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Linux Guru Reiser Seeks New Murder Trial   more similar news »
Hans Reiser, the 44-year-old Linux guru who was convicted in April of killing his wife, is seeking a new trial. But Reiser, who killed wife Nina Reiser, waived his right to appeal in exchange for his sentence to be reduced from 25-to-life to 15-to-life. The deal included leading authorities to the hills in Oakland, Calif., where he buried his 31-year-old wife who was divorcing him.

Wed Nov 19, 2008
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TypePad Offers Blog Bailout to Laid-off Journalists   more similar news »
To help journalists who are losing their jobs, Six Apart offers them a pro account on TypePad. It's a $150 start.

Wed Nov 19, 2008
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The Madness of King Jerry Yang   more similar news »
Jerry Yang has always been viewed as one of the great visionaries in Silicon Valley. Thirteen years ago he started a company with a funny name that changed the world, became a billionaire, and always seemed smart enough to leave the actual running of the place to someone else -- until one day a little more than a year ago he utterly lost his way.

Tue Nov 18, 2008
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Yahoo's Jerry Yang Stepping Down — For Real   more similar news »
As soon as Yahoo appoints a new CEO, Jerry Yang will leave his post at the company, according to a prepared statement released by the company.

Mon Nov 17, 2008
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SEC Charges Mark Cuban With Insider Trading: Reports   more similar news »
The SEC charges Mark Cuban with insider trading, according to several published reports. The Wall Street Journal says Cuban learned of a private offering of Momma.com that would decrease the value of his shares. CNBC says he saved $750,000 by the timing of his sale, in 2004.

Mon Nov 17, 2008
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Sun Cutting 6,000 Workers, 18 Percent of Force   more similar news »
Sun Microsystems plans to cut up to 6,000 jobs, or 18 percent of its global work force, as sales of its high-end computer servers have collapsed.

Fri Nov 14, 2008
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15th Anniversary: How General Magic Engineered Our World   more similar news »

Fourteen years ago, a company called General Magic promised a handheld device that would make calls, send email, play music, and do almost everything else that makes today's iPhone so drool-worthy. "Bill and Andy's Excellent Adventure II" (April 1994) was about the two Macintosh vets—Atkinson and Hertzfeld—leading the project.

Unfortunately, they were far too early.

General Magic sank in 2002. But its legacy lives on, in part because the effort was a formative experience for a team of brilliant young engineers. Pierre Omidyar went on to start eBay. Tony Fadell heads Apple's iPod hardware group. Kevin Lynch cooked up Flash. And Andy Rubin created the Sidekick and Google's Android mobile platform. Not too shabby. As for Bill and Andy, they are still adventuring excellently: Atkinson works with the artificial intelligence startup Numenta, and Hertzfeld codes for Google.



Fri Nov 14, 2008
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15th Anniversary: A Look Back at How We Looked Back   more similar news »

Oh, 15th-anniversary page, how we'll miss you. For 12 issues, we've used this space for overtly self-referential sesquidecimalizing. As the year comes to an end, we thought we'd take a look back at the way we looked back. Herewith, our favorite items.

1 On the first anniversary page, we ran a collection of all our covers that featured guys with beards—14 furry-faced geniuses. Weirdly, 18 of them were George Lucas.

2 In September, we compared the number of issues that mention Bill Gates (150) to the number of issues that mention Steve Jobs (110). Apple's lawyers have demanded we pick up the pace.

3 July's edition listed things we pronounced dead prematurely (like, oh, Web browsers). Is this anniversary shtick really over?

4 In March, we charted the number of covers that used neon ink. We love graphs. In fact, on the left is a little graph of how much we love graphs.

5 Two issues ago we created an "evil meter" to help Google navigate today's murky moral waters. They sued us.* Jerks.

*Not really.



