
Biostar unveils the Racing P1 mini PC
Biostar is probably best known for making motherboards and graphics cards (among folks that know the name at all). But the company also offers computer accessories and some barebones PCs.
Now Biostar is introducing pint-sized PC called the Biostar Racing P1. It’s a full-fledged computer in a case the size of a (thick) smartphone.
According to Lowyat, the Racing P1 should to hit the market in the third quarter of 2016 for under $200.
Continue reading Biostar unveils the Racing P1 mini PC at Liliputing.

Biostar is probably best known for making motherboards and graphics cards (among folks that know the name at all). But the company also offers computer accessories and some barebones PCs.
Now Biostar is introducing pint-sized PC called the Biostar Racing P1. It’s a full-fledged computer in a case the size of a (thick) smartphone.
According to Lowyat, the Racing P1 should to hit the market in the third quarter of 2016 for under $200.
Continue reading Biostar unveils the Racing P1 mini PC at Liliputing.
Warp Shift im Test: Zauberhaftes Kistenschieben
Kisten verschieben, zum Ausgang gelangen – klingt wie ein normales Rätselspiel. Die aus Hamburg stammenden Entwickler von Warp Shift haben aber viel Zeit in das Design der Welt und der Rätsel gesteckt – und so ein Mobilegame für iOS erschaffen, das auch Freunden von Monument Valley gefallen dürfte. (Spieletest, Games)

How to save your Android phone from bad skins and crappy OEM software
Crappy interface got you down? No problem! We can whip your phone into shape.

Android skins seem to get more annoying every year. The skins themselves aren't getting worse, necessarily, but more and more third-party apps have adopted Google's unified Material Design aesthetic. Google has been pushing Material Design since 2014—it publishes comprehensive design guidelines, provides frameworks so developers can easily get consistent designs up and running, and continually has conferences and publishes videos explaining and promoting this design language. Google recently announced there were over 1 million Material apps in the Play Store.
OEMs tend to completely ignore Material Design, which leaves a user of a skinned phone with a bunch of Material Google apps, an increasing number of Material third-party apps, and a weird OEM-designed slate of core apps that clash with everything else. If you care about what the software you use looks like, it sucks.
If you bought a skinned Android phone and are looking for a more unified look, there are some things you can do to fix it, however. Android remains very customizable, and with a combination of apps, settings, and lots of crapware removal, it's possible to get something that at least looks like the Google-designed Android software.
How World War II scientists invented a data-driven approach to fighting fascism
The F-scale personality test measured authoritarianism in US citizens.

Nazi soldiers invade Warsaw.
If you've ever taken a personality test, it was probably in a lifestyle magazine ("What kind of adventurer are you? Take this quiz to find out!") or maybe at the behest of a friend who's a Meyers-Briggs believer. But these fluffy diversions have a serious, often dark history. In fact, one of the earliest personality tests was developed during World War II to determine who might become an authoritarian and join the Nazi movement.
In 1943, three psychology professors at the University of California at Berkeley were struggling to understand the most horrific European genocide in a generation. As the war raged overseas, Daniel Levinson, Nevitt Sanford, and Else Frenkel-Brunswik decided to use the greatest power at their disposal—scientific rationality—to stop fascism from ever rising again. They did it by inventing a personality test eventually named the F-scale, which they believed could identify potential authoritarians. This wasn't some plot to weed out bad guys. The researchers wanted to understand why some people are seduced by political figures like Adolf Hitler, and they had a very idealistic plan to improve education so that young people would become more skeptical of Hitler's us-or-them politics.
The rise of personality testing
As they cooked up a research plan, the Berkeley group borrowed ideas from a somewhat checkered tradition in psychology that held that personalities could be broken down into discrete character traits. In the late nineteenth century, pseudoscientists like Francis Galton, best known for popularizing the idea of eugenics, believed that human "character" could be measured the same way "the temper of a dog can be tested." This idea gained traction, and the first personality tests were developed by the US Army during World War I so millions of soldiers could be tested for vulnerability to "shell shock," an early term for post-traumatic stress.
Sicherheitslücke: Lenovo rät zur Deinstallation vorinstallierter Anwendung
Nach Abspaltung: Owncloud-USA schließt nach Nextcloud-Gründung
Luftfahrt: Drohnen, Schwerelosigkeit und ein Flieger aus dem 3D-Drucker
Zivil und militärisch, bemannt und unbemannt: Auf der Ila in Berlin zeigt die Luft- und Raumfahrtbranche derzeit ihre Produkte. Der größte Aussteller ist ein Jubilar. (Luftfahrt, 3D-Drucker)

Nahverkehr: Vergesst den Fahrplan!
Gear IconX: Samsung präsentiert drahtlose Kopfhörer mit Pulsmesser
Für aktive Nutzer hat Samsung das drahtlose Kopfhörersystem Gear IconX vorgestellt: Die zwei per Bluetooth gekoppelten Ohrstecker können Musik vom Smartphone oder internen Speicher abspielen, während sie den Nutzer per Sprachausgabe beim Trainieren unterstützen. (Samsung, Audio/Video)
