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Keyword: computer

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  • QUESTION: Windows XP Updates vs. Apple Operating Systems

    07/02/2008 1:45:55 AM PDT · by Yosemitest · 101 replies · 891+ views
    July 2,2008 | me
    Windows XP updates are causing more and more problems with my laptop and I have Norton's Systemworks 2008, Systemworks Premier 11.0, and Ghost 12.0, as well as several other freeware programs. I believe that Microsoft is intentionally trying to destroy Windows XP with unstable patches and service packs, so as ... to sell their new operating system coming out soon. I'm seriously considering going to an Apple for my next computer, because I'm sick of Microsoft trying to squeeze more money out of me every two years, for a quote better system unquote. Am I wrong, or just too disgusted,...
  • As more women enter scientific fields, their numbers in computer science are declining

    06/18/2008 3:50:43 PM PDT · by shrinkermd · 37 replies · 46+ views
    MinnPost ^ | 18 June 2008 | Anne Brataas
    Walk the halls of the computer science buildings on college campuses across the United States and you'll notice a peculiar thing: there are very few women. At a time when women are swelling enrollments in many other university departments, computer science is conspicuous for its lack of female students. Worse, percentages of female bachelor degrees earned in computer science are falling-down to 25 percent in 2004, the latest available figures, from a high of 37 percent in 1984. And all this is occurring at a time when National Science Foundation (NSF) funding to encourage women in the computer sciences --...
  • Probe shows kiddie porn rap was bogus

    06/18/2008 10:26:41 AM PDT · by Abigail Adams · 41 replies · 39+ views
    Boston Herald ^ | Monday, June 16, 2008 | Laurel J. Sweet
    A child porn possession charge lodged against a Department of Industrial Accidents investigator fired for having smut on his state-issued laptop has been dismissed because experts concluded he was unwittingly spammed. “The overall forensics of the laptop suggest that it had been compromised by a virus,” said Jake Wark, spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley. Nationally recognized computer forensic analyst Tami Loehrs told the Herald Michael Fiola’s ordeal was “one of the most horrific cases I’ve seen.” Loehrs, who spent a month dissecting the computer for the defense, explained in a 30-page report that the laptop was running corrupted...
  • China’s Cyber-Militia

    05/30/2008 3:42:43 PM PDT · by Dawnsblood · 25 replies · 166+ views
    National Journal Magazine ^ | 5/31/08 | Shane Harris
    Computer hackers in China, including those working on behalf of the Chinese government and military, have penetrated deeply into the information systems of U.S. companies and government agencies, stolen proprietary information from American executives in advance of their business meetings in China, and, in a few cases, gained access to electric power plants in the United States, possibly triggering two recent and widespread blackouts in Florida and the Northeast, according to U.S. government officials and computer-security experts. One prominent expert told National Journal he believes that China’s People’s Liberation Army played a role in the power outages. Tim Bennett, the...
  • Avast Free Virus Showing False Hit on Super Anti-Spyware

    05/26/2008 5:03:20 PM PDT · by cva66snipe · 29 replies · 255+ views
    none ^ | May 26, 2008 | cva66snipe
    Is anyone else using Avast Free Virus Scan getting a Trojan alert on Super Anti Syyware.exe command? I'm getting it on the boot up scan and Avast has no way of marking it a false positive. Warning shows Win32: Trogan-Gen with no anme associated except the Spyware program.
  • What is relationship between Google Apps Standard and Google Message Filtering

    05/26/2008 11:42:01 AM PDT · by rudy45 · 2 replies · 89+ views
    Right now, I use the individual version of Spamarrest. However, people have been telling me to consider an alternative, in particular Google Apps Standard, because it's free. I went to their site, and see that it does offer spam filtering. However, Google also offers message filtering, and the minimum cost is $3/user. Here's my question: if a company uses Google Apps Standard, can they integrate message filtering with their own domain name, or must everyone switch to a @gmail.com address? If the former is true, why would anyone pay for Google Message filtering if they can get Apps Standard for...
  • RECOMMENDATIONS WANTED FOR REBUILDING MY COMPUTER

    05/18/2008 8:30:30 AM PDT · by RebelTex · 46 replies · 269+ views
    VANITY | 05/18/08 | Self
    RECOMMENDATIONS WANTED FOR REBUILDING MY COMPUTERI built this system 7 years ago and it has performed well until now.  The motherboard won't post, so I have decided to upgrade but would like to use as much of the legacy devices that I have as possible.  Here's the main specs on the system I want to upgrade: Motherboard (non-posting now): Soyo SY-KT333 Dragon Ultra Platinum (ATX form factor - Soyo no longer makes motherboards) Processor: AMD Athlon XP 2100 (socket A) Video card: BioStar GeForce 6800 (128mb, AGP) Ram: Corsair DDR 3 1024gb dram sticks   HHD: 2 Maxtor 80gb ATA...
  • jDome Offers Unique Experience To Gamers

