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28 Apr 20:21

Nextly Flips Through Websites Like TV Channels

by Shep McAllister

If RSS stresses you out, or you're just looking for a new way to follow sites in the wake of Google Reader's demise, Nextly offers a more casual, TV-like interface to flip through all of the articles on your favorite sites.

Nextly could best be compared to a less pretty, but more efficient version of Flipboard. Once you log in to Nextly, you can browse through the posts and links that your friends have shared on Facebook and Twitter by tapping the right arrow key. Nextly also offers a ton of websites (including this one) from a variety of categories, and allows you to scroll through all of their articles with the same interface. Like RSS, you can scroll through every article posted to the sites, but by forgoing an unread count, I find the reading experience much more relaxing. Full article pages load up seemingly instantly with each tap of the right arrow key, so you can sift through a ton of content quickly until you find something you want to read.

Nextly isn't without its flaws though. Most notably, you can't add your own favorite sites, so this isn't going to completely replace your newsreader. However, it will load up full articles linked in your Twitter feed, so you could make a Twitter list with any sites that aren't included by default in Nextly. The service is also web-only for now, so it's a desktop-only experience. Despite these limitations, Nextly is a cool take on what a post-Google Reader world could look like, and worth checking out if you're jumping off the RSS train.

Nextly (Free) | Via MakeUseOf

28 Apr 17:11

Five Best Digital-to-Analog Converters (DACs)

by Alan Henry

A good digital-to-analog converter (or DAC) can make all the difference when listening to music, especially through headphones. We've talked about why they're so great, and how to choose a good one before, but this week we're looking at five of the best, based on your nominations.

Earlier in the week, we asked you to tell us which DACs you thought were the best. Not just the outright best in audio quality, or the highest-end, but the best for consumers looking for great audio quality for their money, and a solid listening experience in their headphones. We tallied up your votes, and while no five best anything audio list can possibly settle all rivalies, here's what you said:

Fiio Alpen-E17

The Fiio E17 is a DAC we loved enough to mention in our guide to selecting the right DAC, and our friends at Head-Fi hold it in high regard as well. It's an incredible sounding DAC for the price ($139 at Amazon), and it's a tiny, portable model, small enough to slide into a pocket. It's on the higher end of Fiio's DAC models, but it comes with interchangeable adapters so you can plug in different audio inputs, and almost all of the unit's features can be accessed and managed using the LCD display, so you don't have a ton of dials and knobs: just a thin, sleek piece of metal that can travel with you anywhere you go. It's not a perfect model (some people say the controls and menus are finicky, and even at its price point you could probably find better for a few bucks more), but it's a great and affordable USB DAC (with Amp) nonetheless.


ODAC (ObjectiveDAC)

The ODAC (or ObjectiveDAC) is actually a board that you can buy on its own and install into a case to build your own DIY DAC with the inputs and outputs you want. It's $99 in this form (and doesn't come with an amplifier), but if you want complete, stand-alone model, $149 will buy you the pre-built model in a case, ready to be powered by USB and push audio to a pair of headphones via its 3.5mm audio jack (but it still needs an amplifier in this form). If you want an amp, the O2+ODAC combo package (shown above) comes with the ODAC installed in a case with an O2 amplifier pre-installed. The whole thing will set you back $285, but it's a slim, trim package that'll look good on your desktop without taking too much space, and it'll sound much better. Both the original ODAC and the O2+ODAC combo are well regarded at Head-Fi, offering impressive sound in a small package, whether you get the amplified model or not.


Asus Xonar Essence One

The ASUS Xonar Essence One is just one component in the Xonar line, and as some of you mentioned in the call for contenders, don't let ASUS' name scare you off—the Xonar line of soundcards and USB DACs offers great sound in small, affordable packages. The Xonar Essence One for example sports a built-in amplifier, signal to noise above and beyond other DACs in its class, and a dedicated internal power supply, so you don't have to plug it into a brick or try to power it over USB. It's a little bigger than other models, but the extra space is well used: it can accept a number of audio inputs, including optical and S/PDIF in addition to USB. You'll pay for all of those features though, it'll set you back $600 at Amazon.


Schiit Bifrost

Schiit doesn't mess around. Just read through their FAQ page, and specifically their FAQs on the Bifrost—they're serious about audio, and they don't pull punches. Just as well—The Bifrost is a powerhouse. It's actually an upgradable DAC that you can pair with other Schiit audio gear, like their amplifiers. The Bifrost accepts optical, USB, and S/PDIF inputs and outputs via RCA for speakers (so it's not like the other DACs here, designed to drive headphones). The unit is modular and customizable, so you can get one with or without a USB input card, or upgrade the onboard USB to their Gen2 card. You can even select the volatge, plug types, and analog stage when you order. The Bifrost starts at $349 direct (or at Amazon), and if you want some user reviews before you consider dropping the cash, check out what the folks at Head-Fi have to say about it.


