Author: Zach Walton

  • Looking For A Cheap Linux Board? Try The BeagleBone Black

    Linux can run on just about anything. That’s why projects like the $25 Raspberry Pi are so exciting. Just about anybody can now own a Linux PC and start writing code. Of course, some may want something a bit more sophisticated, and BeagleBoard may have just want you need.

    The BeagleBone Black is the latest Linux board from BeagleBoard. The board can run Linux or Android, and features a 1GHz ARM Cortex-A8 processor. It’s a bit faster than the 720 MHz CPU on board the original BeagleBone. The BeagleBone Black was also upgraded to 512MB of RAM and 2GB of onboard flash memory.

    The BeagleBone Black is a substantial improvement over the $89 BeagleBone so one would expect a higher price, right? Fortunately, cost cutting measures have allowed BeagleBoard to sell the BeagleBone Black for only $45. It’s even cheaper if you just buy the board as the $45 cost also includes a power supply.

    Here’s the full spec list:

  • Processor — TI Sitara AM3359 (Cortex-A8 @1GHz)
  • Memory — 512MB DDR3 RAM (606MHz); 2GB onboard eMMC flash; microSD slot
  • Networking — 10/100 Ethernet
  • Other I/O:

  • Micro-HDMI
  • USB 2.0 host
  • Mini-USB 2.0 client
  • 20-pin CTI JTAG interface (optional)
  • Expansion connector I/O:

  • 3x serial
  • McASP0, SPI1, I2C
  • 65x GPIO
  • CAN
  • LCD
  • GPMC, MMC1, MMC2
  • EHRPWM
  • 7x AIN (1.8V max.)
  • 4x timers; XDMA interrupt
  • Other features — reset, boot, power buttons
  • Power:

  • Mini-USB, DC jack, or 5VDC external (via header) source
  • PMIC regulator
  • Approximately 2.3 Watts max power consumption
  • Dimensions — 3.4 x 2.1 inches
  • Weight — 39.7 g (1.4 oz)
  • If you prefer video tours, here’s a quick rundown of the BeagleBone Black:

    For more info, including where to buy it, check out the BeagleBone Black product page. You’ll even find links to Android and Ubuntu builds that are certifiably stable on BeagleBoard hardware.

    [LinuxGizmos via Slashdot]

  • Apple Reports Record Quarter, Made $43.6 Billion In Q2

    In its second quarter earnings report, Apple says that it made $43.6 billion in revenue and $9.5 billion in profit. Apple pulled in more revenue than Q2 2012′s $39.2 billion, but it made less than last year’s $11.6 billion profit. The company also noted that 66 percent of its revenue came from international sales.

    “We are pleased to report record March quarter revenue thanks to continued strong performance of iPhone and iPad,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “Our teams are hard at work on some amazing new hardware, software, and services and we are very excited about the products in our pipeline.”

    For hardware, Apple sold 37.4 million iPhones in the quarter. It’s a noticeable increase from the 35.1 million iPhones sold in the year-ago quarter. It also sold 19.5 million iPads, which is a pretty sizable increase from the 11.8 million iPads sold in the year-ago quarter. The company’s saw a small decrease as it sold a little under 4 million Macs compared to the year-ago quarter’s 4 million Macs.

    “Our cash generation remains very strong, with $12.5 billion in cash flow from operations during the quarter and an ending cash balance of $145 billion,” said Peter Oppenheimer, Apple’s CFO.

    Apple expects the following earnings results for Q3 2013:

  • revenue between $33.5 billion and $35.5 billion
  • gross margin between 36 percent and 37 percent
  • operating expenses between $3.85 billion and $3.95 billion
  • other income/(expense) of $300 million
  • tax rate of 26%
  • Apple will be be live streaming its Q2 2013 financial results conference call today at 2:00 p.m. PST/5:00 p.m. EST. You can listen in here.

  • CryEngine 3 Displays Its Next-Gen Muscle In New Tech Demo

    Epic Games made one heck of a splash with Unreal Engine 4. The next-generation engine has already proven its worth with two amazing tech demos that make the wait for the next-generation that much harder to bear.

