Sunday, December 8, 2013

Friday, December 6, 2013

The Holographic Universe - http://pinterest.com/pin/51158145739851004/

Saturday, November 23, 2013

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpqTHHm1HEs&feature=youtube_gdata_player
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXGiTbGE0EY&feature=youtube_gdata_player
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ME-bLr7mGL4&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Saturday, November 9, 2013

The Georgia Guidestones: America's Most Mysterious Monument

http://www.youtube.com/v/yIfU41BICf4?autohide=1&version=3&attribution_tag=XiXglwQh7y7UzQYz1MRnBw&autohide=1&showinfo=1&feature=share&autoplay=1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sB7fgY2vnOg&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Thursday, October 31, 2013

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QS29hC5sKzM&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Superbright Supernovas' Cause Potentially Revealed | Space.com

Superbright Supernovas' Cause Potentially Revealed | Space.com

Superbright Supernovas' Cause Potentially Revealed

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Thursday, October 3, 2013

10 Useful Features Hidden in VLC, The Swiss Army Knife of Media Players

10 Useful Features Hidden in VLC, The Swiss Army Knife of Media Players

10 Useful Features Hidden in VLC, The Swiss Army Knife of Media Players

vlc-desktop-window
There’s a good chance you already use the VLC media player. But VLC isn’t just a media player — it’s a complete Swiss Army Knife for digital videos and music, filled with useful and fun features you haven’t found yet.
If you’re just using VLC to play back local media files, you’re only using a tiny fraction of VLC’s capabilities. There’s so much more you can do with VLC, whether you’re using it on Windows, Mac, or Linux.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

CreepyDOL system can destroy your privacy for about US$500

CreepyDOL system can destroy your privacy for about US$500

CreepyDOL system can destroy your privacy for about US$500

August 6, 2013
CreepyDOL is a new personal tracking system that allows a user to track, locate, and break...
CreepyDOL is a new personal tracking system that allows a user to track, locate, and break into an individual's smartphone (Image: Shutterstock)
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Brendan O'Connor is an unabashed hacker who has worked for DARPA and taught at the US military's cybersecurity school. CreepyDOL (Creepy Distributed Object Locator), his new personal tracking system, allows a user to track, locate, and break into an individual's smartphone. "For a few hundred dollars," he says, "I can track your every movement, activity, and interaction, until I find whatever it takes to blackmail you."
Privacy is becoming ever more difficult to insure in today's connected world. It is not clear whether it is governments or businesses that are more interested in your innermost secrets, but both have a pretty good handle on most of us. CreepyDOL and similar systems now threaten to make the ability to ferret out a person's private affairs available to anyone with the inclination and a few hundred dollars to spare.
CreepyDOL is a network of sensors that communicates with a data-processing server. The sensor network runs on boxes about the size of a small external hard drive, with each node containing a Raspberry Pi Model A, two Wi-Fi adapters, and a USB hub. Previously developed by O'Connor, these are called F-BOMBs (Falling/Ballistically-launched Object that Makes Backdoors) and are sufficiently rugged to be thrown, or even dropped from a UAV. Each F-BOMB costs just over US$50, giving a network of 10 a price of around $500.
A CreepyDOL system of 10 F-BOMBS can destroy your privacy for about US$500
The F-BOMBS run software that allows the nodes to communicate with each other, as well as look for Wi-Fi traffic within its detection range. The nodes look for various forms of data, including Dropbox and iMessage data, that can provide information about the user of the smartphone. Some data only reveals that a particular protocol is being used by a particular user, while others may leak a great deal of personal information, including names, pictures, and email addresses. To stay within the law, O'Connor tested CreepyDOL with software settings that made the sensor nodes blind to any but his own smartphones.
All the acquired information is reported back to the data processor, which analyzes, organizes, and stores the personal data. The system includes the ability to display people moving around the area covered by the sensor network in real time.
The impact of CreepyDOL is that it eliminates the idea of "blending into a crowd." If you're carrying a wireless device, CreepyDOL will see you, track your movements, and report home, even if you aren't using it.
O'Connor appears (mostly) to be wearing a white hat in this project. “At some level I’m doing this because it’s interesting, but I’m also doing it to prove that this level of knowledge and detail isn’t only the province of intelligence agencies anymore. If you think that only the government, with millions and billions to blow on watching someone can create this problem for privacy, then we’re not going to solve it.”
On the other hand, his security consultancy Malice Aforethought is selling F-BOMBS to the public. Will CreepyDOL emerge from the hacker underground? Time will tell.

