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12 Mar 15:11

Murder machines: why cars will kill 30,000 Americans this year

by Mark Frauenfelder

Ben Marks of Collectors Weekly says, "We just published a piece about how streets came to be the exclusive domain of automobiles (spoiler alert: they didn't start out that way). Among other sources, we interviewed Peter Norton, author of Fighting Traffic, and Ben Fried, the New York editor of Streetsblog."

In 1924, recognizing the crisis on America’s streets, President Herbert Hoover launched the National Conference on Street and Highway Safety. Any organizations interested or invested in transportation planning were invited to discuss street safety and help establish standardized traffic regulations that could be implemented across the country. Since the conference’s biggest players all represented the auto industry, the group’s recommendations prioritized private motor vehicles over all other transit modes.

Norton suggests that the most important outcome of this meeting was a model municipal traffic ordinance, which was released in 1927 and provided a framework for cities writing their own street regulations. This model ordinance was the first to officially deprive pedestrians access to public streets. “Pedestrians could cross at crosswalks. They could also cross when traffic permitted, or in other words, when there was no traffic,” explains Norton. “But other than that, the streets were now for cars. That model was presented to the cities of America by the U.S. Department of Commerce, which gave it the stamp of official government recommendation, and it was very successful and widely adopted.” By the 1930s, this legislation represented the new rule of the road, making it more difficult to take legal recourse against drivers.

Meanwhile, the auto industry continued to improve its public image by encouraging licensing to give drivers legitimacy, even though most early licenses required no testing. Norton explains that in addition to the revenue it generated, the driver’s license “would exonerate the average motorist in the public eye, so that driving itself wouldn’t be considered dangerous, and you could direct blame at the reckless minority.” Working with local police and civic groups like the Boy Scouts, auto clubs pushed to socialize new pedestrian behavior, often by shaming or ostracizing people who entered the street on foot. Part of this effort was the adoption of the term “jaywalker,” which originally referred to a clueless person unaccustomed to busy city life (“jay” was slang for a hayseed or country bumpkin).

“Drivers first used the word ‘jaywalker’ to criticize pedestrians,” says Norton, “and eventually, it became an organized campaign by auto dealers and auto clubs to change attitudes about walking in the street wherever you wanted to. They had people dressed up like idiots with sandwich board signs that said ‘jaywalker’ or men wearing women’s dresses pretending to be jaywalkers. They even had a parade where a clown was hit by a Model T over and over again in front of the crowd. Of course, the message was that you’re stupid if you walk in the street.” Eventually, cities began adopting laws against jaywalking of their own accord.

Murder machines: why cars will kill 30,000 Americans this year

    






12 Mar 15:06

Just Like the Rest of Your Office's 20-Year-Old Technology...

Chris PeBenito

That brings back the memories.

10 Mar 14:00

Valve Asks Users to Disable SELinux to Play Portal 2, Linux Community Reacts

Chris PeBenito

Nice to hear there is a reaction to bad advice like this, unlike in the past.

Softpedia: When one of the Valve developers closed a bug related to Portal 2 recommending that the users disable a security feature, the Linux community reacted.

25 Feb 22:05

[Fail] Archos CEO Demos A Water-Resistant Phone On Camera By Submerging It... And It Goes Dead

by Bertel King, Jr.
Chris PeBenito

LOL, now that's embarrassing.

Archos-ThumbHardware demos don't get much worse than this one. Archos CEO Loic Poirier wanted to demonstrate just how much punishment one of his company's smartphones could take, but he didn't get quite the results he wanted. He was able to drop the phone just fine, but when he placed the device in a glass and filled it with water, apparently the handset had taken all it could handle.


Le directeur d’Archos casse un smartphone censé...

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[Fail] Archos CEO Demos A Water-Resistant Phone On Camera By Submerging It... And It Goes Dead was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


22 Feb 11:58

The iPad Commode Caddy w/ Toilet Paper Roll Holder for $35 + free shipping

Chris PeBenito

I'm not surprised that this product exists, though I do find it sad.

Amazon offers its Prime members the The iPad Commode Caddy for iPad + Roll Holder, model no. PAD-TSB for $34.99 with free shipping. (Non-members can spend $35 or more to qualify for free shipping; otherwise, it adds $13.09.) That's the lowest total price we could find by $11, although we saw it with pickup for $3 less in December. It can hold second- to fourth-generation iPads with its flexible 10" gooseneck. It also features a snappable paper roll tube.
11 Feb 14:42

VERSI Dock / Stand will prop your smartphone or tablet up at any angle you desire [KICKSTARTER]

by Quentyn Kennemer
Chris PeBenito

IMO this would be so much more interesting if it had an option with an integrated Qi charger.

