Powell calls damage worse than seen in war (USATODAY.com)
Grok Headline matches for Powell calls damage worse than seen in war (USATODAY.com)
Powell calls for legislative rethink
Powell calls for legislative rethink
07/14/2004 01:23 AMFCC chair says antiquated communications rules need overhaul.
Powell calls American's killing barbaric
Powell calls American's killing barbaric
06/18/2004 04:04 PMRegulation of Internet phones Powell
wants calls treated like e-mails
Regulation of Internet phones Powell
wants calls treated like e-mails
12/16/2003 07:51 AMSan Francisco Chronicle Dec 16 2003 6:33AM ET
Powell warns Sudan to act on Darfur
(USATODAY.com)
Powell warns Sudan to act on Darfur
(USATODAY.com)
07/09/2004 08:22 AMUSATODAY.com - Secretary of State Colin Powell said Thursday that the
United States has "yet to see ... dramatic improvements" in the
humanitarian crisis in western Sudan, despite visits to the region by
Powell and United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan to press the
government to act.
Powell wasn't told of $25 billion
Iraq request (USATODAY.com)
Powell wasn't told of $25 billion
Iraq request (USATODAY.com)
05/07/2004 03:10 PMUSATODAY.com - Shortly before Bush administration officials presented
Republican congressional leaders with a request for $25 billion in
Iraq funding this week, Secretary of State Colin Powell was telling
members of the Congressional Black Caucus that no such request would
be forthcoming.
Powell, Gov. Bush lead support
delegation to Thailand (USATODAY.com)
Powell, Gov. Bush lead support
delegation to Thailand (USATODAY.com)
01/04/2005 11:38 AMUSATODAY.com - A U.S. delegation led by Secretary of State Colin
Powell and President Bush's brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, arrived
here Monday night to show support for nations struggling to recover
from one of the most deadly and widespread natural calamities in
recorded history.
Women perform worse than men on average
but even worse when playing against men
Women perform worse than men on average
but even worse when playing against men
04/24/2004 06:22 AMNotes from the paper Performance in Competitive Environments- Gender
Differences
marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2004/04/politi
cally_inc.html
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site | 5 links
Internet calls add foreign accent
(USATODAY.com)
Internet calls add foreign accent
(USATODAY.com)
08/16/2004 08:06 AMUSATODAY.com - In the digital age, the next best thing to being there
might be this: a French phone number.
Panel calls for major changes in foster
care (USATODAY.com)
Panel calls for major changes in foster
care (USATODAY.com)
05/18/2004 01:28 PMUSATODAY.com - The USA's foster care system needs a radical overhaul
to make it more flexible and accountable, says a national panel that
Tuesday will recommend broad changes, including more flexibility in
the way states spend money on the 532,000 children in the system.
Kerry ad calls on Bush to 'denounce the
smear' (USATODAY.com)
Kerry ad calls on Bush to 'denounce the
smear' (USATODAY.com)
08/23/2004 08:39 AMUSATODAY.com - The rhetorical battle over Sen. John Kerry's record in
Vietnam continued to rage Sunday, as Kerry's campaign released a new
television ad calling on President Bush to "denounce the smear."
Start-up's overseas cell calls cheaper
(USATODAY.com)
Start-up's overseas cell calls cheaper
(USATODAY.com)
05/12/2004 05:27 AMUSATODAY.com - While prices for both traditional and mobile phone
services have plunged in recent years, an international call from a
cell phone is still pricey and impossible without activating that
calling option.
Life Lynx Partners with Powell Police
for Technology Launch,September 11 is
Child Safety Event in Powell OH
Life Lynx Partners with Powell Police
for Technology Launch,September 11 is
Child Safety Event in Powell OH
08/22/2004 02:38 AMLife Lynx has developed a new child safety tool that can alert the
authorities of a missing child in seconds. This alert will include a
recent picture, which is the most important piece of data that the
authorites need to do their job effectively and bring the child to
safety. [PRWEB Aug 22, 2004]
Colin Powell the Cat to Meet Real Powell
(AP)
Colin Powell the Cat to Meet Real Powell
(AP)
08/12/2004 05:00 PMAP - Colin Powell, the cat, will meet on Friday with Colin Powell, the
secretary of state.
