Seumas + technology   167

Asian Call Center Workers Trained With U.S. Tax Dollars - Global-cio - Executive insights/interviews - Informationweek
Despite President Obama's recent call for companies to "insource" jobs sent overseas, it turns out that the federal government itself is spending millions of dollars to train foreign students for employment in some booming career fields--including working in offshore call centers that serve U.S. businesses.
The program is called JEEP, which stands for Job Enabling English Proficiency. It's available to college students in the Philippines through USAID. That's the same agency that until a couple of years ago was spending millions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer money to train offshore IT workers in Sri Lanka--until I reported that inconvenient truth in this story. The ensuing uproar led to the Sri Lanka initiative's termination.
paul_mcdougall  information  week  article  technology  government  politics  usa  united_states  america  united_states_of_america  tax  taxes  usaid  train  training  outsourcing  outsourced  outsource  offshore  offshored  offshoring  barack_obama  president  jeep  jobs  employment  philippines  2012  2012_04_18  april  news  industry  asia 
5 weeks ago by Seumas
Obama’s high-tech labor lies - Salon.com
A few days after the New York Times’ (embarrassingly belated and deeply flawed) article on Apple’s Chinese production facilities reignited a national discussion about offshore outsourcing, President Obama was confronted during a Google+ “hang out” about why during a brutal unemployment crisis his administration continues to support expanding the H-1B visa program that allows tech companies to annually import thousands of low-wage engineers from abroad. In his stunning answer, the president first expresses bewilderment that any American high-tech engineer could be out of work, because he says that “what industry tells me is that they don’t have enough (domestic) highly skilled engineers” and that “the word that we’re getting is that somebody (a domestic engineer) in a high-tech field should be able to find something right away.” He then goes on to insist that the H-1B program is “reserved only for those companies who say they cannot find somebody in (a) particular field” and that it shouldn’t apply to industries where “there are a lot of highly skilled American workers” looking for a job because he says his administration is focused on “encourag(ing) more American engineers to be placed” in open positions.
salon  politics  obama  unemployment  employment  h1b  outsourcing  offshoring  engineering  engineers  jobs  david_sirota  february  2012  2012_02_06  news  article  business  industry  technology  tech  government  barack_obama 
february 2012 by Seumas
Neil Young is right — piracy is the new radio — Tech News and Analysis
As an artist who probably makes a substantial income from licensing his music, you might think Neil Young would frown on piracy and file-sharing, but that appears not to be the case, according to an interview he gave at the Dive Into Media conference in Los Angeles. Instead of railing against file-sharers, Young called piracy “the new radio” because it’s “how music gets around.” The musician’s comment puts a lot of the hysteria about copyright infringement into perspective — as we’ve pointed out before, file-sharing and monetization aren’t mutually exclusive, and in many cases a certain amount of so-called “piracy” can actually be good for business, as authors, musicians and even game developers have come to realize.

Comparing piracy to radio is a smart way of looking at the issue: in the early days of the music business, when live performances and record sales were the main revenue generator for artists and publishers, radio itself was seen as a form of piracy (as sheet music was before that). Musicians fulminated about radio stations playing their music for free, and some record labels made their acts sign waivers saying they would not appear on the radio. In the end, of course, radio became a huge revenue driver for music — although it did so in part because record labels and publishers pushed for licensing fees.
gigaom  january  2012  2012_01_31  mathew_ingram  article  news  piracy  copyright  radio  riaa  music  technology  file_sharing  neil_young  quote  quotes  business  sopa  pipa  legislation  politics  government  author  neil_gaiman  paulo_coelho  rovio  minecraft  markus_persson  videogames  gaming  developers 
february 2012 by Seumas
Two SOPA Writers Become Entertainment Lobbyists - Slashdot
"According to Politico, 'A pair of senior Hill aides at the center of a brewing battle between Hollywood and Silicon Valley are packing their bags for K Street, where they’ll work for two of the entertainment lobby shops trying to influence their former colleagues in Congress on the very same issue. Allison Halataei, former deputy chief of staff and parliamentarian to House Judiciary Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas), and Lauren Pastarnack, a Republican who has served as a senior aide on the Senate Judiciary Committee, worked on online piracy bills that would push Internet companies like Google, Yahoo and Facebook to shut down websites that offer illegal copies of blockbuster films and chart-topping songs.' Techdirt adds, 'Pastarnack went to the MPAA where she'll be "director of government relations" and Halataei to the NMPA (music publishers and songwriters) where she'll be "chief liaison to Capitol Hill." The Politico article linked above notes that this kind of "revolving door" is all too common. It may not be directly corrupt, but to the public it sure feels corrupt.'"
slashdot  tech  technology  business  industry  government  corruption  sopa  lobbyists  america  united_states  usa  mpaa  politics  nmpa  music  movies  riaa  payola  legislation  lamar_smith  lauren_pastarnack  allison_halataei  december  2011  2011_12_10  discussion  forum  internet  copyright 
december 2011 by Seumas
Security vendors help covert agencies spy on their own citizens: WikiLeaks | ITworld
Yesterday WikiLeaks released 287 documents in what it calls The Spy Files, which describes as descriptions of the relationship between national intelligence agencies and the commercial software, security and surveillance companies they hired to provide technology that allows them to secretly listen in on cell phone conversations, text messages, email and other Internet traffic and location data.

