Herbow – Window Herb Garden Concept

It’s quite similar with Original Breath window panel, Herbow also allow you to grow plants/herbs near the window. However, it’s not capable of providing purified air for the room beside as a rain shelter. The USP of this concept is the wide area for growing plants or herbs of your choices. Based on the image […]

It’s quite similar with Original Breath window panel, Herbow also allow you to grow plants/herbs near the window. However, it’s not capable of providing purified air for the room beside as a rain shelter. The USP of this concept is the wide area for growing plants or herbs of your choices. Based on the image […]

AllMyVideos.net to Shut Down, No Longer Profitable

Video-hosting service AllMyVideos.net has announced that it will shut down its website next weekend. The operator says that it’s no longer profitable to host videos due to a lack of revenue and encourages users to back up their files before it’s too late.

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

allmyvideosFounded five years ago, AllMyVideos.net has become a household name in the video-hosting world.

With millions of users per month it is the go-to site for many, but this is about to change as a message on the homepage warns.

“We are sorry to inform everyone that effective October 23, 2016 Allmyvideos.net will stop accepting new uploads and the site will close fully at the end of the month,” the site announced.

The announcement coincides with a submission from the Hollywood industry group MPAA to the U.S. Government, which listed AllMyVideos as one of the top pirates sites.

However, according to the operator of the site, prospective legal issues are not the reason why they’re pulling the plug. The site was forced to take this drastic step due to a lack of revenue.

“Honestly, the main reason why the site is closing is the fact that the video hosting business is not profitable any longer, not by any means. Over the years making the site break even has become a massive issue,” Bill from AllMyVideos tells us.

Like many other sites that are often associated with piracy, it’s hard to get decent paying ads that are not peddling malware. In addition, payment providers often refuse to work with these type of sites, while overall subscriptions revenues are dropping.

“It’s very difficult to get ads that will cover the bandwidth. And AllMyVideos sold maybe five premium subscriptions a week over the last few months, for a total of around $200,” Bill says.

The lack of revenue runs directly counter to a report that was published by the Hollywood-backed Digital Citizens Alliance (DCA) two years ago. This report claimed that these hosting services are highly profitable with huge profit margins.

For example, DCA’s report estimated the site to have a yearly profit of $997,587, with a very healthy profit ratio of close to 85%.

Cyberlocker revenues, estimated by DCA

dcaestimate

AllmMyVideos says that these figures don’t make any sense, which is evidenced by the fact that they are not shutting down due to a lack of profits.

“Honestly, I don’t know how the MPAA thinks people make money off hosting. The unreal $ values they come up with are insane. A profit margin of -20% is more like it,” Bill tells us.

The site is not the first to cite money issues as a reason to quit. Earlier this year other file-hosting services shut their doors for the same reason, and torrent site TorrentHound also cited financial problems as one of the main factors to throw in the towel.

In recent years, rights holders and industry groups have pushed hard to cut the money stream to pirate sites in any way they can, which appears to have had some effect.

DCA’s profit report, for example, was used to get payment processors to stop serving file-hosting services. Similarly, advertisers are also frequently warned not to do business with these and other “pirate” sites.

For AllMyVideos these reflections are moot. While they’ve enjoyed their ride, the team behind the site is ready to move on to new adventures.

“It’s been five years and it’s sad to see the site close. My team has met a lot of great people and wishes everyone the best of luck,” Bill concludes.

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

WhammyPhone prototype: Bend your smartphone to make music

WhammyPhone prototype: Bend your smartphone to make music

Researchers at Queen’s University’s Human Media Lab unveiled a flexible smartphone prototype earlier this year that didn’t just have a screen that could bend… it uses the bending motion as a form of input for doing things like flipping through eBook pages.

Now the Human Media Lab is going one step further with the introduction of a WhammyPhone concept. It’s a smartphone that lets you change musical tones by bending the display… just like you’d flex a whammy bar on a guitar.

Continue reading WhammyPhone prototype: Bend your smartphone to make music at Liliputing.

WhammyPhone prototype: Bend your smartphone to make music

Researchers at Queen’s University’s Human Media Lab unveiled a flexible smartphone prototype earlier this year that didn’t just have a screen that could bend… it uses the bending motion as a form of input for doing things like flipping through eBook pages.

Now the Human Media Lab is going one step further with the introduction of a WhammyPhone concept. It’s a smartphone that lets you change musical tones by bending the display… just like you’d flex a whammy bar on a guitar.

Continue reading WhammyPhone prototype: Bend your smartphone to make music at Liliputing.

Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 makes the no-fly list

US FAA and PHMSA are expected to make the announcement today.

Enlarge / The Galaxy Note 7 (left, recalled) and Galaxy S7 Edge (right, not recalled). (credit: Ron Amadeo)

The Galaxy Note 7's short, explosive life was cut short earlier this week, when Samsung issued a second recall for all devices and permanently shut down production.

But plenty of the phones are still out there in the wild, and Samsung and government regulators are trying to limit the potential risks associated with using the phone. To that end, the United Federal Aviation Administration and the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration are expected to completely ban all Galaxy Note 7s from all US flights starting today, according to a report in Bloomberg

Update: It's official. The ban will be implemented October 15 at noon Eastern time. Passengers who attempt to bring Galaxy Note 7s onto planes may have them confiscated and may be fined, and anyone who is caught with the phone in their checked baggage "may be subject to criminal prosecution in addition to fines."

