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| Wednesday, January 1st, 2014 | | 1:12 pm |
| | 10:16 am |
| | 7:14 am |
Oil Train Explosion Triggers Evacuation In North Dakota http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/EKqTR7Zkm10/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/35628e65/sc/3/l/0Lnews0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C140C0A10C0A10C0A2172260Coil0Etrain0Eexplosion0Etriggers0Eevacuation0Ein0Enorth0Edakota0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "The LA Times reports that the small town of Casselton, North Dakota dodged a bullet after being partially evacuated when a train carrying crude oil collided with another train, setting off a large fire and explosions. Officials received a report at 2:12 p.m. of a train derailing about a mile west of Casselton, a city of 2,432 people about 20 miles west of Fargo. At some point, another train collided with the derailed train, belonging to the BNSF Railway, carrying more than 100 cars loaded with crude oil. The explosions and fire erupted after cars from a grain train struck some of the oil tank cars. 'A fire ensued, and quickly a number of the cars became engulfed,' said Sgt. Tara Morris of the Cass County Sheriff's Office, adding that firefighters had managed to detach 50 of the 104 cars but had to leave the rest. This was the fourth serious accident involving trains hauling crude in North America this year. In July, an unattended train with 72 tank cars carrying crude oil from North Dakota's Bakken shale fields rolled downhill and set off a major explosion in Lac-Megantic, Quebec, killing 47 people. The accidents have put a spotlight on the growing reliance on rail to move surging oil production from new fields in Texas, North Dakota and Colorado. U.S. railroads are moving 25 times more crude than they did in 2008, often in trains with more than 100 tank cars that each carry 30,000 gallons. Though railroads have sharply improved their safety in recent years, moving oil on tank cars is still only about half as safe as in pipelines, according to Eric Smith, associate director of the Tulane University Energy Institute. 'You can make the argument that the pipeline fights have forced the industry to revert to rail that is less safe,' says Smith. One problem is that the trains go through small towns with volunteer fire departments, not well schooled in handling a derailment and explosion. Casselton Mayor Ed McConnell says it is time to 'have a conversation' with federal lawmakers about the dangers of transporting oil by rail. 'There have been numerous derailments in this area,' says McConnell. 'It's almost gotten to the point that it looks like not if we're going to have an accident, it's when.'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 4:09 am |
| | 1:03 am |
| | Tuesday, December 31st, 2013 | | 11:59 pm |
| | 11:05 pm |
| | 10:10 pm |
| | 9:08 pm |
| | 8:07 pm |
A Year With Google Glass http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/4m6wSBt4IL0/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3560f872/sc/5/l/0Ltech0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C310C18562590Ca0Eyear0Ewith0Egoogle0Eglass0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Mat Honan, a writer for Wired, has posted an article detailing his takeaways from long-term use of Google Glass. He makes particular note of how the device's form factor is much more offensive to others than the actual technology contained within. For example, his wife wanted him to take pictures and shoot videos of their child's birth, but not with Glass: "It was the way Glass looked. It might let me remain in the moment, but my wife worried it would take her out of it, that its mere presence would be distracting because it’s so goddamn weird-looking." It can get unpleasant when strangers are involved: "People get angry at Glass. They get angry at you for wearing Glass. They talk about you openly. It inspires the most aggressive of passive aggression. ... Wearing Glass separates you. It sets you apart from everyone else. It says you not only had $1,500 to plunk down to be part of the “explorer” program, but that Google deemed you special enough to warrant inclusion (not everyone who wanted Glass got it; you had to be selected). Glass is a class divide on your face." Honan found most of the default software to be handy, but the third-party software to be lacking. Glass also facilitated his unintentional switch from an iPhone to an Android phone. He ends the piece by warning of the inevitability of devices like Glass: "The future is on its way, and it is going to be on your face. We need to think about it and be ready for it in a way we weren’t with smartphones." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 7:04 pm |
Apple's New Mac Pro Gets High Repairability Score http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/HY7NFZOWz9k/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3560959a/sc/21/l/0Lhardware0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C310C18382150Capples0Enew0Emac0Epro0Egets0Ehigh0Erepairability0Escore0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm iFixit has posted a teardown of Apple's new soda-can-shaped Mac Pro. Despite the unusual form factor, it earned a relatively high repairability score: 8/10. iFixit said, "For being so compact, the design is surprisingly modular and easy to disassemble. Non-proprietary Torx screws are used throughout, and several components can be replaced independently." They say it's easy to access the fan and the RAM slots, and while the CPU is buried a bit more deeply, it's still user-replaceable. The Mac Pro doesn't get higher than an 8 because its uses some proprietary connectors and the cable routing is cramped. They add, "There is no room, or available port, for adding your own internal storage. Apple has addressed this with heaps of Thunderbolt, but we'd personally rather use the more widely compatible SATA if we could." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 5:31 pm |