    05/16/2008 8:58:49 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 15 replies · 116+ views
    uk.gizmodo.com ^ | 05/15/2008 | Staff
    Gamers are always after that extra edge or a more immersive experience, and a recent brainwave from designer John Nillson claims to offer both. His jDome increases the field of view of your average game to 180 degrees, offering a far more interactive experience over your average LCD screen. jDome Offers Unique Experience To Gamers May 15, 2008 Read more Games , Home Entertainment , Projector , Technology jDome.jpg Gamers are always after that extra edge or a more immersive experience, and a recent brainwave from designer John Nillson claims to offer both. His jDome increases the field of...
  • Data from Columbia disk drives survived the shuttle accident

    05/10/2008 6:02:08 AM PDT · by shove_it · 71 replies · 159+ views
    Yahoo! via AP ^ | 5/9/2008 | BRIAN BERGSTEIN
    Jon Edwards often manages what appears impossible. He has recovered precious data from computers wrecked in floods and fires and dumped in lakes. Now Edwards may have set a new standard: He found information on a melted disk drive that fell from the sky when space shuttle Columbia disintegrated in 2003. "When we got it, it was two hunks of metal stuck together. We couldn't even tell it was a hard drive. It was burned and the edges were melted," said Edwards, an engineer at Kroll Ontrack Inc., outside Minneapolis. "It looked pretty bad at first glance, but we always...
  • Missing link' memristor created: Rewrite the textbooks?

    04/30/2008 5:01:51 PM PDT · by ThePythonicCow · 34 replies · 1,382+ views
    EE Times ^ | 04/30/2008 1:00 PM EDT | R. Colin Johnson
    PORTLAND, Ore. — The long-sought after memristor--the "missing link" in electronic circuit theory--has been invented by Hewlett Packard Senior Fellow R. Stanley Williams at HP Labs (Palo Alto, Calif.) Memristors--the fourth passive component type after resistors, capacitors and inductors--were postulated in a seminal 1971 paper in the IEEE Transactions on Circuit Theory by professor Leon Chua at the University of California (Berkeley), but their first realization was just announced today by HP. According to Williams and Chua, now virtually every electronics textbook will have to be revised to include the memristor and the new paradigm it represents for electronic...
  • Microsoft offers hope for people who want to keep XP

    04/24/2008 8:44:30 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 86 replies · 107+ views
    www.physorg.com ^ | 04/24/2008 | By AOIFE WHITE
    Microsoft Corp. chief executive Steve Ballmer on Thursday offered a glimmer of hope to fans of the company's XP operating system, saying customer demand may see the company reconsider a decision to stop selling XP in June. But Ballmer was adamant that "most people who buy PCs today buy them with Vista." "That's the statistical truth," he told reporters at a press conference at Louvain-La-Neuve university. "If customer feedback varies, we can always wake up smarter," he said. Fans of the six-year-old operating system set to be pulled off store shelves by June 30 have papered the Internet with blog...
  • how to stay on whitelist, when responding via e-mail

    04/23/2008 11:03:36 AM PDT · by rudy45 · 5 replies · 95+ views
    I have a spam filter that is designed such that when I send outgoing mail, the address I enter is automatically entered into the whitelist, thereby allowing replies to come to me. Sometimes, though, the recipient doesn't actually use that address. Instead the recipients has the address set to forward mail to a second address. The problems is that when the recipient replies from the second address, my whitelist doesn't know about it, and so the reply gets trapped in the spam folder. Is there a way of doing "reverse forwarding," i.e. a process by which a person who has...
  • Users Fight to Save Windows XP [You're gonna buy Vista whether you like it or not!]

    04/14/2008 6:23:53 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 197 replies · 176+ views
    www.physorg.com ^ | 04/13/2008 | By JESSICA MINTZ, AP Technology Writer
    Microsoft Corp.'s operating systems run most personal computers around the globe and are a cash cow for the world's largest software maker. But you'd never confuse a Windows user with the passionate fans of Mac OS X or even the free Linux operating system. Unless it's someone running Windows XP, a version Microsoft wants to retire. Fans of the six-year-old operating system set to be pulled off store shelves in June have papered the Internet with blog posts, cartoons and petitions recently. They trumpet its superiority to Windows Vista, Microsoft's latest PC operating system, whose consumer launch last January was...
  • [IBM] Researchers Move Closer To New Class of Memory

    04/11/2008 1:04:08 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 17 replies · 63+ views
    www.physorg.com ^ | 04/11/2008 | IBM
    Computer memory that combines the high performance and reliability of flash with the low cost and high capacity of the hard disk drive could be closer than you think, thanks to a team of IBM scientists. IBM scientists unveiled a major breakthrough in their effort to build a new class of memory, nicknamed "racetrack." A diagram of the nanowire shows how an electric current is used to slide -- or "race" – tiny magnetic patterns around the nanowire "track," where the device can read and write data in less than a nanosecond. The racetrack memory would stand billions of nanowires,...
  • Computer help needed - where can I download Windows font Courier New?

    04/05/2008 4:56:52 PM PDT · by mtbopfuyn · 3 replies · 42+ views
    vanity
    Trying to print out tax returns and it won't print without Microsoft font Courier New. Thought I had it but it's nowhere to be found. We had a major crash a while back so it might have disappeared then. Anyway, I can't seem to find anywhere to download it from. Can't seem to find it at Microsoft site either. Using Windows XP. Any help?
  • Computer Taught To Recognize Attractiveness In Women

    04/04/2008 5:56:15 PM PDT · by blam · 62 replies · 81+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 4-4-2--8 | Tel Aviv University
    Computer Taught To Recognize Attractiveness In Women "Beauty," goes the old saying, "is in the eye of the beholder." But does the beholder have to be human? (Credit: iStockphoto) ScienceDaily (Apr. 5, 2008) — "Beauty," goes the old saying, "is in the eye of the beholder." But does the beholder have to be human? Not necessarily, say scientists at Tel Aviv University. Amit Kagian, an M.Sc. graduate from the TAU School of Computer Sciences, has successfully "taught" a computer how to interpret attractiveness in women. But there's a more serious dimension to this issue that reaches beyond mere vanity. The...
  • Computer help? XP no sound, no audio device detected

    03/31/2008 5:48:17 PM PDT · by Chasaway · 52 replies · 3,402+ views
    Okay…I give up. I’ve got to ask for some help. Freepers have given me great advice on holsters, guns, etc., but now I need computer help. I recently re-installed XP Media Center on my Dell Dimension E310. Now, whenever I re-start I have no sound. And when I go the Control Panel, I get the “No Audio Device” with all of the selections grayed-out. And I mean all of them: The Volume section, the Sounds section, the Audio section…all of them. When I troubleshoot the hardware it says the device is working properly. I’ve searched the web (and lots of...
  • White House: Computer hard drives tossed

    03/21/2008 7:37:36 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 72 replies · 1,668+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 3/21/08 | Pete Yost - ap
    WASHINGTON - Older White House computer hard drives have been destroyed, the White House disclosed to a federal court Friday in a controversy over millions of possibly missing e-mails from 2003 to 2005. The White House revealed new information about how it handles its computers in an effort to persuade a federal magistrate it would be fruitless to undertake an e-mail recovery plan that the court proposed. "When workstations are at the end of their lifecycle and retired ... the hard drives are generally sent offsite to another government entity for physical destruction," the White House said in a sworn...
  • Tiny Brain-Like Transistor Controls Nanobots

    03/12/2008 8:17:53 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 18 replies · 1,218+ views
    www.physorg.com ^ | 03/12/2008 | Lisa Zyga
    The wheel-like assembly of 16 duroquinone molecules on the edges and 1 duroquinone molecule in the center can produce quotone-to-manyquot parallel communication. Credit: Bandyopadhyay and Acharya. The wheel-like assembly of 16 duroquinone molecules on the edges and 1 duroquinone molecule in the center can produce "one-to-many" parallel communication. Credit: Bandyopadhyay and Acharya. For years, researchers have been building tiny nanobots that could one day serve a variety of purposes. But, until now, nanobots couldn't work together. Recently, scientists Anirban Bandyopadhyay and Somobrata Acharya from the National Institute of Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan, have built the first ultra-tiny, ultra-powerful...
  • Meet the Whiz Kids: 10 Overachievers Under 21

    03/10/2008 7:46:04 PM PDT · by paudio · 8 replies · 718+ views
    PC World ^ | March 09, 2008 | Dan Tynan
    Mark Zuckerberg, watch your back. Sergey and Larry? Consider early retirement. The next generation is coming up fast, and they aren't waiting for you Web 2.0 geezers to step aside. Here are 10 serious overachievers--20 years old or younger--with more ambition, energy, tech smarts, and business savvy than you'll find in most entire high-tech companies, let alone most adults. Like various graying legends of the PC revolution (Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Michael Dell), these ten didn't wait until they were of age before starting their meteoric careers. Some are already millionaires; others seem destined to achieve greatness in other ways.