    Of course, it’s easy to forget that the next generation is already here with CryEngine 3. Crysis 3, at least on the PC, is a technical marvel. Now one company has taken CyEngine 3 and crafted one of the prettiest tech demos you’ll ever see.

    From Enodo, a firm that designs “virtual realities for real life business applications,” comes this real-time demo that simulates multiple environments from the African plains to a busy urban center. Check it out:

    Regardless of the engine, the future of next-gen games looks bright, and very pretty. Let’s just hope game designers start to use a bit more color in their games from now on though. Unreal Engine has already proven that it can do browns, but a little blue or green never hurt anyone.

  • Global Internet Speeds Have Increased Yet Again

    Every quarter, Akamai releases a report called “The State of the Internet.” In the previous report, Akamai found that broadband speeds had fallen on a global level. Thankfully, the latest report indicates that speeds are rising yet again.

    Akamai reports that average global connection speeds rose 5 percent to 2.9 Mbps in Q4 2012. That may not seem like much, but many countries in Africa and Southeast Asia are still seeing average speeds of 500-800 Kbps. Those countries are only seeing less than one percent increase in speeds each quarter, but recent initiatives may help bring them up to speed sooner rather than later.

    On a country-by-country basis, South Korea is still king with an average speed of 14 Mbps. Japan is second with 10.8 Mbps and Hong Kong is in third with 10.8 Mbps. The United States was ranked in eighth place with an average speed of 7.4 Mbps.

    Every country in the top 10, except for South Korea, saw average broadband speeds increase. Japan saw a year-over-year increase of 19 percent, Hong Kong saw a year-over-year increase of 5.4 percent, and the U.S. saw a year-over-year increase of 28 percent.

    The top 10 positions are largely the same when it comes to countries with high broadband (speeds over 10Mbps) connections. South Korea is in first place with 49 percent of the country with high broadband internet followed by Japan and Hong Kong with 39 percent and 28 percent respectively. The United States is in eighth place again with only 19 percent of the country having high broadband.

    When looking specifically at the United States, the Northeast largely remains the place to be if you want consistently high Internet speeds. Vermont takes the number one spot with average speeds of 10.8 Mbps followed by Delaware and the District of Columbia with 10.6 Mbps and 10.2 Mbps respectively.

    It’s largely the same when looking at the states with the highest amount of the population with access to high broadband. In this case, New Hampshire comes in at the top spot with 34 percent of its residents having access to speeds higher than 10 Mbps followed by the District of Columbia and New Jersey with both at 33 percent.

    As for Internet penetration, Akamai says that nearly 700 million unique IPv4 addresses connected to its platform in the last quarter. That’s a 4.2 percent jump from Q3 2012 and a 13 percent jump from Q4 2011. With a single IP address potentially representing numerous users, Akamai estimates that there are over one billion unique Web users on the Internet today.

    It should be noted that not every Internet user connects to Akamai, but a great deal of them do. Akamai’s numbers are about the closest we’ll get to the actual number of people who are now connected to the Internet.

    On a final note, Akamai says that global attack traffic (i.e. DDoS attacks) increased by 200 percent in 2012. Unsurprisingly, 41 percent of that attack traffic originated from China in Q4 with the United States coming in second with 10 percent of all attack traffic.

    Despite the worrying increases in attack traffic over the last year, Akamai’s report is incredibly encouraging. We like to complain about our ISPs, and for good reason, but these reports always help to put things into perspective. Our Internet speeds are slowly rising, and they’re rising faster than in other parts of the world. With the spread of Google Fiber and Gigabit Squared, we might start to see the U.S. rise up the ranks in forthcoming quarterly reports.

    You can get a copy of Akamai’s State of the Internet Report here. If you don’t want to read 45 pages of analysis and charts, you can read the two-page executive summary here.

  • 3D Printed Organs Are Here, And They’re Very Tiny

    Growing organs in a lab is no longer science fiction. Universities have already proven that you can grow tissue or blood vessels with 3D printers. One company has now taken it a step further, however, by combining the two.

    NewScientist reports that Organovo, a San Diego-based medical company, has created a fully functioning human liver via 3D printing. The only catch is that these livers are ridiculously tiny.

