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Bitcoin her oder Kundendaten im Netz: Ein krimineller Hacker hat 900 Gigabyte an Kundendaten von den Servern einer Bank in den Vereinigten Arabichen Emiraten kopiert. Jetzt hat er die Daten im Netz veröffentlicht. (Security, Datenschutz)
DRM-free downloads include MAME-compatible ROMs for Metal Slug, Samurai Shodown, more.
Art of Fighting 2—and 18 other SNK Neo-Geo classics—can now be played legally and easily in a Chrome or Firefox web browser thanks to this week's killer Humble Bundle sale.
Though we're big fans of getting cheap games via the Humble Bundle service (and giving to charity in the process), it's easy to lose track of its zillions of sales and promotions. But Tuesday saw the service launch a particularly unique sale that we couldn't pass up: a giant bundle of classic Neo-Geo games that comes complete with a portal to immediately emulate and play them in a Web browser.
Shoppers can pay whatever they want to access eight games in this 25th anniversary sale, while paying $10 or more unlocks the bundle's current 20-game selection—including new-to-PC ports like Garou: Mark of the Wolves and Samurai Shodown V Special. Only one game, King of Fighters 2002 Unlimited Match, requires a Windows PC and Steam to launch; the rest can be played on any Firefox or Chrome Web browser via a DotEmu emulator built into Humble's site. Humble recommends at least an i3 processor and 4GB of RAM for play via HTML5, and if you're not sure whether your rig can handle the Web browser versions—or if your favorite PC gamepads work as well in the HTML5 version as ours did (including multiplayer)—Humble's sale site includes the full version of Metal Slug 3 for anyone to try for free.
Offline versions of the remaining 19 games can also be downloaded for Windows, Mac, or Linux in a DRM-free Neo-Geo emulator wrapper; only four of those will also work on Steam. We picked through a few of the sale's downloads to find ROM files that are compatible with the popular Multi Arcade Machine Emulator (MAME), meaning classic-gaming purists with dedicated MAME boxes now have a far more legal and frugal way to load classics like The Last Blade and King of the Monsters in their home arcade cabinets.
The MeegoPad T02 is a computer-on-a-stick that’s available with Windows or Ubuntu software. First launched this summer, the MeegoPad T02 is available from a number of retailers for around $100 or less. Gearbest sells the Ubuntu model for $77 and the Windows version for $105, and a few months ago the company sent me one […]
MeegoPad T02 Windows 10 PC stick giveaway is a post from: Liliputing
The MeegoPad T02 is a computer-on-a-stick that’s available with Windows or Ubuntu software. First launched this summer, the MeegoPad T02 is available from a number of retailers for around $100 or less. Gearbest sells the Ubuntu model for $77 and the Windows version for $105, and a few months ago the company sent me one […]
MeegoPad T02 Windows 10 PC stick giveaway is a post from: Liliputing
The MeegoPad T02 is a PC-on-a-stick with an Intel Atom Bay Trail processor, 2GB of RAM, and 32GB of storage. Plug it into the HDMI port of your TV or monitor and you’ve basically got a low-power desktop computer. MeegoPad introduced the T02 this summer, and you can pick up a model with Windows 10 […]
MeegoPad T02 Ubuntu PC stick giveaway is a post from: Liliputing
The MeegoPad T02 is a PC-on-a-stick with an Intel Atom Bay Trail processor, 2GB of RAM, and 32GB of storage. Plug it into the HDMI port of your TV or monitor and you’ve basically got a low-power desktop computer. MeegoPad introduced the T02 this summer, and you can pick up a model with Windows 10 […]
MeegoPad T02 Ubuntu PC stick giveaway is a post from: Liliputing
Mozilla announces it will stop development and sales of Firefox OS smartphones.
The Japan-exclusive Firefox Fx0, the closest thing the platform had to a flagship. (credit: Mozilla)
Mozilla is ending its plan to build an OS for smartphones. Today at Mozilla's "Mozlando" developer event, the company announced that it would stop developing and selling Firefox OS smartphones. TechCrunch has a statement from Ari Jaaksi, Mozilla’s SVP of Connected Devices:
We are proud of the benefits Firefox OS added to the Web platform and will continue to experiment with the user experience across connected devices. We will build everything we do as a genuine open source project, focused on user experience first and build tools to enable the ecosystem to grow.
Firefox OS proved the flexibility of the Web, scaling from low-end smartphones all the way up to HD TVs. However, we weren’t able to offer the best user experience possible and so we will stop offering Firefox OS smartphones through carrier channels.
We’ll share more on our work and new experiments across connected devices soon.
As an open source project, Firefox OS will never really "die," but it sounds like we shouldn't expect to see any more commercial smartphones.
We actually got to do a full review of a Firefox OS device with the $35 Intex Cloud FX. The hardware definitely wasn't high end, but the software didn't help matters, either. The HTML-only approach to app development meant there was basically nothing designed for the platform other than the apps that came with it, leaving us with no benchmarks, no alternative browsers, and not much to do. Firefox OS was mostly relegated to cheap phones like the Cloud FX, with the most expensive, the Fx0, clocking in at $420 and only available in Japan.
