Friday, September 25, 2015

Why you should buy a diesel car right now — or keep the one you own

Volkswagen is in a world of hurt. So are Audi, BMW, Mercedes-Benz and the others who sell diesel passenger cars. Diesels are distressed properties which, ironically, make them a great deal if you’re in the market for a new car. Seriously: Buy a diesel now. If you’re thinking of investing in VW stock, that’s a different matter. It’s hard to say if the market has fully digested all the bad news.

This AI algorithm can match the average American on real SAT questions

Yeah, yeah — of course a computer won at a math competition. That’s not the point. This story, which concerns a rather amazing program called GeoS from the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence (AI2), is about the ability of AI to usefully engage with the world. To a computer, with a brain literally structured for these sorts of operations, the math SAT is not a test on calculation, but reading comprehension. That’s why this story is so interesting: GeoS isn’t as good as the average American at geometry, it’s as good as the average American at the SAT itself.

Mozilla fixes 14-year old Firefox bug, turbocharges Adblock Plus

Court rules cell phone passcodes protected under Fifth Amendment

The federal district court in Eastern Pennsylvania has ruled that plaintiffs in the case SEC v. Bonan Huang et al cannot be compelled to give up the passcode to their cell phones. At issue was whether the defendants could be forced to give up passcodes to devices that were provided by their employer, but secured by passcodes chosen by the employees themselves.
The question of whether or not defendants can be required to unlock a personal device has generally been answered “No,” but the SEC argued that these were products owned by a corporation and merely provided to employees. The men in question, Bonan and Nan Huang, are accused of insider trading, turning a $150K initial investment into more than $2.8 million through illegal profiteering.

VW diesel scandal spreads to Audi, Porsche — and possibly even BMW

Fallout from the Volkswagen diesel scandal continues to grow, as this morning brings reports that Audi’s head of research and development Ulrich Hackenberg and Porsche’s engine chief Wolfgang Hatz are both out — two of the top engineering figures in the Volkswagen’s other flagship brands. That comes as a bit of a surprise, even though it’s widely expected more heads will roll at VW aside from Martin Winterkorn, the CEO of the company’s worldwide operations, who resigned effective yesterday.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Nvidia launches overclock-friendly GTX 980 desktop GPU for gaming laptops

Amid emissions scandal, Volkswagen may have mortally wounded the diesel passenger car market

Quantum dots, OLED go head-to-head in 65-inch DisplayMate shootout

Office 2016 review: Microsoft makes mobile-first, cloud-first a reality

Microsoft has started using OneDrive as the default storage location for an increasing number of its applications, but that is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the integration of the cloud — and team-based workflows — in Office 2016. The new version features brand new team-only apps Planner and Delve, as well as Sway, an innovative new presentation creation and sharing application. Real-time collaboration has also been added to Word, OneNote, and PowerPoint. For organizations that have standardized on Office, there is plenty to like in its newest incarnation.

Office 365 Planner & Delve

Office Delve's people view provides a handle on what everyone in your organization is working on.Office 2016 introduces two entirely new applications to support teams. Delve has been out in preview form for a while. Available to organizations with Office 365 business subscriptions, it uses the power of Microsoft’s servers to allow users to get an automated view into what is likely to be important to them. It does this by using data from Office Graph — essentially a complete record of every document, meeting, or email-related action taken by every user — to build a tiled dashboard of people, projects, and documents that are related to what you’ve been working on, or that have been shared with you.
Planner is a brand new tool that allows teams to quickly set up projects and populate them with tasks and documents. Like Delve, it then uses Office Graph to create user-specific, interactive dashboards of project status. It isn’t designed to replace the heavy-lifting style of project management done by Microsoft Project. But for busy team members, it’s a quick way to keep track of their involvement in many different projects. While Delve provides a people-focused dashboard of all Office-related activity, Planner provides one based on projects and tasks.
In functionality, Planner is very similar to some other existing services, such as Trello, but because it has the advantage of being deeply integrated with Office Graph, it may become the favorite among those organizations committed to Office. On the flip side, for organizations that don’t have a corporate commitment to hosted or server-based Office installations, a separate service allows more flexibility.

