This Diver Is Cradling a 12,000-Year-Old Skull in an Underwater Cave

Inside a cave so deep and dark it’s called Hoyo Negro, or Spanish for “black hole, ” divers are transporting a 12, 000-year-old skull for 3D scanning. The skull belongs to one of the oldest and most complete skeletons ever found in the Americas. Lucky for us, the expedition was documented with an entire set of stunning photos. Read more…

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This Diver Is Cradling a 12,000-Year-Old Skull in an Underwater Cave

These fully automatic Wolverine claws are as badass as the real thing

Holy crap, this guy made the best Wolverine claws replicas ever. These 12-inch steel blades are fully automatic: they can deploy or retract with the push of a button. I’ve seen many tries at making these, but nothing as amazing as this these ones. And for sure, you can use these as real—very—mortal weapons. Read more…

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These fully automatic Wolverine claws are as badass as the real thing

Vudu’s ‘Share My Movies’ lets up to five friends peek into your library

While Ultraviolet digital copies have been pitched as a way to make watching videos online easier, so far they’ve lead to frustration for many users. A recent incident involving the early release of Veronica Mars for Kickstarter backers was a low point, Apple, Google and Microsoft all have yet to tie their services in, and now Disney is finally rolling out its own Movies Anywhere system. To get back on the positive foot, Walmart’s Vudu streaming service is shining a light on Ultraviolet’s ability to let users share their library with up to five friends (no, it’s not quite as easy as sharing a PS4 game ). Now available within Vudu under the title of ” Share My Movies ” it lets users add friends to their library just by sending an e-mail invite. Ultraviolet supports up to three simultaneous streams, so you can even watch movies at the same time. According to the FAQ , once your Vudu account is linked to another person’s library, any TV shows or movies you purchase will be added to that library, so you may want to be careful which ones you add. Done right between a few friends, it can probably add up to a decent online library of movies to watch just from Blu-ray discs and DVDs you already own — check the blog post for more information. Filed under: Home Entertainment , HD Comments Source: Vudu Blog , Vudu Share My Movies

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Vudu’s ‘Share My Movies’ lets up to five friends peek into your library

Univision partners with T-Mobile to create US Hispanic operator

Move over Jennifer Lopez and Verizon , as Univision has just partnered with T-Mobile to create a new Spanish-language cellphone service called Univision Mobile. Underpinned by T-Mo’s network , the new MVNO will target the 56 million strong Hispanic American market with “custom-built” plans. Like its parent carrier , those will be contract-free starting at $30 for unlimited texts and calls and $45 for a 2.5GB web plan. Both will get unlimited international texting and 100 minutes of free calls to mobile phones or landlines in Mexico and seven other Latin American countries. The new company may not have J-Lo fronting it like Viva Movil, but users will no doubt be able to catch her on their phones — Univision will offer “insights and programming content” for the new venture. Filed under: Wireless , Mobile , T-Mobile Comments Source: Univision

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Univision partners with T-Mobile to create US Hispanic operator

Thousands of Gallons of Crude Oil Spill In Los Angeles

As many as 50, 000 gallons of crude oil spilled onto the streets of Los Angeles early this morning when a 20-inch pipeline ruptured. According to the Los Angeles Fire Department , the oil is knee-deep in places. Read more…

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Thousands of Gallons of Crude Oil Spill In Los Angeles

