Tag Archives: world

World War Z ‘Mega Ticket’ trial brings early screenings, bonuses for $50

World War Z 'Mega Ticket' trial brings early screenings, bonuses for $  50 tomorrow

Now that viewers can get excellent movie theater experiences at homes, studios and theaters are trying different strategies to keep bringing them in. Tomorrow night, Paramount will try a new tactic: offering buyers of its $ 50 “Mega Ticket” an early viewing of World War Z in 3D, plus a pair of collectible 3D glasses, a movie poster, an HD digital copy of the movie when it’s available on Blu-ray, and a small (seriously?) popcorn. We’re not sure if making it more expensive to go to the movies is the right way to go, but maybe it’s worth it for those who are really hyped about the film. The viewing is only available at a few Regal Theaters, listed after the break if if you’re interested in what’s listed as $ 75 worth of value.

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Source: World War Z Movie (Twitter), Fandango

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Lost world locked in stone at Fossil Lake

Over thousands of years, dead animals rained down into the muck deep below the surface of long-gone Fossil Lake.


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MIT President Tells Grads To ‘Hack the World’

theodp writes “On Friday, MIT President L. Rafael Reif exhorted grads to ‘hack the world until you make the world a little more like MIT’. A rather ironic choice of words, since ‘hack the world’ is precisely what others said Aaron Swartz was trying to do in his fateful run-in with MIT. President Reif presumably received an ‘Incomplete’ this semester for the promised time-is-of-the-essence review of MIT’s involvement in the events that preceded Swartz’s suicide last January. By the way, it wasn’t so long ago that 2013 commencement speaker Drew Houston and Aaron Swartz were both welcome speakers at MIT.”

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The World as Free-Fire Zone

How drones made it easy for Americans to kill a particular person anywhere on the planet.

Editor’s Note: This story relies upon anonymous sources who could not have spoken on the record without prosecution or other serious repercussions. The author revealed their identities to MIT Technology Review.

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This is the Modem World: So what’s next?

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World

I just spent a week in Japan, where I attended my first Japanese wedding in Tokyo. It was lovely, different and the same all at once. I’ve been coming here almost annually since 1998, and while most things have remained the same, I’ve watched Japan’s pace of consumer technology innovation take a seeming nosedive in recent years. I have no solid evidence to prove this — just some observations.

When I first visited Tokyo in 1998, Japanese mobile phones were years ahead of their American and European equivalents. Japanese mobiles were lightweight, had high-resolution — for the time — color screens, allowed internet access and some even had video cameras that supported real-time video chat.

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Hackers Spawn Web Supercomputer On Way To Chess World Record

New submitter DeathGrippe sends in an article from Wired about a new take on distributed computing efforts like SETI@Home. From Wired: “By inserting a bit of JavaScript into a webpage, Pethiyagoda says, a site owner could distribute a problem amongst all the site’s visitors. Visitors’ computers or phones would be running calculations in the background while they read a page. With enough visitors, he says, a site could farm out enough small calculations to solve some difficult problems. … With this year’s run on the value of Bitcoins — the popular digital currency — security expert Mikko Hyppönen thinks that criminals might soon start experimenting with this type of distributed computing too. He believes that crooks could infect websites with JavaScript code that would turn visitors into unsuspecting Bitcoin miners. As long as you’re visiting the website, you’re mining coins for someone else.”

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Data Won the U.S. Election. Now Can It Save the World?

Data scientist Rayid Ghani helped persuade voters to reëlect President Obama. Now he’s using big data to create a groundswell of social good.

As chief scientist for President Obama’s reëlection effort, Rayid Ghani helped revolutionize the use of data in politics. During the final 18 months of the campaign, he joined a sprawling team of data and software experts who sifted, collated, and combined dozens of pieces of information on each registered U.S. voter to discover patterns that let them target fund-raising appeals and ads.







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As Software Trumps Hardware In The World Of Payments, VeriFone Partners With CardSpring For Card-Linked Services

CardSpringThe world of payments is being turned over by the likes of Square, PayPal, Stripe and others, which are tackling the idea of payments based on hardware terminals, and new services that focus on innovations in smartphones and tablets with functionality coming by way of software iterations. Not to be outdone, incumbents like point-of-sale device maker VeriFone are also cutting their own deals to keep up in the game. The latest is a deal with CardSpring, a payments startup founded by former Netscape engineers, which will allow thousands of merchants to enable loyalty programs, point-of-sale discounts, and more using customers’ existing debit and credit cards.