Office Sway

Sway offers a variety of sharing options for co-authoring and viewing but presentations are always hosted by MicrosoftFor individual users, the most exciting new capability is probably Sway. Sway allows users to easily construct catchy multimedia presentations. Unlike PowerPoint, it doesn’t rely on a slide-by-slide metaphor, and also moves much of the responsibility for layout style to the application. Users can tweak the layout themselves, or use the Remix! Button to have Sway cycle through suggestions. Although part of Office 2016, the Sway application is available from the Windows 10 app store, and for the iPhone and iPad. It is also part of Office Online.
Sway presentations are easy-to-create, colorful, and look cool. It is so easy to make them appear catchy, that I think we’ll see a lot of users go overboard — the same way people went crazy with typefaces when desktop publishing was introduced. It can be very disconcerting to be looking at a Sway presentation and having fly-in effects and panning images while you’re trying to read.
Once shared, a Sway can be viewed by anyone with a browser, although Sway presentations are always hosted on Microsoft’s sway.com, and can’t be off-lined or exported to another format. That raises another issue — longevity. Microsoft doesn’t have the best track record for long-term commitment to its creative tools (remember Expression, Movie Maker, or Live Writer?). Until there is a way to guarantee the long-term survival of a Sway, I see it being most effective for quick sharing.

Real-time collaboration in Word, PowerPoint, and OneNote

Word 2016 features both real time typing among collaborators and Skype for business videoNot to be outdone by the rising tide of cloud-based document editors like Google Docs, Microsoft has added some very slick real-time collaboration capabilities to Word, and similar versions to PowerPoint and OneNote. On the editing front, not only can two users edit the same cloud-hosted document, but if it is on Microsoft’s servers (OneDrive or Office 365, for example) then they can each see exactly where other users are in the document.
Microsoft adds to this capability by making it easy to open a Skype call (or chat or meeting) with any of the document’s authors from right within Word.

Office mobile apps

While not news — as they’ve been around for a while already — Microsoft’s mobile apps for Office have been the most rapidly evolving part of the Office. These touch-friendly versions of Word, Excel, OneNote, and PowerPoint run on iOS, Android, and of course Windows 10. For Windows 10 users on tablets or phones, the mobile versions of the applications make it much easier to work without a keyboard or mouse. Microsoft also has some additional cool tools for mobile users, including my favorite mobile document scanning applications: Office Lens.

Office 365 (2016) pricing: Subscriptions get more attractive

Microsoft has clearly realized — like Adobe before it — that getting people to pay nearly any amount per month, forever, is better than relying on the whims of upgraders. So it is offering both a discounted Personal Plan ($7/month for 1 machine and 1 phone), and a more value-oriented Home Plan ($10/month for 5 computers and 5 phones). Both plans include 1TB of OneDrive storage and 60 Skype calling minutes per month — meaning you get Office essentially for free compared to a similarly-sized cloud plan from Google, for example. (You can compare plans in more detail at the Microsoft Office 3650 Home subscription page). Both plans include Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, and Access.
Those preferring to stick with the traditional purchase licensing model can get Office 2016 (one-time purchase without upgrades) Home and Business for $230. It includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. The Student and Teacher version is $150, but doesn’t include Outlook. Purchased versions don’t include the Skype minutes, and only feature 15GB of free storage.

Mobile-first, cloud-first: Does Microsoft have it right?

Whether you use Ballmer’s phrase “devices and services” or Nadella’s “mobile-first, cloud-first,” it represents the largest software pivot for Microsoft since its 1990s embrace of the web. It implies expanding its platform presence from just Windows to online and mobile, and its moving its revenue model from product licensing to cloud-based service subscriptions. Office 2016 represents Microsoft’s most aggressive effort to date to make these major changes. Its services are available across most platforms, and its revenue is increasingly platform neutral — since it gets subscription revenue independent of which platform you use to access the services.
Google has been selling a very similar vision with its Google Apps for Work offering, but Microsoft is bringing the world’s most mature suite of productivity applications to the party. The good news for organizations, especially those that are long-time Office customers, is that they no longer have to choose between the power of Office and the flexibility of the cloud. With Office 2016 combined with Office 365, Microsoft is giving them the opportunity to have both.

Why is Konami making gambling machines and mobile games instead of AAA games?