Some even use voice-recognition technology to help identify the voices in conversations on which they eavesdrop, sometimes while looking for the opportunity to end some conversations by firing a missile to kill one of the participants.

Nearly all governments spy on their own citizens and on foreigners using surreptitious spyware on computers, cell phones, GPS devices and other modern electronic devices according to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said during a panel on espionage and digital security at a conference yesterday in London.
itworld  tech  technology  wikileaks  security  government  america  us  usa  united_states  privacy  civil_liberties  civil_liberty  corruption  espionage  article  2011  december  2011_12_02  spying  kevin_fogarty  spy_files  julian_assange  london  internet  computers  networking 
december 2011 by Seumas
BBC News - Tony Sale, Colossus computer conservationist, dies
The mammoth project to recreate the code-cracking Colossus capped a career built around electronics and computers.

Most recently, Mr Sale drove the campaign to save Bletchley Park, where Colossus aided Allied code-cracking efforts during World War II.

At Bletchley he also founded the National Museum of Computing to help preserve the UK's ageing computers.

Born in 1931, Mr Sale displayed his talent for engineering at an early age by building a robot, called George I, out of Meccano. One of the later versions of George was built from the remains of a Wellington bomber.

Instead of going to university, Mr Sale joined the RAF, which nurtured his engineering talent, and by the age of 20 he was lecturing pilots and aircrew about advances in radar.
bbc  tech  technology  computers  tony_sale  colossus  august  2011  2011_08_30  dead  death  obituary  news  article 
october 2011 by Seumas
How to Build a Gaming Computer - YouTube
This is a very thorough and patient video worth passing out to people interested in building a computer, but uncertain what is involved. This is a great link for every engineer to have on hand for the next time someone asks "can you tell me how I can build my first rig?".
youtube  video  howto  guide  tutorial  stream  hardware  computer  computers  tech  technology  build  2011 
september 2011 by Seumas
GRC's | Password Haystacks: How Well Hidden is Your Needle?  
This interactive brute force search space calculator allows you to experiment with password length and composition to develop an accurate and quantified sense for the safety of using passwords that can only be found through exhaustive search. Please see the discussion below for additional information.
steve_gibson  gibson_researchcorporation  password  passwords  entropy  privacy  security  haystack  calculator  technology  tech  computing 
august 2011 by Seumas
X Window Managers Part 2
In part 1 of the series we looked at the early X window managers that ran on X display protocol based systems. The scale and range of them was from the very beginning where a user was presented with a menu and windows and little else (perhaps a clock or loadmeter) up to what could be considered the first window manager that went beyond providing the basics to providing more of an environment and extensibility through modules that allowed other hackers to "join in the fun". In this part 2 of the series two more distinct groups of window managers will be peeked at; first a look at the evolution of that first "more of an environment than just window managing" software; many of which cropped up right around the same time (within a few years of eachother). Second the kickback against large scale environments with an examination of a breed of window managers designed to be ultra light/fast while still preserving good looks.
window_manager  window_managers  x_windows  article  2009  april  tech  technology  history  retro  software  operating_system  os  linux  unix  afterstep  windowmaker  gnustep  nextstep  enlightenment  blackbox  wm2  wmx 
july 2011 by Seumas
X Window Managers Part 1
The X11 suite of graphical display capabilities sets policy but does not define application; this is to say it provides a vehicle to transport graphics using a protocol. There are advantages and disadvantages to such a method beyond the scope of this material excepting one particular advantage: the implementation of the X suite allows for the creation of a wide variety of graphical window managers. Although there is a great website that documents the wide array of window managers both large and small called xwinman lets take a look at window managers roughly in order of appearance.
window_manager  window_managers  x_windows  article  2009  march  tech  technology  history  retro  software  operating_system  os  linux  x11  xwinman  plan9  gui  9wm  xwm  twm  ctwm  mwm  fvwm  fvwm2  unix 
july 2011 by Seumas
How To Safely Store A Password | codahale.com
Use bcrypt

Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt. Use bcrypt.

