Thursday, February 28, 2013

BlackBerry 10 Boasts Some Key Apps, but Many Big Names Missing


The big day for BlackBerry has finally arrived. The world now knows what the company’s newest entrant in the smartphone race looks like.



BlackBerry 10 Apps




But what about apps?



For starters, a few key apps were already known, like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Foursquare. Several more were announced or shown onstage during the event: Skype, Amazon Kindle, WhatsApp, Angry Birds, Where’s My Water?, Where’s My Perry?, Box, MLB.com, Rdio, Songza, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg, to name a few.



RIM — pardon me, BlackBerry — also showed how video chatting and screen sharing are now integrated into the popular BlackBerry Messenger application, as well as built-in photo-editing and music-video-making apps.



But right now it’s still unclear when apps like Instagram, Spotify and Pandora, or streaming video apps like Netflix, Hulu and YouTube, will make their way onto BlackBerry 10. And notably absent was Google Maps.



Update: A spokesman for BlackBerry says the company is “in talks” with Instagram and Netflix, but could not confirm when those apps will make their way into the store. Also, there is not a dedicated YouTube app, as we suspected, but he was quick to point out that YouTube can be watched on a mobile browser.



BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins has been quoted as saying that the company’s app store, still called BlackBerry World, would have more than 70,000 apps at the time of this launch. BlackBerry’s Martyn Mallick reaffirmed during today’s event that this is the case.



Just a couple weeks ago, RIM hosted a “Portathon,” enticing developers to create submissions for 15,000 new apps in a single weekend, as AllThingsD’s John Paczkowski reported.



To hear BlackBerry talk about it, developers are excited to take advantage of some of the new features that BlackBerry 10 offers, like “BlackBerry Flow,” or real-time multitasking between apps.



But keep in mind the competition. Apple currently has 800,000 apps in its App Store, with 300,000 optimized for iPad. The total number of apps in Google’s app store, Google Play, isn’t totally clear, but, by some estimates, Google is nipping at Apple’s heels.



Let’s not even get into apps for the Microsoft Windows Phone operating system. Okay, to be fair, let’s talk about it: Microsoft said in a recent blog post that it had “more than doubled” its Windows Phone app library with the addition of 75,000 new apps in 2012. Which means even Windows Phone boasts more apps than BlackBerry 10.



Of course, some will argue that it really doesn’t matter how many apps are available — it’s whether the important ones are there. Many smartphone owners download a bunch of apps, only to have them sit there taking up space on their phones.



Are BlackBerry’s apps enough to sway current iPhone and Android users?



The BlackBerry 10 event is still taking place. Click here for our live coverage.



RELATED POSTS:

  • BlackBerry CEO: PlayBook Update Coming, Vague on Future Tablet Plans
  • Most - But Maybe Not All - U.S. Carriers Will Have BlackBerry 10 Device by March
  • BlackBerry 10 Boasts Some Key Apps, but Many Big Names Missing
  • BlackBerry to Launch in U.S. in Mid-March
  • RIM Changes Name to BlackBerry
  • RIM Aims for Reinvention With BlackBerry 10 Launch
  • Walt Mossberg: BlackBerry Reinvents Itself to Compete With All-Touch Smartphones


Most -- But Maybe Not All -- U.S. Carriers Will Have BlackBerry 10 Device by March


It has long been known that Research In Motion would show the first BlackBerry 10 devices today. One key question is just when you will be able to buy one.



IMG_0053-M




And the news was not exactly promising, especially for those in the United States. First came word via The Wall Street Journal that it would be March before the first customers in the U.S. could buy a device.



Onstage, things actually got a bit worse, as Heins said “most” of the big four U.S. carriers would have it by March. Verizon announced that it would carry both the touchscreen Z10 and keyboard-equipped Q10 handhelds, but did not give availability.



The Z10 will cost $199.99 with a two-year contract. Pricing for the Q10 was not revealed at this time. Both devices will support the carrier’s 4G LTE network, and will come in black or white. The white Z10 will be an exclusive to Verizon Wireless.



AT&T is also set to offer both smartphones, but no word on pricing or release date. T-Mobile has a landing page up for the Z10, and it’s worth noting that it looks like the handset will support its upcoming 4G LTE network.



Sprint also said it would carry a device “later this year,” but it is carrying the keyboard-equipped Q10, which is expected to arrive later than the Z10.



Heins said the company’s main priority is getting the Z10 out the door. As for the keyboard-equipped Q10, “I think we will expect to see it in the April timeframe,” he said.



The device is going on sale in Canada and some other countries as soon as next week.



Speaking with reporters, Heins said Wednesday that a longer testing period at U.S. carriers is why it will take longer to hit the market here.



“The reason is that the testing process in the U.S. with those carrier partners is a rather lengthy one,” Heins said.



The BlackBerry Z10 features a 4.2-inch touchscreen displaying 356 pixels per inch. It has an eight-megapixel camera on back, and only comes in a 16 gigabyte model, though there is a memory-expansion slot. Meanwhile, the BlackBerry Q10 features a full physical keyboard with a 3.1-inch, 720 by 720-pixel touch display.



In his review of the BlackBerry Z10, AllThingsD’s Walt Mossberg found the hardware decent and the user interface easy to use, but said that it will need to continue to add more apps if it’s going to succeed.



The BlackBerry 10 event is still taking place. Click here for our live coverage.



RELATED POSTS:

  • BlackBerry CEO: PlayBook Update Coming, Vague on Future Tablet Plans
  • Most - But Maybe Not All - U.S. Carriers Will Have BlackBerry 10 Device by March
  • BlackBerry 10 Boasts Some Key Apps, but Many Big Names Missing
  • BlackBerry to Launch in U.S. in Mid-March
  • RIM Changes Name to BlackBerry
  • RIM Aims for Reinvention With BlackBerry 10 Launch
  • Walt Mossberg: BlackBerry Reinvents Itself to Compete With All-Touch Smartphones


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Microsoft Office 2013 Now Available For Purchase


Here is some good news for MS Office fans. Microsoft Office 2013 is now available for purchase. You have three options: Office Home & Student 2013, Office Home & Business 2013, and Office Professional 2013.

Microsoft-Office


Orobis Transform offers micro USB and Lighting connector in one cable


If you really hate having to carry more than one cable to charge your electronic devices including your iPhone 5, iPad mini, and anything else that uses a micro USB port the Orobis Transform might be the perfect project for you. This device is a cable that has a special adapter that turns a normal micro USB connector into the new Lightning connector for the iPhone 5 or an iPad mini.



orobis1




Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Apple Store becomes its own trademark




apple store trademark




Apple has successfully been awarded a trademark for the layout of its Apple Store retail locations. The trademark assures that no other company will try to emulate the very unique structure and design of the company’s retail empire.



Among the language of the trademark is verbiage about a “clear glass storefront,” cantilevered shelves, and a line of rectangular tables. Is that enough to warrant a unique trademark? Well, it has been issued so apparently it is. Although, a patent isn’t a legal trump card. Its true validity is never officially declared unless it ends up being defended in court.



Of course, in China, creating fake Apple Stores became a passion among certain businessmen in the region. They copied everything from the giant Apple logo out front to the placement of tables and shelves to look just like what you’d find in a real Apple Store. They were even packed with fake Apple mockup products, and staffed by employees wearing what appeared to be official Apple Store shirts but were also fake.



Now obviously, that kind of blatant ripoff would never happen in the US even without a trademark. And of course, a US trademark doesn’t do anything to help Apple stop the activity in China. In other words, the trademark is probably not going to do much good to Apple in the long run.



Even if it does come across a store that seemingly mimics its design (cough *Samsung* cough), any action could go all the way to court where the validity of the trademark would be called into question. Could someone with no knowledge of Apple’s store design have come up with the same idea? If so, Apple might have a tough time proving actual damages.



After all, the trademark was previously rejected not once but two times, before it was finally tweaked and given an approval. So its foundation is shaky at best.



But this is Apple. Perhaps its primary purpose for getting this trademark was just to brag to the world that its stores are unique.



