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22 Nov 14:07

Artillery shows HTML5 browser game platform

by Colin Campbell

Artillery today unveiled its eponymous HTML5 browser gaming platform, which the start-up claims "turns the modern browser into a game console."

Due for launch next year, Artillery's HTML5-based platform technology is shown off in a new YouTube video that provides a look at how the system works as well as offering information on developer tools. The video shows real-time strategy game Project Atlas running on the system.

"Our browser-based platform will be transformative for the industry," said Artillery CEO Ankur Pansari. "It makes core games easier to develop, play and enjoy, and provides everyone with a browser, access to triple A quality games typically only playable using a console or PC download."

Earlier this month Artillery a...

25 Sep 13:16

Can a blood test detect autism? Google Ventures is betting it can

by Ben Popper

The chances a child will receive a diagnosis of autism has increased 72 percent over the last five years, a dramatic rise that has stumped many health care experts. While there is no cure for autism, early detection and treatment in the form of behavioral therapy can dramatically improve the long-term outcome for patients. Unfortunately, many of the telltale symptoms of autism do not manifest in children until they are several years old.

One attempt to solve this problem comes from SynapDx, a startup founded by life science veteran Stan Lapidus and backed by Google Ventures. SynapDx is developing a blood test it hopes will be able to detect autism using genetic markers, allowing for a much earlier and more accurate diagnosis. Currently...

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25 Sep 13:16

Inside the F-35 fighter jet, the Pentagon's $1.5 trillion boondoggle

by Russell Brandom

One month after 9/11, the Pentagon launched into an ambitious program to build a new generation of fighter jets, smarter and more powerful than the increasingly outdated F-16. Twelve years later, Vanity Fair takes a deep dive into the F-35 program, which has bloated into the most expensive weapons system in American history, but seems unlikely to produce a combat-ready plane any time soon. The program is now seven years behind schedule, plagued by defective parts and frequent malfunctions. The most ambitious element of the project is the 360-degree heads-up display, designed to give pilots a "God's-eye view" of the airspace. But contractors have yet to deliver the intricate code designed to make the helmet display work, and the current...

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25 Sep 13:15

Is ethanol starving Africa?

by Amar Toor

Sugarcane is harvested for conversion into ethanol at the Addex Bioenergy Project in Sierra Leone. (Image: Addex Bioenergy)

The biofuel industry has enjoyed tremendous growth over the past decade, sparked by the ongoing search for renewable energy sources and government incentives for private sector investment. But ethanol and other biofuels have come under increased criticism in recent years, with some questioning their long-term environmental benefits, and others linking them to far more urgent disasters: food shortages in the world's poorest countries.

ActionAid, a UK-based charity, lashed out at Addax Bioenergy earlier this month, accusing the Swiss company of engaging in a biofuels “land grab” that has diminished food supplies...

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23 Sep 03:47

iOS 7 review

by Carly Page
iOS 7 review

Jony Ive's design overhaul breathes life back into Apple's mobile operating system


    
23 Sep 03:37

Mark Zuckerberg says NSA spying is worse than Facebook's privacy theft

by Dave Neal
Mark Zuckerberg says NSA spying is worse than Facebook's privacy theft

Calls for more transparency


    


23 Sep 03:36

Pirate Bay Blocking Orders Should Be Overturned Under EU Law, ISPs Argue

by Andy

In 2010, Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN went to court to try and force Ziggo, the Netherlands’ largest ISP, to implement a DNS and IP address block of The Pirate Bay.

Ziggo were later joined in the case by rival ISP XS4ALL, fighting the action together in the hope of avoiding a damaging precedent. Initially the court decided that blocking all subscribers went too far but BREIN wasn’t satisfied and took the case to a full trial.

In late 2011 the case was heard, with the ISPs arguing in favor of their customers’ right to have free access to information and BREIN countering that copyrights need protecting too.
In January 2012 the ISPs lost the case and BREIN celebrated victory.

Both Ziggo and XS4ALL subsequently filed appeals but in May 2012 yet more local ISPs – KPN/Telfort, UPC,T-Mobile and Tele2 – were ordered to block The Pirate Bay on the back of the original ruling.

