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29 Dec 16:15

CyanogenMod downloaded 10 million times as it begins to go legit

by Engadget

Though CyanogenMod has gotten plenty of ink lately for its Oppo N1 hookup and Google Play approval (and subsequent removal), it’s still first and foremost a modding outfit. In fact it just crossed 10 million downloads of its custom Android ROMs, according to its latest stats. That marks a lot of folks wanting to re-skin their handsets, or give others like Samsung’s Galaxy S (shown above) new life. That model, along with the Galaxy S II and S III were the most popular devices to mod, a reflection of their popularity and perhaps users’ disdain for TouchWiz. It helps that you can now skip difficult command-line installs, thanks to OTA updates and new desktop and mobile apps. Now if you’ll excuse us, we’re going to install CyanogenMod’s Android 4.2.2 ROM on our Galaxy S — a device officially unsupported since the Gingerbread era.

Filed under: Software, Mobile

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Via: Phone Arena

Source: CyanogenMod

The post CyanogenMod downloaded 10 million times as it begins to go legit appeared first on AIVAnet.

29 Dec 16:12

Ex-Google'er bestrijdt Google

by Kristian van Tuil
Brian Kennish werkte ooit voor Google's DoubleClick, maar werpt zich nu op als privacyridder.
29 Dec 16:11

5 Sleep Myths You Can Stop Believing Now

by Details.com

napping, sleep, reading, park, grass

This post originally appeared on Details.com.

It's as much a part of your daily existence as your diet and exercise routine, and yet, even those who prioritize movement and nutrition are a bit misled when it comes to sleep. 

Much of this in-the-dark behavior stems from a misunderstanding of some of the most important factors affecting your sleep (which, by the way, affects your waistline as well as your performance at work and in the gym). To set the record straight, we asked Equinox advisory board member and sleep expert James B. Maas, Ph.D., author of Sleep for Success!, to dispel five of the most common falsehoods.

1. Sleeping too much makes you gain weight.

"Sleep is actually the best diet there is," says Maas. "Research shows that if you sleep just one extra hour a night, you can lose a pound a week." According to a study out of the University of Colorado, subjects who didn't get ample sleep ate about six percent more calories than those who did.

Here's why: Levels of leptin, a hormone that controls your appetite by telling your brain your fat stores are fine and you've got enough energy, drop when you haven't had enough sleep. And Maas says that even if you get six hours a night (and not the generally recommended eight to nine), leptin decreases. You wake up starving—and probably craving high fat and carbs to feel satiated. "So, the brain is tricked into eating more than you need to," he says.

2. You can catch up over the weekend.

Sure, sleeping in on a Sunday to counteract a super late Friday or Saturday night—or even a week's worth of running around—may make you feel like a million bucks, but it's not that easy to really reset a sleep deficit. "You can't replace lost sleep, be it a week's worth or a one-nighter, in one shot—it can take several days or a few weeks," says Maas.

A good rule of thumb is to sleep for half the amount of time you're awake. As in: if you're up for 16, then you should be asleep for eight. But catching up is crucial. "Just like how you can't ignore a charge on your credit card because it will keep building up, if you ignore your lack of sleep, it doesn't disappear into thin air," says Maas. "You literally have to think of it like a sleep bank account."

3. You can condition your body to need less sleep.

You know how some people brag about being able to run on only a few hours of sleep because their body is used to it? Don't believe them. "You can become conditioned to waking up earlier but you can't alter your body's sleep requirements," says Maas.

In fact, 'getting by' on less could mean you're doing your health a great disservice. "There are so many people that say that five hours is all you need—that's a giant mistake," says Maas. "It may be there are individual differences and genetic factors like what your parents sleep habits are and so on and you might be one of the lucky few that really only need seven hours, but if not, over time, some aspect of your health like weight or mental focus will be effected by lack of sleep."

4. One glass of wine promotes deeper sleep.

While a little bit (or a lot for that matter) of vino can sure make you feel like you can sack out the minute your head hits the pillow, you won't get the same quality of sleep as you would if you were completely sober. "Any alcohol within three hours of bedtime can disrupt REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, so you never get into the deepest sleep possible, which is the critical sleep," says Maas. Do that one or more times a week and not only will your sleep deficit increase, but you'll risk the associated weight gain and memory loss issues.

