3,5-Zoll-Formfaktor: Seagate packt 60 TByte in eine SSD

Drei Platinen, ein 20-Kanal-Controller und über 1.000 Flash-Speicher-Chips: Seagates namenlose SSD hat es wortwörtlich in sich, denn die Machbarkeitsstudie liefert eine Kapazität von 60 TByte. (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

Drei Platinen, ein 20-Kanal-Controller und über 1.000 Flash-Speicher-Chips: Seagates namenlose SSD hat es wortwörtlich in sich, denn die Machbarkeitsstudie liefert eine Kapazität von 60 TByte. (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

ZTE offers official bootload unlock for Axon 7, Axon Pro smartphones

ZTE offers official bootload unlock for Axon 7, Axon Pro smartphones

The ZTE Axon line of smartphones offer high-end specs at upper mid-range prices: the new ZTE Axon 7 smartphone sells for $400, and you can pick up last year’s Axon Pro for $350.

But what if you want a bit more control over your phone than ZTE gives you out of the box? Now the company is offering an official method for unlocking the bootloader of those phones.

Unlocking the bootloader allows you to install custom firmware on the phone, replacing the software that comes with the Axon Pro or Axon 7.

Continue reading ZTE offers official bootload unlock for Axon 7, Axon Pro smartphones at Liliputing.

ZTE offers official bootload unlock for Axon 7, Axon Pro smartphones

The ZTE Axon line of smartphones offer high-end specs at upper mid-range prices: the new ZTE Axon 7 smartphone sells for $400, and you can pick up last year’s Axon Pro for $350.

But what if you want a bit more control over your phone than ZTE gives you out of the box? Now the company is offering an official method for unlocking the bootloader of those phones.

Unlocking the bootloader allows you to install custom firmware on the phone, replacing the software that comes with the Axon Pro or Axon 7.

Continue reading ZTE offers official bootload unlock for Axon 7, Axon Pro smartphones at Liliputing.

Social spiders may overshare when food gets scarce

Big colonies may collapse as big prey doesn’t provide enough to go around.

(credit: Avilés lab, UBC)

Spiders are notoriously antisocial, with a number of species known for making a meal out of recent mates. But there are some notable exceptions to that rule, called the social spiders. These can form groups of thousands of spiders, which cooperate to capture prey and build nests that can grow up to six meters long. Their group construction projects allow them to hunt prey that is much larger than any of them could capture individually.

For one species, Anelosimus eximius, however, these big nests appear to come with big risks. Some population surveys indicate that over 20 percent of nests end up going extinct each generation. And, since only mature females that have already mated can successfully start up new nests, this means that most of the spiders in the nest end up dying.

Now, researchers from the University of British Columbia have proposed an explanation for the population busts. It seems that the spiders are a bit too good at sharing, so that even weak and immature colony members are generally able to get something to eat. And, if food ever gets a bit short in the nest, that means that none of the spiders may get enough food to survive.

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Google: Inbox bekommt neue integrierte Benachrichtigungen

Googles E-Mail-Dienst Inbox erhält dank eines Updates neue Benachrichtigungsmöglichkeiten: Neuigkeiten zu Projekten bei Trello und Github erscheinen jetzt ebenso direkt im Postfach wie übersichtliche Zusammenfassungen von Google Alerts. (Inbox, Google)

Googles E-Mail-Dienst Inbox erhält dank eines Updates neue Benachrichtigungsmöglichkeiten: Neuigkeiten zu Projekten bei Trello und Github erscheinen jetzt ebenso direkt im Postfach wie übersichtliche Zusammenfassungen von Google Alerts. (Inbox, Google)

Copperhead OS: The startup that wants to solve Android’s woeful security

A multi-billion-dollar megacorp, Google, apparently needs help to secure its OS.

(credit: Guardian Project)

A startup on a shoestring budget is working to clean up the Android security mess, and has even demonstrated results where other "secure" Android phones have failed, raising questions about Google's willingness to address the widespread vulnerabilities that exist in the world's most popular mobile operating system.

"Copperhead is probably the most exciting thing happening in the world of Android security today," Chris Soghoian, principal technologist with the Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, tells Ars. "But the enigma with Copperhead is why do they even exist? Why is it that a company as large as Google and with as much money as Google and with such a respected security team—why is it there's anything left for Copperhead to do?"

Copperhead OS, a two-man team based in Toronto, ships a hardened version of Android that aims to integrate Grsecurity and PaX into their distribution. Their OS also includes numerous security enhancements, including a port of OpenBSD’s malloc implementation, compiler hardening, enhanced SELinux policies, and function pointer protection in libc. Unfortunately for security nuts, Copperhead currently only supports Nexus devices.

