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I'm going to start the server move this week. There is a nameserver issue with Ensim that I really can't fix the way I want to. If you have any skill with Ensim, please shoot me an email.
20" Laptop screens soon. Insane!!!
Disney to encrypt screener DVDs with DRM.
IBM starts Xbox360 chip production.
Ocean preservation.
I'm going to start the server move this week. There is a nameserver issue with Ensim that I really can't fix the way I want to. If you have any skill with Ensim, please shoot me an email.
20" Laptop screens soon. Insane!!!
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Even larger screen sizes are in the pipeline. Samsung has already shown its upcoming 19-inch laptop to CNET Reviews. The product is expected to ship later this year. Dell, a major partner of Samsung, could easily adopt the large screen format for its high-end XPS laptops. And, LG Philips is also touting its 20-inch LCD displays for laptops, Shim said.
Disney to encrypt screener DVDs with DRM.
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Disney said Monday that it will release DVD "screeners"--copies of movies sent to groups that vote on awards--only for DVD players made exclusively by a Dolby Laboratories unit, Cinea, and engineered to thwart illegal copying. "We feel like this is a really strong first step in addition to all the other things we do to combat piracy," said Dennis Rice, who heads Disney's Oscar publicity campaign, which will include films such as "Shopgirl" and "The Chronicles of Narnia: the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe."
IBM starts Xbox360 chip production.
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The chip features 165 million transistors and is fabricated using IBM's 90-nanometer technology to reduce heat and improve performance. The chip's 21.6GB-per-second front side bus architecture was customized to meet the throughput and latency requirements of the Xbox 360 gaming platform software, the company said.
Ocean preservation.
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An IUCN report released on Tuesday said that up to half of the world's coral reefs might be lost in the next 40 years unless urgent measures were taken to protect them against climate change and other threats. As much as 20 percent of the earth's coral reefs have been effectively destroyed, Carl Gustaf Lundin, head of IUCN Marine Programme, told the conference on Tuesday.