Ready for another interesting Kickstarter project? This one is being called the VERSI, which apparently stands for “versatile, ergonomic, rugged, stable and iconic.” Simply put, it’s a desktop dock / stand that can fit any smartphone and tablet. That alone isn’t exciting, of course, as there have been many of those in the past.

But the VERSI will make its name from the ability to position your smartphone or tablet however you’d like. Whether you like a low, slightly elevated angle or want the device right up close and personal, the VERSI will be able to twist and turn to your hearts’ content.

The quick GIF below should give you a pretty good idea of the different types of angles you’ll be able to achieve, though the video is also sitting above in case you’re more interested in that. VERSI only weighs 585 grams, and was designed in a way to protect both your desk and your devices from scratches and scuffs.

versi moving

The base of the stand also includes grooves for holding pens and pencils, business cards and other typical office supplies. VERSI also includes clips for hiding whatever cable you use to charge whatever device you’ll be propping up. Finally, adjustable clips makes VERSI compatible with pretty much any “normal” case out there (though no promises are made if you happen to put a tank of a case on your smartphone).

The project is pretty cheap, with the Kickstarter goal being set to just $3,000. That goal has already been surpassed as of the time of this writing, with over $5,700 dollars pledged with 22 days to go. The cheapest option to get one of these is for $69, though you should note that is only an early bird option and there are only 10 units available at that price.

versidimensions ksmain IMG_3924 IMG_3862 ks650x275 IMG_3845 IMG_3795 IMG_3702

The next price is $89 for the standard anodized aluminum VERSI. Other tiers include options for adding LED lights, as well as a dual VERSI option for having two devices propped up simultaneously. It’s a pretty neat project, so be sure to head to Kickstarter and drop some cash if you’ve been looking for something like this. It’s expected to ship starting April 2014.

21 Jan 19:19

Watch how this firefighter is doing awesome work with Google Glass

by Richard Devine

Google's latest addition to its Explorer Story's is this, the tale of firefighter Patrick Jackson from North Carolina. Patrick is also a Google Glass Explorer, and he's taken to developing for it, with an eye to helping out his fellow firefighters out in the field. 

Check it out. It's a long way from becoming a widespread reality, but as far as uses for Glass goes, this has to rank as one of the most awesome. 


    






21 Jan 17:53

Don't Use Fire to Remove TP from Tree

by Miss Cellania

Cheryl Crausewell of Dora, Alabama, found that someone had TPed the trees in her yard on Saturday night. The family tried to clean up the mess, but some of the toilet paper in a magnolia tree was out of their reach. What to do? Maybe they should have tried a ladder, but instead they set it on fire. A small piece of paper drifted out to the yard and ignited the grass.

"It just popped out into a little patch and we tried to put it out and it just kept going, so I was trying to keep it from going down the front porch and came down the bank and around the back of the house," she said.

Within seconds, Crausewell said the fire spread to the backyard where the propane gas tank from a grill may have added fuel to the fire.

Crausewell, her son, her elderly aunt, her mother and her aunt's caregiver were all at home when the fire started around 2 p.m. Everyone was able to get out safely.

The video at WBRC shows the scorched yard and toilet paper still in the trees, as well as the house, which is a total loss. -via Uproxx

(Image credit: Linda Spears)

16 Jan 14:33

Our Greatest Musical Achievement as a Species: "Inspector Gadget" on Tesla Coils

Submitted by: Unknown

16 Jan 14:31

Impenetrable Security

Impenetrable Security

Submitted by: Unknown

15 Jan 20:31

Ford Exec: 'We Know Everyone Who Breaks the Law' Thanks To Our GPS In Your Car

by Soulskill
An anonymous reader sends this report from Business Insider: "[Ford VP Jim Farley] was trying to describe how much data Ford has on its customers, and illustrate the fact that the company uses very little of it in order to avoid raising privacy concerns: 'We know everyone who breaks the law, we know when you're doing it. We have GPS in your car, so we know what you're doing. By the way, we don't supply that data to anyone,' he told attendees. Rather, he said, he imagined a day when the data might be used anonymously and in aggregate to help other marketers with traffic related problems. Suppose a stadium is holding an event; knowing how much traffic is making its way toward the arena might help the venue change its parking lot resources accordingly, he said." Farley later realized how his statement sounded, and added, "We do not track our customers in their cars without their approval or consent."

