Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments
typodupeerror delete not in

Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

Comments: 48 +-   Updated Slashdot Story Submission Bookmark on Monday October 12, @11:01AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday October 12, @11:01AM
from the throw-us-a-bone-here dept.
meta
We recently redesigned the Submission Form to make it (hopefully) a little easier for you to shovel news our way. The new system also will allow you to tag your submissions. A reminder that you can participate in rating stories and filtering spam from the recent submissions page. And by bookmarking this convenient bookmarklet you can submit stories from the comfort of whatever web page you are browsing.
Read More... 48 comments story

Comments: 779 +-   Slashdot Mentioned In Virginia Terrorism Report on Friday April 10 2009, @08:19AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday April 10 2009, @08:19AM
from the true-americans dept.
government
megamerican alerted us to a leaked document (PDF) from a Virginia Fusion Center titled "2009 Virginia Terrorism Threat Assessment." The document is marked as "Law Enforcement Sensitive," not to be shown to public. Citizens for Legitimate Government has a write-up. Slashdot gets a mention on page 45 — not as a terrorist organization itself, but as one of the places that members of Anonymous may hang out: "A 'loose coalition of Internet denizens,' Anonymous consists largely of users from multiple internet sites such as 4chan, 711chan, 420chan, Something Awful, Fark, Encyclopedia Dramatica, Slashdot, IRC channels, and YouTube. Other social networking sites are also utilized to mobilize physical protests. ... Anonymous is of interest not only because of the sentiments expressed by affiliates and their potential for physical protest, but because they have innovated the use of e-protests and mobilization. Given the lack of a unifying creed, this movement has the potential to inspire lone wolf behavior in the cyber realms." According to the report, cell phones and digital music players have been used to transfer plans related to criminal activity, and therefore presumably could be grounds for suspicion. Podcasting is also suspicious.
Read More... 779 comments story

Comments: 294 +-   Achievements and Optimizations on Monday April 06 2009, @10:45AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday April 06 2009, @10:45AM
from the because-we-can dept.
meta
This week's code refresh has added a number of really irritating story display bugs that we're working on. But, it also added a number of cool optimizations that should improve performance for a lot of readers. Tap that link below to read a brief description of them, and also a few serious notes about the achievement system we launched last Wednesday.
Read 3944 More Bytes... 294 comments story

Comments: 1582 +-   Slashdot Launches User Achievements on Wednesday April 01 2009, @08:28AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday April 01 2009, @08:28AM
from the can't-believe-it-took-so-long dept.
meta
In a concerted effort to compete with more popular MMOs like World of Warcraft, we've decided to add an Achievement system to Slashdot. We've retroactively granted around 900,000 achievements to our logged in users. You can view them from your user page, or you can see my list if you're curious what a REAL achiever looks like. Many achievements have been sprinkled throughout the system and are awaiting discovery by dedicated Slashdot users, but a starter list of achievements is in the FAQ. I'll toss you one freebie: you can register your wow main for points if you're that kind of person. Now go forth and achieve!
Read More... 1582 comments story

Comments: 220 +-   Slashdot Keybindings, Dynamic Stories on Monday March 30 2009, @10:00AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday March 30 2009, @10:00AM
from the we're-still-here dept.
meta
We've been working hard on the new dynamic Slashdot project (logged in users can enable this by enabling the beta index in their user preferences). I just wanted to quickly mention that there are keybindings on the index. The WASD and VI movement keys do stuff that we like, and the faq has the complete list. Also, if you are using Firefox or have Index2 beta enabled, you can click 'More' in the footer at the end of the page to load the next block of stories in-line without a page refresh. We're experimenting now with page sizes to balance load times against the likelihood that you'll click. More features will be coming soon, but the main thing on our agenda now is optimization. The beta index2 is sloooow and that's gotta change. We're aiming for 2 major optimizations this week (CSS Sprites, and removing an old YUI library) that I'm hoping will put the beta page render time into the "Sane" time frame (which, in case you are wondering, is several seconds faster than that "Insane" time frame we're currently seeing).
Read More... 220 comments story

Comments: 388 +-   Slashdot.org Self-Slashdotted on Monday February 09 2009, @11:08PM

