When Will China’s Economy Leapfrog The U.S.? Check Out This Brilliant Calculator From “The Economist”

As of January 2012 the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the United States is still roughly two-times that of China’s GDP ($14.58 trillion vs. $5.88 trillion). It’s this differential that is responsible for America’s diplomatic might around the world, but all indications are that the balance is about to tip. No one knows exactly when China’s rocket-strapped economy will speed past the United States’ but one of the world’s leading publications has created a fascinating interactive calculator that juggles the hugely complex variables involved (notably China’s GDP growth), providing an easy to understand window into when the transition might occur. When The Economist published their interactive feature last week they prefaced it with the following: “Over the past ten years, real GDP growth averaged 10.5% a year in China and 1.6% in America; inflation (as measured by the GDP deflator) averaged 4.3% and 2.2% respectively. Since Beijing scrapped its dollar peg in 2005, the yuan has risen by an annual average of just over 4%. Our best guess for the next decade is that annual GDP growth averages 7.75% in China and 2.5% in America, inflation rates average 4% and 1.5%, and the yuan appreciates by 3% a year. Plug in these numbers and China will overtake America in 2018. Alternatively, if China’s real growth rate slows to an average of only 5%, then (leaving the other assumptions unchanged) it would not become number one until 2021.” The Economist has graciously allowed embedding of their calculator and you can play around with it below. For more terrific news and insights such as this be sure to visit The Economist and The Economist’s Blog. To play with the calculator simply change the numbers in the red and blue columns below. To expand the very bottom graph all you have to do is click on it.

ChinaUSGDP When Will Chinas Economy Leapfrog The U.S.?  Check Out This Brilliant Calculator From The EconomistSource: The Economist

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When Will China’s Economy Leapfrog The U.S.? Check Out This Brilliant Calculator From “The Economist”

Tranquil PC ships MMC-12: a 1.5-inch thick, fanless HTPC

We haven’t heard from Britain’s own Tranquil PC in a hot minute, but the company’s storming into the new year with a machine that’s easy to overlook. In a good way. The MMC-12 Media Center measures just 1.5-inches thick, enabling it to be slid into (or under) just about any A/V rack. £649 (right around $1,000) nets you a Core i3 processor, 4GB of DDR3 memory (plus another open RAM slot), an admittedly paltry 80GB mSATA hard drive, CD / DVD burner, Windows 7 Home Premium and an HDMI port. You’ll also get a pair of USB 3.0 ports, two underwhelming (and bound to be unloved) USB 2.0 sockets, a gigabit Ethernet jack, DVI socket and an aluminum enclosure. The company recommends that you connect a couple of your favorite USB TV tuners for maximum enjoyment, and in case you’re wondering, Blu-ray drives and international shipping is available.

Tranquil PC ships MMC-12: a 1.5-inch thick, fanless HTPC originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 02:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tranquil PC ships MMC-12: a 1.5-inch thick, fanless HTPC

Gympact iPhone app offers cash rewards to gym-goers, penalizes inattendance

We know, it’s the new year and you just made a resolution to start going to the gym regularly… for the fifth year in a row. But you really mean it this time, don’t you? There’s an intriguing way to make sure you stay motivated throughout 2012 — the almighty dollar. And we’re not just talking gym memberships, either, though you’ll probably need one: an iPhone app called GymPact offers cash rewards if you honor your weekly fitness commitment and makes you cough up some of our own hard-earned money if you slack off. Here’s how it works: you first make a pact on how many days you’ll go to the gym each week (minimum of one day per week) and how much you’ll fork out if you miss, with the minimum penalty set at five bucks for each day you miss. If you have to pay, that money gets taken out of your credit card and goes straight into a community pot, which then gets divided up and doled out to everyone who honored their weekly commitment.