US Patent & Trademark Office via Reuters (Yahoo)




How scientists used soap bubbles to better understand jet fuel fires




Richard Simpson - Sandia




People don't usually become government scientists for the thrill, but that hasn't stopped Richard Simpson from having a good time with it. In an effort to develop better computer models for jet fuel fires, he filled a canyon with soap bubbles. While these two things seem completely unrelated, the bubbles actually helped to solve a real problem with modeling fire outbreaks.



bubble


Simpson works at Sandia National Laboratories, where they spend a lot of time setting things on fire (for science of course). In testing and modeling the behavior of fires burning jet fuel, researchers realized they were missing something. Very hot fires, like those stoked by jet fuel, are often affected by air flow. However, there was no good way to visualize the swirling patterns of air around a blaze… until someone suggested using bubbles.



Rather than work out some sort of complicated government contract for the construction of a bubble-making rig, Simpson just bought 20 off-the-shelf bubble machines you might see at a party. That, and 50 gallons of bubble solution went on his government procurement card. After convincing the powers that be of the legitimacy of his purchase, Simpson was ready to get some science done — with bubbles.



The bubble machines were placed on towers all through the canyon Sandia uses to run burn tests. A large spotlight was used to illuminate the bubbles so their paths could be captured by a flotilla of 3D cameras in special heat resistant cases. The findings helped improve the way scientists at Sandia model jet fuel fires, and it was also fun data to collect, according to Simpson.



This isn’t the bubble test, but it is a great example of Sandia researchers lighting stuff on fire:








Smart Shoes launched by Apple with embedded sensors and alarms


Smart shoes by Apple track the wear and the usage and also help you to identify that when the shoes need to be replaced. This works via built-in LED lights, displays, speakers etc. This works by embedding the processor and other mini electronic devices in the heel of the shoe. This can also be embedded in any part of the shoe which clearly indicates how the shoe is damaged out. This can also reveal that for how long the shoe has been used. This shoe also indicates the user of the shoe if he has crossed the suggested time of the walk by wearing those shoes. The sensors include motion detectors that easily detect the motion of the person wearing smart shoes.



The smart shoe also helps the users to decide when they need to replace their shoes. The qualities of this shoe are that these shoes provide comforts, protection moreover stability for users when they are engaged in physical activities like sports etc.



This also displays the weight. Sensors are given power by the built-in battery or with the help of generator. Apple has also launched such shoes before that was an excellent way to check their workouts by monitoring their actual activities. This was moreover focused on health directly. Whereas, the smart shoes launched by Apple now is not focused on health directly but it can be worn for viewing the workouts, activity habits that tells that how many time you wear your shoes.



So many companies are in future expecting to look for smart watches which will embed on person's body and it will be invisible so that people around us won't be able to see it. These inventions don't give any guarantee. But these inventions are expected to grow in the coming future as it will be a concern of the electronics consumer and the electronics maker.



Related posts:

  1. Bluetooth smart watch is being establishing by Apple- Rumor or Fact
  2. A smart to do list for using the contextual information from iPhone- A new Apple Patent
  3. According to a rumor, Apple is testing the designs for Apple TV sets but still no plans to launch it


“Huge opportunity” in Mac Cannibalization for iPad seen by Apple’s Tim Cook


Apple is not afraid of cannibalization which is a broad topic, considering that there is an opportunity for iPad in several different ways. The Mac sales were decreased on the quarter. And this made a great pressure on Apple. The CEO of Apple Tim Cook answered the questions related the issue of cannibalization of Mac sales. Tim Cook the CEO of Apple said that Apple can tackle with this kind of cannibalization and it's not better to ask someone to cannibalize it for you. Instead of asking someone else you should cannibalize it yourself.



He also said that on iPad the opportunities are so many. The reason behind this is that Windows market is much broader than the Mac Market. At the same time Tim Cook also said that he believed that tablet market is going to be much bigger than the PC market. "Halo effect" was the other point Cook wanted to convey up that the iPhone have. And this was the first time that the buyer of Apple picked up one and then purchased some other products.



Throughout his speech he said that they see cannibalization as an opportunity. He furthermore said that if someone who is buying an Apple product for the first time buys an iPad mini or an iPad, he is sure that they will purchase one more iPad product. He was very confident that this is surely going to happen therefore we can say that Apple see Cannibalization as an opportunity.



Apple has always embraced cannibalization. The reason behind this is that more sales are rack up by the product that replaces it than the product that they are pushing. It is considered that Mac possibly will be declined but as long as iPad continues to grow, it is a fact that that's of a restricted fear to Apple and its peak impudence.



Related posts:

  1. Meeting of Time Cook with China Mobile and said Chinese market will soon be captured by Apple
  2. Apple transparency about $100 million investment for Mac manufacturing, Maps, Forstall and more- A discussion with Tim Cook
  3. Android and iPad market share is shrinking much faster than it was predicted


Monday, February 25, 2013

First Look: BlackBerry 10 vs. iPhone 5






It's no secret to anyone interested in smartphones. For the past couple of years, BlackBerry maker Research In Motion has had some issues keeping up with the likes of iOS and Android. Now though, it's the moment BlackBerry fans have been waiting for. Today marks the release of the all new BlackBerry 10 OS and to go along with it, the announcement of two brand new devices running that OS. The first device, a full touch screen experience called the BlackBerry Z10 will soon be hitting the market followed up later this year by a full QWERTY version dubbed the BlackBerry Q10.



The fearless leader of CrackBerry Nation, Kevin Michaluk, has had a BlackBerry 10 device in his hands for the past week and just attended the launch event in NYC, bringing iMore readers back a first look at the BlackBerry Z10 device. It's still too early to say if this will be a home run for RIM, but competition in this market is good and it helps keep things balanced. Check out the video above and let us know your thoughts on it all in the comments. If you want to see more, be sure to head on over to CrackBerry and read their full review.




Behind the scenes at MacBreak Weekly and TWiT




Thanks to Leo Laport, Alex Lindsay, and the teams at TWiT and Pixel Corps, I was able to take a look behind the scenes of MacBreak Weekly yesterday. I've already posted about the experience, so here's the video and photos, shot by Martin Reisch.



You can also watch how the final show turned out in between all the meta.



Thanks again, Leo, Alex, Chad, Lisa, and everyone at TWiT!




















































Sunday, February 24, 2013

Amazon Makes Murmurs About Its Video Business


amazon video


Netflix added a bunch of streaming video subscribers in the last quarter. How did rival Amazon do?



Who knows? Amazon is fiercely dedicated to the notion that it won’t say squat about its business, and things stayed true to form during yesterday’s earnings call.



But the question did come up a few times during the call. Which makes sense, because Jeff Bezos is pumping a bunch of money into video — by Netflix CEO Reed Hastings’s account, perhaps a billion dollars a year.



So Amazon CFO Thomas Szkutak did make a point of telling Wall Street that things are moving up and to the right — both in terms of usage and investment dollars. A collection of his video-related quotes, via Seeking Alpha:


  • “The percentage of Prime customers who were watching free content through Prime Instant Videos has gone up dramatically year-over-year.”
  • “We have also increased Prime membership dramatically, year-over-year. They are also purchasing a paid content. Those customers that are using this, they watch free but they are also paying for new content which is great.”
  • “I can’t give you specific for attach rates but the business is making good progress on the video content side. Again it’s still very early.”
  • “We will continue to expand our selection, both in terms of Amazon Instant Video as well Prime Instant Video and we will do that in a number of different ways. We think we have a very interesting selection right now and you should expect that will be spending more on content as it relates to Prime over time. We will continue to add selection on the Instant Video. Beyond that, you have to stay tuned.”

In other words: Yes, we’re spending a bunch of money. And yes, based on outsiders’ guesstimates, we’re way, way, way behind Netflix in terms of overall video streaming usage. But we think our “spend now, earn later” strategy is going to pay off here, too.


RIM Changes Name to BlackBerry


BlackBerryName


At its BlackBerry 10 launch event Wednesday morning, Research In Motion unveiled not only the new operating system and devices with which it hopes to reinvent itself, but a rebranding on the company itself. RIM is taking the name of its marquee product: It will be known as BlackBerry, and will trade under the BBRY ticker on Nasdaq, and BB on TSX.