TechCrunch

Data Won the Election. Now Can It Save the World?

Data scientist Rayid Ghani helped persuade voters to reëlect President Obama. Now he’s using big data to create a groundswell of social good.

As chief scientist for President Obama’s reëlection effort, Rayid Ghani helped revolutionize the use of data in politics. During the final 18 months of the campaign, he joined a sprawling team of data and software experts who sifted, collated, and combined dozens of pieces of information on each registered U.S. voter to discover patterns that let them target fund-raising appeals and ads.







New on MIT Technology Review

Multiple Studies Show Used Electronics Exports To Third World Mostly Good

retroworks writes “Bloomberg News reporter Adam Minter writes in today’s Opinion section that several studies show that there’s nothing really remarkable or scandalous about exports of used equipment to developing nations. ‘Some is recycled; some is repaired and refurbished for reuse; and some is thrown into landfills or incinerators. Almost none of it, however, is “dumped” overseas.’ Minter begins with the most recent study (PDF), released by the U.S. International Trade Commission in March 2013. Several other studies from Peru, Nigeria, Ghana and China show there was never an incentive for overseas buyers to pay money to import junk, and that most of the junk filmed by activists in the dumps in those nations was used for years (Nigeria has had TV since the 1970s). ‘A 2011 study by the United Nations Environment Program determined that only 9 percent of the used electronics imported by Nigeria — a country that is regularly depicted as a dumping ground for foreign e-waste — didn’t work or were unrepairable, and thus bound for a recycler or a dump. The other 91 percent were reusable and bound for consumers who couldn’t afford new products.’ The one data source Bloomberg cannot find is a data point for the widely reported ‘statistic’ that 80-90% of used electronics imported by Africans are burned or dumped. In the comment section, two advocates for legislation banning the exports object to the survey methodology of one of the studies. But the source of the original statistic, reported by Greenpeace and Basel Action Network in their fundraising campaigns, remains a mystery.”

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Are we ready for a mobile-first world?

Judging from the number of people poring over their smartphones on the sidewalk, in their cars and in public places, mobile seems to have stolen our attention away from the wired Internet and traditional TV.
Computerworld News

Second Life Founder’s New Virtual World Uses Body Tracking Hardware

Hardware that tracks your head, eyes and hands will make the follow up to Second Life very different to the pioneering virtual world.

The founder of once-popular virtual world Second Life, Philip Rosedale, is working on a new 3D digital world that looks like it will be operated using gestures and body-tracking hardware. Rosedale declined to talk about his new company, called High Fidelity, just yet. But videos and other material posted online by the company suggest it is working on an impressively immersive virtual reality experience where you control an avatar using head and hand movements.







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Gingrich to world: Rename the cell phone

Famed politician Newt Gingrich believes that the word “cell phone” is inaccurate. He wants you to help him find a better name. Quickly. [Read more]

    




CNET News

World grapples with rise in cyber crime

International law enforcement agencies say the recent $ 45 million dollar ATM heist is just one of many scams they’re fighting in an unprecedented wave of sophisticated cyberattacks.


FOX News

World of Warcraft Loses 1.3 Million Players in First Quarter of 2013

hypnosec writes “World of Warcarft, the gaming industry’s most popular franchise and one of Blizzard’s cash cows, is bleeding subscribers with 1.3 million defecting from the game in the first quarter of 2013 alone. Blizzard revealed a subscriber decline of over 14%, the total now standing at 8.3 million in their earnings call press release (PDF).”

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Real World Stats Show Chromebooks Are Struggling

recoiledsnake writes “The first real world stats for Chromebooks show that they’re struggling to have any traction in the marketplace. In its first week of monitoring worldwide usage of Google’s Chrome OS, NetMarketShare reported that the percentage of web traffic from Chromebooks was roughly 2/100 of 1 percent, a figure too small to earn a place on its reports. The first Chromebooks went on sale in June 2011, nearly two years ago, with Acer reportedly selling fewer than 5000 units in the first six months and Samsung selling even fewer. In the past three years, Chromebook sales have been worse than even three months worth of WindowsRT sales. Perhaps users are heeding Stallman’s warning on Chromebooks. We previously discussed reports of Chromebook topping Amazon sales, selling to 2000 schools and wondered whether QuickOffice on ChromeOS can topple Microsoft Office.” I find ChromeOS good in some contexts (any place that a browser and a thin layer of Linux is all you need), but the limitations are frustrating — especially on hardware that can run a conventional Linux as well as Google’s specialized one. We’ll watch for developments in the Google hardware world at next week’s I/O conference.