    Organovo was able to create its tiny livers by using a 3D printer to layer cell after cell until fully functioning liver tissue was formed. It also used cells from blood vessels to ensure that the tissue was getting all of the nutrients that it needed.

    For now, the tissue can only live for five days. During that time, however, researchers are able to put it through a number of tests. The hope is that this first batch of liver tissue can be used to reduce the amount of time needed to test new drugs as the 3D printed liver reacts to treatment just like a real liver would.

    Of course, the ultimate goal is to create a full-sized human liver. Thousands of people die each year waiting for a transplant. With 3D printed organs, doctors would be able to create a liver from the patient’s own cells so as to ensure perfect compatibility.

    Let’s just hope that the advent of 3D printed organs doesn’t throw us into a dystopian world reminiscent of Repo.

  • Learn How To Use The Weapons Of Metro: Last Light

    Metro: Last Light, sequel to Metro 2033, is quickly approaching its mid-May release date. Until then, the developers are equipping players with the knowledge necessary to survive the post-apocalyptic wastelands of Moscow.

    The first two ranger survival episodes covered the human factions and the monsters that thrive in the metro and the surface. Now you’ll learn how to put them down with the weaponry available to players. It also delves into one of the most interesting portions of Metro’s universe – the bullet-driven economy.

    Metro: Last Light will launch across the PS3, Xbox 360 and PC on May 14.

  • Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen Gets A Suitably Epic Launch Trailer

    Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen, the expansion to last year’s criminally underrated RPG, launches today. As such, Capcom has seen fit to release one more trailer before adventurers take on the challenges on Bitter Black Isle.

    The launch trailer for Dark Arisen doesn’t show us anything that we haven’t seen already, but it does show us more. We get a good look at the new bosses that populate Bitter Black Isle as well as the new enemy types that will no doubt kill players again and again.

    Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen is available in North America today, and will launch in Europe on April 26. We can only hope that it finds the audience that it so rightly deserves this time around.

  • A Few Rounds Of Tetris A Day May Cure Lazy Eyes

    As a child, I had a friend with a lazy eye. I was super jealous of him at the time because he got to wear a pirate-themed eye patch. Looking back on it now, it’s easy to see why being forced to wear an eye patch isn’t exactly the greatest thing in the world. Thankfully, new research may have found a way to help cure lazy eyes without needing patches.

    In a new study to be published in Current Biology, McGill University in Quebec found that playing Tetris for an hour a day for two weeks helped strengthen lazy eyes in adults far better than the traditional eye patch method. The game, with the help of special goggles, makes the patient’s eyes work together in unison to strengthen both.

    The special goggles work together with Tetris to ensure that both eyes see separate things while playing the game. One eye will only see the falling blocks while the other will only see the blocks that have accumulated on the ground. This forces both eyes to work together to successfully clear rows of blocks.

    After this test, the researchers had another group of adults with lazy eyes play Tetris while wearing the same goggles, but these participants had their good eye covered the whole time. They found that playing Tetris with only the lazy eye didn’t lead to any significant improvement. They did find, however, that this group saw significant improvement once they moved to the aforementioned method of having both eyes work together to play the game.

    The researchers say that playing Tetris, or any other game that makes both eyes work together, could help cure lazy eyes in adults. The researchers now want to test the same treatment on children. It could prove to be a better alternative to the traditional eye patch that must be incredibly embarrassing to some children not lucky enough to get a pirate-themed eye patch.

    [h/t: BBC]

  • Google Wallet Will No Longer Violate Your Privacy

    It was revealed back in February that Google Play sent your personal details to developers whenever you bought their apps on the Play store. It caused a small outcry among the Android community, and Congress even got involved. Google is now finally starting to address these concerns.

    Droid Life reports that Google will be updating the Google Wallet commerce site in the coming weeks that will remove any personally identifiable information from transactions. Before the update, all transactions would return a customer’s name, email address and other information. The new Google Wallet only returns the general location of the customer at time of purchase for tax purposes.

    So, why did it take Google this long to implement these changes? Google could have just removed the personal information and called it a day, but it seems that the company is completely rebuilding the Google Wallet commerce site to be more developer friendly as well. There’s been a number of UI changes that clean up the site.

