Dell shows its love for Linux, rolls Ubuntu 8.04 out to systems

Filed under: Desktops, Laptops

Aw, aren’t these two just as cute as a button together? We can almost see Dell gushing at the thought of rolling Ubuntu out in a pair of new machines early next month. Nah, we didn’t just fabricate that — the Ubuntu 8.04-powered XPS M1530N and Studio 15N should be available in a matter of weeks, and in the meantime, you open source aficionados can enjoy Hardy Heron as a pre-installed option on the XPS M1330N, Inspiron 1525N and Inspiron 530N. Hit the read link for purchase options in your country.

[Via TG Daily]

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AMD says it’ll detail its Atom-challenging plans in November

Filed under: Desktops, Laptops

AMD has been hinting at its plans to take on Intel’s processor du jour, the Atom, for some time now, but brand new CEO Dirk Meyer is now getting slightly more official about it than the company has been previously, and he’s promising that AMD will reveal all come November. As the folks at Register Hardware point out, all indications point to that Atom-challenging processor being the “Bobcat,” which has been talked about for nearly a full year now. If that past information is correct, it looks like we can expect the chip to debut with a 1GHz clock speed, along with 128KB of L1 cache, 256KB of L2 cache an 800MHz HyperTransport link, support for 400MHz DDR 2 RAM, and a power consumption 8W. No word on how AMD plans to compete with Intel in terms of price just yet, but that’ll no doubt be revealed in November, if not sooner.

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What Would It Take To Have Open CA Authorities?

trainman writes “With the release of Firefox 3, those who have been using self-signed certificates for SSL now face a huge issue — the big, scary warning FF3 issues which is very unintuitive for non-technical users. It seems Firefox is pushing more websites in to the monopolistic arms of companies such as Verisign. For smaller, especially non-profit groups, which will never have issues with domain typo scammers, this adds an extra and difficult-to-swallow cost. Does a service such as this need the same level of scrutiny and cost since all that is being done is verifying domain and certificate match? This extra hand holding adds a tremendous cost and allows monopolistic companies such as Verisign to thrive. Can organizations such as Mozilla not move towards a model that helps break this monopoly, helping establish a CA root authority that’s cheap (free?) and only links the certificate to the domain, not actual verification of who owns the domain?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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RoboCup breeding autonomous soccer players

http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v2:6ac4e837d1334801b57140b847929c16:yhuwPHT1BW74TVTMA7NKQO7eq5buUHiNd9DoovY4%2BGIT9MW1gzwDSzmpt2Xwhu9IEhNKmlnfIDcWEpH3F5VV9rZLUk3p4y8xrYI3NeiyCUo%3D

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The Parker Steam Synthesizer runs on steam, sounds like a theramin, Bjork wants

Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

If synth rock was meant to go hand-in-hand with fantastic steampunk universes (and we really can’t see why it wasn’t), instruments would look something like the thing you see here. This is the Parker Steam Synthesizer, a steam-powered music synth that runs on water and some coal. Designer Lorin Edwin Parker controls steam pressure with a ball valve which activates a dynamo. The dynamo is a magnet motor attached to a flywheel that creates an alternating magnetic field which is then turned into electricity by an inductive pickup. That pickup is finally plugged into an amp and you have some trippy electro from a device that could have been around years ago. He says it will run for about 20 minutes on one tank of water, which, in our estimation, is just long enough for Bjork to hear it and add to her band’s already-insane inventory. By the way, the Read link includes a .mov file so you can see this thing in action.

[Via MusicRadar]

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Postmortem debugging of embedded RTOS applications

Postmortem debugging in desktop operating systems (OSes) such as Windows and Linux has been around for some time.
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RIM fixes critical BlackBerry Enterprise Server bug

Research in Motion patched a critical bug in its BES (BlackBerry Enterprise Server) Friday to stymie hackers hoping to break into company networks by tricking users of the popular smartphone into opening rigged PDFs.

The fix, which was delivered in several separate updates to BES, addressed a security vulnerability in the PDF distiller component of the BlackBerry Attachment Service, which runs on the BES. RIM first disclosed the flaw last week, but the bug gained attention Wednesday when the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT), part of the Department of Homeland Security, posted an alert.

[ Learn how to secure your systems with Roger Grimes’ Security Adviser blog and newsletter, both from InfoWorld. ]

Attackers could exploit the vulnerability by getting BlackBerry users to open malicious PDF files attached to e-mail messages. Successful exploits would compromise servers running BES, not individual BlackBerry devices, RIM said in security advisories first published July 10.

A RIM spokeswoman said Friday that the company had received no reports of attacks and that updates were now available for BES.

Enterprise administrators can update to BES version 4.1 Service Pack 6 (4.1.6) for Microsoft Exchange and IBM Lotus Domino, RIM said in a revised advisory . An update to BES for Novell GroupWise pegged as 4.1.4 also patches the problem.

Administrators running editions of BES older then versions 4.1.6, or 4.1.4 for GroupWise, can instead apply one of several interim security updates posted on RIM’s download site.

Previously, RIM had updated the BlackBerry Unite software that users run on their smart phones to patch the problem on the client side.

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European Researchers Developing Touchy-Feely Robots

The Feelix Growing project is developing software, cameras, and sensors that help robots detect facial expressions, voice, proximity, and other parameters to determine a person’s emotional state.

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Sony Ericsson sees net profits fall 97%, looks to cut 2,000 jobs

Filed under: Cellphones

Sony Ericsson warned the world just over a fortnight ago that things wouldn’t be too rosy when it came time to announce Q2 results, and rosy things are not. Even though the handset maker was hoping and praying to break even at the end of the quarter, net profits ended up falling through the floor to the tune of 97%. As predicted, weak sales of mid-to-high-end mobiles were blamed for the bulk of the bad news, and it did affirm that conditions would remain rough for the rest of the year. Granted, the looming launch of the Xperia X1 should help matters a bit, but without a new stable of low-end cellies to send to emerging markets, it’ll be a long road back to the top. Unfortunately, SE’s sagging position in the market has left it slashing 2,000 jobs across the globe, though it didn’t say exactly where the cuts would be made. It’s okay SE, there’s only one place to go when you’re laying on the bottom… or something like that.

[Image courtesy of Flickr]

Read - Sony Ericsson’s Q2 earnings
Read - Sony Ericsson plans job cuts

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Japanese SELENE confirms Apollo 15 landing spot on Moon

According to a press release of the Japanese space agency, a “halo” has been photographed by the Terrain Camera onboard its SELENE (Kaguya) spacecraft, which shows the exact location of…

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