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Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, December 20 2012 @ 09:07 PM EST |
I am not sure which way to look :-) but the headline says
it all.
Exclusive:
Corrupt Apple Store Employees Come Forward
Across America[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, December 20 2012 @ 10:47 PM EST |
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/12/12/20/2243247/30-days-is-too-long-animated-ran
t-about-windows-8[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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- Windows 8 is so horribly broken that it should be ... - Clickies - Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, December 20 2012 @ 11:34 PM EST
- Windows 8 won't work because it lacks Pinball - Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, December 20 2012 @ 11:54 PM EST
- First comment to that: Score 5, Insightful - Authored by: Gringo_ on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 01:03 AM EST
- Microsoft Innovation... - Authored by: albert on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 01:46 PM EST
- Haven't had any problems with it - Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 03:04 PM EST
- Ditto my Fedora - Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 05:26 PM EST
- Ubuntu - Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 06:57 PM EST
- Kubuntu - Authored by: tiger99 on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 06:16 AM EST
- Lubuntu n/t - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 07:01 PM EST
- Xubuntu ftw - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 08:35 AM EST
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Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, December 20 2012 @ 11:59 PM EST |
The Kickstarter Campaign for the HotPi addon was a success. Stats
are:
202 backers
£5,917 pledged of £5,000
goal
0 seconds to go
HotPi on
Kickstarter
Is anyone interested who didn't get one ordered
during the campaign? I
know someone who knows the designer, and I'd could ask
if they are still
taking orders.
I did ask if a Bluetooth add-on was
under consideration. It isn't yet, but if
enough people
ask...
Waynehttp://madhatter.ca
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 12:50 AM EST |
"Outlook 2013 won’t let you import or export data to or from .doc or .xls
files for Word 1997 to 2003 and Excel versions 1997 to 2003, the company has
revealed in a blog."
Link: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/12/20/outlook_2013_chops_legacy_word_exce
l/
Comment: If what the article says is accurate, this is monumental
foot-shooting from Microsoft, especially the bit about importing data in old
formats. Keeping it would cost really little for Microsoft, but lack of import
will make many users look for alternatives...
... which is a good thing from
the F/OSS perspective! OpenOffice and LibreOffice reads most old MS docs just
fine.
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Gringo_ on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 01:28 AM EST |
The following update just came down the pipes for my
Windows 7
platform...
Microsoft Security Bulletin MS12-078 -
Critical
Vulnerabilities in Windows Kernel-Mode Drivers
Could Allow Remote Code
Execution (2783534)
This security update resolves one publicly disclosed
vulnerability and one privately reported vulnerability in
Microsoft Windows.
The more severe of these vulnerabilities
could allow remote code execution if a
user opens a
specially crafted document or visits a malicious webpage
that
embeds TrueType or OpenType font files. An attacker
would have to convince
users to visit the website, typically
by getting them to click a link in an
email message that
takes them to the attacker's
website.
Just... wow. All you have to do is visit a
malicious web
page with a very common font, and bing! You are
p0wnd.
How can this happen? Windows 7 is what Microsoft calls a
Fundamentally Secure
Platform
Windows 7 builds upon the
strong security
lineage of Windows Vista and retains all of the development
processes and technologies that have made Windows Vista the
most secure
version of the Windows client to date.
Fundamental security features such as
Kernel Patch
Protection, Service Hardening, Data Execution Prevention,
Address
Space Layout Randomization, and Mandatory Integrity
Levels continue to provide
enhanced protection against
malware and attacks. Windows 7 is again designed
and
developed using Microsoft‘s Security Development Lifecycle
(SDL) and is
engineered to support Common Criteria
requirements to achieve Evaluation
Assurance Level 4
certification and meet Federal Information Processing
Standard 140-2. From the solid security foundation of
Windows Vista, Windows 7
makes significant enhancements to
the core security technologies of event
auditing and User
Account Control.
So it's got all that,
and yet they just found yet another
hole in it you could drive a truck through.
I think it is
hopeless.
