Friday, October 22, 2010

70 Terabytes of Homebrewed Storage is a Beautiful Mess







Many of us know the feeling where all the digital storage we have at home is just not enough for our photos, movies and music. So just how much storage do you need?
One guy in Russia seems to have found the answer to that question. He?s strung together 60 hard disk drives and built an array of cooling fans to support it to create 70 terabytes of storage?that?s 71,680 gigabytes.
It?s not pretty to look at. But it?s an amazing do-it-yourself project. Based on the photos you can see how homebrewed the whole idea is?from the rack of 20 fans to cool it down to an ugly custom cabinet to house the drives.
If you want to see more pictures of the storage array, check out the original post on a Russian forum (some ads on the site maybe NSFW).
Source: English Russia via Technabob
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Future Shock: Nokia Research Touts 5 Innovative Mobile Interfaces







See Also:
Meet the World?s First Undulating Cellphone
Nokia?s Snazzy New Smartphones Stick with Symbian OS
7 Reasons Nokia Phones Get No Love in U.S.
Future Phones to Read Your Voice, Gestures
Water Flute Gives a Glimpse of Future Interfaces
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myTouch 4G -- showing off its four colors

Just days after the myTouch 4G ROM leaked to a sleepless community of hackers and developers, the device from which the ROM was torn from is in the spotlight showing off its true colors. Images emerged that prove T-Mobile plans on enlivening its handset lineup by adding a splash of color to its yet-to-be-released myTouch 4G phones. In addition to the obligatory offering of white and black, T-Mobile subscribers will be able to get their myTouch 4G in a cool shade of purple, or a nice warm dark red. Oh, but wait -- let's confuse things a little. TmoNews got some accessory instructions that show the name as myTouch HD. Hmmmmm.Nobody knows for sure when the myTouch/4G/HD will land on T-Mobile, but lots of speculation suggests myTouch/4G/HD owners will be surfing in style around mid-November. [CellPhone Signal, TmoNews]
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Director of Firefox fires opening salvo at Apple's tyrannical Mac App Store

Filed under: Apple, MozillaDirector of Firefox fires opening salvo at Apple's tyrannical Mac App Storeby Sebastian Anthony (RSS feed) Oct 20th 2010 at 6:06PM
Mike Beltzner, Mozilla big-wig and Director of Firefox, has just tweeted his rather damning appraisal of the new Mac App Store. In the tweet he points to the Mac App Store Review Guidelines -- and boy are they draconian, even by Apple's cultish masonic standards.
Basically, you can forget about downloading any kind of demo or beta from the Mac App Store. If an app even exhibits a bug, it will be rejected -- does Apple know how many apps, open-source or otherwise, have bugs?
If you thought that was bad enough, the guidelines continue in a similar, it's-our-sandpit! vein: apps that require optional installations (such as Java) will be rejected; apps that require root privileges will be rejected; apps that require license keys or implement their own copy project will be rejected... and so on.
The strict, chaste censorship rules made popular with the iOS App Store are also present -- there won't be any pornographic or violent apps on the Mac App Store, I'm afraid.
Finally, it's fun to compare the startling differences between Mozilla's recently-announced Open Web Apps initiative and Apple's new offering. I know: open isn't everything, and Apple's vice-like control of the user experience is impressive -- but at this rate the Mac is fast becoming a 21st century re-imagining of 20th century AOL. "Don't try to peek over the wall -- this is all the Internet you need!"



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When Worlds Collide: Galaxy Tab to Share Verizon Shelf Space With iPad

Verizon, the very same company that recently announced it will sell the iPad beginning next week, announced Wednesday that it will become the first U.S. carrier to stock Samsung's Galaxy Tab.

The widely anticipated Tab is a 7-inch Android-based tablet -- the epitome of a class of devices that Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs famously declared "dead on arrival" this week in answering questions about his company's latest earnings report.


Side-by-Side Competition


Beginning Nov. 11, when the Tab goes on sale at Verizon Wireless retail stores for US$599,99, consumers will get a chance to handle it and the iPad side-by-side and decide which they prefer -- and a significant number may well choose the Tab, predicts Chris Hazelton, director of mobile and wireless research for The 451 Group.
While Jobs said "seven-inch tablets are tweeners, too big to compete with a smartphone and too small to compete with an iPad," Hazelton said he sees things almost exactly the opposite way.
"The advantage here is that it's a smaller device, and seven inches I think is a good size," Hazelton told TechNewsWorld.


Tab Advantages


The device can fit in a large pocket or smaller bag and is almost half the weight of the iPad, making it less fatiguing to hold, Hazelton said.
For Verizon customers, Hazelton said the Tab may have a singular advantage over the iPad: connectivity. To connect the iPad to Verizon's network, iPad owners have to use an Verizon MiFi hotspot device, which is included in the purchase price of $629.99 and up. But the Tab, priced at $599, features a built-in 3G modem that works on Verizon's network and can make use of a $20, 1 GB-per-month data plan without any additional devices.
"I think that will push people to seriously consider the Galaxy Tab over the iPad," he said.
The Tab also features front- and back-facing cameras -- a feature entirely lacking on the iPad -- and may score points on memory as well. The Verizon device will come with 2 GB of internal memory and a pre-installed 16 GB Micro SD card that can be upgraded to 32 GB. After buying a new card to max out memory, a Tab user would be out about $714, at current micro SD prices, and have a spare 16 GB card. The price tag for the fixed-memory 32 GB iPad at Verizon is $729.99.


DOA or Not?


Neither Samsung nor Verizon responded to requests for comment on the marketability of the 7-inch Tab in light of Jobs' remarks.
But Hazelton said it's clear Apple is trying to discourage people from taking Android tablets as serious competitors to the iPad.
"I think they're trying to leverage that to steer people towards the iPad," he said, noting that Apple had the iPod and iPhone markets largely to itself for years.
"It's been less than a year with the iPad, and you're already seeing significant competition coming to market," Hazelton said.
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Use Your iPad To Manage Your Finances In Style

August 24th, 2010 at 2:18 am - Posted by admin
When it comes to budgeting and managing your finances on your iPad there are several apps to choose from, but very few compare to Checkbook by iBear LLC. This newly released app has everything you could want or even ask for when it comes to both style and functionality.

Easily keep track of your mortgage, credit cards, bank accounts and all other income and expenses from one simple location. Checkbook for iPad even includes a built-in option to import OFX (Open Financial Exchange) files directly from your bank account(s).
Staying on top of your budget is critical and very important. With this iPad app you?ll know where your money is located, what bills need to be paid and which accounts are being used to cover each of your expenses at all times. You can also schedule delayed transactions if necessary.
Exporting Financial Data From Your iPad
Another useful feature included with Checkbook is the option to export your financial data in either HTML or CSV (Excel) formats. You can also sync your financial data with other iPads. If security is a concern you have the option to protect your account entries by setting up a personal PIN as well.
Budgeting In Style With Your iPad
Not only is this cleverly programmed app loaded with many great features but visually it?s absolutely brilliant as well. The colors and design are very appealing and well done. You will enjoy the colorful bar graphs and pie charts too, definitely a great job in that department.
Pricing & Download Link
So I won?t waste anymore of your time telling you how amazing this app is, you just have to see for yourself, besides the app is currently being sold at a special introductory price of only $0.99 so the sooner you grab your copy the better.
Alright let?s get to it, click here to order and download your copy of Checkbook for iPad today from the Apple iTunes App Store and enjoy keeping track of your finances in style.
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Samsung Galaxy Player, Better Than iPod Touch?


