Category: News

  • New version of HTC One to launch with a larger screen

    HTC_One_Front_Top_Speaker_TA

    The latest round of rumors from the HTC camp are saying that a newer HTC One may be launching soon. The catch? It’ll have a larger screen, supposedly between 5 and 6 inches. Now, before you flip out and bash HTC for replacing a flagship device so quickly, (again) the rumors suggest that this larger phone would just supplement the One, like what Samsung does with their Galaxy S and Galaxy Note devices. And considering the HTC Butterfly and Droid DNA had 5 inch screens, this could very well be a slightly bumped up version of those devices. We have seen that speculated DLXPLUS floating around in Verizon systems for a while, remember? Anything’s possible.

    At this point, this is still a pretty hazy rumor, so take it with a grain of salt. I’d like to see HTC launch a competitive phablet, but I think they’d run the risk of over-saturating their market if they release a One Mini and One Plus right on the heels of the HTC One really just starting to take off.

    source: Pocket Lint

    Come comment on this article: New version of HTC One to launch with a larger screen

  • UFO Over Historic Barn Causes Stir In California

    A picture showing a UFO near a historic barn in Santee, California is drawing a bit of attention this week. Ellen Henry was taking pictures of the Edgemoor barn when she noticed the object. Before she could get any clearer pictures, however, she says her camera stopped working.

    While the images leave plenty of room for discussion and speculation, Henry herself has no doubts. She told local Channel 10 News that she was absolutely certain that the object was from another world.

    She did get one decent picture of the barn with the object in the background before her camera stopped working, though it is a little hard to see. Take a look at the image for yourself below:

    Edgemoor Barn UFO

    The object is a little hard to see in the image, but if you look over to the left you should see a cigar-shaped object in the sky. Here is the same image zoomed in a bit, with a circle drawn around the object in question.

    Edgemoor Barn UFO

    This is not the only time that the Edgemoor barn has drawn attention for things other than its historical significance. The barn is reportedly haunted and is a popular destination for paranormal investigators.

    Local airfields, including the Marine Corps Air Station at Miramar, have no record of any aircraft in the area. Which means that, strictly speaking, the object is a UFO, in that it is unidentified. The question of whether it is really an alien spacecraft will likely remain a mystery, though.

    Personally, though, I think it looks a little bit like a Battlestar…

    Battlestar Galactica

  • Electric E36 Makes 850 lb/ft of Torque: TUNED

    Electric BMW E36

    EV West isn’t like other electric car builders. They aren’t trying to save the planet from gasoline emissions, they are trying to build race cars using electric technology for events that can best use that technology. The Pikes Peak International Hillclimb, with a total driving distance of under 20 miles at very high elevation, is one of those events. We take their Pike’s Peak M3 to the dyno to find out what 400 Kilowatts means in Horsepower, then to see how it drives.TUNED

    Source: Youtube.com/DRIVE

  • It’s a trap! Publishers crave an alternative to Google’s adtech “Death Star”

    “We’d like an end-to-end solution that isn’t Google.” That’s one of the more candid lines I’ve heard in the past several months since I’ve been on the front lines in adtech. The plea came from someone at a major European video publisher after being asked about their adtech vision and requirements. It put into stark relief the dilemma that publishers now face.

    The world of adtech has become increasingly complex and hard to navigate. The parts of the value chain rendered by the (in)famous Lumascape have been increasingly atomized: There’s ad serving, data/DMP, SSPs, exchanges and then a host of ancillary technologies such as ad formats and viewability. And that’s just for display! Add in media types such as mobile and video and it’s enough to have publishers crying out for help in the form of integrated adtech stacks – one-stop shops that they can do business with. The good news is that such a convenient system exists. The bad, in the eyes of many publishers I’ve dealt with at least, is that there’s only one player in town. And that player, Google, also happens to be a competitor.