Why Not {MD5, SHA1, SHA256, SHA512, SHA-3, etc}?

These are all general purpose hash functions, designed to calculate a digest of huge amounts of data in as short a time as possible. This means that they are fantastic for ensuring the integrity of data and utterly rubbish for storing passwords.
encryption  password  passwords  security  bcrypt  codahale  programming  coding  cryptography  cryptology  salt  salts  hash  hashes  md5  sha1  sha256  sha512  sha3  2010  january  2010_01_31  february  2011  2011_02_24  technology  tech  computer  computers  cracking 
june 2011 by Seumas
E3 2011: John Carmack talks Wii U, PlayStation Vita, and next-gen Rage - News
LOS ANGELES--As the 2011 Electronic Entertainment Expo was winding down, John Carmack was getting ready to leave. Having been flown in for a day on a private jet from Texas--courtesy of his bosses at ZeniMax Media--the chief of id Software's technology department was holding court Wednesday at the extravagant booth of its corporate sibling, Bethesda Softworks.
id  idsoftware  rage  john_carmack  wii_u  playstation  vita  e3  2011  2011_06_09  june  interview  article  gamespot  gaming  videogame  videogames  consoles  tech  technology 
june 2011 by Seumas
Amazon Server Said to Be Used in Sony Attack - Bloomberg
Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)’s Web Services cloud- computing unit was used by hackers in last month’s attack against Sony Corp. (6758)’s online entertainment systems, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

Hackers using an alias signed up to rent a server through Amazon’s EC2 service and launched the attack from there, said the person, who requested anonymity because the information is confidential. The account has been shut down, the person said.
bloomberg  article  news  may  2011  2011_05_13  sony  psn  playstation  amazon  ec2  aws  jeff_bezos  amzn  cloud  tech  technology  crime  security  network  networking 
may 2011 by Seumas
“Forever Alone” 4chan Prank Brings Out the Best and Worst of the Internet | Betabeat — News, gossip and intel from Silicon Alley 2.0.
A 4chan-engendered prank perpetrated at male users of online dating sites such as OKCupid and PlentyOfFish.com brought out the best and the worst of the internet tonight when the e-forces of good and evil clashed by a set of payphones at 46th and Broadway in Times Square. The elaborate gag, planned more than a month ago and circulated on 4chan and other forums, was for mischevious netizens to create fake dating profiles for women and set up dates with single “forever alone” men online. The dates were all supposed to meet on Friday night at the payphones on Broadway, which happen to be under a live streaming webcam, so the OKCupid/PlentyOfFish single guys could then be stood up en masse and snarked at by the much cooler 4chan/Reddit single guys sitting on their computers at home.
betabeat  article  news  tech  technology  internet  pranks  practical_joke  prank  forever_alone  4chan  may  2011  2011_05_13 
may 2011 by Seumas
Dropbox Lied to Users About Data Security, Complaint to FTC Alleges | Threat Level | Wired.com
Dropbox, the wildly popular online storage system, deceived users about the security and encryption of its services, putting it at a competitive advantage, according to an FTC complaint filed Thursday by a prominent security researcher.
wired  article  news  may  2011  2011_05_13  ryan_singel  cryptography  security  privacy  business  tech  technology  industry  dropbox  ftc  christopher_soghoian 
may 2011 by Seumas
Regulator to join Comcast after OK of NBC deal - The Washington Post
A top telecommunications regulator who voted to approve Comcast’s takeover of NBC Universal in January is leaving to join the company as a lobbyist.

Meredith Attwell Baker, one of two Republicans on the five-member Federal Communications Commission, will become senior vice president of government affairs for NBC Universal.
the_washington_post  article  news  politics  tech  technology  comcast  nbc  fcc  lobbyist  meredith_attwell_baker  doj  cable  network_neutrality  america  united_states  united_states_of_america  usa  government  may  2011  2011_05_12  joelle_tessler  associated_press 
may 2011 by Seumas
LKML: Linus Torvalds: Re: [stable] Linux 2.6.25.10
Btw, and you may not like this, since you are so focused on security, one
reason I refuse to bother with the whole security circus is that I think
it glorifies - and thus encourages - the wrong behavior.

It makes "heroes" out of security people, as if the people who don't just
fix normal bugs aren't as important.
linus_torvalds  linux  operating_system  os  open_source  opensource  oss  floss  lkml  mailing_list  list  email  mail  usenet  security  bug  bugs  2008  july  2008_07_15  technology  development  developer  programming  coding 
may 2011 by Seumas
Domestic surveillance court approved 100% of 2010 warrant requests
The secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court approved all 1,506 government requests to electronically monitor suspected “agents” of a foreign power or terrorists on US soil last year, according to a Justice Department report released via the Freedom of Information Act.

The two-page report, which shows about a 13 percent increase in the number of applications for electronic surveillance between 2009 and 2010, was obtained by the Federation of American Scientists and published Friday.

“The FISC did not deny any applications in whole, or in part,” according to the April 19 report to Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid, (D-NV.)

The 11-member court denied two of 1,329 applications for domestic-intelligence surveillance in 2009. The FBI is the primary agency making those requests.

Whether the FISA court, whose business is conducted behind closed doors, is rubber stamping the requests is a matter of debate.
arstechnica  tech  technology  freedom  liberty  liberties  privacy  government  fbi  surveillance  2010  warrant  warrants  david_kravets  wired  fisa  fisc  2011  may  2011_05_09  article  news 
may 2011 by Seumas
LastPass Disclosure Shows Why We Can't Have Nice Things
LastPass acted exactly like we wish most companies would act: responsibly. And the press’ response? Declaring LastPass “hacked” and “vulnerable”, and placing them in the same category as Sony—who stored passwords and complete credit card information in plain text, and were actually hacked—with sensationalist headlines like:
may  2011  2011_05_08  lastpass  hack  disclosure  opinion  commentary  password  passwords  media  technology  tech 
may 2011 by Seumas
Why We Need An Open Wireless Movement | Electronic Frontier Foundation
If you sometimes find yourself needing an open wireless network in order to check your email from a car, a street corner, or a park, you may have noticed that they're getting harder to find.

Stories like the one over the weekend about a bunch of police breaking down an innocent man's door because he happened to leave his network open, as well as general fears about slow networks and online privacy, are convincing many people to password-lock their WiFi routers.

The gradual disappearance of open wireless networks is a tragedy of the commons, with a confusing twist of privacy and security debate. This essay explains why the progressive locking of wireless networks is harmful — for convenience, for privacy and for efficient use of the electromagnetic spectrum.
eff  electronic_frontier_foundation  wifi  wireless  peter_eckersley  technology  tech  internet  security  freedom  privacy  government  politics  liberty  april  2011  2011_04_27 
may 2011 by Seumas
After botched child porn raid, judge sees the light on IP addresses
Several recent government raids on computer users suspected of sharing child porn online hit the wrong targets. Instead of getting the perpetrators, some of the raids nabbed a neighbor with an open WiFi network instead. One obvious takeaway: letting total strangers use your Internet connection for any purpose comes with some risk. But there's another lesson: IP addresses simply don't identify the people behind the computers.

One federal judge in Illinois has already taken the lesson to heart and applied it to the P2P file-sharing case before him. John Steele, the main lawyer in Illinois who has brought such cases, recently came up before judge Harold Baker and tried his standard tactic: requesting expedited discovery so that he could turn his list of allegedly infringing IP addresses into names. (Steele has also attempted to lodge the case as a "reverse class action" in which unknown copyright infringers of a pornographic film are named as a "class" to avoid problems of jurisdiction.)
arstechnica  news  article  nate_anderson  2011  may  2011_05_02  government  law  crime  technology  tech  judge  p2p  wifi  united_states  united_states_of_america  usa  john_steele  harold_baker  judge_harold_baker 
may 2011 by Seumas
Sony gives more PSN attack details, details "Welcome Back" packages
Sony's Kaz Hirai spoke at a press conference in Tokyo this morning, offering more details about the PlayStation Network outage, the attacks that caused it, and what the company will do to help keep customers happy. "This criminal act against our network had a significant impact not only on our consumers, but our entire industry," Hirai said in an official statement. "These illegal attacks obviously highlight the widespread problem with cybersecurity. We take the security of our consumers' information very seriously and are committed to helping our consumers protect their personal data."
arstechnica  psn  playstation  sony  privacy  security  ben_kuchera  article  news  tech  technology  gaming  videogames  2011  may  2011_05_01 
may 2011 by Seumas
Appeals Court: No Hacking Required to Be Prosecuted as a Hacker | Threat Level | Wired.com
Employees may be prosecuted under a federal antihacking statute for taking computer files that they were authorized to access and using them in a manner prohibited by the company, a federal appeals court has ruled.
2011  april  2011_04_29  hacking  hacker  court  government  law  crime  criminal  threat_level  privacy  security  internet  united_states  united_states_of_america  usa  america  wired  magazine  article  news  federal  judge  technology  tech 
april 2011 by Seumas
DOJ: FBI digital counterintelligence weakened by focus on child porn | ITworld
Despite its growing digital surveillance capabilities and increasing responsibility for investigating and countering cyber attacks on the U.S., the FBI's core cyber security division turns out to be basically incompetent, according to a critical report from the Dept. of Justice. [PDF]