How does the app know when you’ve stayed true to your vow? It’s easy enough: you have to check-in to the gym using the app and stay for at least 30 minutes in order for your visit to count. The negative motivation seems to be working so far: according to GymPact, the startup saw a success rate of 90 percent in its six-month Boston-area trial. Unfortunately, iOS is the only platform the program is currently available on, but the company says it’s working on an HTML5 web app that would allow check-ins from any smartphone. Now, if only there was an app to keep us from going to the Drive-Thru immediately after we leave the gym…

Gympact iPhone app offers cash rewards to gym-goers, penalizes inattendance originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 05:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gympact iPhone app offers cash rewards to gym-goers, penalizes inattendance

Internet Explorer holds onto top browser crown while Chrome and Firefox tussle over second place

Both Net Applications and StatCounter have released their figures for browser market share for 2011 and it makes for largely unsurprising reading. Internet Explorer’s full share has dropped but it still maintains the top spot — a 52 percent share according to Net Applications and 39 percent according to StatCounter. Meanwhile, second place remains tantalizingly within reach for Chrome, which has made headway catching up with Firefox, whose growth had apparently stalled during 2011. According to Net Applications, Firefox held a 21.8 percent share of browser users this month, while Chrome reached 19.1 percent, up just under 8 percent and capping off a second year of impressive growth. Meanwhile, StatCounter pegs Google’s browser at second place for the end of the year, claiming 27.3 percent versus the 25.3 percent share grabbed by its vulpine rival. Unsurprisingly, the Windows Team Blog takes a different slant on recent browsing trends, trumpeting that its latest version, Internet Explorer 9, continues to grow on Windows 7. This is, however, balanced out by a corresponding drop in the users of its predecessor, IE 8. Better luck next year, eh, Microsoft?

Internet Explorer holds onto top browser crown while Chrome and Firefox tussle over second place originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Jan 2012 21:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Internet Explorer holds onto top browser crown while Chrome and Firefox tussle over second place

HP Spectre teaser video: fantastically thin laptop, shrouded in mystery

Why, what’s this? Funny you ask — we’re wondering the same thing. A source at HP just dropped us a mysterious teaser video of a so-called Spectre laptop, a heretofore unannounced lappie that looks to be the company’s next Ultrabook. In our wildest dreams, this rig has a dual-LCD setup — similar to Toshiba’s Libretto W100 and Acer’s Iconia-6120 — but perhaps the creators here were just coincidentally interested in showing us lots of glass panes. We’ll be digging for more details (we’re told that an official produce portal should surface tomorrow), but for now, lose your mind in the video just past the break.

Gallery: HP Spectre laptop teaser leak

Continue reading HP Spectre teaser video: fantastically thin laptop, shrouded in mystery

HP Spectre teaser video: fantastically thin laptop, shrouded in mystery originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Jan 2012 19:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Spare parts for humans: tissue engineers develop lab-grown lungs and limbs

[Video Link]

Above, a PBS NewsHour report by science correspondent Miles O’Brien which I helped shoot, on the subject of tissue engineering. The goal in this field: Grow tissue or even whole organs to repair damaged or diseased human bodies.

The report focuses in part on Isaias Hernandez, a 26-year old Marine whose leg was badly injured in an artillery attack on his convoy, in Iraq. “It looked like a chicken, like if you would take a bite out of it down to the bone,” he tells Miles.

Dr. Steve Badylak of the McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh harvested material from a pig bladder to grow replacement muscle in the young Marine’s leg.

Full transcript for the story is here.


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Spare parts for humans: tissue engineers develop lab-grown lungs and limbs

Want To Make Your iPhone’s PIN More Secure? Repeat A Digit.

nasty hands

Here’s one for today’s “Yeah, I probably should’ve thought of that” pile.

If you’ve got anything even remotely private on your phone (and who doesn’t? Your phone has access to your email, and thereby access to everything else), you’ve hopefully got a security PIN on the lockscreen. But which numbers should you use? 4 unique numbers would be most secure, right? Not quite, and here’s why: we’ve got nasty, nasty fingers.

While 4 unique digits (each an unknown digit from 0-9) might seem like the most secure option for a 4 digit pin (with 10,000 possibilities), our greasy mitts introduce a bit of an issue: our fingerprints.

(Before we dive in: Cheers to Skeleton Key Security for bringing this up and Presh Talwalker for having done the math a bit earlier. I’d highly recommend either for a deeper dive into the subject.)