5. Sleeping straight through the night is crucial.

Between taking a few sips of water, getting up to use the bathroom, or just tossing and turning, you could end up waking up a few times a night. The good news: NBD. "It's actually unusual for someone to sleep through an entire night without interruption," says Maas.

The critical element however, is whether or not you fall back to sleep within 10 minutes of waking. It's only when you keep tossing and turning that ample sleep as well as memory consolidation gets sacrificed. "If it takes you longer than 15 minutes to go back and you're up for 90 minutes or longer, the equivalent of more than a full REM deep sleep cycle, that's when it's disrupting and [could be a] sign of insomnia."

dec jan 2013 baleMore from Details:

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29 Dec 16:09

The Man Who Invented The AK-47 Has Died — Here's His Greatest Regret

by Adam Taylor

Mikhail Kalashnikov

Mikhail Kalashnikov, the creator of the famous AK-47 assault rifle, has died at the age of 94, according to Russia Today. He had reportedly been suffering from heart problems and was in intensive care since November.

The Kalashnikov AK-47 is frequently cited as the world's most popular assault rifle, with its only serious rival being the American M-series rifle. Kalashnikov himself was a self-taught peasant turned tank mechanic who never finished high school, RT writes, but he became a weapon designer after he was shot in the shoulder in World War II.

The AK-47 was introduced in 1948 and became one of the first assault rifles of the 2nd generation. Its remarkable success come from a variety of factors, including durability and low production cost — they reportedly sold in war-torn countries for as little as $15. However, their popularity led to some conflicting emotions in their founder.

"I would prefer to have invented a machine that people could use and that would help farmers with their work - for example a lawnmower," he said on a visit to Germany in 2002.

“Whenever I look at TV and I see the weapon I invented to defend my motherland in the hands of these bin Ladens, I ask myself the same question: 'How did it get into their hands?' ” Kalashnikov said in 2006. “I didn't put it in the hands of bandits and terrorists, and it's not my fault that it has mushroomed uncontrollably across the globe. Can I be blamed that they consider it the most reliable weapon?”

"It is painful for me to see when criminal elements of all kinds fire from my weapon," he explained again in 2009, on his 90th birthday.

In hindsight, too, many would have regretted another decision. The original design for the AK-47 was never patented, and Kalashnikov reportedly never saw any of the profits from his invention — a few years ago it was estimated that half the AK-47s in the world were actually counterfeits. Still, the inventor never seemed to mind.

“At that time, patenting inventions wasn't an issue in our country,” he explained in 2006. “We worked for socialist society, for the good of the people, which I never regret.”

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29 Dec 16:08

AK-47 inventor Mikhail Kalashnikov is dead at 94

by Kwame Opam

Mikhail Kalashnikov, the inventor of the iconic AK-47, has died at the age of 94. The announcement was made today on Russian state television, reports the BBCAccording to RT, Kalashnikov had long suffered from heart-related problems, and was staying in intensive care at a facility in Izhevsk, Udmurtia, not far from the Izhmash plant where his rifles are designed to this day.

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29 Dec 16:06

Belgische windmolens verbreken record energieproductie

by Dimitri Reijerman
Afgelopen zaterdag hebben de windmolens in België een record aan windenergie geproduceerd, zo heeft de Waalse organisatie Apere becijferd. De 615 Belgische windturbines zouden mede dankzij gunstige weersomstandigheden 1540MW aan stroom hebben gegenereerd.
29 Dec 16:04

Analyst: Battlefield 4 issues may mean long-term damage for EA

by Alexa Ray Corriea

Technical issues following the launch of Battlefield 4 and subsequent class action lawsuits could mean long-term damage for publisher Electronic Arts, says investor analysis site The Motley Fool.

The Fool writes that Battlefield 4, which was poised to compete with Activision's Call of Duty: Ghosts, was "a PR nightmare on all fronts," and as a result of the still ongoing technical and online issues with the game, EA has "let a golden opportunity slip between its fingers." Battlefield 4 was largely unplayable at launch and frequently crashed when players tried to search for and join online matches. As of today, developer DICE is still rolling out patches for Battlefield 4 across all platforms, and all future expansions for the title are...

