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Prune Your Photo Collection with Picasa's Stars [Digital Photos]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 17:00
If you've accumulated a mess of digital photos and you know that many less than album-worthy ones are cluttering up your hard drive, Picasa can help prune your collection. Photography blogger Dave...
Categories: productivity

June 23, 1983: DNS Test Sets Stage for Internet Growth

Wired News Top Stories - Mon, 2008-06-23 10:00

1983: Paul Mockapetris and Jon Postel run the first successful test of the automated, distributed Domain Name System. DNS will lay the foundation for the massive expansion, popularization and commercialization of the internet.

The fledgling internet of the time (Arpanet and CSnet) relied on a bulky and exponentially growing "phonebook" of addresses called the "host tables." It was a text file maintained by SRI International in Menlo Park, California. You contacted another computer on the network by looking up its numerical address, and typing it in.

Craig Partridge, another DNS pioneer (.ppt), later called the host tables an "operational nightmare." Everyone on the network had to copy it nightly to get the latest version. There "were many opportunities for error," Partridge wrote, "and we experienced many of them."

"People had figured out that the old scheme wouldn't work forever," Mockapetris told Computerworld a few years ago. He worked at the University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute, and his manager, Jon Postel, assigned him to devise a new way of assigning and recording internet addresses.

Their solution was brilliant. It still used an underlying system of numerical designations, but allowed you to reach a computer by name as well. It was also hierarchical and distributed. Top-level domains would mark out various types of users, like .mil or .edu. Once a name like berkeley.edu got assigned to the University of California at Berkeley, its local network administrator could independently add computers within the domain, numbering and naming them. Or the Berkeley administrator could subdelegate areas of the domain.

After testing the new plan and tweaking it for a few months, Mockapetris, Postel and Partridge published their idea in a Request for Comments (RFC) memorandum in November 1983. The system gained gradual adoption over the next few years (with prodding from the Arpanet overlords at Darpa), first supplementing and then entirely supplanting the host tables.

The first generic, top-level domains weren't officially established until October 1984 (and implemented in January 1985), but they live on: .com, .edu, .gov, .mil, .net and .org. Though DNS was originally designed to handle 50 million-plus entries, it's been expanded and internationalized. There are now probably more than a billion entries, counting all the DNS names hidden behind firewalls.

Without the Domain Name System, it's doubtful the internet could have grown and flourished as it has. Would a dot-com boom (and bust) have been the same as a dot-22.33 boom (and bust)? If numbers were being used as addresses, would Web 2.0 have emerged as Web B? Would I be writing this? Would you be reading it?

Source: Various

Regulatory Deadline Looms over DNA Testers

Wired News Top Stories - Mon, 2008-06-23 09:00
Genetics testing companies face off against California's health department requirement that they submit plans for coming into compliance with the biological materials testing laws or face civil and criminal sanctions.

Make Your Own Plastic with Milk [DIY Creations]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 09:00
Your average container of milk contains a protein called casein, which, once reduced with a little vinegar, can be made into a homemade plastic and formed into anything you'd like. The plastic takes...
Categories: productivity

Quickly Remove Formatting In Microsoft Programs [Microsoft Office Tip]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 08:00
When you're copying and pasting something to or from a Microsoft application such as Word or Outlook and you want to remove the formatting there is a quick keyboard shortcut to do so. Rather than use...
Categories: productivity

Firefox KeyFixer Makes Home and End Keys Work Like Windows [Featured Mac Download]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 07:00
Mac OS X only: Freeware application Firefox Keyfixer changes the default behavior for your Home and End keys in Firefox. By default, pressing Home or End moves your Firefox window rather than the...
Categories: productivity

Lucipedia Offers Journals and Forums for Lucid Dreaming [Mind Hacks]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 06:00
Whether you're a complete controlled-dream neophyte or a veteran of lucid sleep, Lucipedia can help you learn more about controlling your subconscious wanderings. Signing up gives you a journal space...
Categories: productivity

