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UN Tech Group Finds Most Expensive Broadband

slashdot.org - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 10:33
destinyland writes "In the Central African Republic, broadband internet service costs 3891% of the average monthly income. 'Put another way, a month's broadband service costs more than three years' average wages in the country,' notes one technology blog, 'compared with less than two hours' earnings in Macau.' A United Nations' technology group released the figures in a new report in advance of a September 19 summit on the digital divide in developing countries. ('We are trying to avoid a broadband divide,' said Dr. Hamadoun Toure, the secretary general of the UN's International Telecommunications Union.) Their agency noted that the rate for broadband penetration is below 1% in many poor countries, with monthly costs higher than the average monthly income. 'By contrast,' notes the BBC, 'in the world's most developed economies, around 30% of people have access to broadband at a cost of less than 1% of their income.' And the report also estimates that there are 5 billion cellphones in the world — though some people may own more than one."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

GNOME 3 at Xen 4.0.1 (2.6.32.21 pvops) on top of F14 (rawhide)

LXer Linux News - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 10:01
In meantime Xen 4.0.1 is available via rawhide repositories . Been installed along with 2.6.32.21 pvops kernel and the most recent libvirt 0.8.3 on top of F14 (rawhide) via just several yum install commands,it doesn’t require any longer to build xen rpms using corresponding xen-4.0.1-1.fc14.src.rpm. Changing preferences allows to play with Gnome 3 shell managing virt-manager and other desktop tools.

The Last of the Punch Card Programmers

slashdot.org - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 09:14
Peter Cus writes "Cluny Lace, an English lacemaking manufacturer, has reverted to 19th-Century Leavers machines in order to stay competitive. These 19th-Century machines use Jacquard punch cards. Ian Elm, thought to be the last of the card punchers, says young people don't want factory work: 'Younger people coming into a trade want a guarantee of a career out of it, and this is so uncertain.'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

Yellowstone Hot Spot Shreds Ancient Pacific Ocean

slashdot.org - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 09:14
jamie passes along this excerpt from DiscoveryNews: "If you thought the geysers and overblown threat of a supervolcanic eruption in Yellowstone National Park were dramatic, you ain't seen nothing: deep beneath Earth's surface, the hot spot that feeds the park has torn an entire tectonic plate in half. The revelation comes from a new study (abstract) in the journal Geophysical Research Letters that peered into the mantle beneath the Pacific Northwest to see what happens when ancient ocean crust from the Pacific Ocean runs headlong into a churning plume of ultra-hot mantle material."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

How to upgrade to Ubuntu 10.10 Maverick Meerkat from ubuntu 10.04 lucid, karmic| Desktop & Server

LXer Linux News - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 08:13
Ubuntu 10.10 Maverick Meerkat Beta has been released, If you have ubuntu 10.10 Lucid Lynx or older version of ubuntu installed and you want to upgrade to this new beta release, you can do it by following the instructions in this post.

Announcing WriteType 1.0.98

Linux Today - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 08:06
A High School Student's Views on Software Freedom: "The next version of WriteType (1.0.98) is now available for download! WriteType is a word processor designed to make typing easier and more efficient for young students and students with disabilities."


Researchers Develop "Tea Bag" Water Filter

slashdot.org - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 07:53
cybernanga writes "A group of researchers in South Africa has developed a filter that can purify water straight from the bottle. The filter sits inside a tube fitted on top of a bottle and purifies water as it is poured on a cup. From the article: 'The designer behind the filter, Dr Eugene Cloete, from the Stellenbosch University in South Africa, says the filter is only as big as an ordinary tea bag. He says the product is cost-effective and easy to use. "We are coming in here at the fraction of the cost of anything else that is currently on the market," says Dr Cloete on BBC World Service.'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

Judging You By the Online Company You Keep

slashdot.org - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 06:43
theodp writes "Network analysis uses data about your social network interactions to make assumptions and predictions about your behavior. The Economist notes the upside for companies looking to sell products. But don't forget about the downside, warns Adrian Chen, of living in a world where network analysis is used by financial firms to determine risky borrowers by looking at social ties, or by Internet businesses to determine which customers are more equal than others (nice to see Microsoft's back on the forefront of some tech!). So, did Mom envision Social Network Analytics when she gave you that you-are-the-company-you-keep lecture?"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

Leaders Aren't Being Made At Tech Firms

slashdot.org - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 05:24
theodp writes "In this article Vivek Wadhwa laments that short shrift is paid to management training these days at many high-tech firms. You can't be born with the skills needed to plan projects, adhere to EEOC guidelines, prepare budgets and manage finances, or to know the intricacies of business and IP law, says Wadhwa. All this has to be learned. Stepping up to address the problems of 'engineering without leadership,' which may include morale problems, missed deadlines, customer-support disasters, and high turnover, are programs like UC Berkeley's Engineering Leadership Program and Duke's Masters of Engineering Management Program, which aim to teach product management, entrepreneurial thinking, leadership, finance, team building, business management, and motivation to techies."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

How to install PC-BSD on an encrypted ZFS file system

Linux Today - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 04:06
LinuxBSDos: "As a desktop distribution built atop FreeBSD, PC-BSD makes available to the desktop user all the cool technologies inside FreeBSD. One of those cool technologies is ZFS, the Zettabyte File System"


Fedora 13 update: A month and a half or so in

LXer Linux News - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 02:07
I've been running Fedora 13's Xfce spin on my new Lenovo G555 laptop for about a month and a half now, and I'm very much impressed with the performance, functionality and aggressive update policy even in an already aging (by Fedora standards) release.

