Author: H4CKER

  • Images of Internet Explorer 9’s new interface leaked

    This Chinese page purportedly features a couple of leaked screenshots of IE9’s new GUI. I don’t know if it’s the real thing, but if it is, Microsoft are doing something very bold here. The general design is reminiscent of the new Windows Phone 7, with a clean, angular look and graphics that are “cut” on the edge of the window (like that back button in the top-left corner). Even if it’s just a mock-up, it’s still quite impressive, and an interesting break from what we’ve come to know from Firefox, Chrome and Opera, not to mention previous versions of IE.

    I’ll let Google Translate do the talking here: “New version of IE 9 preview version of the title bar of the platform, integrating the address bar, tool bar, search box, the status bar. Click the page title to display the address bar (and the search box, favorites management, access history viewer), the website finish loading cases, the address bar to display only part of the title page.” (Any native Chinese speakers here are welcome to submit a better translation via the comments.)

    What do you think, people? April Fool’s or the real deal?

    More information (Chinese page) [livesino.net]

  • You can finally remove participants from a Wave

    Google is slowly but steadily adding all of the basic features into Wave. Recently they added email notifications, and not long before that they added access permissions. Now they’ve knocked out another one of those “must have” features; being able to remove someone from a wave.

    ou can read more about it on the Google Wave Help site.

    More information [GoogleWave]

  • Internet Explorer 9 – HTML5 video, faster than Chrome!

    They’ve just showed off hardware-accelerated HTML5 at the MIX10 keynote, and it’s damn impressive. Main points:

    * Full-screen, HD-encoded video on netbooks — the keynote highlighted the dropped frames in Chrome, while IE9 rendered it fine — made possible by the hardware decoder on the netbook.
    * Multiple HTML5 videos on one page? — then they scroll the page down… and there are two HTML5 videos playing full-screen, on the same document! Using only half the CPU (while Chrome used 100%). Can’t see a reason you’d have two full-screen videos on the same page, but it leads into…
    * A richer, more animated Web — the demo showed off a video carousel. Rather than the four icons at the top of the Download Squad page, you might see a carousel that rotates. Done entirely in HTML5; no Flash or Silverlight required.

    The IE9 keynote has finished, so we’ve now had all of the details. Microsoft says they will be releasing a new Developer Preview (download it here) every 8 weeks — I wonder when it will become a full-blown beta. Surely this year…

    More information [Downloadsquad]

  • Legendary Microsoft Game SkiFree Now Free for the iPhone

    This news would have made my week if not for one little caveat: “Upcoming Features Include: Snow Monster.” It’s like a Rolling Stones reunion tour without Keith Richards.

    More information [Gizmodo]

    SkiFree! for iPhone

  • Ubuntu finally gets new logo and looks in 10.04

    Ubuntu has been the “Flagship Linux” distro for quite a while now. This is the distro most people judge Linux by (and the only one I personally work with). However, its visual style remained constant for a long time, and has been starting to look a bit stale. It’s difficult to convey “innovation” to end users when your product keeps the same look, version to version.

    There’s been a lot of talk of changing this, and yesterday Ubuntu finally announced their new look for Lucid Lynx, dubbed “Light”. It includes a new logo (both light and dark), new theme (light and dark), bootsplash, and even logos for the Ubuntu forums, Xubuntu and other related projects. I’ve put up the theme and splash screen after the jump, and you can see more eye-candy on the announcement page itself.

    More information [downloadsquad]

  • Televisions Are Born In Places Like This

    This man is tightening a mold in a Samsung factory in Kaluga, Russia. Inside that mold is a portion of what will soon be a television. Let’s take a tour of the rest of the factory.

    Samsung opened this particular factory in 2008 and its been putting out products ever since. Aside from quality inspections, it appears that from the moment components arrive in gigantic sacks from Korea nearly everything is automated in this factory—from hot plastic being piped into molds to microcircuits being produced to the little logos being stamped onto panels. Humans mostly oversee the production and yes, occasionally tighten molds.

    More information [Gizmodo]

  • Top 10 Torrent Sites Soon Without Mininova

    Compared to a year ago the BitTorrent landscape has changed significantly. The Pirate Bay decided to shut down its tracker last fall and a few weeks later Mininova partly shut down its website. However, with the fall of Mininova many new torrent sites emerged, with KickassTorrents being the most successful one.

    It almost seems like history is repeating itself. Early 2005, just a few weeks after that period’s leading torrent site, Suprnova.org, closed its doors, Mininova was founded. In the years that followed the site grew out to become the most visited torrent site. That growth was stunted in November 2009, when a negative verdict in a court battle against the local anti-piracy outfit BREIN forced the operators of the site to remove over a million torrents.

    Below you’ll find a list of the 10 most-visited torrent sites as of today. Only public and English language sites are included. The list is based on traffic rank reports from Compete, Alexa and SiteReport’s World Rank. The number of daily visitors and page views are estimates.

