Intel closes AppUp, its PC app store (Intel had a PC app store?)

We’re apparently not the only ones who forgot AppUp was a thing—the store closes in March. Intel Intel’s AppUp store for Windows apps has been around since January of 2010, though you could be forgiven for forgetting about it. Intel apparently wants to forget, too: the company announced today that the AppUp store will be closing its doors on March 11, 2014, “after which no new content or apps will be available for download.” An extensive FAQ about the closing covers most of the important facts. E-mail support for AppUp apps will be available until June 15, 2014. The AppUp client application and some apps will continue to function after the store closes, but  many applications “require communication with the AppUp client and may not work after May 15, 2014.” Apps purchased through AppUp will no longer receive updates once the store closes, nor will Intel be able to send product keys for keyed apps after March 11. If you want to download the AppUp client and install it now, you’ll either need to find it from another download source or contact Intel customer service. Intel is offering refunds for some paid apps here , but that page isn’t yet functional, and it’s not clear what criteria a purchase will need to meet to be eligible for a refund. Refunds will only be available between now and December 19, 2014. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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Intel closes AppUp, its PC app store (Intel had a PC app store?)

Tiny Copper and Carbon Nanotube Wires Increase Current Flow 100 Fold

Researchers in Japan have developed an incredibly thin wire—just half a micrometer in diameter—made from a new composite material composed of traditional copper and those new fangled carbon nanotubes . But what makes this creation particularly awesome is that the new wire allows over 100 times more current to flow than a traditional copper thread. Read more…        

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Tiny Copper and Carbon Nanotube Wires Increase Current Flow 100 Fold