“We have reinvented the company, and we want to show that in our brand,” CEO Thorsten Heins said. “One brand. One promise. Our customers use BlackBerry, our employees work for BlackBerry, and our shareholders are owners of BlackBerry. From today on, we are BlackBerry everywhere in the world.”



RELATED POSTS:

  • BlackBerry CEO: PlayBook Update Coming, Vague on Future Tablet Plans
  • Most - But Maybe Not All - U.S. Carriers Will Have BlackBerry 10 Device by March
  • BlackBerry 10 Boasts Some Key Apps, but Many Big Names Missing
  • BlackBerry to Launch in U.S. in Mid-March
  • RIM Changes Name to BlackBerry
  • RIM Aims for Reinvention With BlackBerry 10 Launch
  • Walt Mossberg: BlackBerry Reinvents Itself to Compete With All-Touch Smartphones


Saturday, February 23, 2013

After Rocky Start, Nintendo Cuts Wii U Sales Projections


While the Wii U won’t be an instant flop like the Virtual Boy, sales projections released by Nintendo show it probably won’t match the runaway sales success of the original Wii, either. Nintendo sold 3.06 million Wii U units worldwide from its November launch through the end of 2012. That’s nearly as much as the 3.19 million units of the original Wii Nintendo sold back in the 2006 holiday season. But Nintendo doesn’t think it can keep that momentum up. Back in October, the company said it expected to sell 5.5 million Wii U units through the end of March. That number has now been cut down to 4 million, meaning Nintendo expects to sell fewer than a million systems worldwide in the first three months of 2013. It’s natural to expect some sales drop-off as a new system transitions away from a holiday launch.



Read the full story at ARS Technica.


Twitter Makes Your Tweets More Beautiful With Larger Photos


Twitter announced some changes on Wednesday to how photos and videos will display in user timelines, emphasizing media in the stream as the company builds out its support for photos and video in status updates as a crucial part of its future. In a blog post Wednesday, the company explained some of the changes coming to the site, including larger photos that appear on profiles and in search results, as well as media galleries that will incorporate videos from "Vine, YouTube, Vimeo, and other partners whose videos appear in expanded tweets." Twitter is clearly focusing on the role of visual media recently, having just launched Vine, the company's standalone short video app, and having released a photo editing service in competition with Facebook's Instagram last year.



Read the full story at Giga OM.


Friday, February 22, 2013

Facebook Rolls Out Ad Conversion Measurement Globally So That Marketers Know When One Of Their Ads Did The Trick




Facebook is providing means to marketers with vast opportunities, on a one side marketer can save their money by doing virtual campaigns and competitions, on an other hand has provided them an opportunity to opt and keep flourishing their businesses. This is how Facebook is influencing companies not to hire third parties doing their advertisement job.



With the help of this tool, advertisers can put codes on their sites to keep the check on the actions like checkouts/payments or registrations have been driven by an advert on Facebook. In this way marketers can manage their work and can optimize the cost of their campaigns.



The main use of this conversion tool is for direct marketing campaigns to get specific responses from the target audience. The cost per new customer acquisition of most of the companies is reduced. This is most suitable for sites like retails, travel, e-commerce or financial services, says Facebook.



The tester has shown that this tool could be used for less commercial efforts, government associations can use it to track mailing list and it would reduce cost per-conversion rate by 85 percent.



Power editor, ad managers and advertising API are three of the ad products that this conversion tool has made available for marketers. The service is now active.



Related posts:

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Apple Plans First Berlin Store and Fourth San Francisco Store [Mac Blog]

Bloomberg reports that Apple is to open its first store in Berlin, in the upmarket shopping district of Ku'damm.

berlin



The store, for which Apple began hiring over a year ago, will be in a former movie theatre at Ku'damm 26, opposite the Hard Rock Cafe and close to the city's most famous department store, Kaufhaus des Westens. The area is home to Berlin's biggest concentration of luxury shops, including Hermes and Louis Vuitton.

San Francisco real-estate website Socketsite meanwhile reports that Apple is to open its fourth San Francisco, CA store at 400 Castro Street, a former Bank of America building recently vacated by Diesel after a reputed 50% hike in the rent. A separate area of the building has remained vacant for two years after a Sprint store closed, suggesting that Apple may plan to combine the two spaces.

400 Castro Street



The building featured in the 2008 movie Milk, starring Sean Penn as the gay rights activist Harvey Milk, the city's first openly gay supervisor who was assassinated in 1978. A memorial to Milk serves as the entrance to the subway station.


Thursday, February 21, 2013

On An International Buying Campaign, Cisco Acquires Cyber Threat Protection Startup Cognitive Security


Today, it seems that Cisco’s international buying spree continues. acquisition of Israeli mobile startup, Intucell, for $475 million in cash last week, the company announced this afternoon that it is acquiring Czech network security startup, Cognitive Security. The terms of the acquisition were not made public.



In its announcement today, Cisco Head of Corporate Business Development Hilton Romanski said that it will be combining the startup’s realtime behavioral analytics with its own cloud-based global threat intelligence system to create a “common policy engine that controls distributed network enforcement in an intelligent network.” Essentially, the goal is to allow Cisco to provide corporations and the enterprise with the ability to better identify and mitigate advanced cyber threats.



The acquisition is yet another example of the fact that Cisco is looking to make moves. The company got in the buying mood back in November, when it acquired cloud infrastructure startup, Meraki, for $1.2 billion in cash. With its subsequent purchase of Intucell for nearly $500 million, the networking tech giant has invested nearly $1.7 billion in M&A over the last quarter. And, while Cisco is well-positioned compared to its networking rivals like Alcatel-Lucent and Juniper, the space is going through a big change these days, and Cisco is trying to make the necessary preparations given the diverse nature of its investments.



That led to the company’s exit from the consumer space last week, in which it sold its home networking business unit to Belkin, including the Linksys brand and products. The sale of Linksys, one of its largest consumer properties, followed its shuttering of its Flip video product line — another of Cisco’s well-known consumer brands — as the line began to suffer from the growing competition from smartphone cameras.



At the time, Cisco CEO John Chambers said (via TNW) that the company was re-focusing on its four key business priorities, “core routing, switching and services, collaboration, architecture and video. Cisco’s acquisition of Meraki and Intucell both fall into the architecture and infrastructure camp (for both enterprise WiFi and mobile), however, its purchase of Cognitive Security shows that the company is continuing to reach into related sectors to protect its market-leading position.



As Romanski details in the company’s announcement, since its founding back in 2010, Cognitive Security has been focused on network security research and “applying artificial intelligence techniques to detect advanced cyber threats.” The company, which now has 28 employees, set out to identify and analyze IT security threats through “advanced behavioral analysis of realtime data,” enabling businesses to more quickly and efficiently detect security anomalies.



As mobility and cloud computing change the security landscape, traditional approaches are no longer sufficient to protect businesses amidst the evolution in cyber threats. Through its acquisition of the Czech security startup, Cisco will be able provide its enterprise customers with a brand of advanced security that their networks require today.



Cisco also said that it will continue the long-standing collaboration Cognitive Security has with the Czech Technical University through its joint research program, saying that it “plans to continue to expand on this relationship going forward.”



As a result of the acquisition, the startup’s employees will be joining Cisco’s Security Technology Group, led by Senior Vice President Chris Young. The acquisition is expected to close in the third quarter of 2013 and is subject to approval by the company’s shareholders.



Find more in Cisco’s announcement here.





TC Cribs: Inside Romotive, The Las Vegas Startup Where A New Generation Of Robots Is Being Born



It’s time for another episode of Cribs, the TechCrunch TV series that takes you behind the gates of some of the tech industry’s hottest companies to see the factory floors where your tastiest app and gadget sausage is made.



It’s great to go beyond TechCrunch’s San Francisco headquarters to check out Cribs in other locales — and our latest sojourn was particularly worth it. Earlier this month we were in Las Vegas for the Consumer Electronics Show, and while we were in town we headed over to the Ogden Building, which is the home of a number of startups — including smartphone-controlled robot maker Romotive.



