HP’s Sure View screens strive to stop shoulder surfing

Press F2 and the person next to you on the plane won’t be able to read your screen.

Enlarge / "Say... that's a nice e-mail you're writing." (credit: HP)

I have a dirty secret: I am an inveterate reader of other people's screens. It's a compulsion. I've tried to quit. But I can't. They're invariably more fascinating than my own, so if I'm sitting next to you on the plane I'll be checking out your e-mails, reading your presentations, and tutting at your use of Comic Sans in your documents. As such, I'm not a fan of HP's new Sure View screens—but I certainly understand the justification.

The Sure View option is being offered on the HP EliteBook 1040 and the EliteBook 840; with one press of a button the screens flip from regular wide viewing angle mode into private mode, slashing the off-axis visibility of the devices.

The effect is pretty significant. On-axis visibility drops a little, as the screen gets dimmer, but off-axis visibility drops substantially. It's definitely enough to stop nosy row-mates on your cattle class flight from being able to read your e-mails, and even the people in the row behind are going to struggle to see what you're working on.

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Microsoft goes after VMware with free(ish) Windows licenses for Hyper-V converts

Will this be enough to make Hyper-V overtake VMware?

(credit: Wikipedia)

With the imminent release of Windows Server 2016, due to be launched some time in September with its new per-core licensing, Microsoft is making a concerted effort to win over VMware users and get them to switch to Hyper-V.

Accordingly, the company is running a time-limited promotion: switch from VMware to Hyper-V and the company will give you "free" licenses to Windows Server Datacenter. The catch is that you'll need to buy a Software Assurance subscription too, so it's not really free. But it should save some of the costs of migrating.

To help persuade companies to switch, Microsoft has offered a TCO calculator to show off the big savings (Microsoft hopes) that can be had from making the switch.

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McDonald’s recalls Happy Meal fitness trackers after they injure kids

Fast food company recalls millions of wristband toys amid reports of blistering.

Enlarge (credit: McDonald's)

McDonald’s food isn't exactly the healthiest choice for kids—and apparently the same can be said of the restaurant’s fitness trackers.

The wristband toys given away in the fast food chain’s signature Happy Meals were intended to help get kids moving. Instead, the toys have gotten company officials racing to issue a recall after the devices were found to burn and irritate kids’ skin. So far, there have been 70 reports of injuries from the colorful gadgets, including seven reports of blistering burns.

On Tuesday, McDonald’s issued a voluntary recall of millions of its “Step It” fitness trackers.

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A new NVIDIA Shield controller hits the FCC, new console incoming?

A new NVIDIA Shield controller hits the FCC, new console incoming?

It’s been over a year since the NVIDIA Shield game console/media streamer went on sale. While it’s not clear if NVIDIA plans to launch a new version of the game console this year, it looks like the company might at least have some new hardware on the way.

A new version of the NVIDIA Shield game controller showed up at the FCC website this week.

While there aren’t a lot of details in the FCC listing, the label drawing shows that the shape is a little different than that for the first-gen Shield TV game controller.

Continue reading A new NVIDIA Shield controller hits the FCC, new console incoming? at Liliputing.

A new NVIDIA Shield controller hits the FCC, new console incoming?

It’s been over a year since the NVIDIA Shield game console/media streamer went on sale. While it’s not clear if NVIDIA plans to launch a new version of the game console this year, it looks like the company might at least have some new hardware on the way.

A new version of the NVIDIA Shield game controller showed up at the FCC website this week.

While there aren’t a lot of details in the FCC listing, the label drawing shows that the shape is a little different than that for the first-gen Shield TV game controller.

Continue reading A new NVIDIA Shield controller hits the FCC, new console incoming? at Liliputing.

Why earn XP when you can buy it? Deus Ex goes ape on microtransactions

One-time-use campaign DLC leaves sour taste, as well.

Enlarge / Wanna get more in-game currency, weapons, and experience-point boosts in the new Deus Ex game? Pay up, suckers. (credit: Square Enix)

My review of the stellar cyberpunk stealth-adventure game Deus Ex: Mankind Divided was based on a retail version, which means it had received a "day-one" patch and contained all of the game's content... with one exception. The microtransaction system hadn't yet gone live.

At the time, this shop was limited to DX:MD's "Breach" mode, which combines arcade-style challenges and a "card-unlock" system for beefing your character up. This system works similarly to games like Hearthstone, in that you earn new cards and perks through normal gameplay, but since their rewards are random, you may feel compelled to pay money for more random-card unlocks. Also, because you can only equip so many perks at a time, and normal gameplay unlocks a ton of content, you don't really need to pay into this system to get the full game experience.