WooAudio WA7 Fireflies

Probably the most high-end of the DACs in the roundup, the WooAudio WA7 "Fireflies" are fully featured DACs with world-class vacuum tube amplifiers. They're actually remarkably small, and look a bit like art when sitting on your desk. They accept USB or RCA input, and can output to your headphones using the 3.5mm jack on the front. Behind its simple, minimalist design (and glowing vacuum tubes, thus the name "fireflies,") is an audiophile friendly system. With that design, and its high-end nature, comes a high-end price point: The WooAudio WA7 will set you back $999, with optional upgrade tubes adding another $100 to the price tag. It's available direct from WooAudio, and there are more than a few happy owners over at Head-Fi.


Now that you've seen the top five, it's time to put them to a vote to determine the Lifehacker community favorite!

Honorable mentions this week go out to Dragonfly DAC, a tiny, super-portable USB DAC that's been well reviewed and well regarded. It'll set you back $249 at Amazon. Also worth noting are the affordable but still great-sounding M-Audio Fast Track and M-Audio Fast Track Pro, both of which have been sadly discontinued. You can still find them pop up from used equipment sales and as refurbs from time to time though, often as low as $20, and they work just as well when recording instruments and audio gear as they do plugged into headphones and a computer.

Have something to say about one of the contenders? Want to make the case for your personal favorite, even if it wasn't included in the list? Remember, the top five are based on your most popular nominations from the call for contenders thread from earlier in the week. Don't just complain about the top five, let us know what your preferred alternative is—and make your case for it—in the discussions below.

The Hive Five is based on reader nominations. As with most Hive Five posts, if your favorite was left out, it's not because we hate it—it's because it didn't get the nominations required in the call for contenders post to make the top five. We understand it's a bit of a popularity contest, but if you have a favorite, we want to hear about it. Have a suggestion for the Hive Five? Send us an email at tips+hivefive@lifehacker.com!

28 Apr 13:49

Pirates Debut Super-Smooth Video Torrents

by Andy

filmFrame rate is a term used to describe the frequency that a device is able to capture or replay consecutive images required for the creation of moving video.

If each image was played back, say, once per second, the viewer would see a series of static images, but by presenting more frames in a shorter period an illusion of movement is created. As the FPS (frames per second) increase, the smoother the video appears to the viewer.

In TV and cinema there are three broad standards – 24p, 25p, and 30p – producing 24, 25 and 30 FPS respectively, but last year there was a step up when Peter Jackson’s Hobbit was shot in 48FPS.

However, for quite a while now video has been turning up on BitTorrent networks marked as 60FPS, so are these coming from official sources or is there some other explanation?

“Full HFR [high frame rate] movies are not available online via official channels,” Michael Stat of the HFRMovies blog told TorrentFreak.

“I have heard that 60 fps torrents of Star Trek (2009) and Avatar are both circulating, and maybe others. This is indeed significant because as of now the Blu-ray spec is not capable of handling 60 fps at 1080p. There is no ‘legitimate’ way to get HFR (High Frame Rate) versions of movies as of now.”

So, we had a trawl around the BitTorrent scene looking for 60FPS torrents to see what we could find. Movies do indeed seem rare to non-existent, but the same cannot be said about TV shows. TorrentFreak found dozens of releases, mainly for sporting events (combat sports, NBA, NHL) that boast this superior frame rate.

One Pirate Bay focused releaser, known as Secludedly, is dedicated to releasing UFC/MMA, boxing events and other TV shows. He has dozens to his name and many of them are uploaded at 60FPS. Starting to feel a little out of our depth with some of the technical wizardry involved, TorrentFreak caught up with Secludedly for the lowdown on his sources and processes.

“I live in an area, as well as subscribe to a service, that uses a modified MPEG-4 container to stream broadcasts to my home using AVC @ 60FPS. There are several companies out there making the switch from MPEG-2 to this modified MPEG-4/AVC due to better compression with higher quality, though it is not highly used yet,” he explains.

“I actually needed to get a special capture device to catch an emulation of the original broadcast since, as far as I know, none of your average capture cards support anything above 29.970 in the stream.”

fightWe asked about the attraction to these higher frame rates.

“These 60 frames each second basically make the transition from one frame to the next seem smooth and effortless. Think of it this way. If I am capturing a show on TV with the full 60FPS it was being streamed at, you’re getting the full motion of the video itself, especially in high-paced scenes where the viewer’s eye benefits from the frame-rate,” Secludedly explains.

“Take for example the 720p rips of The Ultimate Fighter that I do. Someone in the cage throws a punch at their opponent. Now, you see them punching, but it’s as if all you saw was a mere blur, and you can’t completely decipher where that punch landed because of the deduction of the frames in 24FPS or 30FPS. Why? Because the frames are pruned to a point where fast action like a punch cannot keep up in a lesser frame-rate.”

With double the frame-rate, however, things begin to develop.

“Change it to 60fps and your eye basically has double the visual capacity to capture that motion being performed as the punch is thrown, and it comes to look more realistic because you’re getting every bit of movement in the original capture of the video, making it seem more life-like.”

But of course, not all subjects are fast-paced and to some higher frame rates aren’t necessarily a good thing. When the Hobbit previewed last year in 48FPS Jackson said the movie felt “more real” and was “much more gentle on the eyes.” Some journalists, however, weren’t so keen and didn’t feel at home with this new level of smoothness.

