That cat is electric! Jaguar will enter Formula E next season

The company plans to use Formula E to develop its electrification technologies.

(credit: Jaguar Land Rover)

Jaguar has been on quite the roll recently. The company made its name in the 1950s and 1960s with cars like the C-Type (the first use of disc brakes in a car) and the E-Type. But by the mid-1980s, things weren't looking so good. Owned for a time by British Leyland, it suffered from industrial malaise and chronic underinvestment. Things looked better under Ford's ownership for a while, but a foray into Formula 1 proved disastrous, and a misguided reliance on focus groups led to underwhelmingly retro-styled cars like X-Type (built on a Ford platform) and XJ (X350, which under that boring skin was actually quite clever).

Ford sold Jaguar and Land Rover to Tata Motors in 2008. And the Indian parent company has done what many Jaguar fans—your author included—had been crying out for: invested heavily in the brand. Lightweight aluminum chassis have been a focus, but so too has technology. The C-X75 supercar may never have made it to the showroom (although you can see it in Spectre), but the boffins at the company's Gaydon HQ have been working on some rather exciting stuff like remote-control via smartphones and full-windscreen heads-up displays. Today, the company announced that it will return to the racetrack with a full factory effort, competing in Formula E next season (Autumn 2016).

Jaguar will partner with Williams Advanced Engineering (a sister company to the Williams F1 team); the companies collaborated on the C-X75, and Williams currently provides the batteries used by every Formula E car. In a press release, Jaguar Land Rover's engineering director Nick Rogers said, "Electric vehicles will absolutely play a role in Jaguar Land Rover's future product portfolio, and Formula E will give us a unique opportunity to further our development of electrification technologies. The Championship will enable us to engineer and test our advanced technologies under extreme performance conditions."

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Why we’re going back to the Moon—with or without NASA

The discovery of lunar water has changed everything for human exploration.

An artist's impression of the Centaur upper stage detaching from the LCROSS spacecraft. (credit: NASA)

It was time for the spent rocket to die. So the 2,000kg Centaur upper stage, about the size of a yellow school bus, detached from its spacecraft and began falling toward the Moon six years ago. Soon lunar gravity took hold, tugging the Centaur ever faster toward the Moon’s inky black South Pole. An hour after separation, the rocket slammed into terra incognita at 9,000kph (or roughly 5,600mph).

Named for a mythical creature with the upper body of a human and lower body of a horse, the empty Centaur burrowed several meters into a crater that had not seen the Sun’s light for billions of years. The impact kicked a plume of Moon dust as high as 20 km into space. The detached spacecraft followed just minutes later, sampling the plume. “We knew within hours that we had measured something really interesting,” recalled Anthony Colaprete, the mission’s principal investigator.

Interesting indeed. After more than a decade of speculation and intriguing findings, the Centaur had blasted up grains of pure ice. It provided dazzling confirmation that a world once thought entirely barren and desiccated harbors the most valuable commodity for human exploration—water. Yet even as Colaprete and other scientists announced their findings in the fall of 2009, NASA’s lunar program was dying.

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Fact-checking the debate on encryption

Recent terror attacks have sparked the debate over encryption and backdoors.

As politicians and counter-terrorism officials search for lessons from the recent attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, California, senior officials have called for limits on technology that sends encrypted messages.

It's a debate that has repeatedly recurred for more than a decade.In the 1990s, the Clinton Administration directed technology companies to store copies of their encryption keys with the government. That would have given the government a "backdoor" to allow law enforcement and intelligence agencies easy access to encrypted communications. That idea was dropped after sharp criticism from technologists and civil liberties advocates.

More recently, intelligence officials in Europe and the United States have asserted that encryption hampers their ability to detect plots and trace perpetrators. But many have questioned whether it would be practical or wise to allow governments widespread power to read encrypted messages.

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Mix: Nuance veröffentlicht Sprachsteuerungstool für Entwickler

Wer selbst Apps programmiert oder Roboter und IoT-Geräte baut, soll künftig auf einfache Art und Weise eine Sprachsteuerung integrieren können: Nuance hat mit Nuance Mix eine Entwicklungsplattform vorgestellt, die ein komplettes Sprachkommandosystem in Apps oder Geräte einfügt. (Nuance, Spracherkennung)

Wer selbst Apps programmiert oder Roboter und IoT-Geräte baut, soll künftig auf einfache Art und Weise eine Sprachsteuerung integrieren können: Nuance hat mit Nuance Mix eine Entwicklungsplattform vorgestellt, die ein komplettes Sprachkommandosystem in Apps oder Geräte einfügt. (Nuance, Spracherkennung)

Next-gen Asus Zenfone to sport Snapdragon 618?

Next-gen Asus Zenfone to sport Snapdragon 618?

Qualcomm’s upcoming Snapdragon 820 processor may be grabbing headlines, but the company also has a series of new mid-range chips on the way… and it looks like Asus may plan to use one of those processors in one of its next smartphones. A device called the Asus Z012D showed up at the GFXBench website recently. […]

Next-gen Asus Zenfone to sport Snapdragon 618? is a post from: Liliputing

Next-gen Asus Zenfone to sport Snapdragon 618?

Qualcomm’s upcoming Snapdragon 820 processor may be grabbing headlines, but the company also has a series of new mid-range chips on the way… and it looks like Asus may plan to use one of those processors in one of its next smartphones. A device called the Asus Z012D showed up at the GFXBench website recently. […]

Next-gen Asus Zenfone to sport Snapdragon 618? is a post from: Liliputing

13 million MacKeeper users exposed after MongoDB door was left open

Expect more breaches in the future as 35,000 MongoDB installs are misconfigured.