Romotive is one of the most buzzed-about companies in the quickly growing Downtown Vegas tech scene, so it was great to have co-founder and CEO Keller Rinaudo give us a tour of his company’s digs and give us a hands-on look at the “Romo” robot. While the Romotive team has built hundreds of Romos themselves right there in its Sin City headquarters, the company just recently signed a production contract with an Asian manufacturer that will help the company scale up its output dramatically. That means that Romos will now be poised to enter the homes (and hearts) of millions of people across the globe.



That idea might sound a bit scary at first, but I think after seeing the gadgets in action you will soon welcome our new Romo robot overlords with open arms. Who can resist those big blinking eyes?



A big tip of the hat to Steve Long, John Murillo, and Ashley Pag n for their camerawork; Ashley Pag n for her editing wizardry, and Felicia Williams for organizing the shoot.



Wednesday, February 20, 2013

128GB iPad To Retail For $799 (Rumor)


Yesterday we heard a rumor that Apple intend to launch a new 128GB iPad, the device is expected to be available as a WiFi only model and also a WiFi and cellular model with LTE.



Now it would appear that we may have some possible pricing for the 128GB iPad, the WiFi only model is rumored to cost $799 whilst the WiFi and LTE version is rumored to retail for $929.



iPad


Surgeon-Simulator 2013 Game Unveiled By Bossa Studios (video)


If you are looking for a game this is a little more unique, and offers a different style of game play from Angry Birds of Black Ops 2, you might be interested in Surgeon-Simulator 2013 developed by Bossa Studios.



In Surgeon-Simulator 2013 you are dropped into the shoes of Nigel Burke, an ordinary guy, with no outstanding skills forced to carry out a heart transplant. Watch the video after the jump to see it in action.



Surgeon-Simulator 2013




Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Apple pulls Vine from App Store Featured section after porn appears in Editor's Picks


Apple pulls Vine from Featured section on App Store due to porn in Editor's Picks




Apple has pulled Vine from the Featured section of the App Store after a pornagraphic video was featured in the Editor's Picks section of the app. While Vine's porn issues have been widely discussed, Apple had taken no action until today.



Vine was removed from the Featured section despite the fact that most apps spend at least a full week there. According to TechCrunch, Twitter, which owns Vine, has responded to the controversy, saying:



The presence of nudity or porn on media-based social networks is expected, but the featuring of such content is a step over the line. Twitter later explained that it was "human error" that caused the porn slip-up.



Last week, the 500px app was removed from the App Store following a controversy with nude photos, only to return today after making changes including adding a mature rating.



Vine has already started to block certain tags in order to filter out pornography, we'll have to see if their efforts will be enough to keep Apple from pulling it.



Source: TechCrunch




Purported iPad mini-like iPad 5 casings leak


Purported iPad mini-like iPad 5 casings leak




Again, it should come as no surprise to anyone that the next-generation iPad 5 may be adopting the design cues of the iPad mini. With that in mind, 9to5Mac has scored some pictures of what just might be the back casing for the black Wi-Fi + 3G model.



Today, we received an unverified image from a purported China-based iPad accessories maker, an industry that seems to frequently tip off Apple's future product designs, of the back plate for the next iPad.



I've already gone over the background for why this design makes sense, but also what technological hurdles still need to be overcome to make it a reality.



One of the pictures is up top. Check out the rest via the link below.



Source: 9to5Mac




Monday, February 18, 2013

Inside the war for Syria's mountains


Rebels are occupying Alawite houses in a region known for its tradition of sectarian coexistence in an offensive that looks likely to determine the fate of the country's cosmopolitan heart



The stone houses were half hidden amid the orchards, their doors kicked in and their walls scorched by flames. Every home in this tiny Alawite hamlet, amid the apple and plum trees, had been ransacked and abandoned.



"There were three families here until yesterday," said a young woman, a Sunni Muslim, pointing to her neighbours' homes. "Now there's no one left, not one."



The village sloped towards a river that had broken its banks a week before. Plastic bags and bottles hung in the trees, marking the line of the flood that coursed between the soaring cliffs of the nearby valley and then surged onwards, across the fields to Turkey.



The water reached so far, and so high, that it inundated the orchards. Mud still covered the road, exposing the footprints of the raiders who followed the flood. They were a far more formidable force even than the raging waters.



Scraped in charcoal on the wall of one house were three words in Arabic: Jabhat al-Nusra.



Until two months ago, locals in this corner of north-western Syria had not had to contend with the Jabhat al-Nusra organisation. Like much else about the war now crippling the nearby cities of Idlib and Aleppo, it was out of sight and out of mind, a distant bogeyman that posed little threat to this border town.



Then came a campaign by rebel units pushing south towards cities still controlled by the regime after almost two years of civil war. "That's when we first saw them," a rebel, Mahmoud Darwiche, said of Jabhat al-Nusra, which insurgent leaders simply call al-Qaida.



"They were good at first, quiet and respectful. Even now, they are still trying to behave. But they will kill any Alawite fighter they capture."



Until December, the town of Darkoush was roughly divided: the north supported the opposition while the south supported the regime; the frontline was marked by a line of ransacked security buildings.



Now, it is a staging point for a coming battle in the mountains to the south, a battle that will decide the fate of Syria's cosmopolitan heart.



Rebel leaders are preparing what they say will be imminent attacks on regime cities. Jabhat al-Nusra is also making plans, with new arrivals to the group turning up on most days over the past few weeks. Some are taking over empty Alawite homes near Darkoush; others are pushing south to frontlines near Latakia.



Al-Nusra fighters like to see themselves as being everywhere but nowhere. They play willingly to the regime characterisation of them as phantom-like figures who can outmanoeuvre the Syrian military. And they are now more evident than at any time in this war.



The al-Nusra member the Guardian met had not been expecting strangers. His head swathed in a black turban, and with a Kalashnikov strapped to his chest, he walked slowly down a potholed road towards us before stopping warily several metres away. He scanned us purposefully from head to toe, inhaled deeply, then said: "What's going on?"



The American-accented English was as much a surprise as finding him there in the first place, living in a house next door to the main rebel outpost in the region, along with 20 or so other members of the group at the vanguard of the fighting.



His opening remark was less an icebreaker, however, than the beginning of an interrogation. For 40 minutes, sometimes chilling, sometimes charming, he tried to gauge our provenance and our reason for journeying south into Jebel al-Krud, the giant plateau that soars above Latakia and Tartous to the south.



The region is steeped in Islamic history, and has a tradition of sectarian coexistence. About 800 years ago, the Islamic warrior Salah al-Din - a Kurd better known to Europeans as Saladin - used the mountains and valleys of the area to prepare to battle the Crusaders. Kurds travelled with him from what is now northern Iraq, and settled here. Christian and Alawite communities are also long established.



Our interrogator eventually offered tea. "You do not share my ideology," he said. "But you are here on humanitarian grounds." The concession amounted to a travel pass. "Where is your flak jacket? We have an obligation before God to do what we can to protect ourselves," he said, pointing at the camouflage vest covering his shirt. "So should you."



Sheer cliffs climbed vertically from the first stretch of the road south, soon giving way to plunging, emerald ravines still flush with blue floodwaters. Villages peppered the hilltops, grey blobs against an iridescent green whenever they emerged from the fog.



Around one bend, white crosses jutted starkly from the graves on a hilltop. This was the Christian village of Jdeida, on the edge of Idlib province and Jebel al-Krud. Barely a home here had escaped shell damage since it was taken by rebel groups six weeks earlier. And next to none of the locals had remained.



One family had stayed behind. "We don't have an option," the elderly Christian man said. "The situation is as you see it. This is the first time there hasn't been shelling here in more than a week. We haven't seen the sun or sat in our garden in all that time."



The man's wife picked an orange from the tree at the centre of the courtyard and offered it on a silver tray.



His 90-year-old mother sat on a stone wall, her left eye red with a chronic infection, her right streaming with tears. "We can't go anywhere to get medicine," she said between sobs. "We are not with anyone, my son. We are too old for this. Please let it end."



Neither side seems to have any will to bring the war for the mountains to a close. Further up the hill, the town's church stood empty and barricaded, part of a wall hit by a shell. And from the bell tower, rebels pointed out the next target in their seemingly relentless sweep to the east and south, the town of Yaccubiya.