    Adtech finally merits high-level attention

    One development that has been a pleasant surprise is that the topic of adtech strategy has begun to merit board-level discussion at major media companies. While it was often dealt with at the operational, ad ops and revenue ops levels in the past, it has been elevated in importance to the point where major adtech players are invited now to present to boards and discuss partnerships at that level.

    But it shouldn’t have surprised me: Digital revenues are now material for most traditional media companies.

    The prospect of streamlined adtech stack

    Google has systematically assembled an integrated tech stack in digital advertising on both the buy and sell sides, offering publishers the tantalizing prospect of working with just one partner. Google’s army of account managers will then try to cross-sell and up-sell all kinds of solutions as well as bundle in content distribution and monetization on YouTube and their other properties. Yet, perhaps ironically, Google’s early success in building out an integrated stack is driving the industry’s transition.

    Agencies and publishers alike rightfully view Google with trepidation thanks to the suspicion that they’re being strategically exposed by having the lifeblood of their media business (and all of the associated data) flow through Google – which also happens to compete with them. After all, imagine the power Google would have over one’s business: from driving traffic via Google Search, news, Android and YouTube to knowing one’s data via Analytics and advertising information via the various DoubeClick and AdX products. (I know, I know: They do no evil. Right.)

    One major European publisher told me, in a moment of hyberbole: “We see [Google] as a Death Star and want to have our own weapons against them.” Alas, while there are a plethora of weapons, there aren’t the end-to-end ones that this publisher would like to see to counter the Big G.

    Options

    The good news for publishers is the market will go their way in terms of having greater convergence of tech stacks and more consolidation, ultimately offering more choice when it comes to adtech solutions. While Microsoft tried this but has pulled back of late, there are others that have been active developing solutions of their own.

    For instance, WPP has been very active in putting its own digital marketing stack together via acquisitions that are focused more on the buy side for marketers and publishers. Adobe has also been active in a converged approach, but admittedly with seemingly limited success thus far. There are independent companies waiting in the wings as well, but their current lack of liquidity has been preventing them from doing all but acqi-hire–scale consolidation in recent years.

    This will change as some of them go public in the next 12-18 months and get the currency with which they can make their own acquisitions (or grow organically to round out their offering). At that point there will be a frenzied game of  musical chairs, where companies compete for the most prized assets – the prospect of which is already setting the hearts of tech bankers racing.

    Back to the person that worried about Google’s Deathstar-like capabilities: He went on to say that they actually have two Deathstars that they need to arm up against – the second one being the Agencies (but we’ll save that for another post).

    Rags Gupta is chief commercial officer at Videoplaza, a sell-side video ad management platform based in London; he is also on the board of Rollup Media. Prior to that, he was an early executive at Brightcove and started his career in digital media at Live365.

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  • Soda Meth Study Reveals Bad News For Your Teeth

    Soda may be as damaging to your teeth as meth or crack in the long run, according to a recently released study. The study claims that the damage done by high soda consumption combined with a lack of proper dental hygiene can do damage that is substantially similar to “meth mouth.”

    (Do yourself a favor and do not do a Google Image search for meth mouth. You can thank me later.)

    The study was conducted by Dr. Mohamed Bassiouny. Bassiouny works at Temple University School of Dentistry as a professor of restorative dentistry. In the study, recently published in the journal General Dentistry, Bassiouny compares the damage done by various kinds of substances, including soda, crack, and meth.

    While the weight loss benefits of diet soda are debatable, Bassiouny says that when it comes to damaging your teeth, there is little difference between diet soda and regular. The reason for this is that they have comparable acid content – citric acid and phosphoric acid, to be precise. Regular exposure to these acids without proper hygiene can do catastrophic damage to the teeth in the long term.

    Fortunately for all you soda fiends out there, the damage from soda is much easier to mitigate than the damage from meth. One of the soda-drinking subjects of the study was a woman in her 30s who had been consuming two liters of soda every day for five years, and had not been to see a dentist in 20 years. That suggests that a little work to keep your teeth healthy can help prevent some of the damage soda can do. Brush regularly, go to the dentist at least once a year, preferably twice, and don’t drink an entire 2-liter per day, and you should be fine.

