A FreeBSD 10 Desktop How-to FreeBSD is a fast, secure, modern Unix-like operating system with a fantastic community, great documentation, and powerful technologies like ZFS and LLVM. It’s my operating system of choice for everything from my beefy i7-2600k desktop to my home router to my ARM plug computer jukebox. Though famed for its uptime in the datacenter the same OS is just as suited to desktop or laptop computing with a little work. Why use FreeBSD? Maybe I’m just getting old, but it’s nice to use an operating system that didn’t spawn a billion-dollar anti-malware industry through frequent security failings, where you can choose the interface you like and reasonably expect it to stay that way instead of being forced into the design fad du jour , where you don’t have to argue about the init system being replaced two times in the same decade, and whose key organizations don’t collectively kowtow to Microsoft ...
Call of Duty: Black Ops III/Activision You don't have to tell me twice. NATALIE WALTERS, BUSINESS INSIDER 18 NOV 2015 16.2k Ads by DNSUnlocker Ad Options Jane McGonigal , a world-renowned designer of alternate reality games who has a PhD in performance studies, wants to change people's conception of video games as "just escapist, guilty pleasures". "My number one goal in life is to see a game designer nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize," McGonigal writes on her website . She tells Business Insider she wants people to realise that games can be "powerful tools to improve our attention, our mood, our cognitive strengths, and our relationships." And research is on her side. Studies suggest that mainstream games like Call of Duty may improve our cognitive abilities significantly more than games specifically designed to do so by designers like Luminosity. To help spread the truth abou...
Mosquitoes engineered to zap ability to carry malaria Efficacy test of gene drive shows it works better in males than females BY TINA HESMAN SAEY 2:47PM, NOVEMBER 23, 2015 BLOCKING MALARIA Anopheles stephensi (pictured) is responsible for about 12 percent of malaria cases in India. Researchers have now engineered these mosquitoes to spread malaria resistance instead of disease. JIM GATHANY/CDC EMail Print Twitter Facebook Reddit Google+ SPONSOR MESSAGE A new genetic engineering technique may quickly inoculate mosquitoes against malaria, helping to end the spread of the disease in humans. Using a gene-editing tool known as CRISPR/Cas9, researchers have made a “genetic vaccine” that will continually inject itself into mosquitoes’ DNA. Such a vaccine, known as a gene drive, could spread to nearly every mosquito in a population within a few generations....
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