Asus smartphone with octa-core CPU, 4,850 mAh battery on the way

Asus smartphone with octa-core CPU, 4,850 mAh battery on the way

Asus may have a new Zenfone on the way. An unannounced 5.2 inch Asus smartphone showed up at the TENAA website recently. That’s China’s equivalent of the FCC… except that Chinese wireless regulators have a habit of publishing more photos and specs of phones.

The most noteworthy thing about this new phone is probably the massive battery: it packs a 4,850 mAh battery, which is nearly twice the size of the batteries found in some other phones with similar-sized displays.

Continue reading Asus smartphone with octa-core CPU, 4,850 mAh battery on the way at Liliputing.

Asus smartphone with octa-core CPU, 4,850 mAh battery on the way

Asus may have a new Zenfone on the way. An unannounced 5.2 inch Asus smartphone showed up at the TENAA website recently. That’s China’s equivalent of the FCC… except that Chinese wireless regulators have a habit of publishing more photos and specs of phones.

The most noteworthy thing about this new phone is probably the massive battery: it packs a 4,850 mAh battery, which is nearly twice the size of the batteries found in some other phones with similar-sized displays.

Continue reading Asus smartphone with octa-core CPU, 4,850 mAh battery on the way at Liliputing.

Some perspective on our place in the Universe from the high Chilean desert

Stunning panoramas from the European Southern Observatory provide a sense of place.

ESO

The best observatory in the world is arguably divided among three sites in northern Chile—La Silla, Paranal, and Chajnantor. Each location in the high, arid Atacama desert offers excellent dark and clear skies for the European Southern Observatory's suite of telescopes. At 2,635 meters in elevation Paranal boasts the best instruments, with four 8.2-meter telescopes combining to make up the Very Large Telescope.

Now more than 50 years old, the observatory has played a principal or significant role in a number of major astronomical landmarks, including the discovery of dark energy, finding Proxima b around Proxima Centauri, the observation of stars orbiting the Milky Way Galaxy, and much more.

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New KickassTorrents Team Condemns Jailing of Music Pirate

The people behind the resurrected KickassTorrents have condemned the sentence handed to one of the site’s former music releasers. After uploading Top40 songs to the old KAT, Wayne Evans was sent to prison for 12 months, something the team describes as “offensive in the extreme.”

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

katcommFollowing a joint investigation with licensing outfit PRS for Music, last year officers from the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU) and Merseyside police raided an address in Everton, Liverpool.

They arrested Wayne Evans, a local DJ who was involved in the online distribution of digital music. Known online as OldSkoolScouse, Evans uploaded packs of the UK’s current Top 40 Singles to torrent sites each week. They included at least 200 uploaded to KickassTorrents.

After pleading guilty during an earlier hearing, this month Evans was sentenced for copyright infringement and fraud. The 39-year-old, who had no previous convictions, was jailed for a year.

Both police and rightsholders celebrated the conviction, describing the 12 months sentence as a deterrent to others considering music piracy. But of course, among file-sharers the long-term detention of Evans was less well received and has been widely criticized online.

Now, the team behind the resurrected KickassTorrents have added their dissenting voices, slamming the sentence as a waste of time and money.

“We find the 12-month sentence of OldSkoolScouse which the judge ruled a ‘deterrent to others’ offensive in the extreme and an irresponsible waste of taxpayer resources,” the team told TF in a statement.

“One questions the motivations of the agencies and resources assigned in regards to copyright infringements whilst actual criminals walk free. Is this what our legal systems have now become?”

While Evans undoubtedly knew that what he was doing was illegal on some level, it’s unlikely he’d have expected a knock on the door from the UK’s most elite anti-piracy unit followed by a major conviction for fraud. Undoubtedly a show of force and a stern warning would’ve ensured no more uploads, but clearly the police and PRS were out to prove a point.

But herein lies the problem. Whether copyright holders like it or not, the general public simply does not see infringement as a serious crime, so when hefty sentences like this are handed out, the numbers are rarely seen to add up.

For instance, take the woman who smashed a glass into another woman’s head in an unprovoked nightclub attack in May. This November, she also received a 12-month sentence.

Another man, who regularly tortured his girlfriend and subjected her to waterboarding sessions, got the same sentence in August.

Worse still, over the past 15 years many convicted terrorists in the UK have been released after serving just 12 months in prison.

It’s no surprise at all that the public has difficulty equating the seriousness of file-sharing to these violent and obnoxious crimes and it’s hard to imagine a time when that will change. However, the authorities have clearly drawn a line in the sand, so if they wanted a deterrent, then they definitely have one here.

Finally, the KickassTeam call for solidarity and wish Evans all the best for the future.

“We urge OldSkoolScouse to appeal the case and allow justice to prevail. Now is the time for the community to show its full support and put an end to corporate greed, bullying, ransom and censorship.

“We wish OldSkoolScouse a positive outcome and know that there are millions of people globally who support you,” they conclude.

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

Deutsche Bahn: WLAN im ICE wird kostenlos

Klassenloses Surfen: Ab dem 1. Januar 2017 können auch ICE-Fahrgäste in der zweiten Klasse kostenlos das WLAN nutzen. Außerdem will die Deutsche Bahn Filme kostenlos anbieten. (Deutsche Bahn, WLAN)

Klassenloses Surfen: Ab dem 1. Januar 2017 können auch ICE-Fahrgäste in der zweiten Klasse kostenlos das WLAN nutzen. Außerdem will die Deutsche Bahn Filme kostenlos anbieten. (Deutsche Bahn, WLAN)

Digitale Agenda: Verkehrsminister Dobrindt fordert Digitalministerium

Bündelung der digitalen Kompetenz statt Aufteilung auf mehrere Ministerien: Verkehrsminister Alexander Dobrindt fordert ein Ministerium, das sich um das Digitale kümmert. (Politik/Recht, Internet)

Bündelung der digitalen Kompetenz statt Aufteilung auf mehrere Ministerien: Verkehrsminister Alexander Dobrindt fordert ein Ministerium, das sich um das Digitale kümmert. (Politik/Recht, Internet)

Spielejahr 2016: Der Sommer der Sammelmonster

Call of Duty war 2016 besser als in den Jahren davor, Uncharted 4 ebenso klasse wie Civilization. Die ganz großen Bestseller waren neben Pokémon Go aber eine kleine Handvoll anderer Titel – die vorher kaum jemand auf der Agenda hatte. (Games, Steam)

Call of Duty war 2016 besser als in den Jahren davor, Uncharted 4 ebenso klasse wie Civilization. Die ganz großen Bestseller waren neben Pokémon Go aber eine kleine Handvoll anderer Titel - die vorher kaum jemand auf der Agenda hatte. (Games, Steam)

Solving Piracy Puzzle Part of Spotify’s DNA, Says Company’s Top Lawyer

Providing a legal alternative top piracy has been Spotify’s goal all along, according to the company’s General Counsel Horacio Gutierrez.In an interview with the Journal on Sports and Entertainment Law, Gutierrez confirmed what many had known all …



Providing a legal alternative top piracy has been Spotify's goal all along, according to the company's General Counsel Horacio Gutierrez.

In an interview with the Journal on Sports and Entertainment Law, Gutierrez confirmed what many had known all along, that Spotify based their core business model on attracting and monetizing pirates.

"One of the things that inspired the creation of Spotify and is part of the DNA of the company from the day it launched (and remember the service was launched for the first time around 8 years ago) was addressing one of the biggest questions that everyone in the music industry had at the time - how would one tackle and combat online piracy in music?" Gutierrez says.

"Spotify was determined from the very beginning to provide a fully licensed, legal alternative for online music consumption that people would prefer over piracy."

Spotify's freemium model has been a hit with pirates, and it has helped to reduce the piracy rate in some regions by as much as 80 percent. However, not all are happy with Spotify.

Many in the music industry complain that Spotify's solution to piracy simply replaced one type of lost revenue with another, suggesting that Spotify simply does not pay enough to artists. Spotify has countered these criticism by pointing out that labels and artists would have received nothing from the previous alternative, piracy, and that Spotify should be compared more to other promotional platforms such as radio, as opposed to sell through platforms like CDs and digital downloads.

Spotify's Gutierrez also correctly points out that since Spotify's introduction, the music industry has reversed the trend of revenue losses, thanks to revenue from streaming music.

"If you look at what has happened since the launch of the Spotify service, we have been incredibly successful on that score. Figures coming out the music industry show that after 15 years of revenue losses in music industry, the music industry is once again growing thanks to music streaming," notes Gutierrez.

Gutierrez is also confident that more and more former pirates will start to pay for the premium version of Spotify, which removes ads and the limitations associated with the free account.

[via The Journal on Sports and Entertainment LawTorrentFreak]

White House fails to make case that Russian hackers tampered with election

US issued JAR billed itself as an indictment that would prove Russian involvement.

Enlarge

Talk about disappointments. The US government's much-anticipated analysis of Russian-sponsored hacking operations provides almost none of the promised evidence linking them to breaches that the Obama administration claims were orchestrated in an attempt to interfere with the 2016 presidential election.

The 13-page report, which was jointly published Thursday by the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, billed itself as an indictment of sorts that would finally lay out the intelligence community's case that Russian government operatives carried out hacks on the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and Clinton Campaign Chief John Podesta and leaked much of the resulting material. While security companies in the private sector have said for months the hacking campaign was the work of people working for the Russian government, anonymous people tied to the leaks have claimed they are lone wolves. Many independent security experts said there was little way to know the true origins of the attacks.

Sadly, the JAR, as the Joint Analysis Report is called, does little to end the debate. Instead of providing smoking guns that the Russian government was behind specific hacks, it largely restates previous private-sector claims without providing any support for their validity. Even worse, it provides an effective bait and switch by promising newly declassified intelligence into Russian hackers' "tradecraft and techniques" and instead delivering generic methods carried out by just about all state-sponsored hacking groups.

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Most popular Liliputing articles of 2016

Most popular Liliputing articles of 2016

As 2016 draws to a close, so do some of the more ambitious mobile tech projects of recent years. Cyanogen OS is dead. Pebble is dying a slow death and wearables aren’t necessarily the hot commodity some had hoped.

This was also the year that I launched the LPX podcast, featuring interviews with people like:

  • Jim Hall: founder of freeDOS
  • Brooke Binkowski: managing editor of Snopes
  • Michael Mrozek: developer of the DragonBox Pyra handheld computer

But as we get ready to greet 2017 with new chips, smartwatches, phones, tablets, notebooks, desktops, and more… let’s take a look back at some of the most popular topics we covered in 2016.

Continue reading Most popular Liliputing articles of 2016 at Liliputing.

Most popular Liliputing articles of 2016

As 2016 draws to a close, so do some of the more ambitious mobile tech projects of recent years. Cyanogen OS is dead. Pebble is dying a slow death and wearables aren’t necessarily the hot commodity some had hoped.

This was also the year that I launched the LPX podcast, featuring interviews with people like:

  • Jim Hall: founder of freeDOS
  • Brooke Binkowski: managing editor of Snopes
  • Michael Mrozek: developer of the DragonBox Pyra handheld computer

But as we get ready to greet 2017 with new chips, smartwatches, phones, tablets, notebooks, desktops, and more… let’s take a look back at some of the most popular topics we covered in 2016.

Continue reading Most popular Liliputing articles of 2016 at Liliputing.