Ever visit web site that won’t let you read the article until you fill out a survey? Many of them are byapssable—you just need to modify the source code a bit. Read more…
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Bypass Pre-Roll Surveys with Your Browser’s Inspect Element Tool
Ever visit web site that won’t let you read the article until you fill out a survey? Many of them are byapssable—you just need to modify the source code a bit. Read more…
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Bypass Pre-Roll Surveys with Your Browser’s Inspect Element Tool
alphadogg (971356) writes “Microsoft has been forced to start using its global stock of IPv4 addresses to keep its Azure cloud service afloat in the U.S., highlighting the growing importance of making the shift to IP version 6. The newer version of the Internet Protocol adds an almost inexhaustible number of addresses thanks to a 128-bit long address field, compared to the 32 bits used by version 4. The IPv4 address space has been fully assigned in the U.S., meaning there are no additional addresses available, Microsoft said in a blog post earlier this week. This requires the company to use the IPv4 address space available to it globally for new services, it said.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Link:
Microsoft Runs Out of US Address Space For Azure, Taps Its Global IPv4 Stock
First Class on domestic flights can be a bit of a joke, offering luxury commensurate with what regular passengers used to get. This Sunday, jetBlue will change the cross country long-haul game with the launch of their new Airbus A321. It’s cheaper than most first class trips and, as I found out, nicer in many ways. Read more…
Taken from:
JetBlue’s New ‘Mint Class’ Is Now The Nicest Way To Fly Cross-Country
You are looking at the new iPhone 6—at least according to Sonny Dickson, whose Apple leaks have always been accurate. If this is true, his photo confirms the rumors that claimed that Apple would start producing 4.7-inch and 5.5-inch iPhone 6 models starting in May. Read more…
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This is the new larger iPhone 6, claims reliable source
When most of us imagine what the mantle of the Earth is like, we see burning hot rock and magma (and maybe satan hanging out for good measure). But scientists have discovered evidence that all that rock may be hiding huge amounts of water— three times the volume of all our oceans combined. Read more…
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The Planet’s Biggest Water Supply Might Be Hidden 400 Miles Below the US
Here comes Prime Music, a free service for Amazon Prime subscribers with over a million songs available for streaming and cached download. Amazon Prime was already an amazing deal —perhaps the best in all of tech—and today, it’s getting even better. Read more…
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Amazon Prime Music: One Million Songs, Free For Prime Subscribers
It sounds weird, but the most abundant mineral on Earth finally got a name last week, thanks to a century-old meteorite. What? How? Why did it take so long? There were a whole confluence of reasons it took bridgmanite so long to get its name. Read more…
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Why Earth’s Most Abundant Mineral Only Just Got Its Name
An anonymous reader writes “Tenure laws one of the most controversial aspects of education reform, and now the tide seems to be turning against them. A California judge has handed down a ruling that such laws are unconstitutional, depriving students of an education by sometimes securing positions held by bad teachers. The judge said, “Substantial evidence presented makes it clear to this court that the challenged statutes disproportionately affect poor and/or minority students. The evidence is compelling. Indeed, it shocks the conscience.” The plaintiff’s case was that “California’s current laws make it impossible to get rid of the system’s numerous low-performing and incompetent teachers; that seniority rules requiring the newest teachers to be laid off first were harmful; and that granting tenure to teachers after only two years on the job was farcical, offering far too little time for a fair assessment of their skills.” This is a precedent-setting case, and there will likely be many similar cases around the country as tenure is challenged with this new ammunition.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Teacher Tenure Laws Ruled Unconstitutional In California
Zothecula writes “A team of researchers working at Stockholm’s KTH Royal Institute of Technology claim to have developed a way to make cellulose fibers stronger than steel on a strength-to-weight basis. In what is touted as a world first, the team from the institute’s Wallenberg Wood Science Center claim that the new fiber could be used as a biodegradable replacement for many filament materials made today from imperishable substances such as fiberglass, plastic, and metal. And all this from a substance that requires only water, wood cellulose, and common table salt to create it. The full academic paper is available from Nature Communications.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Biodegradable Fibers As Strong As Steel Made From Wood Cellulose
NASA’s real life interstellar Enterprise concept ship may look straight out of Star Trek, but their Orion crew module for Exploration Flight Test-1 looks chrometastically cool, like the alien spaceship in Flight of the Navigator. Read more…
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NASA’s Orion crew module looks like a liquid metal alien spaceship