In the last two days I missed two pieces of
very
important email. Now what has that got to do with all
this??? I did not
receive those emails in a timely manner
because they were mistaken as spam (for
which I get a notice
they next day - too late in the case of these two emails.)
How is that Microsoft's fault? It is Microsoft's fault
because it is hijacked
Microsoft platforms that are pumping
out spam by the billions, day and night,
in such an endless
variety that most spam filters can't possibly tell them
apart from valid email, and that's why Microsoft is to blame
for the
inconvenience I suffered from receiving those emails
too late to be of any use
to me. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 02:40 AM EST |
The dispute has been ongoing since September, when the Lightning connector was
announced by Apple.
“We didn’t get a yes or a no up front,” Siminoff said. “But as we kept going
back and forth it was clear that it was getting harder. Then, when we saw that
they weren’t even going to allow a Lightning connector and a 30-pin connector
together, we knew it was over.”
http://venturebeat.com/2012/12/20/apple-kills-a-kickstarter-project-portable-pow
er-project-pop-refunding-139170-to-backers/[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: tiger99 on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 05:37 AM EST |
BBC This
has been talked about for a while, and it is good to see that it is coming
closer to actually happening. It makes perfect sense for you to be able
to play the content which you have paid for on any of your
hardware, anywhere, and make backup copies to ensure that you can play
the content you have paid for at any time in the future. It is a basic
right that everyone should have. If other countries, even most of the EU,
disagree, well that is bad for their citizens. They need to lobby their elected
governments about it, and get the same thing there too. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: JamesK on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 06:57 AM EST |
Just checking. ;-)
---
The following program contains immature subject matter.
Viewer discretion is advised.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: knarf on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 07:03 AM EST |
Waiting for one of them to patent being humanoid vermin and sue the rest of
'm out of existence...
anti-piracy-chief-patents-pay-up-or-disconnect-scheme
---
[ "Omnis enim res, quae dando non deficit, dum habetur
et non datur, nondum habetur, quomodo habenda est." ]
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Gringo_ on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 07:57 AM EST |
Link (watch the video)
Do you think maybe this indicates that any
software is
abstract, no different than math? ...or did the exercise
documented in the video "make a new machine" out of that
person's
brain?
What if you presented this in court as a part of a
defense
against an accusation of a software patent
transgression in attempt to
invalidate the patent? Would you
be allowed to present this video as part of
the evidence?
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 08:43 AM EST |
Danish Tabloid 'Ekstrabladet' has a piece on Microsoft CEO Ballmer being close
to getting sacked.
The theme is that Ballmer needs to make Windows 8 happen in the mobile space or
he may be canned.
The piece then lists the markets where Ballmer has not delivered (music, mobile,
and tablets).
No mention of gaming.
Supposedly, the source is Gartner (nothing comes up on duckduckgo, though)
Smells like a trial balloon...
http://ekstrabladet.dk/kup/elektronik/teknologi/article1888097.ece[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: JamesK on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 10:02 AM EST |
My Blackberry is not
working ;-) --- The following program contains immature subject
matter.
Viewer discretion is advised. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 10:13 AM EST |
I'm in shock. Was looking for some information, and stumbled across
this:
Linux Tycoon is the
premier
Linux Distro Building Simulator game in the universe.
The
website says:
Linux Tycoon is presently available for
Linux (with Ubuntu
packages and a tar.gz for other distros), MacOS X and
Windows.
It's a free download, though source doesn't
seem to be available. Guess I'll
try it out over the
holidays.
Waynehttp://madhatter.ca
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 10:39 AM EST |
"The mega yacht commissioned by late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has
reportedly been sequestered by lawyers for designer Philippe Starck in Amsterdam
over a payment dispute."
http://reason.com/24-7/2012/12/21/steve-jobs-yacht-seized-in-amsterdam-ove[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: sciamiko on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 10:49 AM EST |
The UK government has
announced its proposals for
implementing the Hargreaves report on copyright after a three month
consultation.
From the section on Private Copying:
People will
be permitted to copy content they have bought onto any medium or device that
they own,
strictly for their own personal use (such as transferring their music
collection from CD to iPod).