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Glimpses of a World Revealed by Cell-Phone Data

An examination of simple cell-phone records reveals maps of poverty levels, ethnic divides, and the movements of sports fans.

Around the world, some mobile carriers have been releasing anonymized records of cell-phone data to researchers.







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Activision says World of Warcraft subscriber numbers dropping

Activision has published the financial results of its first quarter, which showed a rise in net income from $ 384 million to $ 456 million. All is not looking up, however, with the company also reporting that World of Warcraft subscribers are down, and as a result it has adjusted its expectations for the rest of the

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Amazon Appstore launches in China, continues its world tour

Amazon Appstore launches in China, continues its world tour

Amazon let its world domination plans be known last month when it asked developers to start submitting apps to line its virtual displays in more countries. While China was notably absent from immediate expansion plans, Amazon launched its Appstore there during the weekend, opening the doors to one of the biggest mobile device markets. As Reuters notes, the Google Play store is available in China, but only serves up free material, whereas Amazon’s Appstore has a selection of both free and paid software available for users. While the company launched its e-book store and e-reader apps in China last December, devices are still waiting for their ticket over. Now, with the release of the Appstore, we suspect it’s only a matter of time before the Kindle and Fire ranges make fashionably late appearances.

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Via: Reuters

Source: Amazon

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Twitter updates iOS and Android apps, lets users see what’s trending around the world

Image

Twitter’s developers are a busy bunch, (allegedly) working on an app for Glass and updating code for Macs in the last week. Today, they released yet another round of new software for iOS and Android, bringing some new functionality along with the requisite bug fixes and unnamed “improvements.” After updating, both sets of users will be able to see trends from around the world, as opposed to just those happening in the immediate area.

Additionally, iOS users can now invite friends to join Twitter from within the app — in case anyone still knows an unfortunate soul who’s not already pecking out 140-character missives — and both author and retweeter names will be included in replies to RT’s. Meanwhile, Android users also received easier access to swap between accounts and change settings using the menu button. If you haven’t grabbed the update already, well, you know the drill, your download awaits.

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Via: Phonescoop

Source: App Store, Google Play

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Filmmaking at the atomic level? IBM nets Guinness world record

With ‘A boy and his atom,” Big Blue has made what may be the first movie explicitly starring atoms. [Read more]

    




CNET News

CERN celebrates the Web and how it changed the world

Twenty years ago today, CERN released World Wide Web technology — all royalty free.
Computerworld News

Poutsch Is An Opinion-Gathering Platform For Tracking What The World Thinks

proushctschHere’s a startup hoping to fill the gap left by the demise of Facebook Questions: French-Belgian startup Poutsch, now based in New York and exhibiting here at TechCrunch Disrupt NY’s Startup Alley, has built a platform for tracking opinion data by crowdsourcing market research, which is incentivised through a free-to-use-and-browse social opinion network.
TechCrunch

Teaching at the End of the World

The professor who tapped into a ­doomsday scenario to teach advanced space systems engineering

Paul Sandorff ’39 did not look like a harbinger of doom. A wiry Lockheed Martin employee with short-cropped hair and an affinity for meteoroids, he had been teaching at the Institute for nearly 15 years in February 1967, when he asked his students to prevent the world from being destroyed on June 14, 1968.







New on MIT Technology Review

Two Changes To Quirky Could Change The World

“Quirky.com has generated a lot of buzz,” writes frequent contributor Bennett Haselton, “but it’s hard to see how it could ever be more than a novelty unless they change two key features of their process. Fortunately, they already have all the infrastructure in place for bringing inventions to fruition, so that with these two changes, Quirky really could deliver on their early promise to change the way products get invented.” Read on for Bennett’s thoughts — which seem more sensible than quirky.