    Other subjects of the study included a 29-year-old man who had been using meth regularly for three years, as well as drinking 2-3 cans of soda per day. Another was a 51-year-old crack user. All three subjects had to have their teeth extracted and replaced with dentures.

  • Goldie Hawn at 67: Charity, Cycling, and Grandchildren

    Goldie Hawn gained fame in the 70s, 80s, and 90s as a comedic actress in movies such as Overboard and Death Becomes Her. The 67-year-old actress may have put aside her acting career a decade ago, but she is still making the rounds in Hollywood circles.

    Since stepping aside and allowing her daughter, Kate Hudson, to take over the family acting business, Hawn has kept herself busy lending her name and image to charity. According to a Los Angeles Times report, the 67-year-old actress was spotted just this week at a charity event in Cannes, France, where the 66th annual Cannes Film Festival is being held.

    Hawn attended the Foundation for AIDS Research’s (amfAR) annual Cinema Against AIDS charity auction. She was joined by stars such as Zachary Quinto, Nicole Kidman, Jeremy Renner, Adrien Brody, Christoph Waltz, and amfAR Ambassador Janet Jackson. AmfAR has stated that this year’s auction raised $25 million for HIV and AIDS research.

    When she’s not lending her name to AIDS research, the retired actress spends time with her longtime boyfriend of 30 years, Kurt Russell, as well as her children and grandchildren. She is also an avid cyclist. Hawn chronicles her love of cycling through her Twitter feed, and also shows that she still has a sense of humor:

    (Image courtesy amfAR)

  • Tiger Kills Worker In British Zoo

    A zoo worker mauled by a tiger at a British zoo died of her injuries at the hospital yesterday. The worker, 24-year-old Sarah McClay was in the big cat enclosure when the tiger attacked her. She was airlifted to nearby Royal Preston Infirmary, but did not survive. She reportedly suffered numerous head and neck wounds.

    The zoo, South Lakes Wild Animal Park in Dalton-in-Furness, closed early and sent all visitors away after the incident. Zoo officials said in a statement that the tiger had been secured in its cage, and that at no time was there any danger to the public.

    The circumstances of the attack remain unclear, though area authorities and zoo officials are investigating.

  • How to create your own audiobooks

    There are many reasons you may want to create your own audiobook: Perhaps you are the author of your own book and want a version of your book spoken in your own words. You can even create an audio only version of a favorite family story spoken by the person that lived through the event and pass it down from one generation to the next.  For me it was a chance to capture my children’s voices while reading their favorite stories and nursery rhymes (for personal use, not for reselling of course).  Now when they grow up, they can play them back to their own children.

    Whatever your motivation, creating your own audiobook isn’t that difficult. The following will walk you through the steps necessary to record the spoken word, capture it in digital audio, and convert it into the audiobook format.

    Choosing a sound location

    Finding an acoustically sound location to record your reading sessions is probably the single most important decision you will have to make in this process. Annoying ambient noise, room echoes and outdoor wind can make for a poor recording. Provided you do not have your own private recording studio, a large closet packed full of clothes will prove to be your best bet. The material in the clothes will absorb most of the unwanted background noises as you record.

    Use Apogee MiC with GarageBand on iPad

    Record with Apogee MiC and an iPad

    Choosing a decent microphone that can produce the sound results you are looking for is the second most important decision you will make. Considering the fact that you will be retreating to your closet to do most of your recording sessions, choosing one that works well with your portable iOS devices is recommended. The Apogee MiC ($199.95, Accessory) works extremely well with both the iPad and the Mac, and has a really great sound to it.  Using any external microphone is preferred over the onboard mic that comes with the iPad.

    Read Book while Recording in Background

    To record your voice Apogee recommends using Apple’s own GarageBand for iOS ($4.99, Universal). When you first create a project in GarageBand, be sure to select Audio Recording as your instrument. GarageBand can also be configured to record in the background, which comes in handy when you are reading a book from your iBooks library.

