Slashdot's Journal
[Most Recent Entries]
[Calendar View]
[Friends View]
Monday, December 30th, 2013
| Time |
Event |
| 2:02a |
| | 5:41a |
Citizen Science: Who Makes the Rules? http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/IVqI1awqz0U/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/35523639/sc/32/l/0Lscience0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C0A5432390Ccitizen0Escience0Ewho0Emakes0Ethe0Erules0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm New submitter UnderCoverPenguin writes "At MakeZine, David Lang talks about the some of the legal issues around a planned, amateur science 'expedition,' as well as some other amateur science projects. In the not too distant past, most science was amateur. Over the past 20 or so years, society has been making it harder for amateurs to do real science, despite the technical costs falling. With the recent upswing of the 'maker movement,' amateur science has seen an increase as well, but is running into an assortment of legal issues. (An exception is astronomy, where amateurs continue to play important roles. Of course, astronomy doesn't involve chemicals or other (currently) 'scary stuff.') Can amateur science make a come-back? Or are the legal obsicles too entrenched?" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 5:41a |
Citizen Science: Who Makes the Rules? http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/IVqI1awqz0U/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/35523639/sc/32/l/0Lscience0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C0A5432390Ccitizen0Escience0Ewho0Emakes0Ethe0Erules0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm New submitter UnderCoverPenguin writes "At MakeZine, David Lang talks about the some of the legal issues around a planned, amateur science 'expedition,' as well as some other amateur science projects. In the not too distant past, most science was amateur. Over the past 20 or so years, society has been making it harder for amateurs to do real science, despite the technical costs falling. With the recent upswing of the 'maker movement,' amateur science has seen an increase as well, but is running into an assortment of legal issues. (An exception is astronomy, where amateurs continue to play important roles. Of course, astronomy doesn't involve chemicals or other (currently) 'scary stuff.') Can amateur science make a come-back? Or are the legal obstacles too entrenched?" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 8:22a |
| | 11:10a |
| | 1:09p |
Is a Super-Sized iPad the Future of Education? http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/Qdtlly_aYas/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/355611a2/sc/4/l/0Lnews0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C290C23142190Cis0Ea0Esuper0Esized0Eipad0Ethe0Efuture0Eof0Eeducation0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm theodp writes "Perhaps people are reading too much into Apple CEO Tim Cook's 'Big Plans' for 2014, but hopes are high that the New Year will bring a biggie-sized iPad. Over at Forbes, Anthony Wing Kosner asks, Will The Large Screen iPad Pro Be Apple's First In A Line Of Desktop Touch Devices?. 'Rumors of a large [12.9"] iPad are many and constant,' notes ComputerWorld's Mike Elgan, 'but they make sense only if the tablet is a desktop for schools.' Elgan adds, 'Lots of schools are buying iPads for kids to use. But iPads don't make a lot of sense for education. For starters, their screens are too small for the kinds of interactive textbooks and apps that Apple wants the education market to create. They're also too small for collaborative work. iPads run mobile browsers, rather than full browsers, so kids can't use the full range of HTML5 sites.' Saying that 'Microsoft has fumbled the [post-PC] transition badly,' Elgan argues that 'the battle for the future of education is likely to be between whatever Google turns the Chromebook into against whatever Apple turns the iPad into.'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 1:51p |
The Rise of Hoax News http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/4Z9NG1HK60U/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/35564c93/sc/38/l/0Lnews0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C130A220A0Cthe0Erise0Eof0Ehoax0Enews0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Reporter Luke O'Neil writes that 2013 was journalism's year of bungles: the New Jersey waitress who received a homophobic comment on the receipt from a party she had served; Samsung paying Apple $1 billion in nickels; former NSA chief Michael Hayden's assassination; #CutForBieber; Nelson Mandela's death pic; that eagle snatching a child off the ground on YouTube; Jimmy Kimmel's 'twerk fail' video; and Sarah Palin taking a job with Al-Jazeera America (an obviously satirical story that even suckered in The Washington Post). All these stories had one thing in common: They seemed too tidily packaged, too neat, 'too good to check,' as they used to say, to actually be true. 'Any number of reporters or editors at any of the hundreds of sites that posted these Platonic ideals of shareability could've told you that they smelled, but in the ongoing decimation of the publishing industry, fact-checking has been outsourced to the readers,' writes O'Neil. 'This is not a glitch in the system. It is the system. Readers are gullible, the media is feckless, garbage is circulated around, and everyone goes to bed happy and fed.' O'Neil says that the stories he's written this year that took the least amount of time and effort usually did the most traffic while his more in-depth, reported pieces didn't stand a chance against riffs on things predestined to go viral. That's the secret that Upworthy, BuzzFeed, MailOnline, Viral Nova, and their dozens of knockoffs have figured out: You don't need to write anymore—just write a good headline and point. 'As Big Viral gets bigger, traditional media organizations are scrambling to keep pace,' concludes O'Neil. 'We the media have betrayed your trust, and the general public has taken our self-sanctioned lowering of standards as tacit permission to lower their own.'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 2:36p |