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29 Dec 16:01

Facebook for Windows Phone 8 now lets you pin chats and events to the home screen

by Engadget

Facebook for Windows Phone

Windows Phone-toting Facebook users no longer have to worry about missing an important conversation or party update. A revamped Facebook app for Windows Phone 8 lets socialites pin seemingly any Facebook content to the home screen as a Live Tile, including chats, events, groups, pages and photo albums. The app’s redesigned main Live Tile also shows wall updates, and Microsoft has spent time bolstering both the language support and overall performance. Whether or not you need to watch your friend activity like a hawk, there’s enough here to justify swinging by the Windows Phone Store for an upgrade.

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Microsoft, Facebook

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Via: Windows Phone Blog

Source: Windows Phone Store

The post Facebook for Windows Phone 8 now lets you pin chats and events to the home screen appeared first on AIVAnet.

29 Dec 15:56

Why creating the perfect game for Oculus Rift is a challenge

by Megan Farokhmanesh

Creating an ideal game for Oculus Rift is tough due to the system's shifting player comfort level, ability to induce motion sickness and levels of physics, according to a report from The Verge.

The publication spoke with several developers for the virtual reality headset. According to Owlchemy Labs' Devin Reimer, something as simple as moving up stairs can become a nauseating challenge. Speaking about the developer's Oculus Rift port of Dejobaan Games' skydiving simulator, AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!! for the Awesome, Reimer explained that manipulating the physical world can be better than fully imitating it.

"With VR games, the less you are trying to manually override your camera controls and movement with inputs, the better off you...

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29 Dec 15:49

Google-powered machines lead DARPA’s Robotics Challenge (video)

by Engadget

Schaft in DARPA's Robotics Challenge

And you thought the Big Dog was scary? Okay, Boston Dynamics’ quadrupedal, un-tip-overable ‘bot still takes the cake, but SCHAFT (pictured above) deserves its own condo in the uncanny valley. And to think, they’ll both be eating together at a cafeteria in Mountain View soon. That ‘bot won DARPA’s rescue-oriented competition this weekend by successfully navigating tricky terrain and clearing debris. Two other teams, IHMC Robotics and MIT, earned respective second and fourth places with variants on Boston Dynamics’ Atlas machine. Other top-ranking entries included third-place Tartan Rescue as well as RoboSimian, Traclabs, WRECS and Trooper. The high scores are useful for more than just bragging rights. These top eight teams will receive DARPA funding as they move on to the Robotics Challenge finals in late 2014; they’ll have a big (metal) leg up versus rivals that will have to pay to play. Congratulations to all, but if you don’t mind, we’ll be keeping our distance from Google headquarters until we know exactly what Andy Rubin plans to do with his new army of metal men and beasts.

Filed under: Robots, Science, Google

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Source: MIT Technology Review, DARPA

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29 Dec 15:49

NASA JPL creates a more immersive way to control a space robot with the Oculus Rift and the Kinect 2

by Engadget

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory has been on the hunt for a more natural way to maneuver robots in space for some time now, resulting in cool experiments like using a Leap Motion controller to remotely control a Mars rover and using an Oculus Rift plus a Virtuix Omni to take a virtual tour of the Red Planet. It therefore made sense for the folks at JPL to sign up for the latest Kinect for Windows developer program in order to get their hands on the newer and more precise Kinect 2 (which, incidentally, is not available as a standalone unit separate from the Xbox One) to see if it would offer yet another robotics solution.

They received their dev kit in late November, and after a few days of tinkering, were able to hook up an Oculus Rift with the Kinect 2 in order to manipulate an off-the-shelf robotic arm. According to our interview with a group of JPL engineers, the combination of the Oculus’s head-mounted display and the Kinect’s motion sensors has resulted in “the most immersive interface” JPL has built to date. Join us after the break to see a video of this in action and find out just why one of them has called this build nothing short of revolutionary.

JPL took part in the first Kinect developer program as well, so it was already intimately familiar with how Kinect’s motion sensor technology worked. It built a series of applications and eventually worked with Microsoft to release a game where you were tasked with landing Curiosity safely on Mars. The second Kinect, however, offers a lot more precision and accuracy than the first. “It allowed us to track open and closed states, and the rotation of the wrist,” says Human Interfaces Engineer Victor Luo. “With all of these new tracking points and rotational degrees of freedom, we were able to better manipulate the arm.”

