Shared posts

26 Jan 22:17

Watch a robotic cube walk and balance under its own power

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Cubes aren't usually the go-to shape when creating an object that's meant to move around, but researchers in Switzerland have created one that can do just that — along with a handful of other surprising talents. Called the Cubli, it measures nearly 6 inches on each side and can walk around by continually flipping itself over. Perhaps more impressively, it can also balance on any of its sides or even just a single corner. As the research team from ETH Zurich's Institute for Dynamic Systems and Control demonstrates in a video, the cube can even remain balanced while a surface is raised up at an angle beneath it.

Continue reading…

26 Jan 10:45

Internet Censors Came For TorrentFreak & Now I’m Really Mad

by Andy

chillSomeone once told me never to go food shopping when hungry, never to argue when drunk, and more recently never to write when angry. Take a deep breath, go for a run, get the aggression out anyway you can first, I was advised.

I’ve done all of that this morning and none of it has worked. In fact, I might be even more fired up than before. This website blocking nonsense that is beginning to pollute the Internet has gone way too far and is becoming my sworn enemy.

Here at TF we’ve long been opponents of website blocking. It’s a blunt instrument that is prone to causing collateral damage and known for failing to achieve its stated aims. We recently discovered that thanks to Sky’s Broadband Shield filtering system, TorrentFreak is now blocked on one of the UK’s largest ISPs by users who think they are protecting their kids.

Our crimes are the topics we cover. As readers know we write about file-sharing, copyright and closely linked issues including privacy and web censorship. We write about the positives and the negatives of those topics and we solicit comments from not only the swarthiest of pirates, but also the most hated anti-piracy people on the planet.

If the MPAA, RIAA, FACT, BPI, RightsAlliance, BREIN and every DMCA takedown company on earth want to have their say they can do that, alongside the folks at The Pirate Bay. We won’t deny anyone their voice, whether it’s someone being raided by the police or the people who instigated the raid. Getting the news out is paramount.

We are not scared to let anyone have their say and we embrace free speech. But apparently the people at Sky and their technology masters at Symantec believe that we should be denied our right to communicate on the basis that we REPORT NEWS about file-sharing issues.

That’s just utter nonsense.

Symantec write about viruses and malware ALL THE TIME, so are they placed in the malware and virus category? Of course not. Thanks to their very own self-categorization process they wear the “Technology and Telecommunication” label. Is their website blocked by any of their own filters? I won’t even bother answering that.

Examining other sites helpfully categorized by Symantec and blindly accepted by Sky reveals no more clarity either. UK ISP Virgin Media runs its own Usenet access, customers can find it at news.virginmedia.com. From there it’s possible to download every possible copyrighted movie and TV show around today, yet that service is listed by Symantec as a “Technology and Telecommunication / Portal” site. Download.com, possibly the world’s largest distributer of file-sharing software, is also green-lighted through.

stopstopOn the other hand, TorrentFreak – which neither offers or links to copyrighted files and hosts no file-sharing software whatsoever – is blocked for any Sky household filtered for under 18s? Really? Our news site is suitable for all ages yet when Sky’s teenager filter is turned on we are put on the same level as porn, suicide, self harm, violence and gore.

Are you kidding me?

Thanks to Ernesto’s annual ‘most-pirated‘ charts we have been cited countless dozens of times in the past few weeks by fellow news resources all over the Internet. Yet Sky users who are “protecting their children” find that when they try to follow the link to the source of those stories they are effectively informed that TorrentFreak is unsuitable for anyone under 18. What does that do for our reputation?

As an earlier statement from Sky points out, the parental filters can be modified to let certain sites through, TorrentFreak.com included. However, when someone in a family asks the account holder for a site to be unblocked (they are the only person who can do that), why would they do so when Sky and Symantec make it very clear on their block screen that we are a file-sharing site? Who will most people believe, a teenager or a “respectable” corporation that cares so much about kids? Furthermore, what are the chances that the account holder even remembers how to turn filtering off once the initial ‘default on’ settings are accepted?

There can be little doubt that little by little, piece by piece, big corporations and governments are taking chunks out of the free Internet. Today they pretend that the control is in the hands of the people, but along the way they are prepared to mislead and misdirect, even when their errors are pointed out to them.

