Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Wednesday 4 March 2015


 
 
Beginnner Responsive Web Design Course
Slashdot Deals: With smartphone and tablet use at an all-time high, the ability to develop responsive websites (websites that adapt to varying screen sizes/resolutions) is of paramount importance. Walk away from this project-based course with the strategies, tools, tips, and tricks for generic web design in HTMl5 and CSS3, as well as all the Bootstrap 3 skills you need to build responsive websites. 
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Slashdot Videos: Now with More Slashdot! 
The Slashdot video section is newly improved to include all the usual Slashdot options to comment, share, etc. No more walled garden! But you still get the same interesting interviews, product close-ups, discussions on hotly debated topics and more. Take a look. Learn More! 
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From the bold-strategy department
HughPickens.com writes: The Globe and Mail reports that Edward Snowden's Russian lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, says the fugitive former U.S. spy agency contractor is working with American and German lawyers to return home. "I won't keep it secret...
 
From the text-rules department
An anonymous reader writes 14 years after the Anna Kournikova virus took advantage of users' ignorance about file-name extensions in order to wreak worldwide havoc, virus writers and hackers are still taking advantage of the tendency of popular...
 
From the may-have-also-used-personal-lungs-to-breathe department
HughPickens.com writes: The NY Times reports that Hillary Rodham Clinton exclusively used a personal email account to conduct government business as secretary of state, according to State Department officials. She may have violated federal...
 
From the not-as-classic-as-COBOL department
Qbertino writes: I've been trying to pick up a classic, object-oriented, compiled language since the early 90s, but have never gotten around to it. C++ was always on my radar, but I'm a little torn to-and-fro with Objective-C. Objective-C is the...
 
From the countering-free-speech-with-more-free-speech department
An anonymous reader writes: When Twitter trolls began posting obscene, sexually explicit comments about his teenage daughter, former MLB pitcher Curt Schilling responded by recording their comments and gathering personal information readily...
 
From the wait-til-you-see-how-scully-revives-walter-white department
Bennett Haselton writes: Vimeo and Youtube are pressured to remove a dark, fan-made "Power Rangers" short film; Vimeo capitulated, while Youtube has so far left it up. I'm generally against the overreach of copyright law, but in this case, how...
 
From the optimism-to-a-fault department
An anonymous reader writes: In November, 2013, a Kickstarter project for a software-defined camera trigger scored £290,386 (~$450,000) in funding after asking for a mere £50,000. After almost a year of delays, they've now announced the...
 
From the just-makes-you-hate-it-a-bit-less department
itwbennett writes: A team of researchers in Sri Lanka set out to test whether common refactoring techniques resulted in measurable improvements in software quality, both externally (e.g., Is the code more maintainable?) and internally (e.g.,...
 
From the hypthetical-or-not department
An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft spent billions purchasing Mojang, the studio behind the game Minecraft, and while it's unlikely to start work on a sequel anytime soon, rather than continue development of the game, it's worth considering what...
 
From the diamond-in-the-old department
schwit1 tips news that a team of astronomers has studied one of the most distant galaxies ever observed and found puzzling results. The light we're seeing from this galaxy comes from roughly 700 million years after the Big Bang, so on the cosmic...
 
From the welcome-to-gattica department
An anonymous reader writes On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review a case involving the conviction of a man based solely on the analysis of his "inadvertently shed" DNA. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) argues that this tacit...
 
From the give-the-people-what-the-government-wants department
An anonymous reader writes: Although Google announced in September 2014 that Android 5.0 Lollipop would require full-disk encryption by default in new cell phones, Ars Technica has found otherwise in recently-released 2nd-gen Moto E and Galaxy S6....
 
From the surf's-up department
sciencehabit writes: A patch of woodland just north of Livingston, Louisiana, population 1893, isn't the first place you'd go looking for a breakthrough in physics. Yet it is here that physicists may fulfill perhaps the most spectacular prediction...
 
From the oh-definitely-trust-the-government department
An anonymous reader writes Tim Hoettges, the CEO of the world's third-largest telecoms company, has called for Google and Facebook to be regulated in the same way that telcos are, declaring that "There is a convergence between over-the-top web...