Alex Menzies, also a Human Interfaces engineer, describes this combination of a head-mounted display and the Kinect motion sensor as nothing short of revolutionary. “We’re able for the first time, with [a] consumer-grade sensor, [to] control the entire orientation rotation of a robotic limb. Plus we’re able to really immerse someone in the environment so that it feels like an extension of your own body — you’re able to look at the scene from a human-like perspective with full stereo vision. All the visual input is properly mapped to where your limbs are in the real world.” This, he says, is very different from just watching yourself on a screen, because it’s very difficult to map your own body movements. “It feels very natural and immersive. I felt like you have a much better awareness of where objects are in the world.”

As you might imagine, latency is a very real concern, as most of the robots are on the other side of a long time delay. Jeff Norris, Mission Operations Innovation lead for JPL, says that therefore, a setup like this is mostly used to indicate goals, which the robots seek out. Luo and Menzies do point out, however, that as you see in the video, there’s a ghosted state to indicate where your arm is, and a solid color to show where the robot is currently, so the latency is displayed on the screen. “It feels pretty natural because the ghosted hand moves immediately, and you see that the robot is catching up to your position,” Menzies says. “You’re commanding it a little bit ahead, but it doesn’t feel laggy.”

“We’re building partnerships with commercial companies that make devices that maybe first and foremost weren’t built for space exploration,” says Luo. “Doing so helps us get a whole lot more done for space exploration than if we were starting everything from scratch. It also means we could build systems that could be available to the general public. Imagine how inspirational it would be for a 7-year-old to control a space robot with the tools he’s already familiar with!”

Of course, the end goal is not just to control a robot arm, but space robots in general. As can be seen in the video demonstration, JPL hopes to bring the same technology to machines like the Robonaut 2, which is currently deployed aboard the ISS. “We want to integrate this work to eventually extend that to controlling robots like the Robonaut 2,” Luo says. “There are tasks that are too boring, too menial or even too dangerous for an astronaut to do the task, but fundamentally we still want to be in control of the robot … If we can make it more efficient for us to control them, we can get more done in less time.”

Filed under: Robots, Science

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Source: YouTube (NASA JPL), NASA JPL Human Interfaces Group

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29 Dec 01:44

Belgian card payment network crashes two days after record usage

by Peter Sayer
Belgium's card payment network failed on Monday night, leaving millions of Belgians unable to pay at stores or to withdraw cash from ATMs and self-service terminals inside banks.
    






29 Dec 01:43

'Apple blokkeert nieuws-app om artikelen over Android en Windows'

by Joost Schellevis
Apple heeft de app van nieuwssite TabletGuide geweigerd omdat de site ook over Android- en Windows-tables schrijft. Dat claimt de site. Andere nieuws-apps met informatie over concurrenten van Apple zouden wel worden toegelaten omdat die over meer dan enkel tablets gaan.
29 Dec 01:42

Sony rolt Android 4.3 update breed uit

by info@gsmhelpdesk.nl (Tim Wijkman)

Sony rolt Android 4.3 update breed uit

Vorige week startte Sony al de uitrol van de Android 4.3 update voor de Sony Xperia Z1. Sony is daar bovenop nu ook de uitrol van dezelfde update voor de Sony Xperia Z gestart.

29 Dec 01:40

Switched On: The desktop dashboard, take two

by Engadget

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

The Quirky Nimbus

The last Switched On discussed the contrast between the $100 laptop concept of 2006 and the $100 tablet reality of 2013. In that case, an idea that didn’t bear fruit was succeeded years later by a different approach. However, what’s even more rare is to see a failed idea by one small company tried many years later by another small company.

This recently occurred with the introduction of the Quirky Nimbus, a physical desktop dashboard that offers four customizable displays that keep track of your digital information, like the weather, commuter traffic, email and calendar updates. The product concept is very similar to the Ambient Executive Dashboard that a yearling Switched On addressed way back in 2005 with two columns focusing on the device and its content. Contrasting that product to the Nimbus reveals that much has changed about technology in the past eight years, but there are still a few things that plague this particular niche product.

The Ambient Executive Dashboard was a device that used the pager network to obtain status updates about information that was portrayed on up to three FaceCards at a time; FaceCards were clear pieces of plastic that were inserted into the device a bit like very thin video game cartridges. A unique combination of grooves at their base told the Dashboard what information to receive. Believe it or not, since the pager network still works and is in active use, so does the Dashboard if you still have one. Turn it on and it springs to life with, for example, live information on the weather.