WD announces My Cloud, an external drive that connects to your home network for $150 (video)

WD announces My Cloud, an external drive that connects to your home network for $150 (video)
WD announces My Cloud, an external drive that connects to your home network for $150 video
Sure, there are plenty of physical storage options out there, but WD's new My Cloud does a little more than the traditional external hard drives. For starters, and as the name would suggest, My Cloud can connect wirelessly to your own home (or office) network, allowing you to easily transfer files to and from it. What's more interesting here, however, is that WD's making it easy to access the plug-and-play device from anywhere -- for example, you can be in a completely different continent and still be able to upload / download files. There's also a USB 3.0 which acts as an expansion option, Gigabit Ethernet for wired connectivity, DLNA features and an undisclosed dual-core CPU to handle most of the load.
Better yet, because it's a local network drive, there's no need to format it for Mac or Windows, making it compatible with both from the get-go and leaving out the need for any unwanted software. To manage things like users, storage space and advanced settings, Western Digital has introduced the companion My Cloud Dashboard, which can be accessed via your internet browser. On the mobile side, there are apps for iOS and Android that allow users to upload photos, videos, documents and other type of files, as well as integrate with cloud services including Google Drive, SkyDrive and Dropbox. The WD My Cloud is now available starting at $150 for the 2TB model, while the beefier 3TB and 4TB variants are priced at $180 and $250, respectively.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Fantasy Ink: Bernie Wrightson: The House of Mystery

Fantasy Ink: Bernie Wrightson: The House of Mystery

Bernie Wrightson: The House of Mystery


The best way to start off the Countdown to Halloween is with some classic art by Bernie Wrightson!


House of Mystery #193, August 1971.


House of Mystery #194, September 1971.


House of Mystery #207, October 1972.


House of Mystery #209, December 1972.


House of Mystery #211, February 1973.

NASA's New Moon Probe Begins Final Leg of Lunar Trek | Space.com

NASA's New Moon Probe Begins Final Leg of Lunar Trek | Space.com

NASA's New Moon Probe Begins Final Leg of Lunar Trek

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Heck Yes! The First Free Wireless Plan Is Finally Here

Heck Yes! The First Free Wireless Plan Is Finally Here

The First Free Wireless Plan Is Finally Here

FreedomPop, promiser of free data, is finally launching the first actually free service plan into beta today. It comes with free texts, free minutes, and free data. All you have to do is front $100 for a phone.
We first heard about FreedomPop's free wireless service aspirations earlier this year, and now the details and the beta have finally arrived. The biggest piece of the puzzle we were missing until now was the phone: it's aHTC Evo Design 4G WiMAX running Android 4.0. Meh. But it's only $100 and the service is free! Slightly less meh!
As you can probably tell by the name, these handsets slurp up 4G data by piggybacking on Sprint's WiMAX instead of LTE, but Sprint's WiMAX coverage is actually better than its fledgling LTE network, for now. And, the HTC Evo Design is just the first of a few—hopefully better—phones which will be coming (or will at least be announced) later this year.
As for the plan itself, a few things have changed. Users will get 200 free anytime minutes, 500MB of free 3G/4G data, and 500 free texts (as opposed to unlimited, like originally pitched) every month, for free. Free free free. And if that doesn't do it for you, you can get extra data at the price of $.02/MB as you go, or you can pick up packs of 1GB for $10, 2GB for $20, 4GB for $35, or 5GB for $40. And for voice and text, you can go unlimited for $11 a month.
The world is getting pretty crowded with alternate service providers, most piggybacking on Sprint, and each peddling one superpower or another. Republic Wireless has its Wi-Fi and fantastic phone, and players like Zact and Ting have super granular billing. But free? Free service is a serious thing to bring to the table, and this kind of shake-up can only work out well for consumers.

