Tag Archives: Largest

NASA records largest explosion ever on the Moon

NASA scientists have recorded what they say is the largest explosion ever seen on the Moon. A meteoroid roughly the size of a small boulder crashed into the moon, creating a large explosion that NASA says could have been seen with the naked eye. The meteoroid was said to have weighed around 90 pounds and

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SlashGear

Largest bitcoin exchange, Mt. Gox, 'throttles' trading to tame price swings

The largest bitcoin exchange, Mt. Gox, is in a continuing battle with miscreants trying to manipulate the price of the virtual currency.
Computerworld News

Foxconn Becomes Largest Microsoft Patent Licensee, Pays Royalty Per Android And Chrome Device

foxconnMicrosoft just scored a coup on the patent royalty front, with a new deal with Taiwanese phone maker, Hon Hai, which owns Foxconn. Under the terms of the deal, Microsoft will get paid a flat fee per Android and Chrome-based device that Foxconn makes. And there are a lot of those. A whopping 40 percent of the world’s phones come from the firm’s China-based factories. Foxconn is an ODM, or “original design manufacturer”, and makes Android devices for clients like Acer and Amazon (it makes the Kindle Fire). It’s famous for making iPhones and iPads as well. The exact patents licensed were not revealed, but Microsoft has been famously litigious on the patent scene. With regard to the Android OS, legal documents filed in 2010 against Motorola and against Barnes & Noble in 2011 give some clues. One of its patent claims is against a way that long and short file names are implemented, and is linked to the FAT16 file system used by older Microsoft OSes like MS-DOS and Windows. Other patents include data management, across flash drives and another in contact databases. Microsoft’s user interface patents are also involved. Microsoft said that over 50 percent of the world’s Android phones come from manufacturers that already have patent agreements in place with it. These include Samsung, LG and HTC, for example. Adding Foxconn to that list will give it a huge boost to these royalty payments, an already huge sum—in 2011, Microsoft was estimated to be making more from patent royalties from phone makers than its own smartphone business. Other behind-the-scenes manufacturers similar to Foxconn such as Quanta and Pegatron also have licensing agreements with Microsoft. Microsoft going after manufacturers has been referred to as “extortion” by Google. It made this statement in late-2011 after Samsung and Microsoft decided to cross-license their patents. Probably because Samsung was sick of all the lawsuits with Apple. Hon Hai is the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer, and holds some 54,000 patents globally.
TechCrunch

Hawaii land board approves plan to build world’s largest telescope atop Mauna Kea summit

A plan by California and Canadian universities to build the world’s largest telescope at the summit of Hawaii’s Mauna Kea volcano won approval from the state Board of Land and Natural Resources.


FOX News

The Internet Archive Is Now the Largest Collection of Historical Software Online

hypnosec writes “The Internet Archive has a great collection of books, music, visual items and websites but, it had one thing lacking up until now – software. This has changed recently as The Internet Archive now claims to hold the largest collection of software in the world. The expansion at the Internet Archive has come through collaboration with other independent archives like the Disk Drives collection, the FTP site boneyard, Shareware CD Archive, and the TOSEC archive. The archive doesn’t hold just the software – it also holds documentation as well.”

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Slashdot

Construction of world’s largest optical telescope approved

The massive Thirty Meter Telescope will be able to image objects 13 billion light years away, near the beginning of time. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Largest gathering of offensive hackers converges on Miami

Formidable American offensive security hackers are meeting in Miami with other top hackers from all over the world to hone their technical expertise, swap war stories – and compete in a little digital jiu-jitsu.


FOX News

Mt. Gox under largest DDoS attack as bitcoin price surges

The largest bitcoin exchange said Thursday it is fighting an intense distributed denial-of-service attack it believes is intended at manipulating the price of virtual currency, which has seen volatile price swings in the past few days.
Computerworld News

World’s Largest High-Rise Data Center Opens In New York

CowboyRobot writes with this excerpt from Wall Street & Technology: “[Wednesday of this week], Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the opening [of] a 1 million square foot high-rise data center [in the] old Verizon switching building at 375 Pearl Street. Sabey Data Center Properties, the owner of the property, has named the data center Intergate.Manhattan and says the building’s location, power supply and connectivity to underground fiber make it an ideal location for a data center in New York City. … Intergate.Manhattan has only one tenant so far, the New York Genome Center, a compute and storage platform for 12 leading medical institutions to tackle the big data challenges that will bring the benefits of genomics to patient care.” Let’s hope they keep plenty of fuel around for next storm season.

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Slashdot

China’s Largest Search Engine Baidu Launches English Site For Developers

Image (1) baidu-logo.png for post 13391Baidu, the search behemoth often referred to as “China’s Google,” launched its new English-language Web site for developers today. While the site is still in its infancy–right now there just a few intros up and no documentation–but it promises to grow up into a valuable resource for developers who want to take a crack at the Chinese market.
TechCrunch

Russian meteor was largest in a century

The meteor that crashed to earth in Russia was about 55 feet in diameter, weighed around 10,000 tons and was made from a stony material, scientists said, making it the largest such object to hit the Earth in more than a century.


FOX News

Russian Meteor Largest In a Century

gbrumfiel writes “A meteor that exploded over Russia’s Chelyabinsk region this morning was the largest recorded object to strike the earth in more than a century, Nature reports. Infrasound data collected by a network designed to watch for nuclear weapons testing suggests that today’s blast released hundreds of kilotons of energy. That would make it far more powerful than the nuclear weapon tested by North Korea just days ago, and the largest rock to strike the earth since a meteor broke up over Siberia’s Tunguska river in 1908. Despite its incredible power, the rock evaded detection by astronomers. Estimates show it was likely only 15 meters across — too small to be seen by networks searching for near earth asteroids.” Today’s meteor event came a day after California scientists proposed a system to vaporize asteroids that threaten Earth. Of course, the process needs to be started when the asteroid is still tens of millions of kilometers away; there’s no chance to shoot down something that’s already arrived.

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Slashdot

Yandex passes Bing to become fourth largest search provider according to comScore

Yandex passes Bing to become fourth largest search provider according to comScore

Bing, Microsoft’s attempt to take on Google directly. When it first launched there was quite a bit of fanfare and its market share grew quickly. It didn’t exactly hack away at Mountain View’s dominance, but it certainly made a small dent. Since then, things have slowed down and other players have asserted themselves in the global search battlefield. While Baidu has been riding high for quite some time, Yandex is a relative new-comer to the leader board. And, somewhat surprisingly, has already surpassed Microsoft for global market share according to stats provided to us by comScore. Though the margin is small, the Russian company saw more searches performed through its site than Microsoft in both November and December of 2012. The difference is small enough that those positions could swap again but, where as Bing has seen its numbers plateau over the last six months, Yandex has continued to grow. Of course, neither is anywhere near challenging Google which accounts for roughly 65 percent of the search traffic according to comScore’s numbers and both only see about half the traffic of the number three competitor, Yahoo. Microsoft can still claim one victory over Yandex in the number of unique searchers, though. If you’re curious for more we’ve put the entire chart after the break.

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Via: DailyTech, Search Engine Watch

Engadget

Largest known prime number – 17M digits long – discovered

A mathematician at the University of Central Missouri has discovered what is now the largest known prime number — one with more than 17 million digits.
Computerworld News

World’s largest prime number discovered — all 17 million digits

As part of the Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS), Curtis Cooper recently discovered the 48th and largest prime number yet found.


FOX News

Intergalactic crash scene among universe’s largest things

A glowing cosmic structure millions of light-years long represents the aftermath of the impact of two merging galaxy clusters, researchers say.
FOX News

Toyota becomes the world’s largest automaker

This week Toyota reclaimed its former spot as the world’s largest automaker with a 23% gain in global sales for 2012. Toyota sold 9.75 million vehicles during 2012 allowing it to take the top spot from GM. GM sold 9.29 million vehicles in 2012. Another automaker that was in the hunt for the title of

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SlashGear

Largest structure in universe discovered

Astronomers have discovered the largest known structure in the universe, a clump of active galactic cores that stretches 4 billion light-years from end to end.The structure is a large quasar group (LQG), a collection of extremely luminous galactic nuclei powered by supermassive central black holes.


FOX News

Fit for a king: largest Egyptian sarcophagus found

The largest ancient Egyptian sarcophagus has been identified in a tomb in Egypt's Valley of the Kings, say archaeologists who are re-assembling the giant box that was reduced to fragments more than 3,000 years ago.


