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Archive for the ‘Google Reader’ Category

IEMobile Conditional Comment

21 Mar

Did you know you can target the Internet Explorer browser on mobile Windows Phone 7 devices?

<!--[if IEMobile]>
   Displayed only on Internet Explorer Mobile on Windows Phone 7
<![endif]--> 

<![if !IEMobile]>
  Anything else
<![endif]>

You totally can1. Hearts to Allison Wagner for telling me about it.

It's a bit more en vogue to handle mobile styling via media queries, which I generally agree is a better way to handle things (browser agnostic), but has the classic problem of a the browser needing to downloading resources it doesn't need (e.g. CSS for desktop version when on a mobile device).

You know what would be super radical? If we could do media queries within conditional comments.

<!-- [if (min-device-width: 481px)]>

<![endif]—>

That would combine the syntax and power of media queries, with the ability of conditional comments to load only the specific resources we need, staying streamlined in terms of bandwidth.


1 Notice in the first block of conditional comments above the slightly different syntax. The former is called a downlevel-hidden comment and the latter is a downlevel-revealed comment. Nerdgrammer.

 
 

Man upgrades Windows 1.0 to Windows 7 (video)

20 Mar
Comments
 
 

The secret to making long-term memories [Neuroscience]

20 Mar
One of humanity's most incredible abilities is being able to remember things that happened many years, perhaps even many decades ago. But it's only now that neuroscience is able to really explain how we can form such long-lasting memories. More »
 
 

What happens in our brain when we see banknotes being ripped up? [Neuroscience]

20 Mar
Or, put another way, "Is our attitude to money like that to any other tool even though its use is symbolic and is not implemented in its physical structure?" More »
 
 

Daily schedule of Benjamin Franklin

20 Mar

Benjamin Franklin schedule

From Maira Kalman's And the Pursuit of Happiness, this is just too good. It appears that there is in fact enough minutes in the day to get stuff done. What's your daily schedule?

[New York Times via swissmiss]

 
 

Discovery served United States well – SalemNews.net

19 Mar

Chicago Tribune

Discovery served United States well
SalemNews.net
The most-traveled spaceship in history, the space shuttle Discovery, did her flying truck on tippy-toes landing thing one last time a week ago Wednesday, ending a journey of 27 years, 148 million miles and 39 launches and landings. ...
Space City fears snub on shuttleHouston Chronicle
Meet NASA's Shuttle Rocket Retrieval ShipsDiscovery News
space workers form human shuttleCentral Florida News 13
PC Magazine -Space.com -The Atlantic (blog)
all 75 news articles »
 
 

Microsoft takes down Rustock, reduces world spam by 39%

19 Mar

This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our site for full content.

Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit, working with federal law enforcement agents, has brought down the world’s largest spam network, Rustock. Rustock, at its peak, was a botnet of around 2 million spam-sending zombies capable of sending out 30 billion spam email per day. Microsoft’s wholesale slaughter of Rustock could reduce worldwide spam output by up to 39%. Rustock was taken down, piece by piece, in a similar way to the Mega-D botnet. First the master controllers, the machines that send out commands to enslaved zombies, were identified. Microsoft quickly seized some of these machines located in the U.S. for further analysis, and worked with police in the Netherlands to disable some of the command structure outside of the U.S.

With the immediate threat disabled, Microsoft then worked with upstream providers to black hole the IP addresses of whoever was controlling the botnet. To prevent further master controllers popping up, Microsoft worked with Chinese CN-CERT to block registration of domains that could be used by new command and control servers. Finally, Microsoft is now working with ISPs and CERTs around the world to help clean the Rustock malware from around 1 million infected machines. It’s also worth noting that Microsoft didn’t do this alone; specialists from Pfizer, FireEye (the company behind the Mega-D botnet takedown), and the University of Washington helped out.

Source: Techamok

more at RLSLOG.net






 
 

What happens when two stars fall into each other? [Science]

19 Mar
The universe is mostly empty, but once in a great while stars get close enough to crash into each other. Two stars recently combined to form Sco V1309. Find out what happened when they did. More »
 
 

Why don’t journalists link to primary sources?

18 Mar
Ben Goldacre, The Guardian, Saturday 19 March 2011 Why don’t journalists link to primary sources? Whether it’s a press release, an academic journal article, a formal report, or perhaps (if everyone’s feeling brave) the full transcript of an interview, the primary source contains more information for interested readers, it shows your working, and it allows [...]
 
 

"The most delicious fruit known to men" has been bioengineered to be even better [Food Science]

18 Mar
One of the reasons bananas enjoy their rampant popularity is that the kinds you buy in stores are hideously mutated versions of the original, bred to not have the inedible seeds their wild brethren so proudly display. Thanks to new research we may soon be seeing other fruit making the transition to seedlessness, and filling our grocery shelves. Bioengineers have successfully tweaked the custard apple, charimoya (called by Mark Twain "the most delicious fruit known to men") and the sugar apple — all of which are delicious but require nimble teeth if you want to avoid their seeds. These plants could provide new farming opportunities and delights in the produce section - plus, there's a possibility the research could be adapted to even more fruit. Get ready for the delicious, seedless future! More »