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AMD Radeon HD 7990 review roundup: fast, quiet but no world beater

Now that the veil has been lifted from the AMD Radeon HD 7990, it’s time for the usual enthusiast review sites to reveal their thoughts — and benchmarks — on the latest graphics card from Sunnyvale. As we’ve mentioned, the 7990 has effectively two 7970 GPUs on board, promising over 8 TFLOPS of power and the chops to handle full 4K resolution under maximum settings. However, it’s a pricey little thing at around $ 1,000, which doesn’t set it too far away from the competition and its unique cooling system means an airy case is a must. What do our sample of reviewers think? Find out in our roundup after the break.

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This is the Modem World: Nothing is new. It’s been done before.

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World Nothing is new It's been done before

It’s funny how things come back around. When I was growing up in the ’80s, music was looking back at the ’50s and ’60s and re-creating it into some of the best bands the world has seen. Paul Weller wouldn’t have become the songwriter he is had he not grown up on the Beatles. Likewise, Paul McCartney wouldn’t have become the genius that he is had he not been raised on Little Richard. And now, bands are looking back at the ’80s and re-doing that explosive era — with both good and bad results that I will not go into here lest I make new enemies.

Culture is cyclical, and we’re beginning to see that technology is bound to follow that same rinse-and-repeat formula.

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The UN’s World Book Day Reminds Us That The Internet Hasn’t Destroyed Everything… Yet

photoToday marks the anniversary of the deaths of Cervantes, Shakespeare and Garcilaso de la Vega and the birthdays of Vladimir Nabokov, Maurice Druon, and Josep Pla. This date, as chosen by the UN, celebrates the book and all it has wrought and, perhaps more important, the place of the book as artifact and sextant in our lives.

TechCrunch

Marc Andreessen: The World Would Be Much Better If We Had 50 More Silicon Valleys

DSC_0018Marc Andreessen, co-founder and general partner of Andreessen Horowitz, delivered a keynote speech at the she++ conference today, sharing what technology is exciting him right now, what he thinks about current startup culture, and how Sheryl Sandberg’s book, Lean In, affected his view of Silicon Valley.

“I like to tell people that I’m beta testing the new Google Contact Lenses,” he joked.
TechCrunch

Arms dealers of the world show off their wares at LAAD 2013

Beautiful models mingled with the most dangerous weapons in the world at the LAAD 2013 defense and security show, held April 9 – 12 in Rio de Janeiro, where military contractors from Russia, the Middle East, Germany, America and all around the world showed off their wares.


FOX News

Schmidt predicts entire world online by 2020. Is he right?

Google’s executive chairman has made a bold prediction about the spread of the Internet. Do you think that prediction will come true? [Read more]

    




CNET News

This is the Modem World: When tech can’t save us from road rage

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World When tech can't save us from road rage

So I’m driving home the other night after a decent day of work, looking forward to a little run, some dinner and maybe a movie. Taking my normal north-south route along Crescent Heights, I listen to Tame Impala to calm the nerves and enter another mental state.

I’m at one of those intersections in which two lanes become one because of a parked car in the right lane ahead. I, being in the right lane, gun it a bit at the start in order to get some distance from the guy on my left.

He’s having none of this, apparently.

Turns out my car is faster, though, and I edge him out. I see him wave his arms frantically, shaking them and then applauding.

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Facebook’s Real “Home” May be the Developing World

The new Facebook-centric Android app for smartphones builds on other efforts to court mobile users internationally.

Facebook Home, a new collection of apps that makes the social network dominate Android phones, might have limited appeal to users already besieged with smartphone options—but it could fit nicely into Facebook’s efforts overseas, where the focus is on capturing first-time users.







New on MIT Technology Review

Simple.TV Raises $5.7M From New World Ventures To Take Its DVR For Cord Cutters Mainstream

simpletvWhen it comes to streaming boxes, Simple.TV is a bit of an outlier, as it performs all the usual functions as a DVR, but it can then stream video that it captures to other devices. Anyway, what started out as a Kickstarter campaign has now become venture-backed, as the Simple.TV team has raised $ 5.7 million to make its funky little standalone DVR a mainstream device.
TechCrunch

Project stores 3D images of world historic sites in limestone mine

The nonprofit organization CyArk creates 3D digital images of the world’s historic sites, but stores them on disk drives dropped each week into a bank security box. As the data is expected to grow to two petabytes over the next five years, the group chose a new archival strategy that includes stashing tape drives in a limestone mine storage facility owned by Iron Mountain.
Computerworld News