I’m calling on Sky, Symantec, McAfee and other ISPs about to employ filtering to categorize this site correctly as a news site or blog and to please start listening to people’s legitimate complaints about other innocent sites. It serves nobody’s interests to wrongfully block legitimate information.

And to Sky, please don’t try pretending that you’re actually trying to stop file-sharing with your parental controls, because if you really meant business you would have blocked the actual protocols, not merely some websites. But that would cost you money in customer churn, and we obviously need to avoid that at all costs.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing and VPN services.

26 Jan 10:39

Snoop Lion's latest music video is an homage to Pokemon

by Alexa Ray Corriea

The latest music video from American rapper Snoop Lion features references to classic video games, putting Snoop on the front lines of Pokemon and side-scrolling space shooters.

The video above, set to his song "Get Away" from the album Reincarnated, includes heavy references to the Pokemon franchise. A tiny Snoop walks through a town in a "red/yellow/green version" of what looks like an 8-bit video game. Snoop comes across a character named Major Lazer — the DJ and artist who produced Snoop's album — who promptly challenges him to battle using creatures that appear an awful lot like Pokemon.

From there the two take to hoverboards and test themselves in a sci-fi-looking side-scrolling shooter. These are the only two games to appear...

26 Jan 10:30

Awesome Old-Timey Photos Show How Much The Winter Olympics Have Changed In 70 Years

by Cork Gaines

The bobsled at the 1936 Olympics in Germany looked like something kids use today

The 2014 Winter Olympics are quickly approaching and we will once again see the the best winter athletes competing with advanced equipment and gear.

Looking back at some of the earliest Winter Olympics shows us just how far these events and sports have come.

What was once the pinnacle of snow and ice sports now looks like something we would see kids doing in the backyard or on hills and ponds.

On the next few pages we'll take a nostalgic look back at photos from the Winter Olympics of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s.

Opening Ceremony at the 1924 Olympics in France was just a march down the town street.



During the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, the opening ceremony was a bit more extravagant.



The bobsled at the 1936 Olympics in Germany looked like something kids use today.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






26 Jan 10:26

Defensie: geen verrassing in rapport F-35

DEN HAAG - Het ministerie van Defensie in Den Haag gaat ervan uit dat een nieuw rapport over problemen met de F-35 (Joint Strike Fighter/JSF) geen verrassingen bevat. De geschetste problemen met software, het onderhoud en de inzetbaarheid van het Amerikaanse gevechtsvliegtuig zijn bekend en er wordt aan gewerkt om die te verhelpen, zei een woordvoerster vrijdag.

26 Jan 10:26

KLM beantwoordt meeste vragen op Facebook

AMSTELVEEN - KLM heeft wereldwijd het laatste kwartaal van 2013 de meeste vragen op Facebook beantwoord. Dit blijkt uit de statistieken van de website Socialbakers.com. Nog niet eerder beantwoordde een organisatie in één kwartaal zoveel vragen op Facebook laat de maatschappij weten in personeelsblad de Wolkenridder.

25 Jan 19:15

The Amazing Story Of The Japanese Soldier Who Hid In The Jungle For 29 Years — And Died This Month

by The Economist

Hiroo Onoda japan soldierHiroo Onoda, soldier of the Japanese imperial army, died on January 16th, aged 91

Before he approached the tent where his commanding officer waited on March 9th 1974, Hiroo Onoda did two things. First, he inspected his rifle. (The Arisaka 99 still worked perfectly; over almost 30 years he had treated it as tenderly as a baby.) Then he retied his boots. Nothing must be slipshod. A soldier of the god-emperor had to be pure, prepared and spiritually invincible.

He had taken elaborate care to get this far. All his guerrilla training had been employed in case, as he suspected, he was walking into a trap. He had planned the meeting for the evening, when there would be just enough light to recognize a face but not enough to hinder his escape, if necessary. Palm and bosa trees hid him as he crept down from the mountains. To cross clearings, he camouflaged his threadbare army uniform—more neatly sewn patches than uniform—with sticks and leaves. Wherever it was safe, he rested.

It was helpful that, after three decades living off the land, he was familiar with every inch of Lubang Island in the Philippines. He knew when local farmers would be about, and where, because he stole coconuts and mangoes from them and shot their cattle in order to survive. Sometimes he killed the farmers, too. After all, this was war, and he had his orders. The orders were that, though the rest of the Japanese army had withdrawn from the island in February 1945 when the Americans invaded, he, as an intelligence officer, should stay, spy on the enemy and wait for his colleagues to return. So he had waited.

