Hybridauto: Karma Revero kommt mit Solardach

Der Karma Revero ist das erste Auto des Fahrzeugherstellers Karma. Es soll vermutlich wieder ein Hybridauto werden, auch das Solardach des Fisker Karma wird beibehalten. (Elektroauto, GreenIT)

Der Karma Revero ist das erste Auto des Fahrzeugherstellers Karma. Es soll vermutlich wieder ein Hybridauto werden, auch das Solardach des Fisker Karma wird beibehalten. (Elektroauto, GreenIT)

TCP-Exploit: Internetstandard ermöglicht Seitenkanalangriffe

Mit einem falsch konfigurierten Internetstandard in Linux lassen sich unverschlüsselte Internetverbindungen manipulieren. Auch das Tor-Netzwerk ist von dem Fehler betroffen. (Security, Server-Applikationen)

Mit einem falsch konfigurierten Internetstandard in Linux lassen sich unverschlüsselte Internetverbindungen manipulieren. Auch das Tor-Netzwerk ist von dem Fehler betroffen. (Security, Server-Applikationen)

Nytro XP7200: Seagate veröffentlicht SSD mit 10 GByte pro Sekunde

Die bisher rein mit Blick auf die Leserate schnellste SSD stammt von Seagate: Praktisch handelt es sich aber um vier kleine M.2-Kärtchen auf einem Board, die im Software-Raid zusammengeschaltet werden. (Seagate, Speichermedien)

Die bisher rein mit Blick auf die Leserate schnellste SSD stammt von Seagate: Praktisch handelt es sich aber um vier kleine M.2-Kärtchen auf einem Board, die im Software-Raid zusammengeschaltet werden. (Seagate, Speichermedien)

New air-gap jumper covertly transmits data in hard-drive sounds

“DiskFiltration” siphons data even when computers are disconnected from the Internet.

(credit: Cyber Security Labs @ Ben Gurion University)

Researchers have devised a new way to siphon data out of an infected computer even when it has been physically disconnected from the Internet to prevent the leakage of sensitive information it stores.

The method has been dubbed "DiskFiltration" by its creators because it uses acoustic signals emitted from the hard drive of the air-gapped computer being targeted. It works by manipulating the movements of the hard drive's actuator, which is the mechanical arm that accesses specific parts of disk platter so heads attached to the actuator can read or write data. By using so-called seek operations that move the actuator in very specific ways, it can generate sounds that transfer passwords, cryptographic keys, and other sensitive data stored on the computer to a nearby microphone. The technique has a range of six feet and a speed of 180 bits per second, fast enough to steal a 4096-bit key in about 25 minutes.

"An air-gap isolation is considered to be a hermetic security measure which can prevent data leakage," Mordechai Guri, a security researcher and the head of research and development in the cyber security labs at Israel's Ben-Gurion University, told Ars. "Confidential data, personal information, financial records and other type of sensitive information is stored within isolated networks. We show that despite the degree of isolation, the data can be exfiltrated (for example, to a nearby smart phone)."

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Microsoft acquires game-streaming site, will integrate features into its games

It’s called Beam: it’s like Twitch but with built-in gamification, lower latency.

Amazon and Google now have company in the game-streaming wars—in the form of a major game publisher, no less. On Thursday, Microsoft announced its acquisition of a burgeoning game-streaming service called Beam, and its mix of unique features and exclusive game integration should get the attention of the streaming world's current leaders.

Beam, which is headquartered down the road from Microsoft in Redmond, WA, is built around gamification features that encourage and reward active participation. The more you watch and interact with Beam, the more Beam XP you earn, which can be spent on in-game votes, cosmetic boosts, and other perks within the Beam interface. (Some of these boosts can only be earned when Beam doesn't recognize the use of ad-blocking services.) Like Twitch, Beam offers an SDK to game developers for integration with their games, but Beam's interface has been built from the ground up to display tappable icons on both desktop and mobile platforms to alter or influence a myriad of factors in a given game. We imagine that will make "Beam Plays" sessions smoother to build, even for game fans who are inserting crowd-participation experiments into existing games.

Microsoft apparently won't waste much time jumping on this interactive aspect, as its announcements talked a lot about how Minecraft games can be altered by Beam's audience-participation systems—the company showed some video proof, to boot. Viewers can spawn bad guys, make volcanoes erupt, and do more via a clean, button-controlled interface. Beam will also support team-based streaming, which Microsoft has begun advertising by talking about its not-yet-released Xbox and PC game Sea of Thieves. (That game revolves around teams of players talking to each other while managing parallel objectives, including the simultaneous piloting, repair, and combat systems in its zany pirate ships.)

