How to upgrade Fedora Core to the next version

Upgrading most systems is a hassle, how ever with Fedora core its just time consuming. Here is how in a few short steps you can upgrade your version of Fedora to the next version

ArcelorMittal to cut 10,000 Jobs

ArcelorMittal ,the world’s largest steelmaker is looking to eliminate about 10,000 jobs, with most of the cuts in Europe and the U.S.

The company declined to specify layoff numbers, but sources said the target is about 3.9% of the 287,000 employees the company had as of Sept. 30. Many of the cuts are expected to affect workers who were furloughed.

Woman assaults man with raw steak

Elsie Egan A 53-year-old of Dunnellon, Florida was arrested after allegedly hitting a man in the head with a raw steak. , The victim told deputies Elsie Egan repeatedly hit him with the uncooked meat and slapped his face after he refused a piece of bread. The man said he wanted a bread roll.

Vampire Lesbian wants to get out of Jail

Tracey Wigginton , who is serving a life sentence for the 1989 murder of

Man claims Satan made him attempt Rape

The 20-year-old Misrak Eyob from Eritrea, who was caught on CCTV, claimed that “Satan created the situation”. Eyob was found guilty of attacking the 35-year-old woman in the city’s Royston area in July last year.

Man wards off Vampires nude with shotgun

Police officers arriving at the Charles J. Irving home, saw  Irving naked and holding the shotgun. When one officer pointed his handgun at Irving and ordered him to drop the weapon, Irving’s mother got between them. Irving eventually complied and walked outside, still naked, where he was arrested.

On Monday federal prosecutors charged Charles J. Irving, 27, of Kansas City, Kansas with being a felon in possession of a firearm. His mother told police that he was trying to protect her from vampires, according to the affidavit filed with the charge.

A witness told police that Irving began “demonic speaking” before pointing the shotgun at him. The witness ran upstairs and reported hearing two shotgun blasts.

 

Thuderbird hits 3.0

Open-Source Email client Thunderbird has made significant features which include; Memory Improvement, advanced search and filtering features, all for free.  You can download your copy Here, or read the whole list of features below

How to Uninstall IE8 from Vista or Windows 7

How to Uninstall Internet Explorer 8 from Windows Vista or for Windows Server 2008

OpenSUSE 11.2

OpenSUSE 11.2 is now available in final form for free download. More information and links to download sites may be found here.

Google Chrome Now with Linux and Mac Support

Google Chrome, an alternative to Internet Explorer, Safari, or Mozilla Firefox now offers a  Mac version or the Linux version now.

 

Organ printing goes comerical

New liver or heart for years of drinking and eating fried food, no problem! Lungs because you couldn’t give up your 4 pack a day habit, no problem! Need a new heart as your current one is failing, No problem!   Organovo Inc has become the first company to create a Commercial 3D Bio Printer.  Link

Cows vicously lick house doing 100 dollars of property damage

In Tennessee, a man’s homeowners insurance apparently doesn’t cover “acts of farm animals.”

Jerry Lynn Davis called the Hawkins County Sheriff’s office on Thursday, complaining that a neighbor’s cows had been licking his house.   Davis says the cows did about $100 in damage by ripping off a screen window, cracking the glass and pulling down a gutter.

Deputy Chris Funk was able to contact the cows’ owner, who said he’d take care of the problem.

How to Remove Windows Root Kits

Removing malware or Windows Root kits is easily done manually. Here is how

Feds mined Sprint GPS Data over 8 million times in one year

“Sprint Nextel provided law enforcement agencies with customer location data more than 8 million times between September 2008 and October 2009, according to a company manager who disclosed the statistic at a non-public interception and wiretapping conference in October.” George Orwell spins in grave   Source: Wired