Microsoft rumored to be building a Surface PC for your living room

Could be coming as soon as this quarter.

Surface 3 in its docking station. (credit: Microsoft)


Yesterday, DigiTimes reported that Microsoft is building a new member of the Surface family: an all-in-one PC designed for the living room. The technology newspaper cites "industry sources," and today Daniel Rubino at Windows Central wrote that his own reliable source told him the same thing.

The new system is supposed to contain Intel's next generation Kaby Lake processor, which is itself shrouded in mystery. Intel has been awfully quiet about Kaby Lake, and while leaked slides originally spoke of it as a Q3 2016 product, it might slip into 2017. This is an issue not just for Microsoft's rumored all-in-one, but also the Surface Pro 4 and Surface Book, both of which are awaiting Kaby Lake's release before being refreshed.

Nothing else is known about the new Surface, but expect it to aim for the high end of the market and share the premium build of its predecessors. Unlike other Surface products, however, the all-in-one PC space has already been trod by Dell, Lenovo, HP, Apple, and others. Surface (and in particular Surface Pro 3) arguably defined a new category of two-in-one tablet-laptop hybrids, and Surface Book's detachable screen and GPU base added novel twists to the clamshell laptop. If the all-in-one Surface does not similarly push the market in a new direction and instead merely treads on the toes of Microsoft's OEM partners, expect a lot more grumbling of the kind that met the original Surface's announcement.

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KickassTorrents Removed More Than 1 Million Torrents

KickassTorrents, one most popular sites on the entire web, offers access to millions of torrents. Users add several thousands of new files to the site every day, but not all of those survive. In fact, over the past few years the site has removed more than a million torrents to comply with rightsholders’ takedown requests.

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

kickasstorrents_500x500As the largest torrent site on the Internet, KickassTorrents (KAT) has become the go-to spot for millions of filesharers.

Like many other torrent sites, KAT is often used to share pirated files, much to the frustration of copyright holders.

However, unlike other sites such as The Pirate Bay, KAT accepts DMCA takedown notices. This means that rightsholders have the option to remove infringing content from the site.

This option hasn’t gone unnoticed by the site’s users, who sometimes see their uploads disappearing in real-time. In other cases, it can make it quite hard to find the latest episode of one’s favorite TV-show.

To find out how many DMCA requests the site processes, we asked the KAT team for an overview.

According to KAT’s official figures, 15,794 torrent files were deleted over the past week, and 55,238 for the most recent month. This means that at the current rate, the site removes more than half a million torrents per year.

Since the site started to keep track of the number of deleted torrents, which is a few years ago, well over a million torrents have been purged from the site. 1,200,313 to be precise.

Torrent removed…

fearkat

While the removals are a source for frustration among users, it also encourages some to come up with creative solutions to ‘revive‘ removed torrents.

Torrent revived?

kekahash

The KAT forums are littered with dedicated threads where people discuss alternative means to access removed content. For example, by generating a magnet link from the torrent’s hash.

In addition to reviving torrents, users also regularly re-upload files that have disappeared, starting a perpetual cat-and-mouse game.

Despite pushback from both users and copyright holders, the KAT team isn’t getting actively involved in the takedown discussion.

Like most other user-generated content platforms, they offer users the freedom to upload content as long as they stick to the rules, and rightsholders the tools to protect their work.

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

Stem cells from cattle, placentas, and fat are used in clinics across the US

Researchers uncover hundreds of clinics, many touting potentially dangerous treatments.

(credit: Abraxas3d)

Topping the list of predatory business schemes, direct-to-consumer clinics peddling unproven stem cell therapies may be right up there with payday loans and Shkreli-esque drug pricing. Such clinics can tout dangerous, often exorbitantly priced “treatments.” They frequently target the vulnerable and desperate, including terminal cancer patients, parents of autistic children, and grown children of parents with Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease. And the results can range from placebos to bones in eyelids and scary growths on spinal cords.

We tend to think this kind of quackery only thrives in countries with lax regulations like China, India, or Mexico. The phrase “stem cell tourism” usually evokes a plane trip. But stem cell therapies are unexpectedly flourishing in the US and may only require a short car trip.

