WebOS 3.0 angeschaut: LGs Smart TVs werden Smartphone-freundlicher

Die neue WebOS-Version für LGs Smart TVs sieht zwar auf den ersten Blick aus, wie ihr Vorgänger – neue Funktionen wie eine bessere Anbindung von Smartphones oder ein Musik-Player, der mit ausgeschaltetem Bildschirm funktioniert, verbessern das Nutzungserlebnis aber merklich. (CES 2016, Heimkino)

Die neue WebOS-Version für LGs Smart TVs sieht zwar auf den ersten Blick aus, wie ihr Vorgänger - neue Funktionen wie eine bessere Anbindung von Smartphones oder ein Musik-Player, der mit ausgeschaltetem Bildschirm funktioniert, verbessern das Nutzungserlebnis aber merklich. (CES 2016, Heimkino)

Major piracy group warns games may be crack-proof in two years

The never-ending game-cracking battle may be tilting toward digital protection.

I'm free... free from piracy!

In the never-ending battle between pirates and game makers, it often seems like the pirates have the upper hand, releasing DRM-breaking cracks within hours or days of a game's official release. Now, the founder of a major Chinese piracy group is warning that it is losing the battle against a specific DRM protection scheme, to the point where game piracy may no longer be possible within two years.

TorrentFreak reports on a recent post by Bird Sister, the founder of Chinese cracking message board 3DM forum, that says the recent release of Just Cause 3 has pushed the group's cracking abilities practically past their limits. "The last stage is too difficult and Jun [cracking guy] nearly gave up, but last Wednesday I encouraged him to continue,” she wrote.

"I still believe that this game can be compromised. But according to current trends in the development of encryption technology, in two years' time I’m afraid there will be no free games to play in the world," she continued.

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Intel launches $399 RealSense/Project Tango smartphone for developers

Intel launches $399 RealSense/Project Tango smartphone for developers

Intel has introduced a smartphone with an Atom x7-Z8700 Cherry Trail processor, a 6 inch, 2560 x 1440 pixel display, 2GB of RAM, and 64GB of storage. And the company’s going to sell it for $399. There’s one small catch though: the target market is developers, and the phone is really a development kit designed […]

Intel launches $399 RealSense/Project Tango smartphone for developers is a post from: Liliputing

Intel launches $399 RealSense/Project Tango smartphone for developers

Intel has introduced a smartphone with an Atom x7-Z8700 Cherry Trail processor, a 6 inch, 2560 x 1440 pixel display, 2GB of RAM, and 64GB of storage. And the company’s going to sell it for $399. There’s one small catch though: the target market is developers, and the phone is really a development kit designed […]

Intel launches $399 RealSense/Project Tango smartphone for developers is a post from: Liliputing

US fails its annual broadband deployment test at FCC

Despite improvement, FCC says broadband still not being deployed to all in US.

(credit: Marcelo Graciolli)

The Federal Communications Commission's annual review of broadband deployment says that advanced Internet service is still not being offered to all Americans.

34 million Americans, about 10 percent of the country, "still lack access to fixed broadband at the FCC’s benchmark speed of 25Mbps for downloads, 3Mbps for uploads," the FCC said in a fact sheet released today. This isn't a question of not being able to afford broadband or deciding to go without—when the FCC says you don't have access, that means no providers are willing to serve your home at modern broadband speeds at any price.

There is good news, though. In 2012, a full 20 percent of Americans could not buy 25Mbps/3Mbps broadband. The number dropped to 17 percent in 2013 and then to 10 percent in 2014. Data for 2015 isn't available yet. The annual Broadband Progress Report is based on filings by Internet service providers, and it takes a while to crunch all the numbers, so the reports are always a little behind.

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Malicious apps in Google Play made unauthorized downloads, sought root

Apps with as many as a million downloads removed following their discovery.

Enlarge / A list of the 13 malicious apps in the Brain Test family found hosted on Google Play. (credit: Lookout)

Google has banished 13 Android apps from its Play marketplace after security researchers found the apps made unauthorized downloads and attempted to gain root privileges that allowed them to survive factory resets.

One of the 13 apps, which was known as Honeycomb, had as many as one million downloads before it was removed, according to researchers from Lookout, the mobile security provider that spotted the malicious entries. The apps boasted a large number of downloads and highly favorable user ratings, presumably thanks to the ability of one app to automatically download other apps and then leave rave user reviews for them. In a blog post, Lookout researcher Chris Dehghanpoor wrote:

The explanation for the apps’ high ratings and hundreds-of-thousands of downloads is the malware itself. First off, some of the apps are fully-functioning games. Some are highly rated because they are fun to play. Mischievously, though, the apps are capable of using compromised devices to download and positively review other malicious apps in the Play store by the same authors. This helps increase the download figures in the Play Store. Specifically, it attempts to detect if a device is rooted, and if so, copies several files to the /system partition in an effort to ensure persistence, even after a complete factory reset. This behavior is very similar to several other malware families we’ve seen recently, specifically Shedun, ShiftyBug, and Shuanet.

As Ars reported in November, members of the Shedun, Shuanet, and ShiftyBug families expose phones to potentially dangerous root exploits that can make app removal extremely hard for many users. That's because the apps are often able to root the infected device and install themselves as system applications. That can make them hard to remove using conventional methods, such as the uninstall button or factory reset in the Android options menu.

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Sorry NASA, Europe says it’s going to the Moon instead of Mars

The European Space Agency has become increasingly bold with its lunar preferences.

