2016 im Video: Monster, Feuer, Sensationen

Angreifer sind dieses Jahr in neue Sphären vorgedrungen: ins Internet of Sicherheitslücken. Außerdem: Samsung lässt Funken sprühen und die Monsterjäger sind unterwegs. Unsere Jahreshighlights im Video-Rückblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Angreifer sind dieses Jahr in neue Sphären vorgedrungen: ins Internet of Sicherheitslücken. Außerdem: Samsung lässt Funken sprühen und die Monsterjäger sind unterwegs. Unsere Jahreshighlights im Video-Rückblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Xenon LED Light USB Recharging Cable With Animated Power Flow!

If you are one of those who love to stay near the outlet waiting for your iPhone or iPad to be recharged, you might want to purchase this cool illuminated charging cable for your iOS devices. This is the Xenon LED illuminated USB charging cable, which know as the world’s first cable that show you […]

If you are one of those who love to stay near the outlet waiting for your iPhone or iPad to be recharged, you might want to purchase this cool illuminated charging cable for your iOS devices. This is the Xenon LED illuminated USB charging cable, which know as the world’s first cable that show you […]

Deals of the Day (12-23-2016)

Deals of the Day (12-23-2016)

Your New Year’s resolution is to exercise more… or at least to spend less time sitting. Great. But how are you going to make sure you actually follow through?

While researchers have found that Fitbit-style activity trackers might not actually help most people lose weight, they can certainly help you set a goal and point out when you’re not meeting it. If you’re motivated enough, they can definitely come in handy… and these days you don’t have to spend an arm and a leg on one.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (12-23-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (12-23-2016)

Your New Year’s resolution is to exercise more… or at least to spend less time sitting. Great. But how are you going to make sure you actually follow through?

While researchers have found that Fitbit-style activity trackers might not actually help most people lose weight, they can certainly help you set a goal and point out when you’re not meeting it. If you’re motivated enough, they can definitely come in handy… and these days you don’t have to spend an arm and a leg on one.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (12-23-2016) at Liliputing.

World’s first solar road opens in France: It’s ridiculously expensive

Kilometer-long road cost $5.2 million to build.

Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images

The world's first solar highway has been opened in France, in the not-very-sunny village of Tourouvre au Perche in Normandy. The roadway is just one kilometre (0.6mi) long, but that still works out at 2,800 square metres of photovoltaic cells—enough, hopefully, to power the village's street lights.

The road was built by Colas, a large Anglo-French construction company. Colas has apparently been working on its own solar road tech, called Wattway, for at least five years. Wattway has been tested in car parks, but this is the first time it has been used on an active road. There will now be a two-year test period, to see if Wattway can withstand the rigour of being pounded by thousands of cars and trucks per day, and whether it can actually provide a useful amount of electricity.

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Emdoor introduces convertible laptops with Remix OS, MediaTek MT8173

Emdoor introduces convertible laptops with Remix OS, MediaTek MT8173

Chinese companies haven’t started cranking out home-grown Chromebooks yet, but Emdoor’s new EM-T8513 and EM-T8516 may be the next best thing. These convertible notebooks have touchscreen displays, 360 degree hinges, the same processor used in the Acer Chromebook R 13, and a choice of Android 6.0 or Remix OS.

Remix OS is an Android-based operating system designed to look and act like a desktop OS, complete with a taskbar and multi-window support.

The EM-T8516 features an 11.6 inch, 1366 x 768 pixel IPS display, while the EM-T8513 has a 13.3 inch display, with 1366 x 768 pixel and 1920 x 1200 pixel display options.

Continue reading Emdoor introduces convertible laptops with Remix OS, MediaTek MT8173 at Liliputing.

Emdoor introduces convertible laptops with Remix OS, MediaTek MT8173

Chinese companies haven’t started cranking out home-grown Chromebooks yet, but Emdoor’s new EM-T8513 and EM-T8516 may be the next best thing. These convertible notebooks have touchscreen displays, 360 degree hinges, the same processor used in the Acer Chromebook R 13, and a choice of Android 6.0 or Remix OS.