From a public relations standpoint, this past year has been incredibly rough for Konami. We’ve seen a falling out with its biggest creative resource, the complete removal of any trace of P.T. from the PSN store, and reports of excessively harsh treatment of employees. Now, it seems that Konami is exiting the world of console game development with the single exception of the Pro Evolution Soccer series. Considering that Konami holds the rights to some of the most beloved franchises in gaming history, this is incredibly sad news.

Apple supposedly working on an electric car with a 2019 launch date

It sounds a little like someone’s idea of a joke. Apple is supposedly working on bringing an electric car to market, despite its lack of experience in the field or any previous automotive operation. Nonetheless, it’s been reported that Apple has a skunkworks of some 600 employees looking to bring a vehicle to market by 2019. The concept, dubbed Project Titan, has reportedly been studied for years, but Apple recently decided to triple the size of its team and bring on an additional 1200 people. Since no photos or finished product is available, we’ve decided to bring you the best of the mockups and concepts the Internet has to offer. You can thank us later.

LG competition offers chance to win 34-inch widescreen displays, $10,000 for a dream PC


Ten semi-finalists will take home an LG 34UC87C, so let’s talk about that for a moment.
LG recently launched its new 34-inch 21:9 widescreen monitor. As part of that effort, the company is offering PC enthusiasts the chance to win a display or even build an entire dream machine. Upload a video or still images that describe your current setup and describe the dream machine you want to build, and you may get lucky. If your entry is chosen, LG will hook you up with a design team including Linus of Linus Tech Tips, Lewis from UnboxTherapy, or gaming expert Jahova.

Monday, September 21, 2015

The iOS App Store has been hit with its first major malware scare

VW caught cheating on diesel emissions standards, ordered to recall 500,000 cars


There are multiple interesting facets to this situation. When VW brought its clean diesel technology to the US, it hyped up its own use of a urea-based additive, known as AdBlue, as a key component of its exhaust-cleaning system. Because US regulations on nitrous oxide emissions are even more strict than European laws, VW claimed it could bring NOx emissions down to as low as 70mg/mile, in compliance with California’s “Tier 2 / Bin 5″ emission standard. (New York, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Maine also use this standard).
Diesel cars have never been popular in the US, after disastrous early introductions left the American market with a poor impression of the fuel and the commercial vehicles that use it. VW is one of a handful of companies to introduce vehicles based on so-called “clean diesel” technology in the last decade, and claimed that the era of smoking, high-pollution diesel was over. Sounds great in theory — but the entire premise may have been built on false assumptions. On Friday, the EPA slammed Volkswagen with a massive, 500,000-car recall, noting that the manufacturer had designed its vehicles to deliberately hide their own diesel emissions and that the cars can dump up to 40x more pollution into the atmosphere than legally allowed.

Terahertz breakthrough allows for ultrafast wireless communications


Oscillating at around 1 trillion times per second, THz waves were previously utilized for the wireless data transmission world record, whereby a team of researchers showed local data transmission could be
 up to 100GBit/s. However, for any real world system, electronic components are required which perform common functions akin to our regular communication technology; such as transmission, multiplexing, demultiplexing, detection, processing etc.A collaboration between US and Japanese researchers, have developed a key component in order to enable wireless communications which operate up to 100x faster than current generation routers. Current wireless communications operate at microwave frequencies, however as the demand for faster speeds and larger bandwidths increases, scientists are looking for ways to alleviate the communication bottleneck. Between the microwave and infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum lies an appealing candidate: Terahertz (THz) radiation.

Sharp will launch 8K TVs next month, at six-digit prices

Sunday, September 20, 2015

5 Scientific Reasons Body Swapping Might Be Possible

I've spent my whole life fleeing from the consequences of my actions. Whether by treachery, cunning, or daring biplane escape, there's not a misdeed whose fallout I haven't escaped.
abadonian/iStock/Getty Images
I actually used the biplane to flee the fallout from the expense report I filed for the biplane.
But sometimes, my indiscretions pose resistant to most conventional forms of flight. And with the authorities closing in on me, my mind has often turned to the possibility of swapping my body with that of some poor rube, and escaping that way. My schemes along this angle have never gotten much further than causing head injuries during a lightning storm, but during a recent spell of non-villainy, I had the time to sit down and do some proper research on the subject. Thus was I was happily surprised to discover that there are actual scientists -- wearing the crispest, cleanest of lab coats -- who are working on the same problem. Here, then, for your new-life-starting pleasure, are the five most scientifically promising ways that we might one day be able to swap bodies with some rube.

