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Wired News: Turn That PC Into a Supercomputer
Topic: Computers 6:24 am EDT, Oct 14, 2003

] An ordinary desktop PC outfitted with six PCI cards,
] each containing four of the chips, would perform at
] about 600 gigaflops (or more than half a teraflop).

] At this level of performance, the PC would qualify as one
] of the 500 most powerful supercomputers in the world.

] "At 3 watts, you could put it in a PCMCIA card," said
] McIntosh-Smith. "With two chips on a PC Card, you can
] have 50 gigaflops on a laptop, running off a battery.
] That's equivalent to a small Linux cluster on your
] notebook."

Its the FPU from hell!

Wired News: Turn That PC Into a Supercomputer


New Scientist - Bio-battery runs on shots of vodka
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:44 am EST, Mar 26, 2003

] An enzyme-catalysed battery has been created that could
] one day run cell phones and laptop computers on shots of
] vodka

Whoa....cheers to that:)

New Scientist - Bio-battery runs on shots of vodka


Hot laptop burns scientist's penis
Topic: Health and Wellness 10:13 am EST, Nov 25, 2002

No, no.. before you start laughing.. read the article. He was "writing a report" and he really did have his pants on! Really!!
Okay.. let's say it together.. "BULLSHIT!"
I'm sorry, but I really did have the hottest laptop imaginable, and yes it got hot, but I was always DRESSED when I used it on my lap, and I never got blisters. And also, when I felt it starting to get too hot, I PUT IT BACK ON MY DESK.

Hot laptop burns scientist's penis


Flirting With Mac OS X
Topic: Computers 9:14 pm EDT, Sep 24, 2002

I was immediately attracted by a very intriguing and pleasant desktop on the laptop's gorgeous screen.

I watched in jealous disgust as the guy next to me fired up a terminal window and ssh'ed to some server and ran a pine mail session.

That's it, I decided. I am going to get a Mac OS X laptop, too.

That was a few weeks ago.

Unix guru Moshe Bar loves his titanium G4 PowerBook (even though he skimped on the RAM). Who settles for 512 MB when you can have 1 GB?

Flirting With Mac OS X


Intel's Unclear Laptop Program for Children in Developing World
Topic: Current Events 1:15 am EST, Jan 18, 2009

intel_logoNicholas Negroponte, head of the charity, stated that Intel repetitively undetermined its non-for-profit scheme, meant to provide cheap laptops to children living in developing countries.

Intel's Unclear Laptop Program for Children in Developing World


RE: New bill would tighten rules for DHS border laptop searches
Topic: Society 11:57 am EDT, Sep 18, 2008

You should come hear my talk at Phreaknic. I'll cover all of this.

flynn23 wrote:
So is this just an end run on habeus corpus?

No. Habeus Corpus is an unrelated concept ... the notion that if the executive seizes a person they must explain their reasons and authority for doing so to an independent decision maker (the judiciary). U.S. Customs is not seizing people, just laptops. It might be more appropriate to ask if this is an end run around the 4th amendment...

Or is it a legal "grey zone" because we're dealing with border checkpoints and not terra firma?

Yes and no. Its not technically a "grey zone." The 4th amendment is said to apply at the border. However, the 4th amendment has two parts:

1. No unreasonable searches.
2. Warrants require probable cause.

The problem here is that it tells you what you need to get a warrant, but it doesn't tell you when a warrant is required. It has a loophole... It only requires that searches be reasonable, and reasonable means whatever people think it ought to.

The Supreme Court has decided that all border searches are reasonable by virtue of the fact that they occur at the border....

God, what the fuck is wrong with these people? Who is sitting in a meeting where this gets proposed and says "I think that's a good idea..."???

It doesn't happen that way. The water just keeps getting hotter until the frog starts to boil but when the frog complains the cook says "Why are you complaining now? The burner has been on for half an hour and you never said a thing! If it was OK for the burner to be on 10 minutes ago it must be OK for it to be on now! Shut up!"

In the 1790's Congress allowed customs to search shipping vessels if they had reason to suspect they contained contraban. Two months later the same Congress also passed the 4th amendment.

In the 1970's, the Supreme Court decided that the only way to reconcile these two decisions is to conclude that border searches don't require a warrant -- they are presumptively reasonable.

In 1985, during the drug war, the Supreme Court relied on that 1970's decision that all border searches are presumptively reasonable to declare that customs agents do not need a reason to perform a routine search (note that this has morphed somewhat from where we were in 1790). However, they also declared that non-routine searches still require reasonable suspicion.