Samsung?s Galaxy Player is a pretty sweet-looking pocket computer, and is the first real competition we have seen for the iPod Touch, a product that has sat in its own market niche since it was launched. The Galaxy Player runs Android 2.1 and packs in enough features to shame Apple?s media-player. Here?s the commercial:

Pretty neat, right? The ad even takes Apple?s approach to simply showing what the hardware does, which ? as you can see ? is quite a lot. There?s a 2MP camera, 8/16GB internal storage plus a microSD slot for expansion, a 3.2-inch touch screen, GPS, an FM radio, Wi-Fi and built-in DivX support. What it doesn?t have is the Touch?s front-facing camera or its hi-res retina display.
The Galaxy Player is already on sale in France priced at ?200 for the 8GB and ?250 for 16GB. This is most likely to translate directly to $200 and $250 when the player comes stateside, possibly as soon as this month. This little device looks great. I wonder why nobody has managed to do this before?
Video: Samsung Galaxy Player (YP-G50) ad [Samsung Hub]
See Also:
Zune HD Priced Cheaper Than the iPod Touch
Walkman Outsells iPod in Japan
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Why ?Gorilla Arm Syndrome? Rules Out Multitouch Notebook Displays



Apple?s new MacBook Air borrows a lot of things from the iPad, including hyperportability and instant-on flash storage. But the Air won?t use an iPad-like touchscreen. Neither will any of Apple?s laptops. That?s because of what designers call ?gorilla arm.?
And while Apple points to its own research on this problem, it?s a widely recognized issue that touchscreen researchers have known about for decades.
?We?ve done tons of user testing on this,? Steve Jobs said in Wednesday?s press conference, ?and it turns out it doesn?t work. Touch surfaces don?t want to be vertical. It gives great demo, but after a short period of time you start to fatigue, and after an extended period of time, your arm wants to fall off.?
This why Jobs says Apple?s invested heavily in developing multitouch recognition for its trackpads, both for its laptops, on its current-generation Mighty Mouse and on its new standalone Magic Trackpad.
Avi Greengart of Current Analysis agrees it?s a smart move, borne out of wisdom gathered from watching mobile and desktop users at work.
?Touchscreen on the display is ergonomically terrible for longer interactions,? he says. ?So, while touchscreens are popular, Apple clearly took what works and is being judicious on how they are taking ideas from the mobile space to the desktop.?
But Apple didn?t have to do its own user testing. They didn?t even have to look at the success or failure of existing touchscreens in the PC marketplace. Researchers have documented usability problems with vertical touch surfaces for decades.
?Gorilla arm? is a term engineers coined about 30 years ago to describe what happens when people try to use these interfaces for an extended period of time. It?s the touchscreen equivalent of carpal-tunnel syndrome. According to the New Hacker?s Dictionary, ?the arm begins to feel sore, cramped and oversized ? the operator looks like a gorilla while using the touchscreen and feels like one afterwards.?
According to the NHD, the phenomenon is so well-known that it?s become a stock phrase and cautionary tale well beyond touchscreens: ??Remember the gorilla arm!? is shorthand for ?How is this going to fly in real use??.? You find references to the ?gorilla-arm effect? or ?gorilla-arm syndrome? again and again in the scholarly literature on UI research and ergonomics, too.
There are other problems with incorporating touch gestures on laptops, regardless of their orientation. Particularly for a laptop as light as the MacBook Air, continually touching and pressing the screen could tip it over, or at least make it wobble. This is one reason I dislike using touchscreen buttons on cameras and camera phones ? without a firm grip, you introduce just the right amount of shake to ruin a photo.
Touchscreens work for extended use on tablets, smartphones and some e-readers because you can grip the screen firmly with both hands, and you have the freedom to shift between horizontal, vertical and diagonal orientations as needed.
On a tablet or smartphone, too, the typing surface and touch surface are almost always on the same plane. Moving back and forth between horizontal typing and vertical multitouch could be as awkward as doing everything on a vertical screen.
This doesn?t mean that anything other than a multitouch trackpad won?t work. As Microsoft Principal Researcher (and multitouch innovator) Bill Buxton says, ?Everything is best for something and worst for something else.?
We?ve already seen vertical touchscreens and other interfaces working well when used in short bursts: retail or banking kiosks, digital whiteboards and some technical interfaces. And touchscreen computing is already well-implemented in non-mobile horizontal interfaces, like Microsoft?s Surface. Diagonalized touchscreen surfaces modeled on an architect?s drafting table like Microsoft?s DigiDesk concept are also very promising.
In the near future, we?ll see even more robust implementations of touch and gestural interfaces. But it?s much more complex than just slapping a capacitative touchscreen, however popular they?ve become, into a popular device and hoping that they?ll work together like magic.
Design at this scale, with these stakes, requires close and careful attention to the human body ? not just arms, but eyes, hands and posture ? and to the context in which devices are used in order to find the best solution in each case.
See Also:
New MacBook Air Disses Adobe Flash
Apple Unleashes New MacBook Airs
Hands-On With Apple's New MacBook Airs
Video: Command and Control Robots with Microsoft Surface
Thin Film Turns Any Surface Into a Touchscreen
Beyond the iPad: Massive MultiTouch Displays Have Big Social ?
Apple's Magic Trackpad Brings Multi-Touch to the Desktop
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Why Apple Saddled the MacBook Air With Weak CPUs



by Chris Foresman, Ars Technica
At long, long last, the Macbook Air has been updated. But if you were hoping for enough CPU muscle in the new models to keep a bunch of Flash-addled webpages from bringing the entire portable to its knees, then you?re going to be sorely disappointed ? the Core 2 Duo is still with us in the new models. In fact, the 11-inch Macbook Air actually trails its predecessor in clockspeed, while the 13-inch model hasn?t changed at all.
Given that Apple really went all-out to upgrade the rest of the Air package, the choice of a geriatric CPU is a giant slap in the face to Intel?s latest portable processor options. Apple looked at Arrandale, Intel?s 32nm CPU with a northbridge/GPU combo integrated into the same package, and said, ?No thanks, but do you have any more of the really old chips?? Ouch.
We hate to say we told you so, but we told you so ? twice, even.
When Intel unveiled the Arrandale ULV parts for ultraportables a few months back, it was obvious that they were not destined for the Macbook Air. The problem wasn?t so much the CPU part of Arrandale ? even though the ULV variant is indeed deficient in the cache and clockspeed departments when compared to the Core 2 Duo ? the problem is the GPU.
The multicore GPU integrated into the NVIDIA 320M handily spanks the (admittedly improved) Intel integrated graphics glued onto the Core i-series processors. And it?s also compatible with OpenCL, something Intel has yet to support in its IGPs. Apple argued that the improved graphics power of the 320M was more important than improved CPU processing power when designing the recent 13-inch MacBook Pro update ? that same logic (though you may disagree with the decision) still applies here.
That?s not the only problem. The dual-chip packages are considerably larger than the small-outline packages for the low-voltage Core 2 Duos originally introduced on the first MacBook Air. Even with the integrated northbridge and GPU, Arrandale processors still require a separate controller. The combination simply couldn?t fit on the MacBook Air?s minuscule logic board. Instead of giving up room to shoehorn in updated processors, Apple instead chose to improve the MacBook Air?s battery capacity. With seven hours of promised life without any need for an external battery, it can be argued that this is a useful trade-off.
Finally, we have to consider the 11-inch MacBook Air. While its bigger brother offers a 1.86-GHz or 2.13-GHz CPU, the smaller sibling is left with just 1.4-GHz or 1.6-GHz options. The reason for the difference here is simple: thermal design. The slower processors clock in at just 10W TDP (7W less than those used in the 13-inch models) making it much easier to cool the inside of the tiny 11.6-inch casing.
The combination of Core 2 Duo processor and NVIDIA 320M graphics is more powerful than the Atom and Intel IGP combo used in notebooks of similar size. While some comparable ultraportables use newer Arrandale chips in them, most also cost significantly more than the revised MacBook Air models. Apple decided to trade maximum performance for increased battery life and portability and still offer a lower price than the previous generation. Whether that tradeoff is worth it (and we?ll be checking this as we review the new models) is up to users to decide.
This story originally appeared on Ars Technica.
Photo by Brian X. Chen / Wired.com.
See Also:
Apple Unleashes New MacBook Airs
Hands-On With Apple's New MacBook Airs
Thank You Apple, for Killing the Optical Drive at Last
Mobile-Inspired Upgrades Define Apple's PC Strategy
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Thursday, October 21, 2010

The Sisyphean Struggle for Biometric Security

Biometric security -- which employs systems that read people's fingerprints or compare their voiceprint or retina scans to information in data banks in order to authenticate them -- is being heavily used in some of the United States' most critical installations.
For example, the United States Department of Defense is focusing strongly on biometric security. The U.S. Army Biometrics Task Force has selected
Raytheon to provide biometric-related services and support.
How reliable are biometric systems, anyhow? What happens if you have a cold or haven't had enough sleep and your voice is hoarse, your nose is running, and your pupils are contracted or dilated? Can security systems mistakenly identify you as a terrorist or a person of interest in an ongoing police investigation?
That's where biometric systems run into trouble.



