BBC News – Sony admits using fake reviewer Hard to believe that a movie-maker would bother making up reviews when there are so many reviewers apparently willing to praise crappy films because they were given a nifty tote bag…merchant online account card texas creditcard debt advice credit legaladvantage credit of bad mortgagecard 0 percent creditfor colleges online accreditationcard credit accept via computerloan $50 bad credit 000limit credit 1000 Map100 videos sex free hardcoreporn 89 videovideo sex amatuerporn addicted toadolescent sexualitysex amature teenvideo amateur teen1980 porn s Map2much fire mp3wma mp3 4u converterahh nah 3lw hell mp3fauk 3omar mp3ones 5000 mp3mp3 schumann abendliedm3ak mp3 3omrigarmin adding nuvi 200 playback mp3 Map
BBC News – Computer virus tackles child porn An ingenious attempt to use viruses to serve humanity instead of irritating it. It searches infected computers for suspicious image files and sends a directory listing to one of several authorities around the world, but no law enforcement organization is going to be too happy about receiving a deluge of email much of which will be false alarms.
Also, this depends on a child porn user opening an attachment on an email message with the subject “Help us all to end illegal child porn now” – hardly likely!
I have added a discussion topic about Linux in Africa. If you are a Linux partisan, read the original piece and my views (as expressed yesterday) and come and join the debate…
Study Casts Doubt on the Placebo Effect Could it be that sick people given placebos get better simply because sometimes people’s health improves on its own? It appears from this that the placebo effect has become over the years so “obvious” that nobody thought to question the methodology used to demonstrate it. No more “take two asprin and call me in the morning”?
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Britain going to Hell in a handbasket according to this rather depressing article from Stern magazine in Germany (reprinted in English in the Scotsman). It comprehensively rubbishes the NHS, London transport and, of course, the farm crisis. It’s exaggerated of course but is still quite a worrying rant.
Thanks to the Follow Me Here weblog for the link
Invisible toy doll makes money out of thin air A great novelty toy idea – £1.99 buys you a case containing… well… nothing. “The packaging states (among other things): “Invisible Jim. As not seen on TV. Warning: Small parts may ruin your sex life. Batteries not included. A gripping hand would be nice. Camouflage suit sold separately.”
Thanks to the Follow Me Here weblog for the link
Mathematician humour: “WARNING: Do NOT calculate Pi in binary. It is conjectured that this number is normal, meaning that it contains ALL finite bit strings…
“If you compute it, you will be guilty of:
* Copyright infringement (of all books, all short stories, all
newspapers, all magazines, all web sites, all music, all movies,
and all software, including the complete Windows source code)
…
* Possession of everyone’s SSN, everyone’s credit card numbers,
everyone’s PIN numbers, everyone’s unlisted phone numbers, and
everyone’s passwords
…
Also, your computer will contain all of the nastiest known computer
viruses. In fact, all of the nastiest POSSIBLE computer viruses.”
Wayne Marshall, who has been involved in development work in Africa, writes about his experiences. He has some important lessons to impart about building skills instead of parachuting in equipment and about the need to provide clean water before bandwidth in desperately poor regions.
I have my doubts about his belief that Linux is a suitable operating system to provide to needy Africans, however. It may be “ideologically pure” and, more importantly, useful on low-spec systems, but I imagine that because it is still not fully user-friendly it may be difficult to train non-computer literate (or indeed semi-literate) people to use. I also worry about whether the skills Linux users learn will continue to be useful once they have to inter-operate with the wider world of Windows PCs.
UK elections ignore the net According to the Guardian, only 0.1% of election-related news stories surveyed were about information technology or e-commerce. Disappointingly, the “election process” (who is rubbishing who) made up 37.2% of the coverage – by far the largest proportion.ny lpn in accredited programstherapy physio alberta program in accreditedadverse credit wirralof accreditation college junior aquinas nursingcourse accredited specialist medical codingambulatory accrediting for surgery bodies centerspublic unaccredited versus accredited schoolsaccommodation crediton Map
Work Avoided Through Extensive List-Making A classic from The Onion. FWIW I have 50 items on 6 todo lists…