This will not allow sharing copies with others
but it will allow consumers to copy material to and from
private online cloud
storage4.
Rights owners will still have the ability and incentive to license
innovative, value-added cloud services.
It looks like good news
with clear descriptions of what is allowed and coming into line with the
public's expectations.
Comment from the Open Rights
group.
s. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: nsomos on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 11:19 AM EST |
from ...
http://amog.com/tech/155583-european-union-charging-samsung-antitrust-case/
---------
It appears that Samsung will soon face formal charges in an antitrust lawsuit
from the European Commission. The commission claims that the South Korean tech
giant broke the region’s competition rules by filing patent litigation against
Apple.
---------
The original source is financial times which requires
registration and I won't be bothered to do that just to
read about this.
Since Apple is litigating against Samsung, why doesn't
that make Apple afoul of these competition rules?
Probably because some of Samsung's patents are standards-essential
and Apples patents are just junk.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: whitehat on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 11:52 AM EST |
The ugliest yacht ever built was impounded in Holland for
non-payment of fees.
It was designed and built for the late
Steve Jobs at a total cost of US$138
million.
The iYacht
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: IMANAL_TOO on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 12:11 PM EST |
According to Fudzilla:
"Steve Jobs was so completely deluded that
he wanted to call his Safari browser “Freedom.” In 2002, the company was about
to release its own Web browser in order to take control and responsibility for
Web browsing on the Mac. Jobs wanted to call the browser "Freedom" because he
believed that locking you into an imaginary walled garden of buggy software was
somehow free. While Jobs was considered a god, no one really wanted to point out
to him that his Freedom was about as liberal as Saudi
Arabia."
Read the rest of the Fudzilla piece
here.
--- ______
IMANAL
. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: artp on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 12:29 PM EST |
Article over at Ars
Technica.
The Federalist Society put Judge Richard Posner
and Judge Paul Michel of the
Federal CCA together in a
debate. Here is the podcast from
the Federalist Society.
I'm sure this quote isn't new, but it really shook
me:
In Michel's view one of the big problems with
the patent
system is actually that people criticize it too
much. No, really: "The patent
system has been so excessively
criticized with overstated claims by so many
commentators
that it has been substantially weakened in the last five to
seven
years," Michel said. (We at Ars had no idea our words
were so
powerful!)
Government just doesn't get it. We used to have a
saying at
one company I worked for: "Any organization develops to the
point
where its primary job is to perpetuate itself." Looks
like it has happened one
more time.
--- Userfriendly on WGA server outage:
When you're chained to an oar you don't think you should go down when the galley
sinks ? [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 12:39 PM EST |
Who else would've thunk that honestly? Santa's logistics explained [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: SpaceLifeForm on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 02:20 PM EST |
It sure looks like RIM has never met a
patent lawsuit
that it does not mind
losing.
BoD1 to BoD2: Here's the plan. We are
going to sue
your company
over some really stupid
software patent.
Yeah, we know it is completely bogus,
but
this will help
you out.
BoD2: Huh? How is this going to
help?
BoD1: Our contacts will prop up your stock
price for a
while,
instead of spreading FUD about your
company.
Your huge amount of stock options
will be
worth
bazillions more. Our contacts will allow you
time to
slowly
cash out, whilst the suckers buy up
the stock that
the contacts will decimate
later.
BoD2: Sounds great, but what's in it for
you?
BoD1: We get to
make it look like the really
stupid
software patent is valid. That way it is
easier to attack
other victims that have lots of money.
---
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 03:46 PM EST |
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/dec/21/nra-newtown-armed-guards-schools
NRA has called for armed security guards to be posted in every school in the
country and insisted that the only solution to gun violence in the wake of the
Newtown massacre was more guns...
