Wednesday, August 16, 2006
WHAT THE BLEEP DO WE KNOW?!
Monday, July 17, 2006
Pennsylvania town gets tough on immigration
NBC VIDEO
• City to vote on immigration
July 13: The mayor of a Pennsylvania town on Thursday weighs a proposal to curb illegal immigration by ordering its undocumented residents to leave. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports......read more
A Wireless Chip the Size of Grain!
"Memory Spot", a research team at HP Labs, has developed this memory device based on CMOS (a widely used, low-power integrated circuit design). The chip is just about the size of a grain of rice or smaller (2 mm to 4 mm square). These chips can be fixed on a sheet of paper or stuck to any surface, and the company says, will eventually be made available as a booklet with self-adhesive dots.
Some of the potential applications of this device include storage of medical records on a hospital patient's wristband; provision of audio-visual supplements for postcards and photos; help in the pharmaceutical industry's fight against counterfeit; beefing-up of identity card and passport security; and supply of additional information for printed documents.
Ed McDonnell, memory spot project manager, HP Labs, said, "The Memory Spot chip frees digital content from the electronic world of the PC and the Internet, and arranges it all around us in our physical world."
HP claims that the chip has a ten megabits-per-second data transfer rate, which is ten times faster than Bluetooth wireless technology, and comparable to Wi-Fi speeds, giving users instant retrieval of information in audio, video, photo, or document form.
.............................read more
Microsoft shutters Windows private folders
The feature was introduced as a free download last week. Almost immediately, people raised questions over how businesses would grapple with the ability of individual workers to encrypt their data.
"Private Folder 1.0 was designed as a benefit for customers running genuine Windows," Microsoft said in a statement to CNET News.com on Friday. "However, we received feedback about concerns around manageability, data recovery and encryption, and based on that feedback, we are removing the application today. This change will take effect shortly." ...........read more
Thursday, June 22, 2006
Wounded Warriors
Because of the financial support Wounded Warriors received, we were able to support other military hospitals in the States and Iraq by purchasing laptop computers and other morale items to be used by the staff and patients. »more
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Military contractors make billions on the front line
Monday, June 12, 2006
The Complete, Unofficial TEMPEST Information Page
Sunday, June 11, 2006
Firefox snaps at Microsoft's heels
Google has released a Linux
Firefox Victory
Ubuntu open source OS available on Sun Sparc servers
Microsoft chatting about buying Ebay
Saturday, June 10, 2006
Forensic Felonies
Dell and Google team up in bid to break Windows
How A Criminal Might Infiltrate Your Network
Monday, May 29, 2006
Bloggers can shield sources
Proof
Friday, May 26, 2006
Brute Force: Cracking the Data Encryption Standard
Friday, May 19, 2006
REALITY IS A SHARED HALLUCINATION
HISTORY OF THE GROUP BRAIN VIII - 35,000 B.P. and Beyond.
The artificial construction of reality was to play a key role in the new form of global intelligence which would soon emerge among human beings. If the group brain's "psyche" were a beach with shifting dunes and hollows, individual perception would be that beach's grains of sand. However this image has a hidden snag - pure individual perception does not exist. read more »
Tuesday, May 16, 2006
UN Sabotaging US Dangerous
From NewsMax.com
By Joan Swirsky
"The U.N. Exposed: How the United Nations Sabotages America's Security and Fails the World" by Eric Shawn. Penguin Press, 336 pages.
Eric Shawn's new book "The U.N. Exposed" is a blistering attack on the world body's corruption, hypocrisies, greed, ineptitude, scandals and crimes against humanity - and it delivers knockout punches on every page.
Shawn, a veteran Fox News Network anchor who has covered the United Nations for years, mourns the demise of the organization that, in his childhood and adolescence, stood for everything he stood for: "world peace, cooperation, compassion and goodness."