Thu Nov 13, 2008
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15th Anniversary: Best Headlines We Slipped Past the Bosses   more similar news »

These Are Definitely Not Scully's Breasts (November 2003)

Me So Nerdy (September 2006)

Cool Whip: A Delicious Blend of Sugar, Wax, and Condom Lube (May 2007)

Nobody Fucks With the DMV (February 1994)

Data Dicks (October 1995)

The Dumbass, the Daytrader, and the New Democracy (April 2000)

The Wired Scared Shitlist (January 1995)

Reminder to Steve Case: Confiscate the Long Knives (September 2000)



Wed Nov 12, 2008
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After Banning YouTube, Military Launches TroopTube   more similar news »
The U.S. military, with Seattle startup Delve Networks, launches a video-sharing website for troops, their families and supporters -- a year and a half after restricting access to YouTube and other video sites.

Tue Nov 11, 2008
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Search Engine With Roots in Genomics Unlocks Deep Web   more similar news »
A research-focused search engine scours the long tail of the web with similar techniques used in genomics to identify DNA strands.

Tue Nov 11, 2008
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15th Anniversary: Weirdest POOP to Land in Wired's Mailbox   more similar news »
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During the nine years of Wired's Return to Sender contest, we received some weird stuff in the mail: broken hard drives, a 5-foot felt "long tail," a wooden DNA helix, and an 8-track player containing an Engelbert Humperdinck tape. The rules called for readers to send us any mailable object; if it came in an envelope or a box, it was disqualified. Winners had a photo of their entry published and received—drumroll, please—a Wired T-shirt. Oh, and immortal glory.

The most prolific contestant was Barry Wood, a 50-year-old government GIS specialist from Vero Beach, Florida. Wood had actually been running his own contest for years, encouraging friends to flummox the Postal Service by sending unusual items he called "permissible objects of postability," or POOP. Once he discovered Wired's contest, he sent us a dozen pieces of POOP, including a mailbox, a conch shell (both winners), buoys, and a pink plastic flamingo. He shelled out nearly $30 to mail an inflatable palm tree, which turned up still inflated. (Sadly, it didn't stay that way, as you can see in the archival video, circa 2006, embedded below.) One year he spent $4,000 on POOP, "but I really didn't care," Wood says, "because sending POOP is my hobby, I mean obsession."

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Digital Screen, appeared in Wired Issue 8.08, August 2000.

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Macintosh SE, appeared in Wired Issue 8.11, November 2000.

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Etch a Sketch, appeared in Wired Issue 9.10, October 2001.

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Bra, appeared in Wired Issue 10.03, March 2002.

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Guitar, appeared in Wired Issue 10.04, April 2002.

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Peeps, appeared in Wired Issue 10.07, July 2002.

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Bicycle, appeared in Wired Issue 10.09, September 2002.

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High heel shoe, appeared in Wired Issue 11.01, January 2003.

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Coconut, appeared in Wired Issue 11.04, April 2003.

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Duct tape, appeared in Wired Issue 11.07, July 2003.

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Cellphone, appeared in Wired Issue 12.02, February 2004.

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Surfboard, appeared in Wired Issue 12.08, August 2004.

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Birdcage, appeared in Wired Issue 13.02, February 2005.

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Orange, appeared in Wired Issue 13.07, July 2005.

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Cowbell, appeared in Wired Issue 14.09, September 2006.

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Dragon tail, appeared in Wired Issue 15.02, February 2007.

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DNA, appeared in Wired Issue 15.03, March 2007.

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Bearded mannequin, appeared in Wired Issue 15.11, November 2007.

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Food container, appeared in Wired Issue 16.02, February 2008.



Tue Nov 11, 2008
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Does Digg Have a Secret Co-Founder in the Attic?   more similar news »
Kevin Rose is widely known as the co-founder of Digg. But a Canadian developer — Owen Byrne — says he, too, is a founder, and he wants recognition.

Mon Nov 10, 2008
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Mr. Know-It-All: How Green Are Rechargeable Batteries?   more similar news »

Dear Mr. Know-It-All Am I doing terribly wrong by the planet if I use alkaline batteries instead of rechargeables? I mean, recharging requires power, right?

The disposable-versus-rechargeable battery debate seems ripe for a contrarian conclusion. Sure, a rechargeable can replace dozens of Duracells, but you have to keep plugging it into the power grid, which usually means burning more and more coal.

But the fact is, it takes appreciably more energy to extract metal from the earth, making alkaline batteries the clear loser. A 2007 study by Bio Intelligence Service (admittedly sponsored by French rechargeable battery maker UniRoss) asserted that wearing out a single rechargeable has 28 times less impact on global warming than using alkalines.

Rechargeables are also easier to recycle, thanks to a federal law designed to keep potentially harmful metals—nickel, cadmium, mercury—out of landfills. If your local electronics retailer won't recycle them, the national Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corporation will help you find someplace that will.

Disposables have their place in mission-critical gadgets used on the go. But in general, on the food pyramid of batteries, alkalines are akin to fats and sweets—enjoy sparingly.

I'm convinced that a butterfingered airport security worker damaged my laptop during a search. Can I get Uncle Sam to pay for a fix?

There's a straightforward process for getting compensation via the Transportation Security Administration's Web site. But don't expect it to happen fast. You stand the best chance of success if you fill out a claim on the spot. The second you step away from the security area without filing a complaint (which sounds like what you did), your odds of obtaining a settlement drop significantly.

Any delay will make it harder to identify the worker involved and establish whether the alleged drop did actually occur. According to Lara Uselding, a TSA spokesperson, the video from security checkpoints is retained for only 30 days. Given that it takes up to three weeks to finally get to TSA's mailroom, you really have only nine days of leeway before all evidence of official clumsiness is deleted.

The TSA couldn't give any statistics on how many after-the-fact complaints result in payouts, but Mr. Know-It-All reckons your chances are slim. The next time you suspect a security employee of battering your precious hardware, conduct an inspection before waltzing off to the gate.

Illustration: Christoph Niemann

A genetic ancestry test revealed that 29 percent of my DNA is Native American, though I look like your basic white dude. Is it OK for me to mark "Native American" on my census form? Or, for that matter, on my grad school application?

It's always thrilling to discover that your backstory might be richer than you thought. But temper your excitement with the knowledge that DNA tests have serious limitations when it comes to discerning ancestry. While it's certainly possible that you have a Pequot or Cherokee blood, today's technology can't come close to proving such kinship.

Given the way you phrased your results, it sounds like you took an autosomal test, which looks at key markers on chromosomes inherited from both your parents. It is reputedly able to indicate descent from one of four population groups: European, African, East Asian, and Native American. These tests examine a broader swath of the genome than previously available Y-DNA or mtDNA analyses, which check ancestry from either your father or your mother.

Still, even autosomal tests have their limits. "Autosomal tests only examine hundreds or thousands of locations out of the billions of bases in the genome," explains Blaine Bettinger, a biochemist and associate editor at the Journal of Genetic Genealogy. So that Native American DNA cited in your results may well be the only such material in your entire genome, which is many million times bigger than what's been analyzed. As Bettinger notes, you could still be 99 percent European.

Even more vexing is the imprecision of what "Native American markers" really mean. They tend to show up in the results not only of Native Americans but people of Middle Eastern or Mediterranean extraction. So it could just be that you have a distant Greek forebear rather than a Navajo.

You also need to realize that genetic tests have no bearing on tribal citizenship policies. You might (inaccurately) claim to be 29 percent Native American, but no major tribe will enroll you as a member based on DNA alone. You must name an ancestor.

And you probably shouldn't mark "Native American" on any official documents, since universities and other institutions may ask for proof of tribal membership. Still, you're well within your rights to use your results as a genealogical starting point for further research. It's a worthwhile pursuit: Our genetic makeups are invariably more complex than conventional racial classifications. You may grumble over being a "basic white dude," but rest assured your ancestors spanned the globe. So even if, in the end, you do not have any Sitting Bull in you, there could be a little Genghis Khan.

Need help navigating life in the 21st century? Email us at mrknowitall@wiredmag.com.



Mon Nov 10, 2008
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Circuit City Files for Chapter 11 Protection   more similar news »
Circuit City Stores files for bankruptcy about a week after it says it would close 20 percent of its stores. The electronics retailer has been struggling as nervous consumers spend less and credit has become tighter. It filed for bankruptcy under a provision that typically allows a company to hold off creditors and operate as normal while it develops a financial reorganization plan.

Mon Nov 10, 2008
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