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- 6/16/10 - Al K7IEY... Silent Key
- 4/14/09 - Let's do The Stanwood/Camino Island Hamfest!
- 10/16/09 - 900MHz back up on Lyman Hill!
- 11/28/09 - VHFDX.NET Propagation Suspended
- 4/12/10 - Radio Amateurs of Skagit County site gets a makeover
- 4/16/09- Looking Global with Twitter
- 4/19/09 - Linuxfest Northwest
- 4/28/09 - Attention Oregon State Amateur radio Operators - HB2377
- 4/4/09 - A change in look and feel.... The new Site
- 5/1/09 - We are on a New Server!
- 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
- 6/11/09 - 2009 ARRL Field Day Locator
- 6/11/09 - Live APRS Map Pages Updated
- 6/19/09 - Walter Cronkite Very Ill
- 6/20/09 - Skagit County Hams Starting a New Net
- 6/23/09 - A Cool Website for locating Hardware Pin Outs!
- 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
- Web Site Announcements
- Announcements
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- Ionospheric Propagation Maps
- Links Page
- Live APRS Maps
- K7IP's Projects
- Photo Albums
- 2009 ARRL Northwest Convention, Seaside, Oregon
- 2010 Linuxfest Northwest
- CQWW VHF 2010
- Field Day - 2009 (Skagit County Style)
- 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
Apache OpenOffice Downloaded 50 Million Times In a Year
An anonymous reader writes with this quick bite from the H: "Just a few days after the one year anniversary of the release of the first version of OpenOffice from the Apache Foundation (Apache OpenOffice 3.4) on 8 May 2012, the project can now boast 50 million downloads of the Open Source office suite. 10 million of those downloads happened since the beginning of March. In contrast, LibreOffice claimed it had 15 million unique downloads of its office suite in all of 2012."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Water Isolated for Over a Billion Years Found Under Ontario
ananyo writes "Scientists working 2.4 kilometers below Earth's surface in a Canadian mine have tapped a source of water that has remained isolated for at least a billion years. The researchers say they do not yet know whether anything has been living in it all this time, but the water contains high levels of methane and hydrogen — the right stuff to support life. Micrometer-scale pockets in minerals billions of years old can hold water that was trapped during the minerals' formation. But no source of free-flowing water passing through interconnected cracks or pores in Earth's crust has previously been shown to have stayed isolated for more than tens of millions of years (paper abstract)."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Irish Judge Orders 'The Internet' To Delete Video
New submitter edanto writes "A young Irish man wrongly accused of jumping from a taxi without paying the fare has secured a judgement from an Irish court ordering the video removed from the entire Internet. Experts from Google, Youtube, Facebook, and others must tell the court in two weeks if this is technically possible. The thing is, the video is accurate, it is only a comment that wrongly identified Eoin McKeogh as the fare-jumper in the video that is inaccurate. It's not clear if the judge has made any orders about the comment."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Groklaw Turns Ten
Founded just to cover the SCO/Caldera UNIX lawsuits back in 2003, Groklaw has proven itself a great place to read and discuss many of the major tech trials since. And today, it turns ten: "We made it. A decade of Groklaw as of today. Who'd a thunk it? Not I. When I started, I thought I'd do a little fiddling around for a couple of months to learn how to blog. But then all you guys showed up and taught me some important things that I didn't know, and vice versa I hope, and here we are, on our 10th anniversary, still going strong, together on a very different path than I originally imagined. The important moment for me was when I realized the potential we had as a group and decided to try to surf this incredible wave all of you created by contributing your skills and time. I saw we could work as a group, explain technology to the legal world so lawyers and judges could make better decisions, and explain the legal process to techies, so they could avoid troubles and also could be enabled to work effectively to defend Free and Open Source Software from cynical 'Intellectual Property' attacks from the proprietary world." This despite a smear campaign by SCO and nearly shutting down in 2009. And it's archived in the Library of Congress.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Used Game To Survive? EA Plans To Drop Online Pass
Krazy Kanuck writes "Introduced in 2010, Online Pass was marketed as a way to 'preserve' online content or DLC as titles were sold in the used game market. Many saw this as a way to cut out the second hand game market. EA has now decided to end this program 'partly because the players didn't like it.' Unfortunately this appears to only be for future released games, those previously released will still be subject to this feature. Activision and Ubisoft still use this form of content control, it will be interesting to see if they follow suit."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Newegg Defeats Alcatel-Lucent in Third Patent Win This Year