Colin Powell the Cat to Meet Human
Powell (AP)
Colin Powell the Cat to Meet Human
Powell (AP)
08/13/2004 07:27 AMAP - Colin Powell, the cat, will meet on Friday with Colin Powell, the
secretary of state.
Are Speakerphone Mobile Calls Less
Annoying Than Regular Calls?
Are Speakerphone Mobile Calls Less
Annoying Than Regular Calls?
04/21/2004 03:53 PMLast week we noted a new study saying that
people get
annoyed with others talking on mobile phones because they only hear
one half of the conversation. At the time, I wrote that this made
sense as periods of silence followed by talking are a lot more jarring
to the passive listener. However, this BBC report claims that the
reason for the annoyance
is that it
shows that we're more curious about what the other party is
saying. I'm not sure I buy that. It seems much more likely that it's
the variability in noise, from silent to noisy rather than any form of
curiosity. When the conversation is at a constant hum (even when
loud), it's much easier to tune it out. Still, the findings do go
against the opinion many people have expressed that things like
"push-to-talk" where the phone usually acts as a speaker phone would
be more annoying since we get to hear both sides of the conversation.
In fact, the researchers behind the study are even suggesting that
mobile phone makers may want to explore adding speaker phones to more
phones to make them
less annoying. Of course, the study only
set up two conditions: a conversation on a mobile phone and a
face-to-face conversation. They didn't test the speaker phone
situation to see how annoying that was. It's possible that the
annoyance factor comes from the inability to make use of body language
to express concepts as well, leading to a different tone of voice.
It's only going to get worse
It's only going to get worse
04/09/2004 04:08 PMThis analysis of the spread of the
witty worm is fascinating for a whole bunch of different
reasons.
Firstly, the analysis was made possible by USCD's Network
Telescope, a network monitoring system on a massive scale which takes
advantage of the fact that IP arranges were handed out like candy back when
the 'net was in its infancy. USCD controls a huge chunk of all
potential IPv4 addresses, and their network telescope tracks data sent
to 1/256th of all IPv4 traffic. Since most worms target random IP
addresses this makes the telescope a unique tool in analysing the
spread of hostile code in the wild.
Next, Witty Worm was no ordinary worm. It targeted an exploit in ISS firewall products, which include
the popular BlackICE product
targeted at home users; this means the worm was actively attacking
people who had made an effort to secure their machines! It also
carried a destructive payload - a rarity for worms in the wild.
Additionally, the exploit it used had only been publically announced
the day before. It's possible the authors new of the vulnerability in
advance, but it's far more likely they had already written the payload
and were just waiting for a new vulnerability to use as the
carrier.
From reading the report, it seems that the worm managed to infect
virtually every one of its potential targets that were connected to
the internet. This critical point is what makes the worm so
interesting, because it destroys the idea that non-Windows users are
made more secure by their relatively lesser numbers. If a worm came
out with a similar methodology to Witty Worm but that targeted Linux,
OS X or even something with a truly tiny statistical footprint like
BeOS it could still achieve almost total infection of its chosen
target audience.
The worm also appears to have used a number of techniques that had
previously been hypothesized by the security communit, such as
spreading from a number of pre-infected hosts.
If a worm can spread this fast, with this little notice, and infect
almost all of the vulnerable population, we're in a pretty precarious
state.
Related reading: The Peon's Guide to
Secure System Development, Slashdot's thread on the Witty Worm
analysis (some of the +5 comments are pretty good).
It was worse than you think. Also
better.
It was worse than you think. Also
better.