In the beginning he commanded a unit of three men, but they had died at various points, two shot by the Philippine police. The war had gone very quiet, so quiet that in 1964, to his surprise, America and Japan competed in apparent amity at the Olympic games. But the island still crawled with American agents and spies, who kept dropping leaflets urging him to surrender. All of it was trickery, he thought. He told the young Japanese hiker who eventually found him that he would not stop fighting until his commanding officer, Major Yoshimi Taniguchi, ordered him to cease in person. So on that day in 1974 the elderly major, now a bookseller, especially summoned from Japan, gave him his new orders. Mr Onoda at once laid down his rifle, 500 rounds, his ceremonial sword and sword-belt and his dagger in its white case, and saluted the flag of the rising sun. 

Hiroo Onoda obit

If it was not a surrender, it still felt crushingly like one. For Major Taniguchi informed him not only that the war was over, but that Japan had lost. Mr Onoda’s first thought was: how could they be so sloppy? Rather than lose, rather than lay down arms like this, a Japanese soldier was supposed to die. And he felt like dying. “Do not live in shame,” General Tojo had written; “leave no ignominious crime behind you.” His mother had given him his dagger, as he left for active service, to kill himself with if he was captured.

She meant it, for when he behaved uncontrollably at the age of six she had taken him to the family shrine to commit harakiri then and there. Of course he hadn’t been able to cut his small, quaking belly. Who could, at six? Later, it would have been almost easy. But in fact his orders in 1945 had been to stay alive, not to die. Intelligence officers were more useful that way. It meant he risked being an outcast when he returned to Japan, simply because he had not made the supreme sacrifice and added his name to the divinities honour ed at the Yasukuni shrine. His duty, however, was to spend every moment serving his country in exactly the way he had been told.

That civic imperative was what mattered, he said later; nothing personal or individual. But pride entered the equation, too. He was fiercely competitive, honed with kendo and swimming—though also with a 50-a-day cigarette habit before he went into hiding—and loved to show off how well he could fend for himself. The man who kept neat and trim for years in the jungle had also cut quite a figure at 18 in central China, as a traveling salesman for a lacquer ware company, driving a 1936 Studebaker and wearing English tailored suits. He had style and stubbornness as well as self-discipline. Outside reports said he wept uncontrollably as he laid his rifle down. He merely wrote that, in the course of delivering a night-long field report that covered 29 years, he faltered once or twice.

Returning to Japan as a hero, he did not know what had become of the place. He found it cowed, drowsy, and denuded of self-confidence. Japan was blamed for the East Asian war when, in his view, it had had no choice but to fight in order to survive. The Americans, who had stripped the country of its military power and made the emperor a cypher, also seemed to have drained away the national will. After barely a year at home, loudly on the right of politics, Mr. Onoda left for Brazil to be a cattle-rancher and take a wife. He eventually came back to establish a school where modern Japanese children could learn to survive in the wild, like him.

In 2007 he offered his “words to live by” to the Japan Times. Almost all were to do with civic duty and self-reliance. One thought stood out: “There are some dreams from which it is better not to wake.” By which he meant, he explained, his long dream of war.

Join the conversation about this story »


    






25 Jan 00:35

Motorola reveals ambitious plan to build modular smartphones

by Sam Byford

Motorola has unveiled Project Ara, an open-source initiative for modular smartphones with the goal to "do for hardware what the Android platform has done for software." The company plans to create an ecosystem that can support third-party hardware development for individual phone components — in other words, you could upgrade your phone's processor, display, and more by shopping at different vendors.

Continue reading…

25 Jan 00:25

Apple Wants To Figure Out What Mood You're In, Then Show You The Ad You're Most Likely To Click On

by Aaron Taube

apple tim cook september 10 product event

Apple is thinking about how it can figure out exactly how you feel at any given moment in order to show you the most relevant advertisements.

In a patent application the company filed Thursday, Apple describes a hypothetical system that would analyze and define people's moods based on a variety of clues including facial expressions, perspiration rates, and vocal patterns. 

To be clear, Apple patents just about everything it does, with most applications never amounting to anything with regard to the actual products Apple releases.