What Is Biometrics, Anyhow?



Biometric systems are fallible and need more work, concludes the
National Research Council in a new report. The committee defines biometrics as the automated recognition of individuals based on their behavioral and biological characteristics.
The report,
"Biometric Recognition: Challenges and Opportunities," was prepared by the Whither Biometrics committee, chaired by Joseph N. Pato, a distinguished technologist at HP (NYSE: HPQ) Labs. It was funded by DARPA, the CIA, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, with aid from the National Science Foundation.
Biometrics is not just a technology but a set of systems, and complex systems have multiple points of failure, the report explains. Further, technical issues such as the calibration of sensors and data degradation can impact the accuracy of a biometric system.
That's not all; biometric systems provide probabilistic results, meaning they offer up the best match to the data that's been input or is being held in data banks. This could lead to misidentification, with unfortunate consequences for the misidentified, as Brandon Mayfield learned -- more on this to come.
Also, biometric characteristics are not stable and may vary over the lifetime of a person due to age, stress, disease or other factors.
"We need more research into the distinctiveness and stability of biometric measures," said Jim Wayman, research administrator with San Jose State University's office of graduate studies and research, who collaborated on the report.
"We also need more research into how biometric measures change with aging," Wayman told TechNewsWorld. "How easy is it to recognize my iris now compared with 10 years ago?"
Fingerprints, that much-loved staple of police shows, aren't stable, either, he pointed out. They can be altered by using more or less force when a subject is being fingerprinted -- and they can change with age.



The Case of the Bulldozed Lawyer



The case of Oregon lawyer Brandon Mayfield is often held up as a classic example of what can go wrong with biometric security. In 2004, Mayfield was arrested on suspicion of being involved with the bombings of commuter trains in Madrid, Spain, after the Spanish police forwarded a set of fingerprints to the FBI.
The FBI disregarded the Spanish authorities' notification that the fingerprints probably weren't Mayfield's. It also ignored its own records, which showed the fingerprints were only one of 20 "similar" prints to those retrieved from Madrid.
Mayfield was held in a county jail under a false name and later transferred to an unidentified location without any notification to his family. Eventually, he was released. It was only after Mayfield successfully sued the FBI and government that he got an apology for his trouble.
How could FBI agents mistake his fingerprints for those of a suspect in the Madrid bombings?
Inexperience is one reason, said San Jose State's Wayman. Further, the sheer size of the database searched meant there would be some close matches.
"The FBI searched the fingerprints against the 650 million fingerprints in its database," he explained. "They had no previous experience with the very close matches that can occur when you search such a large database."
The certainty of a match depends on the number of matches made and the size of the database, Wayman pointed out. This is why it's important to consider biometric systems in context rather than as standalone systems or devices.



Security Only Needs to Be Good Enough



How large does a biometric security system's database need to be in order to provide accurate results? That depends -- security is always a tradeoff between the ideal and the possible.
"When used for security, you are trying for a high confidence match, and are not searching to see if there's anyone else like you in the world," Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group, told TechNewsWorld.
Most biometric security systems are designed on a probabilistic basis, meaning the more likely a breach is, the tighter the security. Doing otherwise would make security solutions highly expensive and slow.
"We are constantly forced to deal with the question of 'good enough' in security," Scott Crawford, a managing research director at
Enterprise Management Associates, told TechNewsWorld.
"While in some cases the 'good enough' approach is inadequate, as shown by the large number of data breaches reported, the practical approach is to weigh all one's options," Crawford remarked.



You Say Yes, I Say No



Misidentification -- where the system generates false negatives or positives -- is a very real problem. Mayfield was the victim of a false positive, but a false negative can be just as harmful, and purchasers and implementers of biometrics systems should always consider the possibility of false negatives and positives, Wayman suggested.
For example, the NRC committee heard testimony from a government official who was planning to implement fingerprint controls at airports to restrict employee access to certain areas.
"That project made no accommodation whatsoever for mistakes and it failed on arrival," Wayman said. "It was turned off the same day."
Designing better biometric systems isn't enough; users need to be trained on the systems, Randy Abrams, director of technical education at ESET, told TechNewsWorld.
"Computers lie all the time," Abrams said. "Too many people think that computers and technology are infallible. That just isn't the case. For the foreseeable future, a pure biometric system is a fool's folly."
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Daily Crunch: Kindling Edition

Inflatable Photo Studio Sets Up In Minutes, Is a FiretrapBiblio Leaf SP02: Toshiba?s Answer To The KindleJust What Kids Need: Scholastic Pocket Texting DevicesVideos: Cybernetic Human Robot HRP-4C DancingAsk CG: Am I Ready For An E-Reader?
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Newsmap visualizes Google News, offers interesting differences between countries

Filed under: Fun, UtilitiesNewsmap visualizes Google News, offers interesting differences between countriesby Sebastian Anthony (RSS feed) Oct 20th 2010 at 12:00PM
With the rapidly increasing amount of data in our lives, visualization has become a new trend. Text has its limits, both cranially and in its ability to display large amounts of information. Visual tools have begun to emerge: Microsoft has Pivot, Firefox is trialling Panorama -- heck, almost every browser and operating system now visualizes data in some way or another.
Newsmap, however, is old. Like, 2004 old. I did a little research, though, and it doesn't look like anyone's covered it in the last few years -- which is odd, considering the monumental surge in Internet news output. Anyway: newsmap takes the entirety of Google News and visualizes it in an array of differently-sized boxes. The larger the box, the more 'related stories' that item has. Newer stories are highlighted.
Where newsmap comes into its own, however, is in its separation of categories. World, National, Business, Technology, Sports, Entertainment, and Health are all coloured differently so that you can see at a glance which category has more coverage. Then change the country and check out the difference. The U.S., for example, has a vast amount of Sports news, but relatively little World coverage. The UK has a stronger emphasis on Business and World news, with almost zero coverage of Health. Spain and Italy love their National news, and India and Australia have huge amounts of World news.
There's also the option of showing every country at once -- but that's no good unless you only display one category at a time. You can see every National news story for all 15 countries, for example.
Newsmap is a great tool for visualizing one of the most important aspects of the Web. Looking at it for just a few minutes every morning would massively increase your knowledge of what's going on in the world -- and that's exactly what I'm going to do!