    Export iPad Recorded Cahpters to iTunes

    Offload recordings to iTunes

    As things progress and you continue to read your book you will want to offload your recorded sessions as GarageBand project files organized for each individual chapter. Follow a naming convention that makes sense to you from the start so you don’t get your recorded sessions out of order. To offload your recording from GarageBand on the iPad, you tap on the recording you want to save and then choose to share the file to your iTunes Library on your Mac.  Once the process is complete, you then must tether your iPad to your Mac and open iTunes on your Mac.  Select your iPad and navigate to the Apps tab.  By selecting GarageBand in the File Sharing section, you should see the individual recordings you shared.  Simply save them to your music folder on your Mac.

    Copy iPad Recorded Chapters from iTunes

    Edit recorded audio with GarageBand on a Mac

    When you are recording, you may have extended sessions of brilliance. But not every session will be so great. Cutting and splicing your recordings together can best be accomplished with GarageBand ($14.99, Mac) on your Mac.  In GarageBand you can cut and splice your recorded sessions to remove any unwanted audio.  So you don’t have to worry too much about being interrupted or flubbing a sentence or two when you are making your original recording.  You can always cut it out later.

    Edit Recorded Chapters in GarageBand

    Share each chapter’s project as a song

    GarageBand is a great tool when it comes to editing multiple tracks, one song at a time, or in this case one chapter at a time. But it is not so great when it comes to organizing multiple songs into an album, or in this case multiple chapters into a book.  Each GarageBand project should be thought of as an individual song.  This means that each book will need to have multiple GarageBand projects, one for each chapter.  Once a chapter is complete, you need to click Export Song To Disk, which is located under the Share menu item.  Repeating this process for each recorded chapter will produce a series of audio files, one file for each chapter.

    Share Recorded Chapters as a Song

    Bind the chapters into a single audiobook

    Audiobook Binder (Free, Mac), available in the Mac App Store, can be used to combine all of your individual chapters into a single audiobook. Simply drag and drop the audio files into Audiobook Binder in the proper order. Once in Audiobook Binder, you can change the chapter titles to be whatever you want them to be.  If you happen to have multiple audio files that comprise a single chapter, you can even combine them at this point. Be sure to edit the author information, book title and add your own cover artwork.  Once everything is set, you simply click on the Bind button to produce the audiobook music file.

    Bind Chapters into Audiobook

    And there you have it, you have just learned that GarageBand may have an equally promising future being known as ClosetNararator. Try a practice run through the steps and actually listen to your first chapter before moving forward.  Finding the ideal location and microphone for your needs will prove to be the most difficult aspect of this endeavor. When doing recordings, it pays to invest as much as you can afford in the initial recording, rather than try to fix things later. There is nothing more annoying than to listen to a constant hum when you are trying to hear someone speak.

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  • Flynn Robinson, Former Laker, Dies At 72

    Flynn Robinson, an NBA guard in the 60s and 70s, has died at the age of 72.

    According to a New York Times obituary, Robinson passed away after a battle with multiple myeloma. He died on Thursday in Los Angeles.

    Robinson played college basketball at the University of Wyoming before being drafted in the second round of the 1965 NBA Draft by the Cincinnati Royals. He played for seven years in the NBA, never staying with one team for more than two consecutive seasons. He hopped around the country, playing for the Royals, the Chicago Bulls, the Milwaukee Bucks, the Los Angeles Lakers, and the Baltimore Bullets.

    Robinson was part of the legendary 1971-72 Lakers, which won the 1972 NBA Finals. The Lakers organization has issued a statement on the athlete’s passing, expressing condolences and calling him “a proud part of our Lakers heritage.”