    Here’s what the new Google Wallet commerce site looks like compared to the old, courtesy of Droid Life:

    Google Wallet Will No Longer Violate Your Privacy

    The Google Wallet fiasco was just one of many privacy challenges that Google is facing. It’s nice to see the company working quickly to address this particular problem, but it has many more to go. In fact, it only just recently settled a years-old Wi-Fi snooping case in Germany. It also has to contend with European regulators as they question Google’s new privacy policy.

  • Firefox OS Dev Units Now Available For Purchase

    It was revealed last week that the Firefox OS dev units from Geeksphone would finally be shipping after missing their originally planned launch in February. Now the phones are available, but you’re still going to have to wait.

    Engadget reports that both the Keon and Peak Firefox OS dev units are now available from the Geeksphone online store. The Keon will cost you $119 and the Peak goes for $194. The phones may be cheap, but good luck actually buying one. Geeksphone’s online store has been taken offline because of incredible demand, or unplanned maintenance. It’s hard to say at this point.

    Maybe you should reacquaint yourself with the Firefox OS hardware while you wait for the store to go back up. First up, the Keon is the budget phone that Mozilla plans to get into the hands of as many people as possible in developing countries. For $119, you get a Qualcomm Snapdragon S1, 3.5-inch display, and 512MB of RAM. The slightly more expensive Peak has a Qualcomm Snapdragon S4, 4.3-inch display, and 512MB of RAM.

    Both devices will be able to connect to either 2G or 3G networks. Both also come unlocked so you can add it whatever carrier you like.

    The site should be available again later today if you really want to get your hands on the first Firefox OS dev units. We’ll update this story once the site is available again. If you find yourself unable to wait, however, you can always install Firefox OS on one of Sony’s Xperia E smartphones.

  • Should Your Startup Use Open Source Software?

    Open source software is awesome, and it’s free. What more do you need to know? In all actuality, there’s a lot to consider when thinking about what software to use in your startup. Do you go with open source or proprietary? Maybe Google can help.

    Chris DiBona, Director of Open Source at Google, is interviewed by Don Dodge about how your startup should use open source software. It’s a given that you should use open source and perhaps contribute as well, but there are tricks to doing it correctly, so that you can scale, so you don’t run into legal trouble and so that you can be acquired.

  • Check Out Splinter Cell: Blacklist In Action On The Wii U

    Ubisoft recently revealed that it’s bringing this year’s Splinter Cell: Blacklist to the Wii U. The console is definitely hurting for content, and a new Splinter Cell is just the kind of AAA content that the console needs.

    Of course, the question now is how Splinter Cell: Blacklist will play on the Wii U. Ubisoft has released a trailer that answers that very question:

    There were definitely some lazy ports at the Wii U’s launch so it’s nice to see that Ubisoft seems to be giving the Wii U version of Splinter Cell: Blacklist plenty of love. Of course, it will all be for naught if the game doesn’t run as well as the other versions. That was a problem at the console’s launch, but we can only hope that developers have gotten used to the unique architecture of the Wii U by now.

    Splinter Cell: Blacklist will be available on Wii U on August 23.

  • Gorilla Glass 3 Ensures That The Galaxy S4 Is Nigh Scratch Proof

    The Samsung Galaxy S4 comes out in just a few days, or a few weeks, depending on your carrier. While you wait to get your hands on the Samsung’s latest smartphone, you might be curious as to how the screen holds up to being attacked by knives, keys and coins.

    Well, indulge your curiosity as the first scratch test has emerged on YouTube. Romanian YouTube user Szabolcs Ignacz got his hand on the Galaxy S4 and put it through seemingly every kind of abuse that could possibly scratch or damage the display. Check it out:

    If you’re too lazy to watch the video, just know that the screen holds up like a champ. That’s because the Galaxy S4 uses Corning’s Gorilla Glass 3 in its display. Gorilla Glass 2 was already pretty much scratch proof, and the third iteration of Corning’s super tough glass only proves once again that it’s the gold standard in mobile device displays.