The Dashboard was configured on a website and many of its dozen-plus services required extra fees beyond the device’s $150 price tag. However, these included some surprisingly personalized data points, some of which were more useful than those currently supported by the Nimbus, including the time until your next meeting and the number of new job listings you were monitoring.

The device was also a non-event to configure. To access personalized information, one had to register at Ambient’s website, but information delivery itself was painless. As with many new hardware products, though, the Nimbus, which connects via WiFi, uses a smartphone app for configuration. There are multiple authentications required for the dubious task of monitoring how many Facebook likes your most recent post has received. However, it is early days for the Nimbus and hopefully there will be more useful apps, like the one that taps into your Fitbit step count for public bragging (or shaming).

One configures the Nimbus with the Wink app that is common to all smart devices co-developed by Quirky and GE. The app configures the device for your WiFi network by putting the iPhone’s screen, for example, into a blinking mode. This too is somewhat of a throwback; a similar method was used to communicate information between PCs and early data watches from Timex. As ever, the process is error-prone and failed at least once during my setup. Still, the lack of Bluetooth helps keep down the price of the Nimbus, which costs $130.

From a design perspective, the Ambient Dashboard was one of the busiest products released by Ambient Devices, which was better known for orbs, umbrellas and other simple objects that glowed with different colors depending on status updates. Its needles represented the manifestation of the digital in the analog world. In contrast, the bulbous, toy-like Nimbus blends analog needles with a too-small LED line. This helps compensate for the inability to read the non-illuminated dials in the dark, which was an issue with the Ambient Dashboard when it was released.

The dashboard is an idea that sounds useful in theory; perhaps its best application may be as a way to hear a digital heartbeat from those we care about.

At this point, though, it seems like it would be better to replace all the faces with four small LCDs or OLED displays, which could be fully readable in low light and further customized with themes, etc. The risk, however, is making it seem too much like a digital picture frame — another product that has fallen from grace — or the comatose Chumby.

The Nimbus revisits the idea of glanceable information in a form factor that might replace your alarm clock. Indeed, it can be used as such and even has a snooze function. The dashboard is an idea that sounds useful in theory; perhaps its best application may be as a way to hear a digital heartbeat from those we care about. But these and similar data appliances face stronger-than-ever challenges from the constant stream of information sent to the devices in our pockets and, increasingly, on our wrists.


Ross Rubin is principal analyst at Reticle Research, a research and advisory firm focusing on consumer technology adoption. He shares commentary at Techspressive and on Twitter at @rossrubin.

Filed under: Desktops, Displays, Internet

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26 Dec 01:02

RapidGator Wiped From Google by False DMCA Notices

by Ernesto

rapidgatorEvery week copyright holders send millions of DMCA takedown notices to Google in the hope of making pirated content harder to find.

Thus far this has resulted in more than 200 million URLs being removed from Google’s search engine. While many of these takedown claims are legit, some are clearly false, censoring perfectly legitimate webpages from search results.

File-hosting service RapidGator.net is one site that has fallen victim to such overbroad takedown requests. The file-hosting service has had nearly all its URLs de-listed, including its homepage, making the site hard to find through Google.

Several other clearly non-infringing pages, including the FAQ, the news section, and even the copyright infringement policy, have also been wiped from Google by various takedown requests.


Removed URLs

rapid-wiped

People who now search for RapidGator on Google will no longer see the site’s domain listed on top of the search results. Instead, the first result now points to RapidGator.org, which appears to be a RapidGator affiliate.

RapidGator is one of the most visited file-sharing portals on the Internet, and the site believes it misses out on thousands of visitors now they have become invisible through Google.

“We’ll lose thousands of visitors because of this action. This is not right. If it happens to us, it can happen to MediaFire or Dropbox tomorrow,” RapidGator’s Dennis told TorrentFreak.

“Most importantly, it opens the door for phishing sites, who will register similar site name and mislead our users,” he adds.

At the time of writing, only two RapidGator URLs are indexed by Google. The file-hosting service has submitted counter-notices for several of the false takedown requests, but thus far they haven’t heard back from Google.


RapidGator’s indexed pages

rapidgator2results

Interestingly, Google has processed takedown requests for millions of RapidGator links over the past months, even though the site only allowed the search engine to crawl a dozen of its pages. In other words, most of the RapidGator pages copyright holders ask Google to remove were never indexed by Google to begin with.