"We have a very big problem with this town," said the leader of the military council in Idlib province. "These Christians are our friends. We have lived with them for a long time, and we respect them. But the regime has put weapons in the cathedral there. We don't want to attack it but we know we must."



Purple-grey smoke from at least a dozen cigarettes and a wood-burning stove swirled around the room. The 10 or so men sitting cross-legged on the floor seemed to crouch ever lower as the haze descended before one finally opened a window, letting in a shock of frigid air.



"We have asked the Christian authorities," the rebel leader said as the smoke cleared. "We have even asked the priests in the north what to do. One gave us his permission to attack the town; another said not to. We want some guidance. Will the west talk to us about this?"



On Sunday, rebel reservations about Yaccubiya were set aside. The Free Syrian Army, which acts as an umbrella group for all the rebel groups except al-Nusra, announced the town had fallen. "There are only two old ladies left in the town," said a rebel leader, Abu Ghaith. "And, praise be to God, the church was not damaged. They ran away."



Evidence of the regime forces' flight from the villages of Jebel al-Krud is everywhere. Along a highway near another Christian village, al-Ghassaneyah, scores of makeshift graves have been dug for Syrian army soldiers killed in battles for nearby areas.



Several dozen destroyed armoured personnel carriers, lorries and tanks dot the roadside. Torched and rusting formations of armour mark overrun checkpoints that not long ago were part of Latakia's ring of defence. Battleground Christian and Alawite villages are largely abandoned. Al-Nusra had not looted the homes of Christian families who had fled, said Abu Ghaith. "They are being careful about them," he said. "But they do whatever they want with the Alawites."



Resentment of the minority Alawite sect, to which Bashar al-Assad belongs and from which he draws his power, is close to universal among rebels in the area. However, while non-jihadists dislike the Alawites because of their links to the regime, al-Nusra's distaste centres on their beliefs.



"They see them as Shia, as heretics," said a rebel fighter who called himself Abu Hamza, standing near a roadside butcher. "I am from here, and I have never got to know them. They have always kept to themselves. They are very insular."



Hamza wore his beard in the style of a Salafist Muslim, black and low and without a moustache. "People often think I'm al-Qaida," he laughed. He then reached into the left breast pocket of his ammunition vest and pulled out a Bible. "It's for you," he said. "I have a Qur'an in my right pocket, and I want to get a Torah for here," he said, pointing at an empty pocket on his hip.



"This area was built on the religions of the book, and it will stay that way, God willing."



Over a ridge ahead, tank shells rumbled in a rebel-held village on the edge of Jebel al-Krud and Latakia. Another two families, their battered cars laden with overflowing bags of belongings, moved slowly north along the deserted highway.



Night was drawing near when a driver stopped in the gathering dark to ask about the way ahead. A cross swung from his rear-view mirror. "Don't be afraid, my brother," a bearded rebel said. "God is with you, just as he is with us."



The rebel looked at his feet and said: "When the people come back, after we win, it will be like it was before. They will buy meat for us, and we will visit them for Christmas.



"But we can't let things get worse than they are here, because people who have known each other for ever may lose their trust. This was the Syria of our dreams."


Boeing 787: regulators admit bafflement over source of aircraft's fault


Regulators say they still have no clear idea of what went wrong but Japanese officials rule out fault with battery manufacturer



Boeing's hopes of a quick solution to its problems with the grounded 787 Dreamliner jet have been dashed by regulators in the US and Japan who have conceded that they still have no clear idea what went wrong with the world's most technologically advanced passenger plane.



Regulators have been examining two incidents involving 787s earlier this month that led to a worldwide grounding of the new airliner. So far, investigators have concentrated on the plane's controversial use of lithium ion batteries, one of which burst into flames, triggering a smoke alarm.



On Monday, Japan's transport ministry official Shigeru Takano said his investigations had found no evidence that battery maker GS Yuasa was the source of the problems. His statement came after US regulators said on Sunday that they had made "no significant discoveries" three weeks into their investigation into the source of a fire that broke out early this month on a Japan Airlines 787 parked at Boston's Logan airport.



The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) had been looking at the batteries' charger, made by Securaplane Technologies, a unit of Britain's Meggitt engineering firm. NTSB said they had found no evidence of flaws that could have caused the incident. NTSB also said parts of the charred battery were too damaged to yield useful information.



The latest updates appear to further rule out a speedy resolution to Boeing's woes. Company executives had told airline customers that they hoped to get the 787 up in the air soon. There had been speculation that a batch of faulty batteries may have led to the two incidents, but this now looks less likely. On Wednesday, Boeing chief Jim McNerney will speak for the first time about the aircraft's woes when he unveils the company's latest results.



Robert Mann, founder of consultant RW Mann, said: "If you rule out battery failure due to manufacturer and you rule out charging, you are left with intermittent faults, which are very difficult to track down, or some unintended consequence from a usage problem."



Both faults were found on Japanese airliners, and Mann speculated that their use for shorter flights, as opposed to other airlines which have used the 787s for longer haul, may have a bearing on the issue. Such flights would lead to more frequent charging of the lithium-ion batteries, which have proven volatile in many other situations and have never before been used so extensively in such a large passenger plane.



"But I am grasping at straws," Mann said. "As is everyone. A lot smarter people than me are looking at this."



Mann said Boeing was now in for a period of "intense brow-furrowing", and a short-term fix looked very unlikely.



Boeing's hi-tech Dreamliner was dogged by delays even before the grounding. The company has invested $20bn developing the plane, which makes use of electric rather than hydraulic systems, and carbon fiber panels to save weight and fuel.



Dreamliner's issues have cast a harsh light on regulators' approval of the aircraft. Japan's regulators eased safety restrictions ahead of the plane's certification, according to Reuters. Boeing spokeswoman Lori Gunter on Sunday said the 787 had "the most rigorous test program in Boeing's history and the most robust certification program ever conducted."


Sunday, February 17, 2013

LG ACCOLADE VX-5600 VX5600 Battery LGIP-520NV

LG ACCOLADE VX-5600 VX5600 Battery LGIP-520NV



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ASUS USB Kit for Eee Pad Transformer TF101, TF101G, TF201 & TF300 Tablets

ASUS USB Kit for Eee Pad Transformer TF101, TF101G, TF201 & TF300 Tablets



  • Asus Eee Pad Transformer Tablet Compatibility: This Asus USB kit is compatible with the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101, TF101G, TF201, TF300 and TF700 Tablets. It is also come compatible with Android’s Honeycomb operating system
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The USB Kit for ASUS Eee Pad Transformer from ASUS connects directly into the dock port of your ASUS Eee Pad Transformer TF101, TF101G, TF201 or TF300 Tablet and converts it into a USB port. This opens up the accessibility to other devices with your ASUS Eee Pad Transformer TF101, TF101G, TF201 or TF300 Tablet.



Saturday, February 16, 2013

Travis Kalanick: The Transportation Trustbuster


I walk to the security desk in the lobby of what could be any of this city’s downtown office buildings filled with lawyers, architects and finance firms. “I’m here to see Travis Kalanick at Uber.”



“You’ll have to email him, they’re very secretive. And take a seat.”



Read the rest of this post on the original site


The YOLO Anthem, Via "Saturday Night Live" Digital Short


YOLO, the motto/hashtag that’s so hot it’s so totally last month unless you have a tattoo of it, gets reinterpreted by The Lonely Island guys of “Saturday Night Live,” reunited with Andy Samberg.



The premise is funny — explaining “you only live once” not to mean “carpe diem,” but instead, “the world is a scary place, so avoid it” — but these guys and their production values have gotten just way too fancy:




Friday, February 15, 2013

eStoreimport @ 5 packs Compatible Ink Cartridge Replacement Canon PGI-7 PGI-9 Pixma MX7600 iX7000

eStoreimport @ 5 packs Compatible Ink Cartridge Replacement Canon PGI-7 PGI-9 Pixma MX7600 iX7000



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Thursday, February 14, 2013

MLB At Bat 2013 will be ready for BlackBerry 10 by opening day


Good news Baseball fans. While the official MLB.com At Bat app won’t be ready for the launch of BlackBerry 10, MLB Advanced Media has committed to having the 2013 version of the app ready for opening day of the MLB season, which is March 31st.

baseball


Verizon getting special flagship Nokia Laser Windows Phone


The Verge is reporting that Verizon is going to get a special flagship Nokia Windows Phone device for its network. One that is codenamed the Nokia Laser. It will apparently be launched along with the Nokia Catwalk device. It looks like this is a variant of the Nokia Lumia 920, so it will most likely have the same polycarbonate/ceramic body of the 920.

lumia 920


Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Cheezburger Creator’s Startup SimpleHoney Shifts Focus From Travel To ‘I Want Wish List’ App


SimpleHoney, the startup co-founded by Joyce Kim (former CEO of Korean pop site Soompi.com and former co-host of the GigaOm show) and Eric Nakagawa (creator of the I Can Has Cheezburger blog), is pursuing a new goal - creating the perfect app for “wish list commerce.”