07/06/2004 06:43 AMThe cd of images from my running of the Marathon des Sables arrived
this morning, just as the temperature here hit the low 90s. I'm
starting to have flashbacks. I've been training for the my manhauling
attempt on the North...
From Bad To Worse?
From Bad To Worse?
12/30/2003 01:22 AMTwo businesses that can only get worse
Two businesses that can only get worse
06/15/2004 08:32 AM 1. Perhaps your newspaper's funny pages includes Whatzit, the
syndicated daily puzzle that takes some everyday phrase and presents
it as a clever arrangement of words. For example, "nv emerald" is
"green with envy" and "TTT" is "big tease." Imagine it runs for the
next 40 years. That's 14,600 common phrases from now. Whatzit will be
down to obscure taglines from the 1950s and hepcat cliches that were
last uttered in 1928. 2. When a store makes a commitment to everything
costing a dollar, it is guaranteeing that it will lose value precisely
at the rate of inflation....
It gets worse for the N-Gage
It gets worse for the N-Gage
11/11/2003 03:18 PMWe wouldn't keep kicking the N-Gage when it's down like this, but the
bad news keeps on coming. The latest calamity: the encryption that
prevents N-Gage games from being played on other cellphones has been
cracked, so now there's no reason to buy Nokia's gamephone if you just
want to play one of its games. Normally this wouldn't be such a big
deal since Nokia would at least see some money from people buying the
games, but copies of N-Gage games are already being swapped online. So
Nokia is doubly screwed. Read [Thanks everyone who wrote in with
this]...
Security: From bad to worse?
Security: From bad to worse?
01/05/2004 12:19 PMNew state, same as old but worse.
New state, same as old but worse.
12/02/2003 02:39 PM The
Miami Model... ["What is the Miami
Model? It is several things:
extremely violent
police response to nonviolent demonstrators, embedded
reporters behind police lines - and arresting and harassing
"non-embedded" journalists...(and) mass arrests and an
arsenal of "non-lethal"
weapons.]...represents the next step in the
criminalization and repression of dissent that is occurring in the
United States right now." It is part of the newly emerging
"
Technologies
of political control" (1.1m PDF) which are rapidly consuming
American democracy from within. This is more than crowd control. This
is the new
Information
Warfare. Oh - and thinking of protesting? -
The
FBI would like your name, please. (more inside)
The
scene was a "massive police state," - John Sweeney,
President
of the United Steelworkers of America. At the
Miami protest against
provisions in the
"Free Trade
of the Americas Act", the massive police presence was paid
for by $8.5 million from the 87 billion dollar "War on
Terror" bill passed by Congress. 30 to 90 busloads of retirees
were blocked from the protest by police, and
Amnesty
International has called for an investigation into allegations of
widespread police brutality - over 100 protestors were injured. (some
photos and
some
more, courtesy of Leif Utne) Bonus -
Watch Miami police
use a tazer on a peaceful protestor. (Quicktime/Video 14M)
it's even worse than we thought
it's even worse than we thought
09/15/2004 03:40 PMDan's Other Imploding Scoop, .. New York Post .. Eric Fettmann ..
UH-OH:
nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/28563.htm
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403(b)etter or Worse?
403(b)etter or Worse?
03/31/2005 05:35 PMTeachers and others stand to gain and lose with new retirement plan
rules.
We've seen worse than Sasser - MS
We've seen worse than Sasser - MS
05/04/2004 03:06 PMClean up gets underway
GAO: P2P Porn no Worse Than on Web
GAO: P2P Porn no Worse Than on Web
12/12/2003 11:35 AMInternet News Dec 12 2003 10:38AM ET
Can Janus' News Get Worse?
Can Janus' News Get Worse?
07/23/2004 02:34 PMThe company's latest report was unfavorable. Are more dreary days
ahead, or is Janus readying for a revival?