“Our robots.txt forbids search engines bots to index any file/* folder/ URLs. We only allow them to crawl our main page and the pages we have in a footer of the website. So most of the URLs for which Google gets DMCA notices are not listed in index by default,” RapidGator’s Dennis explains.

RapidGator hopes that Google will eventually reinstate the homepage listing, as well as the other pages that have been removed without basis.

This is not the first setback for the file-hosting site this year. Last month an Italian court ordered local ISPs to block RapidGator to protect the rights of a movie distribution company controlled by former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Despite these troubles, the site remains one of the most visited file-sharing sites on the Internet, serving millions of users per day.

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

25 Dec 14:24

Beyond Ballmer: meet Microsoft’s top CEO candidates

by Tom Warren

Microsoft is on the verge of massive change. CEO Steve Ballmer has announced his retirement, and the software giant doesn’t have an immediate replacement waiting in the wings. After 38 years with just two CEOs, the company is searching for its perfect match — someone to move software out of traditional boxes and into service efforts, an individual who can steer towards new a hardware push.

That’s a tall order. After months of searching, the company revealed last week that it’s not planning to name Steve Ballmer’s successor until 2014. While many had expected a new CEO by now, the search will continue over the holiday period and into the new year. Microsoft identified over 100 candidates and spoke with several dozen before...

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25 Dec 14:24

A visual history of the Apollo missions

by Russell Brandom

When NASA's astronauts went into space, they took a 70mm Hasselblad camera with them, taking more than 17,000 photos over the course of 13 missions. That includes iconic shots like the famous "earthrise" and Neil Armstrong's first photos on the moon, but also more subtle moments from early fly-bys and the last-ditch Apollo 13 repairs. And thanks to Houston's Lunar and Planetary Institute, they're all currently available online, offering a rarely seen view of humanity's first missions to the moon.

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25 Dec 14:24

What are the real-world ramifications of ghostbusting?

by Kwame Opam

There's no question that Ghostbusters is a great movie, coming down from the same pulp occult tradition as William Hope Hodgson's Carnacki, the Ghost-Finder. But you really have to wonder: given the public's wishy-washy opinions about ghosts, what would people think of a bona fide ghost tracking agency running loose in New York City? The Awl has republished a classic 1984 Atlantic Monthly cover story entitled "The Politics Of The Next Dimension: Do Ghosts Have Civil Rights?" which dutifully explores the media explosion that would have followed Spengler, Stantz, and Venkman as they track down ghosts in the tri-state area. It's a fun fake (if thoroughly reported) piece that follows the moral and legal gray areas surrounding the...

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25 Dec 12:58

ISS astronauts conducting scheduled Christmas Eve spacewalk to finish repairs

by Kwame Opam

NASA astronauts Rick Mastracchio and Michael Hopkins are once again floating outside the International Space Station, in the second scheduled effort to repair the station's malfunctioning coolant system and only the second Christmas Eve spacewalk in NASA history.

The need for repairs was brought about by one of the ISS' two coolant loops unexpectedly shutting down on December 11th. Since then, the crew has had to turn off nonessential equipment to conserve power. Today's effort follows Saturday's successful mission, during which the engineers managed to remove a failing ammonia pump. The live feed of the repairs can be viewed below:


Live streaming video by Ustream

The last Christmas Eve spacewalk took place in 1999, when astronauts...

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25 Dec 12:58

Kanye's ambitious Yeezus tour brings fashion, dance, architecture, and music together

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Kanye West is rarely one for simplicity. Over the past decade, he's been extending his work into more and more mediums, creating an over 30-minute-long short film around a single song, collaborating with highly regarded artists to design his album covers, and founding the design company Donda. But according to Interiors Journal, West's Yeezus Tour — which wrapped up last night — is perhaps his most impressive amalgamation of artistic mediums yet.

Interiors reports that The Yeezus Tour blends fashion, choreography, architecture, and more together with West's music to create a grand and cohesive performance. The show reportedly includes an approximately 50-foot-tall mountain, a massive LED screen displaying information and...

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25 Dec 12:57

SoftBank reportedly in final talks to buy T-Mobile

by Adrianne Jeffries

Japanese telecom SoftBank, which owns 80 percent of Sprint, is reportedly nearing a deal to buy T-Mobile. The Nikkei news service is reporting that SoftBank wants to buy a majority of T-Mobile using Sprint shares in a deal valued at more than $19 billion.