Ziggo and XS4ALL appeal

Today the Ziggo / XS4ALL appeal is being heard in the Court of The Hague. Andreas Udo de Haes, editor of Dutch news site Webwereld, has been live tweeting from the courtroom and there are some interesting arguments to report.

The legal team for XS4ALL began with a reference to the failed SOPA/PIPA legislation in the United States which would have allowed DNS and IP blocking of ‘pirate sites’. Over in Europe, the EU Enforcement Directive is clear on ISP liability for third-party infringements and proactive blocking of communications is prohibited according to recent case-law (1)(2), the ISP’s lawyer argued.

XS4ALL went on to insist that blocking the full Pirate Bay site is a disproportionate response – even if 90% of the indexed content is illegal, many hundreds of thousands of legitimate files are now affected by the blockade.

In any event, the ISP believes that website blocking is ineffective in stamping out copyright infringement. Research carried out by ISPs and researchers has found that blocking The Pirate Bay is futile. If the tool is useless, then there can’t possibly be a need for it, the ISP told the court.

A combination of improved legal options and educational measures are a better bet, XS4ALL concluded.

Ziggo: File-sharing is an advertising channel

Next up was the lawyer for Ziggo, who began by pointing out that not only is the blockade of The Pirate Bay easily circumvented using proxy sites, but there are also plenty of alternative sites offering similar content.

Ziggo said that file-sharing had not caused the end of the music industry and that offering decent legal alternatives leads to a decline in piracy. The existence of iTunes shows that it is entirely possible to compete with ‘free’, the ISP said.

Ziggo’s lawyer said that while BREIN insists that the growth of file-sharing has damaging effects on culture, creativity and the entertainment industry, research shows that the sector is actually growing. The ISP said if there is indeed a relationship between piracy and legal services, it is a positive one, with piracy operating as an advertising channel.

Ziggo went on to underline that it has absolutely no connection to The Pirate Bay and operates only as an intermediary, yet it is expected to implement a very broad filter which indiscriminately blocks users regardless of the kind of content they’re trying to access.

The ISP added that the EU court previously held that preventive measures are only allowed if the fundamental rights at stake in the case are carefully weighed. The current blockade is the start of a very dangerous path, Ziggo concluded.

BREIN: Pirate Bay is run by teenagers profiting from ads of naked girls

After a short break, BREIN presented their case. The anti-piracy group said that despite the ISPs proclaiming the end of the Internet if they are forced to block sites like TPB, no such thing has come about. ISPs are able to block spam because their customers prefer it, but blocking a site such as The Pirate Bay is suddenly difficult only because their customers find it useful.

ISPs are in the business of selling bandwidth, BREIN’s lawyer said, but this is at the expense of poor artists and bankrupt record stores.

BREIN said that the nature of BitTorrent is clear – its users upload as well as download so are therefore infringing copyright. The Pirate Bay also infringes and represents the greatest instance of piracy “in the history of mankind” and must be stopped. Just this week it had Grand Theft Auto V in advance of its official launch.

BREIN’s lawyer said that 95% of the content indexed by The Pirate Bay is illegal and the legal content has “zero seeders and zero peers.” The site removes fakes, does not respond to takedown notices, and is run by “a pair of Swedish teenagers who turn 30 million euros in revenue with ads of naked girls.”

Countering claims that the blockade is ineffective, BREIN said that its research shows that when confronted with a block, users tend to go to other sites, an indication that the blockade is indeed working. Those other sites, BREIN said, will be targeted in due course.

Blocking is a proportional response and costs very little to implement, BREIN went on to argue, adding that according to Alexa, Google and Comscore, The Pirate Bay’s traffic dropped when the blockades were introduced and fell again when its proxy sites were hit. Surprisingly, BREIN told the court it had shut down around 200 proxies.

BREIN went on to argue that the blockades had been effective in reducing piracy and stated that previous studies reporting no decrease in torrent traffic after the blockades were introduced could not be relied upon. There had been an increase in legal BitTorrent usage, BREIN said, such as server syncing carried out by Facebook, traffic which the studies did not look at.

The anti-piracy group also contested the notion that DNS blockades are a form of abuse. BREIN said the technique was more akin to a configuration change rather than an attack on the Internet. As for the EU ruling in the SABAM case, BREIN said it had concentrated on the L’Oreal v eBay judgment. It was not asking for hugely expensive packet level filtering but a straightforward block of The Pirate Bay, in same way that the ISPs block thousands of spam sites every day.