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Use VPN On Your iPad To Protect Privacy | Plus Special Giveaway Inside

August 26th, 2010 at 12:13 am - Posted by admin
When it comes to online privacy while using your iPad you need all the protection you can get. Luckily Golden Frog provides a service called VyprVPN that keeps your data safe. You may not be aware but your surfing as well as other online activities are constantly being tracked and recorded by your ISP and possibly other companies or individuals.
Take the recent situation involving AT&T for example. They were highly criticised for deep packet inspection, or in other words spying on their customers. Little did iPad owners know at the time that signing up for AT&T?s 3G network data plans was not so safe.
While sending emails or browsing the web using your iPad at a nearby coffee shop or library for example, in most cases the public Wi-Fi network you are using is anything but secure. This makes your personal data potentially vulnerable to eavesdropping and sniffing.
With identity theft on the rise you need to ensure your personal information is kept private.
How Does VyprVPN Work & Keep My iPad Secure?
When you perform any activities that require an Internet connection data packets are sent which include a header and a body. When you?re surfing the web for example all that is necessary is the header in order to determine where traffic should go. However it?s common for ISP?s to route this data, inspect the body of these packets and then use this information to spy, track and in some cases target advertising.
Using a VPN (Virtual Private Network) service such as VyprVPN prevents ISP?s from having the ability to view the body of these packets. Their service creates what is known as an encrypted end to end tunnel for all online transfers which prevents your data from being intercepted over Wi-Fi or 3G networks.
The iPad has native support for IPSec, PPTP and L2TP protocols. Currently VyprVPN has PPTP and OpenVPN plans with IPSec and L2TP plans expected to be available around the middle of September.
How Do I Setup VyprVPN On My iPad?
Once you have an account setup all you need to do is the following.
Step 01) Click on Settings ?> General ?> Network ?> VPN
Step 02) Click on Add VPN Configuration
Step 03) Select PPTP then enter the follwoing information:
Description: VyprVPN
Server: There are currently 4 different servers to choose from
us1.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Los Angeles, CA
us2.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Washington, DC
eu1.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Amsterdam
hk1.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Hong Kong
Account: Email address used to setup your Golden Frog account
Password: Your selected password
Step 04) Click Save
Here?s a couple of screen captures to help guide you.


So What?s This Giveaway You Speak Of?
The generous and hard working staff at Golden Frog have agreed to give one lucky winner from this site a 2 month top tier plan valued at $40, not a bad deal at all. Basically how it will work is the first 25 people to comment in this thread will be entered in a draw to be the lucky winner. Comments must be kept clean and on topic, NO SPAM will be tolerated. So best of luck to everyone!
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Hybrid CF Lightbulbs Offer Instant-On for the Incurably Impatient



Man, how impatient are we in our comfortable, high-tech palaces? It seems we can?t even wait for a lightbulb to fire up after we hit the switch. But don?t worry, you over-entitled fusspots, GE has you covered with its complicated new Hybrid Halogen-CFL light bulb.
The problem: CF, or compact-fluorescent bulbs take a while to get to full brightness. Depending on the model, they can take a large chunk of a minute to get up to speed. My parents, for instance, sit in the dark for what seems like forever when I Skype them and they turn on the light in the ?computer room?. My CF lamps, though, are at full power almost instantly.
GE?s solution is to put a tiny halogen lamp inside the bulb, squeezed in alongside the elegantly looping CF-tube already coiled therein. If nothing else, this intricate device looks like a glass-blowers version of a Swiss watch movement, beautiful and impossible to fathom. When you flick the switch, the halogen bulb lights instantly. When the CF tube comes up to temperature, the halogen lamp blinks out.
I?m inclined to think that this is a solution to a first-world problem, something which only whiners would ever feel a need for. On the other hand, there are plenty of people who refuse to buy energy-saving bulbs because of this warm-up delay, preferring to selfishly burn the planet?s resources for a few seconds of added convenience. If GE?s hybrid bulb can get these self-important idiots to switch over, then I?m all for them.
The bulbs will be on sale in 2011.
GE Unveils Unique Hybrid Halogen-CFL Light Bulb [GE. Thanks, David!]
Press images: GE
See Also:
Beautiful Sculpted Lightbulb Too Good for a Shade
'World's Only' Solar-Powered Light-Bulb
World's First Liquid-Cooled Lightbulb: What's The Point?
LED Lightbulb Lasts 19 Years, Claims Right to Vote
Levitating, Wireless Lightbulb
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Daily Crunch: Air Edition

Our Take: Apple?s ?Back To The Mac? EventReview: Parrot AR.DroneWhy FaceTime And Not iChat?Traditional-Style Kids? Remote May Not Apply To This GenerationOakley Releases Special TRON 3D Glasses
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Protect Your iPad With iShine Microfiber Sleeve

August 16th, 2010 at 8:24 pm - Posted by admin
Every iPad owner understands the importance of keeping their device both protected and clean. It takes very little time for oil from your hands to build up on the iPad?s screen, leaving plenty of unwanted smudges. There is an affordable solution though thanks to the iShine Microfiber iPad Sleeve.

The iShine Sleeve is a must have multipurpose accessory for your iPad. It acts as a protective pouch for your tablet device and also doubles as a lint-free cleaning cloth. Quickly remove nasty smudges and fingerprints without worrying about scratching or damaging your screen.
Apple makes it very clear not to use typical household cleaners that contain chemicals which can be harmful to your iPad?s screen. That?s even more reason why owning the iShine Sleeve is such a great benefit. For less than $20 you can have the comfort in knowing your iPad is getting the proper protection it needs.

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Apple announces FaceTime for Mac






As part of the Back to the Mac event, Steve Jobs has just announced FaceTime for Mac. The interface is bare bones, a naked QuickTime X-like UI but it does full screen, and it works as simply as FaceTime for iOS. (Which Jobs also announced they?ve shipped on 19 million devices to date).

Beta release for Mac today. No word on FaceTime for Windows yet.

More as this develops.


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Thank You Apple, for Killing the Optical Drive at Last


You know what was the best news at yesterday?s Back to the Mac event? The MacBook Air?s Software Reinstall Drive, which finally spells the end of the clunky optical drive.
Apple likes to drop old tech as early as possible. The floppy drive is the classic example, and caused a fuss when it was left out of the original Bondi BLue iMac. FireWire has been on life-support these last few years, flickering in and out of existence on Apple?s portables. And while the original Air had no way to load a CD or DVD, you still had to use one via a slow and clunky DVD or CD Sharing feature which let you ?wirelessly ?borrow? the optical drive of a nearby Mac or PC? to install software.
Now, though, it is possible to buy an Mac and never have to deal with spinning media again. Hell, you can?t even buy a MacBook Air with a hard-drive anymore: inside, the only thing that moves is the fan and the clicking trackpad.
So the bundled restore DVD has been replaced with a typically stylish USB stick, something that will certainly come to other Mac in the future. And good riddance to this battery-sucking, space-gobbling piece of legacy tech. Who needs it? Hell, it?s quicker to download a movie these days than it is to rip a DVD.
The one irony here is that the new iLife suite, also announced yesterday, is only available on DVD. Because iLife, unlike iWork, does not require a serial number for activation, there?s no download available. Maybe next year, iLife 12 will come on a USB stick, too.
What?s in the Box (MacBook Air) [Apple]
See Also:
Apple Unleashes New MacBook Airs
New MacBook Air Will Come in 11 and 13-Inch Flavors
Hands-On With Apple's New MacBook Airs
Rumor: Apple to Introduce 11.6-Inch MacBook Next Week
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The Sisyphean Struggle for Biometric Security

Biometric security -- which employs systems that read people's fingerprints or compare their voiceprint or retina scans to information in data banks in order to authenticate them -- is being heavily used in some of the United States' most critical installations.
For example, the United States Department of Defense is focusing strongly on biometric security. The U.S. Army Biometrics Task Force has selected
Raytheon to provide biometric-related services and support.
How reliable are biometric systems, anyhow? What happens if you have a cold or haven't had enough sleep and your voice is hoarse, your nose is running, and your pupils are contracted or dilated? Can security systems mistakenly identify you as a terrorist or a person of interest in an ongoing police investigation?
That's where biometric systems run into trouble.



What Is Biometrics, Anyhow?