Posted by kdawson on Monday February 09 2009, @11:08PM
from the disturbances-in-the-fabric dept.
announcement
Slashdot.org was unreachable for about 75 minutes this evening. Here is the post-mortem from Sourceforge's chief network engineer Uriah Welcome. "What we had was indeed a DoS, however it was not externally originating. At 8:55 PM EST I received a call saying things were horked, at the same time I had also noticed things were not happy. After fighting with our external management servers to login I finally was able to get in and start looking at traffic. What I saw was a massive amount of traffic going across the core switches; by massive I mean 40 Gbit/sec. After further investigation, I was able to eliminate anything outside our network as the cause, as the incoming ports from Savvis showed very little traffic. So I started poking around on the internal switch ports. While I was doing that I kept having timeouts and problems with the core switches. After looking at the logs on each of the core switches they were complaining about being out of CPU, the error message was actually something to do with multicast. As a precautionary measure I rebooted each core just to make sure it wasn't anything silly. After the cores came back online they instantly went back to 100% fabric CPU usage and started shedding connections again. So slowly I started going through all the switch ports on the cores, trying to isolate where the traffic was originating. The problem was all the cabinet switches were showing 10 Gbit/sec of traffic, making it very hard to isolate. Through the process of elimination I was finally able to isolate the problem down to a pair of switches... After shutting the downlink ports to those switches off, the network recovered and everything came back. I fully believe the switches in that cabinet are still sitting there attempting to send 20Gbit/sec of traffic out trying to do something — I just don't know what yet. Luckily we don't have any machines deployed on [that row in that cabinet] yet so no machines are offline. The network came back up around 10:10 PM EST."
Read More... 388 comments story

Comments: 288 +-   Roland Piquepaille Dies on Friday January 09 2009, @01:33PM

Posted by kdawson on Friday January 09 2009, @01:33PM
from the in-memoriam dept.
supercomputing
overheardinpdx writes "I'm sad to report that longtime HPC technology pundit Roland Piquepaille (rpiquepa) died this past Tuesday. Many of you may know of him through his blog, his submissions to Slashdot, and his many years of software visualization work at SGI and Cray Research. I worked with Roland 20 years ago at Cray, where we both wrote tech stories for the company newsletter. With his focus on how new technologies modify our way of life, Roland was really doing Slashdot-type reporting before there was a World Wide Web. Rest in peace, Roland. You will be missed." The notice of Roland's passing was posted on the Cray Research alumni group on Linked-In by Matthias Fouquet-Lapar. There will be a ceremony on Monday Jan. 12, at 10:30 am Paris time, at Père Lachaise.
Read More... 288 comments story

Comments: 206 +- Screenshot-sm   Slashdot's Disagree Mail on Friday October 03 2008, @12:42PM

Posted by samzenpus on Friday October 03 2008, @12:42PM
from the the-old-ball-and-chain dept.
humor
Being in a relationship is not easy, more than half of all first marriages fail in this country. That statistic doesn't improve if you spend most of your time reading your favorite website and not tending to the needs of your family. Instead of asking me to help fix your relationship maybe you should try playing with your kids, talking to your wife, and not staring at a computer screen all day. You should realize that the help link doesn't provide help with your life. It's mostly for getting passwords and stuff. Below you'll find a collection of people that should have reached out to Dr. Phil and not Dr. Sam.
Read 3358 More Bytes... 206 comments story

Comments: 251 +- Screenshot-sm   Slashdot's Disagree Mail on Friday September 19 2008, @12:26PM

Posted by samzenpus on Friday September 19 2008, @12:26PM
from the sell-outs dept.
humor
There is no shortage of comments about us selling out or running advertisements as stories. As you might expect there is no shortage of mail with the same theme. What I enjoy most about them is all the different corporate entities and sometimes political parties, that we are supposedly working for. If even half of them were true, I would have a stack of W-2s as long as my arm every year for the tax man. The truth of the matter is, nobody here sits in their Microsoft smart chair, talking on their minion iPhone, while playing in the Google money pool. (If someone knows how to get into the Google money pool, please send me a mail.) Conspiracy theories have been around as long as man, so I guess it should come as no surprise that Slashdot has a few of it's own. Read below to find out who is pulling our strings.
Read 2839 More Bytes... 251 comments story

