Electric DeLorean DMC-12 prototype goes round and round (and round) in test drive video

It’s already clear that you’re selling everything you own in an effort to purchase a 2013 DeLorean DMC-12 EV (and in turn, apply for a home tax deduction when you begin to live out of it), but what hasn’t been clear is exactly how it’d perform on the wide open road. Truthfully, we still aren’t entirely certain of that, but thanks to a raucous new video of a prototype on the track, we do know that it looks like the most (PG) fun you can have while sitting atop four wheels. We aren’t going to hold you here any longer — hop on past the break and mash play. 60mph in 4.9. 88mph in however long you want.

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Electric DeLorean DMC-12 prototype goes round and round (and round) in test drive video originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Oct 2011 15:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Firmware update enables 2011 iMacs to reinstall Lion from the Internet



Those who own 2011 iMacs now have the option of reinstalling Lion via the Internet thanks to a firmware update issued late Wednesday. The iMac EFI Update 1.7 gives current-generation iMacs the ability to use Lion Internet Recovery, which Apple first introduced as a Lion feature for MacBook Airs and Mac minis released in July.

Lion Internet Recovery enables Lion users to download and reinstall Lion from Apple’s servers when they experience an operating system meltdown, as long as they have a broadband connection. The feature mimics that of Lion’s built-in recovery drive that is installed on your Mac when you install Lion, but the advantage is that the computer is able to retrieve the data remotely in the event that your entire storage disk is experiencing problems. Take it from us, though: the faster and more reliable your Internet connection, the better, because this isn’t a tiny download.

It was only a matter of time before the 2011 iMacs gained this feature—early 2011 MacBook Pros also gained this feature recently via their own firmware update. In addition to Lion Internet Recovery, the EFI Update 1.7 also fixes compatibility problems with Apple's Thunderbolt Display and improves performance when the machine is in Target Disk Mode.

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Firmware update enables 2011 iMacs to reinstall Lion from the Internet

Charted: Android Fragmentation

android

Michael DeGusta has done an amazing job charting the fragmentation of Android by visualizing the history of operating system updates on Android smartphones for sale in the United States.

Compare this to iPhone updates (which DeGusta did), and it paints a telling picture.

Writes DeGusta:

I went back and found every Android phone shipped in the United States up through the middle of last year. I then tracked down every update that was released for each device – be it a major OS upgrade or a minor support patch – as well as prices and release & discontinuation dates. I compared these dates & versions to the currently shipping version of Android at the time. The resulting picture isn’t pretty – well, not for Android users.

Other than the original G1 and MyTouch, virtually all of the millions of phones represented by this chart are still under contract today.

If you thought that entitled you to some support, think again:

– 7 of the 18 Android phones never ran a current version of the OS.
– 12 of 18 only ran a current version of the OS for a matter of weeks or less.
– 10 of 18 were at least two major versions behind well within their two year contract period.
– 11 of 18 stopped getting any support updates less than a year after release.
– 13 of 18 stopped getting any support updates before they even stopped selling the device or very shortly thereafter.
– 15 of 18 don’t run Gingerbread, which shipped in December 2010.
– In a few weeks, when Ice Cream Sandwich comes out, every device on here will be another major version behind.
– At least 16 of 18 will almost certainly never get Ice Cream Sandwich.

I don’t want to steal the guy’s thunder by reblogging the whole thing, so go check out his chart and solid analysis of what’s going on DeGusta’s his Tumblr blog.


Company:
Android
Website:
android.com

In July 2005, Google acquired Android, a small startup company based in Palo Alto, CA. Android’s co-founders who went to work at Google included Andy Rubin (co-founder of Danger), Rich Miner (co-founder of Wildfire), Nick Sears (once VP at T-Mobile), and Chris White (one of the first engineers at WebTV). At the time, little was known about the functions of Android other than they made software for mobile phones. This began rumors that Google was planning to enter…

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Charted: Android Fragmentation

Internet bandwidth report: Have we reached “Peak Netflix?”



Remember that Sandvine report published five months ago that called Netflix the “king” of North American fixed download Internet data? That survey estimated the online video company’s share at 29.7 percent of all peak download time, a 44 percent boost in Netflix’s share of traffic deployment from 2010.

Well, Sandvine has issued another estimate. Netflix now accounts for 32.7 percent of all North American peak fixed access downstream content. That's a relative increase of almost ten percent since the spring, and way beyond the other three top Internet protocols or services by daily volume—approaching double HTTP (17.48 percent), just shy of three times YouTube (11.32), and nearly four times BitTorrent.

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Internet bandwidth report: Have we reached “Peak Netflix?”