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Brave will replace blocked ads with its own ads, taking a 15% cut of revenues.
Brendan Eich, co-founder of Mozilla and creator of the JavaScript programming language, has unveiled his latest project: Brave, a Web browser that blocks ads by default... and then replaces those blocked ads with its own ads. Brave Software, the company behind the eponymous browser, will take a 15 percent cut of the ad revenue generated in this way.
Brave is an open-source Web browser. There's a Brave GitHub repository for Mac/Windows/Linux, iOS, and Android. It looks like the iOS version, ironically enough, is based on Firefox for iOS, and the PC version is based on Chromium (an open-source project that somewhat parallels the development of Chrome). At first glance, it looks like the Android version of Brave is based on Bubble.
If you want to try out Brave, you have to download and build the browser from a GitHub repo. You can sign up to be a beta tester, which presumably grants you some pre-built binaries, but there's currently a waiting list.
iPhone manufacturer may want Sharp’s display tech to extract more cash from Apple.
Foxconn, the Taiwanese company that assembles Apple's iPhones, has made a ¥600 billion bid (about £3.6 billion) to purchase troubled Japanese electronics maker Sharp, according to reports from Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal. While the acquisition hasn't yet been approved, a decision to accept or reject the bid is expected before the end of January.
The ¥600 billion bid is the latest in a string of attempts to take over the embattled Japanese company, which received a ¥225 billion (£1.4 billion) bailout from banks last year following what it described as "very severe conditions." In 2012, Foxconn made an offer of $806 million (£569 million) for a 10 percent stake in Sharp, which quickly fell apart. This was followed by Foxconn founder Terry Gou purchasing a minority stake in a Sharp subsidiary for $617 million (£436 million). The company was also in talks to acquire Sharp's LCD business unit in September of last year.
According to The Wall Street Journal, Foxconn may receive pushback from the Japanese government, which doesn't want to cede control of Sharp to a foreign company. The Innovation Network Corp. of Japan, a government-backed investment fund, is said to be making its own bid of ¥300 billion (£1.8 billion). While the INCJ bid would keep Sharp under Japanese control, Foxconn's higher bid and willingness to take on the company's debt could see officials side in its favour.
Paramedics lose critical time traveling to and from upper floors of high-rises.
(credit: Michael Coghlan)
Moving on up to that deluxe apartment in the sky might actually increase your chances of moving on down—way down.
Living on or above the third floor of a high-rise significantly lowered the chances of people surviving cardiac arrest that struck at home, researchers report in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. The finding, gleaned from 7,842 cases of cardiac arrest in and around Toronto, suggests that the precious extra moments it takes paramedics and other first responders to get up to patients and get them to the hospital could make the difference between patients living and dying.
“With continuing construction of high-rise buildings, it is important to understand the potential effect of vertical height on patient outcomes after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest,” wrote the authors, led by Ian Drennan, a paramedic and researcher at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto.
In healthy, non-celiac athletes, gluten made no difference in digestion or workouts.
(credit: Marc)
Ditching the notorious complex of proteins known as gluten is a popular diet plan nowadays. Besides people with celiac disease, a severe autoimmune disorder triggered by the proteins, athletes have been particularly smitten with the gluten-free fad. But, according to a recent study, the diet is unlikely to give them the results they expect.
Completely cutting out gluten didn't improve cyclists' workout performance, digestive health, or overall fitness in a short-term, double-blind study, researchers reported in the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. “We did not find a beneficial or negative effect of a gluten-free diet,” lead author Dana Lis of the University of Tasmania told The New York Times.
She and her colleagues got the idea to test the effects in athletes after previous studies had reported that gluten-free diets had taken off in the sports world. Many athletes reported thinking that skipping gluten, which is found in wheat and other grains, could improve their digestive health—a common problem for athletes.
Die virtuelle Realität ist eine einsame – bis jetzt jedenfalls. Ein VR-Kinoabend in Berlin zeigt, wie es sich gemeinsam abtauchen lässt. Mit Brillen und auf Drehstühlen. (VR, Head-Mounted Display)
Die kürzlich gefundene Kernel-Lücke wird mit den monatlichen Android-Updates bis zum 1. März geschlossen. Das schreibt ein Google-Entwickler. Die Auswirkungen sind laut Google geringer als ursprünglich behauptet, weshalb nur wenige Geräte betroffen seien. (Security, Linux-Kernel)
This $250 rep tracker is for those who do more than just run all day.
Valentina Palladino reviews the Atlas Wristband. Video shot/edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)
Let's face it, most fitness trackers are for runners. It's a natural progression for a smart pedometer to go from tracking steps to tracking a lot of quicker steps during a certain period of time. Some devices like the Microsoft Band are trying to break away from that bubble, incorporating guided workouts that include moves like crunches and mountain climbers. But really, what most of these devices do best is monitor fast movements that involve the swinging of arms and jostling of legs.
Since the launch of the original Raspberry Pi, there’s been no shortage of cheap, single-board computers aimed at makers and developers. Many take a page out of the Raspberry Pi playbook by offering low-power ARM-based chips, while a few models sport Intel processors. The JaguarBoard is a new model that falls into the latter camp. […]
JaguarBoard: $65 single-board computer with a Bay Trail chip is a post from: Liliputing
Since the launch of the original Raspberry Pi, there’s been no shortage of cheap, single-board computers aimed at makers and developers. Many take a page out of the Raspberry Pi playbook by offering low-power ARM-based chips, while a few models sport Intel processors. The JaguarBoard is a new model that falls into the latter camp. […]
JaguarBoard: $65 single-board computer with a Bay Trail chip is a post from: Liliputing