Ubuntu 10.10 Beta Desktop / Netbook Edition Screenshots And Videos [Tour]

LXer Linux News - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 01:10
There have been many changes and updates in Ubuntu 10.10 Maverick Meerkat since Alpha 3, so let's take a look at what's new - in both Desktop and Netbook editions.

Open-Source GPU Drivers Causing Headaches In KDE 4.5

LXer Linux News - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 00:13
Martin Gräßlin, the KDE developer known for working on KWin and working on advanced features like OpenGL 3.x compositing in KDE 4.7, has written a new blog post in which he details some of the driver issues currently being experienced by some users of the recently released KDE 4.5 desktop.

Ubuntu 10.10 beta arrives with new netbook UI

Linux Today - Sun, 09/05/2010 - 00:06
ars Technica: "Canonical has announced the availability of the Ubuntu 10.10 beta release. The new version of the popular Linux distribution, codenamed Maverick Meerkat, is scheduled for final release in October. It brings some noteworthy user interface improvements and updated software."


Dubai's Police Chief Calls BlackBerry a Spy Tool

slashdot.org - Sat, 09/04/2010 - 23:23
crimeandpunishment writes "Does the battle over the Blackberry ban in the United Arab Emirates have its roots in a spy story? Dubai's police chief says concern over espionage (specifically, by the US and Israel) led to the decision to limit BlackBerry services. The UAE says it will block BlackBerry email, messaging, and web services on October 11th unless it gets access to encrypted data. Comments by Lt. Gen. Dahi Khalfan Tamim are often seen as reflecting the views of Dubai's leadership, and would appear to indicate a very hard line in talks with Research in Motion."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

Five critical apps for Android that you want find on iOS

LXer Linux News - Sat, 09/04/2010 - 23:16
Apple limits the kind of third-party applications and content their users can enjoy. But what does it really mean in practice? Let's look at 5 Android apps iOS is missing to find out.

Radiohead Helps Fans Make Crowd-Sourced Live Show DVD

slashdot.org - Sat, 09/04/2010 - 20:25
Kilrah_il writes "After having a go with a Name-Your-Price album and an open-source video, Radiohead is again breaking new ground, this time with a fan-based initiative. A group of fans went to one of the band's shows in Prague, each shooting the show from a different angle. By editing it all together and adding audio from the original masters provided by the band, they have created a video of the show that is 'Strictly not for sale — By the fans for the fans,' adding, 'Please share and enjoy.' Can this be the future of live show videos?"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

Webcam server on Linux 2

Linux Today - Sat, 09/04/2010 - 20:06
Linuxaria: "My guide on how to make a webcam server has had a lot of feedback and so I decided to give two other methods to achieve it with two different software webcam-server and ZoneMinder"


The Joke Known As 3D TV

slashdot.org - Sat, 09/04/2010 - 17:25
harrymcc writes "I'm at IFA in Berlin — Europe's equivalent of the Consumer Electronics Show — and the massive halls are dominated by 3D TVs made by everyone from Sony, Samsung, and Panasonic to companies you've never heard of. The manufacturers seem pretty excited, but 3D has so many downsides — most of all the lousy image quality and unimpressive dimensionality effect — that I can't imagine consumers are going to go for this. 'As a medium, 3D remains remarkably self-trivializing. Virtually nobody who works with it can resist thrusting stuff at the camera, just to make clear to viewers that they’re experiencing the miracle of the third dimension. When Lang Lang banged away at his piano during Sony’s event, a cameraman zoomed in and out on the musical instrument for no apparent reason, and one of the company’s representatives kept robotically shoving his hands forward. Hey, it’s 3D — watch this!'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Categories: Tech News

Using ATA Over Ethernet (AoE) On Ubuntu 10.04 (Initiator And Target)

LXer Linux News - Sat, 09/04/2010 - 16:19
This guide explains how you can set up an AoE target and an AoE initiator (client), both running Ubuntu 10.04. AoE stands for "ATA over Ethernet" and is a storage area network (SAN) protocol which allows AoE initiators to use storage devices on the (remote) AoE target using normal ethernet cabling. "Remote" in this case means "inside the same LAN" because AoE is not routable outside a LAN (this is a major difference compared to iSCSI). To the AoE initiator, the remote storage looks like a normal, locally-attached hard drive.
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