Story Authors - techNewsi.com
technewsI
Welcome Guest

 

  
 
search:

     
Authors
timothy
Home » Story Authors
Best Browser For Using Complex Web Applications?  |  on web ->
yanyan writes "I'm fairly new to the field of web application development. Currently i'm working on a big online ticketing system for passage and freight for a local shipping company. It's a one-man show and the system is written in Ruby and uses Rails. Aside from the requisite functionality of creating bookings the system must also print reports and tickets, and this is where i've discovered (the hard way) that most, if not all, browsers fall short. I've had to switch from Firefox 3.6.3 to Oper
slashdot | timothy | Jun 18 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
The Struggle To Keep Java Relevant  |  on web ->
snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister questions Oracle's ability to revive interest in Java in the wake of Oracle VP Jeet Kaul's announcement at EclipseCon that he would 'like to see people with piercings doing Java programming.' 'If Kaul is hoping Java will once again attract youthful, cutting-edge developers, as it did when it debuted in 1995, [Kaul] may be in for a long wait,' McAllister writes. 'Java has evolved from a groundbreaking, revolutionary language platform to something c
slashdot | timothy | Apr 02 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
New Open Source Intrusion Detector Suricata Released  |  on web ->
richrumble writes "The OISF has released the beta version of the Suricata IDS/IPS engine: The Suricata Engine is an Open Source Next Generation Intrusion Detection and Prevention Engine. This engine is not intended to just replace or emulate the existing tools in the industry, but will bring new ideas and technologies to the field. This new Engine supports Mult-Threading, Automatic Protocol Detection (IP, TCP, UDP, ICMP, HTTP, TLS, FTP and SMB! ), Gzip Decompression, Fast IP Matching and coming
slashdot | timothy | Dec 31 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
Phase Change Memory vs. Storage As We Know It  |  on web ->
storagedude writes "Access to data isn't keeping pace with advances in CPU and memory, creating an I/O bottleneck that threatens to make data storage irrelevant. The author sees phase change memory as a technology that could unseat storage networks. From the article: 'While years away, PCM has the potential to move data storage and storage networks from the center of data centers to the periphery. I/O would only have to be conducted at the start and end of the day, with data parked in memory whi
slashdot | timothy | Dec 31 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
Machine Translates Thoughts Into Speech  |  on web ->
An anonymous reader points to this explanation of a brain-machine interface for real-time synthetic speech production, which has been successfully tested in a 26-year-old patient. From the article: "Signals collected from an electrode in the speech motor cortex are amplified and sent wirelessly across the scalp as FM radio signals. The Neuralynx System amplifies, converts, and sorts the signals. The neural decoder then translates the signals into speech commands for the speech synthesizer."Read
slashdot | timothy | Jan 01 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
  can we first try to get the speech to text right?  [reply]
Ideas For Exploiting NASAs SRTM Data  |  on web ->
MaxTardiveau writes with an excerpt from an article where the pictures are worth clicking through for: "Ten years ago, in February 2000, NASA mapped the entire world in eleven days. It's true: the mission was called the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), and over the course of eleven days, it used a big radar attached to the space shuttle to get elevation data from the vast majority of solid Earth; practically all land between 60 degrees North and 56 degrees South was included, with a reso
slashdot | timothy | Jan 03 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
Code Used To Attack Google Now Public  |  on web ->
itwbennett writes "The IE attack code used in last month's attack on Google and 33 other companies was submitted for analysis Thursday on the Wepawet malware analysis Web site. One day after being made publicly available, it had been included in at least one hacking tool and could be seen in online attacks, according to Dave Marcus, director of security research and communications at McAfee. Marcus noted that the attack is very reliable on IE 6 running on Windows XP, and could possibly be modifi
slashdot | timothy | Jan 15 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
Apple Seeks To Ban Nokia Imports To US  |  on web ->
Hugh Pickens writes "Cnet reports that the ongoing patent battle between Apple and Nokia has escalated with Apple moving to block imports of Nokia cell phones to the US by filing a complaint with the International Trade Commission, an independent federal agency that examines issues including unfair trade practices involving patent, trademark, and copyright infringement. In December, Nokia filed its own complaint with the USITC alleging that Apple infringes seven Nokia patents 'in virtually all o
slashdot | timothy | Jan 17 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
Electromagnetic Pulse Gun To Help In Police Chases  |  on web ->
adeelarshad82 writes "In an attempt to put an end to dangerous police high speed chases, scientists at Eureka Aerospace have developed an electromagnetic pulse gun called the High Power Electromagnetic System, or HPEMS. It develops a high-intensity directed pulse of electricity designed to disable a car's microprocessor system, shutting down all of its systems. Right now the prototype seen in a video fills an entire lab, but they have plans to shrink its size to hand-held proportions. Some form
slashdot | timothy | Jan 22 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
The Lost Film That Accompanied Empire Strikes Back  |  on web ->
An anonymous reader writes "'Alien' and 'Star Wars' art director Roger Christian was given £25,000 by George Lucas in 1979 to make a 25-minute medieval B-feature called 'Black Angel.' This spiritual tale of a knight on a strange quest was inspired by Christian's near-fatal fever when he fell ill in Mexico making 'Lucky Lady.' 'Black Angel' made a huge impression, not least because it shared the dark tone of 'Empire Strikes Back.' John Boorman showed it to the crew of 'Excalibur' as a templ
slashdot | timothy | Mar 10 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
A Skeptical Comparison of HTML5 Video Playback To Flash  |  on web ->
gollum123 writes "Think we'd all be better off if HTML5 could somehow instantly replace Flash overnight? Not necessarily, according to a set of comparisons from Jan Ozer of the Streaming Learning Center website, which found that while HTML5 did come out ahead in many respects, it wasn't exactly a clear winner. They did find that HTML5 clearly performed better than Flash 10 or 10.1 in Safari on a Mac, although the differences were less clear cut in Google Chrome or Firefox. On the other hand, Fla
slashdot | timothy | Mar 14 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
Complex Life Found Under 600 Feet of Antarctic Ice  |  on web ->
Chroniton writes "NASA ice scientists have found a shrimp-like creature and a possible jellyfish 'frolicking' beneath 600 feet of solid Antarctic ice, where only microbes were expected to live. The odds of finding two complex lifeforms after drilling only an 8-inch-wide hole suggests there may be much more. And if such life is possible beneath Earth's oceans, why not elsewhere, like Europa?" Read more of this story at Slashdot.
slashdot | timothy | Mar 17 |  tweet this story on Twitter share this story on facebook
 
 
 
Tech News  |  Tech Weekly  |  Job Market  |  Projects/Downloads  |  Subscribe to technewsI.com feeds Subscribe
Home  |  About  |  Contacts  |  User Agreement  |  Privacy Policy
 

℗  techNewsi.com
powered by: m3server