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- 11/28/09 - VHFDX.NET Propagation Suspended
- 4/12/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County site gets a makeover
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- 4/28/09 - Attention Oregon State Amateur radio Operators - HB2377
- 4/4/09 - A change in look and feel.... The new Site
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- 5/15/09 - New Docs Show FCC Glossed Over BPL Flaws
- 5/16/09 - APRS Map Pages Update
- 5/17/09 - The New KG7HQ Site Calendar
- 5/26/09 - Coming soon!! "The Northwest’s Largest Ham Convention"
- 5/31/09 - Some Additions added to the Site.
- 5/7/09 - SB649: Government Audit of Frequency Spectrum
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- 6/11/09 - Live APRS Map Pages Updated
- 6/19/09 - Walter Cronkite Very Ill
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- 6/23/09 - SCARC Field Day 2009
- 7/11/09 - Having Troubles Reading This Site? Try a Different Theme!
- 7/2/09 - Island County Has Changed Emcomm Leadership.
- 7/2/09 - US sets final emergency responder wireless pilot
- 7/4/09 - The Latest on the 145.190/R Antenna Replacement Dates
- 7/6/09 - D-STAR Worldwide Contest
- 8/10/09 - SEDRO Digipeater Getting a Facelift.
- 8/11/09 - Washington State DNR Site Repeater Questions
- 8/26/09 - New radios announced at JAIA (Japan)
- 9/20/09 - 220MHz is Looking Better in Western Washington
- 4/14/2013 - WebSite Clean-Up
- 9/7/10 - AA7AT, Murray Goddard... SK
- Articles
- 1/17/2013 - Washington State Senate Bill 5000
- 1/8/10 - How Secure are the Amateur Radio Allocations?
- 11/7/09 - In Memory of KD7NM (Robert Donnell)
- 12/13/09 - Another year draws to a close
- 12/23/09 - Cellphone Ban in British Columbia, CA
- 12/30/09 - Travelling with Amateur Radio
- 2009 Summer Digital Conference
- 3/26/10 - Local Ham Getting Involved
- 3/26/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County make it in the news...
- 4/18/11 - Richard (N7RIG) Caught in the Wild
- 4/2/10 - ARRL, American Red Cross, MOU - A Positive Step Forward
- 4/21/09 - Lastest Information on the N7GDE/R (145.190)
- 4/24/09 - Oh Know! We are in the dark!
- 4/25/10 - Wetnet visits Linuxfest Northwest
- 4/4/09 - Communicating: A Dead Art Within Amateur Radio
- 5/10/09 - Is D-Star Dying a Slow Death?
- 5/20/09 - Amateur Radio Clubs: Improper etiquette of asking for professional advice
- 5/21/11 - Radio Shack wants our input???
- 5/23/09 - More Earthquake Potential? Emergency Preparedness.
- 5/29/09 - Troposhperic Ducting?
- 5/8/09 - Field Day Grilling Option
- 6/15/09 - 145.190/R (N7GDE) Update
- 6/16/09 - United States Amateur Radio Numbers on the Rise
- 6/21/09 - When Personalities Get Invovled... Has This Happened in Your Club?
- 6/25/09 - Solar LED Cap
- 7/10/09 - Traveling into a new area? Visit a local APRS Map.
- 7/10/11 - SalmonCon 2011
- 7/18/10 - CQWW VHF... A lot of fun and Great PR!
- 7/21/09 - Echos of Apollo 40th anniversary of Apollo 11
- 7/21/09 - Goodbye Walter
- 7/22/09 - Mountaintopping Beginnings
- 7/3/10 - Android and Amateur Radio
- 7/31/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County Picnic 2010
- 8/13/09 - Verizon.net changes and The Evolution E-mail Client
- 8/27/10 - Echolink on the Android
- Senate Bill 5000 - Update January 18, 2013
- Consumer Alerts
- 1/14/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 1/16/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 1/19/11 - Schneider Electric Recalls Xantrex GT Series Grid Tie Solar Inverters Due to Injury Hazard
- 1/28/10 - FCC-Consumer News
- 1/8/10 - Acer Recalls Notebook Computers Due to Burn Hazard
- 10/18/10 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 10/21/11 - Horizon Hobby Recalls Losi NiMH Battery Charger Due to Possible Burn and Fire Hazards
- 10/24/09 - Coby Electronics Recalls Rechargeable Batteries Sold with Portable DVD/CD/MP3 Players Due to Fire Hazard
- 10/29/09 - Sony Recalls Computer AC Adapters Due to Shock Hazard
- 11/14/2012 - Powermate Generators Recall to Repair by Pramac America Due to Fire Hazard; Sold Exclusively at Home Depot
- 11/14/2012 - Nielsen-Kellerman Recalls Microphones Due to Electric Shock, Burn Hazards
- 11/15/2012 - American Honda Recalls Portable Generators Due to Fire and Burn Hazards
- 11/24/09 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 11/30/11 - Mophie Recalls iPod Touch Rechargeable External Battery Case Due to Burn Hazard
- 11/30/11 - Rocketfish Battery Case for iPhone 3G/3GS Recalled by Best Buy Due to Fire Hazard
- 11/5/09 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 2/13/09 - FCC-ConsumerNews
- 3/11/10 - Noncontact Electrical Tester Recalled by Fluke Due to Shock or Burn Hazard
- 3/11/2011 - Sanus Elements Surge Protectors Recalled by Milestone AV Technologies Due to Shock Hazard
- 4/1/10 - Howard Berger Recalls Extension Cords and Power Strips Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/1/10 - Comarco Recalls Power Adapters for Laptops Due to Burn Hazard
- 5/11/2011 - Telstar Recalls Energy-Saving Light Bulbs Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/14/09 - HP Recalls Notebook Computer Batteries Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/15/09 - Digital Clamp Meters Recalled by Fluke Due to Shock Hazard