Interestingly the judge then questioned BREIN on the effectiveness of the blockades. BREIN said its goal is to have The Pirate Bay blocked, however the judge recalled that BREIN had already admitted that people circumvent that ban by going to other sites. BREIN said they would tackle those sites next but Ziggo countered by stating that many of those sites are outside the Netherlands.

And now comes the wait, possibly as long as six weeks, for what could turn out to be an extremely important ruling.

Source: Pirate Bay Blocking Orders Should Be Overturned Under EU Law, ISPs Argue

23 Sep 03:35

Scammers Flood The Internet Archive With Pirated Movies

by Ernesto

scamThe Internet Archive is widely regarded as the largest online repository of free-to-share media.

The site hosts millions of public domain and Creative Commons licensed files, many of which can be downloaded through BitTorrent. In recent weeks, however, the Internet Archive has been flooded with more dubious content.

Searching the site for the titles of Hollywood blockbusters now results in long lists of seemingly pirated movies. With names such as “World War Z 2013 DVDRip Xvid AQAS” and “The World’s End full movie part 1 Xvid” it is safe to say the files in question are not in the public domain.

However, on closer inspection it turns out that these titles are not being uploaded by pirates who want to spread free movies, but by scammers trying to earn hard cash through the Internet Archive.

Those who try to download or stream the movies in question will soon notice that it’s not as straightforward as it looks. The “scam” uploads come in different shapes. Some have actually uploaded what looks like a movie file, but one that requires a special software such as the MKPlayer illustrated in the image below.

Needless to say, this is just a money-making scheme designed to lure people into downloading suspicious software.

mkplayer

Another trick scammers use is the YouTube video screenshot.

The page pictured below suggests that you can stream the film Epic directly from the Internet Archive, but those who click play will notice that it’s just an image which points to an external streaming site.

Whether the third-party sites do indeed stream these movies is unknown, but they do ask for the credit card details of those who are gutsy enough to give it a try.

Several movie links point to the same page at Cinemablast.info with fake user comments. When the “film” starts playing a notice pops up saying that the film was approved for all audiences by the non-existing Independent Film Rating Association of America, instead of the MPAA. After this notice visitors are redirected to the pay site.

epic-archive

While these type of scams are nothing new for the average BitTorrent search engine, this is the first time we’ve seen them abuse the Internet Archive.

One of the factors that may explain the increase in interest is the fact that the Internet Archive added BitTorrent downloads last summer. After this announcement several torrent search engines started indexing the site, which makes the scam torrents spread to other sites as well.

Unlike well moderated torrent sites such as The Pirate Bay, the Internet Archive has yet to find a good way to keep the scammers at bay. TorrentFreak asked the Internet Archive for a response to our findings, but we have yet to hear back.

Source: Scammers Flood The Internet Archive With Pirated Movies

23 Sep 03:34

HP offers support for Apple iPads

by noreply@idg.co.uk (Agam Shah)
Is your iPad out of warranty? Hewlett-Packard wants to help.
    


19 Sep 23:22

Microsoft won’t make Office editing free on iOS/Android, so Google does

by Jon Brodkin
QuickOffice for iPad and Android.
Google

Today Google made Quickoffice—its app for creating and editing Microsoft Office documents—free to all users of iPhones, iPads, and Android devices.

Quickoffice was bought by Google a year ago, and it has provided editing of Microsoft Office documents in their native formats on mobile devices for more than a couple of years. The app cost $20, but for the past year Google made it free to companies that are paying subscribers of Google Apps for Business. With today's update, it's free to everyone with a Google account, whether you pay for a Google Apps subscription or not.

Google already provided editing of Google Docs on its Drive application, of course. But while Microsoft Office documents can be imported into Docs, Quickoffice lets users edit them without taking that step, which can reduce compatibility.

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19 Sep 23:22

Vin Diesel Shows Off First Photo From 'Fast & Furious 7'

by Kirsten Acuna

fast furious 7

"Fast & Furious 7" just started filming this week and Vin Diesel is already sharing photos from the set with his fans.

