Intel starts shipping Atom N2600, N2800 processors for netbooks, ten hours of battery life promised

We’ve already seen a few benchmarks and other hints that they’d soon be shipping, and Intel has now officially announced that its new Cedar Trail Atom processors are finally available, with the first systems using them set to roll out early next year. The two chips you’ll likely be seeing the most of are the Atom N2600 and N2800 — both dual-core, and both designed for use in netbooks, where they promise to allow for up to ten hours of battery life and “weeks of standby,” and offer support for 1080p video playback. Also rolling out today are the D2500 and D2700, which are designed for use in entry-level desktops and all-in-one computers, as well as more commercial systems. As for all those systems themselves, details remain a bit light, but Intel says you can expect to see some from Acer, Asus, HP, Lenovo, Samsung, and Toshiba.

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Intel starts shipping Atom N2600, N2800 processors for netbooks, ten hours of battery life promised originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Dec 2011 12:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel starts shipping Atom N2600, N2800 processors for netbooks, ten hours of battery life promised

CameraTrace Finds Your Stolen Camera by Monitoring Photos Shared Online [Security]

GadgetTrak’s new CameraTrace service helped a professional photographer get back $9,000 worth of stolen gear. CameraTrace can also help you recover your lost or stolen camera, as well as find people using your photos without permission. More »


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CameraTrace Finds Your Stolen Camera by Monitoring Photos Shared Online [Security]

Map shows when solar will be cheaper than grid electricity in North American areas


Existing grid-supplied electricity is becoming more expensive. Electricity from solar panels is getting cheaper. Here’s an animated map of North America that shows when the rising-grid-cost and falling-solar-cost curves will intersect for different metropolitan areas.

We used the following assumptions in the construction of this animated map:

The cost of solar in 2011 is $4.00 per Watt installed.

Grid electricity price is the average residential retail rate reported by PVWatts for the core city of the metropolitan area.

The cost of solar decreases by 7% per year.

The grid electricity price increases by 2% per year.

According to John Farrell who created the animated map, San Diego will be the first solar grid parity city, in 2013.

http://energyselfreliantstates.org/content/mapping-solar-grid-parity


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Map shows when solar will be cheaper than grid electricity in North American areas

A Self-Balancing Motorized Unicycle

Who wouldn’t want a self-balancing, motorized unicycle of their very own? Riding around on this unicycle means flaunting your unconventional nature, while being practical about how much dedication you have towards mastering single wheel locomotion.

You don’t have to work hard and practice in order to stay up, on this mechanical marvel created by MIT student Stephen Boyer you can just go, leaving your mind open to other activities, like juggling bowling pins, or calculating the proper speed and angle needed to survive jumping through a flaming hoop. Unicycle stocks are about to go through the roof!

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A Self-Balancing Motorized Unicycle

Passive Optical Diode Created At Purdue University


wbr1 writes “Researchers at Purdue University have managed to create a silicon device that acts as a passive diode for infrared optical signals. From the Purdue news release: ‘The diode is capable of “nonreciprocal transmission,” meaning it transmits signals in only one direction, making it capable of information processing, said Minghao Qi (pronounced Chee), an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue University. “This one-way transmission is the most fundamental part of a logic circuit, so our diodes open the door to optical information processing,” said Qi.’ One of the same researchers had already (using similar technology) created a way to convert laser pulses to RF.”

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Passive Optical Diode Created At Purdue University

XBMC Eden finally makes it to beta, promises HTPC superpowers

Remember that big XBMC update teased back in October? Well, v11.0’s multifarious additions are finally ready for a spot of beta testing. These include all-round speed increases, a “vastly improved” default skin, the ability to rollback unpleasant add-on updates, and better hardware support for iOS devices, plus a host of other new features that can only be listed in full at the source link.

XBMC Eden finally makes it to beta, promises HTPC superpowers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Dec 2011 03:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New WiFi Setup Flaw Allows Easy Router PIN Guessing


Trailrunner7 writes “There is a newly discovered vulnerability in the WiFi Protected Setup standard that reduces the number of attempts it would take an attacker to brute-force the PIN for a wireless router’s setup process. The flaw results in too much information about the PIN being returned to an attacker and makes the PIN quite weak, affecting the security of millions of WiFi routers and access points. Security researcher Stefan Viehbock discovered the vulnerability (PDF) and reported it to US-CERT. The problem affects a number of vendors’ products, including D-Link, Netgear, Linksys and Buffalo. ‘I noticed a few really bad design decisions which enable an efficient brute force attack, thus effectively breaking the security of pretty much all WPS-enabled Wi-Fi routers. As all of the of the more recent router models come with WPS enabled by default, this affects millions of devices worldwide,’ Viehbock said.”

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New WiFi Setup Flaw Allows Easy Router PIN Guessing