When SimpleHoney launched in May of last year, its goal was to connect travelers with the right hotel based on their personality. The problem, according to Kim (who’s also the startup’s CEO), was that people just didn’t travel enough for the site to build an ongoing relationship with its users - it probably didn’t help that the site was limited to hotels San Francisco and Hawaii. At the same time, the team saw that its “stickiest” feature was the ability to create travel wishlists, so it decided to build a wishlist-focused app, which became the I Want Wish List iPhone app.



The idea of creating a wish list is hardly new, but the new app is appealingly simple - Kim described the development process as “stripping down” all the unnecessary features. You search for products that you’re interested in, then add them to your list, which is presented in a clean, image-driven layout. The list is private by default, but you can share it with friends via Twitter, Facebook, and email. For now, the products are all pulled from Amazon (the team wants to add other online retailers eventually), and the app also alerts you when there are price changes and allows you to make purchases.



The ultimate result is a list that’s easy to consult and to update while you’re on-the-go. (I don’t imagine that this will be a common use case, but I’m using the app to create a list of books that I want to buy when I’m visiting my neighborhood bookstores.) In a blog post announcing the app, Kim says that with I Want Wish List, “You simply create a list of the products you want to buy and we let you know when it is the right time to buy and where.” The company will be adding more features, especially on “the right time to buy and where” side of things, and also expanding to the desktop web and tablets,



In the first month after the app launched, Kim said it was downloaded around 30,000 times. During the peak holiday season, its users were performing one search per second. And sixty percent of those searches result in an addition to the wish list - so these are real, purpose-driven searches, and they’re bringing up products that people really want. Kim even told me that Nakagawa has compared the initial user response to the excitement he saw in the early days of I Can Has Cheezburger.



As for the SimpleHoney travel site, it’s still available, but Kim said the team won’t be doing any more serious work on it. Both I Want Wish List (which you can download here) and SimpleHoney are now branded as products from Honey Labs.



Gillmor Gang Live 01.25.13 (TCTV)


Gillmor Gang – Robert Scoble, John Taschek, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor. Recording has concluded.



Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Assassin’s Creed 3: The Tyranny of King DLC Release Date Announced (video)


Ubisoft has this week announced a release date for the new Assassin’s Creed 3: The Tyranny of King DLC which will now be arriving for Xbox 360 and PC gamers on the 19th February.



Unfortunately for European PlayStation 3 games they will have to wait an extra day for 20th February, and currently there’s is no date for the release of a Wii U version. Watch the games trailer after the jump. Enjoy!



Assassin's Creed 3: The Tyranny of King




Project Glass Equipped With Indirect Bone Conduction Speaker?


According to a discovered patent which has been filed by Google, the design of Google’s Glass might include a indirect bone conduction speaker to deliver audio to the wearer.



The indirect bone conduction speaker will vibrate the frame of the eyewear, which will then be passed to the wearer via their skull and through the inner ear.



Google Glass




Monday, February 11, 2013

Asymco: The job Apple’s iPhone is hired to do


“On a re-stated basis, without the extra revenue from accessories, the iPhone ‘ASP’ (Average Selling Price) from a year ago becomes $646 (which, again, is not what is reflected in the graph). This is almost exactly the same as the current quarter. The iPhone "ASP erosion" therefore goes from 2.6% to only 0.7%,” Horace Dediu writes for Asymco. “Similarly, the iPad shown at $467 in the latest quarter does not drop from $593 last year but from $568. Its ASP erosion becomes 18% rather than 21%.”



“Interesting resilience with the iPhone and slightly better support for the iPad price,” Dediu writes. “What does it mean?”



Dediu writes, “The clue comes from the fact that [with iPhone, as opposed to iPad] the consumer is not the only buyer. It's operators who buy and re-price the product. They are hiring the product to sell broadband and the newest variant is still the best hire to do that job. This observation is crucial to understanding the growth dynamics of the iPhone and consequently, of Apple itself.”



Read more in the full article – highly recommended – here.


Apple’s new pet: The Black Swan


“Apple has yet to reveal what will end up being a ‘black swan’... Yes, if the threat of a long squeeze is realized, it could sail down there without even a tail wind. And while I don’t doubt the margin compression story on Apple, I think they’ll make it up on volume in home computing dominance,” Count Bitcoin writes for Seeking Alpha.



“This Swan could be gray or black, and could take any form for Apple. It could be as simple as Apple TV working,” Bitcoin writes. “Or when 80% of Windows users switch to tablets that operate as capable desktops – bursting with a massive App Ecosystem, as well as luxury suites of Adobe programs for Apple’s legions of writers, designers, artists, and musicians who have galvanized around Apple’s products.”



“Android will continue to gain in mobile, but Apple users stay with Apple with fierce loyalty. Windows users will undoubtedly switch to Apple, and Apple will find itself alone on the coffee table and/or workdesk of virtually every person who uses a computer at home and has to do more than just surf the web. Not to mention the millions of teens using earbuds to relieve their sensory deprivation (Public Education) across the U.S.,” Bitcoin writes. “Sorry Google, but Android devices are not ready to play in the home, not yet. Apple’s home computing dominance has just begun to warm up, and its mobile business, like any complex organism, will fight ruthlessly and tirelessly for survival and eventual dominance.”



Much more in the full article here.


Sunday, February 10, 2013

Vietnam to produce its own lethal drugs for executions


Move by south-east Asian nation comes after factories in EU stopped shipments of drugs over objections to death penalty



Vietnam is to begin producing its own chemical for executing prisoners after factories in the European Union stopped shipments because of objections there to the death penalty.



Vietnam stopped using firing squads in 2011 because of concerns it was traumatising the shooters. Last year, the government said it was unable to execute 532 people on death row because it could not source the drugs for lethal injections.



The Labourer newspaper on Thursday quoted the minister of public security, Tran Dai Quang, as saying Vietnam would produce its own drug. The report gave no details.



EU factories are the main supplier of drugs that can be used in executions. Several American states have also said objections from European factories were making it hard to find the chemical.


Data watchdog fines Sony £250,000 over PlayStation ID hack


Information commissioner fines company for security failures after millions of gamers' details were leaked online in 2011



Sony Computer Entertainment has been fined a record 250,000 by the data protection watchdog after the personal details of millions of gamers - including passwords and credit card numbers - were leaked online.



The privacy blunder happened in April 2011, when computer hackers targeted the Sony PlayStation Network.



The Information Commissioner's Office on Thursday said the security breach was "one of the most serious" it has handled under the Data Protection Act. The 250,000 fine is the maximum penalty awarded by the ICO against a private company.



"There's no disguising that this is a business that should have known better. It is a company that trades on its technical expertise, and there's no doubt in my mind that they had access to both the technical knowledge and the resources to keep this information safe," said David Smith, the ICO's deputy commissioner and director of data protection.



The watchdog said millions of customers were exposed to the risk of identity theft after their names, addresses, email addresses, dates of birth and account passwords were leaked online.



The ICO launched an investigation into the leak immediately after the hack in April 2011. It concluded on Thursday that the attack could have been prevented if Sony's software had been up to date, and separately found that passwords were not handled securely by the games giant.



The security breach was a huge blow for Sony, forcing its then chief executive, Sir Howard Stringer, into a humble apology and causing its share price to tumble as investors worried about the ultimate cost of the hack.



The 250,000 fine is the third largest penalty ever imposed by the ICO, with only two local authorities fined more than Sony.