Is it just me, or has Firefox gotten
worse with the last two releasese (since
0.7)?
Is it just me, or has Firefox gotten
worse with the last two releasese (since
0.7)?
06/11/2004 03:24 AMI just finished reading Neil Turner's the review of the latest version
of Firefox, and my first thought is, "I'm not installing that." Of
course, I probably will end up doing so at some point, but it is so
disappointing to see a project that started with such promise getting
worse and worse with every release (although to be fair, it is also
getting faster). Still, I'm still running Firebird .7 on one of my
computers, and on the whole I prefer it to 0.8. If this review and the
release notes are accurate, it looks like the situation just worsens
with 0.9. The new download dialog foisted on users in 0.8 has been
kept, the theme has been changed to one that looks quite ugly and is
acknowledged as being worse than the current one, and the disregard
for the most popular extensions and current users that was
demonstrated when 0.8 was released is strikingly repeated. From the
release notes, "when you run 0.9 for the first time all of your
extensions will be automatically disabled." There were a lot of
comments a year ago about all the problems with design by committee --
now we are starting to see some of the problems with design by
dictatorship, and disregard of users. As someone said on the
mozzilazine forum, "The capacity of this project to repeatedly shoot
itself in the foot never ceases to amaze me." As a believer in open
source, this is really disappointing. I hope that I am wrong, and that
when the dust settles there is still a superior product to Internet
Explorer in there somewhere, but the current direction isn't
promising. At the moment I am considering returning to Mozilla as my
default browser, or testing the Opera waters again....
Is spim worse than spam?
Is spim worse than spam?
04/09/2004 04:13 PMNo.. but shonky IM throws up new set of issues
Is it just me, or has Firefox gotten
worse with the last two releases (since
0.7)?
Is it just me, or has Firefox gotten
worse with the last two releases (since
0.7)?
06/11/2004 06:51 AMI just finished reading Neil Turner's the review of the latest version
of Firefox, and my first thought is, "I'm not installing that." Of
course, I probably will end up doing so at some point, but it is so
disappointing to see a project that started with such promise getting
worse and worse with every release (although to be fair, it is also
getting faster). Still, I'm still running Firebird .7 on one of my
computers, and on the whole I prefer it to 0.8. If this review and the
release notes are accurate, it looks like the situation just worsens
with 0.9. The new download dialog foisted on users in 0.8 has been
kept, the theme has been changed to one that looks quite ugly and is
acknowledged as being worse than the current one, and the disregard
for the most popular extensions and current users that was
demonstrated when 0.8 was released is strikingly repeated. From the
release notes, "when you run 0.9 for the first time all of your
extensions will be automatically disabled." There were a lot of
comments a year ago about all the problems with design by committee --
now we are starting to see some of the problems with design by
dictatorship, and disregard of users. As someone said on the
mozzilazine forum, "The capacity of this project to repeatedly shoot
itself in the foot never ceases to amaze me." As an open source
enthusiast, this is really disappointing. I hope that I am wrong, and
that when the dust settles there is still a superior product to
Internet Explorer in there somewhere, but the current direction isn't
promising. At the moment I am considering returning to Mozilla as my
default browser, or testing the Opera waters again....
BSA Wants To Make The DMCA Worse
BSA Wants To Make The DMCA Worse
01/06/2005 07:34 PMWhile the BSA has mostly sat back and let the RIAA and MPAA take the
brunt of the bad publicity for suing customers, you can be pretty sure
that they're also freaking out over file sharing and avoiding any and
all evidence about how it could help their member companies. Just as
the RIAA lost
yet
another case saying they have to actually file lawsuits before
sending subpoenas to ISPs for user info, the BSA is
asking Congress to modify the DMCA to force ISPs to
cooperate and give up user info
without a lawsuit being filed.
