Windows 8.x breaks 10 percent, Internet Explorer 11 makes a splash

Net Market Share In 2013, Internet Explorer reversed some of its historic losses, Google released of Chrome for Android, and Windows 8 surpassed OS X and Windows Vista to become the third most widely used desktop operating system. Net Market Share Net Market Share Compared to last month, Internet Explorer actually fell slightly, declining by 0.45 points. Firefox, Safari, and Opera also fell, down 0.19, 0.08, and 0.06 points, respectively. The month’s winner was Chrome, which picked up 0.78 points. Over the course of the entire year, Internet Explorer was up 3.14 points on 2012. Firefox was down 1.47 points. Chrome was also down by 1.82 points. Safari rose 0.58 points. Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Read this article:
Windows 8.x breaks 10 percent, Internet Explorer 11 makes a splash

How the Circumference of Earth Was Accurately Estimated 2000 Years Ago

Born around 276 B.C. in Cyrene, Libya, Eratosthenes soon became one of the most famous mathematicians of his time. He is best known for making the first recorded measurement of the Earth’s circumference, which was also remarkably accurate. (And, yes, people at that point had known for some time that the world wasn’t flat, contrary to popular belief .) Read more…        

More here:
How the Circumference of Earth Was Accurately Estimated 2000 Years Ago

Postal Service Starting To Use Mobile Point of Sale Tech

An anonymous reader writes “The U.S. Postal Service is conducting a pilot test of mobile point of sale technology in 50 facilities, using a modified iPod device and printers. During the holiday season, the 50 facilities testing mPOS processed more than 102, 000 transactions using the technology.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Read more here:
Postal Service Starting To Use Mobile Point of Sale Tech

Ford’s C-MAX Solar Energi Concept is powered by a roof panel, rolls to CES next week

The tech inside green vehicles continues to improve, Ford has just announced a concept looks to push it even further. The US auto maker has outed the C-MAX Solar Energi Concept: a vehicle that packs in all of the perks of a plug-in hybrid, but doesn’t require that tether to recharge. As the name suggests, a roof-mounted solar panel collects a day’s worth of energy needed to churn out the same performance as the C-MAX Energi Hybrid ; however, the new Solar Energi model seeks to do so without relying on the ol’ power grid. The panel itself houses “a special solar concentrator lens” that acts like a magnifying glass, directing those requisite rays on the rooftop. After rolling around the lot of the LVCC at CES next week, the concept vehicle will be tested by researchers from Ford and Georgia Tech — who helped develop the panel system — to see if the C-MAX Solar Energi is indeed viable for production. For now, we’ll have to wait to grab a closer look in a few days. Filed under: Transportation Comments

More:
Ford’s C-MAX Solar Energi Concept is powered by a roof panel, rolls to CES next week

Finnish HIV Vaccine Testing To Begin

First time accepted submitter ultranova writes with news of a new phase in trials for an HIV vaccine. From the article: “Some 1, 000 patients throughout France and Switzerland will take part on the trials, with the first phase involving hundreds of HIV sufferers. Participant numbers will increase as the program progresses. … According to Reijonen, the GTU technology developed by FIT Biotech is also suitable for use as a preventive HIV vaccine, however, he says that such a drug is still ten years away.The central idea behind HIV vaccine development is the use of genetic immunization. Genes are introduced into the body in order to generate a controlled immune response against HIV. Gene Transport Unit (or GTU) technology refers to FIT Biotech’s patented method by which genes can be safely introduced into the body.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Read this article:
Finnish HIV Vaccine Testing To Begin

Researchers Confirm Exoplanet Has Clouds Using Hubble Telescope

Discovered in 2009 by the MEarth project, researchers now have strong evidence that GJ 1214 b has an atmosphere “But now a team of astronomers led by UChicago’s Laura Kreidberg and Jacob Bean have detected clear evidence of clouds in the atmosphere of GJ 1214b from data collected with the Hubble Space Telescope. The Hubble observations used 96 hours of telescope time spread over 11 months. This was the largest Hubble program ever devoted to studying a single exoplanet. … The first spectra, which were obtained by Bean in 2010 using a ground-based telescope, suggested that the planet’s atmosphere either was predominantly water vapor or hydrogen-dominated with high-altitude clouds. … More precise Hubble observations made in 2012 and 2013 allowed the team to distinguish between these two scenarios. … The best explanation for the new data is that there are high-altitude clouds in the atmosphere of the planet, though their composition is unknown. Models of super-Earth atmospheres predict clouds could be made out of potassium chloride or zinc sulfide at the scorching temperatures of 450 degrees Fahrenheit found on GJ 1214b.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Excerpt from:
Researchers Confirm Exoplanet Has Clouds Using Hubble Telescope