    “We are very sad to hear of the passing of Flynn Robinson,” said Jeanie Buss, Lakers EVP of business operations. “Flynn played an important role on the 1971-72 Lakers team that brought Los Angeles its first NBA Championship and won what is still an NBA-record 33 consecutive games. Lakers fans might remember him as ‘Mr. Instant Point,’ a nickname given to him by the great Chick Hearn, a nickname that was well earned as Flynn led the reserves in scoring that season, averaging 10 points in 16 minutes off the bench. He was a proud part of our Lakers heritage, participating in numerous reunions and special events over the years and he will be missed. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family at this time.”

    (Image courtesy the Los Angeles Lakers)

  • Vine, hip-hop and the future of video sharing

    What does video tool Vine have in common with iconic rappers like the Beastie Boys and the Notorious BIG? More than you think. Like hip-hop, Vine is way to sample and collect culture — and it may have to run the same legal gambit that rappers did a decade ago.

    If you haven’t tried it, Vine is a tool to make looping, six-second video clips and post them on social media or a website. The company, which is owned by Twitter, launched in January and its videos have already become a part of the Tribeca Film Festival, the U.S. Senate and major marketing campaigns.

    A new video mash-up culture

    Vine exists because of new smartphone technology but it also replicates older forms of mashup culture. In particular, it mirrors what pioneering hip-hop artists started to do in the 1980s — taking sounds from myriad sources and sharing them through records like Paul’s Boutique and Ready to Die.

    Those hiphop records are aural tapestries that today stand as monuments to a new form of music and community. In the 2000s, however, Vine screenshotcopyright collectors came along and sued the rappers — resulting in a drawn-out debate over where to draw a line between culture and intellectual property theft. Hip-hop  largely prevailed but was damaged in the process.

    Now, a fight over a Vine video last month suggests history may repeat itself but this time, on the video front. The dispute involved the musician Prince using a law called the DMCA to force Vine to take down six-second concert clips posted by a fan. The fan didn’t oppose Prince’s takedown demand, meaning no has ruled on whether a six-second clip actually infringes copyright. But if a court did look at the Vine case, the decision process would lead right through hip-hop.

    In the 1990s, hip-hop artists called the sounds they use “samples.” Copyright owners, however, called it theft instead and sued the musicians. The conflicts led to important court decisions about music, but whose principles apply equally to Vine.

    Notorious B.I.G.As the Disco Project explained in a thoughtful analysis of the Prince case, the most relevant precedents involve the Notorious B.I.G. and the Beastie Boys. Both were involved in famous cases involving short samples.

    In the case of the Notorious B.I.G., a Tennessee court shut down store sales and radio plays of the late rapper’s “Ready to Die” album, and a jury awarded $4 million in damages — all over a three note horn riff. An appeals court, which had earlier written “get a license or do not sample,” upheld the verdict in 2007.

    As law professor Tim Wu explained at the time, the case and others like it were especially absurd because the copyright owner was not even a musician but a one-man corporation who had obtained the music rights under shady circumstances.

    Fortunately, in the case of the Beastie Boys, a California appeals court took a more rational approach to the issue and ruled that a six second (the same length as a Vine video!) flute sample on the song “Pass the Mic” didn’t infringe on copyright. The Supreme Court, in 2005, refused to reconsider the decision.

    The upshot, however, is that today we still don’t know for sure how long a sample can be before it infringes copyright.

    Twitter declined to comment on whether it believes Vine videos are covered by copyright law’s “fair use” exception, but a source familiar with the company told me that the decision to make the videos six seconds long was not a coincidence.

    Chilling our new visual culture

    The trouble with Prince’s request to take down the Vine videos is not so much the disappearance of the videos themselves — but instead that Vine and other forms of visual expression could meet the same fate as early hip-hop.

    Pauls BoutiqueWhen the Beastie Boys released their sample-stuffed 1989 masterpiece, Paul’s Boutique, the law was still in a gray area and no one was suing hip-hop artists. That’s no longer the case. As copyright scholars have explained, the threat of lawsuits and the astronomic cost of clearing samples means, today, no one could make an album like Paul’s Boutique in the first place.

