New Alternatives To Silicon May Increase Chip Speeds By Orders of Magnitude.

First time accepted submitter Consistent1 writes “A paywalled article in the “Nature Materials” journal describes the use of Magnetite to achieve ultra fast electronic switching, albeit, at the moment, only at extremely low temperatures. According to a story on Quartz, the team, led by Dr. Hermann Dürr from the Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences hopes ‘to continue the experiment with materials that can operate at room temperature. One possibility is vanadium dioxide.’ Chips utilizing this technology may operate at clock cycles thousands of times faster than the silicon-based chips used today.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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New Alternatives To Silicon May Increase Chip Speeds By Orders of Magnitude.

First images from NASA’s Sun-staring IRIS satellite

NASA/SDO/IRIS Last month we told you about the launch of NASA’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) satellite, which was built to study a poorly understood layer of the Sun’s atmosphere. After its successful launch , the satellite settled into its orbit and NASA took the lens cap off the telescope on July 17. Now, NASA has released the first imagery from the telescope, and it is gorgeous . The image above shows the unprecedented detail of IRIS’s view (on the right) compared to the view from the Solar Dynamics Observatory, a satellite that has been studying the Sun since 2010. (The video below shows these images in motion.) The feathery features you see are the result of differences in density and temperature. It’s the movement of energy through this layer of the solar atmosphere that NASA scientists are trying to understand. It should help them figure out how the Sun’s upper atmosphere gets so hot, as well as how solar flares form. Read on Ars Technica | Comments        

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First images from NASA’s Sun-staring IRIS satellite

Massachusetts Enacts 6.25% Sales Tax On "Prewritten" Software Consulting

First time accepted submitter marshallr writes “Technical Information Release TIR 13-10 becomes effective in Massachusetts on July 31st, 2013. It requires software consultants to collect a 6.25% sales tax from their clients if they perform ‘computer system design services and the modification, integration, enhancement, installation or configuration of standardized software.’ TIR 13-10 was published to mass.gov on July 25th, 2013 to provide the public a few working days to review the release and make comments.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Massachusetts Enacts 6.25% Sales Tax On "Prewritten" Software Consulting

Sony and Panasonic ally to launch next-generation 300GB optical discs

During the heyday of optical storage we saw a 400GB Blu-Ray flavor (shown above) and even 1TB discs in the lab, but lately such development has waned. Sony and Panasonic have teamed up to move things along, however, saying there’s a need for reliable long-term storage that only optical disks can provide. The pair will develop a “next-generation standard for professional-use optical discs, ” saying that a 300GB flavor could be ready in two years or so. Though geared towards industries like cloud storage and digital cinema at first, the tech could eventually trickle down to consumers, too. Given rapid developments in on-demand streaming and cloud gaming , however, there might be nothing left for us plebes to archive by then. Filed under: Storage , Sony Comments Via: The Verge Source: Sony

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Sony and Panasonic ally to launch next-generation 300GB optical discs

ASUS’ RAIDR Express PCI-e SSD is compatible with both legacy and UEFI BIOS

These days, it’s fairly easy to find a PCI Express-based SSD to transform one’s desktop — Angelbird , Fusion-io , Micron and ASUS will sell you one, just to name a few. That said, the last of those three has just revealed a new entrant that will certainly catch the eye of many, as the RAIDR Express claims to be the first PCI-e SSD to be compatible with both legacy and UEFI BIOS. The so-called DuoMode feature is joined by 240GB of storage space, sequential 830MB/s read and 810MB/s write speeds and a reported 620, 000 hours mean time between failure (MTBF). You’ll also find the latest LSI SandForce controller, Toshiba-built 19nm MLC flash, and 100, 000 4K read/write input/output operations per second (IOPS). The bundled RAMDisk utility allows users to dedicate up to 80 percent of a computer’s available RAM for use as a high-speed virtual drive, and if you needed any further proof that it’s fast, look no further than in the video after the break. Curiously, ASUS isn’t talking pricing just yet, but it should start shipping in the very near future. Filed under: Gaming , Storage , ASUS Comments Via: PC Perspective , Engadget Japanese Source: ASUS

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ASUS’ RAIDR Express PCI-e SSD is compatible with both legacy and UEFI BIOS

Did you know that the Saturn V’s fuel economy was 7 inches per gallon?

An incredible fact from a fascinating new Buzz Aldrin interview: the Saturn V was only making 7 inches to the gallon at the moment of launch. Of course, the fuel economy improves dramatically when you actually take into consideration the entire distance travelled. Read more…        

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Did you know that the Saturn V’s fuel economy was 7 inches per gallon?

Man gets ransomware porn pop-up, goes to cops, gets arrested on child porn charges

A man from just outside of Washington, DC turned himself in to local police—with his computer in tow—after receiving a pop-up message from what he believed was an “FBI Warning” telling him to click to pay a fine online, or face an investigation. While specific details on the case are scant as of yet, it appears that the suspect here fell victim to a type of ransomware that has been proliferating for years now—raking in millions for the scammers behind it. Police said Jay Matthew Riley, 21, of Woodbridge, Virginia, walked into Prince William’s Garfield District Station on July 1, 2013 to “inquire if he had any warrants on file for child pornography.” Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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Man gets ransomware porn pop-up, goes to cops, gets arrested on child porn charges

India Thought Jupiter and Venus Were Actually Chinese Spy Drones

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s a Chinese spy drone! Oh, and there’s another one! That’s what the Indian Army must’ve thought when they saw two specks of something “spying on them” in the sky. Instead, what India thought were Chinese spy drones turned out to be… Jupiter and Venus. Read more…        

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India Thought Jupiter and Venus Were Actually Chinese Spy Drones