    [h/t: Droid Life]

  • White House Comes Out In Favor of Online Sales Tax Bill

    One of the most controversial pieces of legislation currently making its way through the Senate is the Marketplace Fairness Act. In essence, it would allow states to collect taxes from online purchases even if the online store doesn’t have a physical presence in the state. Brick-and-mortar stores claim the bill levels the playing field with online retailers while opponents say it would put undue regulations on online businesses while making the tax code even more cumbersome. Guess which side the White House agrees with.

    The Hill reports that the White House has formally announced its support for the Marketplace Fairness Act. The Senate will hold a procedural vote on the bill today at 5:30 p.m. The newfound endorsement from the White House will most likely play a role in the debate today.

    White House press secretary Jay Carney issued the following statement in regards to the bill:

    “This administration has carefully considered the legislation, and our team has met with a broad array of people on the issue. And we have heard overwhelmingly from governors, mayors and the business community on the need for federal legislation to level the playing field for our businesses and address sales tax fairness.”

    Obviously, retail stores have a vested interesting in seeing this passed, but its the governors that are probably pushing for it most. Most states are in dire need of cash. Collecting sales tax from every U.S.-based online store, regardless of location, could potentially bring billions of dollars in revenue to states. Carney said that the potential tax revenue would help states fund “K-12 education, police and fire protection, access to affordable health care, and funding for roads and bridges.”

    The bill faces some pretty stiff resistance not only from Senate Republicans, but online businesses and conservative groups like Americans for Tax Reform. Ebay is even enlisting its sellers to protest the bill.

    The common complaint from those opposed is that the bill would put undue burdens on online retailers. The current tax system has created a symbiotic relationship between online companies and the states. The states attract online companies to set up a physical presence in a state through a number of perks while the company brings tax revenue and jobs to the state in question. A universal online sales tax destroys that relationship by making online companies collect sales taxes for states that they receive no benefit from.

    Of course, there’s an argument to be had that retail stores just need to better compete with online retailers. Retail stores have a number of advantages over their online retailer competition, but rarely do they ever use them. Perhaps its time for retail stores to stop driving away customers with stupid policies and instead create an inviting atmosphere that transforms shopping into an experience that’s just not possible with online retailers.

    At this point, it’s too early to tell exactly what kind of damage, if any, the Marketplace Fairness Act would cause. It could possibly do nothing, but some are right to fear that it would legitimately hurt the operations of online retailers like Amazon while providing no real benefit to retail stores.

  • Google Glass For Consumers Is About A Year Away

    Google Glass is finally shipping out to developers who signed up for the Explorers program at last year’s Google I/O. While they have fun with what could potentially become the next big thing, consumers just have to sit patiently and wait. How long will that wait be though?

    In an interview with BBC Radio 4, Google’s Eric Schmidt said that Google Glass would be “probably a year-ish away” for consumers. Previously, the company said that a consumer version of Google Glass would be available this year and for less than the current price of $1,500.

    So, what does Schmidt’s statement mean? It means that nothing has changed. Google Glass will probably hit consumer markets late this year or early next year. It’s really hard to say because a lot can happen between now and then. Developers may discover errors with the software, hardware and more that Google could not have discovered on its own. Any number of problems could emerge in the coming months that could push the consumer release of Google Glass back.

    That being said, most people seem to have enough confidence in Google to do this right. Google Glass is a huge gamble and the company can’t afford to screw this one up. History is full of revolutionary products that get one little thing wrong thus damning it to an eternity of irrelevancy.

    Besides Glass, Schmidt also touches upon his new book, driverless cars, his North Korea visit and more. You can listen here.

    [h/t: The Verge]

  • Not Afraid Of Snakes? You Will Be After Watching This Severed Snake Head Move In For A Kill

    Snakes are terrifying. The good thing is that snakes are mortal. They can no longer harm us after its head has been lopped off, right? Right?

    National Geographic reports that Santa Cruz resident Thomas Scott recently found himself face-to-face with a rattlesnake. He valiantly chopped its head off, but found that nature is never that easy to subdue:

    Holy sh*t, did you see that? The head literally jumped a few inches forward. It even bared its fangs a few times. This is either a zombie snake, or a case of immortality being applied to the wrong animal.

    National Geographic says that it’s neither. Instead, reptiles, unlike mammals, retain their hunting reflexes up to an hour after death. That means that a severed rattlesnake head can still kill you after it’s been beheaded.