Remix OS is an Android-based operating system designed to look and act like a desktop OS, complete with a taskbar and multi-window support.

The EM-T8516 features an 11.6 inch, 1366 x 768 pixel IPS display, while the EM-T8513 has a 13.3 inch display, with 1366 x 768 pixel and 1920 x 1200 pixel display options.

Continue reading Emdoor introduces convertible laptops with Remix OS, MediaTek MT8173 at Liliputing.

Low birth weight doesn’t seem to affect cognitive ability as much these days

A new cohort study shows the negative impact has reduced over time.

Enlarge (credit: flickr user: ceejayoz)

Evidence has shown that low birth weight is not a good thing for newborns. It’s associated with higher infant mortality and negative impacts on long-term outcomes, like lifelong income and cognitive ability.

But with improved medical practices, there’s a chance that this could be changing. A group of researchers in England, Germany, and Finland took a look at some demographic data and found that the link between birth weight and cognitive ability may have drastically reduced over time—although it hasn't disappeared entirely.

The difficulty with research into questions like these is that it often takes crazy amounts of time. If you want to find out how birth weight affects people in adulthood, you need to track them from the moment they’re born and for decades afterwards. A lot of our evidence about the effects of birth weight had come from studying groups of people who were born in the 1950s.

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Two roads to the same place: 2016 and the future of self-driving cars

2016 was something of a watershed for autonomous vehicles.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

The self-driving car reached something of a watershed in 2016. All of a sudden, it seems we're right on the threshold of autonomous vehicles transforming our transportation. I'd ask any engineer in 2015 when they thought we'd have full (i.e., SAE level 5) self-driving vehicles and the answer was always "ooh, that's another 20-30 years away." Fast forward a year, and all of a sudden that target has moved: BMW, Intel, Mobileye, Uber, Volvo, Ford, Delphi, and others have all set 2021 (or earlier in the case of Delphi) as the year by which steering wheels become optional.

The big breakthrough is down to the use of machine learning and deep neural networks, a field that has come along leaps and bounds in a relatively short space of time. For example, Nvidia will sell OEMs and tier one suppliers an open AI platform for automotive uses that leverages the company's GPUs and machine learning—tech that it ably demonstrated with its BB-8 technology demonstrator:

Nvidia's deep neural network allowed BB-8 to figure out how to drive on and off road in a short amount of time.

But along the way, the automakers and tech firms working on the problem have diverged into two groups: the ones who plan to get there in an incremental, stepwise fashion, and the others who plan to skip the intermediate step.

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I Know What You Downloaded on BitTorrent….

Most people know that BitTorrent is far from anonymous, but seeing all your recent downloads listed on a public website is still quite a shock. ‘I Know What You Download’ says it does exactly that, and also helps people to uncover the torrenting habits of friends with a nifty spy tool.

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

spySo what have you downloaded lately?

If you’re using BitTorrent without a VPN, proxy or seedbox, there’s a good chance that the rest of the world can see without asking.

Several companies have made it their job to monitor and report files that are shared through torrent sites. This is also how tens of thousands of people end up getting warnings in their mailboxes from copyright holders, or worse.

The public nature of people’s sharing habits was highlighted a few years ago by Youhavedownloaded.com, which has since been closed since. However, a similar service that cropped up recently is perhaps even more scary.

I Know What You Download‘ monitors torrent traffic around the clock and makes everything public. This means that you can see what information they store on the IP-address you currently have.

The site currently has information on 460,000 torrents in its database plus 70 million unique IP-addresses captured during the last month alone. This makes it much larger than its predecessor.

If checking out your ‘own’ downloads isn’t enough, the site also helps people to check what others have shared. Just enter any IP-address in the search box and you’re good to go.