“60FPS isn’t a globally accepted standard right now, so there are a lot of things out there, when streamed by the broadcast company, that are pushed to 60FPS even if the video framerate itself is too slow to benefit from it,” says Secludedly.

“From what I’ve personally observed, sports and fast action movies benefit GREATLY from the 60FPS variant. It’s smooth as butter, and I swear it can look better than many of the BluRays I own, and since I’m mostly just an MMA/Boxing provider, that’s fine with me anyway. I’ll cap TV shows sometimes as well, and it’s basically a draw of luck how it’ll turn out, but I’m fine with that,” he concludes.

Time will tell whether the interest in higher frame rates increase, but in the meantime we’re interested in discovering what’s out there. If you’ve found an interesting 60FPS non-TV torrent, particularly of a movie in 1080p, we’d love to learn of the details via the usual address (please don’t post links in the comments section)

This article has been updated to correct an error on the ability of the human eye to perceive images – explanation here.

Source: Pirates Debut Super-Smooth Video Torrents

28 Apr 09:47

Comic for April 28, 2013

27 Apr 23:09

American diplomat begs Australians to halt Game of Thrones piracy

by Brad Reed
Australia Game Of ThronesAmerica's ambassador to Australia wants the Aussies to act more like the Lannisters and pay their debts to HBO. Australia's News.com reports that American ambassador Jeffrey Bleich has castigated Australians for being "some of the worst offenders with among the highest piracy rates of Game of Thrones in the world." Bleich described the large-scale piracy of Game of Thrones as an "epic theft by online viewers around the world" and said that fans of the show had no excuse for illegally streaming it because "stealing is stealing." HBO programing president Michael Lombardo has previously said that he sees the widespread piracy of Game of Thrones as a "compliment" that has actually helped the company sell more DVDs.
27 Apr 23:03

PayPal Bans BitTorrent VPN / Proxy Service

by Ernesto

bittorent paypalPayPal is widely known for their aggressive stance towards BitTorrent sites, Usenet providers and file-hosting services, and now this policy has also been actively applied to a VPN provider.

PayPal has stopped providing service to the Germany based VPN provider GT Guard. In addition, all the company’s funds have been frozen.

GT Guard is a relatively small provider with about 450 active users, 90% of whom pay through PayPal. The company targets BitTorrent users who use the VPN and proxy service to download anonymously while bypassing throttling Internet providers.

GT Guard’s owner Mike was taken by surprise by PayPal’s decision as he is merely providing an anonymizing service to his customers. Initially PayPal stated that GT Guard violated the terms of service because it linked to adult sites but later on its affiliation with BitTorrent became a problem.

In an email received yesterday, PayPal’s Brand Risk Management department explains that “file-sharing, BitTorrent and Usenet websites, as well as similar services, require prior approval from PayPal.”

This policy has been in force since last year and has resulted in PayPal banning many file-sharing related services. However, the same strict demands generally don’t apply to a VPN provider.

During a previous phone conversation GT Guard explained to the payment processor that they were merely offering security services. In addition, the VPN/proxy provider also offered PayPal full access to the VPN and proxy. However, none of the above changed PayPal’s position.

GT Guard’s owner tells TorrentFreak that he would like to continue the service but that payment issues will most likely result in an exodus of customers.

This is not the first time that PayPal has gone after a BitTorrent-friendly VPN provider. Last year TorGuard was also banned but after a careful review PayPal decided that this was a mistake and eventually restored service.

Whether the action against GT Guard represents the early stages of a new crackdown on privacy services or is simply an isolated incident remains to be seen.

Source: PayPal Bans BitTorrent VPN / Proxy Service

27 Apr 23:01

Take Notes With the Google Keep Extension that Google Forgot to Make

by Shep McAllister

Chrome: Google Keep isn't the most full-featured note syncing service around, but it works well for casual note taking, and an unofficial Chrome extension lets you access it extremely quickly.

After you install the extension, navigate to Chrome://flags and enable the "Enable Panels Mac, Windows, Linux, Chrome OS" option. Now, just hit the extension's icon at any point to bring up a Gmail compose-style panel at the bottom right of your screen. From this panel (which you can resize in the settings), you can add a new note or to-do item, and view or delete the rest of the items already stored in Keep. It's so simple, that's it's surprising Google didn't make the same thing itself, but now at least you have the option to use Keep without monopolizing an entire browser tab.

Google Keep Extension (Free) | Chrome Web Store via AddictiveTips

27 Apr 13:38

Tribeca Film Festival Vine competition winners are stop-motion masterpieces

by Dieter Bohn
Vine-contest_large

The Tribeca Film Festival has announced the winners of its #6SECFILMS Vine competition. With 400 submissions in several categories, the winners were chosen by a small panel that included the "King of Vines," Adam Goldberg. The winners for most of the categories were Vines insofar as they used the app and were six seconds long, but beyond that most of the winners were essentially stop-motion pieces. Vines of tiny soldiers blasting eggs, magically moving a car with by waving your hand, and tiny paper bugs were all animated in short little films that are compelling and well-produced, but didn't necessarily break new narrative ground.

The same shouldn't be said for Matt Swinsky's "#LazerAndDonald close shave," which packs a remarkable...