A merger between the third and fourth-largest American carriers would create stronger competition for the two largest, Verizon and AT&T. It could also be seen as weakening the market by reducing the number of big players. The acquisition would have to be cleared by US antitrust regulators.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) quashed AT&T's attempt to buy T-Mobile in 2011 for a much greater sum of $39 billion, saying a merger would essentially be anti-competitive. SoftBank's...

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25 Dec 12:56

Banks cap customers' debit cards in the wake of Target hack

by Adrianne Jeffries

The theft of credit and debit card information for as many as 40 million Target customers, first reported by independent journalist Brian Krebs, is prompting banks to take action.

JP Morgan Chase, Santander Bank, and Citibank have capped debit card purchases and ATM withdrawals for customers whose accounts may have been compromised. Some smaller banks are out-and-out canceling customers' cards.

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25 Dec 01:04

Prestigious speaker Mikko Hypponen cancels RSA talk to protest NSA deal

by Dan Goodin

Friday's report that RSA received $10 million to make an NSA-favored random number generator the default setting in its BSAFE crypto tool aren't yet creating any problems on Wall Street, with stock for parent company EMC rising two percent on Monday. That doesn't mean the revelations don't have important public relations fallout for the encryption software maker.

On Monday, Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer of Finland-based antivirus provider F-Secure, publicly canceled the talk he was scheduled to deliver at the RSA Conference USA 2014, which is slated for February. A highly sought-after security researcher who regularly speaks at Black Hat, Defcon, Hack in the Box, in addition to the more mainstream Ted and South by Southwest conferences, Hypponen said his cancellation was in protest of the recently revealed $10 million contract to make the NSA-influenced Dual EC_DRBG BSAFE's default pseudo random number generator (PRNG). Hypponen also cited RSA's decision to keep Dual EC_DRBG the default PRNG for more than five years after serious vulnerabilities were uncovered in it and Monday's non-denying denial from RSA in response to Friday's report from the Reuters news agency.

"I don’t really expect your multibillion dollar company or your multimillion dollar conference to suffer as a result of your deals with the NSA," Hypponen wrote in an open letter to Joseph M. Tucci and Art Coviello, the CEO of EMC and the executive chairman of RSA respectively. "In fact, I'm not expecting other conference speakers to cancel. Most of your speakers are American anyway–why would they care about surveillance that's not targeted at them but at non-Americans. Surveillance operations from the US intelligence agencies are targeted at foreigners. However I'm a foreigner. And I'm withdrawing my support from your event."

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24 Dec 17:15

NASA Scientists and Engineers Receive Presidential Early Career Awards

President Obama named five NASA researchers Monday as recipients of the 2012 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). These recipients, and 97 other federal researchers, will receive their awards in a ceremony early next year in Washington.
24 Dec 17:11

Search engines to block abuse images

Maxim Bange

.. it will make no difference. I agree

Search engines Google and Microsoft agree steps to make it harder to find child abuse images online, but some experts argue it will make no difference.
24 Dec 17:10

Russia drops first Greenpeace case

A British man arrested by Russia over Greenpeace protests in the Arctic has charges dropped, with the others expected to be freed soon.
24 Dec 17:06

Koning Filip trots op zijn volk

In zijn eerste kersttoespraak heeft koning Filip de Belgen bedankt voor de manier waarop ze hem hebben verwelkomd als hun vorst. "Uw enthousiasme en uw vertrouwen hebben me oprecht ontroerd", zei hij.

De nieuwe koning is trots op de prestaties van zijn volk. Hij noemde de Nobelprijs voor natuurkunde die François Englert deelde met Peter Higgs en de WK-deelname van de Rode Duivels. Ook prees hij de bezuinigingen die de regering heeft doorgevoerd.

Dialoog

Filip sprak een paar keer de hoop uit dat er meer wordt gepraat tussen Vlamingen en Franstaligen. "Mandela heeft ons getoond dat dialoog en verzoening de wereld kunnen veranderen. Laten wij ook in onszelf die kracht vinden."

Ook hamerde de koning op het belang van goed onderwijs, "om ieders kwaliteiten tot ontplooiing te laten komen". Filip: "Onderwijs en opleiding ontwikkelen het kritisch denken en stimuleren het samenwerken van mannen en vrouwen die zich zo kunnen engageren en hun verantwoordelijkheid opnemen."