Diesel put up a spoiler-y photo on his Facebook page along with the caption "The first week of filming, has been both intense and surreal ... P.s. One from set... a more somber moment in Our Saga..."

Earlier this summer, "Fast & Furious 6" broke records when it earned a massive $120 million at the box office over the four-day Memorial Day Weekend.

The film went on to earn more than $788 million worldwide.

MINI-SPOILERS AHEAD.





The "somber" scene depicts what appears to be a funeral. If you've seen "Fast & Furious 6," this scene shouldn't come as a big surprise.

"Fast & Furious 7" is scheduled for a July 11 release next summer.

vin diesel fast and furious 7

Fast and Furious also put out a video yesterday to announce the first day of production in Atlanta.

Check it out below:

SEE ALSO: The coolest cars from "Fast and Furious 6"

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19 Sep 23:22

iOS 7 loophole bypasses the lockscreen for access to photos, email, and Twitter

by Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Like iOS 6.1 before it, the latest version of iOS has shipped with a security loophole. The iOS 7 update, rolled out yesterday, allows users to bypass an iPhone or iPad lockscreen with a tricky maneuver that offers access to a user's photos, email, text messages, Facebook, Flickr, and Twitter accounts. The bug, first reported by Forbes, isn't easy to reproduce, however The Verge was able to confirm the problem on both an iPhone 5 and iPhone 4S. Apple has told AllThingsD that it's aware of the security flaw and plans to deliver a fix in a future iOS update.

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19 Sep 23:19

Opvallend veel klachten over Sony Xperia Z smartphone

In korte tijd zijn er bij de Consumentenbond meer dan 50 klachten over de Sony...
19 Sep 23:16

Ook België wil F-16 vervangen door F-35

BRUSSEL - Na Nederland lijkt nu ook België te willen kiezen voor de Joint Strike Fighter, de F-35, als vervanger van de F-16. Volgens de Vlaamse krant De Tijd bereidt minister van Defensie Pieter De Crem de aankoop voor. Een besluit valt pas na de verkiezingen van mei volgend jaar, zoals al werd vastgelegd in het huidige regeerakkoord.

19 Sep 23:16

Lufthansa kiest voor Boeing 777-9X en Airbus A350-900

FRANKFURT - Lufthansa bestelt in totaal 59 nieuwe vliegtuigen voor long-haul vluchten bij vliegtuigbouwers Boeing en Airbus. Dat maakte de Duitse luchtvaartmaatschappij donderdagochtend bekend. Bij Boeing bestelt Lufthansa 34 toestellen van het gloednieuwe type 777-9X; Airbus kan rekenen op een bestelling voor 25 A350-900’s.

19 Sep 23:16

Onderzoeksraad wil opheldering VS na 'bijna-botsing' boven Noordzee

DEN HAAG - De Onderzoeksraad voor Veiligheid wil dat minister van Defensie Hennis-Plasschaert opheldering vraagt aan haar Amerikaanse collega. Reden is een gebrek aan medewerking aan een onderzoek naar een bijna-botsing van een KLM-vliegtuig met een F-15 van de U.S. Air Force. Het incident op 19 april 2012 werd volgens de Onderzoekraad veroorzaakt door onvoldoende voorbereiding van de militaire vliegoefening 'Frisian Flag'.

19 Sep 23:07

State of Decay hits Steam tomorrow as an experiment in co-op development

by Dave Tach

The first is filled with the technology that ensures the zombie-filled action game runs on a wide variety of hardware.

"There's a huge difference between having a game up and running on PC and having a game running well on anyone's PC," the developer's founder told Polygon in a recent interview.

Undead Labs has been developing a Windows PC port of State of Decay alongside the Xbox 360 version that was released in June. Tomorrow, the developer will release a nascent PC version for $20 through Steam Early Access. We spoke with Strain about porting the game to PC and why he believes that bringing a work-in-progress to Steam will produce the best possible game.

"We wanted really to be able to support the full spectrum of modern hardware."

...

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19 Sep 23:07

iOS 7 lock screen bug allows full access to Photos app, contact info

by Andrew Cunningham

New software comes with new features, but in the case of iOS 7, it also comes with new bugs. Forbes reports that a bug in the new Control Center feature can allow an attacker with physical access to your device full access to your Photos app even if you've protected your phone with a passcode. After following the steps to reproduce the bug, the attacker can open the Camera app from the multitasking window and then open the Photos app from there.