    Armed with this knowledge, I expect all hikers to be equipped with flamethrowers from now on. It’s the only to be sure that this hellspawn remains dead.

    [h/t: Geekologie]

  • Technology Subreddit Goes Dark In Protest Of CISPA

    Last year, all of Reddit went dark in protest of SOPA. It doesn’t look like the site will be doing it again for CISPA, but one of its more popular subreddits will.

    The popular technology subreddit, which has almost 3 million readers, has gone dark today in protest of CISPA. It’s not like the subreddit has become unavailable, but rather the entire page, except for the ad, is now encased in a darkness that makes reading the links rather uncomfortable on the eyes.

    Technology Subreddit Goes Dark For CISPA Protest

    The link at the top of the subreddit redirects users to a post on the Stand subreddit with information on what CISPA means for everyday Internet users. It also contains links to helpful tools that allow users to encrypt not just their Internet connections, but everything on their computer.

    Out of all the other tech-related subreddits, it seems that /r/technology is the only one to have gone dark today. There are probably some other smaller subreddits that have also gone dark, but few have the amount of subscribers that /r/technology enjoys. Unfortunately, those who frequent /r/technology are probably already well aware of CISPA. It would have been far more effective for Reddit’s front page to go dark while providing a link to Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian’s video calling for action against CISPA.

    Still, it’s nice to see at least one mainstream site go dark today in protest of CISPA. Anonymous called for an Internet blackout, but only managed to sign up a little over 400 Web sites. The Web sites that had signed up were not very well known either thus limiting the spread of the message.

  • Microsoft Advertises Do Not Track In Internet Explorer

    Microsoft has been one of the strongest proponents of Do Not Track since it announced that Internet Explorer 10 would turn it on by default. Advertisers didn’t exactly like this, and even threatened to ignore all signals from Internet Explorer if Microsoft didn’t back down. Despite the threat, the Redmond giant didn’t back down, and is now even marketing Do Not Track as a key feature of Internet Explorer.

    Microsoft released a new ad for Internet Explorer today that talks about the differences between information you want to share with others and information you want to keep private. It never explicitly states browsing history as the kind of information you want to keep private, but it does say that it keeps your data private with Do Not Track.

    The Do Not Track debate is far more complicated than what Microsoft has presented in its latest ad. Microsoft may have implemented Do Not Track into Internet Explorer, but that doesn’t mean that advertising companies will suddenly stop tracking your online movements. In fact, these companies have even threatened to ignore all Do Not Track signals from Internet Explorer until Microsoft backs down.

    Since then, the Do Not Track debate has grown exponentially with Congress getting in on the action with some Congressmen saying that the government needs to introduce Do Not Track laws. Of course, such debates in Congress will probably fall victim to the same problem plaguing the debate between private companies and privacy advocates – what does Do Not Track actually mean?

    Still, it’s strange to see Microsoft advertising a feature that’s not only very divisive, but also possibly ineffective. There’s no legal mandate stopping advertising firms from ignoring Do Not Track signals, and Microsoft’s insistence that it be the turned on by default may actually do more harm than good until there’s a consensus on what Do Not Track actually means.

  • Anonymous Organizes CISPA Blackout, Not Many Web Sites Show Up

    The SOPA blackout protest was something else. Google, Wikipedia, Reddit and other major online players blacked out part or all of their Web sites in opposition to a proposed bill that would have given the U.S. government unchecked power to regulate the Internet as it saw fit.

    Likewise, CISPA gives the government and corporations the ability to share your private information without a warrant and without much oversight. The bill has been met with some resistance, but not enough. The House passed it with relative ease, and now the fight will go to the Senate. Now everybody’s favorite (or most hated) hacktivist group wants to send the Senate a message with a blackout of its own.

    Last week, Anonymous announced that it was organizing a CISPA blackout similar to the SOPA blackout of early 2012. Anonymous had hoped to coerce a number of Web sites into going dark today, but it only managed to get a little over 400 volunteers.

    Getting over 400 Web sites to go dark for a day is no small feat, but it just doesn’t compare to the thousands that went dark in protest of SOPA.