Making life more resistant to stress

All plants need to photosynthesize to survive. But when you throw in environmental stressors like excess heat, cold, drought, salt, or herbicides, just photosynthesizing can be deadly. Even in the absence of any of these assaults, too much sun can be worse than too little. The fact that chlorophyll’s absorption spectrum makes things surprisingly green reflects the compromises inherent in being able to capture every photon possible when they are scarce, yet field only just enough when they are plentiful.A recent paper in Current Biology suggests that plants can be engineered against climate change, even drought. Researchers propose to do this by making the plants better at handling stress. Now I know what you might be thinking — ‘stress’, ‘climate change’ — it sounds like it’s time to call the plant acupuncturist. However, there is actually some fascinating new science hiding behind claims like this.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Rock Paper Scissors robot wins 100% of the time

First, how the robot won: by watching. There were three strategies that could produce a 100% win record, but they all basically boil down to using a high-speed camera and human-beating electronic reflexes to identify the oncoming shape of the opponent’s hand and play the corresponding move to beat it. Just the angle of the wrist or early movement of the fingers is enough to give away what move the human is headed for.The newest version of a robot from Japanese researchers can not only challenge the best human players in a game of Rock Paper Scissors, but it can beat them — 100% of the time. In reality, the robot uses a sophisticated form a cheating which both breaks the game itself (the robot didn’t “win” by the actual rules of the game) and shows the amazing potential of the human-machine interfaces of tomorrow.

Jim Keller, AMD’s chief CPU architect, leaves the company

Hackers have created master keys to TSA-approved locks, and the TSA couldn’t care less

First, some background. In 2003, Travel Sentry introduced a new type of TSA-approved lock with a built-in backdoor. A TSA agent armed with the appropriate tools could open the lock, inspect the item, and then send the luggage on its way. The entire system was meant to ensure that officials could still search luggage without forcing consumers to give up all of their security in the process.For years, the US TSA (that’s the Transportation Security Agency, a division of Homeland Security) has recommended that travelers in the United States buy and equip their luggage with a TSA-approved lock. The ostensible reason for this is because it allows the agency immediate access to your bag in the event that it needs to inspect your luggage rather than requiring agents to cut the lock physically in order to inspect its contents. Now, a team of hackers have demonstrated that the seven master keys that collectively open every TSA-approved lock ever manufactured have been broken.

Friday, September 18, 2015

IBM’s upcoming blockchain release could change the internet

A blockchain is just a database with special provisions built in to make it public and agreed-upon by all users — and that transparency is what makes tampering with the blockchain easy to detect. With a trusted, mutually visible place to store basic information, it’s possible to do things like send money over the internet; there’s no need to worry about fraud when the whole transaction is controlled by the info in the blockchain, which is available for you to review at any time. This has taken the form of blockchain-based securities trading, which speeds up the process from days to minutes, while bringing risks down to “zero.”IBM has announced that it will soon  release its own, open source version of blockchain software — the public ledger system that lets Bitcoin work. It’s not a move to reinvent cryptocurrency, but an ambitious attempt to allow individuals and large corporations alike to make full use of everything the internet makes possible. It has the potential to decentralize the internet, making it both safer and more versatile in one fell swoop.

NASA delays crewed Orion capsule launch two years, to 2023

This new delay, however, means the Space Launch System (SLS) will now spend nearly five years from its first Exploration Mission (EM-1) launch in 2018 to the second launch in 2023. The 2018 mission will send the Orion capsule on a circumlunar trajectory with a splashdown back on Earth seven days later. NASA and Lockheed have collaborated on the design of EM-1 and the Orion capsule; NASA announced it would lighten by up to 25% by making multiple changes to Orion’s panel configurations and reducing the number of welds. The Orion vehicle has held up well in its various tests to-date, including a successful uncrewed test flight last December and a demonstrated ability to land despite the failure of two parachutes.NASA has announced that it will delay the launch of its crewed Orion space capsule to April 2023, almost two years later than the original target of August, 2021. The organization claims that this latest day is the result of a rigorous technical review program that incorporates numerous changes to the original EM-2 capsule design. According to Bill Gerstenmaier, the associate administrator for human exploration at NASA, these changes should improve the flight characteristics of the vehicle. “We did some changes to reduce weight, took a lot of weight out of the structure for EM-1 and EM-2, [and] reduced the number of cone panels that make up the cone section of the Orion,” Gerstenmaier said.