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.


    






09 Jan 13:33

It's So Cold That an Escaped Prisoner Turned Himself in

by John Farrier

Robert Vick is a prisoner at a minimum security prison in Lexington, Kentucky. He's serving 6 years for burglary and 5 years for possession of a forged instrument. On Sunday, he escaped. He spent about 20 hours outside wearing only a prison issue jacket, shirt and pants.

On Monday, he walked into the office of a local motel and asked the clerk to call the police. Vick had had enough of the winter storm and wanted to get warm.

Paramedics briefly examined him before police returned him to prison.

-via Legal Juice

07 Jan 13:32

OpenSSL site defacement involving hypervisor hack rattles nerves (updated)

by l33tdawg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSSL

Update: About 12 hours after this brief was published, OpenSSL updated the advisory to say: "The OpenSSL server is a virtual server which shares a hypervisor with other customers of the same ISP. Our investigation found that the attack was made through insecure passwords at the hosting provider, leading to control of the hypervisor management console, which then was used to manipulate our virtual server."

The official website for the widely used OpenSSL code library was compromised four days ago in an incident that is stoking concerns among some security professionals.

Tags: 
30 Dec 19:29

Utility companies go to war against solar

by Cory Doctorow


Utility companies across America are fighting solar, imposing high fees on homeowners who install their own solar panels to feed back into the grid. This one was predictable from a long, long way out -- energy companies being that special horror-burrito made from a core of hot, chewy greed wrapped in a fluffy blanket of regulatory protection, fixed in their belief that they have the right to profit from all power used, whether or not their supply it.

Bruce Sterling once proposed that Americans should be encouraged to drive much larger trucks, big enough to house monster fuel-cells that are kept supplied with hydrogen by decentralized windmill and solar installations -- when they are receiving more power than is immediately needed, they use the surplus to electrolyze water and store the hydrogen in any handy nearby monster-trucks' cells. When the wind isn't blowing or the sun isn't shining, you just plug your house into your enormous American-Dream-mobile -- no need for a two-way grid.

This solution wasn't just great because it aligned the core American value of driving really large cars with environmental protection, but also because it was less vulnerable to sabotage from hydrocarbon-addicted energy companies.

HECO, despite criticism from Hawaii’s solar industry, denies the moratorium is anything more than an honest effort to address the technical challenges of integrating the solar flooding onto its grid.

The slowdown comes in a state where 9 percent of the utility’s residential customers on Oahu are already generating most of their power from the sun and where connections have doubled yearly since 2008.

In California, where solar already powers the equivalent of 626,000 homes, utilities continue to aggressively push for grid fees that would add about $120 a year to rooftop users’ bills and, solar advocates say, slow down solar adoptions.

Similar skirmishes have broken out in as many as a dozen of the 43 states that have adopted net-metering policies as part of their push to promote renewable energy. In Colorado, Xcel Energy Inc. has proposed cutting the payments it makes for excess power generated by customers by about half, because it says higher payouts result in an unfair subsidy to solar users.

Utilities Feeling Rooftop Solar Heat Start Fighting Back [Mark Chediak, Christopher Martin and Ken Wells/Bloomberg]

(via /.)

(Image: Solar Panels All Done!, a Creative Commons Attribution (2.0) image from clownfish's photostream)

    






19 Dec 16:54

PSA: Bootloader Unlocking On Google Play Edition Devices Shows Each One To Have Its Own Nuances And Pitfalls

by Shawn De Cesari
Chris PeBenito

Interesting. Glad I stuck with a Nexus device.

bootloader_unlock

In addition to things like stock Android and being carrier-unlocked, one of the big features of Nexus and Google Play Edition devices that Android power users love is an easily unlockable bootloader. While OEMs and carriers often make a policy of locking their devices' bootloaders to prevent installation of unauthorized software, Google makes it very easy for us to tinker with devices bearing its brand. All you really need to unlock a Google device is a tool called "fastboot," which is made available through the Android SDK.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

PSA: Bootloader Unlocking On Google Play Edition Devices Shows Each One To Have Its Own Nuances And Pitfalls was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


17 Dec 14:39

This Filmmaker Spent a Studio's Promotional Video Budget on Typhoon Relief

by Erin McCarthy
Chris PeBenito

Sounds like a much more useful way to spend the money.

