Incredible Archaeological Discovery May Reset the Buddha’s Birth Date

A dig at the suspected birthplace of the Buddha has led to the discovery of an unknown timber structure beneath a series of brick temples. Remarkably, it’s the first known archaeological evidence linking the life of the Buddha to a specific century. Read more…        

View post:
Incredible Archaeological Discovery May Reset the Buddha’s Birth Date

A Co-processor No More, Intel’s Xeon Phi Will Be Its Own CPU As Well

An anonymous reader writes “The Xeon Phi co-processor requires a Xeon CPU to operate… for now. The next generation of Xeon Phi, codenamed Knights Landing and due in 2015, will be its own CPU and accelerator. This will free up a lot of space in the server but more important, it eliminates the buses between CPU memory and co-processor memory, which will translate to much faster performance even before we get to chip improvements. ITworld has a look.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Continued here:
A Co-processor No More, Intel’s Xeon Phi Will Be Its Own CPU As Well

This Infographic Shows Which Sites Properly Encypt Your Data

No company out there wants to admit it, but the fact is, there’s always a reasonable chance they’ll get hacked. If they don’t encrypt your data, those hacks reveal all kinds of information about you very easily. So, to see who’s doing encryption well, the Electronic Frontier Foundation decided to come up with a chart that looks at a number of the big companies. Read more…        

See original article:
This Infographic Shows Which Sites Properly Encypt Your Data

$1 Million Heist Reminds Us That Bitcoin is Neither Safe nor Secure

Let’s play a little game called Good Idea/Bad Idea. Round One: Saving money. That’s a good idea! Round two: Saving thousands of dollars in a Bitcoin wallet that’s highly susceptible to hackers and heists. As the customers of Bitcoin payment processor BIPS will tell you, that’s a bad idea. Read more…        

Continue reading here:
$1 Million Heist Reminds Us That Bitcoin is Neither Safe nor Secure

Here Is Your Self-Driving Car! But Do You Want It?

So long, jetpacks! Our self-driving car has arrived. Burkhard Bilger has a rundown of the fascinating build-up to the self-driving car and its future in the New Yorker — and in this case the future is now. Now, the question is, are we really ready to start using it? Read more…        

Read More:
Here Is Your Self-Driving Car! But Do You Want It?

Route-Injection Attacks Detouring Internet Traffic

msm1267 writes “Attackers are using route injection attacks against BGP-speaking routers to insert additional hops in the traffic stream, redirecting traffic to third-party locations where it can be inspected before it’s sent to its destination. Internet intelligence company Renesys has detected close to 1, 500 IP address blocks that have been hijacked on more than 60 days this year, a disturbing trend that indicates attackers could finally have an increased interest in weaknesses inherent in core Internet infrastructure.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Follow this link:
Route-Injection Attacks Detouring Internet Traffic

NYT: Healthcare.gov Project Chaos Due Partly To Unorthodox Database Choice

First time accepted submitter conoviator writes “The NY Times has just published a piece providing more background on the healthcare.gov software project. One interesting aspect: ‘Another sore point was the Medicare agency’s decision to use database software, from a company called MarkLogic, that managed the data differently from systems by companies like IBM, Microsoft and Oracle. CGI officials argued that it would slow work because it was too unfamiliar. Government officials disagreed, and its configuration remains a serious problem.'” The story does not say that MarkLogic’s software is bad in itself, only that the choice meant increased complexity on the project. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Read more here:
NYT: Healthcare.gov Project Chaos Due Partly To Unorthodox Database Choice

The Neuroscientist Who Discovered He Was a Psychopath

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “Joseph Stromberg writes at the Smithsonian that one afternoon in October 2005, neuroscientist James Fallon was sifting through thousands of PET scans to find anatomical patterns in the brain that correlated with psychopathic tendencies in the real world. ‘Out of serendipity, I was also doing a study on Alzheimer’s and as part of that, had brain scans from me and everyone in my family right on my desk, ‘ writes Fallon. ‘I got to the bottom of the stack, and saw this scan that was obviously pathological.’ When he looked up the code, he was greeted by an unsettling revelation: the psychopathic brain pictured in the scan was his own. When he underwent a series of genetic tests, he got more bad news. ‘I had all these high-risk alleles for aggression, violence and low empathy, ‘ he says, such as a variant of the MAO-A gene that has been linked with aggressive behavior. It wasn’t entirely a shock to Fallon, as he’d always been aware that he was someone especially motivated by power and manipulating others. Additionally, his family line included seven alleged murderers, including Lizzie Borden, infamously accused of killing her father and stepmother in 1892. Many of us would hide this discovery and never tell a soul, out of fear or embarrassment of being labeled a psychopath. Perhaps because boldness and disinhibition are noted psychopathic tendencies, Fallon has gone in the opposite direction, telling the world about his finding in a TED Talk, an NPR interview and now a new book published last month, The Psychopath Inside. ‘Since finding all this out and looking into it, I’ve made an effort to try to change my behavior, ‘ says Fallon. ‘I’ve more consciously been doing things that are considered “the right thing to do, ” and thinking more about other people’s feelings.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

See more here:
The Neuroscientist Who Discovered He Was a Psychopath

Why is this fresh tomato orbiting in space at 4.8 miles per second?

No, this is not a photoshop. You are looking at a fresh tomato—a cosmomato ? A tomatonaut ?—floating in space, orbiting at 4.791 miles per second, 230 miles above your heads. Why the hell is there a tomato in space? Read more…        

Read the article:
Why is this fresh tomato orbiting in space at 4.8 miles per second?