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Keyword: tech

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  • Researcher: iPhone Location Data Already Used By Cops

    The "news" that iPhones and iPads keep track of where you go has been known in forensic circles for some time When British programmers Alasdair Allan and Pete Warden took the stage at the Where 2.0 conference to unveil their work on iPhone location tracking, it was clear they had some big news on their hands. The duo outlined what they called "the discovery that your iPhone and 3G iPad [are] regularly recording the position of your device into a hidden file." Their findings started a firestorm of media coverage. But as the details came to light, one researcher was...
  • Ralph Langner: Cracking Stuxnet, a 21st-century cyber weapon

    When first discovered in 2010, the Stuxnet computer worm posed a baffling puzzle. Beyond its unusually high level of sophistication loomed a more troubling mystery: its purpose. Ralph Langner and team helped crack the code that revealed this digital warhead's final target -- and its covert origins. In a fascinating look inside cyber-forensics
  • Tactical NAV iPhone app used to help destroy Taliban fighting position

    04/02/2011 11:25:34 AM PDT · by Pan_Yan · 21 replies · 1+ views
    APPMODO ^ | Apr 2, 2011 at 2:02 am
    Kunar Province, Afghanistan – Tactical NAV, a military-grade iPhone app created by U.S. Army Capt. Jonathan J. Springer, a battalion fire support officer with the 101st Airborne Division, has successfully been used in combat to help destroy a Taliban fighting position in eastern Afghanistan’s Kunar Province near the Pakistan border. As troops were patrolling along a main supply route leading to a U.S. base, soldiers in the convoy came under heavy machine-gun fire from an enemy fighting position nearby. While troops were in contact, a call for fire was initiated by the forward observer on the ground, and Tactical NAV...
  • Shockwave-Generating Wave Discs Could Replace Internal Combustion Engines

    03/18/2011 12:45:45 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 83 replies
    Popular Science ^ | 03.16.2011 at 2:14 pm | By Rebecca Boyle
    Michigan researchers have built a prototype of a new auto motor that does away with pistons, crankshafts and valves, replacing the old internal combustion engine with a disc-shaped shock wave generator. It could slash the weight of hybrid cars and reduce auto emissions by 90 percent. The generator is about the size of a saucepot, and would replace the 1,000-pound power train in most cars — no transmission, cooling system, emissions regulation or fluids needed. Norbert Müller and colleagues at Michigan State University showed off the new motor prototype at a meeting with the Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects...
  • Judge in PS3 case lets Sony track visitors to Geohot website [Ninth-Circuit Nonsense]

    03/04/2011 6:43:59 PM PST · by Gondring · 12 replies
    Electronista ^ | updated 07:05 pm EST, Fri March 4, 2011 | Electronista Staff
    Judge lets Sony spy on Geohot visitors in PS3 suit George Hotz faced another setback in his defense against Sony's anti-jailbreaking lawsuit late Thursday after a judge granted Sony a potentially controversial amount of information access. It now has permission to get the IP addresses, accounts and other details of anyone who has visited either his main Geohot site or his PS3 jailbreak Blogger site between January 2009 and the modern day. Sony made clear that the access wouldn't be limited to those who downloaded the jailbreak code.The company had already received permission to track as much information as possible...
  • Fast laser could revolutionize data communications

    03/04/2011 4:34:13 PM PST · by epithermal · 16 replies
    innovations report ^ | 3/4/2011 | Christian Borg
    Researchers at Chalmers in Sweden have shown that a surface emitting laser – a cheaper and more energy-efficient type of laser for fiber optics than conventional lasers – can deliver error-free data at a record speed of 40 Gbit/s. The break-through could lead to faster Internet traffic, computers and mobile phones. Today's commercial lasers can send up to 10 Gb of data per second (Gbit/s) through optical fibers. This applies to both conventional lasers and to surface emitting lasers. Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have managed to increase the speed of the surface emitting laser four times, and see...
  • Sell unclean engines, pay a fine: EPA issued $2 million penalty to PowerTrain

