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Keyword: software

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  • Angels, High Tech Investment Capital Sought for iSiT Software - Google, IBM Winning Startup

    02/16/2011 1:51:31 PM PST · by IsraelBeach · 2 replies · 1+ views
    Israel News Agency / Google News ^ | February 15, 2011 | Helen Katzman
    Investors, Angels, High Tech Investment Capital Sought for iSiT Software - Google, IBM Ranked First Place StartupBy Helen Katzman Israel News Agency Tel Aviv , Israel ---- February 15, 2011 ...... Say you're reading a news or feature article on the Internet from Google News, The New York Times, AP, Reuters, Wikipedia or a Blog regarding a hard to believe, a new state-of-the art mobile phone that just seems too good to be true. Maybe you just read reports about violent riots in Egypt, Yemen or Iran or perhaps a news story about a raging forest fire in California or...
  • Engineering Intelligence: Why IBM’s Jeopardy-Playing Computer Is So Important

    02/11/2011 11:24:04 AM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 42 replies
    Mashable ^ | February 11, 2011 | Matt Silverman
    Language is arguably what makes us most human. Even the smartest and chattiest of the animal kingdom have nothing on our lingual cognition.In computer science, the Holy Grail has long been to build software that understands — and can interact with — natural human language. But dreams of a real-life Johnny 5 or C-3PO have always been dashed on the great gulf between raw processing power and the architecture of the human mind. Computers are great at crunching large sets of numbers. The mind excels at assumption and nuance.Enter Watson, an artificial intelligence project from IBM that’s over five years...
  • Microsoft says La Familia drug cartel is selling bootleg Office software

    02/05/2011 1:31:51 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 34 replies
    Los Angeles Times ^ | 2/5/11 | Nathan Olivarez-Giles
    La Familia drug cartel is selling not just drugs, but also counterfeit Microsoft Office computer software, according the Redmond, Wash., tech giant. Microsoft showed off unauthorized copies of its Office 2007 software in Paris today which the company said it found for sale in Mexico. The pirated copies of Office were marked with La Familia cartel's rectangular "FMM" logo that the Microsoft says proves the link between the counterfeiting and the organized crime group, according to a Bloomberg report. "This is the real side, the scary side of counterfeiting and it plagues the world," said David Finn, Microsoft's associate general...
  • Sex Game For Microsoft's Kinect Garnering Criticism

    12/25/2010 11:24:59 AM PST · by zeestephen · 31 replies · 4+ views
    KOMO News ^ | 22 December 2010 | Luke Ducey
    Microsoft's new gaming system Kinect is getting a little kinky.....Experts say a new 3D sex game is going to be huge in the world of interactive gaming.....
  • Software tip: How to save yourself at least $250 -- Dia Diagram Editor

    12/15/2010 12:22:42 PM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 29 replies · 2+ views
    Watts Up With That? ^ | Dec 15, 2010 | Anthony Watts
    Yesterday I had a request from a client for a network diagram for a system I’m designing, and normally I create such drawings as a PNG file. But this client said “no, I need it in Visio, or similar style so we can edit it”. I have avoided Microsoft Visio in the past, mainly because of its price tag: $249.99 for the basic version, and a whopping $999.99 for the premium version!**********************************snip********************************************* So I want to share “Dia”, short for “Diagram”. Its detailed, open source, and most importantly, free. It also has a community springing up that is adding shape...
  • F-35 begins flying Block 1 software

    11/15/2010 6:44:33 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 6 replies
    F16.net ^ | 11/15/2010 | F16.net
    ThThe fundamental building block for all future avionics software on the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II stealth fighter has entered flight testing on an F-35 test jet. BF-04 lifts off on its 24th flight on November 6 2010. Pilot was Lt Col Matt Taylor. block 1, the first of three principal software-development blocks for the F-35’s mission systems, made its inaugural flight on Nov. 5 in the F-35B short takeoff/ vertical landing (STOVL) aircraft known as BF-4. The functional check flight from Naval Air Station Patuxent River lasted 1.5 hours, and all planned test points were accomplished. “Getting this software...
  • When Will We Have Artificial Intelligence?

