The new iPad Pro vs. the 9.7-inch iPad Pro: What’s changed?

The iPad Pro’s new 10.5-inch screen size may be a bit bigger than the 9.7-inch model it’s replacing, but it’s still sleek and svelte. However, a larger display and a new chassis aren’t the only differences. Inside you’ll find upgraded specs belying the device’s thin frame. Take a peek at our table to to see how much of a difference that extra 0.8 inches of screen makes between smaller iPad Pro models. iPad Pro (10.5-inch) iPad Pro (9.7-inch) Price $649, $749, $949 $599, $749, $899 Dimensions 250.6 x 174.1 x 6.1mm (9.8 x 6.8 x 0.24 inches) 240 x 169.5 x 6.1mm (9.45 x 6.67 x 0.24 inches) Weight 469g (1.03 pounds) 437g (0.96 pounds) OS iOS 10 iOS 9 Display 10.5-inch IPS LCD Retina display 9.7-inch IPS LCD Retina display Resolution 2, 224 x 1, 668 (264 ppi) 2, 048 x 1, 536 (264 ppi) Aspect ratio 4:3 4:3 Processor Apple A10X Apple A9X Memory Not available 2GB Storage 64 / 256 / 512GB 32 / 128 / 256GB Ports Lightning Lightning Front camera 7MP, f2.2, 1080p video 5MP, f2.2, 720p video Rear camera 12MP, f/1.8, 4K video at 30fps 12MP, f/2.2, 4K video at 30fps Cellular radio Optional GSM/EDGE CDMA UMTS/HSPA/ HSPA+/DC-HSDPA LTE Optional GSM/EDGE CDMA UMTS/HSPA/ HSPA+/DC-HSDPA LTE WiFi Dual band 802.11a/b/g/n/ac Dual band 802.11a/b/g/n/ac Bluetooth v4.2 v4.2 Battery 30.4 Wh, 10 hours 27.5 Wh, 10 hours * Specs in italics are unconfirmed. Get all the latest news from WWDC 2017 here!

Continued here:
The new iPad Pro vs. the 9.7-inch iPad Pro: What’s changed?

Evidence of an official iOS file manager hits the App Store ahead of WWDC

Enlarge / This mostly-empty App Store stub suggests Apple will add a file explorer to iOS 11. Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference gets underway in just a few hours, but it’s never too late for leaks! iOS developer Steve Troughton-Smith has discovered  an App Store entry for an Apple-published app called “Files.” The listing appears to be a stub used to re-enable preinstalled first-party applications that you choose to delete, something Apple added support for last year in iOS 10 . There’s not a whole lot of information up right now, but the name of the app and its icon strongly suggest that Apple plans to add some kind of local file manager to iOS 11. There are dummy screenshots listed for both iPhone and iPad versions of the app, so it shouldn’t be an iPad-only feature. The Files app will presumably be more-or-less similar to the iCloud Drive app Apple added to iOS 9—it would just offer access to local apps and files instead of those stored in Apple’s cloud. The app will also presumably stop short of exposing iOS’ filesystem to the extent that the macOS filesystem is exposed; even so, an iOS file manager is a longstanding request of many power users, and any app that provides this kind of functionality is a welcome development. Read on Ars Technica | Comments

See the article here:
Evidence of an official iOS file manager hits the App Store ahead of WWDC

IBM squeezes 30 billion transistors into a fingernail-sized chip

Who said Moore’s Law was dead? Certainly not IBM or its chip partners Globalfoundries and Samsung. The trio has developed a transistor manufacturing process that should pave the way for 5-nanometer chips . While the team etched the chip using the same extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) used for the breakthrough 7nm chip , it ditched the common FinFET (fin field effect) transistor design in favor of stacks of silicon nanosheets. The switch makes it possible to fine-tune individual circuits to maximize their performance as they’re crammed into an incredibly small space. How small? At 5nm, the group says it can squeeze 30 billion transistors into a chip the size of a fingernail (see below) — not bad when the 7nm chip held 20 billion transistors a couple of years ago. IBM sees the technique helping its own cognitive computing efforts as well as the Internet of Things and other “data-intensive” tasks. However, it’s also painting a rosy picture for the future of mobile devices — it imagines phones having “two to three times” more battery life than current devices . That’s likely optimistic (phone makers tend to focus on speed over longevity), but it won’t be shocking if future hardware is both faster and wrings out a little more from every charge. Just don’t expect to see real-world examples of this for a while. We haven’t even seen devices shipping with 7nm chips (they’re not expected until 2018 at the earliest), so it could easily be a couple of years or more before 5nm arrives. Still, that 5nm is even on the roadmap is important. Chip designers won’t have to reinvent the wheel to get meaningful improvements, and you won’t have to worry about device performance growing stale for at least the next few years. Source: IBM