When 20th Century Fox approached filmmaker Casey Neistat to make a promotional video for The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, Neistat had a proposal: Let him use that budget to help victims of typhoon Haiyan, which killed more than 6000 people when it made landfall in November.

16 Dec 19:40

What I Learn From School Projects

12 Dec 14:17

You Guys Need Mobbing Lessons!

You Guys Need Mobbing Lessons!

Submitted by: Unknown

11 Dec 20:21

Android Device Manager app launches on Google Play

by Alex Dobie

Android Device Manager

Like the web interface, the new app lets you remotely track and lock down your other Android devices

Google has launched a new Android app allowing users of the Android Device Manager feature to remotely track, ring, lock down or wipe their other devices. Not to be confused with the Google Play Services feature that launched a few months ago, the ADM app duplicates the functionality of the web interface, meaning you can track or control one phone or tablet using another — provided you've first enabled this feature in the Google Settings app.

If you've not yet set up remote locate or remote wipe on your target handset, you can send a notification to it through the Android Device Manager app on the second device. (Fun fact: select the device you're using the app on and it marks its location as "in your hand.")

To get started, grab the new Android Device Manager app from Google Play at the link above.


    






11 Dec 20:19

Googler: App Ops Was Never Meant For End Users, Used For Internal Testing And Debugging Only

by Ryan Whitwam
Chris PeBenito

Noooooooooooooo! I don't want to put a custom ROM on to get this feature back (or use MMAC instead).

settApp Ops showed up in Android 4.3 and made it possible to revoke permissions on a per-app basis. It wasn't exposed in the main system settings, but it was easy to access. Then Android 4.4 made it quite a bit harder to get to, and now it appears to be completely missing in 4.4.2. What gives? Well, Android engineer Dianne Hackborn has indicated App Ops was never meant to be a user-facing feature in the first place.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

Googler: App Ops Was Never Meant For End Users, Used For Internal Testing And Debugging Only was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


10 Dec 17:43

Half an operating system: The triumph and tragedy of OS/2

by l33tdawg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM

It was a cloudy Seattle day in late 1980, and Bill Gates, the young chairman of a tiny company called Microsoft, had an appointment with IBM that would shape the destiny of the industry for decades to come.

He went into a room full of IBM lawyers, all dressed in immaculately tailored suits. Bill’s suit was rumpled and ill-fitting, but it didn’t matter. He wasn’t here to win a fashion competition.

21 Nov 20:33

QNX 1.4 MB floppy disk demo

Chris PeBenito

This is nuts.

This is a quick demonstration of the QNX 1.4 megabyte floppy disk demo. QNX is an advanced, compact, real-time operating system. This demo disk, released in 1999, fits the operating system, the "Photon MicroGUI", and the HTML 3 capable Voyager Web browser all on a single 1.4 meg disk! So far no emulator or virtualizer I have tried will run this QNX demo 100%, so this is running on real hardware. The video is captured with a VGA capture device. QNX is one of the most intriguing operating systems of all time. This demo disk is one of those things that, even today, blows my mind. Be sure to watch through the whole video, especially the part where extensions are downloaded and run from the web, all on a single 1.44 MB floppy.
04 Nov 16:12

Locked Door and Alarm Circumvented

by Miss Cellania

This is how you break into a place with a locked door without tripping an alarm. Redditor  hammartime2002 posted a picture of his store after a burglary. I can almost picture the Incredible Hulk doing this, although a commenter logically blamed it on Bender. Really, this had to take some serious tools and know-how, unless that door is made of aluminum foil. -via TYWKIWDBI

04 Nov 14:50

Merging Of Google Voice And Hangouts Will Result Shutting Down All 3rd-Party Voice Apps In May 2014

by Cody Toombs
Chris PeBenito

I almost bought an ObiHai to use GV for a pseudo-landline... now glad I didn't. Same thing for GrooveIP.

Google-Voice-updated-for-Android

Users of Google Voice have long called for the company to pay more attention to the seemingly forgotten service for quite some time. Unfortunately, they may be getting more than they were hoping for. While many people are thrilled to hear Voice will finally support MMS and become a part of Hangouts in early 2014, Google is also planning to close up shop for all 3rd-party apps that relied on the service for free texting and VoIP calling.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

Merging Of Google Voice And Hangouts Will Result Shutting Down All 3rd-Party Voice Apps In May 2014 was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


04 Nov 14:49

Close-In Surveillance Using Your Phone's Wi-Fi

by schneier
Chris PeBenito

Yep. Another reason why I use location awareness to shut down WiFi on my phone away from home/work.