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Researchers orbit a muon around an atom, confirm physics is broken

The proton’s charge radius shouldn’t change, and yet it appears to.

(credit: Paul Scherrer Institute)

Although tiny, a proton takes up a finite amount of space, enough to fit three quarks, a host of virtual particles, and their associated gluons. The size of a proton's radius is determined by these particles and their interactions, and so is fundamentally tied in to theories like the Standard Model and quantum chromodynamics.

We can measure the radius because the proton's charge is spread across it, which influences the orbit of any electrons that might be circling it. Measurements with electrons produce a value that's easily in agreement with existing theories. But a few years back, researchers put a heavier version of the electron, called a muon, in orbit around a proton. This formed an exotic, heavier version of the hydrogen atom. And here, measuring the proton's radius produced an entirely different value—something that shouldn't have happened.

This “proton radius puzzle” suggests there may be something fundamentally wrong with our physics models. And the researchers who discovered it have now moved on to put a muon in orbit around deuterium, a heavier isotope of hydrogen. They confirm that the problem still exists, and there's no way of solving it with existing theories.

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Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300

Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300

Most Chromebooks are cheap laptops with entry-level specs. But there’s a growing number of Chromebooks with higher price tags that offer additional storage and memory or better displays.

Dell, HP, and Google all offer what you might call premium Chromebook models.

Now Asus has one of the most affordable models with… let’s say mid-range specs. The Asus C301 Chromebook is now available for pre-order for $300.

The laptop has 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a 13.3 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display.

Continue reading Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300 at Liliputing.

Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300

Most Chromebooks are cheap laptops with entry-level specs. But there’s a growing number of Chromebooks with higher price tags that offer additional storage and memory or better displays.

Dell, HP, and Google all offer what you might call premium Chromebook models.

Now Asus has one of the most affordable models with… let’s say mid-range specs. The Asus C301 Chromebook is now available for pre-order for $300.

The laptop has 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a 13.3 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display.

Continue reading Asus Chromebook with 4GB RAM, 64GB storage now available for $300 at Liliputing.

The Google Play Store scraps Google+ integration

Google cuts social from the Play Store, now accepts app reviews without a G+ account.

(credit: Callip Hall)

The great deplusification of Google continues as a Google+ has been removed from yet another Google product. This time it's the Play Store, which has dropped Google+ votes from apps and nixed the G+ account requirement from app reviews.

There was an entire Google+ focused "People" section on the Play Store that showed apps and ratings from people you follow on Google+. The Play Store also allowed users to "+1" apps on the Play Store, which served as a vote of approval from people you follow. Both features are being stripped out of Google Play, starting earlier this week.

The other feature being removed is the requirement to have a Google+ account to leave a Play Store review on apps, games, and media. Several users have reported to Android Police that they can now leave reviews using their regular Google account, where before they were nagged to created a Google+ account.

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FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview)

FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview)

It’s been more than two decades since Microsoft started to move away from MS-DOS with the launch of Windows 95. But a generation of computers users grew up with DOS in the 80s and 90s and there are thousands of programs and games developed for the platform. Many are still worth running.

Some classic games are much fun to play today as they were 30 years ago. Some businesses are continuing to run vintage software because it still meets their needs.

Continue reading FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview) at Liliputing.

FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview)

It’s been more than two decades since Microsoft started to move away from MS-DOS with the launch of Windows 95. But a generation of computers users grew up with DOS in the 80s and 90s and there are thousands of programs and games developed for the platform. Many are still worth running.

Some classic games are much fun to play today as they were 30 years ago. Some businesses are continuing to run vintage software because it still meets their needs.

Continue reading FreeDOS keeps classic computing alive (LPX Show interview) at Liliputing.

Brain training with exoskeleton and VR spurs recovery for paraplegics

In a year, 50% of patients upgraded from complete to incomplete paralysis rating.

(credit: AASDAP and Lente Viva Filmes, São Paulo, Brazil)

With brain training, paraplegics can once again move and sense their limbs despite having spinal cord injuries that were previously considered irreversible, an international team of researchers reports Thursday in Scientific Reports.

After a year of working with a brain-machine interface, virtual reality, and robotic exoskeletons, eight paraplegic patients began moving and feeling their lower bodies again. Some can now even walk with assistance. Half of them were upgraded from a classification of ‘complete’ paralysis to incomplete. And this group has continued to train and improve, according to the lead study author, Miguel Nicolelis, of Duke University.

“Nobody ever imagined that one day we would be talking about the possibility of using brain-machine interfaces to induce partial neurological recovery in patients who have been diagnosed as having a complete spinal cord injury,” Nicolelis told press during a conference call. “As you can imagine, for us this is a very important milestone."

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