taosmultimedia.com in Taos, New Mexico, Joomla CMS, digital video, online magazines, newspaper, entertainment,webcam


Main Menu
Home
Articles
Downloads
Online Store
J. R.'s Tech Links
Apple Tech News
Joomla Tech News
Video Tech News
Web Dev News
Tech News
Other News
Newsfeed Links
Our Taos Web Portals
TMM YouTube Channel
Global Joomla Sites
Services
Contact
Site Map
Google Video Feed
Video Instruction
News Archive
Testing
Search taosmultimedia.com
Who's Online
We have 90 guests online
Login Form





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Visits today: 8
Visits yesterday: 55
Visits month: 1204
Visits total: 100510
Max.monthly visits: 11796
occurred: 2008-2
Pages this month: 53410
Pages total: 1658471
Bots today: 46
Data since: 2006-02-23
Browsers
Totals Top 10
 40 % Internet Explorer 6.0
 33 % LibWWW
 13 % Internet Explorer 7.0
 4 % Mozilla 20080109
 2 % FireFox 2.0.0.4
 2 % FireFox 2.0.0.11
 2 % Internet Explorer 5.5
 < 1.0 % FireFox 2.0
 < 1.0 % FireFox 2.0.0.14
 < 1.0 % FireFox 2.0.0.12
Visitors by Country
Totals Top 25
 23 % Commercial
 22 % networks
 12 % Unknown
 4 % United States
 4 % Germany
 3 % Australia
 2 % Netherlands
 2 % Brazil
 2 % Sweden
 < 1.0 % United Kingdom
 < 1.0 % Italy
 < 1.0 % Russian Federation
 < 1.0 % India
 < 1.0 % China
 < 1.0 % Canada
 < 1.0 % Korea, Republic of
 < 1.0 % Indonesia
 < 1.0 % Poland
 < 1.0 % Unrestricted use
 < 1.0 % Japan
 < 1.0 % Organization (non-profit)
 < 1.0 % Turkey
 < 1.0 % France
 < 1.0 % 
 < 1.0 % Educational Institution
World Time Clock
Taos
Taos, New Mexico
Invalid Client ID

Email List
Join the taosplaza.com group mailing list and get info on several important Taos sites
E-mail Address:

First Name:

Last Name:

City:

Country:

 

taosdining.com - where to eat here
Home arrow Tech News

Tech News
NSA Releases Historical Documents on TEMPEST
sgunhouse writes to mention Wired's Threat Level has a piece on a recently-declassified document detailing the history of TEMPEST. "It was 1943, and an engineer with Bell Telephone was working on one of the U.S. government's most sensitive and important pieces of wartime machinery, a Bell Telephone model 131-B2. It was a top secret encrypted teletype terminal used by the Army and Navy to transmit wartime communications that could defy German and Japanese cryptanalysis. Then he noticed something odd. Far across the lab, a freestanding oscilloscope had developed a habit of spiking every time the teletype encrypted a letter. Upon closer inspection, the spikes could actually be translated into the plain message the machine was processing. Though he likely didn't know it at the time, the...
Read more...
 
Tilera Releases 64-Way Chip Dev Tools
eldavojohn writes to tell us that Tilera has released a Linux-based development kit for their 64-core system on a chip. "The Tile64 is based on a proprietary VLIW (very long instruction word) architecture, on which a MIPS-like RISC architecture is implemented in microcode. A hypervisor enables each core to run its own instance of Linux, or alternatively the whole chip can run Tilera's 64-way SMP (symmetrical multiprocessing) Linux implementation. An 'iMesh' switching interconnect, developed by Tilera's founder, MIT professor and serial entrepreneur Dr. Anant Agarwal, is said to eliminate the centralized bus intersection that limited scalability in previous multicore designs."

...

Read more...
 
Psystar Open Computer Notes, Benchmarks and Video
Engadget has had a chance to play around with Psystar's Open Computer and has a few things to say about the controversial machine. "Okay, so we've been playing with the Psystar Open Computer for a few hours now, and we've formed some early impressions and put together a short video of it in action. We haven't really tried to stress the system yet, but based on our other experiences with OSx86 machines, we're expecting things to generally go smoothly. That said, there are some definite rough patches and issues, all mostly having to do with the fact that OS X isn't really built for this hardware."

...

Read more...
 
Xerox Demos Self-Erasing, Eco-Friendly Paper
Lucas123 writes "The same Xerox lab that brought us Ethernet, the GUI and the mouse has demonstrated paper that can be reused after printed text automatically deletes itself from its surface in a day. Instead of trashing or recycling after one use, a single piece of paper can be reused up to 100 times. 'The paper contains specially coded molecules that create a print after being exposed to ultraviolet light emitted from a thin bar in a printer. The ultraviolet bar itself is very small, so it can be used in mobile printers. The technology could also be useful for network printing.'"

...

Read more...
 
Memristor — 4th Basic Element of Circuits
esocid writes "Researchers at HP Labs have solved a decades-old mystery by proving the existence of a fourth basic element in integrated circuits that could make it possible to develop computers that turn on and off like an electric light. The memristor — short for memory resistor — could make it possible to develop far more energy-efficient computing systems with memories that retain information even after the power is off, so there's no wait for the system to boot up after turning the computer on. It may even be possible to create systems with some of the pattern-matching abilities of the human brain. Leon Chua, a distinguished faculty member at the University of California at Berkeley, initially theorized about and named the element in an academic paper published 37 years...
Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next > End >>

Results 127 - 135 of 3092

taosdaily.com Horsefly Online The alternative News Source for Taos, New Mexico
Visit J. R.'s Tech Links for more info on tech items
Translation Window
Latest News
Popular of Late
Skype
I am currently... Offline 


taosmultimedia.com © 2000-2008 Taos Music & Art, Inc. unless otherwise noted
Website by J. R. Ransom
 
(C) 2008 J. R. Ransom's taosmultimedia.com
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.