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Wallace state: home

Community college offering associate degrees in arts, science and applied science. Hanceville, Alabama.


Wallace state: home Wed, 16 Jul 2008 22:12:00 GMT,
Wallace state: athletics

Cross Country/Track Teams Wallace State Community College-Hanceville will not be fielding a track or cross country team for the 2008-2009 academic year.


Wallace state: athletics Sat, 12 Jul 2008 20:29:00 GMT,
Wallace state community college - hanceville, alabama

Wallace State Community College - A Community College Located in the Heart of North Alabama leading in distance learning.


Wallace state community college - hanceville, alabama Fri, 18 Jul 2008 19:25:00 GMT,
Academic programs at wallace state community college

Wallace State Community College offers a variety of degrees and programs in an attempt to meet the needs, interests, and abilities of the students within the service area of the ...


Academic programs at wallace state community college Fri, 06 Jun 2008 15:14:00 GMT,
Wallace community college

WCC affords equal opportunity to all employees and applicants for admission or employment regardless of race, color, gender, religion, national origin, age or disability.


Wallace community college Fri, 18 Jul 2008 07:00:00 GMT,
Wallace state: workforce development

Workforce Development at WSCC . Through the customized Training for Business and Industry, Adult Education and Continuing and Corporate Education programs, Wallace State’s ...


Wallace state: workforce development Sun, 13 Jul 2008 06:30:00 GMT,
North alabama advanced manufacturing

To address these needs Wallace State’s North Alabama Center for Advanced Manufacturing has established the following goals. Through targeted marketing and career awareness ...


North alabama advanced manufacturing Wed, 09 Jul 2008 21:08:00 GMT,
Wallace falls state park (page 1 of 2)

Wallace Falls State Park (page 1 of 2) ... Wallace Falls: Park Overview: The Wallace Falls State Park Management Area is a 4,735-acre camping park with shoreline on the Wallace ...


Wallace falls state park (page 1 of 2) Thu, 17 Jul 2008 04:24:00 GMT,
Wallace state community college - mywallaceid

Please enter your student number (NOT your social security number) and date of birth so we can retrieve your information.


Wallace state community college - mywallaceid Sun, 13 Jul 2008 02:34:00 GMT,
Wallace state park - home - missouri state parks and historic sites ...

Department of Natural Resources, Information concerning state parks and state historic sites in Missouri.


Wallace state park - home - missouri state parks and historic sites ... Fri, 18 Jul 2008 20:51:00 GMT,
Texas to build $4.93b wind-power project

Hugh Pickens points out a story in the NYTimes about Texas' $4.93 billion wind-power transmission project. One of the major goals of the project is to improve electrical throughput to the population centers. Current transmission lines are unable to handle all of the power generated by Texas' wind fields. State citizens will be paying slightly more to help cover the cost, though the project is expected to eventually lower the cost to consumers. Quoting: "The lines can handle 18,500 megawatts of power, enough for 3.7 million homes on a hot day when air-conditioners are running. 'The project will ease a bottleneck that has become a major obstacle to development of the wind-rich Texas Panhandle and other areas suitable for wind generation. The lack of transmission has been a fundamental issue in Texas, and it's becoming more and more of an issue elsewhere,' said Vanessa Kellogg, the Southwest regional development director for Horizon Wind Energy, which operates the Lone Star Wind Farm in West Texas and has more wind generation under development. 'This is a great step in the right direction.'"


Texas to build $4.93b wind-power project ,
Fbi fights testing for false dna matches

Statesman writes "The Los Angeles Times reports that an Arizona crime lab technician found two felons with remarkably similar genetic profiles, so similar that they would ordinarily be accepted in court as a match, but one felon was black and the other white. The FBI estimated the odds of unrelated people sharing those genetic markers to be as remote as 1 in 113 billion. Dozens of similar matches have been found, and these findings raise questions about the accuracy of the FBI's DNA statistics. Scientists and legal experts want to test the accuracy of official statistics using the nearly 6 million profiles in CODIS, the national system that includes most state and local databases. The FBI has tried to block distribution of the Arizona results and is blocking people from performing similar searches using CODIS. A legal fight is brewing over whether the nation's genetic databases ought to be opened to wider scrutiny. At stake is the credibility of the odds often cited in DNA cases, which can suggest an all but certain link between a suspect and a crime scene."


Fbi fights testing for false dna matches ,
Flaws in a bsa software piracy report?

