New Error Correction Take Us a Step Closer to Quantum Computing

Quantum computing could make complex calculations trivial in the future, but right now it’s fraught with problems . Consider one of them solved, though, in the shape of a new quantum error correction technique. Read more…

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New Error Correction Take Us a Step Closer to Quantum Computing

Facebook Rant Lands US Man In UAE Jail

blindbat writes While back home in the U.S., a man working in the United Arab Emirates posted negative comments about the company he worked for. Upon returning to the country to resign, he was arrested and now faces up to a year in prison under their strict “cyber slander” laws designed to protect reputation. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Facebook Rant Lands US Man In UAE Jail

Hillary Clinton Also Ran Her Own Email Server As Secretary of State

Transparency, thy name sure as hell ain’t Hillary Clinton. During her time as Secretary of State, Clinton went to extreme lengths to ensure that her emails would stay private. Not only did she exclusively use a personal email address, she even rigged up her own homebrew computer server that routed back to her house instead of relying on government email servers. Read more…

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Hillary Clinton Also Ran Her Own Email Server As Secretary of State

The US’s First Offshore Wind Farm Will Cut Local Power Prices By 40%

merbs writes: The U.S. is finally getting its first offshore wind farm. Deepwater Wind has announced that its Block Island project has been fully financed, passed the permitting process, and will begin putting “steel in water” this summer. For local residents, that means a 40% drop in electricity rates. The company has secured $290 million in financing, with funding from the likes of Key Bank and France’s Société Générale, in part on the strength of its long-term power purchase agreement with US utility National Grid. Block Island has thus surpassed the much-publicized Cape Wind project, long touted as “the nation’s first offshore wind farm, ” but that has been stalled out for over a decade in Massachusetts, held up by a tangle of clean power foes, regulatory and financing woes, and Cape Cod homeowners afraid it’d ruin the view. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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The US’s First Offshore Wind Farm Will Cut Local Power Prices By 40%

Lost City Discovered In Honduran Rain Forest

jones_supa writes: An expedition to Honduras has emerged from the jungle with the discovery of a previously unknown culture’s lost city. The team was led to the remote, uninhabited region by long-standing rumors that it was the site of a storied “White City, ” also referred to in legend as the “City of the Monkey God.” Archaeologists surveyed and mapped extensive plazas, earthworks, mounds, and an earthen pyramid belonging to a culture that thrived a thousand years ago, and then vanished. The team also discovered a remarkable cache of stone sculptures that had lain untouched since the city was abandoned. The objects were documented but left unexcavated. To protect the site from looters, its location is not being revealed. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Lost City Discovered In Honduran Rain Forest

How a Moth’s Eye Could Help Improve the Efficiency of Solar Cells

Inspiration lies in the strangest of places—and for researchers at the Agency for Science, Technology & Research in Singapore, that includes the eye of moth. A new antireflective coating inspired by the creature’s ocular faculties could help bump up the efficiency of solar cells. Read more…

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How a Moth’s Eye Could Help Improve the Efficiency of Solar Cells

Linux 4.0 Getting No-Reboot Patching

An anonymous reader writes: ZDNet reports that the latest changes to the Linux kernel include the ability to apply patches without requiring a reboot. From the article: “Red Hat and SUSE both started working on their own purely open-source means of giving Linux the ability to keep running even while critical patches were being installed. Red Hat’s program was named kpatch, while SUSE’ is named kGraft. … At the Linux Plumbers Conference in October 2014, the two groups got together and started work on a way to patch Linux without rebooting that combines the best of both programs. Essentially, what they ended up doing was putting both kpatch and kGraft in the 4.0 Linux kernel.” Note: “Simply having the code in there is just the start. Your Linux distribution will have to support it with patches that can make use of it.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Linux 4.0 Getting No-Reboot Patching

Hillary Clinton Hid Her Emails While Secretary of State and That’s Bad

Hillary Clinton’s burgeoning presidential campaign is not off to a good start. Just a day after papers reported that the former Secretary of State would make a bid for the nation’s highest office in April, The New York Times reports that Hillary Clinton used only her personal email address while serving as Secretary of State . This is bad. Read more…

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Hillary Clinton Hid Her Emails While Secretary of State and That’s Bad

Android 5.0 Devices Aren’t Encrypted By Default—Despite Google Promises

When Android 5.0 Lollipop launched, Google proudly claimed that full-disk encryption was a standard feature , enabled by default. But now phones with the OS are starting to appear in the wild, that appears not to be the case. Read more…

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Android 5.0 Devices Aren’t Encrypted By Default—Despite Google Promises

This House in Nazareth Offers Hints About Jesus’ Childhood Town

Archaeologists have excavated a house in Nazareth, Jesus’ home town, that dates back to the first century. Local Christians have long believed it was Jesus’ childhood home, but scientists say that’s impossible to know for sure. What the house reveals about life during Jesus’ childhood, however, is fascinating. Read more…

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This House in Nazareth Offers Hints About Jesus’ Childhood Town