Still it's interesting to see how Apple is thinking about predictive, contextual advertising at such a granular level, especially in light of its battle with companies like Google and Facebook to offer search products (Siri, the App Store) that know precisely what a user is looking for — even if the user has not expressly communicated his or her desire.

The patent application, No. 13/556023, describes system that would determine a sort of baseline mood for a given user by collecting and analyzing a mixture of physical, behavioral, and contextual data. The system would then compare this baseline to the data it collects from a user as the ad is about to be served to figure out what mood the user is in and subsequently, which ad the system should send to him or her.

While at this point you can generally assume that any ad you see from an even remotely sophisticated online advertiser will take into account behavioral clues like what content you have clicked on in the past, and contextual clues like where you live, Apple would broach new ground were it to start tracking the look on your face or how fast your heart is beating to determine your mood.

And yet, Apple is not alone in thinking about how to determine users' emotions at any given moment.

Google futurist Ray Kurzweil is working to improve its search function to the point where humans could type in a sentence, and the computer could understand the query on an emotional level. And earlier this month, Yahoo acquired Aviate, a company that organizes and searches for phone apps based on what it thinks you'll be looking for at a certain time.

Here's a diagram Apple made of its proposed system in its patent application:Apple mood patent

SEE ALSO: We Are About To Enter A New War Over 'Semantic' Search

Join the conversation about this story »


    






24 Jan 13:42

Boeing's 787 Dreamliner Is Still Unreliable

by Reuters

boeing dreamliner 787-9 maiden test flight takeoff

OSLO (Reuters) - The reliability of Boeing's <BA.N> 787 Dreamliner is slowly improving but it is still not at a satisfactory level and the firm is working to improve the jet's performance, Mike Fleming, Boeing's vice president for 787 support and services said.

The Dreamliner's reliability rate is now around 98 percent, meaning that two out of every 100 flights is delayed, above the 97 percent reported in October but still short of the firm's target, Fleming told a news conference in Oslo.

"I'll tell you that's not where we want the airplane to be, we're not satisfied with that reliability level of the airplane, the 777 today flies at 99.4 percent ... and that's the benchmark that the 787 needs to attain," Fleming said.

The Dreamliner was supposed to be a game-changer for the aviation industry as its lightweight body and sophisticated engines cut fuel consumption by 20 percent.

But it has been beset by problems, including a battery fire that grounded the model for three months last year and forced Boeing to redesign the battery.

Norwegian Air, the only European budget carrier to fly long haul, has been especially badly hit after a long string of breakdowns last year left passengers stranded around the world.

Also, this month Japan Airlines' maintenance crew noticed white smoke coming from the main battery of Dreamliner with a battery cell showing signs of melting just two hours before the plane was due to fly.

(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi and Joachim Dagenborg. Editing by Jane Merriman)

Join the conversation about this story »


    






24 Jan 13:39

Kids Aren't Reading On Tablets

by Agence France Presse

kid on tablet

Two-thirds of young children in the United States now have access to an e-reader or tablet, but only half of them actually use the device to read, a research institute said in a study published Friday.

The Joan Ganz Cooney Center surveyed 1,577 parents on how much time their two- to 10-year-old kids spent with educational content on "screen media" such as televisions, computers and video games.

Sixty-two percent of children had access to either an e-reader, a tablet or both -- but only 49 percent of them used the devices for reading, either alone or with their parents, the study found.

And when they did read, it was typically for about five minutes a day -- compared with about half an hour with printed books.

Parents considered 44 percent of the screen media used by their children to be educational -- representing 56 minutes out of two hours and seven minutes' viewing a day.

Fifty-seven percent thought their child had learned "a lot" from educational media about reading and mathematics -- but only 19 percent thought that much had been learned about science.

Named for one of the founders of the Children's Television Workshop, the studio behind "Sesame Street," the Joan Ganz Cooney Center promotes literacy skills while researching digital learning for youngsters.

It posted its study on its website.

Copyright (2014) AFP. All rights reserved.

Join the conversation about this story »


    






24 Jan 12:28

Bill Gates says the world is 'better than it's ever been' but aid must continue

by Rich McCormick

Bill Gates published his annual letter from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation this week, focused on debunking three myths that the ex-Microsoft boss says are blocking progress for the poor across the world. In it, Gates says that although many people think "the world is getting worse," it's actually "better than it has ever been." But Gates also thinks we need to keep actively helping those in need. "The belief that the world can't solve extreme poverty and disease isn't just mistaken. It is harmful."

