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LAST NEWS

Death penalty hearings begin (abc 2 baltimore)

A new panel hears expert testimony.


Death penalty hearings begin (abc 2 baltimore) Tue, 29 Jul 2008 02:22:01 GMT,
Comission on capital punishment hears from prominent death penalty abolitionists (wypr maryland)

In its first session yesterday, Maryland's Commission on Capital Punishment heard from two men who turned in their brothers, despite fears they could receive the death penalty. And the results were very different. WYPR's Joel McCord reports.


Comission on capital punishment hears from prominent death penalty abolitionists (wypr maryland) Tue, 29 Jul 2008 02:01:36 GMT,
Radford teacher creates database of serial killers (wsls newschannel 10 roanoke)

RADFORD—Radford University psychology professor Mike Aamodt has spent years compiling a list of serial killers, and, after subtracting competent hitmen and bloodthirsty pirates, he reckons there have been at least 1,900 since the beginning of the 14th century.


Radford teacher creates database of serial killers (wsls newschannel 10 roanoke) Mon, 28 Jul 2008 14:38:45 GMT,
Feeling blue (the new yorker)

After Nature” is an important group show of twenty-six international artists, past and present, at the New Museum, which proposes a saturnine new direction in art. The catalogue is a foldout slipcover around a paperback of “After Nature,” a book-length poem in three parts by W. G. Sebald . . .


Feeling blue (the new yorker) Mon, 28 Jul 2008 04:01:42 GMT,
'x-files: i want to believe': only for true believers (the buffalo news)

That joyful sound you hear from your local megaplex is the sound of faithful, red-eyed hardcore “X-Files” fans high-fiving, knuckle-bumping and glad-handing each other like middle-American conventioneers when the evening's entertainment arrives.


'x-files: i want to believe': only for true believers (the buffalo news) Fri, 25 Jul 2008 10:43:43 GMT,
Black panthers released from solitary confinement (new america media)

After thirty years of solitary confinement three Black Panthers were finally released into the general population in Angola, one of the worst prisons in the United States.


Black panthers released from solitary confinement (new america media) Fri, 25 Jul 2008 08:41:40 GMT,
Attorney paints portraits of serial killers (the fredericksburg free lance-star)

Summary Not Available


Attorney paints portraits of serial killers (the fredericksburg free lance-star) Wed, 23 Jul 2008 05:18:54 GMT,
A view to a thrill (nashville scene)

For readers who want to escape the summer heat, Ridley Pearson's latest thriller, Killer View (Putnam, 340 pp., $24.95), should generate some welcome chills. Pearson's second novel featuring Sheriff Walt Fleming of Blaine County, Idaho, is fast and furious—but also thought-provokin...


A view to a thrill (nashville scene) Wed, 23 Jul 2008 04:03:32 GMT,
Newseum exhibit celebrates fbi centennial (the standard-times)

Evidence — Unabomber Ted Kaczynski's wooden cabin, a replica of the D.C. snipers' car, and heiress-turned-bank robber Patty Hearst's rifle.


Newseum exhibit celebrates fbi centennial (the standard-times) Wed, 16 Jul 2008 05:12:39 GMT,
Storm water compromise reached (wway 3 wilmington)

After much debate, a compromise has finally been reached about the storm water runoff problem in coastal North Carolina. Full story...


Storm water compromise reached (wway 3 wilmington) Fri, 18 Jul 2008 21:33:10 GMT,
What tech should be seen at ted?

J0sh writes "I've been lucky enough to be asked to do tech spotting for the TED conference, one of the biggest and most exclusive technology, entertainment, and design conferences in the US. Many of the folks there are superstars in their field (like Craig Venter and Stephen Hawking), and most of them have the opportunity to take action on the technology that they see there. The problem is that I'm only one guy trying to find the most mind-blowing technology on the planet in order to inform the few people who can make an immediate impact with it. I figured if there's one place to find those kinds of advances, it's here. What unknown tech is about to completely change the world that these people need to know about? Let me know."


What tech should be seen at ted? ,
Jack thompson's letter to take-two exec's mother

debatem1 writes "Apparently, anti-violent-video-games crusader Jack Thompson is at it again, this time writing a letter to the mother of Strauss Zelnick, Chairman of Take-Two, the company that produces the GTA series of video games. In it he compares Zelnick to a member of the Hitler Youth, advocates beating the young Zelnick, and contemplates the existence of a Ted Bundy merit badge for boy scouts."