Brain Function "Boosted For Days After Reading a Novel" http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/6_TuSGgtsTQ/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3556a04f/sc/14/l/0Lscience0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C1362130Cbrain0Efunction0Eboosted0Efor0Edays0Eafter0Ereading0Ea0Enovel0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm cold fjord writes "The Independent reports, 'Being pulled into the world of a gripping novel can trigger actual, measurable changes in the brain that linger for at least five days after reading ... The new research, carried out at Emory University ... found that reading a good book may cause heightened connectivity in the brain and neurological changes that persist in a similar way to muscle memory. The changes were registered in the left temporal cortex, an area of the brain associated with receptivity for language, as well as the primary sensory motor region of the brain. Neurons of this region have been associated with tricking the mind into thinking it is doing something it is not, a phenomenon known as grounded cognition — for example, just thinking about running, can activate the neurons associated with the physical act of running. "The neural changes that we found associated with physical sensation and movement systems suggest that reading a novel can transport you into the body of the protagonist," said neuroscientist Professor Gregory Berns, lead author of the study. "We already knew that good stories can put you in someone else's shoes in a figurative sense. Now we're seeing that something may also be happening biologically."'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 3:20p |
| | 3:20p |
| | 4:05p |
| | 4:52p |
Former CIA/NSA Head: NSA Is "Infinitely" Weaker As a Result of Snowden's Leaks http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/yMCdrJUW8Ew/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/35579e52/sc/1/l/0Lyro0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C13352350Cformer0Eciansa0Ehead0Ensa0Eis0Einfinitely0Eweaker0Eas0Ea0Eresult0Eof0Esnowdens0Eleaks0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm An anonymous reader writes "The Huffington Post reports, 'Michael Hayden, former director of the National Security Agency, said Sunday that he used to describe leaker Edward Snowden as a "defector," ... "I think there's an English word that describes selling American secrets to another government, and I do think it's treason," Hayden said ... Some members of Congress have also ... accused him of an act of treason. Hayden said his view of Snowden has grown harsher in recent weeks after reports that Snowden is seeking asylum in Germany and Brazil in exchange for assisting their investigations into NSA programs. Hayden said the NSA is "infinitely" weaker as a result of Snowden's leaks. "This is the most serious hemorrhaging of American secrets in the history of American espionage," he said. "What Snowden is revealing ... is the plumbing," he added later. "He's revealing how we acquire this information. It will take years, if not decades, for us to return to the position that we had prior to his disclosures."' — More in the Face the Nation video and transcript, including discussion of the recent legal decisions, and segments with whistleblower Thomas Drake, Snowden legal adviser Jesselyn Radack, and Washington Post reporter Barton Gellman who recently interviewed Snowden." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 5:13p |
| | 5:37p |
| | 6:20p |
| | 7:03p |
| | 7:48p |
| | 8:08p |
| | 8:35p |
| | 9:17p |
| | 10:00p |
Are Tablets Replacing Notebook Computers? (Video) http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/6bZriYXH5yM/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/355939fd/sc/15/l/0Ltech0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C20A152270Care0Etablets0Ereplacing0Enotebook0Ecomputers0Evideo0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Maybe, maybe not. It depends on the application and the user. We're seeing tablets advertised like crazy these days, and a trip to any busy coffee shop with free wi-fi will make it obvious that while there may not be as many tablets in use as notebooks, you see a lot more of them than you did five years ago, when it seemed like Bill Gates was the only person who had one, which he tried to show off as often as he could. In 2010, Apple debuted the iPad, and before long tablets were all over the place. So, on behalf of people we know -- and there are more than a few -- who either sneer at tablet computers or aren't sure they need one, we turned to David Needle, editor of TabTimes.com, for advice on what kind of tablet to buy -- assuming we need to buy one at all. Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 10:44p |
| | 11:25p |
US Requirement For Software Dev Certification Raises Questions http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/RWDlh2kIVR4/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3559be76/sc/21/l/0Lnews0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C30A0C22192430Cus0Erequirement0Efor0Esoftware0Edev0Ecertification0Eraises0Equestions0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm dcblogs writes "U.S. government contracts often require bidders to have achieved some level of Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI). CMMI arose some 25 years ago via the backing of the Department of Defense and the Software Engineering Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. It operated as a federally funded research and development center until a year ago, when CMMI's product responsibility was shifted to a private, profit-making LLC, the CMMI Institute. The Institute is now owned by Carnegie Mellon. Given that the CMMI Institute is now a self-supporting firm, any requirement that companies be certified by it — and spend the money needed to do so — raises a natural question. 'Why is the government mandating that you support a for-profit company?' said Henry Friedman, the CEO of IR Technologies, a company that develops logistics defense related software and uses CMMI. The value of a certification is subject to debate. To what extent does a CMMI certification determine a successful project outcome? CGI Federal, the lead contractor at Healthcare.gov, is a veritable black belt in software development. In 2012, it achieved the highest possible Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) level for development certification, only the 10th company in the U.S. to do so." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       |
|