Voor het eerst was er niet alleen een Nederlands- en een Franstalige toespraak; Filip had er ook een opgenomen in het Duits. Duitstaligen vormen een kleine minderheid in België.

24 Dec 17:05

What Justine Sacco, The PR Exec Fired For A Racist Tweet, Is Really Like In Person

by Richard Feloni

Justine Sacco, former director of communications at the PR firm IAC, sent the tweet heard 'round the world last Friday that ultimately lost Sacco her job:

sacco tweet 2

Justine Sacco FacebookShe tweeted before getting on a business flight to South Africa, and by the time she landed hours later, the Internet was obsessed and IAC had issued an apology. The next day, she was let go from the company.

As people perused her Twitter profile, they saw that she had plenty of other offensive, crass tweets, and it didn't take much to develop an idea of Sacco as a racist, a ditz, or a ditzy racist.

But no, argues her friend Jeff Bercovici of Forbes — she made a terrible decision she deserved to be punished for, but she's not a bad person. She's just really bad at Twitter.

"Justine is an easy person to like — frank, funny, quick to laugh," he wrote. To him, she's the kind of authentic PR person a journalist could appreciate.

They discussed Twitter over drinks a few weeks ago:

Although she'd been using the service for several years, Justine was still figuring out its nuances. One thing she'd notice was that people seemed to like the tweets that were a little bit risque or outrageous.

Bercovici remembered their conversation when he saw the backlash to her AIDS tweet. But to him, it wasn't coming from a place of hate:

I interpreted it as a self-deprecating joke about white guilt and Western privilege — about the sheepish feeling of being physically close to tragedy while remaining safe in an economic and cultural bubble.

In her public apology, Sacco apologized for her joke that was in poor taste: "Unfortunately, it is terribly easy to be cavalier about an epidemic that one has never witnessed firsthand."

Her father was raised in South Africa and allegedly spoke with African Twitter user Zac_R at the South African airport about how ashamed he was of his daughter's decision.

And though her tweets are no longer retrievable, Buzzfeed collected some of her most ludicrous ones before they were deleted. Like Bercovici said, Sacco's idea was that the best tweets were the most outrageous:

  • "As I sit and eat a bagel with lox, i would like to send love to my jews who are all starving themselves right now. #hungryhungryhebrews" — Oct. 8, 2011

  • "I can't be fired for things I say while intoxicated right?" — Jan. 30, 2013

  • "I just feel like @jimmyfallon would be such a grateful lover" — Oct. 3, 2013

  • "'Weird German Dude: You're in first class. It's 2014. Get some deodorant.' - Inner monologue as I inhale BO. Thank god for pharmaceuticals." — Dec. 20, 2013

Bercovici thinks that with the fatal AIDS tweet, there was obviously both "a failure of judgment and a poor attempt at expression." He believes that Twitter as a platform lends itself to both of those cases, not just for Sacco, but all its users.

SEE ALSO: Former IAC PR Director Justine Sacco Speaks Out About The Tweet That Got Her Fired

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24 Dec 17:04

Tour The Sky-High Infinity Pool Perched 57 Floors Above Singapore

by Jennifer Polland

marina bay sands infinity poolThe Marina Bay Sands hotel in Singapore opened its doors in 2010, to the tune of a whopping $5.7 billion.

That amount paid for the massive 2,561-room hotel, a museum, casino, restaurants, bars, a swanky shopping mall, and the pièce de résistance: the SkyPark, an insane rooftop pleasure dome with a 150-meter (492 ft.) infinity pool.

Located on the 57th floor, this pool offers stunning views of Singapore's financial district, Marina Bay, and beyond. It's the largest and highest infinity pool in the world, according to the hotel, and if you swim up to the pool's edge, it feels like you're about to fall off the top of the world.

The SkyPark is only open to hotel guests, which provides some exclusivity. Rooms at the Marina Bay Sands start at S$399 per night for a double.

We recently had the chance to visit the Marina Bay Sands, and were amazed by the SkyPark and pool. Here's what we saw.

Disclosure: Our trip to Singapore, including travel and lodging expenses, was sponsored by the Singapore Tourism Board.

For context, here's what Marina Bay Sands looks like from the outside. The SkyPark, which connects the hotel's three towers, looks a bit like a cruise ship perched in the air.



At 57 stories (650 feet), that's a long way down.



From the edge of the SkyPark, you can see how the entire pool curves.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider