Loudernet

January 28, 2007

Jumpers leave workers sleepless in Seattle

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 12:04 am

SEATTLE, Washington (AP) — A bridge over Seattle is becoming hazardous to the mental health of the dot-com employees and other office workers below, who keep seeing people jump to their deaths from the span.

Thirty-nine people over the past decade have committed suicide off the 155-foot-high Aurora Bridge — eight in 2006 alone — and counselors are regularly brought in to help office workers deal with the shock of seeing the leap or the bloody aftermath.

Link

“Pavement” Cafés

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 12:00 am

Find a shady place which gives you a wide range of things to observe, spread a piece of old newspaper on the pavement, sit down and enjoy a cup of coffee (or any other drink you like). This is a new style of drinking coffee among young people in Saigon.

Link

January 5, 2007

How to prevent comment spam on wordpress blogs through phpmyadmin

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 12:30 pm

If you have unchecked Allow people to post comments on the article on the Options > Discussion panel, then you have only disabled comments on future posts. To completely disable comments, you will have to edit each past post and uncheck Allow Comments from the Write Post SubPanel. Alternatively, you could delete the wp-comments-post.php file, or run this MySQL query, from the command line on a shell account, or using phpMyAdmin:

UPDATE wp_posts SET comment_status=”closed”;

This will set all posts in blog to not allow comments

Later

Link
 

Hitachi unveils 1 TB drive for retail

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 11:26 am

Hitachi Global Storage Technologies announced the first terabyte (TB) SATA hard drive, aimed initially for the retail market. The Deskstar 7K1000 will begin shipping to retail customers in the first quarter of 2007 at a suggested retail price of $399, or 40 cents per gigabyte. An enterprise version of the drive is expected in the second quarter of the year. Along with the Deskstar 7K1000 for the retail market, Hitachi is also announcing its CinemaStar version 1 TB hard drive, which provides capabilities specifically designed for digital video recording (DVR) applications. Meanwhile, Seagate said its 1 TB drive will ship the first half of 2007.

Link

October 29, 2006

Now Open: 274 Miles of Road

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 6:57 pm

ORT Lanes Now Available Systemwide

Waukegan Toll Plaza Marks Final Debut of ORT Lanes

Open Road Tolling is now available at all 20 mainline plazas along the 274 miles of Illinois Tollway. On Sunday, ORT lanes debuted at the Waukegan Toll on the Tri-State Tollway (I-94), making non-stop tolling reality at the final plaza to be converted. Illinois is now the first state to completely convert its mainline road to Open Road Tolling so quickly!

It was less than a year ago that we celebrated the inaugural ORT lanes at the Irving Park Road Plaza on the Central Tri-State. The opening at Waukegan and the addition of the third and final lane in each direction at the 163rd Street Toll, completed the Open Road Tolling project along the entire Tri-State (I-94/294/80-94). Non-stop tolling along our busiest corridor will provide congestion-relief for commuters, vacationers and truckers along the road that links Illinois to its neighbors Indiana and Wisconsin.

ORT Lanes are Expected to Deliver Relief at the State Line

Open Road Tolling was designed and delivered with you, the driver, in mind. It means a quicker, easier, and safer drive on the Tollway. We worked hard to deliver the benefits as quickly as possible so that you can spend more time off the road chosing how to live life instead of spending it waiting in traffic. We thank you for your patience during the conversion process and would like to welcome you to the open road. We frequently hear from drivers like you about the difference ORT has made in their lives–we hope you are enjoying the experience too.

Open Road Tolling is just one part of our comprehensive Congestion-Relief Program, so there are still many other improvements under way on the Tollway. Please stay alert in construction zones and obey speed limits to keep the roads safe.

Illinois Tollway, Rod R. Blagojevich

October 25, 2006

Los Alamos nuke documents thought found in drug raid

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 11:47 am

WASHINGTON (AP) — A drug raid on a Los Alamos scientist’s home in New Mexico turned up what appeared to be classified documents taken from the nuclear weapons lab, the FBI said Tuesday.

Link

Police discovered the documents at the scientist’s home while making an arrest in a methamphetamine investigation, according to an FBI official in Washington who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the case.

The police alerted the FBI to the documents, prompting a federal search of the unidentified female scientist’s home. The official would not describe the documents except to say that they appeared to contain classified material.

Asked about the raid, FBI special agent Bill Elwell in Albuquerque, New Mexico, confirmed that a search warrant was executed on Friday night, but he refused to discuss details.

“We do have an investigation with regard to the matter, but our standard is we do not discuss pending investigations,” Elwell said.

A spokesman for the Los Alamos National Laboratory, in Los Alamos, New Mexico, declined to comment.

Past problems at Los Alamos
Los Alamos has a history of high-profile security problems in the past decade, with the most notable the case of nuclear scientist Wen Ho Lee. After years of accusations, Lee pleaded guilty in a plea bargain to one count of mishandling nuclear secrets at the lab.