We were able to replicate this bug on an iPhone 4S, iPhone 5, fifth-generation iPod touch, and an iPad mini, so it seems likely that this affects all devices that can be upgraded to iOS 7. The vulnerability was discovered by Jose Rodriguez, who also uncovered a lock screen bug in iOS 6.1.3 (but not the earlier bug in version 6.1).

The bug doesn't allow an intruder to gain unfettered access to much—you can't open apps that can't be opened by Control Center, and even thumbnails of running apps in the multitasking list are totally blank. An attacker can't see what you were looking at the last time you had Safari or Mail open. However, access to the Share menu from the Photos app means that they can view your contacts, send out pictures via the Messages app, and send pictures via any e-mail or social media accounts you've configured. Stored e-mails, passwords, and other non-photo data does not appear to be accessible, and while you can see all of the icons on the device's Home screen, you can't actually launch any of them.

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19 Sep 23:07

3 Traits Shared By Gen Y Leaders

by Vivian Giang

Thayer Academy

Technology has a huge impact on the way Gen Y thinks about work and leadership.

Former GE CEO Jack Welch once said: "Generation Y is the most exciting group in the world. They want to do their own thing, they want to change the world. Technology’s changed so fast. The internet’s come; they can do it."

Olaf Swantee, CEO of Everything Everywhere (EE), a telecommunications company, quotes Welch in his recent post on LinkedIn.

Swantee says there are three characteristics that are shared by the tech-savvy leaders of tomorrow:

1. They are collaborative decision-makers.

"Having access to a wide network of expert collaborators will become crucial, as more views will be required for decision-making," says Swantee. The future leaders will need to be connected, able to get along with others, and express their views in a way that's easy to understand.

2. They are flexible and able to connect on a personal level.

Swantee says: "Gen Y leaders work to shape the business to suit its talent as much as they shape talent to the business. The workplace, working practices, and tools of business will become much more personal and customizable ... The working environment will become more flexible and human."

Gen Y-ers grew up with technology and are able to interact with professionals in their networks on a more personal level compared to previous generations.

3. They are prepared to challenge the status quo.

"They are passionate about fast progress, innovation and entrepreneurship. Speed of decision-making will become paramount in a wider variety of businesses. Access to data and insight will become real time in order to support ‘fast twitch’ responses to problems and exploitation of opportunities," he says.

Again, a lot of this has to do with Gen Y growing up with technology and witnessing how fast companies and industries change. These younger workers know that they need to change quickly and strategically if they want to stay ahead of the game.

"Gen Y leaders carry their experiences as employees into senior roles," says Swantee. "They do not adapt their style to that of the previous Baby Boomer generation in order to conform to the management group they have joined. Gen Y influence is growing and businesses stand to benefit greatly from this inclusive, diverse, flexible, and transformational working environment that they will bring to the leadership ranks."

Want your business advice featured in Instant MBA? Submit your tips to tipoftheday@businessinsider.com. Be sure to include your name, your job title, and a photo of yourself in your email.

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19 Sep 23:06

iOS 7's Lock Screen Has A Potential Security Issue That Gives Access To Photos, Email, And Twitter

by Kyle Russell

iphone ios 7 security flaw

The latest version of Apple's mobile operating system has only been out a day and reports are already coming in about a potential security issue involving a bug in the lock screen.

Forbes's Andy Greenberg reports that iOS 7 users could be vulnerable to a technique that allows a person to access photos, email, and Twitter without knowing the device's password.

The bug involves using the new Control Center feature from the lock screen to access the Clock app. From there, a person can use a combination of clicks of the power and home buttons to get access to multitasking on the device.

If the Camera app has been recently used, the person then has access to photos on the device. From there, they can use iOS 7's sharing features to get to email and Twitter.

Mark Gurman has an article on 9to5Mac with the steps to replicate the bug.

Here's a video showing the bug in action:

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19 Sep 19:45

How To Make Your Mac Faster

by Justin Gmoser
Maxim Bange

LoL: Mac == XP

Learn how to increase the speed of your Mac in the video below. Click for sound.