Biometric systems are fallible and need more work, concludes the
National Research Council in a new report. The committee defines biometrics as the automated recognition of individuals based on their behavioral and biological characteristics.
The report,
"Biometric Recognition: Challenges and Opportunities," was prepared by the Whither Biometrics committee, chaired by Joseph N. Pato, a distinguished technologist at HP (NYSE: HPQ) Labs. It was funded by DARPA, the CIA, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, with aid from the National Science Foundation.
Biometrics is not just a technology but a set of systems, and complex systems have multiple points of failure, the report explains. Further, technical issues such as the calibration of sensors and data degradation can impact the accuracy of a biometric system.
That's not all; biometric systems provide probabilistic results, meaning they offer up the best match to the data that's been input or is being held in data banks. This could lead to misidentification, with unfortunate consequences for the misidentified, as Brandon Mayfield learned -- more on this to come.
Also, biometric characteristics are not stable and may vary over the lifetime of a person due to age, stress, disease or other factors.
"We need more research into the distinctiveness and stability of biometric measures," said Jim Wayman, research administrator with San Jose State University's office of graduate studies and research, who collaborated on the report.
"We also need more research into how biometric measures change with aging," Wayman told TechNewsWorld. "How easy is it to recognize my iris now compared with 10 years ago?"
Fingerprints, that much-loved staple of police shows, aren't stable, either, he pointed out. They can be altered by using more or less force when a subject is being fingerprinted -- and they can change with age.



The Case of the Bulldozed Lawyer



The case of Oregon lawyer Brandon Mayfield is often held up as a classic example of what can go wrong with biometric security. In 2004, Mayfield was arrested on suspicion of being involved with the bombings of commuter trains in Madrid, Spain, after the Spanish police forwarded a set of fingerprints to the FBI.
The FBI disregarded the Spanish authorities' notification that the fingerprints probably weren't Mayfield's. It also ignored its own records, which showed the fingerprints were only one of 20 "similar" prints to those retrieved from Madrid.
Mayfield was held in a county jail under a false name and later transferred to an unidentified location without any notification to his family. Eventually, he was released. It was only after Mayfield successfully sued the FBI and government that he got an apology for his trouble.
How could FBI agents mistake his fingerprints for those of a suspect in the Madrid bombings?
Inexperience is one reason, said San Jose State's Wayman. Further, the sheer size of the database searched meant there would be some close matches.
"The FBI searched the fingerprints against the 650 million fingerprints in its database," he explained. "They had no previous experience with the very close matches that can occur when you search such a large database."
The certainty of a match depends on the number of matches made and the size of the database, Wayman pointed out. This is why it's important to consider biometric systems in context rather than as standalone systems or devices.



Security Only Needs to Be Good Enough



How large does a biometric security system's database need to be in order to provide accurate results? That depends -- security is always a tradeoff between the ideal and the possible.
"When used for security, you are trying for a high confidence match, and are not searching to see if there's anyone else like you in the world," Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group, told TechNewsWorld.
Most biometric security systems are designed on a probabilistic basis, meaning the more likely a breach is, the tighter the security. Doing otherwise would make security solutions highly expensive and slow.
"We are constantly forced to deal with the question of 'good enough' in security," Scott Crawford, a managing research director at
Enterprise Management Associates, told TechNewsWorld.
"While in some cases the 'good enough' approach is inadequate, as shown by the large number of data breaches reported, the practical approach is to weigh all one's options," Crawford remarked.



You Say Yes, I Say No



Misidentification -- where the system generates false negatives or positives -- is a very real problem. Mayfield was the victim of a false positive, but a false negative can be just as harmful, and purchasers and implementers of biometrics systems should always consider the possibility of false negatives and positives, Wayman suggested.
For example, the NRC committee heard testimony from a government official who was planning to implement fingerprint controls at airports to restrict employee access to certain areas.
"That project made no accommodation whatsoever for mistakes and it failed on arrival," Wayman said. "It was turned off the same day."
Designing better biometric systems isn't enough; users need to be trained on the systems, Randy Abrams, director of technical education at ESET, told TechNewsWorld.
"Computers lie all the time," Abrams said. "Too many people think that computers and technology are infallible. That just isn't the case. For the foreseeable future, a pure biometric system is a fool's folly."
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Apple Unleashes New MacBook Airs



CUPERTINO, California ? Apple on Wednesday released a major upgrade for its mini notebook, the MacBook Air, splitting it into two sizes.
The MacBook Air will come in two flavors: a 13.3-inch model and an 11.6-incher. They both will come thinner and lighter than their predecessor, with improved battery life that?s similar to the iPad?s, the company said.
?We asked ourselves what would happen if a MacBook and an iPad hooked up?? Apple CEO Steve Jobs said. ?It?s one of the most amazing things we?ve ever created: It is our new MacBook Air, and we think it?s the future of notebooks.?

Coupled with mobile-inspired enhancements to the computers? operating systems, such as a planned Mac App Store (due to launch in 90 days) and multitouch enhancements for the next version of Mac OS X, aka ?Lion,? the new MacBook Air models show that Apple is trying to redefine the PC market the same way it has tackled the tablet and smartphone markets.
Instead of merely selling hardware, the company seems to be positioning itself as a vertically integrated vendor of mobile devices, selling hardware and software, as well as controlling the marketplace through which customers purchase software.
?We think all notebooks are going to be like this one day,? Jobs said.
Despite its position as an underdog in the PC industry, the Mac has shown rapid growth relative to Windows-powered machines in recent years. According to an NPD Group retail sales report cited by Apple chief operating officer Tim Cook, Apple dominates the premium end of the PC market: For instance, 91 percent of $1,000+ computers sold in June 2009 were Macs. And in Apple?s latest Q4 earnings call, the company reported record-breaking sales of Macs and iPhones, resulting in its most successful quarter ever.
It also suggests that Apple is far from ready to cede the PC market to the likes of HP, Dell and Acer.
?Although the bulk of its revenues come from mobile products Apple still considers Mac a critical business,? said Avi Greengart, an analyst with research firm Current Analysis.
Cook claimed that one in five PCs sold in the United States are now made by Apple ? a claim sure to be contested by other PC makers. Recent reports by IDC and Gartner show that Apple?s U.S. market share is slightly above 10 percent. That is higher than it?s been in years, but just half of what Apple is claiming.
NPD confirmed the 20 percent figure to Wired, which comes from its retail tracking service, but noted that it applied only to a single month: August, 2010.
The MacBook Airs will include flash storage, 802.11-N Wi-Fi and a Core 2 Duo processor. Apple increased the size of the battery to provide five to seven hours of battery life when surfing the web over Wi-Fi, and 30 days on standby time like the iPad.
The models start at $1,000 and begin shipping today.
See Also:
Rumor: Apple to Introduce 11.6-Inch MacBook Next Week
New MacBook Pro: 10-Hour Battery, Hi-Res Screen, i7 CPU
New MacBook Air Will Come in 11 and 13-Inch Flavors
Netbook Sales Shrivel as Apple Rolls Out iPad
Apple Still Oblivious to Netbook Opportunity

Photo: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com
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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Kaspersky has its own security breached yet again

Filed under: SecurityKaspersky has its own security breached yet againby Lee Mathews (RSS feed) Oct 20th 2010 at 10:30AM
It hasn't been smooth sailing for security vendor Kaspersky Labs over the last few years. Back in 2008, the company's Malaysian website was defaced by a Turkish hacker via an SQL injection. In 2009, their U.S. support site was compromised -- again by the use of an SQL injection.
Following the second breach, Kaspersky's Roel Schouwenberg lamented, "This is not good for any company, and especially a company dealing with security." He's sure right about that. It's about as bad as things could get for an anti-malware provider... Right?
Well, almost. There is one possible scenario which is slightly worse: having your legitimate, well-known security site hacked so that it redirects potential downloaders to malicious software instead. And that's exactly what happened this Sunday.
Kaspersky denied the hack at first, but this is the kind of thing that's a little hard to cover up in 2010. Reports sprang up on their own forums and across the Internet, and Kaspersky eventually fessed up. They later offered an official statement:

Identifying the attacker and potential risk to your clients sounds like a good idea. You know what else might be a good idea? Securing your own servers so this doesn't happen again.
photo by flickr user pvera