Continue reading…

24 Jan 12:25

Google’s reasonably priced Street View car tours Top Gear’s test track

by Engadget

Like swerving bends and screaming “powerrr!” as much as you dislike electric vehicles? Imagine your delight, then, when you learn that Google and the BBC have teamed up to send one of the former’s street view cars around Dunsfold Aerodrome — more famously known as Top Gear’s test track. As you zoom around the lap, you’ll notice a Mercedes Benz SLS AMG popping up by your side, ably driven by the show’s tame racing driver. Some say he’s a clone of Justin Bieber gone right, and that he prefers to think of Dunsfold Aerodrome as the place where they shot the Miami Airport sequence of Casino Royale. All we know, is that he’s called The Stig.

Filed under: GPS, HD, Google

Comments

Via: BBC

Source: Google Maps

The post Google’s reasonably priced Street View car tours Top Gear’s test track appeared first on AIVAnet.

24 Jan 10:39

Iran President Rouhani: Elections Should Decide Fate Of Assad

by Agence France Presse

Hassan Rouhani

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said Thursday that elections would be the best way of ending the civil war in Syria and warned the West it could not impose a political solution on Tehran's neighbor and ally.

Speaking as fledgling Syrian peace talks entered a second day on the other side of Switzerland, Rouhani told the World Economic Forum that the Syrian people should be allowed to decide their own destiny.

"The best solution is to organize free and fair elections inside Syria," Rouhani told the World Economic Forum in Davos.

"No outside party or power should decide for the Syrian people and Syria as a country."

Describing a conflict that has been raging for nearly three years as a "major catastrophe", Rouhani said Iran was deeply concerned by the influx of foreign fighters he described as "terrorists" into Syria.

"Millions of innocent people have been killed, maimed or made homeless - it is a miserable situation and very sad," Rouhani said.

"All of us should work together to push terrorists out of Syria and advise the countries who support them that this is not their own best interests - their next stop will be their own countries."

UN efforts to involve Iran in the Syria peace talks foundered as a result of objections from the United States and the opposition, who accuse Tehran of having propped up the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

Copyright (2014) AFP. All rights reserved.

Join the conversation about this story »


    






24 Jan 10:37

Pope Francis says the internet is a 'gift from God'

by Amar Toor

Pope Francis today described the internet as a "gift from God," hailing its ability to foster dialogue among disparate groups, though he acknowledged that the speed of social media can make it difficult for users to engage in self-reflection. Francis made the comments in a statement released Thursday, for the Catholic Church's World Communications Day.

In the statement, the Argentine-born pope said that "unprecedented advances" in technology and digital media have made it easier to engage with people of different religions, thereby "creating a sense of the unity of the human family." Using the web to communicate with various groups, he added, could help resolve religious, economic, or political differences.

Continue reading…

24 Jan 10:31

'The Internet's Own Boy' fights for reform after Aaron Swartz's death

by Casey Newton

January 11th marked the first anniversary of Aaron Swartz’s death. As an inventor, a coder, and an activist, Swartz had an outsized impact on the world before he died at the age of 26. In his short life, he helped to shape the modern internet by developing RSS, Creative Commons licenses, and Reddit. But he also spent the last two years of his life fighting a legal case that stemmed from his copying millions of documents from a digital library. Depressed and facing 35 years in prison, Swartz committed suicide in his Brooklyn apartment.

Continue reading…

24 Jan 10:27

HP sheds some of Palm's last remnants with patent sale to Qualcomm

by Sean Hollister

Qualcomm is beefing up its patent portfolio with the remants of Hewlett-Packard's smartphone history. The mobile processor and radio giant has just announced that it has acquired 1,400 mobile patents and patent applications from the computer company, including intellectual property from Palm, iPAQ, and Bitfone. The portfolio includes 1,400 US patents and patent applications, and 1,000 patents and patent applications abroad, but it's not clear how much those might overlap.

The company's press release doesn't include many other details, such as how much Qualcomm paid for the patents, but does say the intellectual property includes "fundamental mobile operating system techniques." Qualcomm writes that the aquisition "will enable the...