    #1 THEPIRATEBAY.ORG
    #2 TORRENTZ.COM (RECOMMENDED!)
    #3 ISOHUNT.COM
    #4 BTJUNKIE.ORG
    #5 TORRENTREACTOR.NET
    #6 DEMONOID.COM
    #7 TORRENTDOWNLOADS.NET
    #8 MONOVA.ORG
    #9 KICKASSTORRENTS.COM
    #10 MININOVA.ORG

    As expected Mininova’s decision resulted in a disastrous drop in traffic, as its users spread out over other torrent sites including some promising newcomers. Today, three months after Mininova’s downfall, the site is about to disappear from the top 10 list of most visited torrent sites. The Pirate Bay is currently leading the list closely followed by the meta-search engine Torrentz and isoHunt. KickassTorrents is currently in 9th place, which is a remarkable achievement consdering the site is only a few months old.

    More information [Torrent Freak]

  • How To Quickly Investigate A Fake BitTorrent Tracker

    It’s possible to find information about the files indexed on many trackers by using ’scrape’. In the case of the TorrentQ tracker, the scrape URL is located at http://tracker.torrentq.com/scrape.php. So first off, go to this URL and you’ll get the option to download a file, in this case ’scrape.php’ – download it.

    In this file will be information about the files being seeded on this tracker.

    Next use DeHackEd’s nice little online tool called DumpTorrentCGI. Browse to the ’scrape’ file on your hard drive, change output type to ‘/scrape’ and click the ‘decode’ button. You should get this report;

    Immediately you can see that all the files are apparently hugely popular, but of course, all of these stats are faked. To prove that, one can use a site like Torrentz.com, which creates its torrent URLs by using a torrent’s hash value. Simply test each torrent by using http://www.torrentz.com/ followed by the hash value, as shown below, and check the comments.

    http://www.torrentz.com/0366eb6bdbab88f2ccd9397a0b421b3947c82e06

    The torrents TorrentQ tracks are for Wolfman, Legion, My Name is Khan, The Book of Eli, From Paris With Love, Ninja Assassin, Edge of Darkness, Shutter Island and Dear John.

    Every single one is flagged as a fake by commenters on Torrentz.com.

    More information [TorrentFreak]

  • 8 Things That Suck About the iPad

    1) Big, Ugly Bezel.
    2) No Multitasking.
    3) No Cameras.
    4) Touch Keyboard.
    5) No HDMI Out.
    6) The Name iPad.
    7) No Flash.
    and) Adapters, Adapters, Adapters?.

    Update: Why stop at 8? Here are more things we are discovering that suck about the iPad.
    9) It’s Not Widescreen.
    10) Doesn’t Support T-Mobile 3G.
    11) A Closed App Ecosystem.
    12) And more…

    More information [Gizmodo]

  • RCA Airnergy Charges Gadgets with Nothing But Wifi Signals

    Forget PowerMats and wireless charging and the like, because the Airnergy wi-fi signal harvester is my new front runner for the future of gadget charging.

    It’s not exactly new tech, as ohGizmo notes, but it’s the first application that’s of any real use to consumers. Put simply, Airnergy takes the energy created by wi-fi signals and stores it in a rechargeable battery. At CES, the device’s battery, which I believe was precharged with Wi-Fi power, was able to charge a BlackBerry from 30% power to full power in about 90 minutes.

    Pretty handy, and supposedly available this summer for $40. Not too shabby, and very appealing considering how ubiquitous wi-fi hotspots are these days. Very simple, somewhat cheap and incredibly useful if it works are advertised—by far one of the coolest things I’ve seen come out of CES this year.

    More information [OhGizmo!]

  • Play Pong in your browser – Time Waster

    Pong is such a classic game, what could possibly be done to make it feel fresh and creative? How about using browser windows as game elements? This version of Pong by Stewdio launches three pop-up windows when you press the P (for play) button — two paddles and a “ball”.

    You can play against the computer using the arrow keys to move your paddle up and down, or you can choose to play against another human who can use the A and Z keys to move their paddle up and down.

    Given the unorthodox way the game was implemented, the gameplay is quite faithful, and the graphics refresh fast enough for it to feel snappy. Rather than the typical smooth movement of the paddles you might expect, this version of Pong uses 5 positions from top to bottom on the screen, and each tap of a direction key moves one space in the chosen direction. This allows you to move very quickly when necessary using multiple taps.

    While Stewdio’s Pong was obviously done as a sort of proof of concept, it’s a completely playable version of the game. For some reason the game doesn’t seem to keep score, but that’s really the only thing that is missing.

    More information [uneasysilence]

  • Install PHProxy in Your Web Space to Access Blocked Sites

    Got some web space you rent for a personal site? Good, then you can likely get around any restrictions your employer, school, or other eye-shielding authority have wrongly put in your way with a quick PHProxy installation.

    There are, of course, plenty of newer and more tech-savvy—and likely more private and secure—means of working your way around a web filter that seems unfair. PHProxy just happens to be one that is darned easy to install on any web space that can run PHP scripts, which these days is most of them.

