Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition (updated with video!)

Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition

If you’d been by the shore of the Sumida River in central Tokyo this past weekend, you would have noticed that it was glowing a distinct shade of blue. That’s because Panasonic decided to kick off the first-ever Tokyo Hotaru (fireflies) festival by sending 100,000 EVERLED light bulbs down the river, both to mimic fireflies as well as to pay homage to a Japanese tradition of floating candles on the water. Before you cringe too much at the thought of the environmental impact, rest assured that Panasonic minimized the footprint of its aquatic LED parade. All the bulbs ran on solar power (presumably, charged during the day) that kept Evolta batteries fed inside, and the entire lot was scooped up in a large net afterwards. We love the exhibition as a large-scale demo of sustainable lighting — you may just want to avoid fishing along the Sumida’s shoreline for awhile in case you catch a straggler.

Update: We’ve found a video of this spectacular event — check it out right after the break.

Continue reading Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition (updated with video!)

Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition (updated with video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 May 2012 20:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Spoon & Tamago | sourcePanasonic Tokyo Hotaru project (no translation available) | Email this | Comments

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Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition (updated with video!)

Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition

Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition

If you’d been by the shore of the Sumida River in central Tokyo this past weekend, you would have noticed that it was glowing a distinct shade of blue. That’s because Panasonic decided to kick off the first-ever Tokyo Hotaru (fireflies) festival by sending 100,000 EVERLED light bulbs down the river, both to mimic fireflies as well as to pay homage to a Japanese tradition of floating candles on the water. Before you cringe too much at the thought of the environmental impact, rest assured that Panasonic minimized the footprint of its aquatic LED parade. All the bulbs ran on solar power (presumably, charged during the day) that kept Evolta batteries fed inside, and the entire lot was scooped up in a large net afterwards. We love the exhibition as a large-scale demo of sustainable lighting — you may just want to avoid fishing along the Sumida’s shoreline for awhile in case you catch a straggler.

Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 May 2012 20:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Spoon & Tamago | sourcePanasonic Tokyo Hotaru project (no translation available) | Email this | Comments

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Panasonic sends 100,000 LEDs down Tokyo river, mates tech with tradition

University of California, Riverside runs entire building floor off of 1.1-megawatt green battery

University of California, Riverside runs entire building floor off of 1.1-megawatt green battery

We’re used to batteries powering a lot of devices, but the University of California, Riverside is upping that a notch by charging up a whole floor’s worth. The school’s Winston Chung Global Energy Center is walking the eco-friendly walk and has started using a huge bank of rare earth, lithium-ion batteries from Balqon to produce 1.1 megawatts, enough to keep Winston Chung Hall’s entire first floor humming along while tapping renewable energy sources like solar and wind power. The batteries bank their energy overnight, keeping the throngs of students happy without having to recharge as much or use the regular power grid as a fallback. While it’s considered a testbed, the university’s giant battery is considered a blueprint for cellular towers and the green power sources themselves — the combination of which could keep your smartphone up and running with a lot less of an environmental hit.

University of California, Riverside runs entire building floor off of 1.1-megawatt green battery originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 May 2012 21:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | sourceUCR Today | Email this | Comments

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University of California, Riverside runs entire building floor off of 1.1-megawatt green battery

1.3.0 Alpha – final phase of development

MediaPortal 1.3.0 has entered it’s final phase of development.
Next week on Friday the 18th, we will have all changes that are part of 1.3.0 Alpha merged with the master and build a team internal test-version.

If all goes well, then you will be able to download 1.3.0 Alpha one week later on Friday the 25th!

1.3.0 Alpha brings you some very exciting new features, enhancements and bugfixes. But there is still one more week time to add more!

However, for that to happen we need the help of our great community. With the Area 51 section in our forums we offer you the exclusive chance to test changes long before they are part of an MediaPortal Alpha version.
Everyone in the community has the power to speed up the development process of those changes by testing them and provide feedback.

So with one week development time left, the community can give 1.3.0 Alpha a boost by heading over to the Area 51 section and help us testing the WIP projects.

