How “cell tower dumps” caught the High Country Bandits—and why it matters

Surveillance footage of one of the robbers. On February 18, 2010, the FBI field office in Denver issued a “wanted” notice for two men known as “the High Country Bandits”—a rather grandiose name for a pair of middle-aged white men who had been knocking down rural banks in the northern Arizona and Colorado, grabbing a few thousand dollars from a teller’s cash drawer, and sometimes escaping on a stolen all terrain vehicle (ATV). In each of their 16 robberies, the bandits had a method: “The unknown male identified as suspect number one often enters the banks in rural locations near closing time and brandishes a black semi-automatic handgun. Suspect number one then demands all the money from the teller drawers. He obtains an undisclosed amount of money, puts it in a bag, orders everyone on the ground, then exits the banks with a second suspect. They have been seen leaving the banks on a green or maroon four-wheel ATV with suspect number two driving.” Investigators had bank surveillance footage of the robberies, but the bandits wore jackets, ski masks, and gloves and proved hard to track down. It wasn’t for a lack of witnesses or police effort, either. At one 2009 robbery in Pinetop, Arizona, for instance, the bandits got away with $3, 827. Witnesses saw a man run from the bank and into a residential area, “looking around as if he were lost.” Witnesses later saw the man tear out of the area on an ATV driven by another man. Police followed their escape route and found the spot where the ATV left the road through a freshly-cut barbed wire fence. The cops followed the tracks 17 miles northwest of town before losing the trail completely. Read 21 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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How “cell tower dumps” caught the High Country Bandits—and why it matters

The best of the American Museum of Natural History’s rare book collection

These coy hippos come from a 19th century illustration in The Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. They’re now part of a new book, published by New York’s American Museum of Natural History, that combines some of the best illustrations and artworks from the museum’s rare book collection .        

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The best of the American Museum of Natural History’s rare book collection

Tor Usage More Than Doubles In August

hypnosec writes that the Tor network has witnessed a massive rise in the number of users connecting to it for the month of August. “The privacy-enhancing network is known for providing an anonymous browsing experience through the use of a series of encrypted relays, and has had as many as 500k users throughout this year so far. But if we check the latest statistics available through Tor Metrics Portal there has been a whopping 100 percent increase in the number of Tor clients and as many as 1, 200, 000 users are connecting to the network. The previous peak for the network was in January 2012, when it saw as many as 950, 000 users.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Tor Usage More Than Doubles In August

Dropbox Plus Adds Folder Trees to Dropbox’s Website

Chrome/Firefox: Dropbox is a crowd favorite in the file syncing tool category, with no shortage of uses . The site kind of sucks to navigate, though. Make it a little less bad with Dropbox Plus. Read more…        

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Dropbox Plus Adds Folder Trees to Dropbox’s Website

Improve Your Facebook News Feed in Minutes with the "Organize" Tool

Facebook has an awful lot of noise , especially if you’re “friends” with people you don’t really care about. If you want to clean up your News Feed, Facebook actually has a handy tool to help you do just that. Read more…        

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Improve Your Facebook News Feed in Minutes with the "Organize" Tool

Add Weather and Google Calendar Information to Your Kindle

The Kindle’s screensaver is pretty, but useless. If you want to spice it up with relevant information, including weather, time, and more, programmer Pablo Mateo shows you how to do it. Read more…        

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Add Weather and Google Calendar Information to Your Kindle

Google+ Hangouts moving to HD video soon, going plugin-free within months

You may not have noticed it yet, but Google is in the middle of sweeping changes to Hangouts that should offer big improvements to image quality and accessibility. The company tells GigaOM that it’s currently upgrading its video chat service to 720p by switching from the H.264 video codec to the more efficient (and Google-controlled) VP8 standard . HD-quality Hangouts should be available soon after Google finishes the VP8 rollout to web users late next week. A sharper picture is just one part of the puzzle, however. The switch to VP8 also sets the stage for WebRTC support, which will let Google offer plugin-free Hangouts in browsers like Chrome and Firefox within the next several months. The search giant will still offer a plugin for holdouts , but they may soon be the exceptions to the rule. Filed under: Internet , Google Comments Source: GigaOM

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Google+ Hangouts moving to HD video soon, going plugin-free within months

NIN’s Hesitation Marks Will Come In an Audio-Nerds-Only Version

Trent Reznor has a treat for audio nerds. When Nine Inch Nails’ new record Hesitation Marks drops next week, it’ll be available in regular and audiophile versions. The two sonic flavors will be mixed differently—One mix for the headphone clutching masses who demand “loundness, ” and one mix for the nerds who want to hear every frequency the way it sounded in the studio. Read more…        

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NIN’s Hesitation Marks Will Come In an Audio-Nerds-Only Version

In historic vote, New Zealand bans software patents

A major new patent bill, passed in a 117-4 vote by New Zealand’s Parliament after five years of debate, has banned software patents. The relevant clause of the patent  bill actually states that a computer program is “not an invention.” Some have suggested that was a way to get around the wording of the TRIPS intellectual property treaty which requires patents to be “available for any inventions, whether products or processes, in all fields of technology.” Processes will still be patentable if the computer program is merely a way of implementing a patentable process. But patent claims that cover computer programs “as such” will not be allowed. Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments        

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In historic vote, New Zealand bans software patents