- 5/20/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 5/22/10 - HP Expands Recall of Notebook Computer Batteries Due to Fire Hazard
- 5/28/11 - HP Expands Recall of Notebook Computer Batteries Due to Fire Hazard
- 6/17/09 - Wagner Spray Tech Recalls Heat Guns Due to Fire and Burn Hazards
- 7/1/10 - Sony Recalls VAIO Laptop Computers Due to Burn Hazard
- 7/27/10 - FCC Consumer News
- 8/11/09 - Wii(tm) Battery Recharge Stations Recalled by Griffin International Due to Burn and Fire Hazards
- 8/13/08 - Homelite, Husky and Black Max Generators Recalled Due to Fire Hazard
- 8/19/10 - Electrical Wire Recalled by Cerro Wire due to Fire Hazard
- 8/21/09 - Amplifiers Recalled by Krell Industries Recalled Due to Fire Hazard
- 8/21/09 - DVD Players Recalled by Wal-Mart Due to Fire Hazard
- 9/1/2010 - 32-Inch Sharp LCD-TVs Recalled Due to Risk of Injury
- 9/2/09 - Wal-Mart Announces Recall Expansion of Durabrand DVD Players Due to Fire Hazard
- 9/4/10 - Toshiba Recalls T Series Notebook Computers Due to Burn Hazard
- 4/3/09 - Radio Shack Recall of Switches
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- 2009 ARRL Northwest Convention, Seaside, Oregon
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- KP4AO EME Event
- Memories in Time... Bob Donnell (KD7NM) SK
- PSK-31... It's for the Birds!!!
- RASC Picnic 2010
- Standwood-Camino Island ARC Swap Meet 2010
- Stanwood/Camino Island Hamfest 2009
- Yaesu FT-100 Installation into a 1996 Blazer
Slashdot
Physicists Create Quantum Link Between Photons That Don't Exist At the Same Time
sciencehabit writes "Physicists have long known that quantum mechanics allows for a subtle connection between quantum particles called entanglement, in which measuring one particle can instantly set the otherwise uncertain condition, or 'state,' of another particle—even if it's light years away. Now, experimenters in Israel have shown that they can entangle two photons that don't even exist at the same time. Anton Zeilinger, a physicist at the University of Vienna, says that the experiment demonstrates just how slippery the concepts of quantum mechanics are. 'It's really neat because it shows more or less that quantum events are outside our everyday notions of space and time.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Missile Test Creates Huge Expanding Halo of Light Over Hawaii
The Bad Astronomer writes "A Minuteman III missile launch from California early Wednesday morning created a weird, expanding halo of light seen from the CFHT observatory on Hawaii's Mauna Kea. The third stage of the missile has ports that open and dump fuel into the near-vacuum. This cloud expands rapidly as a spherical shell, shock-exciting the air molecules and causing them to glow, creating the bizarre effect."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
3D Printers For Peace Contest
First time accepted submitter Bas_Wijnen writes "3D printing is being condemned in the media because of the potential for printing guns. Engineers at Michigan Tech believe there is far more potential for 3D printers to make our lives better rather than killing one another. To encourage thinking about constructive uses of 3D printing technology Michigan Tech Open Sustainability Technology (MOST) Lab and Type A Machines sponsor the first 3-D Printers for Peace Contest. Designers are encouraged to consider: If Mother Theresa of Ghandi had access to 3D printing what would they print? What kind of designs could help reduce military spending and conflict while making us all safer and more secure? Anyone in the United States may enter and there is no cost."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Intel's Linux OpenGL Driver Faster Than Apple's OS X Driver
An anonymous reader writes "The open-source Intel Linux graphics driver has hit a milestone of now being faster than Apple's own OpenGL stack on OS X. The Intel Linux driver on Ubuntu 13.04 is now clearly faster than Apple's internally-developed Intel OpenGL driver on OS X 10.8.3. when benchmarked from a 'Sandy Bridge' class Mac Mini. Only some months ago, Apple's GL driver was still trouncing the Intel Linux Mesa driver."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Rough Roving: Curiosity's Wheels Show Damage
astroengine writes "In a recent batch of images beamed back to Earth from Mars rover Curiosity's MAHLI camera, obvious signs of wear and tear could be seen in the 'skin' of the robot's wheels. Considering Curiosity is only 281 sols (Mars days) into its mission and roved less than a kilometer after landing, surely this doesn't bode well? Fortunately, there's good news. 'The wear in the wheels is expected,' Matt Heverly, lead rover driver for the MSL mission at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., told Discovery News. 'We will continue to characterize the wheels both on Mars and in the Marsyard, but we don't expect the wear to impact our ability to get to Mt. Sharp.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Tesla Motors Repays $465M Government Loan 9 Years Early
