Friday, September 30, 2011

Upcoming low-cost Thunderbolt controller could broaden reach of spec

Intel announced at IDF earlier in September that it has two next-generation Thunderbolt controllers, codenamed Cactus Ridge, set to launch with its Ivy Bridge platform next year. However, the company apparently also has a third small, low-end, low-cost controller it expects to launch ahead of Cactus Ridge to spur Thunderbolt adoption among a wider range of peripheral makers.

The current Thunderbolt controllers from Intel include the four-channel Light Ridge, which comes in standard and low-power versions, and the two-channel Eagle Ridge, which comes in standard and small form-factor sizes. Next year, Intel will replace those chips with 12x12mm Cactus Ridge controllers, which will come in four- and two-channel versions. Like Light Ridge, the four-channel Cactus Ridge will be offered in standard and low-power options. Intel hasn't announced a direct replacement for the 8x9mm SFF Eagle Ridge, so that chip may stick around for the time being.

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Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/MHSqmktsTkE/upcoming-low-cost-thunderbolt-controller-could-broaden-reach-of-spec.ars

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GNOME 3 released, ushers in an interesting amalgam of iOS and OS X

GNOME 3 desktop manager
GNOME 3, after more than two years of development, has been released into the wild. GNOME 3 is not merely the logical successor of GNOME 2: it is an entirely new project, started from scratch, to create a "completely new, modern desktop designed for today's users and technologies."

The best way to check out GNOME 3's new features -- and it has lots of new features -- is to run a live version of openSUSE or Fedora, or simply head over to the GNOME 3 website and watch the (rather pretty) introductory videos. If you want a synopsis, though, here it is: GNOME 3 looks a lot like Mac OS X, with a healthy dollop of iOSesqueness for good measure, but yet it still somehow retains an underlying feel of Linux.

The overall aesthetic is very simple, very elegant, and despite being slightly out of fashion, there are plenty of rounded corners, too. The main addition, workflow-wise, is the addition of an app-launcher-cum-alt-tab screen, where you can launch apps, or flip through your open windows. For a complete list of the new features and changes, check the GNOME 3 release notes.

Despite GNOME 3 being officially launched, there aren't actually any releases for existing, stable Linux distros -- it's the live CD/USB images, or Ubuntu users will have to wait for the launch of 11.04 for a GNOME 3 PPA, but it will break Unity in the process. Fedora users will have to wait for for the May 24 release of Fedora 15. Of course, if you're feeling crazy, you can always build GNOME 3 from source.

GNOME 3 released, ushers in an interesting amalgam of iOS and OS X originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 06:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/07/gnome-3-released-ushers-in-an-interesting-amalgam-of-ios-and-os/

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Facebook: How to view your active Facebook sessions and end them

Facebook is one of the most popular social media networks. However with the influx of new users to Facebook, hackers and hacking will increase. This guide will explain how to view where and when your Facebook account is actively logged into and also how to log out these active sessions. This can be very handy if you think your account has been hacked by checking the active sessions and their locations and times or even if you forgot to log out on a public terminal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Tech-RecipesMain/~3/nH-SziRjxHo/

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Accelerator shutdown leads to paper being retracted

Scientific papers get retracted all the time for problems ranging from honest mistakes to outright fraud. The most common reason for discovering a problem is a failure to produce similar data as part of a follow-up experiment. Today's issue of Science contains a retraction that came about because key work couldn't be reproduced, as the facility in which it was done has shut down.

The original work was published back in 2006, and is rather interesting. Covalent bonds between atoms have the ability to stretch and contract, creating vibrations between the atoms. These vibrations can be excited by light of specific wavelengths—absorbing the right photon will set the bond vibrating. The paper claimed to be the first to show that it was possible to hit a silicon-hydrogen bond with enough photons that the vibration would be sufficient to break the bond, releasing the hydrogen from a silicon surface. In short, the results suggested that it's possible to vibrate a molecule to pieces.

For whatever reason, at least one of the authors has recently attempted to obtain similar results, presumably as part of a new but related project. And the author couldn't. The appropriate response in that case is to go back and try to replicate the conditions of the original experiment as exactly as possible. And again, the author couldn't—in this case, because the facility had been shut down in the intervening years: "the free electron laser facility at Vanderbilt, a unique light source for this experiment, has shut down, prohibiting further research." So the authors did the appropriate thing and retracted their earlier paper.

Free electron lasers are, in essence, small particle accelerators that generate an intense light beam by forcing high energy electrons to make a series of rapid turns, which causes them to emit photons. Globally, there are a fair number of these (the entire Stanford Linear Accelerator has been turned into one), but it appears that ones with the right energy to target a silicon-hydrogen bond are either very rare or don't exist at all.

Reproducibility is a key part of science, but it's often a lot more complicated to achieve than a simple "just do the experiment over again" attitude might suggest. Technology is now a central part of most sciences, and it has brought a series of challenges—the rapid pace of obsolescence and the cost of maintaining out-of-date hardware among them—that should be familiar to non-scientists. And technological change can clearly make reproducing exact conditions a challenge, one that these authors apparently couldn't meet.