Taken from:
IBM squeezes 30 billion transistors into a fingernail-sized chip

Overclocking to 7GHz takes more than just liquid nitrogen

Over the years, I’ve been fascinated by two kinds of events at Computex: eSports and extreme PC overclocking competitions. I doubt I’d ever make it as a professional gamer (I’m more of a Counter Fight kind of guy than a Counter-Strike man these days), but I’d jump at any opportunity to pour liquid nitrogen onto a PC motherboard, because even if I screw something up, chances are I’d still look cool doing so. It just so happened that at this year’s Computex, gaming accessory maker G.SKILL invited me to its extreme overclocking workshop behind its contest stage. As a total newbie with absolutely zero knowledge of overclocking, I quickly took up this offer. The one-on-one workshop was jointly set up by G.SKILL and overclocking enthusiast group HWBOT . Rather than getting me to build from scratch, the instructors had already put together a rig that would let me dive right into the overclocking process. At first sight, I was slightly overwhelmed by the setup in front of me: I was staring at an ASUS ROG Maximus IX APEX motherboard which carried two 8GB G.SKILL Trident Z DDR4 RAM sticks, an Intel Core i7-7700K plus a chunky copper pot directly on top of the CPU to hold liquid nitrogen. There was a fan hanging off the pot to suck vapor away, in order to avoid condensation on the motherboard. The monitor was showing the ASUS TurboV Core software along with CPU-Z — the former for accessing various CPU parameters, and the latter for keeping an eye on the CPU’s status. To keep track of the CPU’s temperature, an industrial thermometer was hooked up to a thermal probe inside the liquid nitrogen pot. The main objective of the workshop was to push the CPU from its 4.2GHz base frequency all the way to 7GHz, and this required lowering the CPU’s temperature to nitrogen’s boiling point — -195.8°C or -346°F — in the first place. My instructor, HWBOT director Pieter-Jan Plaisier, started by running Cinebench in Windows to ensure the CPU’s stability while I slowly poured liquid nitrogen into the pot. Once the pot reached just a little below -190°C, the liquid nitrogen stopped boiling frantically, and this was when I could actually start overclocking. Plaisier set me off with a couple of settings in TurboV Core: he bumped the CPU ratio to 55 to reach 5.5GHz clock speed (this is derived from the 100 MHz default base clock), then he also pushed the CPU core voltage to 1.855V. As I was going from 55 to 65 for the CPU ratio, I went up by increments of two units each time before hitting the “Apply” button, and I would always wait until CPU-Z reflected the new clock speed before applying my new settings. Meanwhile, I also made sure that the CPU temperature wasn’t fluctuating too much by occasionally refilling the pot (thankfully, G.SKILL had plenty of liquid nitrogen to share). So far so good. When the CPU reached 6.5GHz, I started nudging the CPU ratio by increments of just one unit instead, while also having to start gradually bumping up the CPU core voltage — it’d need about 1.925V to be stable at 7GHz. I became more mindful of my actions whilst having to juggle between the monitor, the mouse, the thermometer, the rig and the flask; but I kept my cool, because the last thing I wanted to do was to spill liquid nitrogen all over the place — especially not in front of my friend Lau Kin Lam , the champion of G.SKILL’s OC World Cup 2015 , who I brought along for support. By taking my time to fine-tune each parameter, I eventually saw the “Core Speed” figure in CPU-Z floating around 7GHz. Just as I was about to give myself a pat on the back, the monitor went black almost immediately. The computer had crashed. My first instinct was to check the thermometer but the temperature was still at around -192°C, so it wasn’t clear what had caused the crash. To my surprise, Plaisier then brought a blowtorch out of nowhere and started blasting fire into the pot. Don’t worry, he wasn’t mad at me; he just needed to bring the CPU temperature up to around -170°C / -274°F so that the system would be able to boot up. And sure enough, soon we were back in Windows. I repeated the same steady process and reached 7GHz again, and this time, both Plaisier and Lau encouraged me to go further. I obliged. As I was starting to push the CPU to its limit, I had to take baby steps in TurboV Core — in the sense that I had to leave the CPU ratio as-is and start tweaking the base clock speed instead. First of all, I had to push the CPU core voltage to 1.955V, and then I started nudging the 100 MHz base clock speed up by 0.2MHz or 0.1MHz each time. The resultant gain in CPU clock speed was obviously much less than before, but my patience eventually paid off: I somehow managed to break HWBOT’s own 7.05GHz record with that particular chip, and I eventually hit 7.08372GHz before the system froze up (no pun intended). This remained the record for that particular chip at the show, until someone else struck back with a 7.09744GHz achievement in a later workshop session. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t mind, but still, the clock speed I got would come in ninth position in HWBOT’s worldwide overall ranking for the Core i7-7700K. Not bad for a first-timer. Of course, I don’t plan to submit my achievement to HWBOT, because after all, I had most of the dirty work taken care of beforehand. For instance, it wasn’t until after the workshop when I realized that in order to place the pot directly on the CPU’s silicon, someone would have had to use a delid tool — like the upcoming der8auer Delid Die Mate-X pictured here — to pop the CPU’s lid off first. You’d also have to apply new paste between the silicon and the pot, and if the paste isn’t applied properly, you’d end up with uneven temperature across the silicon and thus leading to faulty operation. Lau also made a good point before we wrapped up: it is absolutely crucial to do waterproof work around the pot, not because of liquid nitrogen (it’d just roll off the motherboard due to the Leidenfrost effect) but because of water condensation on the outside of the pot. Water on a motherboard would be “game over” for the system, which is why there was a blue towel delicately wrapped around the base of the pot we used. The overclocking fun doesn’t stop here, though. For those who are adventurous enough, you can also use liquid nitrogen to overclock memory — with G.SKILL’s very own Trident Z 2, 133MHz DDR4 RAM being the first DDR4 module to break the 5GHz barrier last year. But if you ask me, I’ll probably stick to Plaisier’s advice and learn from scratch by building my own liquid-cooling system first. One step at a time. Click here to catch up on the latest news from Computex 2017!