Continue reading…

27 Apr 13:37

AOL Is Shutting Down AOL Music And Firing Staff Who Are Live-Tweeting The Bloodbath

by Josh Constine
Aol Music Grave

While there’s still few details and no official announcement, AOL is shutting down its AOL Music news properties and is firing their employees, according to tweets from the official AOL Music site Spinner’s account and some staff. Poor performance due to competition from independent bloggers may be to blame. However, reports indicate Winamp, SHOUTcast, and flagship music blog Spinner may survive.

AOL Music operates a variety of music news websites for different genres, the SHOUTcast Internet radio site, and the historic Winamp player it acquired in 2009 along with Spinner in a $400 million acquisition of Nullsoft.

Here’s how the pink slips flew this morning. First, Spinner tweeted: ”@Spinner: All of AOL Music is shutting down. Thank you all for your support. We had such a blast.” However, it appears that tweet has since been deleted. You can see retweets of it here, though.

Later, Spinner Editor Dan Reilly tweeted:

Well, we all just got laid off. AOL Music is finished.—
Dan Reilly (@danreilly11) April 26, 2013

Then Reilly and several other Spinner employees began essentially live-tweeting the demise of the site they ran:

Sitting in an HR meeting right now, trying to negotiate keeping our computers for a few more days.—
Dan Reilly (@danreilly11) April 26, 2013

Well, at least I found a good reason to finish off the whiskey at my desk.—
Dan Reilly (@danreilly11) April 26, 2013

Paul Cantor, the hip-hop editor of Spinner wrote:

Just lost my job. Actually I'm in the room losing it right this second, while tweeting. So yeah, hit me with any opportunities.—
  (@PaulCantor) April 26, 2013

The AOL Radio gave some official condolences but noted it will stay open:

It's a sad day here at @AOL. We'd like to say goodbye to our colleagues at @AOLMusic, @TheBootdotcom, @Noisecreep, @Spinner and @TheBoombox
AOL Radio (@AOLRadio) April 26, 2013

For those who are inquiring, @AOLRadio will still be around and we will continue to be bringing you the best music experience.—
AOL Radio (@AOLRadio) April 26, 2013

Meanwhile, other music sites such as The Onion’s AV Club are reaching out to the several dozen fired employees with job offers or freelance work, and the canned AOL staff seem receptive.

Along with music.aol.com, AOL Music runs the site The Boot (country music), Noisecreep (metal), Boombox (hip-hop), and Tour Tracker (concert tickets), which presumably are also getting the axe.

While Twitter’s new music app happened to launch last week, it’s unlikely it had anything to do with the AOL Music shut down. Instead, it’s likely a reflection of poor performance by the site. When they started over ten years ago, AOL Music and Spinner were some of the only options out there for breaking music news. But as the music blogosphere blossomed, readership likely fractured to different sites with more specific personalities and genre focuses.

Well from fellow AOL employees (they own TechCrunch too), we give our hearty condolences to the AOL Music and Spinner staffs. Hope that whiskey helps.

Haha. AOL Music is trending on Twitter. Finally figured our social media strategy out!—
Dan Reilly (@danreilly11) April 26, 2013

And thanks to everyone who offered their support today. I'm truly humbled. Now I guess it's time to tie one on.—
Dan Reilly (@danreilly11) April 26, 2013

Update: Perhaps not all is lost, as it seems Reilly has finished his meeting with HR and just tweeted:

Maybe you haven't heard the last of Spinner. I don't know. I'm glad I got to post this last interview today aol.it/11q8EH0
Dan Reilly (@danreilly11) April 26, 2013

Meanwhile, music writer J Herskowitz has tweeted:

I'm hearing that Winamp/SHOUTcast are still intact. #aol #music
J Herskowitz (@jherskowitz) April 26, 2013


27 Apr 13:35

Wikileaks wins in Iceland's Supreme Court court over credit card payment blockade

by Xeni Jardin
In Iceland, Wikileaks has won a victory against a financial blockade on donations. "The court upheld a district court's ruling that MasterCard's local partner, Valitor, illegally ended its contract with Wikileaks," reports BBC News.
    


27 Apr 13:35

List of British words not widely used in the United States

by Xeni Jardin
Here's a nifty Wikipedia entry: List of British words not widely used in the United States. One must be very careful not to confuse one's "bell-ends" with one's "fag ends." (HT: @FlaixEnglish)
    


27 Apr 13:24

MPAA Executive Tampered With IFPI Evidence in Internet Piracy Case

by Andy

evidenceMore than five years ago an investigation was launched into ‘Angel Falls’ a system of servers used by the so-called ‘warez scene’ for storing and distributing copyright content.

Following an undercover investigation, in 2007 rightsholders filed an official complaint and two months later the site was raided by authorities in Oulu, Finland. A total of 15 servers were discovered containing a range of copyrighted material including music, movies, TV shows, video games and software.

Represented by anti-piracy group CIAPC (known locally as TTVK), rightsholders said that the individuals running the Angel Falls topsite had caused damages to their businesses totaling six million euros. The developing copyright case was to be the largest in Finland’s history.

Earlier this month the trial concluded. Four men were found guilty and two were cleared as per our earlier report. However, according to Herkko Hietanen, a defense lawyer in the case from the Turre Legal lawfirm, the case had a somewhat interesting feature.

During the trial an IFPI investigator was called upon as a witness, but during his testimony something unusual came to light.

“After his presentation the defense counsels pointed out how the information shown on the video of his investigations did not match with the printed log files,” Hietanen informs TorrentFreak.

The video, a screencast of the investigation, showed a particular username accessing an Angel Falls FTP server. However, the corresponding text log for the same event showed a completely different username.

“When the IFPI investigator was asked about this he acknowledged that the names did not match. He said that the Finnish anti-piracy people and IFPI had collected the information together, but there was also an MPAA executive in the room while the evidence gathering took place,” Hietanen explains.

The IFPI investigator was then asked to reveal the name of the MPAA executive. He declined, but did offer an explanation for the inconsistencies in the evidence.

In an apparent attempt to hide the identity of one of their spies, the MPAA executive edited the evidence gathered during the session.

“The IFPI investigator handed over the evidence material to the MPAA senior executive who then changed the text file before the anti-piracy organization handed over the evidence to the Finnish police,” Hietanen says.

No one from the MPAA informed the defense that the edits had been made and the tampering was revealed at the worst possible time – during the trial. This resulted in the prosecutor ordering a police investigation into the changes that had been made.

“Police then proceeded by comparing the ‘work copy’ that the IFPI investigator produced with the material that police and the defending counsels had received. Police found out that the material had differences in over 10 files,” Hietanen reveals.

Considering the effort that had gone into the case, the outcome was somewhat of a disappointment. Two men were completely cleared and the four who were found guilty escaped with suspended jail sentences. The six million euros in damages claimed by the rightsholders was reduced to just 45,000 euros.

The fate of the MPAA investigator is unclear, but since his username was revealed in court it seems likely that if he used the same one on other sites, that will no longer be possible.

Source: MPAA Executive Tampered With IFPI Evidence in Internet Piracy Case

26 Apr 21:49

Privacy is 'off the table' in a 'post-9/11 world,' says New York City police chief

by Adrianne Jeffries
Dsc_5443_large

The rhetoric in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings is starting to recall the heightened fear that took hold after the terrorist attacks on September 11th, 2001. That's especially true in New York City, where the suspected bombers were allegedly planning a second attack.

In a press conference yesterday, both Mayor Michael Bloomberg and police commissioner Ray Kelly used the suspects' alleged plot to make the case for more surveillance cameras. "You’re never going to know where all of our cameras are," Bloomberg said. "And that’s one of the ways you deter people; they just don’t know whether the person sitting next to you is just somebody sitting there or a detective watching."

Continue reading…

26 Apr 21:49

Is AOL Music shutting down?

by Greg Sandoval
Aol-music-stock1_2040_large

AOL is shutting down many of the editorial units of AOL Music, which offers an array of music-related services. Employees of some of the units under the AOL Music umbrella have posted to Twitter that the entire division was shutting down, and AOL Radio, which will continue to operate, has issued an informal goodbye on Twitter to several AOL Music components.

It's a sad day here at @aol. We'd like to say goodbye to our colleagues at @aolmusic, @thebootdotcom, @noisecreep, @spinner and @theboombox

— AOL Radio (@AOLRadio) April 26, 2013

We have contacted AOL for comment but haven't heard back yet.

"Hey guys," began a tweet from Spinner.com, an AOL-owned music and entertainment news site. "Just found out from AOL that we're shutting...

Continue reading…

26 Apr 20:09

Grimm has been renewed for a third season.

26 Apr 20:09

Judge denies FBI request to hijack suspect's PC using spyware

by Joshua Kopstein
Hacker-stock1_2040_large

For a long time, the FBI has been refining its ability to get inside your computer whenever it thinks you might be breaking the law. But this week a Texas judge put his foot down, denying the agency a search and seizure warrant that would have allowed them to break into an unknown suspect’s computer system and secretly install malware that steals data and monitors activities.

It’s a rare but not unprecedented situation that casts law enforcement in a light strikingly similar to the hackers it’s normally hell-bent on pursuing. After deploying the payload, the FBI would be able to record keystrokes, read emails, and even take pictures from an attached webcam for a period of 30 days — the last part being somewhat ironic,...

Continue reading…

26 Apr 13:52

Snooper's Charter is dead! (for now)

by Cory Doctorow

Aw, yeah! The UK Communications Data Bill -- AKA the "Snooper's Charter," a sweeping, totalitarian universal Internet surveillance bill that the Conservative government had sworn to pass -- is dead! Yesterday, Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats in Parliament, announced that his party would not support the bill, and effectively killed it. Though I've been bitterly disappointed with some of the terminal compromises the LibDems have made, this makes me grateful to have them in Parliament. The kind of universal surveillance proposed in the Snooper's Charter was broadly supported by the last Labour government, which radically expanded state surveillance powers, and by the Tories -- thank goodness for the LibDems mustering a scrap of backbone at last!

The only downside is that the Open Rights Group had a whole series of great "Professor Elemental" videos that used pointed, excellent humour to mock and undermine the bill and drum up opposition to it, and now that's all going to go to waste (I blogged episode one yesterday).