Security researcher Chris Vickery has found and reported a massive security issue on the Web servers of MacKeeper, a piece of software often regarded as scareware. According to Krebs on Security, the databases of Kromtech, the company behind MacKeeper, were open to external connections and required no authentication whatsoever. The names, passwords, and other information of around 13 million users may have been exposed.

Kromtech has admitted the breach and put a statement on its website saying that "analysis of our data storage system shows only one individual gained access performed by the security researcher himself." It also states that customers' credit card details have never been at risk as they're processed by a third-party merchant.

"The only customer information we retain are name, products ordered, license information, public ip address and their user credentials such as product specific usernames, password hashes for the customer's web admin account where they can manage subscriptions, support, and product licenses," Kromtech explained.

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AMD embraces open source to take on Nvidia’s GameWorks

The company also plans to substantially upgrade its open source Linux drivers.

AMD's position in the graphics market continues to be a tricky one. Although the company has important design wins in the console space—both the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One are built around AMD CPUs with integrated AMD GPUs—its position in the PC space is a little more precarious. Nvidia currently has the outright performance lead, and perhaps more problematically, many games are to a greater or lesser extent optimized for Nvidia GPUs. One of the chief culprits here is Nvidia's GameWorks software, a proprietary library of useful tools for game development—things like realistic hair and shadows, and physics processing for destructible environments—that is optimized for Nvidia's cards. When GameWorks games are played on AMD systems, they can often do so with reduced performance or graphical quality.

To combat this, AMD is today announcing GPUOpen, a comparable set of tools to GameWorks. As the name would suggest, however, there's a key difference between GPUOpen and GameWorks: GPUOpen will, when it is published in January, be open source. AMD will use the permissive MIT license, allowing GPUOpen code to be used without any practical restriction in both open and closed source applications, and will publish all code on GitHub.

Making the libraries open source should make AMD's library much more appealing than it currently is. AMD already has offerings in this space; in particular, its TressFX library handles fur and hair generation in a manner comparable to Nvidia's HairWorks. Developers can, if they take the time and effort, even include both; the PC release of Grand Theft Auto V has both TressFX and HairWorks support. But this is extra work, and many developers won't bother. This tends to leave one or other GPU vendor at a disadvantage.

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Cloud-Office: Libreoffice Online wird in Owncloud integriert

Die Cloud-Variante von Libreoffice kann nun auch aus Owncloud heraus genutzt werden. Dafür kooperieren die Entwickler beider Projekte eng miteinander. Es steht ein VM-Abbild bereit, mit dem ein Server getestet werden kann. Die kommerzielle Vermarktung ist bereits in Planung. (Open Source, Technologie)

Die Cloud-Variante von Libreoffice kann nun auch aus Owncloud heraus genutzt werden. Dafür kooperieren die Entwickler beider Projekte eng miteinander. Es steht ein VM-Abbild bereit, mit dem ein Server getestet werden kann. Die kommerzielle Vermarktung ist bereits in Planung. (Open Source, Technologie)

Block potential Star Wars: The Force Awakens spoilers with this Chrome add-on

For those watching the film later this week, the Internet is a dangerous place.

As you may have heard, this week a new Star Wars film is coming out. Chances are, it may even be good. Or, if you're as excited about The Force Awakens as I am, you know it will be good. The trouble is, between now and the time that most people see the film this Thursday, the Internet will be awash with chatter from the film's recent premiere in Los Angeles, and from early press screenings. There's a chance, however unlikely, that said chatter will say the film is bad.

Obviously, those people will be wrong. Fortunately, the Internet has come up with a way of blocking naysayers and negative nancys until the rest of us can watch the film and give it the positive reception it so clearly deserves. A new Chrome extension, Force Block: the Star Wars spoiler blocker, blocks pages containing what it thinks might be spoilers for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, replacing them with various Star Wars quotes. There's even a whitelist should any regular Star Wars content get blocked.

Having just tried out the extension on a Guardian article about the premiere, I can confirm it works as described. You can of course choose to ignore the spoiler warning and continue to view the content, but remember that for most part, these people will all wrong and in reality Star Wars: The Force Awakens is the best Star Wars since Star Wars. Definitely.

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Fossil Q Founder review: Bold, beautiful, but average with Android Wear

It’s not stellar, but it could introduce Google’s wearables to a wider audience.

(credit: Valentina Palladino)

Fossil knows watches: its wide selection of timepieces are made of quality materials and with a consistent style while remaining on the affordable side of luxury. Now the fashion company is bringing its watch expertise to Android Wear with the Q Founder smartwatch. The most expensive device in the new line of Q wearables from Fossil, the Q Founder represents the first Google-powered smartwatch to come from a company that focuses more on style rather than specs.

That doesn't mean Fossil forgot about technical details: the Q Founder has a bright LCD display, it's powered by an Intel Atom processor, has a 400mAh battery, and works with both Android and iOS devices (as limited as Android Wear for iOS is, at least it's an option). It looks great on paper—and in person—but despite nice specs and even nicer looks, Fossil's Android Wear watch doesn't do anything to set itself apart from the other Google-powered options out there. No one was expecting it to revolutionize Android Wear, though. Instead, it could do something much more important for smartwatches and Android Wear as a whole.

Design: Very beautiful, very big

The Q Founder is, quite literally, the big sister of the Q collection. It has a 46mm round case, and my review model had a stainless steel, metal link band. There is a model with a genuine leather band that's a little less expensive at $275, but the all-silver model is the stunner and will cost you $295. The crown sits in the middle of the right side of the case on its 13mm-thick edge.

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