Creating a font from a classic comic

Creating a font from a classic comic Typographer Nate Piekos describes how he created a 21st-century typeface from a 1980 issue of Elfquest —just in time to begin lettering the comic series’ conclusive installment. I remember asking my mother to get me the collected Elfquest trade paperbacks for Christmas one year. Weeks went by, and being a nosy kid, I stumbled upon them, concealed in the back of a closet just before the big holiday. Giddy with anticipation, I told no one. I bided my time … Wendy and Richard Pini’s epic tales got me through junior high and beyond. I carted those trade paperbacks with me when I left my mom’s house, went to design school, started a career in comics, got married … and moved a half dozen times in between. Fast-forward to just a few months ago. Editor Sierra Hahn told me new Elfquest comics were coming to Dark Horse and asked if I was interested in not only designing Wendy’s hand-lettering font, but if I’d also like to take on the lettering duties of the whole series! I couldn’t reply fast enough. Of course I was interested! It was one of those surreal full-circle moments when I get to work with some of my comic book heroes. I immediately broke out those faded, dog-eared Elfquest collections for reference, and they sat on my desk the entire time I worked on Wendy’s typeface. I’ve designed hundreds of fonts, but designing the definitive typeface of Wendy’s classic hand lettering was a pretty big deal to me. It had to capture the essence of the original Elfquest , it had to be top-notch software, and it had to be special. Wendy Pini’s lettering from Issue #9 of Elfquest Here’s how I did it Wendy picked out what she considered her best hand lettering-a selection of pages from Elfquest #9. And Dark Horse provided me with high resolution scans of all the pages. My first task was to study the letters in Photoshop, make an intimate analysis of the style as a whole, and choose the characters I thought were most representative. Every hand letterer brings unique qualities to the page. Some are slight, others overt, like the wiggle on the bottom of Wendy’s L’s! Idiosyncratic letterforms help establish the series’ distinctive voice Once I had enough characters picked out to work with, I brought the art into Adobe Illustrator and began creating vector objects of each character. Many typographers would autotrace these, but I always create the objects point by point. The time invested is hours versus seconds, but the results are far superior. Obviously, there are a lot of characters on your keyboard that don’t show up very often, or at all, in comic book lettering. But it’s important to me that a finished font contain these th ings-brackets, a plus sign, accents, etc. It’s a matter of craftsmanship and pride in the end product. You could drive a fancy car just fine without a paint job, but it just wouldn’t seem finished, would it? Many of these lesser-used characters were missing from Wendy’s samples, but the Pinis gave me permission to invent the missing pieces, mimicking Wendy’s style. In the end, I think I did a pretty seamless job. Piekos traces and adjusts the letterforms manually, avoiding use of automated tools available in applications such as Adobe Illustrator At least two versions of each letter were created, so later on, when I moved the project over to Fontlab, I could program Open Type autoligatures for any instance when two of the same letter appeared side by side. (Think of the two o’s in the word book.) The autoligatures swap one letter out so that they’re slightly different in appearance, creating a more organic look. The art contained fewer samples of bold and italic lettering, which are used less often than regular text, so I needed to search a larger number of Wendy’s art pages to get what I needed. I repeated the same process of checking off my top choices of which letters to create as point-bypoint vectors. Characters that I couldn’t find in the art were once again designed from scratch, simulating Wendy’s style. Over the course of about a week, I had re-created or simulated everything I needed. I decided the italic style would be created by slanting the regular characters in Fontlab, so I took some measurements of Wendy’s natural italic slant. You may imagine some very technical equation for figuring this out, or even some preprogrammed action in Illustrator, and those things probably exist, but taking the simplest approach, I just back-slanted some samples of Wendy’s italic letters with Illustrator’s Shear tool until they were nearly vertical. This gave me a measurement of 30°-35°. I made a note for later and moved on to tidying up the vectors that I’d made. As my work progressed, I’d send regular previews to Sierra and the Pinis, getting feedback and making adjustments. The Pinis decided to dial back the degree of slant on both the italic and bold italic sets-we ended up at a 24° slant-and reduce the weight of the bold italic a bit. Here are the samples I submitted to the Pinis for final approval before moving everything over to Fontlab. A font finally becomes a working piece of software once it’s been programmed. This happens in Fontlab or similar software, and it’s when things begin to get very technical, but don’t worry—I’m just going to hit the highlights! Careful adjustment of distances between specific pairs of letters — kerning — is a time-consuming process essential to a high-quality typeface. The most important process at this stage is kerning (how any two characters fit together). Imagine a letter T next to an A They have to scoot together to look right within a word. Over the last decade, I’ve assembled a proprietary list of over eleven thousand kerning pairs that I check and adjust for every font I create. The process can take anywhere from hours to days and is the true measure of a professionally made font. Each typeface also needs to be cleaned up one final time, spaced, and hinted (the process of making characters render properly onscreen), and the Open Type autoligatures must be programmed. After much work, the software was saved as installable font files and approved by the Pinis. As I remember it, we made barely any changes at this point. (Always good news!) The font Richard and Wendy decided to call “Elfquest” was finished, and it was about to get a trial by fire! The completed typeface Dark Horse was going to print the Final Quest Special issue that the Pinis had already completed. But first it needed to be relettered with the new font to match the style of upcoming issues. So within a day or two of finishing, I was hard at work using the new typeface and developing a style guide that evoked those classic tales I grew up with while bringing a fresh, uniform aesthetic to the series’ lettering. If the lettering didn’t really jump out at you in this comic, I’ll take that as a compliment. When comic lettering is done well, by a letterer with a love of typography and graphic design, it’s unobtrusive to the reader and complements the art. When it’s done poorly, it’s a distraction, and worse yet, it makes your reading experience difficult. It’s a serious business to me. That said, if you did enjoy the lettering in Elfquest: The Final Quest half as much as I enjoyed designing it … well … I guess we both have my mom to thank! ✦ Issue #1 of Elfquest: TFQ is available now from Dark Horse Comics. See more of Nate’s work at Blambot.com . A panel from Elfquest typeset … in Elfquest ✦ Nate Piekos graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Design from Rhode Island College in 1998. Since founding Blambot, he has created some of the industry’s most popular fonts and has used them to letter comic books for Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Oni Press, and Dark Horse Comics, as well as dozens of independent publishers. In 2001 he became type designer to Harvey Award Winner, Mike “Madman” Allred, and has had his designs licensed by such companies as Microsoft, Six Flags Amusement Parks, New Yorker Magazine, The Gap, and many more. Nate’s work has not only been utilized in comics, but in video games, on television, and in feature films as well. When not designing, Nate is committed to a regular fitness routine, reads voraciously, writes and illustrates webcomics, and is a dedicated musician. He’s married and lives in New England. COMMENTS AND DISCUSSION Previously in Typography Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto        

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Creating a font from a classic comic

Researchers Grow New Hair From Stem Cells For the First Time

Traditionally, baldness cures involve moving hair around, either from one part of the scalp to another , or from the toupee store to your dome. This week, scientists announced a potentially revolutionary discovery in hair science: they’ve successfully turned mature skin cells into stem cells that develop into hair follicles . It’s hair-raising! Read more…        

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Researchers Grow New Hair From Stem Cells For the First Time

Microsoft’s board is reportedly preparing to name Satya Nadella as the new CEO.

