Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300

Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300

Most Chromebooks are cheap laptops with entry-level specs. But there’s a growing number of Chromebooks with higher price tags that offer additional storage and memory or better displays.

Dell, HP, and Google all offer what you might call premium Chromebook models.

Now Asus has one of the most affordable models with… let’s say mid-range specs. The Asus C301 Chromebook is now available for pre-order for $300.

The laptop has 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a 13.3 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display.

Continue reading Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300 at Liliputing.

Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300

Most Chromebooks are cheap laptops with entry-level specs. But there’s a growing number of Chromebooks with higher price tags that offer additional storage and memory or better displays.

Dell, HP, and Google all offer what you might call premium Chromebook models.

Now Asus has one of the most affordable models with… let’s say mid-range specs. The Asus C301 Chromebook is now available for pre-order for $300.

The laptop has 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a 13.3 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display.

Continue reading Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300 at Liliputing.

The Google Play Store scraps Google+ integration

Google cuts social from the Play Store, now accepts app reviews without a G+ account.

(credit: Callip Hall)

The great deplusification of Google continues as a Google+ has been removed from yet another Google product. This time it's the Play Store, which has dropped Google+ votes from apps and nixed the G+ account requirement from app reviews.

There was an entire Google+ focused "People" section on the Play Store that showed apps and ratings from people you follow on Google+. The Play Store also allowed users to "+1" apps on the Play Store, which served as a vote of approval from people you follow. Both features are being stripped out of Google Play, starting earlier this week.

The other feature being removed is the requirement to have a Google+ account to leave a Play Store review on apps, games, and media. Several users have reported to Android Police that they can now leave reviews using their regular Google account, where before they were nagged to created a Google+ account.

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FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview)

FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview)

It’s been more than two decades since Microsoft started to move away from MS-DOS with the launch of Windows 95. But a generation of computers users grew up with DOS in the 80s and 90s and there are thousands of programs and games developed for the platform. Many are still worth running.

Some classic games are much fun to play today as they were 30 years ago. Some businesses are continuing to run vintage software because it still meets their needs.

Continue reading FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview) at Liliputing.

FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview)

It’s been more than two decades since Microsoft started to move away from MS-DOS with the launch of Windows 95. But a generation of computers users grew up with DOS in the 80s and 90s and there are thousands of programs and games developed for the platform. Many are still worth running.

Some classic games are much fun to play today as they were 30 years ago. Some businesses are continuing to run vintage software because it still meets their needs.

Continue reading FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview) at Liliputing.

Brain training with exoskeleton and VR spurs recovery for paraplegics

In a year, 50% of patients upgraded from complete to incomplete paralysis rating.

(credit: AASDAP and Lente Viva Filmes, São Paulo, Brazil)

With brain training, paraplegics can once again move and sense their limbs despite having spinal cord injuries that were previously considered irreversible, an international team of researchers reports Thursday in Scientific Reports.

After a year of working with a brain-machine interface, virtual reality, and robotic exoskeletons, eight paraplegic patients began moving and feeling their lower bodies again. Some can now even walk with assistance. Half of them were upgraded from a classification of ‘complete’ paralysis to incomplete. And this group has continued to train and improve, according to the lead study author, Miguel Nicolelis, of Duke University.

“Nobody ever imagined that one day we would be talking about the possibility of using brain-machine interfaces to induce partial neurological recovery in patients who have been diagnosed as having a complete spinal cord injury,” Nicolelis told press during a conference call. “As you can imagine, for us this is a very important milestone."

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Samsung Galaxy Note 7 with 6GB of RAM coming soon (to China)

Samsung Galaxy Note 7 with 6GB of RAM coming soon (to China)

Disappointed that Samsung’s latest high-end smartphone has just a measly 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage? Don’t worry. Samsung’s mobile chief DJ Koh says a 6GB/128GB variant is coming.

There’s just one catch: it’ll only be available in China.

In an interview with the Korea Herald, Koh confirmed that a model with more memory and storage will be coming to China soon.

Why is China the only market that will get that model?

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Note 7 with 6GB of RAM coming soon (to China) at Liliputing.

Samsung Galaxy Note 7 with 6GB of RAM coming soon (to China)

Disappointed that Samsung’s latest high-end smartphone has just a measly 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage? Don’t worry. Samsung’s mobile chief DJ Koh says a 6GB/128GB variant is coming.

There’s just one catch: it’ll only be available in China.

In an interview with the Korea Herald, Koh confirmed that a model with more memory and storage will be coming to China soon.

Why is China the only market that will get that model?

Continue reading Samsung Galaxy Note 7 with 6GB of RAM coming soon (to China) at Liliputing.

KickassTorrents Crew Ask For Donations to Rebuild The Site

While the original KickassTorrents site remains offline, a group of site admins and moderators have plans to restore the site to its former glory. They have gathered many users under a new roof and are now gathering donations to keep expanding.

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

kickasstorrents_500x500With an active community and millions of regular visitors, KickassTorrents (KAT) was much more than a site to leech the latest torrents from.

Many considered it to be their virtual home where they gathered with friends on a daily basis.

This ended abruptly last month. When the site’s alleged operator was arrested following a criminal investigation of the U.S. Government, the official site went down with him.

While it’s unlikely that the original site will return anytime soon, a group of KAT-crew members have been working hard to keep the community together.

Within a few days a new forum was launched at Katcr.to, supported by several high ranking moderators of the original site. In the weeks that followed thousands of members returned to the community, which now has plans to expand.

The site started a fundraising campaign asking for money to repair and rebuild the “authentic KAT site code.” The team is accepting donations through PayPal and a Gofundme campaign, hoping to collect several thousands dollars.

“This site we now inhabit is costing money: Money that a few individuals put up to ensure the survival of this Community. This is still not the Kat we all remember but on a daily basis it is getting closer,” Johnno23 says.

Katcr.to fundraiser

kat-donations

The big question is whether this means that the torrent download and upload functionality will be returned to its former glory. For the time being, this appears to be one of the long-term goals.

To find out more TorrentFreak spoke with Mr.Gooner aka the President, a long time KAT-crew member and one of the top admins at the original site.

Mr. Gooner explains that many of the original site staffers have returned to the community, but that funds are needed to develop and maintain it during the months to come.

While the initial focus will be on the community element, torrents are expected to return as well in the future.

“At this stage, it very much depends on pending legal action and rulings in regards to the legality of torrents in the US. However the community can be reassured that in one way or another, KAT will return to its former glory,” Mr. Gooner says.

That said, fully restoring the old site with the original database is not an option at this moment.

The site administrators and crew, all regular users at one point, were clearly separated from the people who technically and financially ran the site. This means that the people in charge of Katcr.to don’t have access to the original code and data.

“It is our understanding that the databases have been secured in such a way that the information inside would become useless if an unauthorised attempt was made to access them,” Mr. Gooner says.

So, if torrent sharing is added to the current community site, it has to be coded by new people. This will take time and money, obviously, and the current crew is not certain if that will happen anytime soon.

Fundraisers are always welcomed with a healthy dose of scepticism, which is no different this time around.

From the information we have gathered so far, it’s safe to say that people shouldn’t expect the original KAT functionality to be restored fully in the near future.

In that regard, Mr. Gooner and others still encourage people to continue uploading in the meantime, even when that’s on other torrent sites.

“Run those seedboxes and torrent clients 24/7 where possible. Just because uploading stopped at KAT we are all still pirates and we will always encourage uploading,” he says.

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

Republic Wireless now sells SIM cards, lets you bring your own phone (Only 9 models supported, though)

Republic Wireless now sells SIM cards, lets you bring your own phone (Only 9 models supported, though)

So you’ve been thinking about signing up for Republic Wireless due to the mobile carrier’s relatively low-cost phone plans… but you’ve been disappointed in the selection of phones available from the company.

Good news: now you can bring your own phone.

Bad news: That’s only true if you have one of the nine devices that are currently supported.

In a rather odd move, Republic Wireless is now selling SIM cards for $5.

Continue reading Republic Wireless now sells SIM cards, lets you bring your own phone (Only 9 models supported, though) at Liliputing.