    And that’s the danger posed by Prince. Right now, we’re enjoying a rich new age of images — everything from Vine videos to BuzzFeed cat GIFs that are shared, recast and then shared again. If lawyers began to throw copyright grenades into this mix, these splendid strains of creativity could be quickly snuffed out.

    Does this mean that all Vine videos should be fair use? It’s hard to say. People are already using the platform to produce clever and original works of art — the sort of thing copyright law is meant to reward. Likewise, big companies who use Vine for marketing have a case for using intellectual property law to protect their brands.

    It seems inevitable that these issues will get resolved sooner than later. The biggest task for now, though, is to find a way to do so without resorting to the harsher tools of copyright law, including the $150,000 damage demands that are a common feature of cease and desist letters.

    Congress is right now reviewing the Copyright Act. The process presents a perfect way to protect and foster this emerging age of visual culture — rather than try to smother it like hip-hop. But let’s give the last word to the rappers (click on the Vine vid below) :

    (Image by R. Gino Santa Maria via Shutterstock)

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  • TED Weekends breaks the silence for suicide survivors

    JD-Schramm-at-TEDActiveAt TEDActive 2011, JD Schramm shares the story of his friend, John, who, after surviving a suicide attempt, JD Schramm: Break the silence for suicide attempt survivorsJD Schramm: Break the silence for suicide attempt survivorsfound that there were few resources available for someone in his position to be able to communicate the hardship he experienced and the depression he continued to battle. And there are others in this position, too – as Schramm points out, 19 out of 20 people who attempt suicide live but feel extreme isolation from others. This can lead to second, sometimes successful, attempt.

    This week’s TED Weekends on the Huffington Post emphasizes the importance of having an honest conversation about the taboo of suicide in order to help people in this at-risk situation. Below, find open and thoughtful essays on the subject.

    JD Schramm: Revealing a Heartbreaking Secret on the TED Stage

    My sharing of John’s story was my first attempt to spark a conversation about the taboo subject of suicide, and in particular the challenge of coming back from an attempt and choosing life. It worked well enough to bring more than a half million viewers to see it. It’s been lovingly translated into 39 languages by volunteers and shown at numerous TEDx events around the world. I said in the talk that I was trying to “start a conversation worth having about an idea worth spreading.” That idea is determining how best to support the many people who attempt suicide but fail and seek to return to life.

    What I’ve learned since the privilege of delivering this talk and then having TED put it online has been profound. Read the full essay »

    Lea Lane: What I’ve Learned from My Best Friend’s Suicide

    Sometimes, especially when a person seems to have a satisfying life, we dismiss suicidal signals that would otherwise alert us. I know this first-hand.

    Delia had a loving husband, two adorable and adoring young daughters, an 18th-century farmhouse filled with antiques. She was smart, kind, beautiful, active in the community and was revered in our Westchester County village, north of New York City.

    When I moved to a nearby house with my first husband and two young sons, she came over with a bouquet of garden flowers to welcome us. I was charmed by her grace and warmth, and we soon became best friends. Read the full essay »

    Mary Robin Craig: Faith-filled responses to suicide

    During one of those interminable sleepless nights that followed the death of my oldest son, I crept downstairs in the dark and logged on to the computer to explore the views of the Christian Church on suicide. I was a midlife seminary student but, like most people, my knowledge of religious attitudes toward suicide was limited. I knew that suicide had been condemned by the early church and that those who died of suicide were once understood to be sinners of the worst sort, headed straight for hell. I knew that churches had at some point come to recognize that mental illness may reduce a person’s capacity to make decisions and, therefore, his or her responsibility for a self-inflicted death. My hours on the computer that terrible night revealed little beyond that basic information.

