Those Mexican thieves that stole a truckload of coblat-60 ? They’re virtually sure to die, according to experts. Read more…
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Those Mexican Cobalt-60 Thieves Will Die of Radiation Exposure
Those Mexican thieves that stole a truckload of coblat-60 ? They’re virtually sure to die, according to experts. Read more…
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Those Mexican Cobalt-60 Thieves Will Die of Radiation Exposure
crookedvulture writes “AMD’s recently introduced Radeon R9 290X is one of the fastest graphics cards around. However, the cards sent to reviewers differ somewhat from the retail units available for purchase. The press samples run at higher clock speeds and deliver better performance as a result. There’s some variance in clock speeds between different press and retail cards, too. Part of the problem appears to be AMD’s PowerTune mechanism, which dynamically adjusts GPU frequencies in response to temperature and power limits. AMD doesn’t guarantee a base clock speed, saying only that the 290X runs at ‘up to 1GHz.’ Real-world clock speeds are a fair bit lower than that, and the retail cards suffer more than the press samples. Cooling seems to be a contributing factor. AMD issued a driver update that raises fan speeds, and that helps the performance of some retail cards. Retail units remain slower than the cards seeded to the press, though. Flashing retail cards with the press firmware raises clock speeds slightly, but it doesn’t entirely close the gap, either. AMD hasn’t explained why the retail cards are slower than expected, and it’s possible the company cherry-picked the samples sent to the press. At the very least, it’s clear that the 290X exhibits more card-to-card variance than we’re used to seeing in a PC graphics product.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Retail Radeon R9 290X Graphics Cards Slower Than AMD’s Press Samples
Hanjie Wanda Square, a high-end mall designed by Dutch architects UNStudio, opened in the Chinese city of Wuhan this week. There are 42, 300 stainless steel orbs strung along the facade, each embedded with an LED that, together, turn the building’s skin into a multi-colored screen at night. [ Domus ; image by Edmon Leong ] Read more…
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Hanjie Wanda Square, a high-end mall designed by Dutch architects UNStudio, opened in the Chinese ci
New submitter LordWabbit2 sends this quote from an AP report: “The Vatican Library and Oxford University’s Bodleian Library have put the first of 1.5 million pages of ancient manuscripts online. The two libraries in 2012 announced a four-year project to digitize some of the most important works of their collections of Hebrew manuscripts, Greek manuscripts and early printed books. Among the first up on the site Tuesday, are the two-volume Gutenberg bibles from each of the libraries and a beautiful 15th-century German bible, hand-colored and illustrated by woodcuts. … The Vatican Library was founded in 1451 and is one of the most important research libraries in the world. The Bodleian is the largest university library in Britain.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In the world of head-worn displays, Google Glass seems to lately get most of the praise as well as most of the dirty looks, though it’s far from alone. At this year’s DroidCon in London, I talked with Epson Europe product manager Marc-Antoine Godfroid about a very different kind of head-worn display: the Moverio BT-100. Epson’s display is running a Google operating system, but it isn’t competing with Glass, at least not directly. The hardware in this case is a relatively high-definition stereo display meant for immersion (whether that means information overlays or watching recorded video) hooked to an external control unit running Android, rather than the sparer, information-dashboard, all-in-one approach of Glass. One other big difference: Epson’s stereo, full-color headset is cheaper than Glass, and available now. Hit the link below to see what it looks like. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Epson Tries to One-up Google Glass with Moverio-Goggles (Video)
cagraham writes “Startup Swarm Mobile intends to help physical retailers counter online shopping habits by collecting data on their customer’s actions. Swarm’s platform integrates with store’s Wifi networks in order to monitor what exactly customers are doing while shopping. In exchange for collecting analytics, shoppers get access to free internet. Swarm then send reports to the store owners, detailing how many customers checked prices online, or compared rival products on their phones. Their platform also allows stores to directly send discount codes or coupons to shopper’s phones.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Swarm Mobile’s Offer: Free Wi-Fi In Exchange For Some Privacy
The Bad Astronomer writes “Planets orbiting other stars are usually found indirectly (by blocking their stars’ light or inducing a Doppler shift in the light as they orbit, for example), but direct images of exoplanets are extremely rare. However, using the 10-meter Keck telescope in Hawaii, astronomers have taken photographs of three nearby exoplanets, all young, massive, and hot. One may be massive enough to count as a brown dwarf, but the other two are more likely in the planet-mass range. All three are very far from their stars, which means they may have formed differently than the planets in our solar system.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Three New Exoplanets Seen In Direct Photographs
By creating highly detailed connectome maps of nearly 1, 000 men, women, boys, and girls, neuroscientists have shown the dramatic extent to which male and female brains are “wired” differently — cognitive variations that may help to explain why men and women fare better at certain tasks. Read more…
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The Dramatic Differences in Male and Female Brain Connectivity
In May 1972 in a uranium enrichment plant in France, scientists examining ore from a mine in Gabon, West Africa, discovered that a natural nuclear reactor had spontaneously manifested in that region in the Earth’s primordial past, churning out approximately 100 Kw worth of energy continuously for a few hundred thousand years about 1.7 billion years ago. In order to understand how the natural nuclear reactor came about, it helps to understand a little of the history and science of nuclear reactions. Read more…
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There’s a Naturally Occurring Nuclear Fission Reactor in West Africa
Card skimmers are getting way more common , to the point that they’ve even started appearing on point-of-sale card machines . And, boy, if this thing is anything to go by, they’re getting better and better. Read more…
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Beware This Simple But Incredibly Effective Point-of-Sale Skimmer