FOX News

EU Issues Largest Antitrust Fine to Date for CRT TV Price Fixing

hankwang writes “The European commission fined a number manufacturers for pricing fixing of cathode ray tubes in the period between 1996 and 2005. The total fine was EUR 1.47 billion (USD 1.92 billion), for Philips, LG Electronics, Samsung SDI, and three other firms. According to the European Commission: ‘For almost 10 years, the cartelists carried out the most harmful anti-competitive practices including price fixing, market sharing, customer allocation, capacity and output coordination and exchanges of commercial sensitive information. The cartelists also monitored the implementation, including auditing compliance with the capacity restrictions by plant visits in the case of the computer monitor tubes cartel.’”

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Slashdot

World’s Largest Passenger Airship grounded

If you were planning on an airship ride any time in the near future, you’ll be better off not attempting to take a ride with the group Airship Ventures, as they’ve turned up cold on the sponsorship tip. It would appear that due specifically to the lack of sponsorship the company has received as of

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SlashGear

Inhabitat’s Week in Green: Tetris pumpkin, giant cardboard ghetto blaster and the world’s largest offshore wind farm

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.

DNP Inhabitat's Week in Green

Hurricane Sandy dominated the news cycle this week as the storm surge flooded large swaths of New Jersey and New York, knocking down trees, crippling the New York subway system and leaving thousands of people in the dark after a ConEd station in lower Manhattan exploded. The storm caused an estimated $ 10 billion worth of damage in Manhattan and Brooklyn alone, and it caused lasting environmental contamination when 336,000 gallons of diesel fuel spilled between Staten Island and New Jersey. And it reminded us of the potential dangers of nuclear power when the storm forced three nuclear reactors offline and New Jersey’s Oyster Creek power plant was placed on alert.

Continue reading Inhabitat’s Week in Green: Tetris pumpkin, giant cardboard ghetto blaster and the world’s largest offshore wind farm

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Inhabitat’s Week in Green: Tetris pumpkin, giant cardboard ghetto blaster and the world’s largest offshore wind farm originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Nov 2012 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Sixers unleash world’s largest T-shirt cannon on fans

Attending a Sixers game this season? Keep an eye out for the biggest T-shirt bazooka ever conceived. [Read more]


CNET News

Sony Invests $642 Million In Olympus, Becomes Largest Shareholder

olympuslogoSony is expected to approve a plan to invest around $ 642 million (50 billion yen) in Olympus. As the Japanese manufacturer of cameras, optics and reprography products is currently facing a trial for having hidden investment losses for the past 20 years, it has been looking for a potential investor for months. By injecting that capital investment, Sony will become the largest shareholder.
TechCrunch

Largest Moon Rock Ever Auctioned Expected To Sell For $380,000



First time accepted submitter amkkhan writes “One lucky space-lover with some extra cash could become the proud new owner of the largest moon rock ever to be auctioned, according to the auction house Heritage Auctions. The moon rock, known as Dar al Gani 1058, is part of a lunar meteorite that was found on Earth in 1988 and is expected to fetch as much as $ 380,000 at auction.”

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Slashdot

Largest moon rock ever auctioned could fetch $380,000

If you have some serious cash lying around, a chunk of the moon could be yours.A piece of lunar meteorite is on sale at auction, and experts estimate the final price will tally at keast $ 340,000.