Ian Lamont writes "The Business Software Alliance has just released its state piracy study (full PDF also available). The BSA says that one in five pieces of software in use in the United States is unlicensed, and notes that piracy rates are highest in Ohio (27%). However, as noted by the Industry Standard, there are problems with the state study, and the way the BSA is presenting the data: the study only includes eight states, and it is making some questionable connections, including the claim that lost state and local tax revenue from piracy would have been enough to 'hire nearly 25,000 experienced police officers.'"


Flaws in a bsa software piracy report? ,
American solar challenge racers head for canada

coondoggie writes "Solar race cars this week began their nine-day, 2,400 mile chase from Dallas to Calgary, Alberta using only the sun for fuel. The 24 teams in the American Solar Challenge race are mainly US college teams including entries from MIT, Ohio State and Northwestern. The University of Michigan's Continuum car is the defending champ, having won the Challenge in Australia last year. The University of Michigan has won four out of the eight North American Solar Challenges it has entered with its team of more than 100 engineering students, who have vowed to defend their title this year."


American solar challenge racers head for canada ,
Hd radio recording in the us?

unreceivedpacket writes "The public radio stations I listen to have been advertising their conversion to HD Radio format for some time. They advertise multiple channels, their second channel playing all classical, all the time. I am interested in purchasing a receiver so I can listen to this extra content, and was also hoping to find a receiver with a built-in recorder so I could time-shift programs that are not otherwise available as legal pod-casts. My initial queries have returned few models that support any kind of digital recording, and the existing ones seem out of production or sorely lacking features. Is this the state of Digital Radio in the US? Are there any legal recording devices for HD Radio? Any good solutions for recording and time-shifting, perhaps through Linux?"


Hd radio recording in the us? ,
Notebook storage ssds and hds compared

The Raindog sends us a particularly timely showdown article comparing seven 2.5" mobile hard drives, four of them HDs and three SSDs, across a wide range of application, file-copy, power-consumption, and noise-level tests. Tom's Hardware was recently forced to issue a correction to a claim, which we discussed here, that SSDs aren't actually much more power-thrifty than HDs. The Tech Report's in-depth comparison provides some data points on the question of whether solid-state storage is ready to supplant traditional mechanical hard drives, but notes that the price disparity is still substantial.


Notebook storage ssds and hds compared ,
Linux 2.6.26 out

diegocgteleline.es writes "After three months, Linux 2.6.26 has been released. It adds support for read-only bind mounts, x86 PAT (Page Attribute Tables), PCI Express ASPM (Active State Power Management), ports of KVM to IA64, S390 and PPC, other KVM improvements including basic paravirtualization support, preliminary support of the future 802.11s wireless mesh standard, much improved webcam support thanks to a driver for UVC devices, a built-in memory tester, a kernel debugger, BDI statistics and parameters exposure in /sys/class/bdi, a new /proc/PID/mountinfo file for more accurate information about mounts, per-process securebits, device white-list for containers users, support for the OLPC, some new drivers and many small improvements. Here is the full list of changes."


Linux 2.6.26 out ,
"probable cause" hearing against mediasentry

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "RIAA sidekick MediaSentry's 'illegal investigation' problem, which surfaced the other day when it got caught in a lie in Michigan (or got caught telling the truth after having told 2 years worth of lies in Brooklyn), has taken another turn for the worse. We learned today from court papers filed in North Carolina, in one of the cases targeting NC State students in Raleigh, that the North Carolina Private Protective Services Board has scheduled a Grievance Committee hearing to determine whether there is probable cause to investigate an alleged violation of the law by SafeNet (formerly known as MediaSentry). Fortunately for MediaSentry, they won't have to testify under oath, according to the notice (PDF)."


"probable cause" hearing against mediasentry ,
Superconducting power grid launches in new york

EmagGeek writes "IEEE is running a story about a new superconducting power grid that was energized in April in New York State. The lines operate at 138kV and are cooled to 65-75K to maintain superconductivity. These lines are run underground and can carry 150 times more electricity than copper lines of the same cross section. The project is funded with taxpayer dollars through the Department of Energy." A related story at MarketWatch indicates that this is part of a large-scale effort to upgrade aging infrastructure.


Superconducting power grid launches in new york ,
The web development skills crisis

snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister raises questions regarding Web development skills in an era of constant innovation. Sure, low barriers to entry give underdog technologies ample opportunity to thrive without the backing of name-brand vendors. But doesn't this fragmentation of the Web development market put undue pressure on developers to specialize? Choosing one tool to be your bread and butter from a field this broad is one thing, McAllister writes. Recruiting talent for a Web project when your technology requirements eliminate most of the applicants is another. The result is a crisis, McAllister concludes, one in which maintaining a marketable skill set gets more and more difficult as the so-called state of the art changes on an almost daily basis."


The web development skills crisis ,
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