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Education

Submission+-Automated Language Deciphering by Computer AI (mit.edu)

eldavojohn writes: Ugaritic has been deciphered by an unaided computer program that relied only on four basic assumptions present in many languages. The paper (PDF) may aid researchers in deciphering eight undecipherable languages (Ugaritic has already been deciphered and proved their system worked) as well as increase the number of languages automated translation sites offer. The researchers claim 'orders of magnitude' speedups in deciphering languages with their new system.
User Journal

JournalJournal:This is a bitch about anything thread4

Your whines, complaints, annoyances and observations of complete stupidity are welcome.

I just want to see if anyone had a worse week than I did.

Last night and today topped it off - returning to bed last night at whatever hour slipped off as I lay down and smashed my back, neck and head onto the floor. Followed by a 2 hour meeting this morning where people displayed their ignorance ever so proudly as I tried to avoid groaning in pain as I moved in anyway.

Games

Submission+-California Student Arrested for Console Hacking (whnt.com) 2

jhoger writes: "Matthew Crippen was arrested and released August 3rd, 2009 on $5000 bond for hacking game consoles (for profit) in violation of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act.

He faces up to 10 years in prison.

This is terribly disturbing to me... this man could lose 10 years of his freedom for providing a service of altering hardware. He could well lose much of his freedom for providing a modicum of it to others. There is no piracy going on, necessarily... the games that could then be run may simply not be signed by the vendor. It's much like jailbreaking an iPhone.

But it seems because he is disabling a "circumvention device" it is a criminal issue.

Time to kick a few dollars over to the EFF!"

The Almighty Buck

Economic Climate Spurring Independent Game Success40

Eurogamer is running an opinion piece suggesting that innovation and creativity have been on the decline for years within the games industry. Now, with the threat of the economic crisis looming, game publishers are shying further from new projects and ideas, instead choosing to rehash popular IP in order to minimize the risk of failure. The upside is that their reluctance, along with technological improvements that make game distribution easier, is allowing independent developers to gain exposure like never before. "This revolution will give us a new wave of developers who see games through very different eyes to those of their studio-bound compatriots. Forced to consider the financial bottom line, the technological bleeding edge and the whims of Metacritic at each turn, big studio development is by no means uncreative, but certainly has to follow certain set patterns. ... The studio system couldn't have created a game like Flower, the utterly beautiful PSN title which came out earlier this month; but more than that, it couldn't have created a persona like Jenova Chen, the mind behind Flower, who happily talks in interviews about evoking emotions, moving past primal feelings and 'maturing' the industry in ways that don't involve sex, blood and swearing. He talks about making games that don't empower gamers, but instead make them experience other things, other emotions. It's spine-tingling stuff. It's also commercial suicide — or would be, to a studio working in the traditional development context."
Medicine

Submission+-Microsaccades Keep Us from Going Blind1

Ponca City, We love you writes: "Even when trying to fix a gaze on a stationary target, our eyes are always moving. Scientists have long dismissed the imperceptible jumps and jiggles known as "microsaccades" as the accidental result of spurious nerve signals but now scientists have determined that these unconscious flickering eye movements provide a vital function by "refreshing" images on the retina which would otherwise fade away. Although the unconscious flicks have long been considered mere "motor noise," researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies found that they are instead actively controlled by the same brain region that instructs our eyes to scan the lines in a newspaper or follow a moving object. "Because images on the retina fade from view if they are perfectly stabilized, the active generation of fixational eye movements by the central nervous system allows these movements to constantly shift the scene ever so slightly, thus refreshing the images on our retina and preventing us from going 'blind'," says Dr Ziad Hafed, of the Salk Institute. Microsaccades are also the cause of a famous optical illusion in which a still image appears to move."

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