    03/01/2011 5:50:39 AM PST · by Red Badger · 24 replies
    Autoblog Green ^ | 02-24-2011 | Sebastian Blanco
    What is it with companies thinking they can get around the Clean Air Act? Earlier this year, the second-largest refinery in the U.S. was fined $5.3 million (and required to upgrade pollution control systems for $700 million) for CAA violations. Before that, companies like Pep Boys, Cummins and Mercedes (among others) were all forced to pay fines for selling products that are just plain dirtier than they should be. Today, the EPA announced that PowerTrain is the latest to be hit with a CAA-violation fine. The company settled the case and will now have to pay $2 million because, between...
  • Gmail accidentally resetting accounts, years of correspondence vanish into the cloud? (update)

    02/27/2011 6:08:24 PM PST · by george76 · 27 replies
    AOL ^ | Feb 27th 2011 | Sean Hollister
    If you've got a working Gmail account, you might want to back it up every so often -- as many as 500,000 Gmail users lost access to their inboxes this morn, and some of them are reporting (via Twitter and support forums) that years worth of messages, attachments and Google Chat logs had vanished by the time they were finally able to log on.
  • Toshiba claims massive energy savings on flip-flop circuits (Might be good for politicians )

    02/21/2011 9:16:09 AM PST · by epithermal · 9 replies
    the Inquirer ^ | Feb 21 2011 | Rob Coppinger
    A WHOPPING 77 PER CENT less power is needed for Toshiba's 40nm scale CMOS flip-flop circuit compared to earlier flip-flops, the Japanese company claims.
  • The Internet bubble in Middle East politics

    02/19/2011 8:00:00 AM PST · by Pride_of_the_Bluegrass · 7 replies
    Asia Times Online ^ | Feb 16, 2011 | Spengler
    Once America had allies. Now it has Facebook friends. Google News turns up more than 5,000 news reports including the search terms "Facebook", "Egypt" and "revolution". The same soap-bubble of global youth culture that gave us the Internet stock bubble in the 1990s has returned, this time as the solution to the problems of the Arab world. With the last bubble, people got poor. This time people will get killed. As a reality check: the search terms "Egypt", "revolution" and "genital mutilation" turn up just seven stories in Google News (including a previous essay by this writer). Many Egyptian women...
  • Google offers £12,500 and a laptop to the first person to hack its Chrome browser

    02/04/2011 5:55:59 PM PST · by FromLori · 27 replies
    The Daily Mail ^ | 2/4/2011 | GRAHAM SMITH
    It's a move that reeks of extreme confidence, bordering on the reckless. Google is so certain its Chrome browser is unhackable it has promised to award £12,500 ($20,000) and a notebook to the first person who proves them wrong. The company laid down the gauntlet ahead of the fifth annual Pwn2Own hacking competition next month.
  • New hardware boosts communication speed on multi-core chips

    01/31/2011 9:19:48 AM PST · by epithermal · 2 replies
    Physorg ^ | January 31, 2011 | North Carolina State University
    Computer engineers at North Carolina State University have developed hardware that allows programs to operate more efficiently by significantly boosting the speed at which the "cores" on a computer chip communicate with each other. The core, or central processing unit, is the brain of a computer chip; most chips currently contain between four and eight cores. In order to perform a task more quickly using multiple cores on a single chip, those cores need to communicate with each other. But there are no direct ways for cores to communicate. Instead, one core sends data to memory and another core retrieves...
  • Verizon sues FCC over net neutrality regulation it helped draft

    01/31/2011 8:46:53 AM PST · by epithermal · 5 replies
    Digital Trends ^ | January 21, 2011 | Jeffrey Van camp
    Verizon has filed an appeal against the FCC's newly enacted net neutrality regulation, arguing that the agency has no authority to regulate bits on the Internet. Though Verizon practically co-drafted the FCC’s new Net Neutrality regulation, it now plans to sue the agency for overstepping its bounds. The broadband and mobile operator argues that the FCC doesn’t actually have the authority to require Internet service providers to regulate how traffic flows on their networks. “We are deeply concerned by the FCC’s assertion of broad authority for sweeping new regulation of broadband networks and the Internet itself,” said Michael E. Glover,...
  • New Tech Turns Your Skin Into a Game-Controlling Touch Pad