Republic Wireless now sells SIM cards, lets you bring your own phone (Only 9 models supported, though)

So you’ve been thinking about signing up for Republic Wireless due to the mobile carrier’s relatively low-cost phone plans… but you’ve been disappointed in the selection of phones available from the company.

Good news: now you can bring your own phone.

Bad news: That’s only true if you have one of the nine devices that are currently supported.

In a rather odd move, Republic Wireless is now selling SIM cards for $5.

Continue reading Republic Wireless now sells SIM cards, lets you bring your own phone (Only 9 models supported, though) at Liliputing.

Time to scrap the idea that humans arrived in the Americas by land bridge

Bering Land Bridge fossils show a lifeless area until long after humans hit the Americas.

The standard story of how humans arrived in the Americas is that they marched 1,500km across the Bering Land Bridge, a now-vanished landmass between Siberia and Northern Canada that emerged roughly 15,000 years ago in the wake of the last ice age. But for the past decade, evidence has been piling up that humans arrived in the Americas by traveling in boats along the Pacific coast. Some 14,000-year-old campsites like Oregon's Paisley Caves have been found near rivers that meet the Pacific, suggesting that early humans came inland from the coast along these waterways. Now, a new study published in Nature provides more solid evidence the first humans to reach the Americas could not have come via the Bering Land Bridge.

A group of geoscientists, anthropologists, and biologists led a massive effort to study the environment on the Bering Land Bridge when humans were supposedly crossing it 15,000 years ago. They used a common method for sampling ancient environments called coring. Using hollow tubes, they drilled deep into the sediment at the bottom of two frozen lakes in British Columbia, looking for fossils of plant and animal life from the era when humans could have crossed the Land Bridge. They picked these two specific lakes—Charlie Lake and Spring Lake, to be exact—because they were in a region where the last remaining ice sheets melted. The very first humans to pass into the Americas would have had to cross through this area.

Carefully analyzing the layers of sediment, the researchers were able to determine what kind of life inhabited the region. Radiocarbon dating allowed them to recreate a timeline for the ancient ecosystem there, too. In their paper, the researchers write:

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Intel Atom isn’t dead: Next-gen chips aimed at embedded and IoT systems

Intel Atom isn’t dead: Next-gen chips aimed at embedded and IoT systems

Intel isn’t developing Atom chips for smartphones, tablets, or low-power laptops anymore. But it looks like the Atom brand will live on.

At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco next week, the company will unveil some details about next-gen Atom chips based on the new Apollo Lake platform.

There aren’t many details available at this point, but as PC World notes, the technical session schedule includes a few events related to the unannounced, next-gen Atom products.

Continue reading Intel Atom isn’t dead: Next-gen chips aimed at embedded and IoT systems at Liliputing.

Intel Atom isn’t dead: Next-gen chips aimed at embedded and IoT systems

Intel isn’t developing Atom chips for smartphones, tablets, or low-power laptops anymore. But it looks like the Atom brand will live on.

At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco next week, the company will unveil some details about next-gen Atom chips based on the new Apollo Lake platform.

There aren’t many details available at this point, but as PC World notes, the technical session schedule includes a few events related to the unannounced, next-gen Atom products.

Continue reading Intel Atom isn’t dead: Next-gen chips aimed at embedded and IoT systems at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (8-11-2016)

Deals of the Day (8-11-2016)

The Dell XPS 12 is a 2-in-1 tablet with a 12.5 inch display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and a starting price of $1000… if you buy one from Dell.

But Adorama is selling a few models for much lower prices.

You can pick up a model with 8GB of RAM, 128GB of storage and a 1920 x 1080 pixel display for $620. Or pay $845 for a model with a 4K screen and 256GB of storage.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-11-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (8-11-2016)

The Dell XPS 12 is a 2-in-1 tablet with a 12.5 inch display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and a starting price of $1000… if you buy one from Dell.

But Adorama is selling a few models for much lower prices.

You can pick up a model with 8GB of RAM, 128GB of storage and a 1920 x 1080 pixel display for $620. Or pay $845 for a model with a 4K screen and 256GB of storage.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-11-2016) at Liliputing.