A screen capture from the new ESA video shows a concept of a human lunar settlement. (credit: ESA)

NASA has made it clear for the last half decade that it considers Mars the next destination for its astronauts. Nevertheless, since President Obama took the Moon off the table during a 2010 space policy speech, potential partners for NASA's "Journey to Mars" have fallen by the wayside.

Earlier this decade, both China and Russia, the two nations now capable of launching humans into space, signaled their intentions to first explore the Moon. Now they have been joined by arguably NASA's most important partner in the coming years, the European Space Agency (ESA). In a new video titled "The Moon Awakens," the agency says it will take lessons learned from the International Space Station and team with other interested partners to return humans to Earth’s natural satellite by the end of the next decade.

"This new exploration will be achieved not in competition, as in the past, but through peaceful, international cooperation," the narrator says. "Eventually we will see a sustained infrastructure for research and exploration where humans will live and work for prolonged periods. Here we will put into practice the lessons of the International Space Station, to establish a facility akin to those we see in Antarctica today. In the future the moon can become a place where the nations of the world work together."

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The Pirate Bay Switches on New .MS Domain

The Pirate Bay has put a new domain name into circulation. Starting this week TPB has officially switched on the Montserrat-based domain name ThePirateBay.ms. The new addition is welcome since the torrent site recently lost control over most of its active domain names.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

pirate bayThe Pirate Bay has gone through a lot of domain changes over the past year.

When the operators found out that Swedish authorities might confiscate their .se domain as the result of a legal battle, the torrent site added six new alternatives last Spring.

In the months that followed this “hydra” was carefully destroyed as registrars and registries suspended the domain names in question. This most likely happened in response to copyright holder complaints.

Ironically, this meant that TPB was back to square one relying on the older .se and .org domains. However, starting this week the torrent site has added a new domain option.

The notorious torrent site is now also accessible from the Montserratian .MS TLD. Both the .SE and .ORG domains pointed to the new domain earlier, but this redirect has been turned off at the time of writing.

With the latest addition TPB now has three generic TLDs, as well as the .onion version which is exclusively available through the Tor network. Pirate Bay’s official forum has also added ThePirateBay.ms to the list of official domains.

Pirate Bay’s active domains

tpblocations

The TPB team registered the .MS extension several years ago but it hasn’t been used as a primary domain until now. Strangely enough the domain name is linked to the same registrar who previously suspended the other domains.

While TPB remains widely accessible some related issues remain. TPB’s Pirate Browser domains piratebrowser.com, piratebrowser.net and piratebrowser.org remain suspended due to an ICANN verification issue, for example.

There’s currently no known alternative domain for The Pirate Browser but the application can still be downloaded by visiting the site’s direct IP-address. Adding a new domain would be relatively easy but it appears that the TPB-crew has other priorities at the moment.

Time will tell how long the new .MS domain lasts. It’s expected that TPB’s operators will register additional domain names in the future to make sure that the site doesn’t run out of options.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Programmer who aided financial malware to be sent home to Latvia

Deniss Calovskis, who pled guilty in 2015, has served 20 months combined in Latvia, US.

(credit: Davide Restivo)

The Latvian programmer who was involved in the creation of the Gozi virus—what American authorities called "one of the most financially destructive computer viruses in history"—has been sentenced to time served and will be sent back home soon. Denniss Calovskis previously pleaded guilty to one count of "conspiring to commit computer intrusion" in September 2015.

According to the Associated Press, US District Judge Kimba Wood said she was "impressed" by Calovskis' "rehabilitation" and that she would take into account the 10 months he already spent behind bars in Latvia prior to be extradited in February 2015. (Calovskis has also served 10 months behind bars in the US.)

“What I did was wrong. … I must say it was the biggest mistake,” Calovskis said, according to the AP.

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Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy TabPro S Windows tablet

Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy TabPro S Windows tablet

The Samsung Galaxy TabPro S is a 12 inch Windows tablet with a 2160 x 1440 pixel AMOLED display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and support for a Bluetooth digital pen. Samsung is showing off the tablet and a companion keyboard cover at CES 2016, but the company hasn’t announced a price yet. The […]

Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy TabPro S Windows tablet is a post from: Liliputing

Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy TabPro S Windows tablet

The Samsung Galaxy TabPro S is a 12 inch Windows tablet with a 2160 x 1440 pixel AMOLED display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and support for a Bluetooth digital pen. Samsung is showing off the tablet and a companion keyboard cover at CES 2016, but the company hasn’t announced a price yet. The […]

Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy TabPro S Windows tablet is a post from: Liliputing

Layered perovskite-on-silicon could boost PV efficiencies to 30 percent

New formulation of perovskites can be tuned to wavelengths that work with silicon.

A typical perovskite, similar in structure to the one being tested here. (credit: Texas Tech)

Given how fantastically cheap silicon-based photovoltaic cells have gotten, it might be hard to muster much excitement for developing any other material. But the cost of silicon-based PV has created a potential niche—it's so cheap that installation costs now dominate the price of solar power. If we could squeeze more energy out of a single installation, it could drop the costs even further.

That's one of the reasons researchers have been trying to develop perovskites. Not only are these made from chemicals that are cheap and easy to manufacture, there are indications that they can be tuned to absorb some wavelengths while allowing others to pass through to an underlying silicon photovoltaic. The big problem: they tend to decompose when exposed to intense light.

Now, an Oxford-Berlin collaboration is reporting they may have solved the decomposition problem and, in the process, accidentally made a material where they could tune the absorbance across a wide range of wavelengths. With some additional improvements, they suggest a combined silicon-perovskite cell could reach 30 percent efficiencies—up from the neighborhood of 22 for silicon alone.

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