Archived Pages
2008-08
2008-07
2008-06
2008-05
2008-04
2008-03
2008-02
2008-01
|
LAST NEWS
| Tornado touches down in colorado - kfsn 8/24/2008 Colorado -- A tornado touched down in Douglas County, Colorado Sunday evening. There were no immediate reports of damage. The twister swirled a lot of orange and brown ... Tornado touches down in colorado - kfsn
Mon, 25 Aug 2008 00:24:00 GMT,
|
| Tornadoes touch down near denver - political gateway DENVER, Aug. 24 (UPI) -- Several tornadoes danced across the outskirts of metropolitan Denver Sunday, putting on a thrilling show but inflicting little damage, authorities said ... Tornadoes touch down near denver - political gateway
Mon, 25 Aug 2008 03:31:00 GMT,
|
| Tornado touches down in douglas county - denver post A tornado touched down in Douglas County this evening near Interstate 25 and Happy Canyon Road. There were no immediate reports of damage. The area is largely open, with a ... Tornado touches down in douglas county - denver post
Mon, 25 Aug 2008 00:03:00 GMT,
|
| Fallout from fay to drop more rain - ledger-enquirer – All United States – Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas ... Fallout from fay to drop more rain - ledger-enquirer
Mon, 25 Aug 2008 05:11:00 GMT,
|
| More rain expected for georgia and alabama - ledger-enquirer – All United States – Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas ... More rain expected for georgia and alabama - ledger-enquirer
Sun, 24 Aug 2008 20:07:00 GMT,
|
| August 2008 - posts - msnbc firstread EAU CLAIRE, WI -- Obama told a crowd of supporters at a BBQ here today that the Democratic convention, which begins tomorrow in Denver, would show that he is just like them and ... August 2008 - posts - msnbc firstread
Sun, 24 Aug 2008 20:57:00 GMT,
|
| The rain makers - independent Share Whether it is the Chinese firing weapons into the sky to make it rain, or the Thai government setting up a "royal rainmaking project", the science of weather modification has ... The rain makers - independent
Sun, 24 Aug 2008 08:04:00 GMT,
|
| Steve pastorino: roster moves change look of mls - salt lake tribune Posted: 1:47 PM- While much of Utah's sports attention has been turned toward the Olympics in Beijing the last two weeks, something remarkable has been occuring in Major League ... Steve pastorino: roster moves change look of mls - salt lake tribune
Sat, 23 Aug 2008 19:46:00 GMT,
|
| Will severe storms repeat on sunday? - denver channel DENVER -- The Colorado Rocky Mountains were hit with severe weather Saturday afternoon when storms unloaded rain, hail and even a tornado. The tornado touched down at 2:16 p.m ... Will severe storms repeat on sunday? - denver channel
Sat, 23 Aug 2008 00:55:00 GMT,
|
| Mike scarlett: i owe my life to bat guano - cleburne times-review Recently I needed a break from counseling, so my wife and I took our family on a short excursion to New Mexico. While on the trip we visited Carlsbad Caverns. The 51-degree caverns ... Mike scarlett: i owe my life to bat guano - cleburne times-review
Sat, 23 Aug 2008 19:39:00 GMT,
|
| Spam king and family dead in murder-suicide Lt.Hawkins was one of many readers sending in word that the escaped spam king discussed yesterday was found dead in Colorado, after apparently killing his wife and 3-year-old daughter. A teenager was injured, and an infant was found alive in the car. Spam king and family dead in murder-suicide
,
|
| Researchers face jail risk for tor snooping study An anonymous reader writes "A group of researchers from the University of Colorado and University of Washington could face both civil and criminal penalties for a research project (PDF) in which they snooped on users of the Tor anonymous proxy network. Should federal prosecutors take interest in the project, the researchers could also face up to 5 years in jail for violating the Wiretap Act. The researchers neither sought legal review of the project nor ran it past their Institutional Review Board. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which has written a legal guide for Tor admins, strongly advises against any sort of network monitoring." Researchers face jail risk for tor snooping study
,
|
| Head first c# Michael J. Ross writes "For computer programmers who do not have a solid understanding of object-oriented programming (OOP), learning the C# programming language can be rather challenging, even if they have experience with C or C++, which at least would give them a head start over non-C programmers. Any developer in this situation may well want to begin the learning process with a book that aims to teach both OOP and C# in as gentle a manner as possible, with plenty of patient explanations and illustrative diagrams — such as those found in the book Head First C# by Andrew Stellman and Jennifer Greene." Read below for the rest of Michael's review. Head first c#
,
|
| How to clean up incorrect geolocation information? zorro6 writes "I thought this might be an interesting question/topic and it would sure help me to get some kind of answer. I recently got internet service from a small, local wireless ISP in my area (south central Colorado, USA). The strange thing is that many, many web sites think I am in Quebec, Canada when I use the service. Evidently some geolocation service thinks my IP address indicates I am in Canada. I have checked the obvious. The WHOIS information for my IP correctly indicates a location of Durango, CO. So the bad info is coming from some more sophisticated geolocation service. My ISP is at a loss as to how to fix this but it is causing me a lot of grief. Many of the ads I get shown on Yahoo! for instance are in French! Certain sites won't sell me goods or services because they don't do business in Canada. So far I know that Yahoo! (or their ad provider), Nvidia, Movielink, etc. all think I am in Canada. I would sure appreciate any help/info on how to get this corrected." How to clean up incorrect geolocation information?