Aw, who'm I kidding? This kind of thing never stays dead.

The snooper's charter has reminded Nick Clegg, finally, he is a liberal

    


26 Apr 13:50

Instapaper acquired by Betaworks, owner of Digg

by Sean Hollister
Instapaper_icon_640_large

Instapaper founder Marco Arment has just announced that he doesn't own his creation anymore. Betaworks, which also owns Digg, has acquired a majority stake in the read-it-later service. In a post on his personal blog, Arment explains that Instapaper had grown beyond its original beginnings in 2008 as a web-only service, and that maintaining it was no longer feasible for a one-person operation. "To really shine, it needs a full-time staff of at least a few people," he writes; hence the deal with Betaworks.

While it was an early pioneer in the world of iOS apps, in recent years Instapaper has faced increased competition from services like Pocket and Readability. However, Arment is quick to point out that the Betaworks deal places the...

Continue reading…

26 Apr 13:50

Recording industry threatens YouTube and other music services, after copyright law snafu

by Jacob Kastrenakes
Uscourt3_large

An important legal protection that defends websites like YouTube from being held liable for user-generated copyright infringement has been called into question by a New York state appellate court. Since the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) passed in 1998, companies have been protected under a provision known as "safe harbor" that makes them unaccountable for such content until they becomes aware of it. But now, courts disagree on whether that safe harbor applies to audio recordings created before 1972.

Confusion in the courts

In a case between Universal Music Group and the music streaming service Grooveshark, the court ruled that the DMCA-granted protections do not cover sound recordings that were made before 1972, which as the...

Continue reading…

25 Apr 22:31

Wild boars will inherit the earth

by Adrianne Jeffries
Wild_boar_large_jpg

Modern Farmer has an in-depth look at the "pig bomb," a population explosion of wild boars that is devastating crops, destroying natural terrain, and spreading disease around the world. The animals cause $1 billion in damage every year in the US alone. The exact causes of the pig bomb are uncertain and vary by country, but the population in the US has been increasing ever since European wild boars were imported sometime around the nineteenth century.

Continue reading…

25 Apr 22:27

Sweet, nostalgic film about a magic trick

by Cory Doctorow

R Paul Wilson sez, "I've just released a short film about magic and nostalgia. 'The Magic Box' is based on experiences and memories that many of us share and follows a handmade magic trick as it passes from one generation to the next."

This is as sweet as a sweet thing.

The Magic Box

    


25 Apr 19:51

Google Brings Its New And Improved File Viewer For MS Office Documents To Chrome Beta

by Frederic Lardinois
office_viewer_chrome_2

If you regularly need to open Microsoft Office documents in the browser, Google now offers you a new Chrome extension that renders Word, Excel and PowerPoint files directly in the browser. Currently, these documents open in a Drive-based viewer, but after you install the new Chrome Office Viewer (which is officially still in beta), these documents will open directly in the browser.

Until now, this feature was limited to Chromebooks, but now it’s also available for Chrome on Windows and Mac. You do need to run Chrome Beta, however, as it’s not available for the stable release channel of Chrome just yet.

The advantage of this new plug-in (which weighs in at over 20 megabytes), Google says, is that it ensures that you are protected from malware because the files open in a specialized sandbox “to impede attackers who use compromised Office files to try to steal private information or monitor your activities.”

While Google doesn’t say so in today’s announcement, chances are this new feature is at least partially powered by the technology it acquired when it bought Quickoffice last year. When Google launched the Pixel Chromebook in February, it also said it would port Quickoffice to Chrome, using its Native Client technology. Those three months are almost over, so we’ll likely see a bit more from Google with regard to Office documents in the browser.


25 Apr 15:39

Shaun The Sheep Gets A Spin-Off

Shaun The Sheep Gets A Spin-Off

Here come the Inglourious Baastards

Like the Scorpion King and Richard B. Riddick, only about 6000 per cent fluffier, Aardman's knitwear icon Shaun the Sheep is getting his own spin-off movie. Shaun The Sheep - for that is what it's called - pools the Bristol animation house's skills with the considerable financial muscle of StudioCanal in a deal that will see the Close Shave's star joining Wallace and Gromit in the stop-motion movie pantheon.{Shaun The Sheep Official Still}

The story, penned by Richard Starzak and Madagascar writer Mark Burton, sees the mischief-making ruminant land his farmer in a world of trouble. With the old man led away from the farm, Shaun is forced to take on a rescue mission to the big city with his flock in tow. Before you can say "adopt motorbike display formation", the fluffy posse are in deep on a daredevil, lamb-chop-or-glory adventure.

StudioCanal will no doubt be keen to let Aardman get on with striking its trademark balance of helter-skelter exuberance and knowing wit. In partnering up with the Bristol-based animators, the studio has followed in the auspicious footsteps of DreamWorks Animation (Chicken Run, Flushed Away, Wallace & Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit) and Sony Animation (Arthur Christmas, Pirates! In An Adventured With Scientists). "We're really happy to work with Aardman", says StudioCanal CEO Olivier Courson, "and join the flock. Shaun is a character you love at first sight whatever your age."