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1.3.0 Alpha – final phase of development

Hitwise: Bing Now Powers Over 30% Of U.S. Searches

bing_logo

Just a day after it announced its well-received updates to its search result pages, here is some more good news for Bing: according to the latest data from Experian Hitwise, Bing-powered searches — that is searches on Bing.com and search.yahoo.com — now account for 30.01% of all U.S. searches. By itself, Bing grew 16% year-over-year and 5% month-over-month and now accounted for 14.32% of all U.S. searches in April 2012. Yahoo grew somewhat slower, but still at a respectable 5% month-over-month and 7% year-over-year.

Things didn’t quite look so rosy for Google, though. Searches on Google.com, according to Hitwise, declined 3% in April 2011 compared to the previous month and were down 5% year-over-year. Google, of course, still remains far ahead of its competition. In April, almost 64.5% of all U.S. searches were powered by Google.

The 65 smaller search engines Hitwise also tracks only accounted for 6.51% of U.S. searches, by the way.

While Bing is still losing money – and while there have been some rumors about Microsoft trying to sell its search engine to Facebook – there can be little doubt that Microsoft’s persistence is slowly paying off and eating into Google’s still sizable lead. Leaving out the searches it powers on Yahoo, Bing itself, of course, still remains a niche player at under 15%, but crossing the 30% barrier is quite an achievement for Bing.

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Hitwise: Bing Now Powers Over 30% Of U.S. Searches

The Diamond Sutra: The World’s Oldest Copyleft Book

In 1907, archaeologist Sir Marc
Aurel Stein
discovered the Diamond
Sutra
, a 16-foot scroll containing the Chinese translation of the
Sanskrit Buddhist text, from the Caves of the Thousand Buddhas in Dunhuang,
China (the discovery in itself is fascinating,
but that’s a different story).

The Diamond Sutra has the colophon at the inner end that reads:

Reverently made for universal free distribution by Wang Jie on
behalf of his two parents on the 15th of the 4th moon of the 9th year
of Xiantong.

That date translates to May 11, 868, which makes the Diamond Sutra not
only the world’s oldest surviving copy of dated printed book, but also
the oldest copyright-free /public domain work as well!

Links: High
resolution photos of the scroll at the British Library
| This
Day in Tech

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The Diamond Sutra: The World’s Oldest Copyleft Book

Amnesty International malware attack: when bad things happen on good sites

Lurking in the shadows, malicious code on this Amnesty International site installed malware on unpatched computers.

Shattering the myth that only disreputable sites push malware, Amnesty International’s UK website was recently compromised and used to install a notorious backdoor trojan that allows hackers to spy on political activists and government employees, security researchers said.

People visiting Amnesty.org.uk on Wednesday and Thursday were exposed to malicious code that exploited a now-patched vulnerability in Oracle’s Java software framework, according to a blog post published Friday by Websense. End users who hadn’t yet applied the patch were infected with Gh0stRat, a family of malware that siphons sensitive data from victims’ machines and can also operate Web cams and microphones in real time. The trojan came to light in 2009 when researchers reported that it infiltrated government and private offices in 103 countries. That included computers belonging to the Dalai Lama.

The Java vulnerability targeted on the Amnesty International site has been used in the past to install malware on computers running both Microsoft Windows and Apple’s OS X. Recently, similar espionage attacks have migrated to OS X, and the Flashback malware attack believed to have infected more than 500,000 Macs targeted the same bug. Based on the Websense post, however, it appears this week’s attacks infected only Windows users.

Read more on Ars Technica…


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Amnesty International malware attack: when bad things happen on good sites

Foxconn Chief Confirms The Apple iTV

fanboys

In an interview published by China Daily today, Terry Gou, chairman of Foxconn, confirms the massive manufacturing company is making preparations for an Apple television set called iTV. Gou also states that neither development nor manufacturing has begun. Apparently, per China Daily at least, the television set will have an aluminum construction, Siri voice controls and FaceTime video calling.