Jack thompson's letter to take-two exec's mother ,
Why opensolaris failed to build a community

xtaski writes "Ted Ts'o, one of the earliest Linux developers, points out some serious flaws in OpenSolaris. There is a severe lack of developers, for one. Apparently, after 3 years, the OpenSolaris 'developer community' is still struggling to get the proper tools for developers to develop! Ted also points out some other flaws which make it clear just how disconnected the executives at Sun are from what's really going on in their 'open source communities.' He notes, 'It was never ... Sun's intention to try to promote a kernel engineering community, or at least, it was certainly not a high priority for them to do so.'"


Why opensolaris failed to build a community ,
Patch the linux kernel without reboots

evanbro writes "ZDNet is reporting on ksplice, a system for applying patches to the Linux kernel without rebooting. ksplice requires no kernel modifications, just the source, the config files, and a patch. Author Jeff Arnold discusses the system in a technical overview paper (PDF). Ted Ts'o comments, 'Users in the carrier grade linux space have been clamoring for this for a while. If you are a carrier in telephony and don't want downtime, this stuff is pure gold.'" Update: 04/24 10:04 GMT by KD : Tomasz Chmielewsk writes on LKML that the idea seems to be patented by Microsoft.


Patch the linux kernel without reboots ,
Scotus asked to decide on legal fees in riaa cases

Fogerty's ghost notes that the Supreme Court has been asked to decide whether exonerated RIAA defendants should automatically be awarded attorneys' fees. Texas resident Cliff Thompson was sued by the RIAA, which subsequently dropped its copyright infringement lawsuit after it determined that his adult daughter was the culprit. Thompson was denied attorneys' fees by the district and appeals courts and is asking the Supreme Court to weigh in on the matter. "In the petition for certiorari filed with the Supreme Court, Thompson's attorney Ted Lee lays out the RIAA's legal strategy and notes what he describes as the 'inherent unfairness' of the lawsuits... The fight between the RIAA and alleged copyright infringers is inherently unbalanced due to the vast financial resources available to the record labels. The risk-reward ratio for defendants is seriously out of kilter, and mandating that a successful defense — even if it comes from the RIAA's decision to voluntarily dismiss a case — results in the record labels picking up the tab would even things out."


Scotus asked to decide on legal fees in riaa cases ,
Sun hires two key python developers

sspringer writes to let us know about Sun's continuing push to support scripting languages other than Java on its Java virtual machine. Sun just hired two key Python developers: Ted Leung, a long-time Python developer at the Open Source Applications Foundation, and Frank Wierzbicki, who is lead implementer of the Jython project. They will both work on Jython, which enables Python to run on the JVM. Last month Sun's CEO said the company wants to "take the J off the JVM and just make it a VM."


Sun hires two key python developers ,
Sneak peek at microsoft's worldwide telescope

Ted.com has a great sneak peek at Microsoft's new WorldWide Telescope project. In this video, presented by Roy Gould and Curtis Wong, you are able to see a combined view of satellites and telescopes from all over the planet and nearby space. The compiled image is rendered using Microsoft's new high-performance "Visual Experience Engine" that allows users to pan and zoom across the night sky seamlessly.


Sneak peek at microsoft's worldwide telescope ,
The beckoning promise of personal fabrication

posys noted an interesting talk from Neil Gershenfeld's called "The beckoning promise of personal fabrication". It's a TED talk which I've found greatly enjoyable in the past, and is worth your time, assuming you have 20 minutes to see something really neat.


The beckoning promise of personal fabrication ,
Usa 193 shootdown set for feb 21, 03:30 utc

An anonymous reader writes "Amateur satellite watcher Ted Molczan notes that a "Notice to Airmen" (NOTAM) has been issued announcing restricted airspace for February 21, between 02:30 and 05:00 UTC, in a region near Hawaii. Stricken satellite USA 193, which the US has announced plans to shoot down, will pass over this area at about 03:30. Interestingly, this is during the totality of Wednesday's lunar eclipse, which may or may not make debris easier to observe."


Usa 193 shootdown set for feb 21, 03:30 utc ,
Birds give a lesson to plane designers

Roland Piquepaille points out a news release from the University of Michigan where researchers are looking to birds and bats for insights into aerospace engineering. Wei Shyy and his colleagues are learning from solutions developed by nature and applying them to the technology of flight. A presentation on this topic was also given at the 2005 TED conference. From the news release: "The roll rate of the aerobatic A-4 Skyhawk plane is about 720 degrees per second. The roll rate of a barn swallow exceeds 5,000 degrees per second. Select military aircraft can withstand gravitational forces of 8-10 G. Many birds routinely experience positive G-forces greater than 10 G and up to 14 G. Flapping flight is inherently unsteady, but that's why it works so well. Birds, bats and insects fly in a messy environment full of gusts traveling at speeds similar to their own. Yet they can react almost instantaneously and adapt with their flexible wings."


Birds give a lesson to plane designers ,
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