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Daily Crunch: Kindling Edition

Inflatable Photo Studio Sets Up In Minutes, Is a FiretrapBiblio Leaf SP02: Toshiba?s Answer To The KindleJust What Kids Need: Scholastic Pocket Texting DevicesVideos: Cybernetic Human Robot HRP-4C DancingAsk CG: Am I Ready For An E-Reader?
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Motorola Defy to hit T-Mobile on Nov. 3

The Motorola Defy (see our hands-on here) is coming to T-Mobile on Nov. 3, according to T-Mobile USA's official Twitter account.� No price has been announced yet, and I'm not even going to venture a guess.� While it may not win any beauty awards, and it's not quite the top of the line, it seems more than capable -- and the Mil-Spec toughness factor is surely going to appeal to many.� The Defy ships with Android 2.1, a 5 MP shooter, a 3.7-inch capacitive screen at 480x854, Gorilla glass and the usual cadre of Wifi, Bluetooth, GPS with DNLA support tossed in for good measure.If you weren't lucky enough to get one from Oprah, you'll soon have you chance at this one. [T-Mobile via Twitter]
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Evernote strikes it rich, secures $20 million in funding

Filed under: ProductivityEvernote strikes it rich, secures $20 million in fundingby Lee Mathews (RSS feed) Oct 19th 2010 at 10:00AM
If you're an Evernote fan, their official blog has some good news this morning: the wildly popular cloud-centric note taking app has secured a cool $20 million in funding.
That's a big chunk of cash, and Evernote plans on putting it to good use. "Things are moving pretty quickly at Evernote," Phil Libin writes. "They're about to start moving even faster." Count on seeing more features and support for more devices coming in the very near future.
But Evernote isn't stopping there. Libin mentions a lofty new ambition for the app: to become "the global platform for human memory." Evernote wants to be the app to use when it comes to preserving your memories digitally, and it will be interesting to watch its evolution going forward.



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Chrome Web Store launch may be imminent

Filed under: Google, BrowsersChrome Web Store launch may be imminentby Lee Mathews (RSS feed) Oct 19th 2010 at 4:00PM



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Use VPN On Your iPad To Protect Privacy | Plus Special Giveaway Inside

August 26th, 2010 at 12:13 am - Posted by admin
When it comes to online privacy while using your iPad you need all the protection you can get. Luckily Golden Frog provides a service called VyprVPN that keeps your data safe. You may not be aware but your surfing as well as other online activities are constantly being tracked and recorded by your ISP and possibly other companies or individuals.
Take the recent situation involving AT&T for example. They were highly criticised for deep packet inspection, or in other words spying on their customers. Little did iPad owners know at the time that signing up for AT&T?s 3G network data plans was not so safe.
While sending emails or browsing the web using your iPad at a nearby coffee shop or library for example, in most cases the public Wi-Fi network you are using is anything but secure. This makes your personal data potentially vulnerable to eavesdropping and sniffing.
With identity theft on the rise you need to ensure your personal information is kept private.
How Does VyprVPN Work & Keep My iPad Secure?
When you perform any activities that require an Internet connection data packets are sent which include a header and a body. When you?re surfing the web for example all that is necessary is the header in order to determine where traffic should go. However it?s common for ISP?s to route this data, inspect the body of these packets and then use this information to spy, track and in some cases target advertising.
Using a VPN (Virtual Private Network) service such as VyprVPN prevents ISP?s from having the ability to view the body of these packets. Their service creates what is known as an encrypted end to end tunnel for all online transfers which prevents your data from being intercepted over Wi-Fi or 3G networks.
The iPad has native support for IPSec, PPTP and L2TP protocols. Currently VyprVPN has PPTP and OpenVPN plans with IPSec and L2TP plans expected to be available around the middle of September.
How Do I Setup VyprVPN On My iPad?
Once you have an account setup all you need to do is the following.
Step 01) Click on Settings ?> General ?> Network ?> VPN
Step 02) Click on Add VPN Configuration
Step 03) Select PPTP then enter the follwoing information:
Description: VyprVPN
Server: There are currently 4 different servers to choose from
us1.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Los Angeles, CA
us2.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Washington, DC
eu1.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Amsterdam
hk1.vpn.goldenfrog.com for Hong Kong
Account: Email address used to setup your Golden Frog account
Password: Your selected password
Step 04) Click Save
Here?s a couple of screen captures to help guide you.


So What?s This Giveaway You Speak Of?
The generous and hard working staff at Golden Frog have agreed to give one lucky winner from this site a 2 month top tier plan valued at $40, not a bad deal at all. Basically how it will work is the first 25 people to comment in this thread will be entered in a draw to be the lucky winner. Comments must be kept clean and on topic, NO SPAM will be tolerated. So best of luck to everyone!
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Apple TV jailbroken via greenpois0n [Jailbreak]






Prominent iOS hacker and Chronic-Dev Team member p0sixninja has tweeted a picture of an Apple TV jailbroken via Greenpios0n.


?Credits go to @nitoTV, @dhowett, and @westbaer for the awesome AppleTV loader?


Previously, the Apple TV had already been jailbroken using the SHAtter exploit, but had absolutely no 3rd party app support. We aren?t sure of when this will be released, or if it?ll be as easy as the current Greenpois0n jailbreak for iPhone or iPad, but at least we know the effort is moving forward ? and in a substantial way. Likewise, no information has been released on how 3rd party apps will be run, though the ?inject method? shown in the picture is tantalizing to say the least.

However, we?re pretty sure that ? given how quickly the team moves on this kind of thing ? we?ll be seeing a release in the near future. Maybe with a planned release date announced in the interim, as they did with 10/10/10?

In the meantime, is a Jailbroken Apple TV something you?re looking forward to? If so, what?s the main reason?

[@p0sixninja, thanks Anthony for the tip!]

by Andrew Wray


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Android - for your phone's protection

It is really vague. About 90% of people would never think of condoms or dicks when reading the sentence "The perfect fit for your phone's protection", to be honest. I think "the perfect fit" is the most vague (that no one would really relay to condoms) and, "for your phone's protection" is the main part that is probably causing the 10 people here to see a relation to condoms - but even that is pretty vague and unrelatable (not a word I guess) in my opinion.
I'm all for staying a kid sometimes - life really needs its fun moments - but I would never have made a correlation between this sentence and a condom joke, and I'm a 21 year old male. I think it's strange to be posted as an article, but, this is pretty rare, at least.



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Cyclists? Airbag Helmets Bursts Forth from Stylish Collar



The H�vding is an airbag for your head. Mounted in a bulky collar, which can be disguised as a stylish scarf, the bag explodes on when you crash and surrounds your delicate melon with an inflated hood. I know there are some drivers out there who hate cyclists, so here?s a video of the H�vding in action, with a sneaky car-driver mowing down an innocent biker.

