This New "Pure" Laser Makes Fiber Optic Networks 20x Better

Whether you’re a huge geek or a total luddite, you’ve got to be excited when scientists invent a new kind of laser , especially one that stands to replace the one we’ve been using for fiber optic communications for the last 40 years. A team of CalTech researchers did just that . Be excited. Read more…        

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This New "Pure" Laser Makes Fiber Optic Networks 20x Better

The World’s Largest Solar Plant Started Creating Electricity Today

Take 300, 000 computer-controlled mirrors, each 7 feet high and 10 feet wide. Control them with computers to focus the Sun’s light to the top of 459-feet towers, where water is turned to steam to power turbines. Bingo: you have the world’s biggest solar power plant, the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System . Read more…        

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The World’s Largest Solar Plant Started Creating Electricity Today

Orbital Becomes Second Private Firm To Send Cargo Craft To ISS

An anonymous reader writes “Orbital Sciences Corp.’s unmanned Cygnus spacecraft delivered 3, 000 pounds of equipment, fresh fruit, and Christmas presents from the families of all six ISS spacemen today. ‘From the men and women involved in the design, integration and test, to those who launched the Antares (rocket) and operated the Cygnus, our whole team has performed at a very high level for our NASA customer, and I am very proud of their extraordinary efforts, ‘ said David W. Thompson, president and chief executive officer of Orbital, in a written statement from the company.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Orbital Becomes Second Private Firm To Send Cargo Craft To ISS

A US Army Base Is Running a Bunch of Illegal Windows 7 Copies

Given the United States’ intolerance for copyright infringement and the piraters that propagate it , you’d think Uncle Sam would be a little more keen on making sure that his men were playing by the book themselves. As it turns out, a whole mess of computers running unlicensed, illegal copies of Windows 7 belong to none other than the US Army itself . Read more…        

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A US Army Base Is Running a Bunch of Illegal Windows 7 Copies

DoD Public Domain Archive To Be Privatized, Locked Up For 10 Years

Jah-Wren Ryel writes “Looks like the copyright cartel have raided the public domain yet again — the US DoD has signed an exclusive contract with T3 Media to digitize their media archive in exchange for T3 having complete licensing control for 10 years. Considering that all output from the US government is, by law, ineligible for copyright, this deal seems borderline illegal at best. To make matters worse, it appears that there is no provision to make the digitized content freely accessible after the 10 years are up — which means we risk having all that content disappear into T3.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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DoD Public Domain Archive To Be Privatized, Locked Up For 10 Years

Army 3D-Prints Futuristic Electronics In Its Own New Jersey Mini-City

Defense Systems reports on the Army’s 3D printing operation at the Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey, describing how they’ve been using additive manufacturing to print antennas into helmets, sensors into clothes, and even whole functioning batteries— among other things . Gizmodo was at the lab last week to see these machines in action, and to photograph the fascinating things going on in this “defense R&D mini-city.” [ Defense Systems ] Read more…        

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Army 3D-Prints Futuristic Electronics In Its Own New Jersey Mini-City

For 20 Years the Nuclear Launch Code at US Minuteman Silos Was 00000000

Today I found out that during the height of the Cold War, the US military put such an emphasis on a rapid response to an attack on American soil, that to minimize any foreseeable delay in launching a nuclear missile, for nearly two decades they intentionally set the launch codes at every silo in the US to 8 zeroes. Read more…        

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For 20 Years the Nuclear Launch Code at US Minuteman Silos Was 00000000

US Military Settles Software Piracy Claims For $50M

Rambo Tribble writes “The BBC reports that the U. S. government has agreed to pay software maker Apptricity $50 million to settle claims that the U.S. Army pirated thousands of copies of the firm’s provisioning software. The report indicates 500 licensed copies were sold, but it came to light an army official had mentioned that ‘thousands’ of devices were running the software.” $50 million in tax money could have paid for a whole lot of open source software development, instead. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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US Military Settles Software Piracy Claims For $50M

​Some Fool Threw Away a Hard Drive with $7.5 Million of Bitcoin On It

Ever accidentally lose a dollar? Then you count what’s in your war chest, realize it’s a dollar short, and kick yourself for being careless? Well, a British IT worker knows what that feels like—except times 7.5 million . Read more…        

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​Some Fool Threw Away a Hard Drive with $7.5 Million of Bitcoin On It

Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “The Boston Globe reports that the pending use of GPS tracking devices, slated to be installed in Boston police cruisers, has many officers worried that commanders will monitor their every move. Boston police administrators say the system gives dispatchers the ability to see where officers are, rather than wait for a radio response and supervisors insist the system will improve their response to emergencies. Using GPS, they say, accelerates their response to a call for a shooting or an armed robbery. ‘We’ll be moving forward as quickly as possible, ‘ says former police commissioner Edward F. Davis. ‘There are an enormous amount of benefits. . . . This is clearly an important enhancement and should lead to further reductions in crime.’ But some officers said they worry that under such a system they will have to explain their every move and possibly compromise their ability to court street sources. ‘No one likes it. Who wants to be followed all over the place?’ said one officer who spoke anonymously because department rules forbid police from speaking to the media without authorization. ‘If I take my cruiser and I meet [reluctant witnesses] to talk, eventually they can follow me and say why were you in a back dark street for 45 minutes? It’s going to open up a can of worms that can’t be closed.’ Meanwhile civil libertarians are relishing the rank and file’s own backlash. ‘The irony of police objecting to GPS technology for privacy reasons is hard to miss in the aftermath of United States v. Jones, ‘ says Woodrow Hartzog. ‘But the officers’ concerns about privacy illustrate just how revealing GPS technology can be. Departments are going to have to confront the chilling effect this surveillance might have on police behavior.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS