This Sticker Automatically Injects Meds When a Chemo Patient Can’t

Chemotherapy is a brutal but often life-saving treatment for an even worse disease. It can also reduce a patient’s white blood cell count, which hinders the body’s ability to fight off infections. Injections of Neulasta (pegfilgrastim) can help boost white blood cells, if given exactly a day later. That’s where this sticker comes in handy. Read more…

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This Sticker Automatically Injects Meds When a Chemo Patient Can’t

New Concept Tire Could Recharge Car Battery

randomErr writes Goodyear Tire showed off its new BH03 tire that can partially recharge your electric car while driving. At the 2015 Geneva International Motor Show a new concept tire was displayed that uses heat generated while driving and converts the thermal energy to electrical power. The triple inner tube design changes pressure to maximize electrical output while adjusting to the road conditions. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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New Concept Tire Could Recharge Car Battery

Chinese Government Takes Down Anti-Pollution Documentary "Under The Dome"

An anonymous reader writes with a link to BBC’s report that [A]uthorities in China have a removed from websites a popular documentary which highlights the country’s severe pollution problem. Under the Dome explains the social and health costs of pollution, and was watched by more than 100 million people online, sparking debates. It was removed just two days after Premier Li Keqiang called pollution a blight on people’s lives. Searching YouTube gives you a pretty good idea of what the Chinese government doesn’t want people to see. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Chinese Government Takes Down Anti-Pollution Documentary "Under The Dome"

Mesa 10.5 Updates Open-Source Graphics Drivers

An anonymous reader writes Mesa 10.5 has been released to update the open-source Linux graphics driver stack. This quarterly update to Mesa has initial support for Intel’s next-generation Skylake graphics, Qualcomm Adreno A4xx support, EGL support on the BeOS-inspired Haiku, the new NIR intermediate representation, and other changes. While new GL4 extensions were implemented, the Intel/Radeon/Nouveau drivers only have enough support right now to expose OpenGL 3.3, but GL4.2 is expected out of the open-source drivers by the end of the year. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mesa 10.5 Updates Open-Source Graphics Drivers

Intel Reveals Unlocked, Socketed Broadwell and Core i7 NUC With Iris Graphics

MojoKid writes Intel held an event at a location adjacent to GDC last night, where the company discussed some updates to its 5th Gen Core processor line-up, Intel graphics developments, the Intel Hardware SDK, and its various game developer tools. Chris Silva, Director of Marketing for Premium Notebook and Client Graphics teams disclosed a few details that a socketed, unlocked, 65W desktop processor based on Intel’s Broadwell architecture, featuring Iris graphics, is due to arrive sometime in mid-2015. It’s noteworthy because this will be Intel’s first desktop CPU with Iris Pro graphics and because it is multiplier unlocked. It will be interesting to see what Iris Pro can do with some overclocking. Intel then showed off a new NUC mini PC powered by a 28W, quad-core Core i7 Broadwell processor, which also featured Iris graphics. The device has a tiny .63 liter enclosure with support for high-performance M.2 solid state drives and features an array of built-in IO options, like USB3, BT4, and 802.11ac WiFi. Bryan Langley, Principal PM for Windows Graphics also talked a bit about DirectX 12, disclosing that the company would be ready with DX12 support when Windows 10 arrives and that there are optimizations in DX12 and their drivers that would deliver performance enhancements to current and future Intel graphics platforms. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Intel Reveals Unlocked, Socketed Broadwell and Core i7 NUC With Iris Graphics

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

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

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

Unreal Engine 4 Is Now Free

jones_supa writes In 2014, Epic Games took the step of making Unreal Engine 4 available to everyone by subscription for $19 per month. Today, this general-purpose game engine is available to everyone for free. This includes future updates, the full C++ source code of the engine, documentation, and all sorts of bonus material. You can download the engine and use it for everything from game development, education, architecture, and visualization to VR, film and animation. The business scheme that Epic set in the beginning, remains the same: when you ship a commercial game or application, you pay a 5% royalty on gross revenue after the first $3, 000 per product, per quarter. Epic strived to create a simple and fair arrangement in which they succeed only when your product succeeds. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Unreal Engine 4 Is Now Free

ISIS Threatens Life of Twitter Founder After Thousands of Account Suspensions

Patrick O’Neill writes After a wave of account bannings that marks Twitter’s most aggressive move ever against ISIS, new images circulated from militants shows founder Jack Dorsey in crosshairs with the caption “Twitter, you started this war.” The famously tech-savy ISIS has met a number of defeats on American-built social media recently with sites like Twitter and YouTube banning the group’s efforts in unprecedented numbers. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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ISIS Threatens Life of Twitter Founder After Thousands of Account Suspensions