Newegg's policy of not backing down from patent trolls, even ones as large as Alcatel-Lucent, continues to result in victory. Earlier this year, Overstock and Newegg successfully defended themselves with a jury invalidating Alcatel-Lucent's main patent used to force companies as large as Amazon to settle. Naturally, Alcatel-Lucent appealed, but the appeals court quickly ruled in favor of Newegg and Overstock.com. From Ars: "Federal Circuit judges typically take months, and occasionally years, to review the patent appeals that come before them. Briefs in this case were submitted last year, and oral arguments were held last Friday, May 10. The three-judge panel upheld Newegg's win (PDF), without comment — in just three days. ... Alcatel-Lucent dropped the case over its other two patents, desperate to get back the '131 patent that Newegg and Overstock had killed at trial. 'If they had been able to revive this patent, the litigation machine would have continued on,' Reines told Reuters after the win."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Google's House of Cards
theodp writes "In 'The Design That Conquered Google,' The New Yorker's Matt Buchanan reports that 'cards' — modeled after real cards — are set to become one of the dominant ways in which Google presents certain types of information to users. The power of a card as a visual-organization metaphor according to Matias Duarte (lead designer of Android), is that 'it makes very clear the atomic unity of things; it's still flexible while creating a kind of regularity.' Hey, maybe that Bill Atkinson was really on to something with that dadgum HyperCard software of his back in the '80s!"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Honeynet Project Researchers Build Publicly Available ICS Honeynet
msm1267 writes "Conpot, short for Control Honeypot, is one of the first publicly available honeypots for industrial control systems (ICS) and SCADA gear. Built by two researchers from the Honeynet Project, the hope is that others will take what they started, deploy it on their own critical infrastructure networks and share the findings. 'The main goal is to make this kind of technology available for a general audience,' said Lukas Rist, one of the developers. 'Not just for security researchers, but also for people who are sysadmins setting up ICS systems who have no clue what could happen and want to see malware attacks against their systems and not put them in any danger.'" Unlike previous ICS Honeypots, this one simulates the control systems rather than requiring that you happen to own an actual industrial control system.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Google and NASA Snap Up D-Wave Quantum Computer
ananyo writes "D-Wave, the small company that sells the world's only commercial quantum computer, has just bagged an impressive new customer: a collaboration between Google, NASA and the non-profit Universities Space Research Association. The three organizations have joined forces to install a D-Wave Two, the computer company's latest model, in a facility launched by the collaboration — the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab at NASA's Ames Research Center. The lab will explore areas such as machine learning — useful for functions such as language translation, image searches and voice-command recognition. The Google-led collaboration is only the second customer to buy computer from D-Wave — Lockheed Martin was the first."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Google Demands Microsoft Pull YouTube App For WP8
First time accepted submitter exomondo writes "Google has given Microsoft until May 22nd to pull their Windows Phone 8 YouTube app from the marketplace and disable it on customer devices. It not only includes a built-in ad blocker but also allows users to download videos and doesn't impose device-specific streaming restrictions outlined in the YouTube Terms Of Service. A Microsoft spokesperson said in part: 'YouTube is consistently one of the top apps downloaded by smartphone users on all platforms, but Google has refused to work with us to develop an app on par with other platforms. Since we updated the YouTube app to ensure our mutual customers a similar YouTube experience, ratings and feedback have been overwhelmingly positive. We'd be more than happy to include advertising but need Google to provide us access to the necessary APIs. In light of Larry Page's comments today calling for more interoperability and less negativity, we look forward to solving this matter together for our mutual customers.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics
davecb writes "The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) has recently published two notices for patent examiners relating to patent interpretation, and in particular computer-related/business method type patents saying: 'for example, what appears on its face to be a claim for an "art" or a "process" may, on a proper construction, be a claim for a mathematical formula and therefore not patentable subject matter.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
A Peek At Google's Software-Defined Network
CowboyRobot writes "At the recent 2013 Open Networking Summit, Google Distinguished Engineer Amin Vahdat presented 'SDN@Google: Why and How', in which he described Google's 'B4' SDN network, one of the few actual implementations of software-defined networking. Google has deployed sets of Network Controller Servers (NCSs) alongside the switches, which run an OpenFlow agent with a 'thin level of control with all of the real smarts running on a set of controllers on an external server but still co-located.' By using SDN, Google hopes to increase efficiency and reduce cost. Unlike computation and storage, which benefit from an economy of scale, Google's network is getting much more expensive each year."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Categories: Open Source