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Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/GtxNYRKqLfo/accelerator-shutdown-leads-to-paper-being-retracted.ars

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Guy Arrested, Threatened With 15 Years For Recording Traffic Stop In Illinois

With Illinois planning to appeal the Michael Allison case, in which the state wants to put Allison in jail for 75 years because he recorded an interaction with the police, it's worth pointing out that this is not the only such case in Illinois. A few people have sent over this ABC report about another guy, Louis Frobe, who was arrested and told he was facing 15 years in jail for daring to turn on his Flip cam during a traffic stop. You can see the video of the traffic stop in the news report below. Yes, note the irony: the whole thing was recorded (without Frobe's permission) by the police car camera, but the second the officer sees the Flip cam, he tells Frobe he's committed a felony and arrests him:
The key part:
Frobe calls it the worst experience of his life. He was on his way to a late evening movie on an August night last year when he was stopped for speeding in far north suburban Lindenhurst. He didn't believe he was in a 35-mile-an-hour zone, and he figured if he was going to get ticket he wanted to be able to document his challenge with video evidence, so he got out his flip camera, which he was not very adept at using.

At one point he held it out the window trying to record where he was. When the officer, being recorded on his squad dash cam, walked back to Frobe's car, the officer saw Frobe's camera.

Officer: "That recording? Frobe : "Yes, Yes, I've been... Officer: "Was it recording all of our conversation? Frobe: "Yes. Officer: "Guess what? You were eavesdropping on our conversation. I did not give you permission to do so. Step out of the vehicle."

Louis Frobe was then cuffed and arrested for felony eavesdropping.
Yes, eavesdropping. On himself.

In this case, prosecutors eventually dropped the charges, but Frobe turned around and sued them for the arrest in the first place. The Illinois Attorney General -- who still insists there's no First Amendment right to record the police -- has said Frobe's case should be dismissed since he has no standing. Of course, this is a nearly identical fact pattern to the Glik case in Massachusetts, where the court not only allowed Glik to sue but found 1st and 4th Amendment problems with the arrest. These are different circuits, so the ruling in Massachusetts doesn't directly act as precedent for Illinois, but it certainly can be cited and discussed.

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Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110929/10325216136/guy-arrested-threatened-with-15-years-recording-traffic-stop-illinois.shtml

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Friday Shortbread

Eight is Enough

  1. HotHardware reports Asus announces first batch of Ivy Bridge boards
  2. VR-Zone reports ASRock teases with X79 Extreme7 picture
  3. TC Magazine: New HIS HD 6970 card enables DisplayPort-free Eyefinity 3 setups
  4. Fudzilla reports Kindle Fire on your doorstep by November 16th
  5. Blu-ray players will take over as DVD players extinct by 2015 - market research
  6. TweakTown's Catalyst 11.9 Windows 7 driver analysis
  7. Battlefield Blog: Welcome all to the Battlefield 3 open beta
  8. Bethesda Blog: Rage - Jackal Canyon official gameplay trailer

Read more...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/techreport/all/~3/W1lnYgTO23o/21746

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New Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos unearthed, and how to enable channel switching

Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos
Later today, Firefox will undergo its biggest developmental upheaval ever. Mozilla-central, the source of nightly builds, will be renumbered to version 5 -- and at long last, after years of wallowing around version 1, Mozilla's rendering and layout engine, Gecko, will also have its version number updated to match Firefox.

Shortly thereafter, Firefox's new channel system will be implemented. Firefox 5a2 will be introduced as the first Aurora build, and we should also see a Firefox 6 Nightly build. While we we're not sure where they came from, one Sören Hentzschel seems to have unearthed the new Nightly and Aurora logos (see above), along with new About Firefox dialogs (after the break).

In other news, if you want to take a sneak peek at the new 'channel changing' technology that will be introduced in upcoming Firefox builds, head to about:config and create a new string called app.update.desiredChannel -- the value doesn't matter. Then open Help > About Firefox and you'll be able to switch channel, but it doesn't do anything just yet (image after the break). Here's hoping that Firefox channel switching is smoother than Chrome.

Continue reading New Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos unearthed, and how to enable channel switching

New Firefox Nightly and Aurora logos unearthed, and how to enable channel switching originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 07:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/11/new-firefox-nightly-and-aurora-logos-unearthed-and-how-to-enabl/

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Etc.

Morning, all. In case you didn't know it, today is the day the Battlefield 3 beta becomes available to all. You just have to download EA's Origin app, go to the "store" tab, and choose the "Free Games" section. Once there, it's hard to miss; you just hit a button to download and install the beta. I'm downloading it now.

In other news, I've been battling a head cold and budding sinus infection, so I've been taking Sudafed constantly for the past week and a half. At this point, I feel like I'm on Jimmy Tango's fat busters . We recorded the ...

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/techreport/all/~3/JAezGfs5cUU/21737

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

A Lie Detector Test for Online Reviewers

Fake reviews are proliferating, and researchers are developing new ways to identify them

Source: http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/a-lie-detector-test-for-online-reviewers-09292011.html

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Does Gove?s webmail policy breach Data Protection Act too?