,
|
| Replacement for aging doppler radar being tested longacre writes "Due to its limited range and slow scan times, the backbone of weather prediction in the US since the early 1990s, the NEXRAD radar system, is deeply flawed in the eyes of meteorologists. A new system being tested by researchers at the NOAA and four universities called the Collaborative Adaptive Sensing of the Atmosphere (CASA) network aims to fill the holes left by NEXRAD, using radar nodes piggybacked onto existing infrastructure, such as rooftops and cell towers. From the article: 'Based on faster and more comprehensive data collection, [Distributed Collaborative Adaptive Sensing] processing can refocus the CASA radars on a particularly interesting part of a storm (like an area that looks like it might develop a tornado) without losing track of an entire storm cell. "The system is continuously diagnosing the atmosphere and reallocating resources using wireless Internet as a backbone," says [the CASA team director].' Testing has begun in Oklahoma, Houston, and Puerto Rico, and initial installations could begin in 5 years." Replacement for aging doppler radar being tested
,
|
| Road rage linked to automobile bumper stickers Ponca City, We Love You sends news of a study by Colorado State University psychologist William Szlemko that recorded whether people had added seat covers, bumper stickers, special paint jobs, stereos, or plastic dashboard toys to their cars. Szlemko found a link between road rage and the number of personalized items on or in people's vehicles. "The number of territory markers predicted road rage better than vehicle value, condition, or any of the things that we normally associate with aggressive driving,' says Szlemko. What's more, only the number of bumper stickers, and not their content, predicted road rage... Szlemko suggests that this territoriality may encourage road rage because drivers are simultaneously in a private space (their car) and a public one (the road). 'We think they are forgetting that the public road is not theirs, and are exhibiting territorial behavior that normally would only be acceptable in personal space,' the researcher says. Road rage linked to automobile bumper stickers
,
|
| Hubble survey finds half of the missing matter esocid sends along the news that scientists believe they have found about half the missing matter in the universe. The matter we can see is only about 1/8 of the total baryonic matter believed to exist (and only 1/200 the mass-energy of the visible universe). This missing matter is not to be confused with "dark matter," which is thought to be non-baryonic. The missing stuff has been found in the intergalactic medium that extends essentially throughout all of space, from just outside our galaxy to the most distant regions of space. "'We think we are seeing the strands of a web-like structure that forms the backbone of the universe,' Mike Shull of the University of Colorado explained. 'What we are confirming in detail is that intergalactic space, which intuitively might seem to be empty, is in fact the reservoir for most of the normal, baryonic matter in the universe.'" Hubble survey finds half of the missing matter
,
|
| Riaa lawyer jumps ship NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The RIAA's top litigation lawyer, who has been personally leading the RIAA's litigation campaign for the past several years, Richard Gabriel, will be leaving his law practice after getting a job as a state court judge for a 2-year term in Colorado. What this will mean to the RIAA's litigation machine is anyone's guess. Mr. Gabriel has personally argued all of the RIAA's main cases, including Elektra v. Barker, Atlantic v. Howell, Atlantic v. Brennan, Capitol v. Foster, Atlantic v. Andersen, UMG v. Lindor, and London-Sire v. Doe 1, and personally tried the Capitol v. Thomas case, the only RIAA case that has ever gone to trial. He was working directly under the supervision of the RIAA's mysterious 'representative' Matthew Oppenheim." Riaa lawyer jumps ship
,
|
| Comcast blocks web browsing An anonymous reader writes "A team of researchers have found that Comcast has quietly rolled out a new traffic-shaping method, which is interfering with web browsers in addition to p2p traffic. The smoking gun that documents this behavior are network traces collected from Comcast subscribers Internet connections. This evidence shows Comcast is forging packets and blocking connection attempts from web browsers. One has to hope this isn't the congestion management system they are touting as no longer targeting BitTorrent, which they are deploying in reaction to the recent FCC investigations." Comcast blocks web browsing
,
|
| Amazon ec2 now more ready for application hosting For months now, I've been geeked about Amazon's EC2 as a web hosting service. But until today, in my opinion, it wasn't ready for prime time. Now it is, for two reasons. One, you can get static IPs, so if an outward-facing VM goes down you can quickly start another one and point your site's traffic to it without waiting for DNS propagation. And two, you can now separate your VMs into "physically distinct, independent infrastructure" zones, so you can plan to keep your site up if a tornado takes out one NOC. If I were developing a new website I'd host it there; buying or leasing real hardware for a startup seems silly. If you have questions, or especially if you know something about other companies' virtual hosting options, post comments -- let's compare notes. Amazon ec2 now more ready for application hosting
,
|
|
techsis scanner mainpro scroogle joan crawford winter olympics 2010 sam perkins fanball jennifer richards my country tis of thee big tv reliance strathmore
|