Part of the reason is that the 14 agencies that share some responsibility for online counter-espionage don't share information well. Another contributor is the lack of effective pressure from top managers to get agents trained in national-security intrusion topics and tactics.

Most of the reason is that the FBI spends twice as much effort investigating child porn as it does attempts by foreign governments to attack U.S. facilities or steal information that would damage U.S. national security, the report found.

To put that in perspective, the number of foreign attacks on the U.S. increased 40 percent between 2007 and 2008, according to the report, whose data are pretty old for such a sensitive topic.
itworld  it  tech  technology  internet  government  crime  fbi  america  united_states  united_states_of_america  usa  kevin_fogarty  report  porn  doj  april  2011  2011_04_29 
april 2011 by Seumas
AppleInsider | Epic game developer calls iPad 2 graphics leap "astonishing," doubts Android can compete
The blistering pace of graphics performance improvements on Apple's iPad 2 will enable a new class of handheld gaming titles, but Android devices aren't likely to get the same kind of attention due to platform fragmentation, says Epic Games's Tim Sweeney.
epic  developer  development  games  gaming  videogames  ipad  graphics  technology  tech  apple  appleinsider  daniel_eran_dilger  2011  april  2011_04_05  mobile  hardware  tim_sweeney 
april 2011 by Seumas
Tenenbaum Appeal Heard: Is It Okay To Make Someone Pay $675,000 For Downloading 30 Songs? | Techdirt
The latest in the ongoing trial of Joel Tenenbaum, the student who was found guilty of sharing 30 songs online, and told to pay $675,000 for it, until the judge unilaterraly reduced the amount to $67,500. As we noted at the time, it really seemed like Tenenbaum had horrifically bad legal counsel, in the form of Harvard law professor Charlie Nesson, who still seems more focused on making the case a circus, rather than focusing in on the key issues. That does not, however, mean there aren't key issues here, with the big one being the appropriate standards for determining how much one should have to pay if found guilty of file sharing.

The appeal was just heard on Monday, and you can listen to the oral arguments (mp3) from the court's website. It's definitely an interesting hearing and worth listening to. As with most appeals court situations, the bulk of the work is done in the briefs that were filed prior to the hearing, and which everyone is familiar with. The oral hearings get right to the point and drill down on where the panel of judges has questions.
techdirt  riaa  p2p  file_sharing  filesharing  law  legal  judge  appeal  tenenbaum  music  downloading  court  america  usa  united_states  united_states_of_america  2011  april  2011_04_05  article  news  technology 
april 2011 by Seumas
The history of UTF-8 as told by Rob Pike
Rob Pike explains how Ken Thompson invented UTF-8 in one evening and how they together built the first system-wide implementation in less than a week.
unicode  utf-8  character  text  encoding  rob_pike  ken_thompson  tech  technology  history  developer  development  developers  coders  bell_labs  documentation  email 
april 2011 by Seumas
LXer: A Brief History of Microsoft FUD
This time it's patents that will ensure the downfall of GNU/Linux and with it, the entire world of open source. But before hanging up your certified geek propeller-hat and retraining as a dental hygienist, you might want to consider the following brief history of Microsoft's use of Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt (FUD) as a weapon against GNU/Linux.
history  microsoft  technology  business  tech  industry  lxer  glyn_moody  2006  march  2006_03_30  article 
april 2011 by Seumas
Oracle Corporation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oracle Corporation (NASDAQ: ORCL) is an American multinational computer technology corporation that specializes in developing and marketing hardware systems and enterprise software products — particularly database management systems. Headquartered in Redwood Shores, California, United States and employing 105,000 people worldwide as of 1 July 2010,[3] it has enlarged its share of the software market through organic growth and through a number of high-profile acquisitions. By 2007 Oracle had the third-largest software revenue, after Microsoft and IBM.[4]

The corporation has arguably become best-known for its flagship product, the Oracle Database. The company also builds tools for database development and systems of middle-tier software, enterprise resource planning software (ERP), customer relationship management software (CRM) and supply chain management (SCM) software.