Continue reading…

24 Jan 10:26

Qualcomm acquires Palm, other patent portfolios from HP

by Engadget

Chipmaker Qualcomm just announced that it’s acquired 1,400 granted and pending US patents and another 1,000 foreign patents from HP. Those include “fundamental mobile operating system techniques” and come from a collection of patent portfolios that include those of once-great smartphone manufacturer Palm. The sale comes just months after the announcement that HP sold Palm’s operating system, WebOS to LG, and more than a year after HP put the failed TouchPad tablet to rest. HP’s relationship with Palm and the technology that it brought to the table has been a sordid one. Former Palm CEO Jon Rubenstein even went as far as to call the sale to HP a waste during an interview last summer, months after he joined Qualcomm’s board of directors. The company also acquired patent portfolios from HP’s iPAQ PDA business and Bitfone, a mobile enterprise software company that it acquired in 2006.

Filed under: Mobile, HP

Comments

Source: Qualcomm

The post Qualcomm acquires Palm, other patent portfolios from HP appeared first on AIVAnet.

24 Jan 10:19

Tracking and Data Relay Satellite Launch Lights Up the Night Sky

A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket lights up the night sky over Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida as it carries NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite, or TDRS-L, to Earth orbit. Launch was at 9:33 p.m. EST on Thursday, Jan. 23 during a 40-minute launch window. The TDRS-L spacecraft is the second of three new satellites designed to ensure vital operational continuity for NASA by expanding the lifespan of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS) fleet, which consists of eight satellites in geosynchronous orbit. The spacecraft provide tracking, telemetry, command and high-bandwidth data return services for numerous science and human exploration missions orbiting Earth. These include NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the International Space Station. TDRS-L has a high-performance solar panel designed for more spacecraft power to meet the growing S-band communications requirements. TDRSS is one of three NASA Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) networks providing space communications to NASA’s missions. > More about TDRS-L Image Credit: NASA/Dan Casper
23 Jan 20:22

Symantec uncovers malware that uses Windows to infect Android devices

by Lee Bell
Symantec uncovers malware that uses Windows to infect Android devices

Malware authors shift to targeting Android as its popularity grows


    


23 Jan 20:22

European Commission to create online platform and think-tank to support EU start-ups

by Sam Shead
European Commission vice president Neelie Kroes today announced the launch of a new start-up ‘accelerator’ and think-tank to support the Europe’s start-up community.
    






23 Jan 20:11

Finally, Apple Admits It Made A Huge Mistake By Not Making A Big-Screen Phone (AAPL)

by Jim Edwards

ASS.103

In October 2011, in Berlin, Samsung launched a phone the like of which no one had ever seen before: The Galaxy Note, with a massive 5.3-inch screen.

A lot of people laughed. "We're not so sure that's a good thing," we said at the time. The screen seemed impossibly big — how would you fit it into your pocket? Is it really supposed to be a tablet? They were given a derisory nickname, "Phablets."

Apple — marketing the 3.5-inch iPhone 4S at the time — largely ignored the trend. In 2012, it launched the iPhone 5 with a slightly larger 4-inch screen. The logic for going bigger but not too big was that many people used phones with one hand, and the 4-inch screen was the biggest you could go still comfortably using it without engaging two hands.

Now, three years later, with the news that Apple will launch two big-screen phones later this year,  it appears that Apple has finally admitted it made a huge mistake by underestimating the demand for big screen phones and the design of them.

It's a dramatic mistake that cuts to the core of Apple's corporate philosophy: careful design. Apple prides itself on the thoughtfulness of its design and the care they put into their products. A big screen presents only a trivial technical challenge to a phonemaker, so this is overtly a design issue and not a technical issue. 

Yet between 2011 and now, Samsung became the market leader in big-screen phones — the Galaxy S3 and S4 also had bigger screens than the iPhone.

But it is the Note, which is huge in Asia and less popular in the West, whose sales are remarkable. Some numbers:

You can quibble over the statistics. What is not in doubt is that Samsung created a brand new type of smartphone market from scratch, and dominated it.

Apple lagged, and then copied it.

It's a humiliating position to be in for a company that professes to make the best gadgets in the world. It was Apple, after all, who invented the touchscreen smartphone market back in 2007.

In hindsight it seems so obvious: What made the iPhone immediately great was that it had a big screen. Blackberrys and feature phones of the time had tiny little screens for texting and not much else. The big screen ruled.

Yet as the years rolled by, screens got bigger around Apple, and Apple stayed small. As a proportion of available models, the iPhone basically shrank.