Yes, guns are the core of the safety. But not the way NRA believes.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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- Will the NRA pay for more guns at schools - Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 04:12 PM EST
- I'm sure the DHS/TSA is cheering - Authored by: kg on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 06:45 PM EST
- NRA: bring even more guns to schools. Sounds like a good idea. - Authored by: Kilz on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 08:33 PM EST
- NRA: bring even more guns to schools - Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 11:51 PM EST
- Disgusting - Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 12:52 AM EST
- NRA: bring even more guns to schools - Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 04:15 AM EST
- ..so, NRA, what about the good armed guy having a bad day? N/T - Authored by: arnt on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 10:20 PM EST
- ..anti-Americanism: NRA vs al-Qaeda, what can we learn from the numbers? N/T - Authored by: arnt on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 10:27 PM EST
- Hold gun owners responsible. - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 03:40 PM EST
- The real issue is Mental Health - not Gun Control - Authored by: dlrapp on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 05:53 PM EST
- We need a new term - Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, December 24 2012 @ 10:56 AM EST
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Authored by: SpaceLifeForm on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 04:15 PM EST |
Link
---
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 05:23 PM EST |
Steve
Jobs' yacht impounded over pay dispute [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: SpaceLifeForm on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 06:58 PM EST |
Link
It will be interesting to see if China
decides to block all
https traffic. I suspect they will not.
This
illustrates the importance of free software and
open gardens. At least with an
open platform the user
has more options.
---
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 08:05 PM EST |
Prosecutors might have acted improperly in vetting potential jurors
but the misconduct was not serious enough to quash a series of convictions, the
Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday.
Still, despite rejecting five appeals
stemming from three separate cases, the country's top court made it clear it
wasn't condoning the behaviour.
Colin Perkel, The Tyee
The Decisions:
Citation: R. v. Davey, 2012
SCC 75
Date: 20121221
Docket: 34179
http://scc.lexum.org/decisia-scc-csc/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/12780/index.do
Citation: R. v. Emms, 2012 SCC 74
Date: 20121221
Docket: 34087
http://scc.lexum.org/decisia-scc-csc/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/12781/index.do
Citation: R. v. Yumnu, 2012 SCC 73
Date: 20121221
Docket: 34090,
34091, 34340
http://scc.lexum.org/decisia-scc-csc/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/12782/index.do [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: SpaceLifeForm on Friday, December 21 2012 @ 08:29 PM EST |
Link
This is the
MIC out of control.
---
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 03:45 AM EST |
Google slashed the cumulative view counts on YouTube channels
belonging to Universal Music Group, Sony/BMG, and RCA Records by more than 2
billion views Tuesday, a drastic winter cleanup that may be aimed at shutting
down black hat view count-building techniques employed by a community of rogue
view count manipulators on the video-sharing site.
[...]
More than 500
prominent YouTube channels have been stripped of preexisting YouTube views in
the past 30 days, something that causes concern when you consider that YouTube
views counts, unlike subscriber statistics, are cumulative and cannot
organically drop at any point throughout their existence.
Google's takedown
of these major music channels came on the same day that hundreds of YouTubers
took to Google forums and their own YouTube channels to inform their peers that
they'd been subject to a series of video takedowns for violations of YouTube's
Terms of Service (TOS).
Chase Hoffberger, Daily Dot
In other YouTube news - PSY's
'Gangnam Style' broke a 1,000,000,000
views today. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: odysseus on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 09:39 AM EST |
http://scripto.org/
"A free, open source tool enabling community transcriptions of document and
multimedia files. Scripto brings the power of MediaWiki to your collections.
Designed to allow members of the public to transcribe a range of different kinds
of files, Scripto will increase your content’s findability while building your
user community through active engagement."
Looks a bit easier to use than Distributed Proofreaders (http://www.pgdp.net/c/)[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 02:08 PM EST |
If a wife suspects her husband is having an inappropriate
relationship with one of his female employees, is it legal to fire the female
employee even if there's no evidence of an affair?
It is in Iowa. The
state's Supreme Court ruled today that an "employee who has not engaged in
flirtatious conduct may be lawfully terminated simply because the boss views the
employee as an irresistible attraction."
The court upheld a lower court
ruling that Melissa Nelson, who had worked as a dental assistant for Dr. James
Knight of Fort Dodge for 10 years, had no basis under the state's civil rights
act to sue him when he fired her at his wife's demand.
The two had texted
each other with what could be considered sexually suggestive messages. And when
Dr. Knight fired Ms. Nelson, he told her it was because he might try to have an
affair with her.
