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March 30th, 2010 by Rebecca Gregory

CERN – the best Twitter stream ever?

CERN today used its Large Hadron Collider to achieve a world record in doing the thing that they do, which no one really understands. Despite a (seeming) common lack of knowledge, CERN’s use of twitter through its handle @CERN made for gripping reading for scientific and non-scientific audiences alike (as well as a strange feeling of being in an interactive Star Trek episode where you’re expecting @CERN to say “Beam me up Scottie…”)

Where else can the words stabilise, beams and collisions be so enthralling? Never has a one word tweet: Collapsed!! – extorted such an explosive reaction across Twitter?

If you weren’t lucky enough to see it live, here are a few brilliant tweets to show what you missed:

  • First time in the history!!!!!!!!!!!! World record!!!!!!!!
  • Experiment have seen collisions!!!!!!!!!!!
  • ­Now stabilizing the beams
  • ­Collapsed!!
  • ­The ramp is successfully completed! Beams are now accelerated to 3.5 TeV, the highest energy! Preparing for collisions now!!
  • ­Ramping up now!
  • ­Preparing for new injection from SPS, the smaller accelerator that brings particles to the LHC.

Genius.

Now, while we wait for those crazy scientist to work on transporting (“Uh oh. We’ve lost the eyes. Not the eyes!”) maybe surgeons could tweet operations in real time…“pass the pneumatic drill Sister, this cranium’s a toughie…”

You can still catch the aftermath by following @CERN or watch the scientists in action on their live webcast.

Of course, if the live feed goes quiet and the webcast blank we’ll know black holes really do exist.

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December 18th, 2009 by Lisa Francis

Daily News: 18/12

BBC – Iraq insurgents ‘hack into video feeds from US drones’
Insurgents in Iraq have hacked into live video feeds from unmanned American drone aircraft, US media reports say.

BBC – YouTube video leads to Hollywood contract
A producer from Uruguay who uploaded a short film to YouTube in November 2009 has been offered a $30m (£18.6m) contract to make a Hollywood film.

Guardian – Privacy groups file FTC complaint against Facebook

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), the Center for Digital Democracy and eight other organisations have filed a complaint to America’s Federal Trade Commission about the changes Facebook has made to its privacy settings.

CBR – CERN looks to Platform for cloud infrastructure

Platform Computing has announced that CERN, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, is using its Platform LSF grid infrastructure to power what is said to be the world’s largest cloud computing environment for scientific collaboration. CERN is using Platform’s private cloud management and HPC cloud-enabling software services, Platform ISF and Platform ISF Adaptive Cluster, to enable more powerful computing performance and a better IT infrastructure to 10,000 researchers from 85 countries.

The Daily Telegraph – Blippy: the social network based on credit card transactions

Blippy, a new social network which allows people to share information about your credit card purchases with friends or strangers is set to launch in 2010. Created by web entrepreneur, Philip Kaplan, the site is currently in beta (accessibly only by invitation) and plans on using credit card transactions to help people locate each other.

November 20th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Daily News 20/11

Information Age – Two arrested in the UK over financially motivated Trojan
A man and a woman have been arrested in Manchester in connection with the zbot Trojan, the most widespread example of malware specifically designed to help hackers steal money from their victims.

Silicon.com – Outsourcers to fall victim to cloud computing rush
As businesses begin to host their IT systems in the cloud – instead of hiring outsourcers to maintain and integrate their systems – outsourcers could start to feel the pain, according to author and technology thinker Nicholas Carr.

The Guardian – Mandelson seeks to amend copyright law in new crackdown on filesharing
Lord Mandelson is seeking to amend the laws on copyright to give the government sweeping new powers against people accused of illegal downloading.

Computer Weekly – CERN prepares Large Hadron Collider for second firing
Scientists are preparing the world’s most powerful atom smasher to restart more than a year after it overheated and failed in initial trials. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland has been handed over for operation, according to the update service on Twitter.

IT PRO – Nokia says businesses want its netbook
Nokia has seen growing interest among companies for its first netbook or mini-laptop, a company executive said today. “When we launched the Booklet 3G … we thought it to be primarily a consumer device, but after the launch a big, growing interest is coming from companies,” Heikki Norta, head of Nokia corporate strategy, told a seminar.