Today, the iPhone is noticeably tiny. At CES in Las Vegas this year I noted that "I felt alone as I tapped away on my little iPhone 5. ... My tiny iPhone looked like a dumbphone next to Samsung’s Galaxy and Note devices."

So it should come as a huge relief to iPhone fans that Apple is finally catching up. Two — 2!! — 5-inch-plus iPhone screens are on their way. They will doubtless be as functional, reliable and well made as everything else Apple does ...

... Which is why Samsung ought now to be terrified.

SEE ALSO: This Android Chart Explains Why Apple CEO Tim Cook Is Obsessed With China

Join the conversation about this story »


    






23 Jan 08:11

Everything Is Impossible In Europe

by Joe Weisenthal

Fondue

The other day in Geneva, my wife and I wanted to split a single serving of fondue, rather than get enough for two. The waiter at the restaurant responded: "It's impossible." Ultimately though, that's what we got.

Last night in Davos, a group of us tried to get into a shuttle to be taken from a party to the main center here. There were only five seats in the back, yet six people tried to squeeze in. The driver responded: "It's impossible." Ultimately it was very easy to squeeze in an extra person, and the driver relented pretty quickly.

One person in the car — who was American but lives in Belgium — commented that he hears the phrase "It's impossible" all the time in Belgium. I've heard it several other times in just a few days. Never has the situation actually been "impossible" or even close to impossible. The situation's just always been kind of slightly against the rules.

You don't really hear this much in the US, so I'm wondering: Does the prevalence of this phrase actually represent some kind of cultural thing whereby people take rules more seriously? Or is it just a language thing, where people who don't speak English natively use it to just mean "you're not supposed to do that."

Genuinely curious which one it is.

Join the conversation about this story »


    






23 Jan 08:03

Shinzo Abe Compares Japan-China Tensions To UK-Germany Before World War I

by Michael Kelley

shinzo abe

Japan Prime Minster Shinzo Abe said the current tension between Japan and China is a “similar situation" as the rivalry Britain and Germany before World War I, Gideon Rachman of The Financial Times reports.

From FT:

The comparison, he explained, lies in the fact that Britain and Germany – like China and Japan – had a strong trading relationship. But in 1914, this had not prevented strategic tensions leading to the outbreak of conflict.

The comparison of is a startling one, especially since any escalation that led direct military conflict would bring the U.S. to Japan's defense.

Unfortunately, there are parallels between the situation. Both are regional powers with strong trading relationships. 

Abe told Rachman that Chinese military spending, which he says is increasing by 10% a year, is a major source of instability in the region. Last year Japan boosted its military spending by the most in nearly two decades.

Between 1908 and 1913, European powers increased military spending by 50% after Germany began building a navy to rival Britain's.

And then there are the strategic tensions.

The current Japan and China are centered around territorial disputes in the East China Sea that are exacerbated by sour memories of World War II. Japanese jets regularly scramble to intercept Chinese aircraft as China becomes more assertive in the area.

When Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated in June 1914, Germany backed regional allies Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire in the Great War. Britain then led the Allied Powers (which included France, Russia, Italy, Japan, and eventually the U.S.).

Abe noted to FT that any “inadvertent” conflict would be regarded as a disaster, and he again called for military-to-military communications between the two countries.

SEE ALSO: Someone Just Said Something About The Japan-China Conflict That Scared The Crap Out Of Everyone

Join the conversation about this story »


    






23 Jan 07:53

Bill Gates voted for marijuana legalization in Washington

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Bill Gates wants to see Washington state experiment with legal pot. According to BuzzFeed, Gates voted in favor of his state's 2012 referendum to legalize marijuana, feeling that some states should assess the policy before a similar plan is implemented at a federal level. “It’s an experiment, and it’s probably good to have a couple states try it out to see before you make that national policy,” Gates tells BuzzFeed. Though Gates didn't actually think that the 2012 referendum would pass, he's interested to see what happens now that its full effects are approaching.

Continue reading…

23 Jan 07:36

The Battle For Ukraine Is Being Fought Using Ancient Military Tactics

by Geoffrey Ingersoll

uk15

Things got pretty hairy in Kiev, Ukraine, in the last week due in large part to the government banning protests.

As a result, riot police broke out their Roman army tactics.