In an analysis published this week in Cell Stem Cell, researchers identified a startling 351 businesses, encompassing 570 clinics across the US, that offer stem cell therapies largely unproven and unapproved by the Food and Drug Administration. Without peer-reviewed evidence, these businesses and clinics claim their therapies can treat dozens of diseases, injuries, and cosmetic indications, including joint pain, autism, spinal cord injuries, muscular dystrophy, and breast augmentation. Costs can reach into tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars for treatments.

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Gigabyte Aero 14 portable gaming notebook now available (for $1599)

Gigabyte Aero 14 portable gaming notebook now available (for $1599)

The Gigabyte Aero 14 laptop measures 0.8 inches thick and weighs about 4.2 pounds. It’s hardly the thinnest and lightest notebook around, but it’s surprisingly compact considering the amount of horsepower it packs.

Gigabyte’s latest 14 inch laptop is aimed at gamers and features an Intel Core i7-6700HQ processor, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970M graphics, and a 94.24 Wh battery for up to 10 hours of battery life (or less, while gaming).

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg… but those premium specs come with a premium price tag.

Continue reading Gigabyte Aero 14 portable gaming notebook now available (for $1599) at Liliputing.

Gigabyte Aero 14 portable gaming notebook now available (for $1599)

The Gigabyte Aero 14 laptop measures 0.8 inches thick and weighs about 4.2 pounds. It’s hardly the thinnest and lightest notebook around, but it’s surprisingly compact considering the amount of horsepower it packs.

Gigabyte’s latest 14 inch laptop is aimed at gamers and features an Intel Core i7-6700HQ processor, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970M graphics, and a 94.24 Wh battery for up to 10 hours of battery life (or less, while gaming).

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg… but those premium specs come with a premium price tag.

Continue reading Gigabyte Aero 14 portable gaming notebook now available (for $1599) at Liliputing.

Teen girl who texted friend to commit suicide must stand trial

Top court upholds indictment against girl “on the basis of words alone.”

Michelle Carter at a court hearing in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, last year. (credit: WPRI12)

Massachusetts' top court ruled Friday that a teenager may stand trial on involuntary manslaughter charges in connection to text messages she sent urging her friend to commit suicide.

In a unanimous ruling, the Supreme Judicial Court said a local grand jury had enough probable cause to indict Michelle Carter in connection to the 2014 suicide of Carter Roy III, who was found dead about 50 miles south of Boston in a Fairhaven parking lot. The girl was 17 at the time of Roy's suicide, and she is accused of sending Roy several texts, including one saying "get back in" the day the 18-year-old teen took his own life via carbon monoxide fumes inside his truck.

The defendant's lawyers maintained that her texts were constitutionally protected speech under the First Amendment. The court, however, did not create a bright line rule on where free speech ends and criminality begins. Instead, the court ruled that a physical act of violence is not necessary to sustain involuntary manslaughter charges and that each case is "entirely fact specific."

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Android’s full-disk encryption just got much weaker—here’s why

Unlike Apple’s iOS, Android is vulnerable to several key-extraction techniques.

Privacy advocates take note: Android's full-disk encryption just got dramatically easier to defeat on devices that use chips from semiconductor maker Qualcomm, thanks to new research that reveals several methods to extract crypto keys off of a locked handset. Those methods include publicly available attack code that works against an estimated 37 percent of enterprise users.

A blog post published Thursday revealed that in stark contrast to the iPhone's iOS, Qualcomm-powered Android devices store the disk encryption keys in software. That leaves the keys vulnerable to a variety of attacks that can pull a key off a device. From there, the key can be loaded onto a server cluster, field-programmable gate array, or supercomputer that has been optimized for super-fast password cracking.

The independent researcher that published the post included exploit code that extracts the disk encryption keys by exploiting two vulnerabilities in TrustZone. TrustZone is a collection of security features within the ARM processors Qualcomm sells to handset manufacturers. By stitching together the exploits, the attack code is able to execute code within the TrustZone kernel, which is an enclave dedicated for sensitive operations such as managing cryptographic keys and protecting hardware.