    Of course, a CISPA blackout could be effectual if Web sites frequently visited by millions of Internet users went dark. Unfortunately, the heavy hitters behind the SOPA blackout (i.e. Google, Reddit, Wikipedia) are refusing to go dark today in protest of CISPA. There are probably a number of reasons for this, but we can only guess at a few of them.

    For starters, CISPA isn’t an immediate threat to companies. SOPA would burden Web sites with the responsibility of policing their own content. CISPA encourages companies to share private customer data with the government while granting them complete immunity from legal recourse. CISPA may not present any immediate threat to Internet companies, but Rep. Jared Polis argued last week that it would cause some pretty serious damage all the same:

    “[CISPA] directly hurts the confidence of Internet users. Internet users – if this were to become law – would be much more hesitant to provide their personal information – even if assured under the terms of use that it will be kept personal because the company would be completely indemnified if they ‘voluntarily’ gave it to the United States government.”

    The other thing standing in the way of an organized CISPA blackout is the organizers themselves. Even among anti-CISPA Web sites like Mozilla, Reddit and others, Anonymous isn’t exactly well-liked. The group’s intentions may be pure this time around, but there’s an argument to be made that CISPA was crafted in response to attacks from Anonymous and other hacking groups.

    Anonymous’ planned blackout isn’t a failure, but it isn’t much of a success either. That being said, it at least shows that large groups of people are in opposition to CISPA. It might not be opposed by the teenagers who use Wikipedia to write term papers, but those in the tech community are rightly concerned about the overly broad legislation. It’s unfortunate then that Congress seems to think that only 14-year-olds living in their basements are the only ones opposed to CISPA.

    [h/t: RT]

  • PHP Upgraded To Version 5.4.14, PCRE Library Merged

    Those who use PHP are in for a treat this month as the development team has released updates for both the current and old versions, 5.4 and 5.3 respectively, of the scripting language. There’s nothing major, of course, but there are a number of bug fixes that developers should be aware of.

    Starting with PHP 5.4, the latest update brings it up to version 5.4.14. With this update, the team has fixed more than 10 bugs. Here’s the full changelog:

    Core:

  • Fixed bug #64529 (Ran out of opcode space).
  • Fixed bug #64515 (Memoryleak when using the same variablename two times in function declaration).
  • Fixed bug #64432 (more empty delimiter warning in strX methods).
  • Fixed bug #64417 (ArrayAccess::&offsetGet() in a trait causes fatal error).
  • Fixed bug #64370 (microtime(true) less than $_SERVER[‘REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT’]).
  • Fixed bug #64239 (Debug backtrace changed behavior since 5.4.10 or 5.4.11).
  • Fixed bug #63976 (Parent class incorrectly using child constant in class property).
  • Fixed bug #63914 (zend_do_fcall_common_helper_SPEC does not handle exceptions properly).
  • Fixed bug #62343 (Show class_alias In get_declared_classes()).
  • PCRE:

  • Merged PCRE 8.32.
  • SNMP:

  • Fixed bug #61981 (OO API, walk: $suffix_as_key is not working correctly).
  • Zip:

  • Fixed bug #64452 (Zip crash intermittently). (Anatol)
  • Those who are still on version 5.3, the team has released a smaller update (version 5.3.24) with a number of bug fixes. It also includes the same PCRE library merge that was included in the latest version of PHP 5.4, as well as the same Zip crash bug.

    Core:

  • Fixed bug #64370 (microtime(true) less than $_SERVER[‘REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT’]).
  • Fixed bug #63914 (zend_do_fcall_common_helper_SPEC does not handle exceptions properly).
  • Fixed bug #62343 (Show class_alias In get_declared_classes()).
  • PCRE:

  • Merged PCRE 8.32.
  • mysqlnd:

  • Fixed bug #63530 (mysqlnd_stmt::bind_one_parameter crashes, uses wrong alloc for stmt->param_bind).
  • DateTime:

  • Fixed bug #62852 (Unserialize Invalid Date causes crash).
  • Zip:

  • Fixed bug #64452 (Zip crash intermittently).
  • If you want to the source code for either version 5.4.14 or 5.3.24, you can grab it here. If you need PHP for Windows, you can grab the latest versions here.