FOI-fudging foolery might've been the least of Mrs Blurt's boo-boos

Does the use of Gmail or Hotmail by a Minister's Private Office (in order to evade Freedom of Information (FOI) obligations) also lead to breaches in the Data Protection Act? Well, I can see how this could be the case.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/29/does_gove_email_policy_breach_data_protection_act/

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Browsers tackle the 'BEAST' Web security problem

Mozilla considers disabling Java in Firefox as a solution to a weakness with the Transport Layer Security protocol used for accessing sensitive Web sites.

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-20113530-245/browsers-tackle-the-beast-web-security-problem/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

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Shazam offers unlimited free tagging to iPhone app

Users of Shazam, the popular iOS app that allows people to discover what song is playing on the radio, television, or almost anywhere, will be happy to hear that Shazam is offering unlimited free tagging in its iPhone app. Shazam allows users to simply hold up their iPhone while a song is playing, which the app will then identify, or tag.

Previously, Shazam users got five free song tags a month and if you wanted more you had to pay for the Shazam Encore service. Now however, iPhone users get unlimited free song tagging. Shazam is offsetting their Encore revenue by partnering with Capital "What's in your wallet?" One. So expect plenty of ads. But hey, I'd rather be able to identify any song I hear at any time and see come credit card ads rather than having to shell out for a subscription to tag music.

Shazam is a free download in the App Store.

Shazam offers unlimited free tagging to iPhone app originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Thu, 29 Sep 2011 15:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2011/09/29/shazam-offers-unlimited-free-tagging-to-iphone-app/

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HTC Sensation Z710t becomes first smartphone to offer ST-Ericsson's NovaThor SoC

There's a new Sensation on the block that'll be making its way to China Mobile, but rather than rehashing more of the same, this release marks the first smartphone to place ST-Ericsson's NovaThor SoC under the hood. Unlike offerings from Qualcomm, the chip inside the Sensation Z710t offers a dual-core A9 processor along with connectivity to the carrier's TD-SCDMA infrastructure. Other specs are expected to remain the same, which includes a 4.3-inch qHD display and 8 megapixel camera. Unfortunately, press photos weren't released, which suggests its design hasn't changed. You'll find the full PR after the break, heralding this latest Sensation among the top-tier of China Mobile's offerings. While pricing or a release date have yet to be announced, we're inclined to agree.

Continue reading HTC Sensation Z710t becomes first smartphone to offer ST-Ericsson's NovaThor SoC

HTC Sensation Z710t becomes first smartphone to offer ST-Ericsson's NovaThor SoC originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Sep 2011 08:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/09/29/htc-sensation-z710t-becomes-first-smartphone-to-offer-st-ericsso/

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Journo register gaffe a boon for media overlords

Labour's half-baked plan backfires

Opinion New Labour showed both its technological illiteracy and authoritarian streak by floating plans to establish an official register of journalists from which miscreants might be struck off.?

Source: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/29/journalist_register_opinion/

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Part 1: Getting software licensing under control

Negative user reaction No organization wants to be seen as draconian by its users and employees. Many users think of their company-issued PC or laptop as ?theirs?, so license managers, IT Directors and CIO?s worry that any move to remove … Continue reading

Source: http://blogs.1e.com/index.php/2011/09/29/part-1-getting-software-licensing-under-control/

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DICE and EA give PC Battlefield 3 players peek at 64-player Caspian Borders map

While Operation Metro is the only "official" map available in the Battlefield 3 beta, there are a few servers running the 64-player Caspian Border map. Yes, that's the one from the trailer, complete with jets and tanks. It's frustrating to see the map so close, but the servers are password-protected.

Why not release the password? "...I've seen the replies on the forums and I think you guys deserve the Caspian Border experience," a Community Manager for DICE wrote on the official form. The password for the servers is "sexyelevator"—and the password will be changed at 18:00 CET. So you've likely missed your chance.

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Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/2uHopDIDALM/pc-battlefield-3-players-get-peek-at-64-player-caspian-borders-map.ars

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Microsoft Releases An Update to Fix Windows Explorer Continuous Crashes & Restarts Issue In Windows 8

Windows Explorer continuous crashes and restarts in a loop experienced by lot of users using Windows 8 developer preview, culprit to this issue is Metro Tiles (though Windows Explorer is related to traditional desktop instead of Metro Start Screen),  Microsoft identified the issue and released an update which fixes this issue,  users experiencing Windows Explorer [...]

Microsoft Releases An Update to Fix Windows Explorer Continuous Crashes & Restarts Issue In Windows 8 is a post from: techdows.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/%7Er/blogspot/yNnk/%7E3/BDB-eB5EtOM/fix-to-windows-explorer-continous-crashes-and-restarts-in-windows-8.html

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DailyDirt: All The Little Things

Making a product look better than one of its competitors to consumers sometimes comes down to the little things. Useful little features here and there can really add up. But sometimes marketing focuses on things that shouldn't really matter. Here are a few examples that could go either way.
By the way, StumbleUpon can recommend some good Techdirt articles, too.

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Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090112/0801423370/dailydirt-all-little-things.shtml

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