Tesla Motors announced today it has completely repaid the $465 million loan from the U.S. Department of Energy the company received in 2010. The funds were generated by Tesla through a recent sale of their stock, worth close to a billion dollars. The stock price had risen sharply after the company reported its first profitable quarter (and the stock still sits roughly 50% higher than before their earnings release). Today's payment of $451.8 million finished off both the loan's principal and its interest, nine years before the final payment was due. Tesla CEO Elon Musk said, 'I would like to thank the Department of Energy and the members of Congress and their staffs that worked hard to create the ATVM program, and particularly the American taxpayer from whom these funds originate. I hope we did you proud.'
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Why the 'Star Trek Computer' Will Be Open Source and Apache Licensed
psykocrime writes "The crazy kids at Fogbeam Labs have a new blog post positing that there is a trend towards advanced projects in NLP, Information Retrieval, Big Data and the Semantic Web moving to the Apache Software Foundation. Considering that Apache UIMA is a key component of IBM Watson, is it wrong to believe that the organization behind Hadoop, OpenNLP, Jena, Stanbol, Mahout and Lucene will ultimately be the home of a real 'Star Trek Computer'? Quoting: 'When we talk about how the Star Trek computer had “access to all the data in the known Universe”, what we really mean is that it had access to something like the Semantic Web and the Linked Data cloud. Jena provides a programmatic environment for RDF, RDFS and OWL, SPARQL and includes a rule-based inference engine. ... In addition to supporting the natural language interface with the system, OpenNLP is a powerful library for extracting meaning (semantics) from unstructured data - specifically textual data in an unstructured (or semi structured) format. An example of unstructured data would be the blog post, an article in the New York Times, or a Wikipedia article. OpenNLP combined with Jena and other technologies, allows “The computer” to “read” the Web, extracting meaningful data and saving valid assertions for later use.'" Speaking of the Star Trek computer, I'm continually disappointed that neither Siri nor Google Now can talk to me in Majel Barrett's voice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
NYPD Detective Accused of Hiring Email Hackers
An anonymous reader writes "Edwin Vargas, a detective with the New York City Police Department, was arrested on Tuesday for computer hacking crimes. According to the complaint unsealed in Manhattan federal court, between March 2011 and October 2012, Vargas, an NYPD detective assigned to a precinct in the Bronx, hired an e-mail hacking service to obtain log-in credentials, such as the password and username, for certain e-mail accounts. In total, he purchased access to at least 43 personal e-mail accounts belonging to 30 different individuals, including at least 19 who are affiliated with the NYPD."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Scientists Find Vitamin C Kills Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
AndyKrish writes "A BBC story reports that scientists at Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University found Vitamin C kills drug resistant tuberculosis (abstract). Though results are preliminary — the lead investigator of the study said, 'We have only been able to demonstrate this in a test tube, and we don't know if it will work in humans and in animals' — this is an exciting development in the fight against drug-resistant TB."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
German IT Firm Seeks Autistic Workers
Aguazul2 writes "The German software giant SAP has announced it plans to recruit hundreds of people with autism within the next few years. The project has already started in India and Ireland where a total of 11 people with autism are employed by the company. The program to take on software testers, programmers and data management workers will spread across Germany, Canada and the U.S. this year. People with autism have a neural development disorder that often undermines their ability to communicate and interact socially [...] but in the world of computers the tendencies they often display such as an obsession for detail and an ability to analyze long sets of data very accurately can translate into highly useful and marketable skills."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Violent Galactic Clash May Solve Cosmic Mystery
astroengine writes "The mother of all cosmic collisions has been spotted between two galaxies containing a total of 400 billion stars, igniting the birth of 2,000 new stars per year! This incredible event was first spotted by the recently-retired Herschel infrared space observatory (abstract), a mission managed by the European Space Agency. This violent discovery isn't just awesome to look at, it could also help explain how massive, red elliptical galaxies evolved in the early universe."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
