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  • News & article

    Are electric cars driving into a dead end?

    Oped, Published on 02/02/2024

    » In the early 1990s, every self-respecting American yuppie and retired suburban couple bought an electric bread maker, with sales hitting four million units. But the fad soon faded as these amateur bakers discovered that stuffing a precise quantity and ratio of flour, eggs, butter, yeast, and salt into a metal box takes time and costs much more than strolling to the corner bakery. Are plug-in electric vehicles (EVs) the breadmakers of our day?

  • News & article

    Industry rules are broken, not cryptocurrencies

    News, Published on 31/08/2023

    » When the Venetian merchant Marco Polo travelled the Silk Road in the thirteenth century, he encountered not only unfamiliar peoples, but also new (to him) forms of finance. In China, he was shocked to learn that Kublai Khan had introduced paper money. It was lighter, easier to transfer and store, and more valuable than the metal coins packed in his purse. After returning to Venice, Marco Polo taught his fellow merchants how to use the Khan's innovation. Even though some rejected the flat, foldable currency, arguing that it was no gold and never would be, paper money would change the world.

  • News & article

    Trump offers clarity on Iran's terrorist aims

    News, Eli Lake, Published on 10/04/2019

    » For more than 30 years, successive US administrations have called Iran what it is: a state sponsor of terrorism. Leaders of its military and intelligence agencies have been sanctioned, while the terror groups Iran supports have faced military action as well as sanctions.

  • News & article

    No democracy, no loss

    News, Published on 18/04/2015

    » A bit of advice for two contributors, Khun Colin Roth, of “Faux democracy rules”, and Kuldeep Nagi, of “Davies won’t turn tide” (PostBag, April 17).

  • News & article

    Postbag; Meddling Eurocrats

    News, Published on 25/06/2014

    » Re: “EU curbs ties, raps coup”, (BP, June 24).

  • News & article

    Happy birthday, Gmail

    Life, James Hein, Published on 30/04/2014

    » This month Gmail turned 10. According to legend, it was created in the free time of Google engineers, who were allocated 20% of their time for personal projects. In those days there was Microsoft (who managed to lose all of my Hotmail emails one year; I’ve never touched it since), Yahoo! and AOL, making Gmail’s rise from nothing quite an achievement. Gmail introduced threaded mail, more data storage and allowed users to send larger emails. They also introduced an “undo send” option, long-term storage of emails, better searching and didn’t delete your account if you remained inactive for a while. It handled spam decently and worked on almost every browser. Microsoft responded by charging for extra space. No wonder it is now the top free email service, at least according to some measures.

  • News & article

    Heartbleed causing heartache

    Life, James Hein, Published on 23/04/2014

    » One of the hottest topics in the computing world over the past two weeks has been a problem with the security of OpenSSL named Heartbleed. The short version is that this popular security layer has had a bug for the last couple of years that allowed people to grab not only information from a computer, but also passwords and decryption keys. The fix is to go to the OpenSSL site download and apply the latest version, anything past 1.0.1f, from here, www.openssl.org/related/binaries.html. If your Android phone is 4.1.x, then download a Heartbleed detector from the Play Store and check your exposure. For the technically minded, the problem is a missing bounds check so that the attacker can grab 64KB of memory. There are code samples on the net if you want more details. I suspect that system administrators have been busy all over the world patching their machines, generating new public and private keys and notifying all users to change their passwords on affected systems. I also suspect that there will be administrators and users who will not take any steps at all, either due to laziness or hubris. There is strong evidence that you should change all your important passwords at places like banks.

  • News & article

    Tackle inequality through property tax

    News, Published on 28/03/2014

    » Property taxes. Two of the most disturbing words to many (but not all) of Thailand’s property magnate dollar millionaires and billionaires — among them, some MPs.

  • News & article

    State of roads important

    News, Published on 07/10/2013

    » Peter Brown (PostBag, Oct 5) makes some valid yet obvious points about road safety in Thailand. It is clear that enforcement, if it ever was to happen, would contribute to lowering the deplorable statistics.

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