    Grab the ZIP download from SourceForge, extract the folder inside, then copy it into a folder on YourPersonalSite.com, filling in your actual site name. Head to, for example, YourPersonalSite.com/phproxy, and you’re greeted with a little address bar, and lots of data retention and privacy-enhancing options to determine what kind of traffic you’ll generate when you head to your chosen site.

    Should you use this to look at very bad stuff that your boss would instantly fire you for glimpsing, should he discover your tracks? No, you should not, for many reasons. Can it be a quick little experiment in anonymizing your browsing records and getting past lockdown for the occasional sports score or Facebook check? You make the call.

    PHProxy is a free download, works on any hosted storage space (or home server) that can run PHP scripts. We’ve previously rounded up our readers’ recommendations for cheap and reliable web hosts, if you’re looking for one. Need to password protect your PHProxy directory so the whole world isn’t trying to fit through your privacy gate? Try the previously mentioned Htaccess Editor, or try out Webmonkey’s resources for htaccess editing.

    More information [PHProxy]

  • Lessons Learned from a Hacked Google Account

    Digital Inspiration is an oft-linked blog here at Lifehacker, and its author is a very savvy digital worker. That said, Amit Agarwal learned a lot about safety precautions when both his Gmail and Google Apps accounts were hacked into.

    Agarwal’s not entirely sure about how his accounts were broken into, given that he had strong passwords on them. After a few moments’ panic and some back-and-forth with the Google team, he regained control over his accounts. If he had to go through it again, he’d wish he had a whole bunch of backup and verification procedures on hand. Here’s one item that jumped out at us, despite having gone through a similar experience, as something neither we nor most Google/Gmail users probably have ready:

    #3. Take a paper and write down the following information about your Google Account. You will need this to verify your identify to Google in case someone else takes over your Google Account and the secondary email address associated with your account.

    * The month and year when your created your Gmail / Google Account.
    * If you created a Gmail account by invitation, write the email address of the person who first sent you that invite for Gmail.
    * The email addresses of your most frequently emailed contacts (the top 5).
    * The names of any custom labels that you may have created in your Gmail account.
    * The day/month/year when you started using various other Google services (like AdSense, Orkut, Blogger, etc.) that are associated with the Google account that you are trying to recover. If you’re not certain about some of the dates, provide your closest estimate.

    Be sure to read the full Digital Inspiration post for more tips and advice on preparing for, and recovering from, hacked Google accounts, and share your own hack/spam recovery experiences in the comments.

    More information [Digital Inspiration]

  • Firefox 3.6 Final Downloads in 2010

    It’s now official, the final release of Firefox 3.6, the next iteration of the open source browser from Mozilla has slipped into the coming year.

    Download Firefox Beta 3.6 [Mozilla]

  • Youtu.be – You’ll never guess what this URL shortener does

    Hot on the heels of both Goo.gl and Fb.me, there’s now a Youtu.be! Its sole purpose: shorter YouTube links.

    There isn’t really a lot more to this one, other than a brief explanation of how they work:

    * Take the ‘key’ from the end of a YouTube video URL — The key, in the URL http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHg5SJYRHA0 would be ‘oHg5SJYRHA0′
    * Stick it on the end of YouTu.be — and… voila! http://youtu.be/oHg5SJYRHA0

    The thing is, it’s not really all that short. The only real advantage, over something like Bit.ly, is that you now know it’s a video and not some stupid meme or phishing attempt. Also, as the YouTube Blog suggests, web developers can use the video key to bring up thumbnails, or embed videos directly. It’s also great with YouTube’s fairly-new AutoShare option: publish your youtu.be links straight to Twitter! Woo!

    I know what you’re all thinking: Belgium has finally brought more than than just waffles or fries to this world; hallelujah!

    More information [Download Squad]

  • Google URL Shortener

    Google URL Shortener at goo.gl is a service that takes long URLs and squeezes them into fewer characters to make a link that is easier to share, tweet, or email to friends. The core goals of this service are:

    * Stability – ensuring that the service has very good uptime
    * Security – protecting users from malware and phishing pages
    * Speed – fast resolution of short URLs

    Google URL Shortener is currently available for Google products and not for broader consumer use.

    More information [Google]

  • Ya está disponible la versión beta de Google Chrome para Linux

    Hola a todos los usuarios de Linux:

    Google Chrome ha lanzado una versión beta para Linux. Nos gustaría dar las gracias a todos los desarrolladores de Chromium y de WebKit que nos han ayudado a convertir Google Chrome en un navegador rápido y estable. A continuación incluimos algunos datos interesantes sobre el trabajo del equipo de Google Chrome:

    60.000 líneas de código escritas para Linux
    23 compilaciones de desarrolladores
    2.713 bugs corregidos para Linux
    12 colaboradores y editores de bugs externos para la base de código de Google Chrome para Linux y 48 colaboradores externos de código

    Gracias por la espera. Esperamos que disfrutéis de Google Chrome.

    El equipo de Google Chrome

    Más información [Google]