With a Shaun franchise already in place thanks to a successful TV series, there's gold in them thar hills. The prospecting business starts with Cannes and hopefully international distribution deals juicy enough to keep Shaun in those baa-tinis. (Sorry.)

    


25 Apr 15:38

Why Samsung Is Cloning Google Play On Its Smartphones

by Dan Rowinski

By putting its own media content store next to Google Play on its new Galaxy S4 smartphones, Samsung is essentially turning all of its users into beta testers that could determine the future of the Android operating system.

Think about it. Apple has iTunes. Android has Google Play. Amazon has its own Video On Demand with music and books. BlackBerry as its App World and Microsoft has its Windows Phone Marketplace. What do all of these companies have in common? To a certain extent, they all make their own operating systems, have application stores and sell content such as books, movies, music and television shows through their own proprietary channels. 

Where, exactly, does Samsung fit into this equation? 

With the release of the new Galaxy S4 flagship, Samsung has taken all of its media “hubs” and consolidated it all into one Samsung Hub that sells books, movies, television shows, games, apps and music. Samsung Hub comes preloaded on all new Galaxy devices and is pushed front and center with a widget on a home screen panel on its devices. 

Samsung is a little bit of a misnomer in this equation. It is not like Apple, which makes its own operating system. It uses Google's Android. By juxtaposing its Media Hub next to Google Play, Samsung is basically asking users to make a choice. Where will you get your content? From us or from Google?

What is Samsung's goal here? Is it preparing to fork Google's Android operating system and go it alone? With Media Hub, Samsung may be turning users into millions of "beta testers." If people end up using Media Hub for their content and apps instead of Google Play, Samsung may see reason to fork Android and go it alone. If not, Samsung can try to create its own hub of content that runs across all of its devices, just as Sony tried (and failed at) a couple years ago.

This… is a little awkward.

Tense Relations Between Samsung & Google?

Much was made earlier this year about how Samsung has grown so dominant in the Android ecosystem that it has become a threat to Google. In certain ways this is true, in many ways it is not. The hinge of the argument is that Samsung could fairly easily strip out all of Google’s services from Galaxy devices and serve similar services up itself. So, no more Gmail, Chrome, Google Play and so forth. 

Google executives have reportedly acknowledged that Samsung, while being its biggest Android ally, is also a cause of anxiety. It would not take much for Samsung to fork the open source kernel of Android and go it alone. Google would then lose out of the all-important user data and profiles that are the core of its advertising business strategy through mobile.

Samsung already makes many of its own alternatives to Google’s offerings through its TouchWiz interface. Samsung has its own email app and browser. Galaxy smartphones come loaded with dual apps for almost every core function – one from Samsung and one from Google. Usually, the Samsung ones are inferior.

And now there is Hub.

Hub Next To Google Play

Why do these mobile operating system makers put content in their app stores? Really, the profit margins are not great as companies like Apple, Google and Amazon have to license the content from the creators (movie studios, record labels etc.) and barely eke any money out of it for themselves. 

But what content does do is sell devices. The best thing that Apple ever did with the iPhone was create the App Store and open up iTunes so music and movies could be downloaded to people’s smartphones. You could argue that the App Store/iTunes has been responsible for selling more Apple devices than any other force combined. 

This fact is not lost on Samsung.

Yet, Samsung is a little bit different from Apple. Its product portfolio is broader, especially when you factor in that it makes televisions (which are some of the best available). Samsung is not just looking to sell smartphones, it wants users to go down the full profile and own a Samsung tablet, computer and TV.

That, Samsung’s director of product marketing Ryan Biden tells me, is the biggest push for Samsung Hub.

“Hub is really intended for people that own multiple Samsung devices,” Biden said. “It now allows us to deliver content to other devices from Samsung.”

That is why Samsung has baked in “screen-mirroring” into its recent Galaxy devices. Through Wi-Fi Direct, you can broadcast what is on your phone to your Samsung TV or vice versa. Apple can do this in a limited fashion with its Apple TV box and AirPlay but that then creates three devices – TV, smartphone, box – Samsung can do it with two. The kicker? It has to be two Samsung devices. 

Biden downplays the fact that, just by its very existence, Samsung Hub battles Google Play. In Samsung’s mind, they are for two very different use cases for a media store. 

That may not exactly be the case though. Google’s Android runs on smartphones and tablets and it has Google TV, where Android has been fitted for the big screen. Samsung has even made some of its Smart TVs with Google TV integration. So, the differences that Biden cites may not be as far apart as Samsung likes to think.

25 Apr 15:37

'Hacker' convicted by US court despite never hacking

by Matt Brian
Hacker-stock1_2040_large

After more than a year of bouncing between appeals courts, the hacking case involving David Nosal has ended with a conviction. Wired reports that Nosal was yesterday found guilty of conspiracy, stealing trade secrets, and violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) in the US — despite the fact he hadn't personally accessed anyone else's computer. While Nosal will seek to appeal the decision ahead of sentencing later this year, it's a high-profile win for the US attorney's office.

Continue reading…

25 Apr 15:37

The takeover of the US by the security-corporate complex

by Mark Frauenfelder

Kevin Kelly says:

The takeover of the US by the Security-Corporate Complex is documented by mainstream press. It is worse than I thought.

