Outlook.com exits preview with 60 million active users, Hotmail UI to be retired this summer

It’s been so long since Microsoft launched Outlook.com that we forgot it was technically in preview mode. Well, that ended today, at 12:01AM ET on the dot. The company just announced that the email service is no longer in beta, and that the site has racked up 60 million active users — over a third of them Gmail converts. If you decide to join today, you’ll be getting the same feature set announced last summer, just with a smoother, less glitchy experience (not that it was ever that buggy to begin with, if you ask us). To lure in even more users, Microsoft is planning on launching a massive advertising campaign, one that will include TV and radio spots (see one of them after the break), online ads and even posters in subway stations. Basically, the sort of heavy promotion Microsoft is already doing for Surface. Regardless of how much success Microsoft has in converting Gmail loyalists, though, a lot more people are about to become acquainted with Outlook’s clean UI: the company has said it plans to switch Hotmail users over to the Outlook interface by summertime. To be clear, Microsoft says it has no plans to shut down the hotmail.com domain, so your existing Hotmail email address is safe, and you don’t even have to register for an Outlook.com addy if you don’t want to. Additionally, all of your folders and settings will be preserved. It’s just that you’re soon going to have to say goodbye to the old Hotmail. Onward, we say. Filed under: Software , Microsoft Comments Source: Microsoft

Read the article:
Outlook.com exits preview with 60 million active users, Hotmail UI to be retired this summer

Lots of Changes for Intel Graphics Coming in Linux 3.9

With the Linux 3.8 merge over, the Intel Linux graphics developers are looking toward 3.9. From a weblog entry by one of them: “Let’s first look at bit at the drm core changes: The headline item this time around is the reworked kernel modeset locking. Finally the kernel doesn’t stall for a few frames while probing outputs in the background! … For general robustness of our GEM implementation we’ve clarified the various gpu reset state transitions. This should prevent applications from crashing while a gpu reset is going on due to the kernel leaking that transitory state to userspace. Ville Syrjälä also started to fix up our handling of pageflips across gpu hangs so that compositors no longer get stuck after a reset. Unfortunately not all of his patches made it into 3.9. Somewhat related is Mika Kuoppala’s work to fix bugs across the seqnqo wrap-around. And to make sure that those bugs won’t pop up again he also added some testing infrastructure. ” The thing I am most looking forward to is the gen4 relocation regression finally being fixed. No more GPU hangs when under heavy I/O load (the bane of my existence for a while now). The bug report is a good read if you think hunting for a tricky bug is fun. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Read More:
Lots of Changes for Intel Graphics Coming in Linux 3.9

Satechi Wireless Multifunction Mini Router Solves Many Wireless Internet Needs with a Tiny Footprint

We love our pocket routers , because they’re great for both travel and home use. The Satechi Wireless Multifunction Mini Router offers more than just standard internet access over Wi-Fi, however. It also works as a signal repeater, access point, wireless client, and bridge. More »

Read more here:
Satechi Wireless Multifunction Mini Router Solves Many Wireless Internet Needs with a Tiny Footprint

Cellular data traffic keeps doubling every year

Florence Ion Worldwide mobile data traffic doubled over the past year and is expected to continue growing at a similar rate due to expanding smartphone sales and video traffic, telecom equipment maker Ericsson said in research released today. By the end of 2012, global data traffic on mobile networks (not including Wi-Fi) hit around 1,300 petabytes per month, twice as much as in the previous year, Ericsson said. Ericsson The chart shows an approximate doubling each year for the past few years. We’ve asked Ericsson for the raw data behind the report and will provide that if we get it. Ericsson’s measurements come from “a large base of commercial networks that together cover all regions of the world,” the report states. “They form a representative base for calculating world total traffic in mobile networks.” Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

More here:
Cellular data traffic keeps doubling every year

Sexy scammers entice men into stripping on webcam, then blackmail them

Police in Singapore have issued an alert citing a dramatic rise in the number of “cyber blackmail” cases being reported. But unlike many cases that target women or teenagers , this latest rash of crimes targets men through social media sites. The Singapore Police Force reports that there have been more than 50 reported cases in the last year where “foreign” women have lured men through invitations on social networks, such as Facebook and Tagged.com, into video sex sessions that are recorded for blackmail purposes. The women “initiate cybersex” with the men over video chat, stripping for them and then encouraging them to do the same. The men are told to perform sex acts on camera for the women, and the video feeds are recorded. The men are then contacted later and told that the videos will be posted in public if the victims don’t wire money to the scammers. Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

More:
Sexy scammers entice men into stripping on webcam, then blackmail them

FollowShows Keeps You Up-to-Date on Your Favorite TV Shows, Finds Where to Watch Them Online

So you’ve got a bunch of TV shows you watch, but maybe you don’t know exactly what day they air, or where you can watch them online. FollowShows lets you see a schedule with just your favorite shows on it, get notifications, and watch it from one place no matter where it’s available online. More »

Read the original post:
FollowShows Keeps You Up-to-Date on Your Favorite TV Shows, Finds Where to Watch Them Online

The NBA Built Itself a Massive Interactive Stat Shrine

Stats obsession has been the provenance of baseball’s sabermetricians for the last several decades. But if your data-crunching heart belongs to basketball, you’ve finally got a datum-filled palace to call home. Meet NBA Stats . It’s… comprehensive. More »

View post:
The NBA Built Itself a Massive Interactive Stat Shrine

LG Display invests $655 million to expand OLED HDTV mass production next year

Sure, LG’s current 55-inch OLED HDTV is pretty pricey with a US MSRP of $12K, but that may start to change next year when panel supplier LG Display kicks its new 8G production line into full gear. LG Electronics holds a 38 percent stake in the company and although it supplies screens to many others as well, the next generation of 55EM9700s will likely be a large segment of the displays produced. Although LCD manufacturers ramped up 8G facilities capable of producing six 55-inch displays from one piece of glass in the late 2000s, oversupply caused prices to drop and manufacturing to slow down, including at LG Display . Now, new display technology is ramping up investment again, which will see this new line installed at its P9 plant in Paju, South Korea at a cost of 706 billion won ($655 million). Based on LG’s WRGB OLED evaporation process, it should be capable of working with as many as 26,000 input sheets per month once it’s up to full speed in the first half of 2014. Chief competitor Samsung showed off “production” OLED HDTVs last year and plenty of demo units at CES with a mid-year release planned, we’ll see if it manages to keep up before / if the tech goes mainstream. Filed under: Displays , Home Entertainment , HD , LG Comments

See original article:
LG Display invests $655 million to expand OLED HDTV mass production next year

Most Traffic Jams Are Caused By Just a Handful of Idiots

Deep in your heart you know it: there are like two drivers out there on the road that are causing all the traffic jams and one of those assholes is the guy right in front of you. Well, new information collected from hundreds and hundreds of drivers’ cellphones actually backs that up . Sort of. It turns out that it takes very few jackasses to screw things up for everyone. More »

Read More:
Most Traffic Jams Are Caused By Just a Handful of Idiots

ATLAS Meteor Tracking System Gets $5M NASA Funding

An anonymous reader writes “After a huge meteor recently exploded over Chelyabinsk (population 1,130,132), Russia, NASA has approved $5 million for funding for ATLAS project (Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System). From the article: ‘”There are excellent ongoing surveys for asteroids that are capable of seeing such a rock with one to two days’ warning, but they do not cover the whole sky each night, so there’s a good chance that any given rock can slip by them for days to weeks. This one obviously did,” astronomer John Tonry of the Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii told NBC News Friday.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View post:
ATLAS Meteor Tracking System Gets $5M NASA Funding