In 2004, the Supreme Court relied on that 1985 decision to declare that the removal and disassembly of a gas tank from an automobile is a routine search and can be performed without any reasonable suspicion. The frogs were a bit warm at this point.

In the spring of 2008 the 9th circuit court of appeals ruled that searches of the content of laptop computers are routine searches and can be performed without any reasonable suspicion.

The frogs are now complaining that it is quite hot in here. Customs is arguing that there has been no policy change in regard to routine searches and that these court opinions just confirm prior policy. What this argument ignores is that technology has changed. People are now bring far more information across the border on a more frequent basis than they were before, and that changes the stakes. More at Phreaknic.

RE: New bill would tighten rules for DHS border laptop searches


Chertoff Misleads on Laptop Searches, Feingold Charges | Threat Level from Wired.com
Topic: Miscellaneous 2:37 pm EDT, Aug 10, 2008

On August 1st, I pointed out that Chertoff lied in an editorial published in mid-July in the USA-Today. Apparently he told the same lie to Wired in an interview on the 7th, and on the 8th Sen Russ Feingold echoed my comments exactly:

Secretary Chertoff's description of the newly published DHS policy on laptop searches was not just misleading – it was flat-out wrong. In an interview with Wired.com, the Secretary stated that "[w]e only do [laptop searches] when we put you into secondary [screening] and we only put you into secondary [screening] ... when there is a reason to suspect something."

But the actual policy that DHS published says the exact opposite.

Also note:

DHS spokesman Russ Knocke dismissed Feingold's statement, calling it "sour grapes and paranoia from someone who can't accept that even the 9th Circuit ruled that what we're doing is constitutional."

Hey Russ, have you read that 9th circuit decision? Can you explain what the hell the warrant exception for vehicle searches has to do with the standard of suspicion required to search laptops given that probable cause is required to search a home regardless of whether or not it is "readily mobile."

Chertoff Misleads on Laptop Searches, Feingold Charges | Threat Level from Wired.com


Editorial - The Government and Your Laptop - Editorial - NYTimes.com
Topic: Civil Liberties 6:30 pm EDT, Jul 10, 2008

The Department of Homeland Security is routinely searching laptops at airports when Americans re-enter the United States from abroad. The government then pores over or copies the laptop’s contents — including financial records, medical data and e-mail messages. These out-of-control searches trample the privacy rights of Americans, and Congress should rein them in.

I'm speaking on this subject at Hope in NYC next Sunday. If you are planning to be at Hope, drop by!

Editorial - The Government and Your Laptop - Editorial - NYTimes.com


The Last HOPE - July 18-20, 2008 - Hotel Pennsylvania - New York City
Topic: Miscellaneous 9:03 am EDT, Jun 20, 2008

Warrantless Laptop Searches at U.S. Borders

Decius

U.S. customs agents have begun randomly searching the contents of laptops carried by individuals across U.S. border checkpoints. Personal laptops contain increasingly vast and intimate collections of information about their owners, and cannot be easily sanitized for government inspection prior to travel. The privacy implications of this policy are obviously tremendous. There is presently a debate in the U.S. court system about the constitutionality of these searches. This talk will cover the developments so far, explaining (and criticizing) the basic legal framework in which this debate is occurring as well as the reasoning employed by the courts that have heard this issue. Related topics will also be discussed, such as recent controversy over the Fifth Amendment right to refuse to reveal an encryption password to the police and the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement. Attendees will be armed with a deeper understanding of these present threats to our fundamental rights.

I'm speaking at Hope next month in NYC. A number of other people connected with MemeStreams are also speaking. It should be a good time.

The Last HOPE - July 18-20, 2008 - Hotel Pennsylvania - New York City


Laptop Picture Frame - Project Bling - Awooga!!!
Topic: Technology 5:41 pm EDT, Jun 18, 2008

Ever had the desire to display your digital pictures in a frame without going through the hassle of printing them and re-framing? My inspiration came from the write up on Applefritter and I decided to take the plunge and destroy a hand-me-down IBM Thinkpad 560X in the name of science ;)

Over the space of a couple of days, I disassembled the laptop and carefully assembled only the bare minimum required parts on the back side of a wooden picture frame. I’m quite pleased with the result if I say so myself :)

Find the pictorial here

http://awooga.nl/gallery/modding/projectbling

Laptop Picture Frame - Project Bling - Awooga!!!


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