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

6 things you may not know about holography


Holography

1. Tupac is not a hologram
If a 2D picture is worth a thousand words, then a 3D image is worth a million. With holography, it is possible to reconstruct 3D images using holograms, and the process is unlike anything found in traditional display technology. Even though it was invented over 70 years ago, holography remains the best candidate for achieving true 3D displays. Here we present six things you may not know about the strange and wonderful world of holography.

The Witcher 3 can’t maintain 30fps on either the PS4 or Xbox One


Witcher 3

The team at Digital Foundry did a brief comparison of the PS4 and Xbox One versions of the game, but the results are far from clearcut. As you may remember, the PS4 version runs at 1080p, but the Xbox One uses dynamic resolution scaling to switch between 900p and 1080p depending on how graphically intensive the scene is. And while the PS4 is capped at 30fps, the Xbox One is not.The Witcher 3 has been both critically and commercially successful since its release last week, but it’s not without its issues. Most notably, the frame rate on the PS4 and Xbox One has been sub-par. Nobody sincerely expected it to be hitting 60fps on either console, but it seems that it can’t even maintain a solid 30fps. We’re a year and a half into this console generation, and AAA developers still can’t keep the frame rate up.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Ten Highest Paid Female Gamers In The World

Top 10 Highest Paid Female GamersVideo games were developed as a form of leisure mostly for children some years ago. There were times when parents truly had concerns with the amount of time their children spent playing video games.
The gaming industry has quite changed and players now have the opportunity to earn a lot of money. This does not leave out the females as more and more females are joining the industry and doing very well for themselves too. Here is a list of the top 10 highest paid professional female gamers in the world today.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

SCS Blender Tools - Trailer Export Supported

Today we'd like to announce release of the second iteration of SCS Blender Tools.

The highlight of today's release is the support for exporting semi-trailer models from Blender to Euro Truck simulator 2. This new functionality should add to the growing roster of already supported models.

Here's is the full list of changes in the new version of SCS Blender Tools:
  • New and better visualization of SCS materials based on Blender nodes system
  • "Look" system implementation (The "look" is our internal name for what people usually call "skins")
  • Lamp Tools - lamp material preview and helper tool for positioning UV mappings
  • Wrap Tool - vertex colors wrapping
  • Collision Locators support

Monday, May 11, 2015

Run Android apps on your Windows PC


ARC

Well, fortunately, with a little leg work, you can run Android apps on a regular old Windows PC. There are a few different ways to go about it, each with their own strengths and weaknesses.Android’s application ecosystem has proven to be versatile and very developer-friendly, after a bit of a slow start. You are free to develop an app for Android and publish it to the Play Store with minimal restrictions. This has led to a plethora of really cool Android apps, some of which aren’t available on iOS or other platforms. Running Android apps usually requires an Android smartphone or tablet — obviously! — but what if you currently use iOS or another mobile OS, and want to try out Android without actually getting an Android device?

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Nvidia kills Icera soft modem, refocuses Tegra on automotive design


Tegra 4 - Batman logo
Nvidia posted its first quarter results yesterday, with strong growth in PC gaming and automotive sales. The GPU manufacturer also announced that it would cease all business operations related to its Icera softmodem technology, with the intent of wrapping up that segment by the second half of the year.
Killing Icera brings an end to one of the more ambitious chapters in Nvidia’s quest for mobile market domination. When Nvidia bought the company in 2011, 4G and LTE support were just beginning to roll out across the United States. After several quiet years with relatively few design wins, Nvidia came out swinging in 2013, with the simultaneous announcement of Tegra 4, 4i, and the Icera i500 stand-alone modem.