Comments: 188 +- Screenshot-sm   Slashdot's Disagree Mail on Friday September 12 2008, @12:59PM

Posted by samzenpus on Friday September 12 2008, @12:59PM
from the I-want-back-in dept.
humor
Since we covered people who wanted out of Slashdot last week, I thought we'd look at some people who wanted back in. These users found that living without Slashdot was a lot harder than they thought. Maybe you've just been married and are finding out your wife is less interesting than Slashdot or maybe you were bad and want to make amends. These people found out it's hard to make it without your favorite website. Keep reading to find out what they'll do to get back.
Read 3763 More Bytes... 188 comments story

Comments: 426 +- Screenshot-sm   Slashdot's Disagree Mail on Friday September 05 2008, @01:40PM

Posted by samzenpus on Friday September 05 2008, @01:40PM
from the unsubscribe-me dept.
meta
Everyone likes to belong to something. Whether it be for fun, a sense of belonging, or a need for attention, a group gives you a feeling of solidarity. Surrounding yourself with people that share common goals and ideas can be comforting. Sometimes however, you realize that you hate the people you've surrounded yourself with. Your religion doesn't allow you to read anything that has profanity or you've subscribed to Slashdot thinking you could learn more about hockey. This week's collection is composed of people who don't want to play, read, or be associated with us anymore. Read below to find out how bad they want out.
Read 2056 More Bytes... 426 comments story

Comments: 354 +- Screenshot-sm   Slashdot's Disagree Mail on Thursday August 28 2008, @12:01PM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday August 28 2008, @12:01PM
from the teach-me-something dept.
humor
There is an old Japanese proverb that goes, "Better than a thousand days of diligent study is one day with a great teacher." This week's mail is all about teaching. Whether it is about the seriousness of psychic ability, a short history of trolls or explaining how much free time and malice your dad's attorney has, these people just want to impart information. If what they sent me is any indication, they had a lot of sick days. Click on the link below to become enlightened.
Read 2761 More Bytes... 354 comments story

Comments: 264 +- Screenshot-sm   Slashdot's Disagree Mail on Wednesday August 20 2008, @12:02PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday August 20 2008, @12:02PM
from the keep-your-cool dept.
humor
In this week's Disagree Mail, I try to show the range of messages I get. It's not all angry or insane, sometimes it's sent to us for no apparent reason. We start off a little mad, slip into a whole bunch of crazy and finish with someone who has a complaint about racism at his favorite restaurant. Read below to get started.
Read 11856 More Bytes... 264 comments story

Comments: 281 +-   Slashdot Announces Idle Section on Thursday August 14 2008, @01:30PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday August 14 2008, @01:30PM
from the do-not-read-the-idle-section dept.
announcement
For the last few months we've been beta testing Idle.slashdot.org, our offtopic humor/meme/viral video/pictures section. Like many of you, we spend most of our waking hours on-line seeking stuff to entertain our brains, but most replicators out there pick so much content that it's incredibly boring filtering through the mediocrity to find the funny. We intend to fill our idle section with a very small collection of the very best the net has to offer, making it the most efficient way to waste your time. Some of this content will make it back to the Slashdot mainpage, but much of it will be new content that we wouldn't dare soil the precious Slashdot mainpage with. We are also using it as a test bed for new functionality on Slashdot — currently the page is a reasonably dynamic/interactive experience with various voting controls and filtering options. Finally you will see occasional original content, starting with a recurring special feature today where Samzenpus shares some real tech support email from some of our most intelligent readers. We hope you will enjoy wasting a slice of your day with us, and in addition will submit content through the usual channels, but put it into the 'Idle' section so we know not to take it seriously. Now go about your day — it's mid August, so I'm sure everything you do is urgent, exciting, and oh-so-interesting.
Read More... 281 comments story

