Friday, March 11, 2011

WEEK 10

Magnitude 8.9 Earthquake in Japan This Morning Probably the Biggest in Area's Recorded History
And scientists are on the job, already producing many spectacular graphics to illustrate tsunami characteristics and other data collected about this phenomena.

 








Tuesday, February 22, 2011

WEEK 9

Tiny-fingered researchers at the University of Michigan have created this computer, the world's first complete millimeter-scale computing system. It is a prototype designed to be implanted in a human eye, to monitor internal pressure there for signs of glaucoma.




Original Article

Monday, February 21, 2011

WEEK 8







Dumber and Dumber?

     I found an interesting article by Jonah Lehrer of Wired which takes issue with Gideon Rachman's article in the Financial Times about how there is a dearth of geniuses and "great thinkers" today compared to times past. 
     Lehrer points out that while it may seem that our civilization is producing less of these "great minds", the reason is not that we're not as smart, but that today's great problems are so large and complex, and computer networking so widespread, that most solutions come from teams instead of individuals.


Thursday, February 17, 2011

WEEK 7




 President Obama to Meet With
Technology Industry Leaders
    

     President Obama travels to the west coast this week to meet with top executives in the technology sector including Steve Jobs, Eric Schmidt, Mark Zuckerberg and other major players. The President is going to start his trip with a visit to San Francisco, then will travel to Hillsboro, Oregon to tour Intel's semiconductor plant and will be promoting and discussing some of the initiatives announced in his State of the Union address last week.
      


Original Article

Friday, February 11, 2011

Week 6

More Hacker News....
I know I probably shouldn't be so fascinated with hackers,
but now that growing marijuana is pretty much legal
it's one of the last ways that I can think of to be
a potentially ethical outlaw
 
 Too much Robin Hood, Dukes of Hazard and Pirates with a heart of gold as a kid, I guess.

Hackers busted into a NASDAQ confidential corporate communications system and had access to three hundred different companies' information for over a year. No suspects. No motive. Go Hackers.
Original Article

Anonymous, a group of hackers who have acted in support of Julian Assange and Wikileaks, mainly through denial of service attacks against corporate websites of companies that have been critical, or introduced sanctions against Wikileaks, got a little more up close and personal last week. A security researcher who claims he can identify Anonymous' members has pretty much had his world turned upside down with up to sixty instances of malicious tampering on everything from his personal emails and photos, to messed up financial accounts to nasty smart phone flares. I like what Wikileaks was doing, but I definitely pity this fool.
Original Article

Brought to you by the folks who really invented the internet, (sorry Al Gore) DARPA recently started a program that encourages, recruits, and pays hackers from all over the world to help strengthen network security. So leave NASDAQ, the Pentagon, and that security researcher alone, get a haircut, and get a job. Just Kidding (please don't mess up my junk).
Original Article

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Week 5


Could the U.S. Government Shut Down the Internet as Egypt Did?

Technically, the United States could do the same thing Egypt did to block internet access,Robert Faris, research director at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society said.
The government would have to call four or five top internet providers and order them to disrupt Border Gateway Protocols in a way that shut down the majority of American internet traffic, he said. Others said the government would have to deal with the country's thousands of internet providers in order to fully clamp down on internet access, which would be logistically difficult.
But that's unlikely to happen here, experts said.
For one thing, the internet in the U.S. is bigger. There are more companies involved, more data at play and more locations where the internet comes in and out of the country.
Moreover, U.S. law would prevent such an authoritarian shutdown.
"The internet is a network of networks," said Andrew Blum, a correspondent for CNN content partner Wired magazine and author of an upcoming book on internet infrastructure, "and they're all commercially operated.
"They're all businesses. Their autonomy is sort of their bread and butter. And they're mostly unregulated. So the idea of having to comply fully with any government order to shut them off is pretty extreme. It's as if there were a government order to close every McDonald's -- all at once."
A country's legal framework, not its technical infrastructure, determines whether it is able to shut down its citizens' access to the internet, said Cowie.
"It really comes down to the fact that somebody has to have the legal authority to go to a company that runs a large part of the internet in the United States and say, 'Turn off your connection to the outside world.' "
However, as CNET reports, three U.S. senators have submitted legislation to give the president emergency powers over the internet in the event of a cyberattack or other disaster scenario.
On Wednesday, the bill's authors tried to distance themselves from what's happened in Egypt, issuing a statement:
"Our bill already contains protections to prevent the president from denying Americans access to the Internet -- even as it provides ample authority to ensure that those most critical services that rely on the Internet are protected."


Original Article