Monday, May 4, 2015

Microsoft demonstrates new HoloLens prototype, talks up dedicated Holographic processor


Hololens
Microsoft unveiled new prototypes and details of its HoloLens project this week, and the new technology looks like it could have a profound impact on how we use computers in the future. Like the Oculus Rift, the HoloLens system is headset-based, but that’s where the similarities end. Where Oculus Rift creates entire 3D realms to explore (virtual reality), HoloLens is meant to create holographic overlays over existing objects and structure in the real world (Augmented Reality).
Microsoft had previously showed off its HoloLens technology, but the January demos relied on bulky equipment. The new prototypes are, dare we say it, rather sleek. The fact that HoloLens is only meant to augment real-life rather than completely replace it means that there’s no need for a screen and face-covering VR headset.

Is the phablet the future of smartphones?


Nexus 6 Phablet
A recent report by Yahoo’s Flurry Analytics unit shows that phablet usage is growing dramatically. For the purposes of looking into this further, it helps to categorize phablets and differentiate them from smartphones. Flurry looks at usage data in the following categories:
Flurry phablet smartphones data

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Exoplanet’s visible light spectrum measured for the first time


ESO exoplanet spectrumFor some 20 years, astronomers have been discovering exoplanets, or planets orbiting other stars, in various indirect fashions. These discoveries are just as scientific and valid as a visual observance, if not more so. But once in a while there’s a milestone that’s worth noting for the thrill as much as for the science. The first time we actually saw an exoplanet, i.e. directly imaged, in 2008 was one such example. Now we have the first official detection of an exoplanet’s visible light spectrum, courtesy of the HARPS planet-hunting machine and the ESO’s 3.6-meter telescope at the La Silla Observatory in Chile.
The exoplanet in question orbits the star 51 Pegasi, and is roughly 50 light-years away from Earth in the constellation Pegasus. What also makes this discovery noteworthy is that this exoplanet, 51 Pegasi b, is the first one we ever discovered back in 1995 that orbits a normal star like the Sun. For amateur astronomers, 51 Pegasi itself has an apparent magnitude of 5.49 — meaning you can *just* about see it without binoculars or a telescope if you’re under dark skies. Fortunately, we have much more sophisticated instrumentation available to us than the naked eye:

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

It’s still possible we all live inside a hologram


Hologram (TU Wien, Vienna)

Mathematicians are already familiar with the holographic principle, which the famous physicist Leonard Susskind first proposed. It asserts that a volume of space can be thought of as encoded on a boundary to it — such as an observer-dependent gravitational horizon — and therefore needs one less dimension than it appears to need. By extension, since our universe seems three-dimensional to us, it could actually be a two-dimensional structure that’s overlaid onto an incredibly large cosmic horizon.Is our universe actually just a hologram? This idea has been floated around before, and isn’t just some trippy, somewhat horrifying thought one gets at 3am, perhaps along with (or as a result of) insomnia. Instead, it could very well be an actual physical property of the universe. And it may have been under our noses all this time.

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Sony Has Certain Parity Policies As Well, Microsoft’s Indie Requirements Are Not Unreasonable

Tower of Guns

Microsoft’s indie parity clause has been a subject of much debate ever since Microsoft announced the ID@Xbox policy at Gamescom 2013. Several developers in the past have outright mentioned their grievances with the parity clause whereas some have taken a neutral stance on it. In the past, Xbox One executives have mentioned that the parity clause can be tweaked if developers speak to them and bring along exclusive content for the Xbox platform.

Black Ops 3 Nuketown T-Shirt Discovered On Call of Duty Merch Store


Black Ops 3 Nuketown T-Shirt Discovered On Call of Duty Merch Store


With the game’s official global reveal mere hours away, Call of Duty: Black Ops 3 merchandise has begun to surface on Call of Duty’s official store.
While that fact itself may not interest you, what caught our eye, as well as the eye of tipster @DavidCarcedo, was this “Black Ops III” t-shirt designed around the series’ most popular multiplayer map, Nuketown.