The Six Way Opener Declutters Your Kitchen Drawer [Stuff We Like]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 05:00
The Six Way Opener is a kitchen multi-tool that lives up to its moniker, offering a multitude of ways to open, grip, and pry common containers in the kitchen. At $7.95, it can open bottles, bags,...
Categories: productivity

Predict Weather with the Clouds [Weather]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 04:00
DIY web site Instructables details how to predict the weather by glancing at the sky and—more specifically—the clouds. Being able to predict the weather by observing cloud formations is a...
Categories: productivity

Console Makers Open Doors to Indie Game Designers

Wired News Top Stories - Mon, 2008-06-23 03:25
The game industry has been a tough sell for indie game makers. However, now players like Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony are opening up digital distribution channels and reaching out to the independents.

Wordle Creates Cloud Art from Text or Tags [Art]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 03:00
Stylish Java applet Wordle creates custom word clouds out of any text you throw at it. You can also have it parse your Del.icio.us tags for a cloud, but either way, the real fun is in customizing the...
Categories: productivity

Brain Drainer Puts Audience to Sleep With Music

Wired News Top Stories - Mon, 2008-06-23 02:51
Famed Japanese "sleep doctor" Takuro Endo attempts to lull an audience of 1,500 to sleep with a playlist that includes Chopin, Tchaikovsky and Japanese tenor Masafumi Akikawa. The result? A partial snooze.

Turn a Totebag into a Bed Pocket [Weekend Project]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 02:00
Rather than sending it off to the textile factory in the sky, DIY blogger Neale McDavitt-Van Fleet repurposed a cloth grocery tote into something he could use. With a little ingenuity, a single cut,...
Categories: productivity

AltTab Fingertips Brings the Window Switcher to Your Mouse [Featured Windows Download]

LifeHacker - Mon, 2008-06-23 01:00
Windows only: Free, open-source application AltTab Fingertips switches between open windows from wherever your mouse cursor is located. To use it, just press the hotkey (F10 by default) to invoke the...
Categories: productivity

NASA Hopes for Microbe-Friendly Mars

Wired News Top Stories - Sun, 2008-06-22 23:25
Bizarre microbes, like those that survive in punishing environments on Earth, might also thrive on Mars, some researchers speculate.

Harvard Docs Uncover New Clue in Alzheimer's Battle

Wired News Top Stories - Sun, 2008-06-22 23:08
Researchers discover that a particular form of beta-amyloid, a sticky protein found in the brains of Alzheimer's patients, causes dementia in rats where other forms of the same protein don't. The findings help explain why not all patients with the protein develop the disease.

Extreme Lifehacker Home Office Makeover [Clutter]

LifeHacker - Sun, 2008-06-22 23:00
When my messy home office got so cluttered I couldn't get anything done in it, it was time to take action—and I turned to Lifehacker for advice. Disorganization leads to lack of free time, lack...
Categories: productivity

Clean Pen Marks Off Your Hands with a Teabag [Urawaza]

LifeHacker - Sun, 2008-06-22 21:00
Whether you've got ink blots on your hands from working too hard or snagging that cutie's number at the concert last night, there's a better way to scrub it off than plain old soap and water. Use a...
Categories: productivity

Open Web Design Offers Free Web Design Templates [Web Design]

LifeHacker - Sun, 2008-06-22 20:00
Planning to spend some time this weekend, or during one of those mythical "free" weekends, whipping your web site into shape? Open Web Design, a free and frequently-updated collection of site...
Categories: productivity

'Cinematic Titanic' Makes Hot Hollywood Debut

Wired News Top Stories - Sun, 2008-06-22 15:00
While hosting an impressive collection of fresh studio features, award-winning documentaries and competitive short films, the Los Angeles Film Festival turned the spotlight toward celluloid's ugly side with a painfully funny live screening of The Doomsday Machine with the cast of Cinematic Titanic.

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