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Comment Re:Yes of course (Score 2) 159

You can definitely revive an old Pentium M / Sempron with a modest 50 dollar or so low end card. It enhances a good chunk of the browsing experience, not just video acceleration.

Not exactly what you were asking, but I have a Pentium M based board that makes a great mediaPC now that I dropped a Radeon HD 6450 in it. Used to be nearly unusable. Now 1080p video, YouTube, web browsing, all great (just don't deviate too much out of those core tasks). For whatever reason seems a lot faster on Firefox over Chrome...

Comment Re:ask a mechanic (Score 1) 672

That's wrong. Canadians are keeping their cars longer than ever before, because they are more durable. They don't make them like they used to is right - we make them a lot better nowadays. I remember reading a Statistics Canada based piece in The Globe and Mail (cannot relocate), but I found these studies just googling it now.

http://www.autonorth.ca/home/2008/7/30/canadians-keeping-cars-longer.html
http://www.therecord.com/news/business/article/623911--canadians-keeping-cars-longer
http://www.thecarconnection.com/news/1057594_will-auto-sales-stay-lower-because-better-cars-last-longer

Comment Re:Revenue != Profit (Score 1) 117

That is except TFA I guess?

"The Times Co., which includes the flagship New York Times, Boston Globe, International Herald Tribune, 15 other dailies and About.com, said net profit plunged 57.6 percent to $5.4 million on continued print advertising weakness."

Oh wait you said everything you've READ, right this is slashdot I was being silly...

Comment Experience from the Inside (Score 1) 179

I have personally worked for a Canadian Member of Parliament. I totally understand what this guy is going through. If he gets two emails a day from this pressure group, he's lucky (note the source that came from - the pressure group).

I would often spend the the ENTIRE morning going through email bombs. I'm talking 200-300 emails or so per day. Much of them were profanity laced, and not directed to my member in particular, but mass mailed from pressure group websites using a form to blast the entire Parliament of Canada. People would often send the same email several times PER DAY. The only tool the IT department allowed me to use was MS Outlook Message Rules (which helped, but not nearly enough).

It was all about repetition and "louder is better". It borderlined on harassment. I genuinely got excited when I got a well thought out, original email that I could respond to. Unfortunately I had less time to deal with their issue because I had to deal with morons thinking anyone above me would care about their repetitive profanity laced email bombs.

Comment Re:You won't mind if I poop in your yard, then? (Score 1) 565

Actually BP will probably be paying for the cleanup. Federal law forces them to, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_Pollution_Act_of_1990. This is capped at 75 million dollars maximum, but BP has pledged to pay the full cost regardless. Take that as you will. Also. the concept of an oil company going bankrupt even at say over 10 billion dollars or so of damage is laughable. That's more like a quarterly profit. Also I think it's important to note that this is a fairly exotic deep water oil well, not the more garden variety shallow well, and it is open to a plethora of additional engineering challenges.
Moon

Birth of the Moon: a Runaway Nuclear Reaction? 355

An anonymous reader writes "How the Moon arose has long stumped scientists. Now Dutch geophysicists argue that it was created not by a massive collision 4.5 billion years ago, but by a runaway nuclear reaction deep inside the young Earth."
Biotech

Scientists Identify a Potentially Universal Mechanism of Aging 359

cybergenesis2008 points us to a summary of research out of Harvard Medical School in which a set of genes known to affect aging in yeast was found to affect aging in mice as well. The genes, called sirtuins, perform two particular tasks; regulating which genes are "on" and "off," and also helping to repair damaged DNA. As an organism ages, the frequency of damage to DNA increases, leaving less time for the sirtuins' regulatory tasks. The increasingly unregulated genes then become a significant factor in aging. Realizing this, the researchers "administered extra copies of the sirtuin gene [to the mice], or fed them the sirtuin activator resveratrol, which in turn extended their mean lifespan by 24 to 46 percent." We discussed the plans for this research a few years ago.
The Internet

World's Smallest IPv6 Stack By Cisco, Atmel, SICS 287

B Rog writes "Cisco, Atmel, and the Swedish Institute of Computer Science have released uIPv6, the world's smallest IPv6 compliant IPv6 stack, as open source for the Contiki embedded operating system. The intent is to bring IP addresses to the masses by giving devices such as thermometers or lightbulbs an IPv6 stack. With a code size of 11 kilobytes and a dynamic memory usage of less than 2 kilobytes (yes, kilobytes!), it certainly fits the bill of the ultra-low-power microcontrollers typically used in such devices. When every lightbulb has an IP address, the vast address range of IPv6 sounds like a pretty good idea."

Comment Slashdot shouldn't post partisan press releases! (Score 1) 169

"The first leader of a major Canadian political party to acknowledge the importance of the Internet during a federal election?" Are you effing kidding me? A quick google would clearly show this to be false. Every major party is all over YouTube as well, and every major party but the Conservatives support net neutrality. Please be more careful, this is way worse than a typical story dupe.

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