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Skip the Apple Watch, but keep its features


Apple Watches

Let’s step through the features one at a time. First and foremost, this is a timepiece. It’s an expensive and elaborate one, but it’s still just a watch. If you’re looking for a quick way to tell time and set alarms, you’re better off investing ten or 20 bucks in a plain old digital watch. And even if you’re looking for an expensive and showy timepiece, you’re probably better off investing in something without firmware.Today’s the day. The Apple Watch is now officially on sale, and the crowd is, in fact, going wild. There’s a lot to like about Apple’s new product line, but there’s even more to dislike. It’s reportedly underpowered as it stands, so what hope do we have of it aging gracefully? At this stage, even most smartwatch enthusiasts should probably wait a generation or two for Apple to work out the kinks. But thankfully, we can still get most of the Apple Watch’s functionality without dropping between $350 and $17k.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Cancer tech: reprogramming rogue cells in pancreatic cancers


Pancreatic

Most cases of pancreatic adenocarcinoma are caused by mutation in the so-called Kras gene that is active in the acinar cells. These are the cells that secrete the major digestive enzymes. An errant setting of a single bit (technically 2 bits for four base pair options) at the right spot in the Kras gene reconfigures the entire flow chart of the acinar cell to differentiate itself into a highly unstable ‘ductal’ type cell — those which line the secretory output ducts of the pancreas and feed into the gut.All forms of pancreatic cancer are difficult to treat. Surgery is the only potential solution for the rare neuroendocrine variety, the type that Steve Jobs succumbed to, and we all know how ineffective that method still is. Adenocarcinoma, the more common variety that killed the likes of Patrick Swayze and Luciano Pavarotti, is no better a sentence, as anyone who does their own supermarket shopping knows from seeing the tabloids.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

The 20 best free PC games


Path of Exile
Free PC games used to be the realm of quirky flash games or weird indie projects, but the free-to-play phenomenon has really taken off in the last couple of years. Now, the $60 AAA games that once ruled the roost are getting some real competition from games that offer hundreds of hours of gameplay for free.
There are innumerable free-to-play games available for the PC, and with that comes both good and bad. The large selection means that there is something to fit just about any taste, but the signal-to-noise ratio is truly atrocious. Instead of trudging through dozens of clones and half-hearted cash grabs, let me separate the wheat from the chaff for you. Today, I’m highlighting twenty of the very best free games on the PC to help you find something you’ll really love. There’s a lot to cover, so follow along, and something here is bound to strike your fancy.

Server woes: Final Itanium processor will be 32nm, AMD’s ARM servers delayed a full year

Itanic
Intel and AMD are both facing delays and product changes on the server front. While we alluded to some of these changes in our AMD earnings coverage from last year, it’s worth exploring them in a bit more detail. Intel has finally let slip some details on Kittson, the follow-up processor to Poulson and the last Itanium processor on any roadmap. Meanwhile, AMD’s roadmap for its Cortex-A57 based “Seattle” SoC has slipped a full year, with volume ramping in 2015.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

How to download and install Windows 10 Technical Preview

Windows-10

Be preparedAs promised, Microsoft has been issuing new Windows 10 Technical Preview builds on a regular basis, ahead of the official release later this year. Want to try it out? There are 64-bit and 32-bit versions available for US  and UK English, Chinese, and Brazilian Portuguese, among other languages. Follow these instructions to download and install the Windows 10 Technical Preview.

Wacom announces new 2.5K tablet



Cintiq27QHD_parts.jpgCES, the world’s biggest gadget show, has been and gone for another year, and among the new smartphones, even-higher-def TVs and super-lightweight laptops, there was a bit of news for artists and animators with an update to Wacom’s touch-screen tablet line, the Cintiq 27QHD and Companion 2.
With its 27-inch screen, the Cintiq 27QHD is the biggest pen display Wacom has made, and boasts a higher 2.5K resolution at 2,560x1,440. However it actually has the same footprint as its predecessor, the Cintiq 24HD, and is much lighter, at just 9kg.
In terms of specification, the 27QHD is improved across the board, capable of displaying 97% AdobeRGB with 1.07 billion colours and conforming to the REC 709 HDTV standard. It also features five USB 3.0 ports, plus DisplayPort and HDMI outputs.