    Five years have passed and I have learned a great deal more about the attitudes of both the general public and the clergy toward suicide. I now realize that our family benefited tremendously from knowledgeable attitudes toward mental illness and from the generosity of religious authorities. Read the full essay »

  • 2013 Firestone Indy Lights Race Has Extremely Close Finish

    The ending to the 2013 Firestone Indy Lights Race ended the way you typically see in the movies, as the winner Peter Dempsey passed the finish line just .0026 seconds quicker than the 2nd place racer. Not only was the margin of victory minuscule, the race ended 4 wide, with all cars coming down the stretch, side-by-side-by-side-by-side.

    Enjoy.

    We can only hope that the Indianapolis 500 provides something exciting as this to finish with.

  • Charlie Sheen Changes Name For Upcoming Film ‘Machete Kills’

    Since his inaugural Hollywood appearance in Red Dawn, and even before that, Charlie Sheen has used his changed name in every movie or television show he’s appeared in. This will change with his role in the campy, action film sequel ‘Machete Kills’. He’s embracing his latino heritage, by using the moniker Carlos Estevez, his birth name.

    The history of the Estevez/Sheen names is quite interesting. Martin Sheen was born Ramon Antonio Gerardo Estevez. He changed his name to Martin Sheen to have a better chance at getting work as an actor, however, he never officially changed his name. This led to all four of his children to adopt the Estevez surname. Charlie Sheen kept his original name into his teen years, and ended up changing it for the same reason as his father, to try and get acting work.

    Sheen will use his birth name for the first time in his long acting career. We don’t know yet whether or not he will use his birth name in future films or if this is a one shot deal.

    Carlos Estevez joins a stacked cast, with Danny Trejo, Amber Heard, Mel Gibson, Sofia Vergara, Jessica Alba, Michelle Rodriguez, Antonio Banderas, Cuba Gooding Jr., and more.

    Machete Kills looks to take the camp to the next level, as proven by the IMDB plot summary – “The U.S. government recruits Machete to battle his way through Mexico in order to take down an arms dealer who looks to launch a weapon into space.

    Really, the film could be about anything if they give Sofia Vergara chest guns. Which they have. The movie is set to release September 13th.

    Sofia Vergara

  • Decibel – Minimalistic Music Player for Audiophiles

    Nowadays, iTunes is the standard music player for many Mac users and it offers numerous playback features tightly packed within an intuitive interface. Unfortunately, when it comes to high-end audio formats files like FLAC, WAVE or OGG, iTunes is lacking the ability to play them.

    Decibel is an easy-to-use audio player specially designed to fulfill the needs of audiop… (read more)

  • Jumper Kills 5-Year-Old, Lands On Top Of Her After Suicide Attemp

    South Korea has a problem with rampant suicide in their country, with it being the leading cause of death among 15-24 demographic. While this is a sad fact in and of itself, one suicide became an even more heartbreaking tragedy.

    A 39 year-old man jumped to his death from a 11-story building, killing a 5 year old girl who was leaving the building with her parents. The suicide took place in in the port city of Busan, South Korea. The man died instantly, the girl had multiple broken bones, brain damage, and was immediately taken to the hospital after the impact, where she died. Her parents were unharmed in the incident.

    No reason has been discovered as to why the man jumped to his death, but he was being treated for depression. There hasn’t been a note discovered at this time. The incident adds to the epidemic of suicides which plagues South Korea every year. Giving it one of the highest suicide rates among industrialized nations.

    [H/T: Inquistr]

  • Say hello to “ULTRA BOUNCER”

    Ultra Bouncer

    Sometimes ingenuity, craftsmanship and imagination have the capacity to produce some amazing things. Case in point; this four-wheel steering, V8 powered, full custom chassis hooligan that’s simply called, “ULTRA BOUNCER”. It’s the bull in the china shop, the smoker in the school parking lot, and the bouncer at the club all rolled into one and it’s frickin’ glorious. Plus, the fact that it can climb over anything doesn’t hurt either. Check it out after the jump.

    Source: Youtube.com

  • AX64 Time Machine – Review

    File backup solutions are abandoned by more and more users these days in favor of off-site storage locations provided by cloud services.

    On the other hand, the operating system is the one that needs a safety net against malfunctions (both software and hardware) or malware infections.