Bob Collins, Minnesota
Public Radio
Decision:
.PDF
http://www.iowacourts.gov/Supreme_Court/Recent_Opinions/20121221/11-1857.pdf [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: SpaceLifeForm on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 04:07 PM EST |
Link
For some reason, they waited two
years.
Perhaps so that
more damages
could be created.
---
You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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- Link not working! - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 03:31 PM EST
- Link, try this - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 04:00 PM EST
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Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 07:17 PM EST |
"America’s best tech companies could go back to focusing their resources
and energies on product innovation instead of legal strategy."
Get real. They will mainly focus on vested interests like they always have,
unless innovation is their forever business plan.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, December 22 2012 @ 07:46 PM EST |
Copyright law did a pretty good job protecting books from piracy for
exactly three centuries. But the technological developments of the last few
years are rapidly transforming both books and piracy, and have greatly reduced
the practical effect of copyright in books. The law of copyright is as crucial
as ever in defining authors’ rights and providing the framework for authors,
publishers, and distributors to deal with each other. But it can only be
enforced in jurisdictions that play by the rules.
Matt Rubinstein, Australian Book Review[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 02:02 AM EST |
In Japan, people often refer to traffic lights as being blue in
color. And this is a bit odd, because the traffic signal indicating ‘go’ in
Japan is just as green as it is anywhere else in the world. So why is the color
getting lost in translation?
This visual conundrum has its roots in the
history of language.
Aatish
Bhatia, Empirical Zeal[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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- How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 02:22 AM EST
- How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 03:21 AM EST
- How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains - Authored by: JimDiGriz on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 06:23 AM EST
- Interesting article, but could have used more biological foundation - Authored by: Gringo_ on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 06:41 PM EST
- How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains - Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 11:56 PM EST
- Context - Authored by: globularity on Monday, December 24 2012 @ 04:12 AM EST
- Context - Authored by: myNym on Monday, December 24 2012 @ 04:27 AM EST
- Context - Authored by: Wol on Monday, December 24 2012 @ 06:56 AM EST
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Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 09:17 AM EST |
FBI documents just obtained by the Partnership for Civil Justice
Fund (PCJF) pursuant to the PCJF’s Freedom of Information Act demands reveal
that from its inception, the FBI treated the Occupy movement as a potential
criminal and terrorist threat even though the agency acknowledges in documents
that organizers explicitly called for peaceful protest and did “not condone the
use of violence” at occupy protests.
The PCJF has obtained heavily redacted
documents showing that FBI offices and agents around the country were in high
gear conducting surveillance against the movement even as early as August 2011,
a month prior to the establishment of the OWS encampment in Zuccotti Park and
other Occupy actions around the country.
“This production, which we believe
is just the tip of the iceberg, is a window into the nationwide scope of the
FBI’s surveillance, monitoring, and reporting on peaceful protestors organizing
with the Occupy movement,” stated Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, Executive Director of
the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund (PCJF).
The
Partnership for Civil Justice Fund[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 02:46 PM EST |
Microsoft also developed a new sans-serif user interface
font called Gadugi –
the Cherokee word for "working
together" – for the Windows 8 build, as well as
for a
forthcoming version of Office 2013.
The world is ending soon. LOL
Click
here to release the
toads [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 03:11 PM EST |
Why would you need kernel mode drivers to screen render TTF or OTF?
Because Windows Explorer is snagged so deep in the OS bowels.
Workarounds to block known attack vectors (specially crafted ttf files)
include (inter alia) "Disabling the Preview and Details panes..."
It's so long ago I've forgotten when that workaround was issued
for somewhat similar reasons, and my life ever since has been
warning people to turn Preview off because it's an easy way
for bad stuff to get in, and MS really don't know how to fix it.
Oh, for the joy of elm on a 14k4 line...
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/security/bulletin/ms12-078
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: celtic_hackr on Sunday, December 23 2012 @ 06:46 PM EST |
Merry Christmas to everyone out there following Groklaw and especially to PJ who
made all this happen to begin with![ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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