Sunday | 20 July, 2008
Computerworld

Stories about: Carnegie Mellon University

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    How CAPTCHA got trashed 15/07/2008 09:02:49

    CAPTCHA used to be an easy and useful way for Web administrators to authenticate users. Now it's an easy and useful way for malware authors and spammers to do their dirty work.
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    The new face of R&D: What's cooking at IBM, HP and Microsoft 11/07/2008 08:44:22

    Is R&D in the US losing focus, or just shifting focus?
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    MySpace users struggle to overcome cybervandalism 01/07/2008 07:46:48

    One of the first social networking upstarts, MySpace, is facing continuing security problems that threaten to spoil many of the innovative features that make the site useful.
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    Researchers say notification laws in US not lowering ID theft 06/06/2008 10:41:42

    Over the past five years, 43 U.S. states have adopted data breach notification laws, but has all of this legislation actually cut down on identity theft? Not according to researchers at Carnegie Mellon University who have published a state-by-state analysis of data supplied by the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
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    What's next for the x86? 06/06/2008 08:37:47

    It's impossible to look at the x86 family of microprocessors without wondering if, after three decades of dominance, the architecture might be running out of steam. Intel, naturally, says the x86 still has legs, while hastening to add that its battles with competing architectures are far from over.
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    Happy birthday, x86! An industry standard turns 30 05/06/2008 08:21:38

    Thirty years ago, on June 8, 1978, Intel introduced its first 16-bit microprocessor, the 8086, with a splashy ad heralding "the dawn of a new era." Overblown? Sure, but also prophetic. While the 8086 was slow to take off, its underlying architecture -- later referred to as x86 -- would become one of technology's most impressive success stories.
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    How to fire an IT person 03/06/2008 11:50:55

    Joseph Powell first suspected that there were problems with his IT contractor when the admin refused to cede his administrative rights on an accounting software package. Powell, who was the business administrator for a private school, began noticing more issues. When the school's board ordered the IT admin to cede control of the software, he began introducing deliberate errors into the school's database. "We also began to experience costly downtime on the network coinciding with any time [he] was unhappy with how he was treated by the administration," Powell says.
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    Scientists build mind-reading computer 02/06/2008 08:51:45

    Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh have developed a 'mind-reading' computer.
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    Q&A: Software's advance is so steady, you probably don't even notice it 20/05/2008 08:22:33

    William Scherlis is a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University and director of the Institute for Software Research there. He specializes in software assurance, software evolution and technology to support software teams. He has a long association with NASA and the US Department of Defense. Scherlis spoke with Gary Anthes about progress in software development.
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    IBM, Google stirring up a cloud environment 05/05/2008 09:16:11

    Google and IBM are testing a cloud computing infrastructure that could become an important avenue for them to deliver software and services to consumer and business users.
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    25 network research projects you should know about 17/04/2008 09:58:50

    While universities don't tend to shout as loudly about their latest tech innovations as do Google, Cisco and other big vendors, their results are no less impressive in what they could mean for faster, more secure and more useful networking. Here's a roundup, in no particular order, of some of the most amazing and colorful projects in the works.
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