It's not ideal, but I ruled that this kind of microtransaction system was all in all tolerable for what was essentially a free bonus mode on top of an already-huge campaign in the retail package. Looks like Eidos Montreal had other ideas, however.

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For Apple Die-Hard Fans: iPhone App Paintings

Being a fans means that you’ll love everything. Including a dull shaped painting of zoomed app icons, that means nothing but a iconic fanatism. I’m certainly one of them, and you don’t wanna blame me if I’ve got bunch of these guys (the App paintings) screwed all over my pale walls. Okay, these App paintings […]

Being a fans means that you’ll love everything. Including a dull shaped painting of zoomed app icons, that means nothing but a iconic fanatism. I’m certainly one of them, and you don’t wanna blame me if I’ve got bunch of these guys (the App paintings) screwed all over my pale walls. Okay, these App paintings […]

Google Fiber hits Salt Lake City, now available in seven metro areas

Future cities could get wireless instead of fiber, though.

Today Google Fiber began taking signups in Salt Lake City, Utah, the gigabit ISP's seventh metro area.

Gigabit Internet will be available for $70 a month and 100Mbps will cost $50 a month. Gigabit Internet with TV service is $140 a month. There are no data caps on any of the tiers. Phone service can be added for $10.

The initial deployment "will cover roughly 112 blocks from 100 South to 800 South between 400 West and 1300 East," The Salt Lake Tribune reported today. Assuming demand is high, installations "could take a week or more after customers apply." Google Fiber said that other parts of the city will get the service within months but offered no more specific timeline.

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After public complaints, here’s what EA is changing about Titanfall 2

Faster gameplay, easier-to-access Titans among gameplay tweaks.

We came away from last weekend's early Titanfall 2 "tech test" impressed and reminiscing about what we liked about the original mech-and-wallrun-heavy first-person shooter. Not everyone was so enamored with some of the changes on display, though, leading multiplayer game designer Steven DeRose to promise further tweaks to the game before its final launch.

Chief among the coming changes is the game's sense of speed. DeRose says the team toned down "pilot mobility" in Titanfall 2 in an attempt to make flanking feel more "skillful" and close-range firefights less "overly chaotic due to erratic player movement." That said, a few glitches that limited air and wall-running speed are being fixed, and normal traversal will no longer be accidentally impacted by some anti-bunnyhop speed restrictions.

The giant, map-dominating Titans will soon be easier for players to call down, as well. DeRose says that, in addition to gaining points toward a Titan for completing game objectives, players will soon also gain "a small passive amount" of credit toward a new Titan "every few seconds," as they did in the first Titanfall. The goal is to let "every player be... guaranteed a Titan per match."

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CrossOver for Android lets you run (some) Windows software on Android, preview launches August 25th

CrossOver for Android lets you run (some) Windows software on Android, preview launches August 25th

For years, CodeWeavers has been selling CrossOver software that lets you run some native Windows programs on Linux and Mac computers.

Now the company is getting ready to bring CrossOver to Android, making it possible to run Windows software (including games) on Android phones or tablets, as well as Chromebooks like the Acer Chromebook R11.

A tech preview of CrossOver Android will be available to a group of testers starting August 25th, 2016.

Continue reading CrossOver for Android lets you run (some) Windows software on Android, preview launches August 25th at Liliputing.

CrossOver for Android lets you run (some) Windows software on Android, preview launches August 25th

For years, CodeWeavers has been selling CrossOver software that lets you run some native Windows programs on Linux and Mac computers.

Now the company is getting ready to bring CrossOver to Android, making it possible to run Windows software (including games) on Android phones or tablets, as well as Chromebooks like the Acer Chromebook R11.

A tech preview of CrossOver Android will be available to a group of testers starting August 25th, 2016.

Continue reading CrossOver for Android lets you run (some) Windows software on Android, preview launches August 25th at Liliputing.

Rage mounts against pharma corp. that jacked cost of life-saving EpiPen by 400%

Even infamous Martin Shkreli called price-hiking drug makers “vultures.”

(credit: Phillip Bradshaw)

When someone like Martin Shkreli fingers your company as greedy “vultures,” you know you’ve got problems.

For pharmaceutical company Mylan, which hiked the price of life-saving EpiPens by 400 percent since it bought the product in 2007, Shkreli’s is just one of the voices in a chorus of scorn now facing the company.

On Wednesday, presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and the American Medical Association (AMA) separately called on Mylan to lower the cost of the auto-injecting pens, which reverse deadly allergic reactions. Also Wednesday, Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) took to Facebook to declare “Mylan’s greed is apparently limitless.” The rebukes follow a steady stream of other Congress members who have questioned and expressed concern over the price increase.

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