Microsoft’s immediate plans against NSA ‘threat’: court challenges, encryption and transparency

The NSA / PRISM / MUSCULAR scandal sparked by Edward Snowden’s leaks stained many tech companies, and tonight Microsoft has laid out several plans it hopes will convince customers (particularly non-US businesses and foreign governments) they’re safe using its products and services . In a blog post , general counsel and executive VP Brad Smith lays out a three pronged approach of “immediate and coordinated action” against the threat of government snooping. It’s expanding the use of encryption to cover any content moving between it and its customers, any transmissions between its data centers, and data stored on its servers — all of this is said to be in place by the end of 2014. In terms of court orders that may push it to reveal data , Microsoft is committing to notify “business and government” customers of any legal orders, and if it is prevented from doing so by a gag order, says it will challenge those in court. Finally, it’s expanding the existing program giving governments access to its source code so they can make sure it doesn’t contain any back doors. According to Reuters , this will put Microsoft on par with other Internet companies like Amazon Web Services, Yahoo and Google for how it treats data. Still, while that may help foreign diplomats feel better about logging into Outlook or Skype , there are probably a few individuals who will keep their tin foil hats on, Kinect cameras covered and cellphones off . Filed under: Internet , Microsoft Comments Source: Microsoft TechNet Blog

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Microsoft’s immediate plans against NSA ‘threat’: court challenges, encryption and transparency

Bluetooth Is Getting an Intelligence Boost to Save Your Battery

Since Bluetooth was given an overhaul in 2010 with the 4.0 standard, it’s surged in popularity, being used in everything from wireless speakers to smartwatches. Now, the connection is getting a shot in the arm—and it should help save your battery. Read more…        

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Bluetooth Is Getting an Intelligence Boost to Save Your Battery

World’s Largest Ship Floated For the First Time

Zothecula writes “A ship with a hull longer than the Empire State Building is tall has been floated out of dry dock in Geoje, South Korea. Measuring 488 m (1, 601 ft) long and 74 m (243 ft) wide, the hull belongs to Shell’s Prelude floating liquefied natural gas (FLNG) facility, which upon completion will be the largest floating facility ever built.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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World’s Largest Ship Floated For the First Time

Retail Radeon R9 290X Graphics Cards Slower Than AMD’s Press Samples

crookedvulture writes “AMD’s recently introduced Radeon R9 290X is one of the fastest graphics cards around. However, the cards sent to reviewers differ somewhat from the retail units available for purchase. The press samples run at higher clock speeds and deliver better performance as a result. There’s some variance in clock speeds between different press and retail cards, too. Part of the problem appears to be AMD’s PowerTune mechanism, which dynamically adjusts GPU frequencies in response to temperature and power limits. AMD doesn’t guarantee a base clock speed, saying only that the 290X runs at ‘up to 1GHz.’ Real-world clock speeds are a fair bit lower than that, and the retail cards suffer more than the press samples. Cooling seems to be a contributing factor. AMD issued a driver update that raises fan speeds, and that helps the performance of some retail cards. Retail units remain slower than the cards seeded to the press, though. Flashing retail cards with the press firmware raises clock speeds slightly, but it doesn’t entirely close the gap, either. AMD hasn’t explained why the retail cards are slower than expected, and it’s possible the company cherry-picked the samples sent to the press. At the very least, it’s clear that the 290X exhibits more card-to-card variance than we’re used to seeing in a PC graphics product.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Retail Radeon R9 290X Graphics Cards Slower Than AMD’s Press Samples

Anonymous Member Sentenced For Joining DDoS Attack For One Minute

jfruh writes “One of the most potent aspects of Anonymous is, well, its anonymity — but that isn’t absolute. Eric Rosol was caught by federal authorities participating in a DDoS attack on a company owned by Koch Industry; for knocking a website offline for 15 minutes, Rosol got two years of probation and had to pay $183, 000 in restitution (the amount Koch paid to a security consultant to protect its website ater the attack).” The worst part? From the article: “Eric J. Rosol, 38, is said to have admitted that on Feb. 28, 2011, he took part in a denial of service attack for about a minute on a Web page of Koch Industries…” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Anonymous Member Sentenced For Joining DDoS Attack For One Minute

Hanjie Wanda Square, a high-end mall designed by Dutch architects UNStudio, opened in the Chinese ci

Hanjie Wanda Square, a high-end mall designed by Dutch architects UNStudio, opened in the Chinese city of Wuhan this week. There are 42, 300 stainless steel orbs strung along the facade, each embedded with an LED that, together, turn the building’s skin into a multi-colored screen at night. [ Domus ; image by Edmon Leong ] Read more…        

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Hanjie Wanda Square, a high-end mall designed by Dutch architects UNStudio, opened in the Chinese ci

Autodesk Announces CAM 360, World’s First Cloud-Based CAM Solution

So you’ve designed your product, run simulations on the model, figured out the PLM and rendered countless iterations. Now it’s time to actually machine the thing. Autodesk is now addressing this final step, taking advantage of Autodesk University’s packed attendance (10, 000-plus people this year!) to announce their new CAM 360 software , which they’re billing as the world’s first cloud-based CAM solution. CAM 360 is seen as the final puzzle piece in their cloud-based digital manufacturing software suite, following on the heels of PLM 360 (product lifecycle management), Sim 360 (simulation software) and Fusion 360 (design). By finally integrating the thing that actually generates the toolpaths for CNC, the company reckons manufacturers will enjoy a huge time savings. And the cloud-based approach confers three distinct benefits: 1) Customers no longer need worry which version of the software they and their collaborators are on; 2) Files can be accessed anywhere, anytime; and 3) they’ve got virtually limitless cloud-based computing power available to quickly crunch those monster files. The CAM 360 release date is pegged for next year. (more…)