Visit site:
Overclocking to 7GHz takes more than just liquid nitrogen

Apple stops showing 32-bit iOS apps in your search results

Apple has been nudging iOS app developers toward 64-bit code for years: it started by requiring 64-bit support , then told users that 32-bit apps might run poorly, and lately has been warning that 32-bit apps wouldn’t work in “future versions of iOS.” Now, however, it’s pulling the plug. TouchArcade and others have noticed that 32-bit iOS software no longer turns up in App Store search results. You can still use direct links, but that’s about as far as you can go. And you can probably guess why Apple is making this move right now. Many suspect that iOS 11, likely to be unveiled at WWDC on June 5th, will be 64-bit only. If all those 32-bit apps are going to stop working when iOS 11 ships in a few months, why let new users download them? This is also a final warning for app writers: move to 64-bit code now or you’ll be left in the dust. There are a number of potential advantages to moving all apps to 64-bit technology. You won’t usually see much of a performance difference — unless an app can benefit from 64-bit math (think encryption or media encoding), it’ll probably run as quickly as before. Modern iOS devices don’t have more than 4GB of RAM, so you wouldn’t need support for extra memory. Rather, this is more about creating headroom and dropping the burdens of legacy tech. Apps won’t demand quite so much space on your devices, and the hardware itself can ditch unnecessary 32-bit components in favor of making the 64-bit parts more powerful. Everyone will eventually benefit — this is just one step toward that goal. Via: 9to5Mac Source: TouchArcade

Originally posted here:
Apple stops showing 32-bit iOS apps in your search results

Pioneering Link-Sharing Site Del.icio.us Shuts Down

Long-time Slashdot reader brentlaminack writes: One of the first and best social bookmarking platforms, Del.icio.us has changed hands about four times, one was to Yahoo for > $15M. Its most recent relaunch was over a year back, which was their last blog entry. Now images are broken, little “advertisement” blocks show up with no advertisements, things seem moribund. What’s the deal? The Next Web reports: It’s the end of the road for social bookmarking website del.icio.us. After almost fifteen years, the site has been acquired by rival Pinboard, and will be shuttered on June 15, when it goes into read-only mode. While the site will continue to be viewable, users won’t be able to save any new bookmarks. Del.icio.us pioneered the social bookmarking paradigm. Its influence can be seen everywhere, from Reddit to Twitter… After del.icio.us was acquired by AVOS Systems in 2011, users fled to Pinboard in droves over complaints AVOS was fundamentally changing the makeup of the site. By purchasing del.icio.us, Pinboard is able to coax the few remaining del.icio.us users to jump ship. Depending on how much Pinboard paid for the site, how many users remain, and how many users Pinboard is able to convert, this could be a financially lucrative move. A Pinboard subscription costs $11 per annum. A late update to the article includes a quote from Pinboard founder Maciej Ceglowski. “In a statement, he said ‘I am the greatest.’ Ceglowski also confirmed the purchase price for del.icio.us, which was $35, 000.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Read the original:
Pioneering Link-Sharing Site Del.icio.us Shuts Down