Former Subway sandwich franchisee cops to $40,000 gift-card hack scheme

A former Subway sandwich shop franchisee pled guilty to taking part in a scheme to hack point-of-sale terminals for at least 13 stores and obtaining gift cards worth $40,000. Shahin Abdollahi, who also ran a business that sold and maintained point-of-sale terminals, sold the computerized checkout registers to the Subway shops that were illegally accessed, according to federal prosecutors in Massachusetts. He set up the terminals with software from LogMeIn , which allows people to remotely log in to PCs over the Internet. Abdollahi and other conspirators then used the software to repeatedly access the Subway terminals without authorization, usually early in the morning, when the restaurants were closed. Once logged in, they loaded gift cards with credit totaling $40,000. Co-conspirator Jeffrey Wilkinson, 37, of Rialto, California, would then advertise the cards for sale on eBay and Craigslist and hand deliver them to buyers. On Wednesday, Abdollahi 46, of Lake Elsinore, California, pled guilty in federal court in Massachusetts to one count of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion and wire fraud and one count of wire fraud. He is scheduled to be sentenced on for August 6. Wilkinson, 37, of Rialto, California, pled guilty in February and is scheduled to be sentenced on May 28. It’s not the first time Subway point-of-sale terminals have been illegally accessed by crooks for purposes of skimming the till. In 2012, two men pled guilty to participating in an international conspiracy that hacked into credit-card payment terminals at more than 150 Subway franchises and racked up more than $10 million in losses. Read on Ars Technica | Comments

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Former Subway sandwich franchisee cops to $40,000 gift-card hack scheme

Your Old CD Collection Is Dying

Hugh Pickens DOT Com (2995471) writes “Adrienne LaFrance reports at the Atlantic that f you’ve tried listening to any of the old CDs lately from your carefully assembled collection from the 1980’s or 1990’s you may have noticed that many of them won’t play won’t play. ‘While most of the studio-manufactured albums I bought still play, there’s really no telling how much longer they will. My once-treasured CD collection — so carefully assembled over the course of about a decade beginning in 1994 — isn’t just aging; it’s dying. And so is yours.’ Fenella France, chief of preservation research and testing at the Library of Congress is trying to figure out how CDs age so that we can better understand how to save them. But it’s a tricky business, in large part because manufacturers have changed their processes over the years and even CDs made by the same company in the same year and wrapped in identical packaging might have totally different lifespans. ‘We’re trying to predict, in terms of collections, which of the types of CDs are the discs most at risk, ‘ says France. ‘The problem is, different manufacturers have different formulations so it’s quite complex in trying to figure out what exactly is happening because they’ve changed the formulation along the way and it’s proprietary information.’ There are all kinds of forces that accelerate CD aging in real time. Eventually, many discs show signs of edge rot, which happens as oxygen seeps through a disc’s layers. Some CDs begin a deterioration process called bronzing, which is corrosion that worsens with exposure to various pollutants. The lasers in devices used to burn or even play a CD can also affect its longevity. ‘The ubiquity of a once dominant media is again receding. Like most of the technology we leave behind, CDs are are being forgotten slowly, ‘ concludes LaFrance. ‘We stop using old formats little by little. They stop working. We stop replacing them. And, before long, they’re gone.'” You can donate CDs to be tested for aging characteristics by emailing the Center for the Library’s Analytical Science Samples. I haven’t had much trouble ripping discs that were pressed in the 80s (and acquired from used CD stores with who knows how many previous owners), but I’m starting to get nervous about not having flac rips of most of my discs. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Your Old CD Collection Is Dying

Photos of an NSA “upgrade” factory show Cisco router getting implant

NSA techs perform an unauthorized field upgrade to Cisco hardware in these 2010 photos from an NSA document. A document included in the trove of National Security Agency files released with Glenn Greenwald’s book No Place to Hide details how the agency’s Tailored Access Operations (TAO) unit and other NSA employees intercept servers, routers, and other network gear being shipped to organizations targeted for surveillance and install covert implant firmware onto them before they’re delivered. These Trojan horse systems were described by an NSA manager as being “some of the most productive operations in TAO because they pre-position access points into hard target networks around the world.” The document, a June 2010 internal newsletter article by the chief of the NSA’s Access and Target Development department (S3261) includes photos (above) of NSA employees opening the shipping box for a Cisco router and installing beacon firmware with a “load station” designed specifically for the task. The NSA manager described the process: Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Photos of an NSA “upgrade” factory show Cisco router getting implant

You Can Text 911 in an Emergency, Starting Tomorrow

If you’re deaf or in an emergency where you can’t speak, getting a hold of 911 is problematic. In just a few hours, the nation’s leading mobile providers will start the support of texting to 911 for emergencies in certain areas. Read more…

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You Can Text 911 in an Emergency, Starting Tomorrow