H�vding means ?chieftain? in Swedish, and the air-helmet was designed by Swedes Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin as a university thesis project. The collar contains the bag itself, helium to inflate the airbag and sensors which tell the H�vding when to fire. The sensor unit consists of gyroscopes and accelerometers which constantly monitor movement and deploy to bag when you?re in danger. The Chieftain is charged by USB (firmware can also be updated via the same port) and you switch it on by zipping the collar shut around your neck.
With a car airbag, the time to fire is obvious ? when impact is detected. But as you see in the video, there are many ways a cyclist can fall that look similar to normal, safe activities in other contexts: going over the bars and falling forward is a lot like bending down to lock a wheel, for instance. To eliminate false positives, Haupt and Alstin carried out extensive testing with both dummies and ? amazingly ? stunt men and women.
So why wear this instead of a helmet? Style is the first thing that comes to mind. You can change the covers of the collar to match your outfit, and you won?t muss your hair while you ride. I?d probably feel less safe in this active scarf than I would in a passive, always-on helmet, but the H�vding seems to be reliable, and I don?t wear a helmet anyway.
There?s one more thing that this protector will do: adapt. When you hook up the hood to a USB port, you can choose to upload your ?chiefs?. The unit contains a ?black-box? which keeps the last ten-seconds of sensor info in a buffer and saves it on impact. This information is then aggregated to improve the performance of the software.
Bonus: fall off a bridge on the way home and you won?t drown, however drunk you are.
How the H�vding works [H�vding via David Report]
See Also:
Explosive Dog Collar Keeps Heads Above Water
Prototype Bike-Helmet Stinks When Damaged
NYC Giving Away Cool Bike Helmets
Bern Brentwood: The Only Bike Helmet You'll Ever Need
Lazer Bike Helmet Turns You Into a Space Pilot
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Rumor: Macbook Air Will Have Updated TrackPad and Two USB Ports [Apple]

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Android?s Champions Defend OS Against Steve Jobs



Two prominent Android enthusiasts aren?t taking Apple CEO Steve Jobs? tirade against the Android mobile operating system lying down.
Iain Dodsworth, the CEO of TweetDeck, and Andy Rubin, the brains leading the Android OS development, have both refuted Jobs? claims about the effect of fragmentation on users and developers because of Android?s open source philosophy.
?Did we at any point say it was a nightmare developing on Android? Errr nope, no we didn?t. It wasn?t,? tweeted Dodsworth Monday evening after hearing Jobs say that ?Twitter Deck? faced a major problem with fragmentation.
?A Twitter client, Twitter Deck recently launched their App for Android,? Job told analysts on the conference call. ?They reported that they had to contend with more than 100 different versions of Android software on 244 different handsets.?
Dodsworth is not the only one rebutting Jobs? strange trash-talking of Android. Android creator Rubin took to twitter to post his first tweet, a coded message to Jobs:
the definition of open: ?mkdir android ; cd android ; repo init -u git://android.git.kernel.org/platform/manifest.git ; repo sync ; make?
Those are the commands needed to compile Android on a home Linux machin?a way for Rubin to emphasize that anyone can take Android and play with it.
Since it debut in 2008, Android has grown into a major operating system, gathering support from phone manufacturers and wireless carriers. Android is now the most popular operating system among people who bought a smartphone in the past six months, while Blackberry RIM and Apple iOS are in a statistical dead heat for second place among recent acquirers, according to August data from The Nielsen Company.
With its rapid growth, Android could eclipse Apple?s iOS and iPhone. It may be one reason why Jobs seemed to launch in to what seems like a long rant against Android.
?We think Android is very fragmented and becoming more fragmented by the day, and as you know, Apple strives for the integrated model so that the user isn?t forced to be the systems integrator,? told Jobs. (You can listen to the entire conference call here.)
But data shows Android fragmentation, caused by the different versions of the Android operating system on devices, is on the decline. The Android OS is coalescing around three major flavors: Android 1.5, aka�Cupcake; Android 1.6, or Donut; and Android 2.1, nicknamed Eclair. As of June, almost half of all Android devices ran on Eclair.
Still Jobs tried to convince listeners of the superiority of iPhone?s walled garden, tight control approach over Android?s open philosophy.
We also think our developers can be more innovative if they can target a singular platform rather than 100 variants. They can put their time into innovative new features rather than testing on hundreds of different handsets, so we are very committed to the integrated approach, no matter how many times Google tries to characterize it as closed. And we are confident that it will triumph over Google?s fragmented approach, no matter how many times Google tries to characterize it as open.
Developers such as Dodsworth disagree. Dodsworth tweeted his company has just two developers working on the Android app.
?That shows how small an issue fragmentation is,? he says.
See Also:
Why Windows Phone 7 Will Make Android Look Chaotic
Bloatware Creeps Into Android Phones
Independent App Stores Take On Google?s Android Market
Everything We Know So Far About Amazon?s Android App Store
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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

How to fix stuck app downloads [From the Forums]

This is also happening on 2.1 devices. Half/some/most of the time I update apps in the new Froyo'd Market, the app will install fine but the status bar ("Installing...") will cycle endlessly.
The fix for that is pretty easy, though. Go to Menu, Settings, Applications, Manage Applications, Market, Uninstall Updates. The next time you go to the Market, it's the standard Eclair Market. You'll have to agree to the Android Market terms of use, blah blah blah, but it will clear all the stuck status bars.
I've done this many, many times now and it works every time. Bit of a PITA, but I haven't seen any ill effects.
Of course, after about 10 minutes the Market is updated to the Froyo version... and the issue will happen again... and again...



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TatMash 3D lets you try a virtual tattoo before you take the plunge

Filed under: Fun, PhotoTatMash 3D lets you try a virtual tattoo before you take the plungeby Sebastian Anthony (RSS feed) Oct 18th 2010 at 2:30PMThere are two things I've always wanted to try, but never had the guts to actually do: cut my hair short and get a tattoo. I also want to bungee jump, but that's not something that computers can really help with, so let's stick to hair and tattoos...
It's the permanence of it all. Sure, hair might grow back -- and you can remove tattoos with lasers -- but you're still looking at weeks or months of pain and embarrassment. While I haven't found a good tool to virtually crop my hair, there is something for tattoos: TatMash 3D. It's free (with cheap premium upgrades, if you're a serial skin painter), and the site itself is ugly -- but it works! Not without issues, mind you.
First, you name and tag your image before you upload it. You have to click through to the next page to get the upload dialogue -- how very counterintuitive. The CAPTCHA sucks -- despite typing it correctly, the site disagreed -- and the uploader had some issues with my transparent PNG. GIFs worked fine, though.
Next, you have the option of uploading your own image, using your webcam to grab an image, or giving the site an image URL (which is great for plastering tattoos all over your favorite celebrity).
Then you create your TatMash. Drag the tattoo around, resize it, rotate it -- marvel as it magically hugs the contours of your body! This is where the "3D" bit comes in: "SkinSnap" somehow maps your skin and alters the shape of the tattoo. With the premium version you can do even more 3D wizardry! As you can see above, the DLS logo is quite heavily skewed by my bulging, manly musculature.
Once you're done, you have the usual social sharing options or you can create a "should I get this tattoo?" voting widget. Because everyone knows that asking your friends is a brilliant idea...



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What to Expect From Apple?s Mac Event



The iPad and iPhone have hogged the media?s attention for months, but Apple is preparing to turn the spotlight onto its Macintosh computers in a news conference Wednesday.
Just what can we expect? Apple observers are exchanging whispers about new notebooks and a preview of the next Mac operating system. Here?s a quick rundown of what Apple is likely to unveil at the presser.
New MacBooks
Multiple independent publications received tips about major upgrades for Apple?s ultrathin notebook, the MacBook Air. Rumor has it that the Air will come in two different sizes ? 13.3 inches and 11.6 inches ? and come with an even-thinner unibody enclosure.
The internals could be even more interesting. AppleInsider claims the Air will include flash storage, which would theoretically enable extremely fast boot times and ?instant-on? capabilities. Cult of Mac adds that the Air will have a bigger battery providing 8 to 10 hours of battery life.
These rumors seem plausible given that a bigger battery would follow the trend of Apple integrating built-in batteries into its other MacBooks, which get about 10 hours of battery life. Flash storage and instant-on capability on a notebook would be a logical next step following the iPad.
Publications haven?t been tipped off about new MacBook Pros, but it?s likely we?ll see incremental upgrades for these notebooks as well: They were last upgraded about six months ago, and on average the MacBook Pro gets refreshed every seven months.
Mac OS X Lion
Apple?s press invite includes an image of a lion, so it?s fairly obvious part of the event will provide a sneak peek on the next-gen Mac OS, code-named Lion. Our friends at MacStories received a tip that OS X will abandon the current aqua-based scroll bars in favor of iOS?s translucent gray scroll bar, which disappears whenever you?re not scrolling.
Also, a ?Quick Look? feature will enable you to get a pop-up view with some details about a file that you select with the Spotlight search tool, according to MacStories.
That can?t be all there is to it. We?re guessing that OS Lion will introduce features such as instant-on capability, and some significant performance boosts for the entire Mac family.
Wired.com will report live from Apple headquarters Wednesday morning at 10 a.m. Pacific time. Stay tuned for the news.
See Also:
Steve Jobs Unveils Newer, Sexier Aluminum MacBooks
Rumor: Apple to Introduce 11.6-Inch MacBook Next Week
New MacBook Air Will Come in 11 and 13-Inch Flavors
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WD?s New 3TB Drive Packs More Storage Than 32-Bit Can Handle