Comments: 345 +-   Slashdot Discussion System Updates on Tuesday July 15 2008, @11:23AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday July 15 2008, @11:23AM
from the stuff-to-play-with dept.
upgrades
This week we have a few new functions for you comment readers guaranteed to amaze and enchant. Or at least to make your day a little more efficient. The biggest update is that the system should remember what comments you've already read (for a few weeks anyway) but there's some other less interesting stuff as well. Hit the link below to read more.
Read 1895 More Bytes... 345 comments story

Comments: 149 +-   Welcome to the New Slashdot Chicago Cluster on Saturday May 24 2008, @10:16PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Saturday May 24 2008, @10:16PM
from the its-been-a-long-time-coming dept.
meta
Thanks to everyone who tested on Friday, as well as to all of SourceForge's netops crew, our corporate overlords at SourceForge for paying the bill, and of course all the engineers on Slashteam- Jamie McCarthy, Tim Vroom, Chris Nandor, Chris Brown, and Scott Collins, we are now running on the new iron in a cage in Chicago. We'll run a story in a few days about the ridiculously overpowered new hardware we have now, but now is the part of sprockets where we dance.
Read More... 149 comments story

Comments: 308 +-   Help Slashdot Test Our New Data Center on Friday May 23 2008, @01:24PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Friday May 23 2008, @01:24PM
from the it-seems-like-only-yesterday dept.
meta
After many years of living in California, Slashdot is preparing to move to a new data center in Chicago, and we need your help. We have our new site running a dump of our database from a few days ago. You can hit it at beta.slashdot.org. Please go there, post comments, submit stories, and do whatever you do normally. Or maybe abnormally — run crawlers, write poll spamming robots or something. If you find any crazy issues, please submit them to our sourceforge tracker. If you're curious, the new system features 18 2x quad-core 2.3 GHz webservers each with 8 gigs of RAM, and 4 quad-core 2.3 GHz databases with 16 gigs of RAM.
Read More... 308 comments story

Comments: 219 +-   Unexpected Slashdot Downtime on Wednesday April 30 2008, @10:32AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday April 30 2008, @10:32AM
from the zomg-what-a-night dept.
meta
Netcraft confirmed it ... Slashdot was dying for several hours (along with SourceForge, which shares a corporate overlord and router). Some planned downtime from our provider apparently didn't come back up quite as planned. Sorry for the inconvenience. On the upside, we're moving to a new network and hardware soon, so the site should be much faster and more stable rsn.
Read More... 219 comments story

Comments: 277 +-   The History of Slashdot Part 4 - Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow on Wednesday October 31 2007, @01:00PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday October 31 2007, @01:00PM
from the at-the-end-of-the-tour dept.
meta
Today, on the last day of our 10 year anniversary navel gazing spectacular, I present the final (thank god!) chapter in my 4 part history of Slashdot. I've written about the creation, the explosion, and the corporatization. Today I talk about where we are today, and what I see as our future, and how I feel about it. Clicky click the magic link below to read the last "thrilling" chapter, and celebrate with me the fact that I won't have to spend this much time writing about Slashdot for another decade.
Read 8456 More Bytes... 277 comments story

Comments: 102 +-   Slashdot 10-Year Anniversary Party Grand Prize Winner on Wednesday October 31 2007, @11:00AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday October 31 2007, @11:00AM
from the congratulations-for-the-carnage dept.
meta
From Brisbane to Beunos Aires... From the UK to France to Romania... from New York to San Francisco and everywhere in between, we had well over 100s of parties and over 2,300 registered attendees scattered around the world. Many of them got boxes of t-shirts and ThinkGeek gift certificates (and some of them even got them on time). We've seen cakes with legos and logos, we seen nerf gun fights, and even a lawn sporking. I've put a tiny sampling of my favorite pictures online. The grand prize winner is of the $1k store credit at ThinkGeek is Lindsi from Minneapolis. Their party featured a lolcats cake, a taco bar and a dude in a helmet smashing computers with a sledge hammer in a raining parking lot. They earned it. We had a great time in both Palo Alto and Ann Arbor- I hope you guys had fun wherever you gathered. See you again in 2017!
Read More... 102 comments story

I dunno, I dream in Perl sometimes... -- Larry Wall in <8538@jpl-devvax.JPL.NASA.GOV>