FOX News

Russia Builds World’s Largest Nuclear Powered Ice-Breaker



Hugh Pickens writes “Eve Conant reports that Russia’s dream to dominate the Arctic will soon get a boost with a $ 1.1 billion nuclear-powered icebreaker 170 meters long and 34 meters wide. It’s designed to navigate both shallow rivers and the freezing depths of the Northern Sea. Powered by two ‘RITM-200′ compact pressurized water reactors generating 60MWe, the world’s largest ‘universal’ nuclear icebreaker is designed to blast through ice more than 4 meters thick and tow tankers of up to 70,000 tons displacement through Arctic ice fields. Why the effort and cost? ‘Climate change is a pivotal factor in accelerating Russia’s interest in icebreakers,’ says Charles Ebinger. ‘With climate change we are seeing a major change in the Northern Sea Route, which is a transport route along Russia’s northern coast from Europe to Asia. Just in the last few years, with less and less permanent sea ice, maritime traffic across the Russian Arctic has risen exponentially.’ The expectation is that the melt will continue, but there are still sections of route that would require icebreakers to keep it open year round. Icebreakers are an excellent example of a special purpose vehicle that is very poorly designed for operation outside its specific envelope. The key element is the rounded bow, a shape best suited to riding up on ice shelves and crushing them from above, causing the ships to roll from side to side in the waves when sailing on open water, making for a very seasick ride for the crew. Russia is the only country in the world currently building nuclear icebreakers, and has a fleet of about half a dozen in operation, along with a larger fleet of less powerful, diesel-powered icebreakers. The U.S. has been relying on a Russian diesel icebreaker to deliver supplies to Antarctica due to our own shrinking fleet of the cold-water, diesel-fueled vessels.”

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Slashdot

Inhabitat’s week in green: solar powered toilet, pollution-fighting mural and the world’s largest rooftop wind farm

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.

DNP Inhabitat's week in green TKTK

Hear those school bells in the distance? It’s hard to believe, but the start of the school year is just a few weeks away — and all week we’ve been rounding up some of our favorite eco-friendly back-to-school essentials. From green school supplies to sustainable backpacks, we’ve got all your back-to-school needs covered. And to top it off, we’re giving away a laptop-charging Voltaic solar-powered backpack (worth $ 389) stuffed with green school supplies for a total prize package worth over $ 500. If we could go back to school and live in any dorm, we’d probably choose Copenhagen’s Tietgenkollegiet dorm, a circular building with community kitchens, cafes, music rooms and a central courtyard. And if we could choose any gadget to take with us, it would have to be the P&P Office Waste Processor, which can transform a basket full of waste paper into fully-formed pencils.

Continue reading Inhabitat’s week in green: solar powered toilet, pollution-fighting mural and the world’s largest rooftop wind farm

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Inhabitat’s week in green: solar powered toilet, pollution-fighting mural and the world’s largest rooftop wind farm originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 19 Aug 2012 10:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Google fine is FTC’s largest in history

The largest fine ever levied against a company by the FTC has been drawn this week up against Google for their breach of Apple’s Safari web browser. This situation has had Google and the FTC in talks for several weeks and involved a breaking of terms of consent by the search giant through Apple’s software

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SlashGear

Experts take down Grum spam botnet, world’s third largest

Botnet was responsible for 18 billion spam messages a day, about 18 percent of the world’s spam, experts tell the New York Times.
[Read more]
CNET News

Gmail Takes Largest Webmail Service Crown



redletterdave writes “After several years of dominance, Microsoft’s Web-based email service, Hotmail, has been unseated by Google’s significantly younger webmail service, Gmail. Google announced it had about 350 million monthly active users in January; since then, that number has ballooned to 425 million.”

Remember when people ran their own mail servers?

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Slashdot

Sharp’s 90-inch Aquos is largest LED TV to date

Videophiles know that Sharp demands quality. It may not have the largest market share in the TV business, but its range of Aquos television sets are revered, and for good reason. Now, the company is differentiating itself by offering the world’s first commercially available 90-inch LED HDTV. The question is – do you live somewhere

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SlashGear

The Nice Guy At the World’s Largest Weapons Expo



pigrabbitbear writes “It was the second day of the Special Operation Forces Exhibition in Amman, Jordan, and the temperature outside the convention center was around 80 degrees Fahrenheit, with a typical chance of rain of zero. Drones of various sizes hovered in the hot blue desert sky. Inside, Ed Atchley had set up a booth for his company, Aspen Water Inc., right next to a 30mm chain gun designed to sink things like helicopters and Somali pirate ships. Atchley had traveled from his headquarters in Richardson, Texas, to the largest weapons trade show in the world, mainly because he makes ‘the army’s smallest, lightest, least expensive, high output, reverse osmosis water purifier,’ he says, and people in the Middle East – including soldiers – get very thirsty.”