No Question: Snowden Was 2013's Most Influential Tech Figure http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/wukpQ11oQkY/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/356047b3/sc/21/l/0Lyro0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C310C16422520Cno0Equestion0Esnowden0Ewas0E20A13s0Emost0Einfluential0Etech0Efigure0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Nerval's Lobster writes "Lots of CEOs, entrepreneurs, and developers made headlines in 2013—but in hindsight, Edward Snowden will likely stand as this year's most influential figure in technology. In June, Snowden began feeding top-secret documents detailing the National Security Agency's surveillance programs to The Guardian and other newspapers. Much of that information, downloaded by Snowden while he served as a system administrator at an NSA outpost in Hawaii, suggested that the U.S. government swept up massive amounts of information on ordinary Americans as part of its broader operations. Whatever one's feelings on the debate over privacy and security, it's undeniable that Snowden's documents have increased general awareness of online vulnerability; but whether that's sparked an increased use of countermeasures—including encryption tools—is another matter entirely. On the developer side of things, when you consider the sheer amount of money, time, and code that'll be invested over the next few years in encryption and encryption-breaking, it's clear that Snowden's influence will be felt for quite some time to come—even if the man himself is trapped in Russian exile." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 6:14 pm |
| | 4:51 pm |
Public Domain Day 2014 http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/QoXJIwrvdZc/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/355fead7/sc/38/l/0Lyro0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C310C1610A20A90Cpublic0Edomain0Eday0E20A140Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm An anonymous reader writes "What could have been entering the public domain in the US on January 1, 2014? Under the law that existed until 1978.... Works from 1957. The books On The Road, Atlas Shrugged, Empire of the Atom, and The Cat in the Hat, the films The Incredible Shrinking Man, The Bridge on the River Kwai, and 12 Angry Men, the article "Theory of Superconductivity," the songs "All Shook Up" and "Great Balls of Fire," and more.... What is entering the public domain this January 1? Not a single published work." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 4:05 pm |
| | 2:37 pm |
| | 3:19 pm |
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| | 1:54 pm |
| | 10:06 am |
If UNIX Were a Religion http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/g-cEGCEQNjQ/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/355d4d03/sc/4/l/0Ltech0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C310C0A3282210Cif0Eunix0Ewere0Ea0Ereligion0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Charles Stross has written a very clever article where he describes the religious metaphor he uses with non-technical folks to explain the relationship between Mac OS X and UNIX. There is one true religion in operating systems says Stross and it is UNIX although there's also an earlier, older, more arcane religion with far fewer followers, MULTICS, from which UNIX sprang as a stripped-down rules-deficient heresy. If MULTICS is Judaism then UNIX is Christianity. By the mid-1970s there were two main sects: AT&T UNIX, which we may liken unto the Roman Catholic Church, and BSD UNIX, which we may approximate to the Orthodox Churches. In an attempt to control the schisms, the faithful defined a common interoperating subset of the one true religion that all could agree on—the Nicene Creed of UNIX which is probably POSIX. Stross says that today the biggest church in the whole of UNIX is Mac OS X, which rests on the bedrock of Orthodox BSD but "has added an incredible, towering superstructure of fiercely guarded APIs and proprietary user interface stuff that renders it all but unrecognizable to followers of the Catholic AT&T path." But lo, in the late 1980s, UNIX succumbed to the sins of venality, demanding too much money from the faithful and so, in 1991 Linus Torvalds nailed his famous source code release to the cathedral door and kicked off the Reformation. 'The Linux wars were brutal and unforgiving and Linux itself splintered into a myriad of fractious Protestant churches, from the Red Hat wearing Lutherans to the Ubuntu Baptists.' More recently, a deviant faith has sprung from Linux. 'Android is the Church of Latter Day Saints of UNIX: hard-working, sober, evangelizing the public, and growing at a ferocious rate. There are some strange fundamentalist Mormon Android churches living in walled communities under the banners of Samsung and Amazon, but for the most part the prosperous worship at the Church of Google.' Stross notes that as with all religion, those sects with most in common are the ones who hold the most vicious grudges against one another. 'Is that clear?'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       |
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