This article talks about applications in retail, but the possibilities are endless.

Every smartphone these days comes equipped with a WiFi card. When the card is on and looking for networks to join, it's detectable by local routers. In your home, the router connects to your device, and then voila ­ you have the Internet on your phone. But in a retail environment, other in-store equipment can pick up your WiFi card, learn your device's unique ID number and use it to keep tabs on that device over time as you move through the store.

This gives offline companies the power to get incredibly specific data about how their customers behave. You could say it's the physical version of what Web-based vendors have spent millions of dollars trying to perfect ­ the science of behavioral tracking.

Basically, the system is using the MAC address to identify individual devices. Another article on the system is here.

25 Oct 17:16

Study finds iPhone 5S & 5C touchscreens inaccurate, but Galaxy S3 is spot-on

by Kevin Krause

iphone-accuracy

So iPhone owners can claim that their touchscreens are more responsive than those of Android users, but are they as accurate? That’s the question the folks at OptoFidelity wanted to answer, so they built a machine to do the heavy lifting and set about plotting their data. The results were quite surprising.

Using a precision-calibrated robot arm and finger to continuously touch smartphone displays at specific coordinates, the intended result was than compared to the actual data points registered by the operating system. The verdict? The display used in the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C (and iPhone 5, by extension) is far less accurate than that of the Samsung Galaxy S3.

iphone-keyboard-accuracy

While the Galaxy S3 was accurate uniformly across its display (the very outside edges being the one exception), the iPhone’s display registered touch input in a far less precise manner. The most accurate portion of the screen happened to correspond with where the phone’s virtual keyboard rests, but even then accuracy was spotty.

In the end, overall accuracy comes as slightly more important how quickly a phone can register touch input, especially when it’s mostly a matter of milliseconds. Based on how difficult the inaccuracy of the iPhone’s display makes typing on the device, it’s wonder we have seen so many autocorrect memes pop up.

24 Oct 17:08

Photo: Woman Holding Her Own Heart in Her Hands

by John Farrier

(Photo: Penny Smith)

Although it doesn’t have the same effect as holding up the heart of one your enemies, this is still pretty badass. But dealing with hardship with good spirits has always been Penny Smith’s strength. She had cancer when she was 3 years old and developed heart problems in 1994. Last year, she had a heart transplant.

Here she is holding up her old heart while her new one keeps her alive. It took place a few months after her transplant:

"That was in the hospital in the pathology lab," Smith said. "I was saying goodbye to my heart, actually, because I felt like it got me through half of my life and I needed to say goodbye to it. So I was saying goodbye, and getting to know my new heart.

"My doctors made me wait because they didn't think I was ready. I wanted to be able to hold it, and they didn't want me to drop it.

"I was happy to see it again-well, see it for the first time, I guess.

"My husband even got to hold it. It felt really weird for both of us, but it was amazing to get to hold something that was once in someone."

You may think you're tough, but are you "Holding your own heart in your hand" tough? pic.twitter.com/rgJYZKeZg4

— Robb Allen (@ItsRobbAllen) October 23, 2013

I found this story while searching for information about the above photo, which is also impressive to an almost Ron Swanson level.

24 Oct 16:48

Study: LPTA sacrifices long-term value, stifles innovation

Chris PeBenito

No, really?

Survey also finds significant perception gaps between feds and vendors on the tradeoffs of Lowest Price Technically Acceptable.
01 Jul 18:56

RSS App gReader Updated To v3.3.4, Adds Support For The Old Reader

by Ryan Whitwam

unnamedAs you're reading this, the world has changed. After years of faithful service, Google Reader has ceased operation. Ever since the announcement was made services like Feedly have been revving up to take its place. The Old Reader is another alternative that doesn't get as much attention, but it's got some admirers. The uber-popular RSS reader app gReader has just been updated with support for The Old Reader to help ease the transition.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

RSS App gReader Updated To v3.3.4, Adds Support For The Old Reader was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


28 Jun 16:58

Malware that Foils Two-Factor Authentication

by schneier
Chris PeBenito

Not surprising at all.

This is an interesting article about a new breed of malware that also hijack's the victim's phone text messaging system, to intercept one-time passwords sent via that channel.