Below, for example, we have a list of recent downloads shared by a random Google Fiber customer in Provo, Utah.

Random Google fiber user

ipgoofib

In addition, the site offers a nifty spy tool where you can see what your friends are downloading, without knowing their IP-address. If someone clicks on a link you send them, their alleged download history shows up immediately, without the IP-address being exposed.

TorrentFreak got in touch with the people behind the site to find out more about this monitoring and spying service. The company informed us that the site helps to showcase their abilities to the various outfits they work with, including copyright holders.

“We’ve set up the site for promotional purposes and as a demonstration of our capabilities,” Marketing director Andrey Rogov says.

“We are engaged in the distribution of information relating to torrent downloading activity to rightsholders, advertising platforms, law-enforcement and international organizations.”

The company offers API access to its data for interested parties and can also provide TCP dumps as extra proof that downloaded content is linked to a certain IP-address.

Of course, not everyone likes to see their information exposed on the site, especially if they haven’t downloaded content themselves. However, Rogov says that they generally don’t respond to removal requests from the public.

They do, in some cases, help individuals to remove their own content from public view if it’s being shared without permission. And they also assist organizations to understand how their network is used to pirate content.

“For example, we received a letter from a girl whose sexually explicit video had appeared on the Internet and had been widely spread over torrents sites. We helped her to remove public access to this content.

“We also respond to inquiries from some organizations. For example, Northeastern University asked us about torrent downloads from their IP-addresses,” Rogov explains.

For the public at large, however, the site should mainly be a reminder of how public BitTorrent is, and that everything you share is open for others to see.

Note: For those who have dynamic IP-addresses the service might also show content that someone else has downloaded. VPN users will also notice a long list of downloads that are not theirs.

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

Three years later, the console wars are more confusing than ever

We walk you through the changes upending the console market in 2016 and beyond.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Last year, after much previous hemming and hawing, we recommended that console gamers looking for a new console finally take the plunge and invest in a PlayStation 4. But the console market has changed in the 12 months since that recommendation, from the release of new generation-splitting hardware to the announcement of upcoming console hardware from both Microsoft and Nintendo.

Is it time to upgrade? Is it better to wait? Should you just stick to a retro-focused Raspberry Pi build instead? Below, we'll walk you through the current state of the console market, summarize what we know about the near future, and give you our best recommendation for where to put your console dollars.

Go Pro?

The PS4 Pro: It's bigger, it's pricier, and it's more powerful. But does it offer a true 4K experience? Video hosted by: Mark Walton. (video link)

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Xiaomi expands Mi Notebook family with LTE, Core i7 models

Xiaomi expands Mi Notebook family with LTE, Core i7 models

Xiaomi launched its first two laptops this summer, and like the company’s smartphones, the Mi Notebook Air laptops offer high-end specs at reasonably affordable prices.

Now Xiaomi is expanding the lineup with two new models, both featuring 4G LTE modems with support for the China Mobile wireless network.

The new models are a bit pricier than their WiFi-only predecessors. But the mobile broadband support isn’t the only thing that’s new.

Customers in China who buy one of the new laptops will get 4GB of mobile data per month from China Mobile for a year.

Continue reading Xiaomi expands Mi Notebook family with LTE, Core i7 models at Liliputing.

Xiaomi expands Mi Notebook family with LTE, Core i7 models

Xiaomi launched its first two laptops this summer, and like the company’s smartphones, the Mi Notebook Air laptops offer high-end specs at reasonably affordable prices.

Now Xiaomi is expanding the lineup with two new models, both featuring 4G LTE modems with support for the China Mobile wireless network.

The new models are a bit pricier than their WiFi-only predecessors. But the mobile broadband support isn’t the only thing that’s new.

Customers in China who buy one of the new laptops will get 4GB of mobile data per month from China Mobile for a year.

Continue reading Xiaomi expands Mi Notebook family with LTE, Core i7 models at Liliputing.