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LAST NEWS

100 greatest hip hop...

Vh1 is paying tribute to rap royalty by counting down the 100 Greatest Hip Hop Songs.


100 greatest hip hop... Tue, 30 Sep 2008 04:39:35 GMT,VH1.com
Vh1 pays tribute to hip hop's finest tonight

It's official: VH1 loves hip hop. VH1 is offering up two shows bound to keep hip hop fans happily entertained and noddin' their heads, too.


Vh1 pays tribute to hip hop's finest tonight Mon, 29 Sep 2008 17:49:37 GMT,Newsday.com
Vh1's 100 greatest hip-hop songs

VH1's at it again , asking readers of their .com to rank music for a televised special.


Vh1's 100 greatest hip-hop songs Mon, 29 Sep 2008 16:42:45 GMT,Stereogum
What's on tonight: how the u.s. embraced torture: roger catlin | tv eye

Hey where'd the newspaper's TV Eye column go? Where's the TV grid? Sorry folks, it's victim to the paper's effort to "adapt to modern life." It's all online now.


What's on tonight: how the u.s. embraced torture: roger catlin | tv eye Mon, 29 Sep 2008 13:52:00 GMT,The Hartford Courant
How does 'chuck' keep our interest?

Last year was the season of the preposterous premise. The main character on "Pushing Daisies" could raise the dead.


How does 'chuck' keep our interest? Mon, 29 Sep 2008 09:34:40 GMT,SouthCoastToday.com
Far-fetched yet fascinating

Last year was the season of the preposterous premise. The main character on "Pushing Daisies" could raise the dead.


Far-fetched yet fascinating Mon, 29 Sep 2008 09:31:12 GMT,Tacoma News Tribune
Channel surfing: 'chuck,' 'life' are back

Two of 2007's best new series, both cut short in their first season by the writers strike, begin their second seasons tonight.


Channel surfing: 'chuck,' 'life' are back Mon, 29 Sep 2008 07:37:38 GMT,Fort Worth Star-Telegram
100 greatest hip hop...

Vh1 is paying tribute to rap royalty by counting down the 100 Greatest Hip Hop Songs.


100 greatest hip hop... Mon, 29 Sep 2008 05:27:35 GMT,VH1.com
Vh1 crowns 'fight the power' a...

By: Yves Erwin Salomon VH1 will premier the 100 Greatest Hip Hop Songs on September 29th and Public Enemy's "Fight The Power" will top the list.


Vh1 crowns 'fight the power' a... Sat, 27 Sep 2008 18:23:24 GMT,Mix 99.9
Tivo this: 'housewives,' 'dexter' and more

SUNDAY We're five years into the future when "Desperate Housewives" returns, and Wisteria Lane's been turned upside down: Lynette's kids are in and out of jail, Gabrielle's got a pair of her own, Bree has ...


Tivo this: 'housewives,' 'dexter' and more Sat, 27 Sep 2008 00:58:21 GMT,Los Angeles Times
Guitar hero world tour won't allow copyright infringement

1Up did an interview with two of the developers for Guitar Hero: World Tour about the process of creating the game. One of the interesting things they mention is that they won't be putting up with people who use the song creation tools to make covers of existing songs. "We'll be actively monitoring the site. And, obviously, if the copyright holder complains, Activision will pull it down immediately. We can't condone people putting up covers of music. It's really there for original content." We discussed the creation tools themselves recently. Since then, Activision has announced that they'll be including a MIDI sequencer to assist with making your own tunes.


Guitar hero world tour won't allow copyright infringement ,
Working effectively with legacy code

Merlin42 writes "I recently took a Test-Driven-Development (TDD) training course and the teacher recommended that I read "Working Effectively with Legacy Code" by Michael Feathers. First things first, a note about the title. Feathers defines "Legacy Code" a bit different than you may expect, especially if you are not into the XP/Agile/TDD world. I have heard (and used) a number of definitions for "legacy code" over the years. Most of these definitions have to do with code that is old, inherited, difficult to maintain, or interfaces with other 'legacy' hardware/software. Feathers' definition is 'code without tests.' For those not into TDD this may seem odd, but in the TDD world, tests are what make code easy to maintain. When good unit tests are in place, then code can be changed at will and the tests will tell automatically you if you broke anything." Read on for the rest of Kevin's review.


Working effectively with legacy code ,
Review: crysis warhead

When Crysis was released last year, it immediately became known for two things; excellent gameplay and ridiculously high hardware requirements. With the recent release of Crysis Warhead, a standalone expansion to the original game, Crytek's plans were to maintain or improve the quality of gameplay while simultaneously streamlining it so a broader audience would have a chance to enjoy it. As it happens, they succeeded. Fans of the original game will feel right at home in Warhead, and it provides a good chance for new players who were curious but wary of Crysis's graphical requirements to give it a shot. Read on for my thoughts.


Review: crysis warhead ,
Myspace digital music service is drm-free

Anti-Globalism sends word that MySpace flipped the switch on its online, ad-supported, DRM-free music service that will "... give its roughly 120 million users free access to hundreds of thousands of songs from the world's largest recording labels. Unlike much of the material at Apple's iTunes store, the music sold through MySpace's new service won't contain the protections that limit how many times a track can be copied. MySpace is hoping to set itself apart from iTunes even further by allowing its users to create an unlimited number of playlists containing up to 100 songs apiece, a sharing concept similar to music services already offered by Imeem and Last.fm."


Myspace digital music service is drm-free ,
Sdk shoot out, android vs. iphone

snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister delves into the Android and iPhone SDKs to help sort out which will be the best bet for developers now that technical details of the first Android smartphone have been announced. Whereas the iPhone requires an Intel-based Mac running OS X 10.5.4 or later, ADC membership, and familiarity with proprietary Mac OS X dev tools, the standard IDE for Android is Eclipse. And because most tasks can be performed with command-line tools, you can expert third parties to develop Android SDK plug-ins for other IDEs. Objective-C, used almost nowhere outside Apple, is required for iPhone UI development, while app-level Android programming is done in Java. 'By just about any measure, Google's Android is more open and developer-friendly than the iPhone,' McAllister writes, noting Apple's gag order restrictions on documentation, proprietary software requirements to view training videos, and right to reject your finished app from the sole distribution channel for iPhone. This openness is, of course, essential to Android's prospects. 'Based on raw market share alone, the iPhone seems likely to remain the smartphone developer's platform of choice — especially when ISVs can translate that market share into application sales,' McAllister writes. 'Sound familiar? In this race, Apple is taking a page from Microsoft's book, while Google looks suspiciously like Linux.'"


Sdk shoot out, android vs. iphone ,
The thirteen greatest error messages of all time

Technologizer writes "They add insult to injury — and computing wouldn't be the same without 'em. So I rounded up a baker's dozen of the most important error messages in computing history — from Does Not Compute to Abort, Retry, Fail to the Sad Mac to the big kahuna of them all — the mighty Blue Screen of Death. And just in case my judgment is off, I include a poll to let the rest of the world vote for the greatest error message of all." I can't believe that "I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that" didn't make the list.


The thirteen greatest error messages of all time ,
Lhc offline until april 2009 (or longer)

rufey writes "The recent problems at the Large Hadron Collider will now keep it idle until spring 2009. The official press release is here. The LHC went offline due to a suspected failure in a superconducting connection, which overheated and caused around 100 of the LHC's super-cooled magnets to heat up by as much as 100 degrees. This resulted in the accidental release of a ton of liquid helium. The process required to repair the failed superconducting connection involves weeks of warming up the affected area from -456 degrees Fahrenheit to room temperature, and then several more weeks to cool it back down after the repair is made. The total amount of time to do this will spill over into CERN's scheduled winter maintenance/shutdown period, which is partly done to save money on electricity during the period of peak demand."


Lhc offline until april 2009 (or longer) ,
Students are always half right in pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Public Schools officials have enacted a policy that sets 50 percent as the minimum score a student can receive for assignments, tests and other work. District spokeswoman Ebony Pugh said, the 50 percent minimum gives children a chance to catch up and a reason to keep trying. If a student gets a 20 percent in a class for the first marking period, he or she would need a 100 percent during the second marking period just to squeak through the semester. The district and teachers union issued a joint memo to ensure staff members' compliance with the policy, which was already on the books but enforced only at some schools. At this rate, it won't be long before schools institute double extra credit Mondays and Fridays to ensure students don't take three day weekends.


Students are always half right in pittsburgh ,
The supercomputer race

CWmike writes "Every June and November a new list of the world's fastest supercomputers is revealed. The latest Top 500 list marked the scaling of computing's Mount Everest — the petaflops barrier. IBM's 'Roadrunner' topped the list, burning up the bytes at 1.026 petaflops. A computer to die for if you are a supercomputer user for whom no machine ever seems fast enough? Maybe not, says Richard Loft, director of supercomputing research at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. The Top 500 list is only useful in telling you the absolute upper bound of the capabilities of the computers ... It's not useful in terms of telling you their utility in real scientific calculations. The problem with the rankings: a decades-old benchmark called Linpack, which is Fortran code that measures the speed of processors on floating-point math operations. One possible fix: Invoking specialization. Loft says of petaflops, peak performance, benchmark results, positions on a list — 'it's a little shell game that everybody plays. ... All we care about is the number of years of climate we can simulate in one day of wall-clock computer time. That tells you what kinds of experiments you can do.' State-of-the-art systems today can simulate about five years per day of computer time, he says, but some climatologists yearn to simulate 100 years in a day."


The supercomputer race ,
Saturn's rings may be very old

Kristina from Science News writes "Combining computer simulations with data about the way starlight shines through Saturn's rings suggests the individual grains are big and thus could have been around a good 4 billion years, not the mere 10 million to 100 million previously suspected. What may have thrown earlier observations off is the chance that the grains aren't evenly distributed, but clump here and spread out there."


Saturn's rings may be very old ,
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