This is very problematic for plenty of reasons -- not the least of
which is that it would turn ISPs into an enforcement arm that will be
forced to monitor how people use their network. ISPs just provide the
service. If companies have a problem with what an individual is
doing, they should file a lawsuit and then request the info from the
ISP. Without a lawsuit, it's all just a fishing expedition. At the
same time, however, the BSA
is at least interested in exploring
some amount of patent reform -- including plans to make it easier to
challenge granted patents. That might be a slight improvement -- but
it could also lead to many frivolous challenges. It seems a much more
reasonable idea is to open up the patent process so that people have
an easy process to make prior art claims
before a patent is
granted.
YUKOS: From Dismal to Worse
YUKOS: From Dismal to Worse
07/28/2004 04:30 PMThe Russian government claims it doesn't want to take down YUKOS, but
that's what it's doing.
It's Not Rocket Science -- It's Worse
It's Not Rocket Science -- It's Worse
12/22/2004 01:13 AMThe iPod is brilliant. I don't understand why they're not more
popular. By Deborah Ross, The Independent
Spam epidemic gets worse
Spam epidemic gets worse
12/04/2003 04:53 AMBut you knew that already
2004: How could it be worse than last
year?
2004: How could it be worse than last
year?
01/02/2004 09:30 AMSan Jose Mercury News Jan 2 2004 8:29AM ET
New Forecast Says Inflation May Get
Worse (AP)
New Forecast Says Inflation May Get
Worse (AP)
05/24/2004 07:52 AMAP - Fed by escalating energy prices and a rebounding economy,
inflation will pick up more this year than previously thought, a group
of economic forecasters says.
"Pupils 'do worse with computers'"
"Pupils 'do worse with computers'"
03/26/2005 05:07 AMWildfire Forecast Goes From Bad to Worse
(AP)
Wildfire Forecast Goes From Bad to Worse
(AP)
05/23/2004 03:08 PMAP - Months ago, national fire managers predicted the 2004 wildfire
season would be a bad one in the West. Now, they're changing their
forecast: It's going to be worse.
MIT Presidency worse than feared
MIT Presidency worse than feared
08/27/2004 01:40 PMCatching up on the mail I read through the latest Technology
Review, MIT's alumni magazine. Things are far worse than
feared. One letter calculates the cost of the $283 million
new computer science building as $17 million in 1916
dollars. The main buildings, which are enormous by comparison,
were completed in 1916 at a cost of $7 million.
Much more depressing than the backwards slide of the American
construction industry in terms of efficiency is an article about Chuck
Vest's 14 years running MIT. The article touches briefly on
Vest's achievements in increasing research funds between 1990 and
2003, which sound very impressive due to the lack of
inflation-adjustment (the actual increase in 2003 dollars was from
$430 million to $472 million). Nothing having to do with
innovation in research or education is mentioned. If the article
is accurate, Vest's major focuses turned out to have been
- fighting with the Federal Government over MIT's price-fixing
arrangement with the Ivy League colleagues. This agreement was
predicted to be illegal by Stanford, which refused to join the cartel,
and deemed illegal by a Federal District Court Judge but we ultimately
beat the rap in the Court of Appeals (see my
tuition-free MIT article for more)
- studying the extent to which female faculty members had less lab
space than male faculty members and whether this was due to
discrimination
- pursuing sex- and race-based discrimination in student admissions
and faculty recruitment and promoting such discrimination nationwide
in briefs to the U.S. Supreme Court in affirmative action
cases
I guess Phil Sharp, the Nobel Prize-winning biologist who turned
the job down is feeling pretty good about his decision to stay in the
lab.
The only encouraging news in the magazine concerned Erika Ebbel,
MIT Class of 2004 in Chemistry, who as Miss Massachusetts will
compete in the Miss America pageant on September 18.
Grok Description matches for Powell calls damage worse than seen in war (USATODAY.com)
GrokA matches for Powell calls damage worse than seen in war (USATODAY.com)
Powell calls damage worse than seen in war (USATODAY.com)