 
<div>Please enable Javascript to watch this video</div>

 

Produced by Justin Gmoser

SEE ALSO: Use Pivot Tables In Excel To Organize Confusing Raw Data In Seconds

Follow Us: On YouTube

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19 Sep 19:44

HP SlateBook x2 review: HP takes on ASUS with a dockable Android tablet

by Engadget

HP SlateBook x2 review: HP takes on ASUS with a dockable Android tablet

Until now, ASUS hasn’t had much competition in dockable Android tablets. Sure, we’ve seen the odd model from Lenovo and other companies, but for the most part, “Transformer” has become one of those words like “Kleenex” — you know, the kind that refers just as much to a category as a specific brand. Nonetheless, HP is throwing its hat in the ring. The SlateBook x2, only the company’s second Android tablet, is a 10-inch slate that competes on price as much as performance. For $480, the keyboard dock comes included, and the tablet itself boasts some top-notch specs, including a 1,920 x 1,080 screen and a Tegra 4 processor. And, of course, in addition to being a keyboard, that dock has a built-in battery of its own, promising to extend the total runtime to up to 12.5 hours. So is it good enough that you’ll remember not to call it a Transformer?%Gallery-slideshow88713%

Filed under: Tablets, HP

Comments

The post HP SlateBook x2 review: HP takes on ASUS with a dockable Android tablet appeared first on AIVAnet.

19 Sep 19:41

Android-custom-rom CyanogenMod is ondergebracht in bedrijf

by Bauke Schievink
De makers van de populaire custom rom voor Android CyanogenMod hebben hun software in een apart bedrijf ondergebracht. Het bedrijf Cyanogen heeft daarbij een aantal mensen full time in dienst, waaronder CyanogenMod-pionier Steve Kondik.
19 Sep 19:41

Even the trees are watching: collecting the Stasi's hidden cameras and secret radios

by Adi Robertson

In January of 1990, demonstrators stormed the headquarters of East Germany's secret police, the Stasi. Breaking into the building, they recovered reams of documents detailing the agency's extraordinary surveillance of citizens, though many had already been frantically shredded by Stasi officials. The new government declared that the sacked Stasi headquarters should be renovated as a memorial, and the center now known as the Stasi museum opened its doors not long after German reunification. In a fascinating photo essay, programmer Egor Egorov captures the spy technology preserved in the museum, from camera-filled watering cans to hastily smashed hidden microphones — all meant to be used alongside the Stasi's meticulous disguises. A few...

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19 Sep 19:40

'Het diner' het meest vertaald

'Het diner' van schrijver Herman Koch is sinds kort het meest vertaalde Nederlandstalige boek ooit. De bestseller verschijnt in 33 talen en in 37 landen.

Het boek van Koch verslaat daarmee de bestsellers van Karel Glastra van Loon ('De passievrucht'), Harry Mulisch ('De aanslag') en Cees Nooteboom ('Het volgende verhaal'), die in 31 talen werden uitgegeven.

Vertaaldeal met Ethiopië

Volgens directeur Chris Herschdorfer van uitgeverij Ambo Anthos kreeg de toch al goed lopende verkoop dit jaar een impuls nadat de roman in de bestsellerslijst van de New York Times was terechtgekomen.

"We zagen dat het succes in Europa weer een zetje kreeg. En we hadden plotseling een vertaaldeal met Ethiopië om maar een ver buitenland te noemen", zegt Herschdorfer.

'Het diner' gaat over twee bevriende echtparen, van wie de zonen een gruwelijk misdrijf hebben begaan.

19 Sep 19:39

Belgische koning trekt tweet in

Koning Filip van België heeft een enthousiaste tweet ingetrokken. "Ik voel me goed als Koning! Leve België!", stond er kort te lezen op MonarchieBe, het officiële Twitteraccount van het Belgische koningshuis. Na enkele minuten verdween de tweet zonder uitleg.

Wat er precies is gebeurd, is niet duidelijk. Een woordvoerder van het paleis wil tegen de VRT alleen zeggen dat het niet de koning zelf was die de tweet plaatste. Wie het dan wel deed en of het account misschien is gehackt, kon de woordvoerder niet zeggen.

