality Experiment Wants To Put White People In Black Bodies | Denmark Makes Claim To North Pole, Based On Undersea Geography Download SolarWinds Bandwidth Analyzer Pack (BAP) today so you can: Find which users, apps & protocols are consuming the most bandwidth. Highlight the IP addresses of the top talkers. Identify excessive bandwidth utilization or unexpected application traffic. Learn More! With The White Hat Hacker Bundle, you will learn the skills needed to protect your online presence from those who would do you harm. For a limited time, you can get The White Hat Hacker Bundle at 92% off, just $49, at Slashdot Deals. Six professional video courses will give you the tools necessary to protect your site and will offer insights on how to ethically hack websites to test for security flaws and to mine Internet data. Learn More! From the if-you-watch-someone-long-enough department An anonymous reader writes with this news from the EFF's Deep Links: The public got an early holiday gift today when a federal court agreed with us that six weeks of continually video recording the front yard of someone's home without a search... From the through-other-eyes department Molly McHugh (3774987) writes with an intriguing use of VR technology: "It's as simple as making a light-skinned person feel connected to a virtual, darker skinned self—a thought experiment pretty much impossible without the immersive... From the jump-in-with-an-appropriate-number-of-feet department An anonymous reader writes: I graduated with a degree in the liberal arts (English) in 2010 after having transferred from a Microbiology program (not for lack of ability, but for an enlightening class wherein we read Portrait of the Artist). Now,... From the that-land-is-our-land department As reported by The Independent, A scientific study has found that Greenland is actually connected to the area beneath the polar ice where the North Pole lies – thanks to a huge stretch of continental crust known as the Lomonosov Ridge.... From the but-my-space-elevator department An anonymous reader writes: We keep hearing about the revolutionary properties of graphene, an atom-thick sheet of carbon whose physical characteristics hold a great deal of promise — if we can figure out good ways to produce it and use it.... From the your-tax-dollars-at-rest department An anonymous reader writes: In a scathing indictment of NASA's bureaucracy, the Washington Post documents a $349 million project to construct a laboratory tower that was closed as soon as it was finished. From the article: "[The tower was]... From the drm-protected-history-is-written-by-the-victors department An anonymous reader sends word that Apple's iTunes DRM case has already been decided. The 8-person jury took only a few hours to decide that the features introduced in iTunes 7.0 were good for consumers and did not violate antitrust laws.... From the functionality-of-the-month department Lemeowski writes: Cloud, big data, and agile were three of the technology terms that were brandished the most by IT leaders in 2014. Yet, there could be a real danger in buying into the hype without understanding the implications of the... From the part-and-parcel department An anonymous reader sends this quote from TechDirt: As a string of whistle blowers like former AT&T employee Mark Klein have made clear abundantly clear, the line purportedly separating intelligence operations from the nation's incumbent... From the encrypt-what-you-must department An anonymous reader writes Tech giants such as Apple and eBay have given their support in Microsoft's legal battle against the U.S. government regarding the handing over of data stored in an Irish datacenter. In connection with a 2014 drugs... From the farewell-and-thanks department An anonymous reader writes: Dr. Dobb's — long time icon of programming magazines — "sunsets" at the end of the year. Editor Andrew Binstock says despite growing traffic numbers, the decline in revenue from ads means there will be no... From the stick-this-in-your-ear department mpicpp writes that Microsoft, after demoing the technology back in May, is giving some real-world exposure to its Skype-based translation. The Skype preview program will kick-off with two spoken languages, Spanish and English, and 40+ instant... From the things-the-USPTO-would-totally-issue-a-patent-for department New submitter st1lett0 writes: Now and in years past, electronic engineers and hobbyists alike have enjoyed the classic 1972 April Fool's joke by Signetics of the Signetics 25120 Write-Only Memory chip. Now it seems that the previously anonymous... From the enabled-by-typing-iddqd department mpicpp sends this report from CNN: Uber has rolled back employee access to its "God view" mode, which allows the company to track riders' locations and other data. The ride service company was faced with questions about its privacy policies from... From the and-still-hasn't-killed-any-cats department astroengine writes: A gas strongly associated with life on Earth has been detected again in the Martian atmosphere, opening a new chapter in a decade-old mystery about the on-again, off-again appearance of methane on Mars. The latest discovery... |
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