Printing ‘soft robotics’ and wearable tech with liquid metal


Credit: Alex Bottiglio/Purdue University

The production method is called mechanically sintered gallium-indium nanoparticles. While that’s a mouthful of marbles, it’s actually pretty straightforward. You make the ink by taking liquid metal and dispersing it in a non-metallic solvent using ultrasound. The result is ink that could work in an inkjet-style printer. What happens is the process creates liquid metal nanoparticles, which are small enough to pass through an inkjet printer nozzle. The resulting technique would let you print devices made of liquid metal alloys, the same way you could manufacture ne-off plastic objects using a commercially available 3D printer.Researchers at Purdue University have outlined a way to mass-produce circuits made of liquid-metal alloys using inkjet-printing technology, paving the way for “soft robots” and other kinds of flexible electronics, at least once commercial manufacturing echniques are developed. These devices could involve anything from stretchable garments to pliable robotic designs, for purposes as widespread as therapeutic clothing and new kinds of consumer devices.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Delivering medicine directly to the brain via remotely heated nanoparticles

Brainbarrier

Researchers at the Université de Montréal, Canada were able to bypass the BBB by delivering iron-oxide magnetic nano particles to a precise region of a mouse brain, and then heating them up with a remote RF field. To prove all this, they injected a blue dye into the blood, and then looked to see if it showed up on the business side of the BBB. To give some measure of confidence that the heating was not damaging the brain, they analyzed sliced-and-diced samples of brain for the presence of a protein known as CD68. This molecule, while certainly not the only telltale indicator of inflammation, is manufactured and/or released after many kinds of injury.There’s a lot of great medicines out there that don’t work for the brain. That’s primarily because they aren’t membrane-soluble and therefore can’t penetrate the blood brain barrier (BBB) that surrounds its vasculature. For things like cancer or infection, the only way in is to tap into the spine for a one-shot charge, or put in a more permanent indwelling tube that in-and-of itself can lead to further infection. Furthermore, any drug delivered by these extraordinary means can only penetrate as deep as the cerebro-spinal fluid can percolate. Fortunately, there may now be better ways to do it.

This laser imaging chip could turn your phone into a 3D scanner

NCI penny

3D imaging systems already exist, but they’re usually bulky and expensive. Google’s Project Tango developer devices can do a little of this, but they rely on multiple cameras and are built entirely around depth and position sensing. The NCI chip could be just another thing built into your phone. The key to making this work is that each pixel on the NCI is an independent interferometer. That’s an optical instrument that uses the interference of light rays to judge distance. Therefore, the NCI pixels have both intensity (like a regular camera) and distance information.Your smartphone can probably do an okay job of figuring out how far away something is when taking a photo, but the image itself is still just a flat plain of pixels. A team at Caltech has created a new imaging chip that could be incorporated into smartphones to capture a full 3D view of an object, which could then be used to generate a file suitable for 3D printing. It’s called a nanophotonic coherent imager (NCI), and it’s so small it could fit inside current smartphones without much of a problem.

Monday, April 6, 2015

This Guy Continues To Paint Pop-Culture Characters Into Old Thrift-Store Paintings

David Irvine is an artist in Toronto who breathes new life into old thrift-store paintings by adding new, often silly elements and characters. Since we last wrote about his altered thrift-store paintings (or, as he calls it, ‘Re-Directed Art’), Irvine has come up with a host of new bizarre paintings that we’d love to share with you.

Irvine, who runs an art store called ‘Gnarled Branch,’ seems to have a fascination with pop culture characters, which makes them seem all the more fun and outlandish in the idyllic, rural paintings his that they often invade. Depending on the painting, he will either match the original artist’s style or oppose it intentionally, but he will always leave the original signature clear.

If you like his work, check out the prints he sells on Etsy, and if you find yourself in Toronto, swing by the Flying Pony Gallery, where his art will be on display for the entire month of April!

Open-source Windows? The unthinkable is already happening, says Microsoft

windows 10 aio
However unlikely a future in which Microsoft makes Windows open source may sound, Microsoft has already taken considerable strides in that direction.
But instead of allowing developers to make changes to Windows and other products, it’s Microsoft’s fingers at the keyboard.
According to Microsoft Technical Fellow Mark Russinovich, a future that includes an open-source Windows could happen. “It’s definitely possible,” Russinovich reportedly told an audience at the ChefCon conference in Santa Clara this week. “It’s a new Microsoft.”
“Every conversation you can imagine about what should we do with our software—open versus not-open versus services—has happened,” Russinovich added.

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