Smith said: "If you are responsible for so many payment card details and log-in details then keeping that personal data secure has to be your priority. In this case that just didn't happen, and when the database was targeted - albeit in a determined criminal attack - the security measures in place were simply not good enough.



"The penalty we've issued today is clearly substantial, but we make no apologies for that. The case is one of the most serious ever reported to us. It directly affected a huge number of consumers, and at the very least put them at risk of identity theft."









The ICO did not reveal how many gamers it believes were affected by the security breach. At the time, it was estimated that as many as 100 million users may have been impacted.





It is not known who was responsible for the hack, described by the ICO as a "focused and determined criminal attack" on Sony's network. The hacking group Anonymous denied that it was involved back in May 2011, after reports quoted some members as admitting responsibility.





The data protection body said the attackers exploited a "vulnerability" in Sony's network following several distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, which overwhelmed Sony's network by flooding it with requests to load information.





The Japanese electronics giant failed to address the vulnerability even after it had spotted the unauthorised access on 19 April 2011, according to the ICO. It said that the Sony network had now been completely rebuilt.





Sony responded robustly to the fine, saying it "strongly disagreed" with the ruling and planned to appeal.





It added in a statement: "Criminal attacks on electronic networks are a real and growing aspect of 21st century life and Sony continually works to strengthen our systems, building in multiple layers of defence and working to make our networks safe, secure and resilient.





"The reliability of our network services and the security of our consumers' information are of the utmost importance to us, and we are appreciative that our network services are used by even more people around the world today than at the time of the criminal attack."





The company pointed out that the ICO found in its investigation that the "personal data is unlikely to have been used for fraudulent purposes" and that there was no evidence that encrypted payment card details were accessed.


Saturday, February 9, 2013

Kindle? Check. Sun? Check





I love taking the Kindle on vacation. Load up your books and boom. You are lost in a world of nonfiction...or fiction if you choose. Kindle battery life is unbelievable too. Yet any bookworm away from home may tend to run low on power. Sure if you only read 30 minutes a day you will get a month. But if you plan on not peeling your eyes away while basking in the vacation sun then you better be prepared.



From the "that make sense" file is the SolarFocus cover for Kindle. Pop your Kindle 4 (latest edition...the one without the keyboard or touchscreen) into the leather case where it is held securely. Built into the cover is a solar panel. So yes, as you sit at the pool your Kindle can recharge. It will take you 3 sunny days to fully recharge. But with the low battery usage of the Kindle I find it hard to believe anyone could run out of juice. Included inside the case is a self-housed LED light for nighttime reading. And it is charged via the solar panel too, preserving your Kindle battery for its own functions. This Solar Lighted Cover can be yours for $69.95 on Amazon.com or 49.90 on Amazon.co.uk and be to you just in time for your winter getaway to the sun.

Hands Free Facial Muscle Toner



We all know that the beauty industry is a multi-billion dollar one, and while the fabled Fountain of Youth remains elusive to the general public, we will just have to make do with the myriad of beauty creams and cosmetics available over the counter to help us fight the scourge of time (and gravity, of course). Well, here we are with something that might just help you out assuming you have more or less tried just about anything and everything out – the $399.95 Hands Free Facial Muscle Toner.



In a nutshell, the Hands Free Facial Muscle Toner is a practical device that will tighten and tone the face thanks to a comfortable stimulator which is worn like a headset, ensuring that your two hands remain nice and free to do other stuff. There will be gel pads located in the headset to deliver a harmless electrical impulse so that it can stimulate the underlying nerves which will in turn, help control facial muscles. It is said that when you follow a regimen of five 20-minute treatments each week, the device is capable of restoring a more youthful appearance in a matter of three months, now how about that?



You will be able to select from three treatment options and 99 levels of intensity via its tethered controller, and the rechargeable battery delivers up to 20 treatments after a three-hour charge. Each purchase comes with a dozen gel pads, each of which delivers five 20-minute treatments.

Friday, February 8, 2013

‘jOBS’ biopic with Ashton Kutcher set for nationwide premiere on April 19th


'jOBS' biopic with Ashton Kutcher set for nationwide premiere on April 19th


The Steve Jobs biopic starring Ashton Kutcher is set to make its nationwide movie theater premier on April 19 according to The Hollywood Reporter. It also claims that the date of release coincides with the 37th anniversary of the founding of Apple however that date appears to be incorrect as it is widely thought that Apple was founded on April 1 1976.



The Steve Jobs biopic jOBS, starring Ashton Kutcher, will open in theaters April 19, the 37th anniversary of the founding of the Apple Computer. The biopic, directed by Joshua Michael Stern and written by Matthew Whitely, chronicles Jobs' ascension from college dropout to one of the most revered entrepreneurs of the 20th century. Part of the film was shot in the historic garage where Jobs first set up shop at his family's home in Palo Alto, Calif.



If April is too long to wait to see the film, it will also be shown on the closing night at The Sundance Film Festival in Utah on January 27; we are sure that there will be many reviews after that screening to whet your appetite. Also Kutcher will be joined by Josh Gad at the opening keynote at this year's Macworld where we will be on the ground to bring you all the latest news. Expect to see a lot more of Kutcher as the release date gets nearer with the obligatory TV chat show appearances to hype up the film.



Source: The Hollywood Reporter




Tim Cook sends out congratulatory email, announces Town Hall meeting


Tim Cook sends out congratulatory email, announces Town Hall meeting




Just like last year, following another record-breaking -- if not Wall Street pleasing -- set of quarterly results, Apple's CEO Tim Cook sent out a congratulatory email to everyone on the team, and announced that they'd be rallying for a Town Hall meeting today at 10am PST/1pm EST. Mark Gurman of 9to5Mac scored a copy, here's the intro:



Team, We've just reported another record setting quarter, thanks to everyone's incredible hard work and focus. We sold over 75 million iOS devices in the holiday quarter alone, which is a testament to the strength of Apple's innovation.



Regardless of how you feel about the numbers, the prospects, the manipulations, or even the products and services themselves, the people at Apple really did work their collective asses off to launch everything they did before the holidays, and they pulled off one of the most profitable quarters for any company ever -- the likes of which have never been seen outside the biggest of big oil.



Cook's right to be proud. Apple is right to be proud. Congratulations and thanks for the hard work, can't wait to see what you have in store for us this year!



Read the rest of Tim Cook's email via the link below.



Source: 9to5Mac




Thursday, February 7, 2013

Latvia: Russia's playground for business, politics – and crime


Mystery of missing tycoon shows how Russian influence is growing again in small Baltic nation



The Russian tycoon Leonid Rozhetskin was last seen alive in the pretty seaside town of Jurmala, on the Baltic coast of Latvia. That was five years ago. Detectives found ominous clues inside his villa, including blood on the floor, but no body.



Then last summer police discovered human remains 25 miles away in a forest. Inside a pocket was Rozhetskin's credit card. So far officials have been unable to say for sure that the corpse is that of the missing multi-millionaire.



The presumed murder is a vivid example of how Latvia - a small Baltic nation of 2 million people on the doorstep of Russia - has become a playground for Russian interests: business, political and, above all, criminal. Or often, as in the Rozhetskin case, all three. Like many rich Russians he had numerous enemies. The Guardian has even been told the name of the hitman who allegedly killed him.



Two decades after Latvia declared independence from the Soviet Union, joining the EU and Nato in 2004, Russian influence is growing again.



It is most visible in Jurmala, the picturesque resort of pine forests and wooden dachas from where Rozhetskin is thought to have disappeared. Every summer Russia's fashionable super-rich gather here for the New Wave pop festival. They meet, socialise and party. A table in the VIP lounge of the town's concert hall costs 25,000. It is joked that their combined wealth exceeds Latvia's budget.



The guests are a who's who of Vladimir Putin's Russia - oligarchs, Duma MPs, crooners and spies. Two years ago Roman Abramovich dropped by and went for a walk in the sand dunes. Other summer visitors include Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine's richest man, and Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman. Also there last year was Vladimir Pronichev, deputy director of Russia's powerful FSB spy agency, and the man responsible for guarding the country's borders.



According to Leonid Jakobson, an investigative journalist based in the capital, Riga, Jurmala also attracts another clientele: the Russian mafia.