Found: This robot solves a Rubik's Cube in the blink of an eye - TechSpot

Found: This robot solves a Rubik's Cube in the blink of an eye - TechSpot

Found: This robot solves a Rubik's Cube in the blink of an eye

On October 1, 2013, 10:00 AM With Video
I’ve never been any good at solving a Rubik’s Cube but I do know some people that are. During my last trip to cover the Consumer Electronics Show, I set up an impromptu face-off between the two gurus. It lasted about 20 some-odd seconds and that was that.
That said, neither of those guys would be any match for the robot used in the video you see above. This machine is able to solve the cube in about one second… well, sort of. I suppose the correct term would be that it can implement a solution in that amount of time as it actually takes a bit longer for the robot to scan the cube to work out the correct twists and turns necessary to match all sides.
Found is a TechSpot feature where we share clever, funny or otherwise interesting stuff from around the web.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Search Pictures on SkyDrive with Bing - Search Blog

Search Pictures on SkyDrive with Bing - Search Blog

Search Pictures on SkyDrive with Bing

A few weeks ago, the SkyDrive team announced  updates to the service that will allow you to take a picture of something with text (e.g. a sign, a menu, a business card), save it to SkyDrive and Bing’s optical character recognition (OCR) technology will extract the text. Today they announced that those pictures will be fully searchable with Bing Smart Search available in the upcoming release of Windows 8.1.
What does that mean? Let me explain.
With this update, you can take a picture of a business card for say, Dave Johnson of Contosso Corporation and it will seamlessly synch with SkyDrive. The OCR technology that Bing has developed will scan the picture and pull out parts of the image that it recognizes as text. Now whenever you use Windows 8.1 and search for Dave Johnson, not only will you see a list of results from your device and the web but also the image of Dave’s business card that you have saved in SkyDrive.
You can check out a demo of this in action in the following video:

Today’s announcement builds upon the enormous investments we have made in core search technologies let users interact with the world’s knowledge and their surroundings in more human ways.
- The Bing Team

Toshiba's dual-camera system enables second-chance manipulations

Toshiba's dual-camera system enables second-chance manipulations

Toshiba's dual-camera system enables second-chance manipulations

7 hours ago by Nancy Owano report
Toshiba's dual-camera system enables second-chance manipulations
Dual camera module, "TCM9518MD", enabling simultaneous output of images and depth data. Credit: Toshiba
(Phys.org) —Smartphone cameras are taking on advanced features as smartphone vendors continue to compete for sales. Toshiba last week announced a dual camera system that will be a talking point in mobile devices at some time in the future. Toshiba last Thursday announced a dual camera system "TCM9518MD" that brings deep focus imaging to smartphones. The camera will provide capabilities for deep focus and post-focus, in contrast with cameras where the picture taker needs to focus on objects before snapping, with no such second chance to make adjustments. The Toshiba camera system in mobile devices will enable manipulations to change the depth of field and point of focus.
Toshiba's system uses two 1/4-inch 5Mpixel CMOS image sensors that are placed side-by-side, recording depth and images at the same time. Toshiba highlighted this in its product announcement, referring to the product's new "depth map" and "deep focus image" capabilities.
"The TCM9518MD's twin cameras and dedicate companion LSI simultaneously deliver deep focus images in which foreground and background and all points in between are in focus, with depth data on each object in the image. This supports creation of new applications for smartphone, tablets and mobile devices, including refocus, defocus and extraction of any objects of the images, and gesture operation."
Toshiba will start to ship samples of the module for smartphones and tablet computers in January next year, and the company intends to mass-produce the system in April next year at a rate of 500,000 units per month.
In its statement, Toshiba noted that "Computational cameras create images impossible to realize with the standard camera module by combining optical hardware technology—the lens and diaphragm—with digital signal processing technology. The TCM9518MD brings high resolution and computational camera functionalities to the CMOS market for smartphones, tablets and ."
News sites carrying the announcement referred to the new module as a Lytro-like camera phone. They are talking about the Lytro camera, which Mountain View, California-based Lytro introduced in 2011. Lytro describes itself as the creator of the world's first consumer light field camera. The company said the 's user and friends can "endlessly refocus pictures after you take them."
More information: Press release

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