4.6 Million Snapchat User Names and Phone Numbers Leaked (Check Yours)

Oh dear. In an inauspicious start to 2014 for both Snapchat and its users, a website appears to have published user name and phone number information for 4.6 million accounts. Read more…        

More:
4.6 Million Snapchat User Names and Phone Numbers Leaked (Check Yours)

GOG’s managing director: Gamer resistance to DRM is stronger than ever

GOG.com’s Guillaume Rambourg giving Jenga advice. Digital games distribution site GOG (Good Old Games) has spent the last five years offering classic videogame titles DRM-free to its customers. Earlier in 2013, the site launched an indie publishing platform which allowed independent developers to submit their games for sale through GOG—an alternative to Steam’s contentious Greenlight initiative . Wired.co.uk spoke to Guillaume Rambourg, managing director of GOG.com, to discuss DRM, anti-sales, and why exactly the site was offering the original Fallout games free of charge. Wired.co.uk: What was the story behind setting up the GOG.com website? Rambourg: It all began in the mid-90s, when friends Marcin Iwinski and Michal Kicinski started their business as retail distributors in Poland. Back then, Poland was a very highly pirated market, with most gamers using outdated hardware and not having too much money to spend on games. That’s a tough market to break into: one where people aren’t used to paying for games. Read 32 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Read the original:
GOG’s managing director: Gamer resistance to DRM is stronger than ever

Mobile Substrate Updates for iOS 7, Supports More Jailbreak Tweaks

iOS ( Jailbreak ): The iOS 7 jailbreak came along with a bit of drama last week , and one of the problems with it was the fact that the backbone of most jailbreak tweaks, a system called Mobile Substrate, hadn’t been updated to support iOS 7. Mobile Substrate was updated this morning and many of your favorite tweaks and apps should work a bit better now. Read more…        

View article:
Mobile Substrate Updates for iOS 7, Supports More Jailbreak Tweaks

Snapdragon 805’s desktop-class mobile graphics chops in action (video)

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 800 chip is still pretty dang new, but the company’s already churned out a follow-up: the Snapdragon 805 , a so-called Ultra HD processor. Like the 800, this version is a Krait-based, quad-core chip, and its biggest selling point is support for 4K video playback on your mobile devices as well as your smart TV. The 805 also includes an Adreno 420 GPU, which Qualcomm says offers 40 percent more graphics power. Of course, this is the sort of tech that you really need to see to believe. Luckily, a recent trip to San Diego gave us a chance to stop by Qualcomm’s HQ and check out the latest Snapdragon demos. Head past the break for a look at the chip’s graphics and video chops. All three demos utilized the Snapdragon 805 Development Platform, an Android tablet with a 2, 560 x 1, 440 display, dual cameras with 3D sensors and surround-sound speakers. While devices packing the 805 chip won’t debut until late 2014, these set-ups tease some of the visual improvements you can expect. Selective focus and other camera apps With the 805, Qualcomm is commercializing several software algorithms that allow for advanced photo-editing tools no matter what smartphone you’re using (as long as it packs this Snapdragon chip, that is). For example, an app called UbiFocus let us change what parts of an image were in focus a la the Lytro camera. It worked well, and thanks to the 805’s processing oomph, there wasn’t noticeable delay on-screen. Other programs include Optizoom, which sharpens a particular area (such as text) of a photo, and Chromaflash, which fuses flash and natural-light versions of a photo for an enhanced picture. Multi-view 3D One of the coolest demos on hand showed off the 805’s capable Adreno 420 GPU. When hooked up to an external monitor, the Development Platform was capable of streaming eight different feeds of 3D video to the display, allowing for an ideal viewing experience no matter where we stood in front of the setup. Multi-view 3D is one of the Snapdragon 805’s most significant advantages — at least in terms of graphics — over the 800, which can’t pull it off with its Adreno 330 GPU. Improved graphics efficiency Qualcomm added hardware tessellation to the Adreno 420 GPU, which makes for a marked improvement over the Adreno 330 in terms of visuals. Essentially, the GPU supports additional geometry (i.e., graphics details) without stressing the CPU’s processing power and memory. It’s the kind of GPU heavy lifting that’s been doable on consoles and high-end PCs previously, but not on a tablet. A comparison between the Adreno 330 and 420’s rendering of an insect moving around makes it clear just how much better the latter performs. High-quality images, small file size Thanks to hardware 4K HEVC (high efficiency video coding), the Snapdragon 805 can decode and stream high-quality video without using much power. And we really mean high quality; just check out the clip above, which should give you a decent idea about the level of detail you can expect on mobile platforms and TVs alike. The processor also packs improved Dolby Audio, including vertical surround sound, but that experience doesn’t transfer as well to a video hands-on. Zach Honig contributed to this report. Filed under: Cellphones , Tablets , HD Comments

See the article here:
Snapdragon 805’s desktop-class mobile graphics chops in action (video)