It’s World Backup Day: no time like the present to protect the past

It's World Backup Day no time like the present to protect the past

There are two kinds of computer owners: those that backup their data, and those who will backup after they lose something irreplaceable. It’s that last group for whom World Backup Day exists, and the special occasion has returned for a third year to make sure we all wind up in that first, very responsible camp. Thankfully, it’s easier than ever to have at least some kind of safety net. Along with ridiculously high-capacity external hard drives, both Mac and Windows users have simple built-in software to make backup a set-it-and-forget-it affair. No money or room for an extra drive on the desk? No problem: cloud storage is ubiquitous, and even includes unlimited options. Mobile users have it a little easier with a myriad of Apple, Google and Microsoft cloud services, although there’s third-party options in that space, too. In short, you’ve got few excuses to skimp out when it comes to safeguards, and enough choices to seriously consider using two or more — which might be wise in this dangerous era of meteorite showers and brick-tossing robots.

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Source: World Backup Day

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Treat your Mac to World Backup Day

Celebrate this year’s World Backup Day by ensuring that your Mac and other devices you use are properly backed up. [Read more]


CNET News

Alt-week 3.23.13: Universal snapshots, cosmic world records and print your ride

Alt-week peels back the covers on some of the more curious sci-tech stories from the last seven days.

Alt-week 3.23.13: universal snapshots, cosmic world records and print your ride

If you are a fan of absolutes, then you are in the right place. We have a first, a fastest and a biggest in this week’s round-up of all things sci-tech. We’ll try to add one more to that — a quickest. The quickest intro for this feature ever. Did we manage it? This is alt-week.

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A Game of Thrones Android app guides you through the world of Westeros and beyond

Game of Thrones Android app guides you through the televised world of Westeros and beyond

Perhaps the second screen experience for HBO megahit show A Game of Thrones provided through Xbox 360′s SmartGlass functionality and HBO Go’s iPad app isn’t enough for you? And maybe you want a bit more of a George R. R. Martin touch to your Game of Thrones book companions? This week’s release of “A Game of Ice and Fire” for Android — the previously iOS-only Game of Thrones app that acts as an “official guide” to the series and its myriad characters / relationships / political struggles / etc. — is clearly for you. And yes, it goes beyond what just the show covers; it can even be customized for spoilers based around how far you are.

The initial cost to download is nothing and comes with several characters as well as a companion for the first book, but for books two through five you’ll need to grab the upgrades: $ 1 apiece, or $ 5 for those four plus an additional “InfoPack” which would otherwise cost $ 2 by itself. Those $ 2 “InfoPacks” include, “new characters and places and additional data and background info” (whatever that means), and more are expected in the future. The third season of A Game of Thrones kicks off on March 31st, and wouldn’t you know it, this app is perfectly timed to accompany it. That’s what we call synergy. Head to the Google Play link in the source link and grab it for free, or risk *paying the iron price.

*Thankfully, in this case, that price is just potentially looking ignorant about A Game of Thrones. So … not that big of a thing, actually.

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Via: Mashable

Source: Google Play

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March Madness Gets A Full Court Press From The Tech World, As Pickmoto, IFTTT, & More Cater To Hoop Lovers Online

MFF_2013_FINAL_LOGOAs you’ve no doubt heard by now, March Madness is upon us, with the NCAA tournament officially kicking off tomorrow. Yes, March Madness brings April gladness, as the saying goes. In fact, difficult as it may be to fathom, but the NCAA men’s basketball tournament is turning 75-years-young in 2013.

TechCrunch

Smartphones Are Eating the World

Smartphones have created a bridge between two previously separate industries—wireless networks and personal computing. For Internet firms and device makers, this means access to the world’s largest network of people. As can be seen at right, the wireless telephone business is large compared to personal computing. In 2012, the world’s mobile operators did $ 1.2 trillion in business and served around 3.2 billion people, versus perhaps 1.7 billion people who used PCs to access the Internet. By comparison, the combined revenue of Microsoft, Google, Intel, Apple, and the entire global PC industry was $ 590 billion. Online advertising, the main driver of the consumer Internet, generated only $ 89 billion in revenue.







