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Day Link Icon Sunday, September 28, 2003
Microsoft monoculture allows virus spread Technology (posted at 4:48 PM by Philippe Martin)
New Scientist: A report published on Wednesday by the Computer and Communications Industry Association says that MicrosoftÂ’s dominance in PC operating systems has created a 'monoculture' that allows viruses to spread like wildfire over the Internet. This lack of diversity allows even simple viruses, created in minutes by so called 'script kiddies' to wreak havoc within hours of creation.

"Nature does not put up with monocultures because they are too easy to attack," says Daniel Geer, one of the paper's authors and chief technology officer for the security company AtStake. "If everything looks just alike . . . it will promptly be punished."

The security problems created by Microsoft are a direct result of the company's business practices, claims the report. The companyÂ’s systems are designed to keep out competitors rather than intruders, say the authors.

To which, a spokesman for Microsoft replied: "No other company in the world is more committed to providing its customers with more secure software than is Microsoft."

This reply gave me a good laugh. But when I thought about it, I realized that he was certainly right... in one sense: I guess no company releases more patches than Microsoft!

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Day Link Icon Saturday, September 20, 2003
Photos of VirginiaTech's 11000 G5 cluster Technology (posted at 5:35 AM by Philippe Martin)
VirginiaTech posted lots of photos of their supercomputer cluster constituted of 11000 G5 (yes, that's eleven thousand PowerMacs G5!) at different steps of its installation. Amazing!

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Day Link Icon Thursday, September 11, 2003
Sharp to release next month a notebook with a 3-D display Technology (posted at 11:15 PM by Philippe Martin)
According to Yahoo! News Sharp is going to release a notebook with a 3-D display next month:

The 3-D feature, which does not require special glasses, is a world first, said Sharp, Japan's largest maker of liquid crystal displays (LCD).

It said the 3-D feature can be used for video games and such purposes as architectural design, and users can switch to 2-D for normal use such as word processing by just pressing a button.

I look forward to seeing that!

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