Roman Testudo Phalanx formation army

This formation is called the "Testudo," or tortoise in Latin.

The tactic springs from ancient Greek warfare which relied on the Phalanx formation to slowly chew up the enemy.

Romans later adopted and modified the phalanx, which remained relevant for about 2000 years.

In the case of riot police, it's more about area denial and protecting police officers than killing an enemy.

Protesters, on the other hand, have actually gone so far as to build a a trebuchet.

(Small as it may be.)

The weapon appeared during the Middle Ages and is the precursor to long-range artillery. It uses a counterweight to sling much heavier objects much longer distances than a traditional catapult or, perhaps more importantly, than what a human could throw. 

Kiev Trebuchet

 

Join the conversation about this story »


    






23 Jan 07:35

Hacker Defeats Snapchat's New Security Measure In Less Than 30 Minutes

by Karyne Levy

Snapchat Bot

When new users sign up for Snapchat, there's a cute way that the app verifies that you're not a robot: by picking out Snapchat's white ghost out of a series of nine images.

This is good news, as Snapchat spam has become more of a problem lately.

But then there's the bad news. Unfortunately for Snapchat, one hacker, Steven Hicks, was able to write fewer than 100 lines of code that cracked the new person verification method in less than 30 minutes.

In fact, he writes in his blog that he could've written something to crack the verification in less time, he was just too lazy to do it.

Looks like Snapchat's security team might have to go back to the drawing board. The ghosts sure are cute, though.

SEE ALSO: Hackers stole millions of phone numbers and usernames from Snapchat

Join the conversation about this story »


    






23 Jan 07:29

Apple says a fix for random iOS 7 reboots is coming

by Chris Welch

Apple has confirmed to Mashable that it's aware of a bug that causes devices running iOS 7 to randomly reset for no apparent reason. The issue has existed since the launch of iOS 7 and has persisted even after Apple ironed out other kinks through subsequent software updates. Thankfully the company says a fix is on the way for the "home screen crash" that results in iPhones, iPads, and iPod touches going through a soft reset without warning. It's also been coined the "black screen of death" since it displays the same black background and Apple logo that users see when a device is first powered on. (The screen is white if you're using a white iOS product.) Though not a crippling bug by any measure, the resets have proven to be an annoying...

Continue reading…

23 Jan 07:28

Apple Planning Fix for iOS 7 Home Screen Crashes

by MacRumors

ios_7_iconSince iOS 7 was released in September, users have complained of frequent home screen and app crashes, resulting in a soft reboot of the system. According to an Apple representative that spoke to Mashable, a fix for the issue is in the works, with a software update to be released soon.

“We have a fix in an upcoming software update for a bug that can occasionally cause a home screen crash,” Apple spokesperson Trudy Muller told Mashable.

Random iOS 7 reboots have been occurring for users since September, according to a threads on both the MacRumors forums and Apple’s own Support Communities. During these system reboots, the iPhone screen goes black or white (depending on the color of the phone) for a short period of time before reloading. Based on the complaints, all iPhones running iOS 7, regardless of model, appear to be exhibiting problems.

The fix may possibly come bundled as part of iOS 7.1, which is currently in its fourth beta iteration. Developers received the latest seed of the operating system on Monday, but it is unknown when Apple plans to release iOS 7.1 to the public.

According to a report from BGR, a public launch of iOS 7.1 isn’t expected until March, which could mean Apple plans to release a smaller iterative iOS 7.0.5 update in the meantime.

    



The post Apple Planning Fix for iOS 7 Home Screen Crashes appeared first on AIVAnet.

23 Jan 07:21

OnePlus Smartphone Promises Best Specs Running CyanogenMod

by AndroidSPIN

OnePlus-bestspecs

A former executive over at Oppo has established himself a new company, with plans on blowing all our minds with a new flagship phone. This company that he established is called OnePlus, and they want to pair up with CyanogenMod to create a flagship that has the best specs. The image above illustrates such a declaration, as they posted it on their Facebook page.

Details about this phone have not been given quite yet, but if they are promising such things as ‘best specs’, you can imagine a phone that is buttery smooth and fast, with a vibrant screen that we will not be able to stop staring at. Once we hear more about this phone with the “best specs”, we will surely let you know.

Source: Techno Buffalo

The post OnePlus Smartphone Promises Best Specs Running CyanogenMod appeared first on AIVAnet.