Nemesis own nemesis. OmniGene Analysis on Mac. Securing with chroot.

Nemesis its own nemesis.

Rick Berman Doesn’t Know Why Nemesis Tanked

Well at least the Even-Numbered-Movie myth is broken now. :)

Steve Krutzler writes "Star Trek producer Rick Berman broke his silence today on the debacle that was the North American box office for STAR TREK NEMESIS. The film grossed $18.5 million in its opening weekend in mid-December, the lowest of any TREK bow, and its current domestic total stands below even that of the much-lambasted STAR TREK V. Read more at TrekWeb. Berman says he doesn’t know why the movie failed and the future of more TREK movies is uncertain." (Slashdot)

OmniGene Analysis Engine client on Mac OS X

A Bioinformatics Web Service with Mac OS X

Brian Gilman demonstrates how to use Objective-C and Mac OS X’s Core Web Services to construct an OmniGene Analysis Engine client. (MacDevCenter)

chroot chroot chroot for the home team…

Securing Systems with chroot

4 Feb 2003: On Lamp brings us:Securing Systems with chroot.”When a process requests to chroot to a given directory, any future system calls issued by the process will see that directory as the filesystem root. It becomes impossible to access files and binaries outside the tree rooted on the new root directory. This environment is known as a chroot jail.” (RootPrompt.org — Nothing but Unix)