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Why Bioshock still has, and will always have, something to say

Nearly a decade later, Bioshock‘s ambitious objectivist themes are just as impactful.

"No Gods or Kings, Only Man." No higher authority than that of reason and rationality. A place where "the artist would not fear the censor, where the scientist would not be bound by petty morality, where the great would not be constrained by the small." As videogame intros go, few are as ambitious, or as forthright, as the protagonist's descent into the murky depths that envelop Bioshock's underwater city of Rapture. Fewer still are as effective nearly a decade on. Whether players realise it or not, those words—No Gods or Kings, Only Man—plastered above the golden visage of the game's big bad, Andrew Ryan (an interesting contradiction in itself), set a tone that's carried through the entirety of the game.

It's a mighty ambitious tone too. Objectivism—a controversial political philosophy created by the Russian-American philosopher Ayn Rand in the mid-20th century—is what stands between Bioshock having a hokey sci-fi plot, and one that gives it worth well beyond its now-waning technical offerings. What is objectivism? In short, it's the idea that society flourishes if each of its members focuses on their own self-interests over the interests of others, and without heavy-handed intervention from the state. In doing so, the theory runs that each person creates a personal situation where they feel accomplished and happy. Ultimately, society rules itself, "without Gods or Kings."

Objectivism in Bioshock is seemingly presented as a failure. When you arrive in Rapture, the city has already fallen into chaos and decay, the vast majority of its surviving inhabitants having been consumed by the gene-altering "plasmids" that instil both superpowers and insanity on its users. But the real message of the game goes deeper than this simple warning. Rapture's founder and ruler, Andrew Ryan, is Bioshock's less-than-subtle embodiment of Ayn Rand. Both Rand and Ryan grew up in the Soviet Union under strict communist governments, experiencing the kind of poverty and injustice that sometimes results from a system where individual liberty is side-lined in favour of helping the whole.

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QuantX: Micron zeigt beeindruckende 3D-Xpoint-Benchmarks

Was bei Intel Optane heißt, nennt Micron QuantX: Eine erste solche SSD mit 3D-Xpoint-Speicher schafft wahnwitzige 1,8 Millionen Input-/Output-Operationen pro Sekunde selbst bei kurzer Befehlskette und überflügelt die NAND-Flash-Speicher-Konkurrenz meilenweit. (3D Xpoint, Speichermedien)

Was bei Intel Optane heißt, nennt Micron QuantX: Eine erste solche SSD mit 3D-Xpoint-Speicher schafft wahnwitzige 1,8 Millionen Input-/Output-Operationen pro Sekunde selbst bei kurzer Befehlskette und überflügelt die NAND-Flash-Speicher-Konkurrenz meilenweit. (3D Xpoint, Speichermedien)

Chrome starts retiring Flash in favor of HTML5

Non-visible Flash content blocked in September; Flash fully deprecated by December.

Last year, Chrome made Flash ads click-to-play; now, Google is trying to kill off Flash completely.

Starting with Chrome 53, due out early next month, the browser will automatically block tiny and non-visible Flash content, such as tracking and fingerprint cookies that are notoriously hard to shake off. Then, with Chrome 55 in December, Flash will be deprecated entirely, with exceptions for "sites which only support Flash." In both cases HTML5 is expected to take up the reins.

The changes in Chrome 53 are mostly targeted at behind-the-scenes Flash widgets that many sites use for tracking and analytics purposes. Best-case these non-visible elements can slow down your browsing experience, worst-case they might cause stability issues or reduce battery life on mobile devices. Google says that publishers are in the process of moving these widgets over to HTML5.

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PS4 Neo: Sony confirms PlayStation event for September 7

Sony says PS4 updates will be part of event; we’ll probably see the 4K-capable Neo.

Sony's upcoming 4K-capable PlayStation 4 Neo console looks set for a September reveal. The company has began sending out invites to a "PlayStation" meeting taking place in The PlayStation Theatre, New York on September 7 at 3pm (8pm UK time). It has also confirmed that updates on the PS4 and the PlayStation business are part of the event.

The invite follows several reports that Sony would unveil Neo in September, with French gaming website Gameblog even nailing down the exact date earlier this week. While Sony's Andrew House confirmed the existence of the console to the Financial Times in June, it has yet to detail any of its specifications, or what sort of performance players can expect from its upgraded hardware.

That said, an earlier report from gaming website GiantBomb—which was corroborated by several other publications—detailed the specifications of the console, which included a boost in CPU clock speed, more and faster GPU cores, and increased memory bandwidth. All is said to be based on AMD's technology, which is used in the current PS4.

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