Last year a Russian businessman, Nikolai Kirillov, was shot dead while returning from the beach with a 24-year-old female companion. There was a theory he was involved in smuggling. As is often the case, nobody was caught.



In 2010 Vyaschaslav Shestakov, a Russian alleged to be a gangster, moved to Jurmala. He was said to be an emissary of the mobster Aslan Usoyan, also known as Grandpa Hasan, who was gunned down last week while leaving his favourite Moscow restaurant. Last month the Latvian authorities banned Shestakov from the country, and from the rest of the EU.



"Jurmala isn't really a music festival. You don't need to go to Latvia to listen to Russian pop stars. You can do that in Russia," Jakobson said. "In reality Jurmala is an important moment. The Russian mafia and Russian government are together in one place. They discuss common problems, global problems and how to move money through the Baltics."



Some including Jakobson believe the Kremlin's agenda in Latvia is to slowly reverse the country's strategic direction from pro-west to pro-Moscow. This is not as far-fetched as it may seem. Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan and, arguably, Georgia have all recently returned to Russia's geo-political fold following unsuccessful revolutions.



Latvia has the biggest proportion of ethnic Russians of the three post-Soviet Baltic states, accounting for about 25% of Latvia's population. Some 37% speak Russian as a first language, the highest figure for any EU country. The charming capital Riga is effectively bilingual, with Russian and Latvian spoken on its art nouveau streets.



There is also growing evidence the country has become a haven for dubious Russian money.



In a report last week the European commission praised Latvia's post-2008 economic recovery. But it said the authorities had not done enough to stop Latvia's banking system being used for "complex economic, financial, money laundering, and tax evasion crimes".



In recent months wealthy Russians have abandoned Cyprus, which is seeking an EU bailout, and moved their company registrations to Latvia.



Half of all money now invested in Latvia - $10bn - comes from non-resident depositors. Most live in Russia and former Soviet republics such as Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. The US state department has expressed concern that this reliance on outside money creates a "systemic money-laundering risk".



"Latvia seems to be the first point of call for money launderers to get their cash into the EU," said Tom Mayne, of the campaign group Global Witness. "Once you get money into the EU there are close relations between EU banks, and you can move it around easily. Latvia is one of the main hubs. It's a point of weakness."



Latvian financial regulators say they have introduced tough measures to clamp down on money-laundering and suspicious transactions. They say Latvia, with its large financial services industry, is not the only European country that does business with Russia. "The EU is still buying gas from Russia. We are part of the west," said Kristaps Zakulis, the head of Latvia's bank regulator, FKTK.



But many see evidence of Russian soft power at work. Jakobson's investigative website has made him plenty of enemies. Last year unknown assailants attacked him in the stairwell of his home, slashing his face with a knife.



He had also published emails that allegedly showed Russia's foreign intelligence agency, the SVR, had secretly financed the 2009 municipal election campaign of Nils U akovs, now Riga's mayor. U akovs does not dispute the authenticity of the emails but police interrogated the journalist for two days over their possible theft.



U akovs, a young and energetic former journalist, is ethnic Russian. He leads the Harmony Centre, a five-party coalition that predominantly enjoys support from Latvia's ethnic Russian voter base. Latvia's harsh post-2008 austerity programme may have delighted the IMF, but it has alienated many. The populist Harmony Centre could well play a role in a future national coalition government.



Ethnic Latvians view the party's rise with concern, seeing it as a proxy for Moscow's business and political interests. The party has fuelled suspicion by signing a co-operation agreement with Putin's United Russia party.



Moscow, meanwhile, has staged military exercises on Latvia's border, while the ultra-nationalist Duma MP Vladimir Zhirinovsky has called on Russia to annex the parts of eastern Latvia dominated by ethnic Russians.



EU diplomats in Riga confirm that Russian intelligence agencies in Latvia are highly active. "They have successfully penetrated Russian elites in this country," one said.



Boris Karpichkov, a Latvian former KGB agent now based in Britain, said Latvia's geographical position, bridging Russia and the west, made it an ideal entry point for Russian espionage, smuggling and laundering of criminal proceeds. He said: "Latvia is in the centre of the three Baltic states. Russia's security services use Latvia like a trampoline, to send their people to Europe and the US." Russian spies with Latvian passports can travel undetected across the EU, he said.



The Kremlin has also sought to bolster its influence via Latvia's Russian language press. An anonymous offshore company owns many newspaper titles; their real owner is suspected to be a pro-Kremlin businessman. All portray Putin favourably. Pro-Putin Russian state television is widely viewed; Russia has also distributed history textbooks to schools that portray Latvia's post-1944 Soviet occupation as "liberation".



Valeri Belokon, a Latvian banking tycoon, former owner of a Russian-language newspaper, and president of Blackpool FC, said Moscow was undoubtedly trying to return Latvia to its sphere of influence. "Unfortunately it's true. I'm afraid of all this Russian capital. Capital is influence. Latvia is an open country. And I'm not against tourism or business. But the danger for a small country is that we become dependent on Russia. We definitely have to defend ourselves."



Many of the apartments in Jurmala are Russian-owned. Buying property in Latvia entitles the owner to residency. This allows visa free travel across the EU. Even the Russian ambassador to Latvia lives here, in an imposing yellow and white mansion next to the sea.



Many ethnic Latvians despise the Jurmala festival. Local businesses, by contrast, welcome it.



From her home in the US, Rozhetskin's mother has accused Russian agents of murdering her son. The tycoon had fallen out with the Kremlin before his death, and was embroiled in business disputes with Russia's then communications minister and other well-connected oligarchs.



One tantalising version suggests Rozhetskin faked his own death, and is alive and well in the US living under a false name. Either way his house, next to Jurmala's cemetery, was eerily empty last week. There was no sign its owner will return any time soon.


Afghan rape victim 'attacked again by government workers protecting her'


Girl aged 15 says she was raped by employees and security guard at provincial women's affairs department



A teenage Afghan rape victim who secured a rare conviction of her attacker has said she was assaulted this month for a second time, by a group of government employees tasked with protecting her.



The 15-year-old schoolgirl, from Daikundi province in Afghanistan's freezing, poor central highlands, was first raped four months ago while she was on her way to school, said Nowruz Ali Ataee, head of the provincial criminal investigation department.



In an unusual move for a young girl in conservative rural Afghanistan, where a rape is often considered to bring shame on an entire family, she reported the attack. Equally unusually, for a country that passed a law banning violence against women four years ago but has been slow to implement it, police found and arrested her rapist. He was recently jailed for 16 years and an accomplice was given a five-year sentence.



But the girl had to travel to the provincial capital for the case, and was temporarily living in an "education reform" centre that Daikundi officials said shelters women and children with no family.



After four months, and with her attackers in prison, judges last week ordered that the victim should be sent to a shelter or back to her family, Ataee said.



Her home was not really an option, however. She comes from a remote district, where the roads are now blocked by heavy snows, and it was not even clear if her family wanted her back. The girl's father had died when she was young, and her mother remarried, to a man who one government source said did not treat his stepdaughter well, forcing her to spend long hours herding sheep.



And in Daikundi town there were no suitable shelters, said Ataee, so she was sent to spend the night in the provincial women's affairs department. "The next morning she made an accusation. When the acting chairman of the women's department went to her office and asked her if it was OK, she said some employees and one security guard raped her," Qurban Ali Uruzgani, governor of Daikundi province, told the Guardian.



The victim was not sure how many men had raped her, one source said, because she had lost consciousness at the start of her ordeal, but several men have already been detained.



"We arrested four employees and one security guard of the building and put them in jail," Uruzgani said. The acting chairman of the women's department was briefly held but then released, he added.



After details of the case leaked to the Afghan media, the president, Hamid Karzai, sent a delegation to investigate, something he has done before in cases of extreme violence against women, contested civilian casualties or other cases that catch public attention.



The team, which included representatives from the ministry of women's affairs and the attorney general's office, has now returned to Kabul and is likely to report back within weeks. But regardless of the outcome, the case has already raised fears that a trend of rising violence against women, recorded last year, is continuing into 2013.



Additional reporting by Mokhtar Amiri


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

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