Microsoft’s board is reportedly preparing to name Satya Nadella as the new CEO. Nadella is an internal candidate most recently in charge of the company’s enterprise and cloud endeavors. The company is also reportedly considering replacing Bill Gates as chairman. [ Bloomberg ] Read more…        

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Microsoft’s board is reportedly preparing to name Satya Nadella as the new CEO.

Amazon mulling price hike for Amazon Prime shipping and streaming service

Amazon has just reported its earnings for the fourth quarter of 2013 . According to The Verge , Amazon CFO Tom Szkutak mentioned that the company is considering a price increase for its Amazon Prime customers in the US. The decision hasn’t been made, but high shipping costs could prompt a price increase of between $20 and $40 a year for the service. Prime began life as a service that offered free two-day shipping on many items for a flat, $79-a-year fee. As Amazon has branched out into tablets and streaming media, perks like the Instant Video service and Kindle Owners’ Lending Library have been added to sweeten the deal. The potential price increase would be the first since Prime was introduced in the US in 2005. Amazon reported income of $239 million on sales of $25.59 billion for the fourth quarter of 2013, lower than analysts had expected. The company’s guidance for the first quarter of 2014 projects sales between $18.2 and $19.9 billion and expects income to be somewhere between a profit of $200 million and a loss of $200 million. Read on Ars Technica | Comments        

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Amazon mulling price hike for Amazon Prime shipping and streaming service

Mass hack attack on Yahoo Mail accounts prompts password reset

Yahoo said it is resetting passwords for some of its e-mail users after discovering a coordinated effort to compromise accounts. Attackers behind the cracking campaign used usernames and passwords that were probably collected from a compromised database belonging to an unidentified third party, according to Jay Rossiter, Yahoo senior vice president of platforms and personalization products, who wrote an advisory published Thursday . A large percentage of people use the same password to protect multiple Internet accounts, a practice that allows attackers holding credentials taken from one site to compromise accounts on other sites. There’s no evidence the passwords used in the attack came from Yahoo Systems. “Our ongoing investigation shows that malicious computer software used the list of usernames and passwords to access Yahoo Mail accounts,” Rossiter wrote. “The information sought in the attack seems to be names and e-mail addresses from the affected accounts’ most recent sent e-mails.” Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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Mass hack attack on Yahoo Mail accounts prompts password reset

AT&T plan to shut off Public Switched Telephone Network moves ahead at FCC

PhotoAtelier On Thursday, the Federal Communications Commission is expected to take its first major step toward letting AT&T and other carriers replace the country’s traditional phone system with one that works entirely over Internet Protocol networks. AT&T has argued that the technology transition should be accompanied by deregulation that would strip the company of most of its monopoly-era obligations. AT&T likely won’t get everything it wants, though. FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler wrote in a blog post last November that he intends to “ensure the continuation of the Network Compact” with universal service for all Americans, consumer protections, public safety services, and competition.In other words, AT&T can’t stop maintaining the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) without a plan to preserve current service levels. This is not as simple as just making sure phone calls get through, although solving the rural call completion problem by itself is a challenge. It also means maintaining access to 911 services, fire alarms, fax machines, medical alert systems, anything that relies on the phone network. Not everything is to be decided this week. The FCC vote is on an AT&T petition to launch customer trials of new IP-based networks. While AT&T’s petition is expected to be granted, the FCC’s proposed order is written to ensure continuation of the four values (universal service, consumer protection, public safety, and competition) as Wheeler emphasized, an FCC official told Ars on condition that he not be named. Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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AT&T plan to shut off Public Switched Telephone Network moves ahead at FCC

Globalstar’s new service turns your WiFi device into a satellite phone

Your choices for satellite communication devices are relatively limited, especially if you’d prefer to use your own gear while chatting in the wilderness. You’re going get a much wider selection of hardware once Globalstar’s Sat-Fi service goes live, though. The subscription offering revolves around a satellite hotspot (not yet pictured) that lets you make calls and send data on Globalstar’s network using most any WiFi-capable device. You can share the connection between multiple gadgets, and you can even use an existing phone number. Just be patient if you’re eager to sign up for an always-available data link. The company doesn’t expect the FCC to approve the hotspot until some time in the second quarter of the year, and you’ll have to wait until shortly afterward to use the service itself. Filed under: Cellphones , Wireless , Networking Comments Source: Globalstar

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Globalstar’s new service turns your WiFi device into a satellite phone