Java 9 Delayed Due To Modularity Controversy

An anonymous reader quotes InfoWorld: Java 9 won’t be released on July 27 after all. Oracle has proposed that Java 9 Standard Edition be delayed until September 21 so the open source community that is finalizing Java 9 can address the ongoing controversy over a planned but later rejected approach to modularity, said Georges Saab, vice president of software development in the Java platform group at Oracle and chairman of the OpenJDK governing board… The [Java Platform Module System] measure was sent back to the proposal’s expert group for further discussion. Since then, the group has reached consensus on addressing the modularity concerns, Saab said. But they cannot rework Java 9 in time for the original July 27 release date… If the revised JSR 376 approved, as expected, work can proceed on implementing it in the official version of Java 9 SE. This setback for Java 9s upcoming upgrade, however, should just be temporary, with Oracle expecting a more rapid cadence of Java SE releases going forward, Saab said. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View original post here:
Java 9 Delayed Due To Modularity Controversy

NASA Will Create Fake Red And Green Clouds Near Virginia

An anonymous reader quotes CNET: The early morning hours on the U.S. East Coast might be unusually colorful as NASA plans to produce artificial blue-green and red clouds that may be visible from New York to North Carolina… It’s a test of a new system that helps scientists study the auroras and ionosphere. A NASA sounding rocket (a small, sub-orbital rocket often used in research) will launch from Wallops Flight Facility off the coast of Virginia and release several soda-sized canisters of vapor tracers in the upper atmosphere that may appear as colorful clouds. The tracers use vapors made up of lithium, barium and tri-methyl aluminum that react with other elements in the atmosphere to glow, letting researchers visually track the flows of ionized and neutral particles. It’s a bit like being able to dye the wind or ocean currents to be able to get a visual picture. CNN adds that “If you’re near the eastern U.S. coast, look toward the eastern horizon beginning about 4:30 a.m. The farther you are from the launch location, the lower the clouds will appear on the horizon.” Basically, try to adjust your gaze towards Virginia’s eastern shore — and if you’re not on the east coast, NASA is livestreaming the launch and posting updates on Facebook and Twitter. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Visit link:
NASA Will Create Fake Red And Green Clouds Near Virginia

Chinese ‘Fireball’ Malware Infects Nearly 250 Million Computers Worldwide

Check Point researchers have discovered a massive malware campaign, dubbed Fireball, that has already infected more than 250 million computers across the world, including Windows and Mac OS. The Fireball malware “is an adware package that takes complete control of victim’s web browsers and turns them into zombies, potentially allowing attackers to spy on victim’s web traffic and potentially steal their data, ” reports The Hacker News. From the report: Check Point researchers, who discovered this massive malware campaign, linked the operation to Rafotech, a Chinese company which claims to offer digital marketing and game apps to 300 million customers. While the company is currently using Fireball for generating revenue by injecting advertisements onto the browsers, the malware can be quickly turned into a massive destroyer to cause a significant cyber security incident worldwide. Fireball comes bundled with other free software programs that you download off of the Internet. Once installed, the malware installs browser plugins to manipulate the victim’s web browser configurations to replace their default search engines and home pages with fake search engines (trotux.com). “It’s important to remember that when a user installs freeware, additional malware isn’t necessarily dropped at the same time, ” researchers said. “Furthermore, it is likely that Rafotech is using additional distribution methods, such as spreading freeware under fake names, spam, or even buying installs from threat actors.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View article:
Chinese ‘Fireball’ Malware Infects Nearly 250 Million Computers Worldwide

JRR Tolkien Book ‘Beren and Luthien’ Published After 100 Years

seoras quotes a report from BBC: A new book by Lord of the Rings author JRR Tolkien is going on sale — 100 years after it was first conceived. Beren and Luthien has been described as a “very personal story” that the Oxford professor thought up after returning from the Battle of the Somme. It was edited by his son Christopher Tolkien and contains versions of a tale that became part of The Silmarillion. The book features illustrations by Alan Lee, who won an Academy Award for his work on Peter Jackson’s film trilogy. It is being published on Thursday by HarperCollins on the 10th anniversary of the last Middle Earth book, The Children of Hurin. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Excerpt from:
JRR Tolkien Book ‘Beren and Luthien’ Published After 100 Years