These first few came from BoingBoing.
Crazy-ass clouds
Mulvaney on Bomb Disposal, Supplement to Intelligence Bulletin No. 85, 15 September 1945
A novel without a word telling a love story?
Competition: The death of Dumbledore
The rest are from CNN and/or Drudge.
Coroner: Toddler killed by LAPD bullet
Waterfalls dazzle in Michigan's far north
Companies confused over gay rights
Suspected leaders of al Qaeda in Iraq captured
"We now believe [Hasib Hussain] was responsible for this attack [on the number 30 bus in London] which claimed the lives of 13 people."
Five hurt in New York building collapse
Claim: New Potter sold in Indianapolis
Scientists find planet with 3 suns
Who's the next great film superhero?
"The whole trick is taking a story that has a fantasy angle of some sort, but doing it as realistically as possible," says the 82-year-old Lee. "Saying, what if a fellow really could shoot a web and crawl on the walls? What would his day-to-day existence be?"Damn straight.
New "SiteKey" system for banker security launched (I wrote that "headline", CNN's sucks)
Tokyo fault could produce 'intense shaking'
The fault that has twice caused major earthquakes in the Tokyo area may be shallower and more hazardous than previously thought.Prisoners escape US Afghan base
BBC edits out the word terrorist
CIA-backed tech can instantly spot terrorists in a crowd
A Los Altos, Calif. company, Pixlogic, has been developing technology meant to search for fugitives and insurgency suspects in a crowd.Laura [Bush]: Name woman to high court
Pixlogic has employed new software based on visual pattern recognition and search technologies to match archived still or video images with those gathered from security cameras or other sources, Middle East Newsline reported.
[...]
Executives said the company's software could also detect and alert investigators to anomalies in video footage provided by closed-circuit television systems. Such anomalies could include an individual carrying a large box, or a truck that returns to the same spot. They said such technology has not yet been employed in either Britain or the United States.
A Muslim man has been beaten to death outside a corner shop by a gang of youths who shouted anti-Islamic abuse at him, the Guardian has learned.
[London] Terrorist gang 'used military explosives'
Unborn babies carry pollutants, study finds
Unborn U.S. babies are soaking in a stew of chemicals, including mercury, gasoline byproducts and pesticides, according to a report released on Thursday.Corpse Falls Into Traffic in Texas
Although the effects on the babies are not clear, the survey prompted several members of Congress to press for legislation that would strengthen controls on chemicals in the environment.
Bill Clinton contends Democrats are held to a double standard (I made that title up too, I mean, that's what the article's about...yeesh, AP)
Mystery 'sex change' has curious flocking to Myanmar monk-to-be
Support for bin Laden falls in Muslim countries
...WHEW.
Okay, that's most of the news I actually clicked on and read :>
2 comments:
They always put out press releases about the facial recognition software a while after something like the bombing; it bumps the stock price
Unfortunately the reality is that there are so many false positives that it won't be effective.
You know...now that you mention it, the idea does sound familiar.
But I'm hoping the part that has nothing to do with facial recognition will be effective, the pattern recognition thing.
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