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Slashdot

In Pictures: The World’s Largest Solar Thermal Power Plant

Brightsource’s 370-megawatt facility near Las Vegas is taking shape, but the future of solar thermal is much more fuzzy.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

RocketFrog Wants To Build The Largest Social Casino On The Web, Myspace Tom Joins As Advisor

Screen shot 2012-05-22 at 1.26.13 PMToday brings another entrant into the social gambling space with RocketFrog, which is setting out to bring casino entertainment to Facebook with the launch of a free-to-play online casino that offers players the chance to win real prizes. Traditionally, online casino players participate in the casino gaming experience recreationally, with the rewards being the opportunity to socialize with friends or earn a few virtual badges.

So, RocketFrog wants to change this by leveraging the Facebook platform — where all of your friends are already — to create social tournaments, where players can interact and compete against their friends to win real prizes, not just accumulate points on leaderboards or vie for meaningless status increases.
TechCrunch

Maryland teen wins world’s largest high school science competition

A Maryland student was awarded the top prize at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair on Friday for developing a urine and blood test that detects pancreatic cancer with 90 percent accuracy.




FOXNews.com

Largest known crocodile likely ate early man

The largest known crocodile was big enough to swallow a human being and likely terrorized our ancestors two to four million years ago.




FOXNews.com

Samsung beats Apple, Nokia as world’s largest handset maker

Samsung Electronics became the world’s biggest mobile handset vendor for the first time ever in the first quarter of 2012, capturing a quarter of the global market and overtaking struggling Nokia, according to data released Friday by London-based research firm Strategy Analytics.




FOXNews.com

World’s Largest Digital Camera Project Passes Critical Milestone



An anonymous reader writes in with a link about the progress of one of the coolest astronomy projects around. “A 3.2 billion-pixel digital camera designed by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is now one step closer to reality. The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope camera, which will capture the widest, fastest and deepest view of the night sky ever observed, has received ‘Critical Decision 1′ approval by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to move into the next stage of the project. The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will survey the entire visible sky every week, creating an unprecedented public archive of data – about 6 million gigabytes per year, the equivalent of shooting roughly 800,000 images with a regular eight-megapixel digital camera every night, but of much higher quality and scientific value. Its deep and frequent cosmic vistas will help answer critical questions about the nature of dark energy and dark matter and aid studies of near-Earth asteroids, Kuiper belt objects, the structure of our galaxy and many other areas of astronomy and fundamental physics.”

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Slashdot

Chechnya claims world’s largest dinosaur eggs, met with skepticism

A university in Chechnya said Tuesday an unprecedented stash of giant fossilized dinosaur eggs was found in a remote mountainous area of the North Caucasus region, but the claim was met with skepticism.




FOXNews.com

Inhabitat’s Week in Green: autos galore, electric trees and the world’s largest rooftop farm

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.
Electric DeLorean

Flying cars and taxis of the future drove out of our imaginations and onto the show floor of the 2012 New York Auto Show this week as autophiles poured into the Jacob Javits Center from far and wide. Inhabitat editors left no hybrid or electric cars unturned as they scoped out gems like the Fisker Karma‘s lower-priced but equally-sexy cousin, the Fisker Atlantic, and Infiniti’s revolutionary LE electric car, which will use the world’s first wireless home charging system. We were also wowed by reveals of the Lincoln MKZ hybrid vehicle and a special guest appearance by the back-to-the-futuristic electric DeLorean (shown above).

Even though we kicked the week off with some pretty plausible April Fool’s Day stories, some of the actual events from the past few days proved that truth is often stranger than fiction. Case in point: this Indian man single-handedly planted a 1,360 acre forest (really makes you question what you’ve accomplished in your life, doesn’t it?) and a spooky unmanned Japanese ghost ship was recently spotted off the coast of Canada floating aimlessly in the sea. In other news, Harry the Hermit crab was picky about his abodes until he was presented with a custom-made LEGO shell, and the electric blue trees that sprouted up in Seattle weren’t stragglers from a Dr. Seuss book, but rather the work of an artist calling attention to the dangers of deforestation. On the other hand, some reforestation is about to take place in NYC, as Marty Markowitz and celebrity chef Mario Batali announced that the world’s largest rooftop farm will be coming to Brooklyn in 2013. And finally, it seems the media made April Fools of themselves last week when they jumped to the false conclusion that taxpayer money was lost after Solar Trust of America filed for bankruptcy.