    Relying on disk imaging technology, a new generation of backu… (read more)

  • Top 5 Data Center Stories, Week of May 25

    For your weekend reading, here’s a recap of five noteworthy stories that appeared on Data Center Knowledge this past week.

    With Ubiquity, Sears is Turning Shuttered Stores into Data Centers – Will blinking blue lights of servers soon fill the aisles that previously offered the Blue Light Special? Sears Holdings has formed a new unit to market space from former Sears and Kmart retail stores as a home for data centers, disaster recovery space and wireless towers.

    Should Data Centers Be Regulated as Utilities? Industry Experts Weigh In – Is the data center industry a candidate for regulation as a utility, as suggested last week by the New York Times? We reached out to experts who were familiar with both data centers and utilities to get their take.

    The Robot-Driven Data Center of Tomorrow – Robotics are beginning to be integrated into data center management, creating the potential for a robot-driven, fully automated “lights out” data center environment. Bill Kleyman explores the possibilities.

    Microsoft Will Back Xbox One With 300,000 Servers – With this week’s unveiling of the new Xbox One gaming system, Microsoft says it will beef up its Xbox Live platform with 300,000 servers, a huge jump from the 15,000 servers currently supporting the platform.

    NSA Utah Data Center Facing Unexpected Energy Taxes – The National Security Agency (NSA) finds itself facing millions of dollars in taxes on the electricity usage in its Utah data center as a result of a new law passed by state legislators, according to the Salt Lake Tribune.

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  • Android this week: Nexus 7 cloned for $149; Google Edition HTC One; Chrome beta updated

    Small slate shoppers have a new option to choose this week: Hisense debuted a tablet that looks like a Nexus 7. The Sera 7 Pro tablet uses the same basic hardware as Google’s own tablet –with a few improvements, even — but costs $50 less. WalMart is the exclusive retailer for the Android 4.2 slate, which is priced at $149.

    Sero 7Most of the base components are the same between the two tablets: An Nvidia Tegra 3 chip, IPS display with 1280 x 800 resolution, 1 GB of memory, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and NFC.

    The Hisense model only comes with half of the storage capacity as the Nexus 7 — 8 GB vs 16 GB — but does include a microSD card slot for storage expansion. Both devices have front facing cameras while the Hisense model adds a rear, 5 megapixel camera. It also supports mini HDMI out for external displays while the Nexus 7 doesn’t.

    I’m planning to check out the Sero 7 Pro at my local WalMart and compare the build quality to a Nexus 7. Assuming it’s comparable, I could see many people picking up one of these tablets at this price.

    My other concern would be software updates going forward. Since Hisense isn’t known for Android devices, I’m wondering how quickly the tablet will see Android upgrades in the future. You definitely some piece of mind with this for the Nexus 7 since Google provides the updates directly and quickly.

    That same question comes to mind when talking about “Google Edition” phones. Samsung has already announced a $649 version of its Galaxy S 4 that will run stock Android without Samsung’s customizations. Now sources suggest that an HTC One handset will be offered in a “Google Edition” as well. Since Google is selling such devices in the Google Play Store, my guess is that Google itself will push future updates. That hasn’t been made clear, however.

    HTC One BlackRegardless, many who like the HTC One hardware but don’t like HTC Sense software may have the best of both worlds available soon. We’ll find out this coming week, when HTC is expected to announce an HTC One “Google Edition” smartphone.

    With Samsung, and possibly HTC, offering “pure” Android devices, Google’s Nexus line will be interesting to watch. I have a feeling the new Nexus devices will be kept at lower prices with fewer cutting edge features and components if these “Google Edition” phones sell well.

    All Android devices saw the Chrome beta browser get a substantial update this week. Note that the beta version is different from the generally available version of Chrome and both can co-exist on your Android smartphone. The beta edition gained full-screen browsing, a new graph showing bandwidth savings when using Google’s data compression feature and automatic language translation when browsing pages in non-native languages.

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