In 2004, the lab was essentially shut down after an inventory showed that two computer disks containing nuclear secrets were missing. A year later the lab concluded that it was just a mistake and the disks never existed.

But the incident highlighted sloppy inventory control and security failures at the nuclear weapons lab. And the Energy Department began moving toward a five-year program to create a so-called diskless environment at Los Alamos to prevent any classified material being carried outside the lab.

Even though Los Alamos is now under new management, Danielle Brian, executive director of the watchdog group Project on Government Oversight, said the lab has not done much to clean up its act.

“Los Alamos has always seemed to be rewarded for its screw-ups,” Brian said. “We’re waiting with bated breath to see if anything has changed.”

The idea that police found classified documents in a drug lab is disturbing, she said.

“The problem is when you actually have those materials that are supposed to be protected inside the lab and you find them outside the lab in the hands of criminals that should worry everybody,” Brian said.

The FBI and the U.S. attorney’s office in Albuquerque were “evaluating the information obtained as a result of the search warrant,” Elwell said.

The federal charge of unauthorized removal and retention of classified material is a misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of a year in prison and up to a $100,000 fine.

Caffeine-stoked energy drinks wire a generation, prompt concerns

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 11:00 am

October 24, 2006 - More than 500 new energy drinks launched worldwide this year, and coffee fans are probably too old to understand why.

Energy drinks aren’t merely popular with young people. They attract fan mail on their own MySpace pages. They spawn urban legends. They get reviewed by bloggers. And they taste like carbonated cough syrup.
Vying for the dollars of teenagers with promises of weight loss, increased endurance and legal highs, the new products join top-sellers Red Bull, Monster and Rockstar to make up a $3.4 billion-a-year industry that grew by 80 percent last year.

Thirty-one percent of U.S. teenagers say they drink energy drinks, according to Simmons Research. That represents 7.6 million teens, a jump of almost 3 million in three years.

Nutritionists warn that the drinks, laden with caffeine and sugar, can hook kids on an unhealthy jolt-and-crash cycle. The caffeine comes from multiple sources, making it hard to tell how much the drinks contain. Some have B vitamins, which when taken in megadoses can cause rapid heartbeat, and numbness and tingling in the hands and feet.

But the biggest worry is how some teens use the drinks. Some report downing several cans in a row to get a buzz, and a new study found a surprising number of poison-center calls from young people getting sick from too much caffeine.

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August 28, 2006

Getting paid can be a royal pain for recording artists

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 12:27 am

By Althea Legaspi Special to the Tribune Published August 27, 2006

It’s rock ‘n’ roll, the hits are flowing, your band is selling CDs like mad and the buzz is off the scale.

So where’s all the money?

If being an independent rocker conjures images of a rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle and easygoing contracts, think again. Whether it’s a major-label contract or one from an independent label, artists can find themselves lost in a legal web when dealing with their music’s availability and royalty payments. There were the headlines about platinum-selling artists such as TLC facing bankruptcy, or about the suits being filed against major labels by bands such as TLC or the Dixie Chicks for underpayment of royalties.

Because when it comes to royalties, out-of-print, and/or shelved material, bands can end up in disputes after which their music — or money — may never see the light of day. Navigating contracts can be complicated. In some cases, artists are young and eager, signing away possible rights that might be valuable in the future, and some bands sign up without any legal representation. But once that contract is signed, it can be difficult to renegotiate terms.

Earlier this month, rockers Hawthorne Heights filed a lawsuit against Chicago-based independent label Victory Records and its owner, Tony Brummel, alleging among other things, unpaid royalties and copyright fraud. In a statement, Victory said, “The lawsuit filed by Hawthorne Heights has no merit whatsoever. Victory Records fully expects Hawthorne Heights to honor their commitment to deliver two additional studio albums to Victory pursuant to their recording artist agreement with Victory.”

Link

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August 27, 2006

Refuse to be Terrorized

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 7:17 pm

The point of terrorism is to cause terror, sometimes to further a political goal and sometimes out of sheer hatred. The people terrorists kill are not the targets; they are collateral damage. And blowing up planes, trains, markets or buses is not the goal; those are just tactics.

The real targets of terrorism are the rest of us: the billions of us who are not killed but are terrorized because of the killing. The real point of terrorism is not the act itself, but our reaction to the act.

And we’re doing exactly what the terrorists want.

Link

August 25, 2006

Music Makes Your Brain Happy

Filed under: Uncategorized — john @ 2:33 am

By Randy Dotinga 

As a rock producer, Daniel Levitin worked with Stevie Wonder, the Grateful Dead and Chris Isaak. But the music business began to change, and a disillusioned Levitin turned to academia, where a career in neuroscience beckoned.

Sixteen years after he made the switch, Levitin is an associate professor at McGill University in Montreal and one of the world’s leading experts in cognitive music perception.

In his new book, This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession, Levitin explores research into how our brains process the works of artists as varied as Beethoven, the Beatles and Britney Spears, and why they make us feel so good. Wired News picks his brain about how it all works.

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