A growing number of users and applications are making Linux a prime hacking target.
Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson and Getty)
Getting a Linux server hacked and made part of a botnet is easier than some people may think. As two unrelated blog posts published in the past week demonstrate, running a vulnerable piece of software is often all that's required.
Witness, for example, a critical vulnerability disclosed earlier this year in Elasticsearch, an open source server application for searching large amounts of data. In February, the company that maintains it warned it contained a vulnerability that allowed hackers to execute commands on the server running it. Within a month, a hacking forum catering to Chinese speakers provided all the source code and tutorials needed for people with only moderate technical skills to fully identify and exploit susceptible servers.
A post published Tuesday by security firm Recorded Future deconstructs that hacker forum from last March. It showed how to scan search services such as Shodan and ZoomEye to find vulnerable machines. It includes an attack script written in Python that was used to exploit one of them and a separate Perl script used to make the newly compromised machine part of a botnet of other zombie servers. It also included screenshots showing the script being used against the server. The tutorial underscores the growing ease of hacking production servers and the risk of being complacent about patching.
The Asus Chromebox is a small desktop computer that runs Google’s Chrome OS software. Asus launched the first model in 2014 and eventually expanded the lineup to include versions with Celeron, Core i3, and Core i7 processors based on Intel’s 4th-gen Core “Haswell” architecture. Now there’s a new model with a 5th-gen “Broadwell” chip with […]
Asus Chromebox with Broadwell CPU now available for $199 is a post from: Liliputing
The Asus Chromebox is a small desktop computer that runs Google’s Chrome OS software. Asus launched the first model in 2014 and eventually expanded the lineup to include versions with Celeron, Core i3, and Core i7 processors based on Intel’s 4th-gen Core “Haswell” architecture. Now there’s a new model with a 5th-gen “Broadwell” chip with […]
Asus Chromebox with Broadwell CPU now available for $199 is a post from: Liliputing
Plus a slew of other laptop, gaming, and accessories deals to choose from.
Hello Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have a ton of great deals today—and one in particular that could sell out quickly. For today only, you can get a Jackery Giant+ 12,000mAh portable battery pack for only $22 and change. The extra battery lets you charge up multiple devices at once via USB, and it's compatible with Android and iOS devices. Considering the pack's list price of $129, you won't be able to find it for a better price after today. Grab it before it's gone!
As usual, we have a big list of other electronics deals below, too.
Featured deals
Firefox OS is an operating system built around the same technologies used in the Firefox web browser. Mozilla introduced the software a few years ago as an alternative to Android and iOS that would be based on open source software, available for low-cost phones, easy to develop for, and easy for phone makers and wireless carriers […]
Mozilla is giving up on Firefox OS smartphones is a post from: Liliputing
Firefox OS is an operating system built around the same technologies used in the Firefox web browser. Mozilla introduced the software a few years ago as an alternative to Android and iOS that would be based on open source software, available for low-cost phones, easy to develop for, and easy for phone makers and wireless carriers […]
Mozilla is giving up on Firefox OS smartphones is a post from: Liliputing
Elite: Dangerous lead also talks about the game’s 2.0 beta and future features.
Enlarge / "Big moon Horizons on Cobra and SRV," by CMDR [AEDC] Haridas Gopal. (credit: CMDR [AEDC] Haridas Gopal)
Ninety frames per second. That’s the new target for consumer VR gear: you need hardware capable of rendering two HD images with all the trimmings at a steady 90fps, or the whole thing starts to shake and judder and make you sick. That 90fps requirement is what’s driving the disturbingly high VR system requirements posted a few days ago for Elite: Dangerous by Frontier Developments; according to Frontier, you need 16GB of RAM, a fast i7 quad-core CPU, and a GeForce GTX 980 to do VR well with Elite and consumer VR hardware.
Studio founder and CEO David Braben is aware that the spec is high—the recommended video card alone will set you back at least $500—but Braben is in somewhat of a privileged position among game developers: he has one of the only shipping triple-A games that, as of today, officially supports VR without having to dig into config files and enable hidden dev-only options (I’m looking at you, Alien: Isolation). The game’s soon-to-be-released "Horizons" 2.0 expansion, which is currently in semi-open testing by the Elite playerbase, raises the bar and adds SteamVR support alongside Oculus Rift support, meaning you could plug an HTC Vive into your computer and play Elite: Dangerous on it right now, at the 90 frames per second the Vive prefers for glass-smooth head tracking.
Elite is one of the best VR experiences a PC gamer can have right now—and believe me, if a PC game supports VR, I’ve tried it out on my Oculus Rift DK2 at home, which is attached to a gaming PC that meets or exceeds Frontier’s VR spec in every category (I have a 980ti video card, but only one—SLI in Elite with VR is currently problematic due to a combination of different issues). Braben explained that the game’s VR support is the result of a complex dance of intuition and design iteration.