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Sony to bring a half dozen PlayStation games to mobile next year

Sony to bring a half dozen PlayStation games to mobile next year

Nintendo isn’t the only game console company getting into the mobile space. Earlier this year Sony announced it was forming a new group called ForwardWorks aimed at bringing PlayStation content to mobile devices.

Now the Wall Street Journal reports that Sony’s PlayStation division “plans to release five or six smartphone games” by March, 2018.

There’s no word on which games will be first, whether they’ll be ports of existing PlayStation titles or brand new games, or what kind of prices Sony will charge for the games.

Continue reading Sony to bring a half dozen PlayStation games to mobile next year at Liliputing.

Sony to bring a half dozen PlayStation games to mobile next year

Nintendo isn’t the only game console company getting into the mobile space. Earlier this year Sony announced it was forming a new group called ForwardWorks aimed at bringing PlayStation content to mobile devices.

Now the Wall Street Journal reports that Sony’s PlayStation division “plans to release five or six smartphone games” by March, 2018.

There’s no word on which games will be first, whether they’ll be ports of existing PlayStation titles or brand new games, or what kind of prices Sony will charge for the games.

Continue reading Sony to bring a half dozen PlayStation games to mobile next year at Liliputing.

A sense of scale: the best microscopy of 2016

Amazing images from this year’s Nikon Small World Competition.

This spectacular bit of hardware is the foot of a diving beetle, specialized to propel it through the water. (credit: Igor Siwanowicz)

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek was born while Galileo was still alive, and he ended up developing a similar skill in lens making to that of Galileo. Galileo turned his results to the heavens and began a revolution in how we understand our place in the Universe. van Leeuwenhoek looked inward and became the first to recognize that our own world is teeming with life that's too small to see without a microscope.

The revolution he spawned is still changing our understanding about where we fit in right here on Earth.

Microscopy remains a mixture of science and art. All sorts of biology and chemistry are involved in sample preparation, and choosing the optics to bring out what you need to see can involve an understanding of physics. But to turn the options you have into a thing of beauty requires a sense of aesthetics. The people behind the gallery below, who have submitted their images to the Nikon Small World microscopy competition, clearly have that.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Salesforce CEO has “walked away” from deal with beleaguered Twitter

Twitter has lost nearly $2 billion in five years.

(credit: Johan Larsson)

In the wake of Salesforce’s CEO publicly saying Friday that his company would not buy Twitter, the popular social network’s stock price has dropped more than six percent as of this writing.

“In this case we’ve walked away. It wasn’t the right fit for us,” Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff told the Financial Times.

For months, rumors have swirled that numerous tech giants, ranging from Apple to Google, would snap up the San Francisco startup, which has lost nearly $2 billion from 2011 through 2015.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Beware of all-powerful DDoS malware infecting cellular gateways, feds warn

Sierra Wireless confirms that devices it manufactures were infected by Mirai.

Enlarge / One of the Sierra Wireless devices that can be infected by Mirai. (credit: Sierra Wireless)

This week, the US government-backed ICS-CERT warned that the troubling new generation of computer attacks is powered by malware that can infect cellular modems used to connect automotive and industrial equipment to the Internet.

An advisory published Wednesday listed five industrial control devices manufactured by Sierra Wireless that are vulnerable to malware known as Mirai when default passwords that ship with the equipment aren't changed on the gateways. The advisory referenced a separate notice from Sierra Wireless (PDF) that reported infections have succeeded against actual devices by connecting to the ACEmanager, a graphical interface used to remotely administer and configure them.

The Sierra Wireless post stated:

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Studio Ghibli’s first TV series getting English dub courtesy of Amazon

Gillian Anderson to narrate official 26-episode dub of Ronja the Robber’s Daughter.

Enlarge / Expect Ronja to rob... your heart. (credit: Studio Ghibli)

Famed animation studio Studio Ghibli launched its first TV series, Ronja the Robber's Daughter, in 2014, and fans' wait for an official Western version is now coming to an end, thanks to Amazon.

After the series' 26-episode run wrapped, the studio began shopping an English-language version to various international channels and distributors. That shopping apparently concluded this week, as Amazon confirmed via a Friday press release that Ronja's dub will debut exclusively on Amazon Video in the US, UK, Germany, Austria, and Japan. The news didn't include a release date, but it did confirm one familiar voice joining the Ronja cast: Gillian Anderson, whose voice previously appeared in famed Ghibli film Princess Mononoke.

As the studio's first release to employ 3D-rendered characters, Ronja the Robber's Daughter represents a huge shift for Ghibli's production process. This style will look familiar to anybody who has seen the mix of 2D and 3D animation and heaping dollops of cel-shading from the animation studio's cut scenes in the Ni No Kuni JRPG series of video games. (That game's sequel has yet to launch in either Japan or the West.)

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

TFW an obituary you wrote five years ago goes viral

In 2011, I wrote an obituary for Dennis Ritchie. This week, the Internet thought it was news.

(credit: Photograph by Kevin Marks)

This week, as I was sitting in my father's hospital room, I glanced at my phone and saw something strange going on with my Twitter notifications. A story I wrote five years ago was suddenly exploding across social media. It was my tribute to Dennis Ritchie, the creator of the C programming language and co-creator of Unix, republished from Ars by Wired on October 12, 2011:

I wasn't sure what had set this off. But the deluge began to build even more after this tweet from Om Malik:

Malik later apologized for posting a five-year-old story—one that was perhaps overshadowed at the time by the attention paid to the passing of Steve Jobs a week earlier. But he clearly wasn't the only one who thought the story was fresh news, as my Twitter and Facebook timelines showed.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments