Study: Lumosity boosts brain function as much as normal video games—by 0%

But taking cognitive tests repeatedly makes you better at taking cognitive tests.

Enlarge (credit: Lumosity)

Brain training may do little more than train healthy brains to be good at brain training, yet another study suggests.

In the new controlled, randomized trial involving 128 healthy young adults, researchers found that playing Lumosity brain-training games for 30-minute sessions, five times a week for 10 weeks resulted in participants getting better at playing the games. But researchers saw no changes in participants’ neural activity and no improvements in their cognitive performance beyond those seen in controls. The same went for participants who played video games not designed with cognitive benefits in mind.

The research, led by University of Pennsylvania psychologist Joseph Kable, is the latest ding to the billion-dollar industry that suggests its games can beef up mental abilities and ward off the cognitive declines of old age—among other things. Last year, Lumosity paid $2 million to the Federal Trade Commission to settle allegations that it baited customers with bogus claims that its games could cure and prevent mental declines and diseases, such as Alzheimer’s. No data suggest that the games can do that. And studies and analyses into the less grand claims of mental improvements have also been mixed: many found that benefits may only be seen in some users; those benefits may not extend beyond placebo effects, and they may not translate into real-world improvements in brain function.

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Amazon Prime Day deals on mobile tech (7-11-2017)

Amazon Prime Day deals on mobile tech (7-11-2017)

Amazon Prime Day kicks off tonight at 9:00PM Eastern and runs through midnight on July 11th. If you have an Alexa-powered device you can also get started a bit early: the first Prime Day Alexa deals go live at 7:00PM. I’ve rounded up some of the best deals below. Amazon’s third-annual made-up sales holiday includes […]

Amazon Prime Day deals on mobile tech (7-11-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Amazon Prime Day deals on mobile tech (7-11-2017)

Amazon Prime Day kicks off tonight at 9:00PM Eastern and runs through midnight on July 11th. If you have an Alexa-powered device you can also get started a bit early: the first Prime Day Alexa deals go live at 7:00PM. I’ve rounded up some of the best deals below. Amazon’s third-annual made-up sales holiday includes […]

Amazon Prime Day deals on mobile tech (7-11-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age review: Reinforced for reexamination

FFXII remake improves the original’s weirdness while preserving its best qualities.

Enlarge / Hunts for named monsters are one of the only reliable ways to make gold. (credit: Square Enix)

Final Fantasy XII has always been a bit of an oddball within the long-running series. Its real-time combat smacks of an MMO, like FFXI and FFXIV, but it's still a single-player adventure centered around a core party of characters. Throw in a Gambit system that lets players "program" party behavior and a story more about political intrigue than gods or monsters, and XII just might be the weirdest main game in its franchise—at least compared to what passes for normal in Final Fantasy.

None of this changes the fact that FFXII is also a damn good JRPG. That fact might have been overshadowed by its eccentricities since the PlayStation 2 era. So it's nice that publisher Square Enix is releasing a superior version of the game (itself based on a superior version that never came out in North America) in the form of Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age.

International at last

If The Zodiac Age sounds familiar, it's because Square also released Final Fantasy XII International Zodiac Job System in 2007 in Japan (and only Japan; so much "for International"). That's the version this latest remake is based on. It allows Western PlayStation 4 owners to finally enjoy Zodiac's many improvements over the baseline XII experience and a grip of new goodies that makes the game even more enjoyable.

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Mary Lou Jepsen moves on from display tech to “telepathy”

Mary Lou Jepsen moves on from display tech to “telepathy”

Within the next 10 years, you might be able to put on a hat that can read your thoughts and turn them into commands or send them to others. At least that’s what Openwater founder Mary Lou Jepsen tells CNBC. She and her team are working on technology that does the same thing as a […]

Mary Lou Jepsen moves on from display tech to “telepathy” is a post from: Liliputing

Mary Lou Jepsen moves on from display tech to “telepathy”

Within the next 10 years, you might be able to put on a hat that can read your thoughts and turn them into commands or send them to others. At least that’s what Openwater founder Mary Lou Jepsen tells CNBC. She and her team are working on technology that does the same thing as a […]

Mary Lou Jepsen moves on from display tech to “telepathy” is a post from: Liliputing

Wait, what? Trump proposed a joint “cyber security unit” with Russia

“It’s not the dumbest idea I have ever heard, but it’s pretty close.”

Enlarge (credit: Mikhail Pochuyev/via Getty Images)

President Donald Trump proposed creating a so-called "cyber security unit" with Russia, then he decided against it after the idea was shot down by pretty much anybody who got word of it, including congressional members of his own GOP party. Trump, after meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, said Sunday that they discussed building "an impenetrable Cyber Security unit" to address issues such as election meddling.

"It's not the dumbest idea I have ever heard, but it's pretty close," Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican of South Carolina, said of the plan. Senate Republican Marco Rubio of Florida tweeted that "partnering with Putin on a 'Cyber Security Unit' is akin to partnering with [Syrian President Bashar] Assad on a 'Chemical Weapons Unit."'

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that Trump and the Russian president decided at a meeting during a Group of 20 nations summit in Hamburg, Germany, to embark on a joint "cyber unit to make sure that there was absolutely no interference whatsoever, that they would work on cyber security together."

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Trump begins to dismantle Obama’s “startup visa” program

Obama-era rule would grant immigration “parole” for those with $250,000 in capital.

Enlarge / US Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly. (credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The Trump administration has delayed the implementation of the "International Entrepreneur Rule," an Obama-era policy that would have allowed more foreigners to start businesses in the US. The administration intends to overturn the rule, which would have gone into effect next week.

Official notice of the delay, which pushes out the effective date of the regulation until March 2018, will be published tomorrow in the Federal Register. The Department of Homeland Security intends to rescind the rule but is taking public comment during a review period.

The International Entrepreneur Rule is a kind of stunted version of the "startup visa" that tech companies have long favored. It would have allowed foreign entrepreneurs an "initial parole stay" of 30 months in the US, which could have been extended by another 30 months. Only entrepreneurs who had lined up at least $250,000 of investment capital from established, reputable investors would have been allowed to use the rule.

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Tumbleweed at Vuze as Torrent Client Development Grinds to a Halt

Since its launch in 2003, Vuze has been one of the most visible clients in the BitTorrent scene, but there is concern among users that something might now be amiss. After years of constant and swift development, Vuze development ground to a halt in April, breaking the steadfast monthly update pattern. No one from the team has yet offered any explanation.

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

Back in the summer of 2003 when torrenting was still in its infancy, a new torrent client hit the web promising big things.

Taking the Latin name of the blue poison dart frog and deploying a logo depicting its image, the Azureus client aimed to carve out a niche in what would become a market of several hundred million users.

Written in Java and available on Windows, Linux, OSX, and Android, Azureus (latterly ‘Vuze’) always managed to divide the community. Heralded by many as a feature-rich powerhouse that left no stone unturned, others saw the client as bloated when compared to the more streamlined uTorrent.

All that being said, Vuze knew its place in the market and on the bells-and-whistles front, it always delivered. Its features included swarm-merging, built-in search, DVD-burning capabilities, and device integration. It felt like Vuze was always offering something new.

Indeed, for the past several years and like clockwork, every month new additions and fixes have been deployed to Vuze. Since at least 2012 and up to early 2017, not a single month passed without Vuze being tuned up or improved in some manner via beta or full versions. Now, however, all of that seems to have ground to a halt.

The last full release of Vuze (v5.7.5.0) containing plenty of tweaks and fixes was released on February 28 this year. It followed the previous full release by roughly three months, a pattern its developers have kept up for some time with earlier versions. As expected, the Vuze 5.7.5.1 beta versions followed but on April 10, everything stopped.

It’s now three whole months since Vuze the last beta release, which may not sound like a long time unless one considers the history. Vuze has been actively developed for 14 years and its developers have posted communications on their devblog archives every single month, at least as far back as July 2012. Since then – nothing.

Back in May, a user on Vuze forums noted that none of Vuze’s featured content (such as TED Talks) could be downloaded, while another reported that the client’s anti-virus definitions weren’t updating. Given past scheduling, a new version of the client should have been released about a month ago. Nothing appeared.

To illustrate, this is a screenshot of the Vuze source code repository, which shows the number of code changes committed since 2012. The drastic drop-off in April 2017 (12 commits) versus dozens to even hundreds in preceding months is punctuated by zero commits for the past three months.

Of course, even avid developers have offline lives, and it’s certainly possible that an unusual set of outside circumstances have conspired to give the impression that development has stopped. However, posting a note to the Vuze blog or Vuze forum shouldn’t be too difficult, so people are naturally worried about the future.

TorrentFreak has reached out to the respected developer identified by Vuze forum users as the most likely to respond to questions. At the time of publication, we had received no response.

As mentioned earlier, torrent users have a love/hate relationship with Vuze and Azureus but there is no mistaking this clients’ massive contribution to the torrent landscape. Millions will be hoping that the current radio silence is nothing sinister but until that confirmation is received, the concerns will continue.

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

Review: HP’s new Spectre x2 is a crazy value compared to the Surface Pro

Spend hundreds less, get more stuff and comparable performance.

Readers, meet HP's new Spectre x2 convertible. (video link)


Convertibles and detachables are ideal for people who need versatility but only want one device. Microsoft's Surface Pro ran on that idea and became a convenient multi-use product for many. However, the newest update to the Surface Pro left a lot to be desired, and other OEMs are jumping on this opportunity to out-Surface the Surface Pro.

HP's updated Spectre x2 fine-tunes the original device's design while giving the internals a power boost from Core M to Core i5/i7 for better productivity. The Spectre x2 is also more affordable than the Surface Pro and includes its keyboard and pen in the box rather than forcing customers to pay extra for them. HP's Spectre x2 challenges the value of the Surface Pro while also trying to prove to users that you can make a two-in-one your main PC without much compromise.

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Judge: Uber can depose Alphabet CEO Larry Page for Waymo lawsuit

Also, Uber’s attempt to get documents from competitor Lyft gets squashed.

Enlarge / Larry Page at an event in San Francisco in 2015. (credit: Photo by Kimberly White/Getty Images for Fortune)

A US magistrate judge has ruled (PDF) that Uber lawyers can depose Alphabet CEO Larry Page, and perhaps Alphabet Chief Legal Officer David Drummond, in regard to Waymo's lawsuit alleging theft of trade secrets.

Waymo, Google's self-driving car spinoff, sued Uber earlier this year, claiming that ex-Uber engineer Anthony Levandowski stole thousands of files while employed at Google. Uber has denied that any trade secrets ever made their way to Uber. Friday's ruling on the depositions is part of ongoing discovery in the case, which is scheduled for an October trial.

"Larry Page has first-hand non-repetitive knowledge of relevant facts," wrote US Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley. "Further, less intrusive means, such as interrogatories, are not sufficient."

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Over many objections, W3C approves DRM for HTML5

Contentious feature is added, without mandate to protect security researchers.

(credit: Bart Maguire)

A system for providing DRM protection to Web-based content is now an official recommendation from W3C.

In 2013, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the industry body that oversees the development of Web standards, took the controversial decision to develop a system for integrating DRM into browsers. The Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) would offer a way for content producers to encrypt and protect audio and video content from within their plugin-free HTML-and-JavaScript applications.

EME is not itself a DRM system. Rather, it is a specification that allows JavaScript applications to interact with DRM modules to handle things like encryption keys and decrypting the protected data. Microsoft, Google, and Adobe all have DRM modules that comply with the spec.

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