    11/13/2010 5:28:58 AM PST · by RogerFGay · 53 replies · 1+ views
    High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project ^ | November 13, 2010 | Roger F. Gay
    From the High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project blog. When are we going to have AI, one survey asks? It's a question relevant to HLL because so much of the thought behind the HLL design comes from the history of AI research and current technology that has come from AI research. The answer to the question when, with reference to HLL, is now. (Or at least as soon as version 1.0 is ready.) And that's no reason to get worried. As the description of HLL claims, you don't even need a high-powered computer science background to build applications...
  • The Ghosts in My Machine, Chapter 3

    11/07/2010 9:25:31 AM PST · by RogerFGay · 11 replies
    High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project ^ | November 7, 2010 | Roger F. Gay
    Chapter 1Chapter 2Prepare yourself for a surprise ending. Do that now to avoid confusion later. Around 1990, I met with an industrial engineering professor who had been working for years with artificial intelligence technology. We had a long chat about the possibility of completely automated factories. This was still a decade before frequent online purchasing and customer management systems. But it seemed reasonable to contemplate a future in which everything from initial customer contact, sales, accounting, instructions to the factory floor, robotic manufacturing on demand, packaging, right out to the shipping dock would be fully automated. Even if you've never...
  • High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project: The Ghosts in My Machine: Chapter 2

    11/01/2010 10:26:17 AM PDT · by RogerFGay · 1 replies
    High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project ^ | November 1, 2010 | Roger F. Gay
    Link to Chapter 1I understood the differences between what application developers wanted to do and what the “artificial intelligence” technology of the late 1980s supported. They were not the sort of differences that one might use to contract to update a software application. What had been, in effect, a broad survey of application needs resulted in a snap-shot of a more basic set of technical requirements. This snap-shot taught me much about the path of development of software technology generally, decades into the future. Much of that future would evolve with or without me, as developers pushed to realize their...
  • The Ghosts in My Machine: Chapter 1

    10/29/2010 5:40:15 AM PDT · by RogerFGay · 6 replies
    High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project ^ | October 29, 2010 | Roger F. Gay
    As a young man, when I enjoyed idle time and my daydreams tended to wander in strange directions, I found myself considering a rather unimaginative question. As computer languages and tools have evolved to higher and higher levels - “bottom-up” - where will they eventually reach? Where's the top? To put this contemplation in perspective, the year was 1985. The computer under my desk was a first generation Texas Instruments PC with two floppy disk drives. Ethernet cables were being strung through our offices to network our computers for the first time, allowing messages to stream around the building...
  • Seeking a PSTN (NOT VOIP) telephony solution for the PC (vanity)

    10/18/2010 9:06:14 AM PDT · by Blueflag · 25 replies · 1+ views
    Used to be freeware ^ | 10/18/2010 | Blueflag
    Techies - I seek a software solution that will do this: Enable my Windows PC to be a telephone/ speakerphone plugged in to the PSTN via an UTP/RJ-11 jack out the modem, NOT a VOIP ( a la Skype ) phone emulator connected to the Internet via RJ-45/TCP/IP. I recognize this involves a modem. This stuff used to be bundled freeware with PCs and has fallen out of fashion. What's out there now?
  • Judge Tosses F-35 Software Suit

    10/13/2010 10:32:15 PM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 1 replies
    Dod Buzz ^ | 10/11/2010 | Colin Clark
    Lockheed Martin, dogged by a whistleblower lawsuit charging the company built lousy and possibly dangerous software for the F-35, is breathing a little easier this afternoon as a judge dismissed the suit. According to my colleague Bob Fox at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram (the F-35’s home town paper), U.S. District Court Judge Terry Means recently threw out the 2006 suit filed by Sylvester Davis, a former software engineer on the program. “Davis, Means said in the ruling, ‘fails to allege the dates of any false claim or any information regarding the documents Lockheed submitted to the government for payment,” according...
  • The Reincarnation of SOA - Sort of!

    09/26/2010 5:19:53 AM PDT · by RogerFGay · 10 replies
    High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project ^ | September 26, 2010 | Roger F. Gay
    Wouldn't it be nice if a comment on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) would attract a lot of attention (for my blog, I'm thinking)? Thousands of people googling 'SOA' come right to my site and find out more about HLL. I can't expect that, because I'm provoked on this occasion to comment in response to a discussion that started in January of last year. VP and Research Director of The Burton Group, Anne Thomas Manes wrote an article entitled, SOA is Dead; Long Live Services. Burton Group surveys IT R&D and provides business consulting services. They have a particular interest...
  • High Level Logic: Rethinking Software Reuse in the 21st Century

    09/20/2010 8:52:32 AM PDT · by RogerFGay · 110 replies
    High Level Logic (HLL) Open Source Project ^ | September 20, 2010 | Roger F. Gay
    IntroductionAn application programmer spends six months perfecting a set of components commonly needed in the large company that employs him. Some of the components were particularly tricky and key pieces required very high quality, reliable and complex exception handling. It has all been tuned to run quickly and efficiently. Thorough testing has demonstrated his success. Part of his idea of “perfection” was to build in a way that the software, even many of the individual components, could easily be reused. But it is surprisingly likely that no one outside of a small group within the project will ever hear of...
  • Warning over malicious computer worm (infects sw controlling valves in pipelines, powerplants)