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Autodesk Announces CAM 360, World’s First Cloud-Based CAM Solution

Charged with theft, man arrested for plugging car into school’s outlet

Nissan A man in an Atlanta suburb was confronted by a police officer for plugging his electric car into an outside outlet at a school. Ten days later, he was arrested at home and charged with theft for taking about 5 cents worth of electricity “without consent.” Kaveh Kamooneh plugged an extension cable from his Nissan Leaf into a 110-volt external outlet at Chamblee Middle School while his son was practicing tennis. A short time later, he noticed someone in his car and went to investigate—and found that the man was a Chamblee police officer. “He informed me he was about to arrest me, or at least charge me, for electrical theft,” Kamooneh told Atlanta’s Channel 11 News . Kamooneh said that the car, when plugged into a 110-volt outlet, draws a kilowatt an hour. “Over an hour, that’s maybe eight or nine cents” worth of electricity, he said, depending on the rates. He was plugged in for less than 20 minutes, so he estimated the amount of power he drew from the school at less than 5 cents. Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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Charged with theft, man arrested for plugging car into school’s outlet

Hands-on with the YotaPhone: the e-ink Android phone that nobody expected

There was a moment, back in 2012, when we had some quiet doubts about the YotaPhone. The first prototype was desirable, useful, and far beyond any kind of gimmick — but it also seemed like it’d be hard to manufacture for a reasonable price, especially by a company that has never built a phone before. After all, this is effectively two devices rolled into one: an LTE Android phone with a 4.3-inch LCD display on one side, plus an e-reader on the other side, offering always-on notifications from the OS and the luxury of over 60 hours of e-book reading time thanks to good old E Ink technology. Fortunately for us, and for any other phone lover on this planet who appreciates fresh ideas, such fears were unfounded. The Russian engineers at Yota Devices have overcome the many technical challenges that stood in their way, and the fruit of their efforts will go on sale in Europe later today via a dedicated online store, priced at a not-so-wacky 499 euros ($675). Admittedly, that may seem like a lot to ask if you focus solely on the specs — like the 720p resolution of the LCD or the mid-range Snapdragon S4 Pro processor — but it starts to make sense when you take a look at just how unique this thing is. And now that we’re holding the final hardware in our hands, we’re able to do just that. The first thing you notice when you pick up the YotaPhone is that it’s more chunky than you might expect given the relatively modest 4.3-inch screen size — but not to the point of being inconvenient of uncomfortable. The extra display certainly contributes to the phone’s 146 gram weight, wide bezels and 9.9mm thickness, but this is partly off-set by the unusual curvature of the E Ink display, which allows the device to taper inwards slightly at the top and succeeds in reducing the phone’s blocky feel. There are no removable covers here. The soft-feel matte plastic casing permits no entry except through the SIM tray on the top right-side corner (right-side if you’re looking the LCD display, that is) — and this tray also cleverly doubles up as the power button. Then there’s the 3.5mm headphone jack on the top left and the microUSB port on the bottom. The seams around each Gorilla Glass-protected display are much, much improved compared to the prototype we saw last year, and overall the device feels sturdy. Turn the device on and you’ll notice that both displays are of decent quality. Neither one will blow you away, but the LCD side has decent viewing angles and the E Ink side has acceptable contrast. Somehow, the phone’s designers have managed to dissipate the heat from the Snapdragon processor so that it doesn’t disturb the fussy E Ink particles — a system, we’re told, that is now patent-protected. “Log in with a Google account and it’ll take you seconds to figure out how to throw tomorrow’s appointments over to the always-on display.” The phone provides a brief but effective tutorial, covering basic navigation and how to flip information over to the E Ink side. Navigation is done by means of swipes on the large blank capacitive area below each display, which takes some learning but has the advantage of providing a single paradigm for gestures so that they work in broadly similar ways regardless of which side of the phone you happen to be using. Flipping info to the rear screen is done by means of a button on the top right corner of customized apps, a few of which come pre-loaded on the phone — including a social feed aggregator, a notepad and a calendar. Log in with a Google account and it’ll take you seconds to figure out how to throw tomorrow’s appointments over to the always-on display — something that is just as cool as it sounds. There’s also meant to be a way to get Google Now cards on the back, but we haven’t figured that out just yet. At this point we need to burrow deeper into the phone and test its usability over a good few days, so we’re going to hold off on further impressions pending our full review. That said, everything we’ve seen so far is extremely encouraging. “It’ll be a much better price in the second generation, because we’ve proved ourselves to suppliers and we can go with much bigger volumes.” — Vlad Martynov, Yota Devices CEO We’re also not too perturbed by the $675 price tag. When we asked Yota Device’s CEO, Vlad Martynov, about the YotaPhone’s value compared to something like the Nexus 5 , he gave us an answer that makes a lot of sense: around 20 percent of the price is due to the extra display and all its knock-on effects (such as the need for nine antennas to avoid interference with the E Ink particles), and perhaps another 20 percent (as a rough guess) is due to the fact that Yota doesn’t yet have enough clout to negotiate bargain prices for components from the likes of Qualcomm. In other words, these costs are inevitable in this first version of the YotaPhone, and it’s just a question of whether enough people will be prepared to pay that sort of money to be part of the journey from the beginning. If they aren’t, Martynov says he’s already preparing to offer better value in the second-gen — but maybe we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Stay tuned for our full review coming soon! Filed under: Cellphones , Mobile Comments

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Hands-on with the YotaPhone: the e-ink Android phone that nobody expected