    01/25/2011 10:56:37 AM PST · by wastedyears · 3 replies · 1+ views
    Kotaku.com ^ | March 26, 2010 | Brian Crecente
    I'll leave it as link-only because I'm unaware of their sharing policies.
  • Internet Controlled Shotguns Discovered In Georgia (Yes, you read that correctly)

    01/17/2011 2:21:20 AM PST · by Stoat · 146 replies
    AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Georgia authorities are investigating the discovery of six loaded shotguns aimed at a food plot that were rigged to be fired through a network of Web-controlled cameras. The Augusta Chronicle reported the guns were discovered last fall on Georgia Power Company right of way in rural south Georgia. The set up was discovered by a utility contractor and it was reported to the U.S. Office of Homeland Security. The newspaper reported that a bulletin circulated by the Office of Homeland Security said it appeared that the rig was only intended for illegal hunting in an area known...
  • Israel Tests on Worm Called Crucial in Iran Nuclear Delay [Cyberweapon, Killing Scientists, Mossad]

    01/16/2011 1:35:25 AM PST · by fight_truth_decay · 18 replies
    NYTIMES ^ | Published: January 15, 2011 | William J. Broad, John Markoff , David E. Sanger.
    The Dimona complex in the Negev desert is famous as the heavily guarded heart of Israel’s never-acknowledged nuclear arms program, where neat rows of factories make atomic fuel for the arsenal. Over the past two years, according to intelligence and military experts familiar with its operations, Dimona has taken on a new, equally secret role — as a critical testing ground in a joint American and Israeli effort to undermine Iran’s efforts to make a bomb of its own.
  • Report: U.S.-Israel Tested Worm Linked to Iran Atom Woes

    01/16/2011 5:09:42 AM PST · by nuconvert · 16 replies
    WASHINGTON -- Israel has tested a computer worm believed to have sabotaged Iran's nuclear centrifuges and slowed its ability to develop an atomic weapon, The New York Times reported Saturday. In what the Times described as a joint Israeli-U.S. effort to undermine Iran's nuclear ambitions, it said the tests of the destructive Stuxnet worm had occurred over the past two years at the heavily guarded Dimona complex in the Negev desert.
  • iPhone App Mocks the Church

    01/14/2011 10:40:08 AM PST · by markomalley · 20 replies
    National Catholic Register ^ | 1/13/11 | Tim Drake
    When will the mockery of the Catholic Church cease? Not anytime soon it seems. Penance – the new free iPhone application that allows users to anonymously “confess” their sins to other users, and to give “absolution,” makes a mockery not only of the Church and the Sacrament of Reconciliation, but also of the Church’s structure. By “confessing” and “absolving,” users are able to accrue “horns” or “halos.” The more notable “confessors” are ranked with titles such as “Saints” to “Bishops,” “Cardinals,” and “Holy Father/Mother of the Church.” The highest ranking users are allowed to issue week-long edicts to those below...
  • Princeton scientists construct synthetic proteins that sustain life

    01/11/2011 5:30:22 AM PST · by epithermal · 2 replies
    innovations report ^ | 07.01.2011 | Emily Aronson
    In a groundbreaking achievement that could help scientists "build" new biological systems, Princeton University scientists have constructed for the first time artificial proteins that enable the growth of living cells. The team of researchers created genetic sequences never before seen in nature, and the scientists showed that they can produce substances that sustain life in cells almost as readily as proteins produced by nature's own toolkit.
  • Hot booze turns material into a superconductor

    01/11/2011 6:07:37 AM PST · by epithermal · 24 replies
    Physorg ^ | January 11, 2011 | Lin Edwards
    (PhysOrg.com) -- A Japanese scientist who "likes alcohol very much" has discovered that soaking samples of material in hot party drinks for 24 hours turns them into superconductors at ambient temperature. The scientist, Dr. Yoshihiko Takano of the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) in Tsukuba, Japan, made the discovery after a party, soaking samples of a potential superconductor in hot alcoholic drinks before testing them next day for superconductivity. The commercial alcoholic beverages, especially wine, were much more effective than either water or pure alcohol.