'Zoekende'

Koning Filip twittert sinds begin deze maand. "Hij is nog wat zoekende op Twitter", zegt correspondent Joris van Poppel. "Het is nu een combinatie van officiële gelegenheden en persoonlijke boodschappen."

Zo verstuurde Filip eerder deze week de tweet: "Straks Blijde Intrede in Henegouwen, nu kinderen net op school afgezet." Kort daarna verscheen de boodschap ook, zoals gebruikelijk, in het Frans.

De tweets van zijn Nederlandse collega Willem-Alexander zijn een stuk formeler. Hier zet de Rijksvoorlichtingsdienst alleen officiële mededelingen door.

19 Sep 19:39

Two Years After That Famous Report On Chinese Ghost Cities Things Might Be Getting Even Worse

by Mamta Badkar

china ghost cities

China's ambitious urbanization plan has helped create many ghost cities.

2 years after visiting some of China's most infamous ghost cities and malls, Australian reporter Adrian Brown revisited them for SBS Dateline, to see if they had changed.

His tour of Tianducheng, the Paris replica that we reported on, the South China Mall, and Kangbashi in Ordos, China's most famous ghost city, showed that they were still empty.

Tom Miller, a Chinese urbanization expert told Brown, it's as though Chinese officials "basically draw a circle on a map and they build it, and then they expect people to go and move in." The "gamble" is that cities might be empty now, but they will be filled up later, an argument Stephen Roach has previously made.

While some argue that this is symptomatic of a massive property bubble in China, this really shows the presence on individual property bubbles across China.

Tianduncheng, a city intended to replicate Paris was Adrian Brown' first stop.



The city has a mix of Parisian town houses, a replica of the Eiffel Tower.



And an imitation of the fountains of Versailles.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






19 Sep 19:38

BMW maakt automatisch filerijden mogelijk

by Bauke Schievink
BMW heeft technologie ontwikkeld waarmee auto's automatisch kunnen filerijden. Wanneer de bestuurder in een file terechtkomt kan de auto automatisch de voorganger volgen. De technologie komt vanaf eind dit jaar beschikbaar.
19 Sep 18:53

Aaron Paul: People Harass Me To Find Out How 'Breaking Bad' Ends

by Kirsten Acuna

aaron paul jimmy kimmel

"Breaking Bad" star Aaron Paul was on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" Wednesday to discuss his crazy fan following and the end to AMC's hit series.

With only two episodes left, Paul tells Kimmel fans are constantly asking him about the ending to the show, something he doesn't mind sharing.

"It is just madness out there." says Paul."People come up to me constantly just begging to have me tell them what is happening with the show ... how it's going to end. They just constantly harass me. Finally, I'm just like, 'All right, fine. I will tell you.'"

However, before Paul gets the chance to say another word, he says fans stop him.

"They just start screaming at me, 'How dare you! Don't tell me!'" Paul tells Kimmel.

If you're wondering about the last two episodes, Paul says it continues to get even crazier. (That's difficult to imagine after last week's jaw-dropping episode.)

"Last week's episode was pretty messy," says Paul. "The final two episodes are so much more messier. It goes to a place where … It gets so crazy, I can't wait for people to see how it all plays out."

Watch Paul discuss the final episodes of "Breaking Bad" below:

Paul also shared that he held a screening of the most recent episode for fans in his hometown.

However, things got a little out of hand when he gave away tickets by hosting a scavenger hunt around town. Paul says fans started flocking to areas he was at and wrestled each other for a chance to watch with him.

Hear about Paul's "Breaking Bad" scavenger hunt:

SEE ALSO: Behind-the-scenes photos from Sunday's episode of "Breaking Bad"

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19 Sep 18:39

NSA Chief Built Star Trek Like Command Center

by samzenpus
Maxim Bange

Found, thanks to Hein-Jan Leliveld on The Old Reader

Bruce66423 writes "As the NSA scandal moves from appalling to laughable, the latest report in the Guardian indicates that the current NSA chief spent US taxpayers' money to create a command center for his intelligence operations that was styled just like Star Trek. From the PBS News Hour report: 'When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center. It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a 'whoosh' sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather 'captain's chair' in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen. "Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard," says a retired officer in charge of VIP visit '"

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