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Reports: Microsoft working on a Surface all-in-one desktop PC

Reports: Microsoft working on a Surface all-in-one desktop PC

After decades of making the software that powers most of the world’s personal computers, Microsoft started building its own PCs a few years ago. The Surface line of tablets are positioned as 2-in-1 devices with optional keyboard covers that let you use them like laptops, and digital pens for pressure-sensitive writing and drawing.

This year the company also started selling the Surface Hub, which is an expensive line of computers with enormous displays (there are 55 inch and 84 inch models) primarily aimed at enterprise customers.

Continue reading Reports: Microsoft working on a Surface all-in-one desktop PC at Liliputing.

Reports: Microsoft working on a Surface all-in-one desktop PC

After decades of making the software that powers most of the world’s personal computers, Microsoft started building its own PCs a few years ago. The Surface line of tablets are positioned as 2-in-1 devices with optional keyboard covers that let you use them like laptops, and digital pens for pressure-sensitive writing and drawing.

This year the company also started selling the Surface Hub, which is an expensive line of computers with enormous displays (there are 55 inch and 84 inch models) primarily aimed at enterprise customers.

Continue reading Reports: Microsoft working on a Surface all-in-one desktop PC at Liliputing.

Blizzard job posting outs plans for new Diablo game

FYI, a game is not “unannounced” if developer publicly seeks its freakin’ director.

Is it time to change that "III" into a "IV"? (credit: Blizzard)

Just because Blizzard finally got a wholly new franchise out the door this year doesn't mean the game maker isn't keen on milking its older franchises for everything they're worth. But one of those series, Diablo, has seen a bit of a content freeze since its 2014 expansion launched. While the company loves refreshing a game launch with expansion packs, Diablo III has been sitting idly. Now we might know why.

A brand-new "unannounced" entry in the Diablo world was, er, announced on Friday by way of an official job posting for—get this—the next entry's director. It's the game-news equivalent of New Line Cinema saying a new Lord of the Rings film is coming but, whoops, Peter Jackson's not involved, and they could really use a new person to get this thing up and running.

The post seeks someone to "lead the Diablo series into the future." While such a public push for a series director might read like an attempt to bring more diversity into the hiring pool, we'd frankly be shocked to see anybody other than the industry's old-guard vets fulfilling application requirements such as five years of game-directing experience and shipping "multiple AAA products as a game director or creative director." The job posting mentions nothing about virtual reality or other experimental hardware.

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Deadmau5 shows Ars the bonkers VR dreams living inside his giant mouse head

In an exclusive interview, EDM titan hints at future plans, scoffs at 360-degree video.

Virtual reality may be blowing up in tech circles, but mainstream pop culture has mostly kept an arm's-length distance from the movement. What's more, if you've seen a well-known celebrity in VR, that pretty much always means you've seen them in a 360-degree video—the kind that employs fixed video footage and therefore locks viewers into a single place as opposed to fully explorable virtual worlds.

Far-out musicians like Reggie Watts and Bjork have starred in 360-degree music-and-video experiments, while more mainstream artists like Jack White have published concert footage taken from a few 360-degree cameras. But if you're looking for a big musician who has launched anything resembling a fully VR experience, you surprisingly only have one option: Deadmau5, which launched a Google Cardboard-compatible VR app this week on iOS and Android.

The electronic music titan, aka Joel Zimmerman, lent his likeness, music, and input to Absolut Vodka to make a VR app. A skeptic might think this means a simple cash-in, but in an exclusive interview with Ars, Deadmau5 admitted he was pretty involved in its creation—because he's got serious VR dreams.

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Frontier teams with AT&T to block Google Fiber access to utility poles

Frontier court filing supports AT&T lawsuit against Louisville, Kentucky.

(credit: Getty Images | aledettaale)

AT&T is getting some help from Frontier Communications in its attempt to block Google Fiber's progress in Kentucky.

As we reported in February, AT&T sued the local government in Louisville and Jefferson County, Kentucky to stop a new ordinance designed to give Google Fiber and similar companies access to utility poles. Although Frontier has no operations in Kentucky, it submitted a court filing last week supporting AT&T's lawsuit because Frontier is worried such ordinances will come to other states.

AT&T did not ask Frontier for its help, but Frontier's filing said, "the issues raised by the case may have important implications for Frontier’s business and may impact the development of law in jurisdictions throughout the country where Frontier operates."

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