According to Dana Priest and William M. Arkin of The Washington Post, "Some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United States. ... An estimated 854,000 people, nearly 1.5 times as many people as live in Washington, D.C., hold top-secret security clearances. ... In Washington and the surrounding area, 33 building complexes for top-secret intelligence work are under construction or have been built since September 2001. Together they occupy the equivalent of almost three Pentagons or 22 U.S. Capitol buildings -- about 17 million square feet of space."

A hidden world, growing beyond control

    


25 Apr 15:37

UK police won't charge man filmed beating up a cyclist

by Rob Beschizza

Carlton Reid writes:

Cyclist 'BlackCountryBikeCam' suffered from an unprovoked, violent road rage attack from the driver of a white van belonging to a Birmingham pet shop. The incident was recorded on a helmetcam and this was shown to police. However, as the driver has no previous convictions and admitted his guilt (when told there was video evidence) West Midlands police advised the cyclist to seek a "local resolution", meaning the driver would not be charged with assault.

    


25 Apr 15:36

Ricin letter case enters higher realm of surreality

by Rob Beschizza
The Elvis impersonator "framed" for sending poison-tainted letters to top policians? BB reader Jonathan Grubb writes to inform us that the case has entered a surreal world which "includes a taekwondo instructor with a band called Dusty & the RoboDrum". Meanwhile, authorities are investigating the "fellow entertainer" while the now-freed former suspect heads off on an interview tour.
He appeared with his attorney Wednesday on CNN. During his detention, he said, investigators "treated me like gold, but they intensely interrogated me for hours. It was nerve-wracking." Then, at the prompting of a mischievous interviewer, Curtis began to sing a Randy Travis tune, "On the Other Hand," and hugged his laughing attorney, Christi McCoy of Oxford, Miss.
    


24 Apr 23:19

Swap Desktops with Each Other with Our Reader Wallpaper Pack 7.0

by Adam Dachis


Some of the best wallpapers we find come from you. You're finding awesome stuff on the web or making it yourself. These wallpapers don't always fit into a category, and so the reader wallpaper pack was created. This is our seventh. Come check out some great images from your fellow readers.

Want more? You can find previous reader packs here.

Bonfire

Download this wallpaper | JonnyPC12 1600x1200

Nyan Cat Portal

Download this wallpaper | JonnyPC12 1600x1200

JonnyPC12

Download this wallpaper | Cityscape 1600x1200

Wheelscape

Download this wallpaper | JonnyPC12 1600x1200

Old Flower

Download this wallpaper | JonnyPC12 1600x1200

Clear Waters

Download this wallpaper | Uncommon Carribean 2560x1440

Tower

Download this wallpaper | Ismail Affan Waheed 4288x2848

Banco

Download this wallpaper | Fernando 2560x1920

Tree

Download this wallpaper | Tristan TeNyenhuis 4752x3168

The Gate

Download this wallpaper | TheHeartwoodStudio 2560x1600

For more great wallpapers, check out our previous Wallpaper Wednesdays. Got any great wallpapers you'd like to share? Email me a link with "Wallpaper Wednesday" in the subject line. Submitting your own work is highly encouraged!

24 Apr 20:04

Amazon In Your Living Room: Company Is Reportedly Launching Its Own TV Set-Top Box This Fall

by Drew Olanoff
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According to a report from Bloomberg, e-commerce behemoth Amazon is preparing to launch a set-top box this fall, in hopes that you’ll consume all of your content through its spin on the now-common device. The company is already working hard to push its Kindle line to consumers, and this box would be for people who don’t want to deal with the fanciness of Apple products, the gaming nature of Microsoft’s XBox, the half-baked Google TV or the little engine that could, Roku.

Yes, this is a crowded market, but Amazon has something that these other companies don’t have, which is warehouses full of things to sell to people while they watch TV. I imagine that you’ll be able to shop as you would online or on your mobile device, right on your TV set. That means that the temptation to pick up that new TV, while you’re watching your old crappy one, could overcome you during a show. One button click and a new TV could be on the way.

Think of it as Home Shopping 2.0. With some interesting programming to watch, of course.

Instead of acquiring a smaller company that already has its own product in the wild, Amazon has decided to build this in-house, under its Lab126 umbrella in Cupertino.

Amazon has been building up its content viewers by bundling it with Amazon Prime shipping for free, trying to entice anyone who is already spending regular money with them to try other things out. What shipping has to do with free movies and TV, I don’t know, but customers seem to be happy with it thus far.

Reasons for doing a set-top box are obvious, with its original content being the most popular on the platform since it launched. As Amazon finds its way to more niche shows that it can present exclusively, the reasons to grab an Amazon-branded device for your TV makes more sense. In the same way that Apple leverages each of its devices to sell new ones, Amazon is learning how it’s done. It also doesn’t help that it has millions of shoppers visiting its site daily looking for new things.

Some could say that Amazon is late to the game, but I see Jeff Bezos and company taking smart, calculated steps to capitalize on mistakes made by others, much like it did with the Kindle, staying close to a purer paperback-esque reading experience.

[Photo credit: Flickr]