As of 2010, Larry Ellison, a co-founder of Oracle Corporation, has served as Oracle's CEO throughout its history. He also served as the Chairman of the Board until his replacement by Jeffrey O. Henley in 2004. On August 22, 2008 the Associated Press ranked Ellison as the top-paid chief executive in the world.[5][6]
wikipedia  industry  technology  business  oracle  orcl 
april 2011 by Seumas
Sun Microsystems - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sun Microsystems, Inc. was a company selling computers, computer components, computer software, and information technology services. Sun was founded on February 24, 1982.[4] Prior to the acquistition by Oracle its headquarters were in Santa Clara, California (part of Silicon Valley), on the former west campus of the Agnews Developmental Center.

On January 27, 2010, Sun was acquired by Oracle Corporation for US$7.4 billion, based on an agreement signed on April 20, 2009.[5] Sun Microsystems, Inc. was subsequently renamed Oracle America, Inc.[6]
wikipedia  technology  industry  business  sun_microsystems  sunw 
april 2011 by Seumas
RIAA lobbyist becomes federal judge, rules on file-sharing cases
Last week, Washington, DC federal judge Beryl Howell ruled on three mass file-sharing lawsuits. Judges in Texas, West Virginia, and Illinois had all ruled recently that such lawsuits were defective in various ways, but Howell gave her cases the green light; attorneys could use the federal courts to sue thousands of people at once and then issue mass subpoenas to Internet providers. Yes, issues of "joinder" and "jurisdiction" would no doubt arise later, but the initial mass unmasking of alleged file-swappers was legitimate.
arstechnica  technology  tech  music  news  article  riaa  government  usa  united_states  united_states_of_america  justice  law  beryl_howell  corruption  lobbying  lobbyist  dmca  file_sharing  filesharing  judge  federal  patriot_act  2011  march  2011_03_28  nate_anderson  politics 
march 2011 by Seumas
David Rumelhart Dies at 68 - Created Computer Simulations of Perception - NYTimes.com
David E. Rumelhart, whose computer simulations of perception gave scientists some of the first testable models of neural processing and proved helpful in the development of machine learning and artificial intelligence, died Sunday in Chelsea, Mich. He was 68.
david_rumelhart  article  health  nyt  new_york_times  scientist  science  tech  technology  2011  march  2011_03_13  benedict_carey  2011_03_18  obituary 
march 2011 by Seumas
David Rumelhart - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Everett Rumelhart (1942 - 2011) has made many contributions to the formal analysis of human cognition, working primarily within the frameworks of mathematical psychology, symbolic artificial intelligence, and parallel distributed processing. He also admired formal linguistic approaches to cognition and explored the possibility of formulating a formal grammar to capture the structure of stories.
wikipedia  david_rumelhart  david_everett_rumelhart  science  math  michigan  usa  united_states  united_states_of_america  connectionism  artificial_intelligence  tech  technology  1942  june  1942_06_12  2011  march  2011_03_13  stanford  stanford_university  scientist 
march 2011 by Seumas
Kevin Rose - blogg - Apple's Role in Japan during the Tohoku Earthquake
Wow, this email is from a friend of mine that works for Apple in Japan... makes me happy Apple went the extra mile here, check out his story below:
apple  disaster  technology  tech  earthquake  japan  kevin_rose  blog  apple_store  store  retail  email  letter  2011  march  2011_03_14 
march 2011 by Seumas
Carmack: Direct3D is now better than OpenGL | bit-gamer.net
First person shooter godfather John Carmack has revealed that he now prefers DirectX to OpenGL, saying that 'inertia' is the main reason why id Software has stuck by the cross-platform 3D graphics API for years.
game  gaming  videogames  development  developer  john_carmack  carmack  direct3d  graphics  graphics_engine  engine  3d  3d_engine  bitgamer  march  2011  ben_hardwidge  2011_03_11  pc  computer  computing  tech  technology  opengl 
march 2011 by Seumas
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