The world of design presented us with some inspiring new developments this week as we delved deep into tiny terrarium worlds, ogled IKEA’s otherworldly new jellyfish lamp and witnessed an eco Easter egg sprout mini skyscrapers just in time for the holiday. More strides were also made in the race for cleaner energy as this young savant at the University of Delaware developed a self-sustaining solar reactor that could revolutionize clean energy as we know it and Bayer revealed a new seismic wallpaper that could actually keep walls from collapsing in an earthquake. Not to be outdone, scientists from Austria and Japan announced that they created micro-thin solar cells narrower than spider silk and Chinese researchers unlocked the secret of butterfly wings to make solar electricity more efficient. And, of course, no tech recap would be complete without an innovation from Google – the search giant just unveiled its new pair of “Project Glass” augmented reality glasses.

Inhabitat’s Week in Green: autos galore, electric trees and the world’s largest rooftop farm originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 08 Apr 2012 20:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Flashback the largest Mac malware threat yet, experts say

Congratulations, Apple. The Mac is now popular enough to attract major attention from the bad guys.
[Read more]
CNET News

World’s largest telescope underway, scientists definitely observe big bang

Image

Once again astronomers are observing formative explosions, but this time a little bit closer to home. Three million cubic feet of planet earth is being blasted from the Chilean Andes as work on what will be the world’s largest telescope begins. The location is the Carnegie Institution’s Las Campanas Observatory, and the project is a collaboration between South Korean, Australian and American institutions to create the Giant Magellan Telescope. The first mirror segment is just being completed, and is so precise it, matches its optical prescription to within a millionth of an inch. The project will cost $ 700 million once complete, small change we say for a chance to glimpse light from the edge of the Universe.

World’s largest telescope underway, scientists definitely observe big bang originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 24 Mar 2012 17:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

NATO Awards Largest Cyber-Security Contract To Date



Sara Chan writes “NATO has awarded its largest cyber-security contract to date, in a move that is expected to prompt member states to augment their own cyber-security capabilities. The contract, for €58 million ($ 76 million), is to design and implement NATO’s Computer Incident Response Capability. NCIRC will enable NATO to monitor computer networks from its headquarters in Brussels and detect and respond to cyber threats and vulnerabilities at about 50 NATO sites in 28 countries. The project is intended to meet the requirements of a declaration by NATO Head of States at the Lisbon Summit, in November 2010, which called for the achievement of NCIRC Full Operational Capability by end of 2012.”

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Slashdot

World’s largest telescope to detect threats from outer space

If there are space invaders out there, it won’t be long before they can no longer stage a sneak attack, thanks to a project to build the most sensitive radio telescope ever — one that’s the size of a continent.




FOXNews.com

Google Public DNS prevails as the world’s largest service

With more than 70 billion DNS requests each day, the search engine’s public DNS service is now the most used on earth.
CNET News

World’s Largest Virtual Optical Telescope Created



erice writes “Astronomers in Chile linked four telescopes together to form a single virtual mirror 130 meters in diameter. Previous efforts had linked two telescopes but this is the first time that all four had been linked. ‘The process that links separate telescopes together is known as interferometry. In this mode, the VLT becomes the biggest ground-based optical telescope on earth. Besides creating a gigantic virtual mirror, interferometry also greatly improves the telescope’s spatial resolution and zooming capabilities.’”

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Slashdot

The Gang Behind the World’s Largest Spam Botnet



tsu doh nimh writes “A Wikileaks-style war of attrition between two competing rogue Internet pharmacy gangs has exposed some of the biggest spammers on the planet. Brian Krebs uncovers fascinating information about a hacker named ‘GeRa’ who is supposedly behind the Grum botnet, which is currently sending about one out of every three spam emails worldwide. The story also points to several possible real-identities behind the Internet’s largest spam machine.”

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Slashdot

Hackers attack Brazil’s largest private bank, shut down online banking

A group of Internet hackers said Tuesday it took down the website of Brazil’s second largest private sector bank, one day after it did the same with the country’s largest private bank.




FOXNews.com

Symantec: Android Market having its largest malware infection ever

Virus detection and security group Symantec has today reported that a bug by the name of Android.Counterclank has infected between 1 million and 5 million Android users as of this afternoon. This bit of software sits on a handful of easily downloadable applications available on the Android Market as of late today and each has [...]
SlashGear