Go ahead: punch in your pin, lock the phone again, and tilt the phone a bit until the light catches the oil residue. A huge chunk of the time, you’ll see big ol’ globs of finger-juice sittin’ right on top of the 4 numbers that make up your PIN. When a would-be intruder knows the 4-digits used (as they would gather from the placement of your prints), they only need to figure out the combination. The number of possibilities drops from 10,000 to 24.

So, what are you to do? Use one of the numbers twice.

By using one digit twice, you’re introducing two challenges: first, the intruder must guess whether you used 4 unique digits (and one of the digits just didn’t smudge clearly), or 3 digits with 1 repeated. If they go with the latter, they’ll need to figure out which of the 3 digits was used twice. This increases the number of permutations from 24 to 36. It’s not at all intuitive, but using one less unique digit actually makes things marginally more secure.

“But wait,” you say. “24 to 36 isn’t a huge jump. If they’ve got the time to try 24 possibilities, they’ve got the time to try 36.”

This is absolutely true… unless you’ve got a cap on the number of times they can make a guess before your phone wipes itself. If they’ve got 10 tries and 24 options, they’ve got a 41% chance of getting it right. If they’ve got 10 tries and 36 options, this dumps down to 27%.

Sure, the improvement is arguably slight — but better security is better security. Or, if you’re particularly hardcore, you could disable the Simple Password and have access to a full keyboard. That’s pretty painful, though.

(Side note: Apple [or anyone else with a touchscreen-based PIN input system] could actually make the 4-digit system exponentially more secure with an option to randomize the placement of each digit on the keypad each time. This would negate the fingerprint issue, spiking the possible count back up to 10,000. Of course, this would also be terribly confusing and definitely shouldn’t be enabled by default.)

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Want To Make Your iPhone’s PIN More Secure? Repeat A Digit.

Apple gearing up for ‘media-related announcement’ later this month?

Leave it to Apple to completely avoid CES, yet be one of the largest stories surrounding its dates. Much like last year’s invite to what would eventually be the introduction of Verizon’s iPhone 4, All Things D has it on good authority that the folks in Cupertino are spending their first hours back on the job planning a “media-related announcement” for later this month. Contrary to earlier beliefs, we’re told that this particular event won’t be related to the next-gen iPad, and it’s also “unlikely” to be connected to a “large-scale rethinking of its interactive television initiative.”

So, knowing what it won’t entail… what will be talked about? According to unnamed sources, Apple SVP of Internet Software and Services Eddy Cue is reportedly involved. For those unaware, Cue is responsible for a sizable chunk of Apple’s media units, not the least of which include the App Store, iBookstore, iTunes Store and iCloud. Sadly, details outside of that are few and far betwixt, but you can bet we’ll be keeping an ear to the ground for more — even if it’s smack-dab in the middle of a Sony CES keynote. Cough.

Apple gearing up for ‘media-related announcement’ later this month? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Jan 2012 16:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Belarus Bans Use of Foreign Websites

bs0d3 writes “A new law in Belarus prohibits people from using ‘foreign’ websites. The law requires that all companies and individuals who are registered as entrepreneurs in Belarus use only domestic Internet domains for providing online services, conducting sales, or exchanging email messages. The tax authorities and the secret police are authorized to investigate violations.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Belarus Bans Use of Foreign Websites

Google Testing Completely Revamped Look


SharkLaser writes “Google’s search engine has always looked pretty much the same since it was introduced in 1998. However, Google is now testing a revamped look that is the largest change the search engine has ever done to its website. The new look strips the black bar running horizontally at top and places it as an openable menu on the left side. The move is said to promote Google’s other services without making the search engine too cluttered. The new side menu is also more similar to Chrome OS and allows Chromebook and Google’s website to have the same look and feel. Another consequence of the move is that it now takes users two clicks to enter other services such as Images and News, which is said to improve the amount of ad clicks and visitors advertisers get. Considering that European Commission is examining claims of Google downgrading rival websites and U.S. senators are calling FTC to inspect Google for unfair practices, the move comes at a surprising time.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Google Testing Completely Revamped Look