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In the Developing World, MOOCs Start to Get Real

Putting free U.S. college courses online is only the first step to filling higher education needs around the world.

As online education platforms like Coursera, edX, and Udacity burst onto the scene over the past year, backers have talked up their potential to democratize higher education in the countries that have had the least access (see “The Most Important Education Technology in 200 Years”). These ambitions are now moving closer to reality, as more people begin to experiment with their setup, although significant challenges remain. 







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StudentFreelance Pulls Students Away From Boring Studying And Drinking, Sticks Them Into The Real World

Screen Shot 2013-03-14 at 12.37.57 PMIt’s been a long time since I’ve been a student – we still carried “books” to school and would often enter computer “clusters” where we would do “homework” on “PCs” running “Windows NT” – but I do remember the rush of being trusted with real-world projects by folks who looked at me as a cheap way to get a little work done. That’s what StudentFreelance.com is all about: it lets companies hire students to do work without the rigamarole of Craigslist or a traditional HR route.

TechCrunch

Can We Really Run the World on 100% Renewables?

Some studies suggest we can easily drop nuclear and fossil fuels, but they raise serious questions.

Every once in a while someone will publish a roadmap for running the world (or a state) on 100% renewable energy by some date, say 2030 or 2050. The latest considers what it would take to run New York State with sources such as wind and solar. The resulting headlines look great, and a lot of people walk away with the general impression that, if we wanted to, we could easily drop fossil fuels and nuclear power.







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Nuclear Arms Cuts, Supported By 56% of Americans, Would Make the World Safer

Lasrick writes “Kingston Reif of the Nukes of Hazard blog writes about nuclear arms reductions are back in the news, thanks to President Obama’s State of the Union address and now also a Gallup poll that shows 56% of Americans support U.S.-Russian reductions. From the Article: ‘A recent report by the Center for Public Integrity revealed that senior Obama administration officials believe the United States can reduce its arsenal of deployed strategic warheads to between 1,000 and 1,100 without harming national security. Those numbers would put the total below levels called for by New START…’ Congressional Republicans of course are against those cuts; Reif lays out why the cuts would make the U.S. and the world safer.” Do we even need a thousand nuclear warheads?

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Drupal’s Creator Aims For World Domination

angry tapir writes “Open-source content management system Drupal has come a long way since it was initially released in 2001. Drupal now runs 2% of the world’s websites — but Drupal’s creator Dries Buytaert thinks that this could easily grow to 10%. I caught up with Dries to talk about Drupal’s evolution from a pure CMS to a Web platform, cracking the enterprise market, and the upcoming release of Drupal 8, which features significant architectural changes — incorporating elements of the Symfony2 Web framework to replace Drupal’s aging architecture.”

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Rapyuta helps robots understand the human world

European scientists have just launched Raptuya, an online database of information for robots, that helps robots cope in the world of humans. The Raptuya database is part of the European RoboEarth Project, a “World Wide Web for robots”. The project is designed so that robots can download information from the internet to learn about their

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SlashGear

Bird poop and Big Screens: Attempting a multiplayer world record

Bird poop and big screens Attempting a multiplayer world record

There’s no category in the Guinness World Records for the most players in a single-screen multiplayer game. However, that’s likely to change soon thanks to a group of New York University graduate students who created SPLAT, a multiplayer game designed for the 120-foot video wall installed in the lobby of the IAC building on the west side of Manhattan. The screen is a Prysm laser phosphor display and sports a whopping resolution of 11,520 x 1,080 pixels. The game was debuted at a packed showcase event last Friday night, along with the work of other students from an NYU Interactive Telecommunications Program class appropriately called Big Screens.

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Canon Shows the Most Sensitive Camera Sensor In the World

An anonymous reader writes “Canon announced today that it successfully developed a super high-sensitivity full-frame CMOS sensor developed exclusively for video recording. The new Full HD sensor can capture light no other comparable sensor can see and it uses pixels 7.5 larger than the best commercial professional cameras in existence today.” There doesn’t seem to be a gallery of images, but the video demo (direct link to an mpeg4) makes it seem pretty sensitive.

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Apple vs. the world: In a battle of inches, can iPhone compete?

In smartphone land, everyone seems to agree: Bigger is better. Everyone, that is, except Apple.


FOX News