This is the most solid report to date of the long-fabled Apple HDTV. The product has been rumored for the last several years. So far both Steve Jobs and now Tim Cook have called the Apple TV, the company’s set-top box, a hobby. But it seems the company is almost ready to turn its avocation into an occupation.

Gou’s claims published in today’s China Daily report line up very nicely with previous rumors including Cult Of Mac’s claims from last week. The iTV, or as I have long called it, the Apple HDTV, seems like it would be an iMac designed for the living room. An Apple HDTV will likely use a very similar branding and design plan as the iMac with near-edgeless glass and aluminum frame. It would also hopefully have a similar I/O port design, allowing consumers the luxury of having all the ports located in one location. China Daily also indicates that Foxconn is teaming up with Sharp to produce this set, which makes sense given Sharp’s dominance in LCD manufacturing.

But as China Daily indicates, production nor development has started on this product yet, seemingly indicating that it won’t hit the market in 2012. It’s been also rumored that Apple is trying to line up more content partners to bolster iTunes’s library or even perhaps cobble together a legitimate alternative to cable TV. Whenever it hits, the iTV, Apple HDTV, or whatever it will be called will likely be the biggest TV news (albeit perhaps not the most popular selling unit) since the Beatles appeared on Carson.

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Foxconn Chief Confirms The Apple iTV

Redsn0w 0.9.11b1 now allows post-iPad 2 devices to downgrade to an older firmware

Redsn0w 0.9.11b1 now allows post-iPad 2 devices to downgrade to an older firmware

Per usual, the Dev-Team whiz-kids have been hard at work trying to make your jailbroken iOS life a tad bit easier. This time around, MuscleNerd & Co. have outed their latest revision of RedSn0w (0.9.11b1), allowing folks using the new iPad, iPad 2 and iPhone 4S to downgrade to lower firmwares for jailbreaking purposes — a feature others have been enjoying for some time now. As expected, you’d still need those saved SHSH blobs from the previous firmware in order to do so, and if your device depends on an unofficial unlock, it’s recommended (with a few exceptions) to steer clear since this method will upgrade your baseband. Speaking of, the Dev-Team also notes you should stick with an earlier version of Redsn0w unless you must have the new tidbits. Those of you eager to give it a try can head over to the Dev-Tem Blog to grab yourself a copy.

Redsn0w 0.9.11b1 now allows post-iPad 2 devices to downgrade to an older firmware originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 May 2012 10:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Jailbreak Untethered | sourceDev-Team Blog | Email this | Comments

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Redsn0w 0.9.11b1 now allows post-iPad 2 devices to downgrade to an older firmware

WiFi Pineapple: an appliance to do WiFi snooping, password sniffing, and site-spoofing


The $90 WiFi Pineapple is now in its fourth iteration. The gadget does man-in-the-middle attacks on WiFi networks, allowing its owner to snoop on all the traffic, keylog password entries, and generally compromise the shit out of anyone using WiFi in the area. It’s a damned good reason to use a VPN, like The Pirate Bay’s IPREDator. Also: it has epic rickrolling potential.

The WiFi Pineapple Mark IV improves tremendously on previous models in both hardware capabilities and ease of use. Where the Mark III brought a completely redesigned web management interface the Mark IV continues with plug & play 3G / 4G connectivity, automatic presistent reverse SSH tunnels and a simplistic status page to name a few. The new control center shows at a glance connected clients hostnames, IP addresses, Karma’d SSID as well as signal strength, idle time and network throughput.

Hardware wise the Mark IV is built on a powerful Atheros AR9331 SoC at 400 MHz–over double that of the previous generation–and sports two Ethernet ports, 802.11 b/g and N connectivity, as well as most notably a USB 2.0 port, allowing for expansions like mass storage and 3G / 4G modems. *modem sold separately.

Also it’s black, which adds at least 50 hacker points.

WiFi Pineapple Mark IV

(via JWZ)


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WiFi Pineapple: an appliance to do WiFi snooping, password sniffing, and site-spoofing