    09/24/2010 6:35:14 AM PDT · by SmartInsight · 44 replies
    Financial Timesw ^ | Sept. 24, 2010 | Joseph Menn , Mary Watkins
    A piece of highly sophisticated malicious software that has infected an unknown number of power plants, pipelines and factories over the past year is the first program designed to cause serious damage in the physical world, security experts are warning. The Stuxnet computer worm spreads through previously unknown holes in Microsoft’s Windows operating system and then looks for a type of software made by Siemens and used to control industrial components, including valves and brakes. “It is not speculation that this is the first directed cyber weapon”, or one aimed at a specific real-world process, said Joe Weiss, a US...
  • The Farewell Dossier (How the CIA blew up the Trans-Siberian pipeline with pirated software)

    09/23/2010 10:49:25 AM PDT · by E. Pluribus Unum · 32 replies · 2+ views
    Damn Interesting ^ | 26 March 2007 | Alan Bellows
    In 1982, operatives from the USSR’s Committee for State Security– known internationally as the KGB– celebrated the procurement of a very elusive bit of Western technology. The Soviets were developing a highly lucrative pipeline to carry natural gas across the expanse of Siberia, but they lacked the software to manage the complex array of pumps, valves, turbines, and storage facilities that the system would require. The United States possessed such software, but the US government had predictably turned down their Cold War opponent’s request to purchase the product. Never ones to allow the limitations of the law to dictate their...
  • Worse than useless - An American government attempt to help Iranian dissidents backfires (Haystack)

    09/19/2010 5:34:19 AM PDT · by nuconvert · 10 replies
    The Economist ^ | Sept. 16, 2010
    FOR Iran’s beleaguered opposition, the internet is a potent weapon and a big hope. During the Green movement’s protests in 2009, activists used Twitter and Facebook, often from mobile phones, to upload videos of police brutality and spread messages of support and news of new demonstrations. The authorities responded not only by cracking heads, but cracking computers: trying to trace users, block services and close websites. Outsiders found the struggle inspirational. Austin Heap, a 26-year-old hacker born in Ohio, decided to develop anticensorship software to foil the authorities’ efforts. He named the product Haystack, and began earlier this year to...
  • $700,000 Joke Telling Software - Stimulus Funded

    09/15/2010 7:31:17 AM PDT · by Sad Hill · 29 replies
    Sad Hill News ^ | 09.14.2010 | Sad Hill
    Northwestern University professor, Kristian Hammond, received more than $700,000 in federal stimulus money to develop software that tells jokes. Hammond says it’s serious work. “Understanding what makes humor, what makes irony, what makes interesting juxtapositions, to understand what that means [then] actually create it," said Hammond. WLS-TV reports, “The material generated so far is not exactly killer standup material, and Hammond's critics certainly aren't laughing. Senator John McCain singled out Hammond's project, calling it a ‘joke machine’ — one of many examples of wasteful spending.”Hammond received the funding after he applied to the National Science Foundation, beating out dozens of...
  • Consumer Rights: Court Rules Against Used Software Sales

    09/13/2010 1:35:31 PM PDT · by Still Thinking · 88 replies · 1+ views
    ECN Magazine ^ | September 13, 2010 | Jason Lomberg
    The 9th Circuit of Appeals has reaffirmed the right of software companies to circumvent the first-sale doctrine by “licensing” rather then “selling” its products. The significance of this ruling cannot be overstated—it could singlehandedly destroy the used software market. In 2005, one Timothy Vernor bought a sealed copy of AutoCAD Release 14 at a garage sale. In 2007, Vernor purchased four used copies of Release 14 from an authorized dealer, Cardwell/Thomas & Associates (CTA). He subsequently placed all but two copies on eBay, and in each instance, Autodesk appealed to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), alleging copyright infringement. In...
  • Appeals court ruling threatens used software sales (and eBay and Netflix)

    09/11/2010 7:43:51 AM PDT · by Zakeet · 28 replies
    Associated Press ^ | September 10, 2010 | Michael Liedtke
    SAN FRANCISCO – A federal appeals court has sided with the computer software industry in its effort to squelch sales of second-hand programs covered by widely used licensing agreements. Friday's ruling by the 9th Circuit of Appeals raised worries that it will embolden music labels, movie studios and book publishers to circumvent the so-called "first-sale" doctrine in an attempt to boost their sagging sales. The doctrine refers to a 102-year-old decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that determined copyright holders can't prevent a buyer from reselling or renting a product after an initial sale, as long as additional copies aren't...