Western Digital claims its newly-announced 2.5 TB and 3 TB Caviar Green hard drives are the largest capacity SATA drives on the market. But WD admits that these bigger drives need a little bit of help working on older systems.
?Drives with capacities in excess of 2.19 TB currently present barriers for PC hardware, firmware and software,? according to WD?s press release. To get around these barriers, WD is bundling its new drives with an Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI)-compliant Host Bus Adapter (HBA), which will pair legacy operating systems with a driver than can support bigger drives.
The 2.19 TB limit isn?t a problem for 64-bit versions of Windows 7 or Vista, OS X Leopard or Snow Leopard, or many versions of Linux. Really, the problem is Windows XP.
XP (whether in 32- or 64-bit) runs into problems because of its legacy BIOS and Master Boot Record (MBR) partition table, which it in turn carried over from earlier versions of Windows. These allow XP to address a maximum only 2^32 logical blocks at 512 bytes each ? for an upper bound of 2.19 TB.
Any 32-bit system (even one as new as Windows 7) has trouble booting into a drive with a capacity over 2.19 TB, but they can work around that limitation for a secondary internal drive. XP can only use these large drives as external drives with special USB firmware that either presents it as a single drive using larger sector sizes or as more than one smaller drives to the host (this is how Seagate?s 3 TB external drive works) ? or using an internal HBA card, which does basically the same thing.
Still confused? WD has a complete list of operating systems, motherboards and USB bridges that it supports for its new large-capacity drives. Meanwhile, if you?re ready to roll and the old 2TB drives just weren?t enough storage, the new drives are available now. The 2.5 TB is $189 and the 3 TB hard drive is $239.00.
See Also:
Western Digital Hard Drives With E-Ink Displays
Western Digital Portable Drives Now Smaller (and Bigger)
The Price of a Hard Drive
HyperDrive 750GB Photo-Storing Hard Drive for iPad
Imation Ships First Wireless USB Hard Drive
'World's First' 3TB Desktop Drive Offers USB 3.0, FireWire ?
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How Seven-Inch Android Tablets Can Succeed



7-inch tablets may have drawn Steve Jobs? contempt, but they could be a very good thing for consumers.
During Apple?s earnings call yesterday, Apple?s CEO argued forcefully that a 7-inch Android tablet could never compete with Apple?s nearly 10-inch iPad.
?7-inch tablets are tweeners: too big to compete with a smartphone and too small to compete with the iPad,? Jobs said, in an extended thrashing of Apple?s competitors. ?These are among the reasons that the current crop of 7-inch tablets are going to be DOA ? dead on arrival.?
What I don?t understand is why that?s necessarily a bad thing for Android or tablet-makers.
If Jobs is right that the 7-inch tablets won?t be able to beat Apple?s iPad on price, that could indeed be a deal-breaker. But the pricing we have seen on smaller Android tablets suggests that they?ll be at least $100 cheaper than the current entry-level iPad, even without a data plan. If they?re sold with data plans and carrier subsidies like smartphones, they could be even cheaper than that.
Lower cost isn?t the only appeal of going small. 7-inch tablets are lighter than 10-inch devices. They?re infinitely easier to hold in one hand. They?re easier to type on with two hands (particularly if you have small hands). They fit into smaller bags. And you use them to do different things.
Really, a 7-inch tablet is closer to an e-reader, a personal media player or a handheld gaming device than the iPad is. It?s no coincidence that most e-readers, such as the Kindle and Sony Reader Daily Edition, have 6- or 7-inch screens: That?s about the size of a paperback book.
More?
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Android 3.0 Honeycomb almost done, expect tablets galore at CES

�Google has been pretty mum, at least in public, about its plans for�Honeycomb, which isn't much of a surprise since Gingerbread hasn't even been announced. However, DigiTimes has gotten word that Google has recently reached out to its hardware partners to let them know that development on Honeycomb "will soon be completed" and that they can expect engineering prototypes sometime in December. Expect an updated Galaxy Tab from Samsung, as well as tablet offerings from Motorola, HTC, and traditional notebook manufacturers like Acer once CES rolls around in January of next year.�In addition, the site said we can expect Android 4.0 (Ice Cream?) during the middle of 2011, but did not offer any details on the OS. They went on to explain some of the benefits of using Android as a tablet OS over Windows: namely, that licensing for Android is just $10 compared to up to $60 for Windows. In addition, the ARM processors used by Android are much cheaper than the Intel ones required by Windows. So, in short, expect to see tons of Android tablets come January. But that's hardly a surprise, right? [DigiTimes]
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Daily Crunch: Squirrel Target Edition

Video: Use A Slinky To Save Your Birdseed From Evil SquirrelsLockheed & Darpa Develop Real Life ?Aimbot? For SnipersHandheld X-Ray Device Powered By 2 D BatteriesChumby Grows Workable Legs, Next Step Is Clearly Human EnslavementApple Looking To Sell iPad In South Korea In November
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Inflatable Photo Studio Is a Lawsuit Waiting to Happen



I so wanted to laugh at the IPS, or Inflatable Photo Studio, when I saw it. Luckily it is easy to do so. The giant black plastic balloon is actually ideal for quickly setting up a controlled shooting environment in minutes, but its website is as laughable as the machinations of the fashion-industry itself.
This (annoying Flash) site could only have been built in the U.S.A, land of the lawsuit. Almost every part on the site, from the Q&A to a section marked ?Important? has a warning of some kind. Here is one of the best, as transcribed from the Flash monstrosity by our favorite Strobist Mr. David Hobby.
It is not recommended that you smoke, cook or have any open flames in the studio. Also lights can become very hot and melt the studio. Do not rest lighting or position it against the sides. Curling irons, hair driers [sic] irons, and steamers can also melt the plastic causing rapid deflation or possible fire.
Or what about this one, concerning the use of the big bubble-tent in wind:
Its [sic] not concrete. But if you?re shoot in an air bubble in gale force winds then yes its [sic] going to move around a bit [...] It is not recommended that you inflate these on cliffs, dams or areas with strong wind gusts.
If you want more, then here it is:
DO NOT ALLOW ANYONE INSIDE WHILE DEFLATING! It is recommended that in the event there is a power failure that you crawl on your hands and knees to the nearest exit. In the event of a rapid deflation is is best to NOT PANIC, keep your arms up at an angle in front of you.

This last is accompanied by a photo of Shatner?s Kirk choking to death.
But back to the actual product. The 6-10mm-thick plastic is welded into a giant black balloon which is inflated by a fan connected to an entry tube. The tent is black inside to prevent light spill, and can be pumped up ready for action in 3-4 minutes.
There are two sizes, the smaller 12 x 7 x 10 foot version and a lager 20 x 12 x 12-foot model. Both can be had with or without fans, at $330/$400 or $350/$500 respectively. This is surprisingly cheap for photo gear.
Go check out the site. It?s worth it for a few minutes amusement. Especially good is the glimpse of what look like capri-pants on the boy-model in the video.
Inflatable Photo Studio [IPS via Strobist]
See Also:
Inflatable Bike-Bag for Air-Filled Air-Travel
Blow Up the Big Screen with the Inflatable Outdoor Theatre ?
Designers Imagine Portable Homeless Shelters
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