BlackBerry Posts $4.4 Billion Loss, Will Outsource To Foxconn

iONiUM writes “Today BlackBerry announced a $4.4 billion loss, and a deal with Foxconn to outsource hardware manufacturing. One interesting stat is that 75% of sales were actually older BB7 devices. That said, CEO John Chen says, ‘We are very much alive, thank you.’ He adds, ‘Our “for sale” sign has been taken down and we are here to stay. BlackBerry recently announced it has entered into an agreement to receive a strategic investment from Fairfax Financial and other institutional investors, which represents a vote of confidence in the future of BlackBerry.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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BlackBerry Posts $4.4 Billion Loss, Will Outsource To Foxconn

BitTorrent Unveils Secure Chat To Counter ‘NSA Dragnet Surveillance’

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “Jacob Kastrenakes reports on The Verge that as part a response to the NSA’s wide-reaching surveillance programs, BitTorrent is unveiling a secure messaging service that will use public key encryption, forward secrecy, and a distributed hash table so that chats will be individually encrypted and won’t be stored on some company’s server. ‘It’s become increasingly clear that we need to devote hackathons, hours and resources to developing a messaging app that protects user privacy, ‘ says Christian Averill, BitTorrent’s director of communications. Because most current chat services rely on central servers to facilitate the exchange of messages, ‘they’re vulnerable: to hackers, to NSA dragnet surveillance sweeps.’ BitTorrent chat aims to avoid those vulnerabilities through its encryption methods and decentralized infrastructure. Rather than checking in with one specific server, users of BitTorrent chat will collectively help each other figure out where to route messages to. In order to get started chatting, you’ll just need to give someone else your public key — effectively your identifier. Exchanging public keys doesn’t sound like the simplest way to begin a chat, but Averill says that BitTorrent hopes to make it easy enough for anyone interested. ‘What we’re going to do is to make sure there are options for how this is set up, ‘ says Averill. ‘This way it will appeal to the more privacy conscious consumer as well as the less technically inclined.’ For now, it remains in a private testing phase that interested users can apply for access to. There’s no word on when it’ll be open to everyone, but with all of the recent surveillance revelations, it’s easy to imagine that some people will be eager to get started.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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BitTorrent Unveils Secure Chat To Counter ‘NSA Dragnet Surveillance’

"Perfect" Electron Roundness Bruises Supersymmetry

astroengine writes “New measurements of the electron have confirmed, to the smallest precision attainable, that it has a perfect roundness. This may sounds nice for the little electron, but to one of the big physics theories beyond the standard model, it’s very bad news. ‘We know the Standard Model does not encompass everything, ‘ said physicist David DeMille, of Yale University and the ACME collaboration, in a press release. ‘Like our LHC colleagues, we’re trying to see something in the lab that’s different from what the Standard Model predicts.’ Should supersymmetrical particles exist, they should have a measurable effect on the electron’s dipole moment. But as ACME’s precise measurements show, the electron still has zero dipole moment (as predicted by the standard model) and is likely very close to being perfectly round. Unfortunately for the theory of supersymmetry, this is yet another blow.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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"Perfect" Electron Roundness Bruises Supersymmetry

Archaeologist Uses 2,000-Year-Old Sky to Study Roman Ruins

If archaeology was once about digging through dirt, it is increasingly—like almost every other profession—about programming computers. Bernie Frischer, an Indiana University “archaeo-informaticist, ” has came up with a new theory about two Roman monuments. His finding are based on 3D reconstructions of the monuments using video game technology and calculations of the sun’s position 2, 000 years ago. Read more…        

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Archaeologist Uses 2,000-Year-Old Sky to Study Roman Ruins

Virtuix Omni is a Step Toward True Virtual Reality Gaming (Video)

The Virtuix Omni “is an omnidirectional treadmill video game peripheral for virtual reality games currently in development by Virtuix, ” says Wikipedia. With this device and an Oculus Rift, Razer Hydra or a similar “immersive” headset, you can play games equipped to use these devices with your whole body moving in any direction you choose. If you think you saw this product on the Shark Tank TV show or a pitch for it at Kickstarter.com, you’re right. You did. The Virtuix Omni people have been pushing their product hard, everywhere they can. Tim ran into their product manager, Colton Jacobs, at the recent AppsWorld conference in London. This video is Tim’s record of their conversation. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Virtuix Omni is a Step Toward True Virtual Reality Gaming (Video)

Mark Zuckerberg Gives $990 Million To Charity

mrspoonsi writes with this excerpt from Business Insider: “This morning, Mark Zuckerberg announced plans to give 18 million Facebook shares to charity by the end of the month. Facebook is currently trading at $55 per share, so Zuckerberg’s gift is worth just under $1 billion. The money will go toward Zuckerberg’s foundation, the Silicon Valley Community Foundation and The Breakthrough Prize In Life Science, a [Nobel] Prize-like award. Zuckereberg is giving his shares away as part of a secondary stock offering from Facebook. Reuters says Zuckerberg will sell 41.4 million shares, reducing his voting power in the company from 58.8% to 56.1%. Other insiders selling include board member Marc Andreessen, who will sell 1.65 million shares. Facebook is selling 27 million.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mark Zuckerberg Gives $990 Million To Charity

A Fully Loaded New Mac Pro Will Cost You $14,000

After no short period of waiting, the new Mac Pro has finally gone on sale today . All along it’s promised to pack punch, and it might just prove to be your ultimate work station . But absolute power will cost you. Read more…        

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A Fully Loaded New Mac Pro Will Cost You $14,000

CryptoLocker Gang Earns $30 Million In Just 100 Days

DavidGilbert99 writes “A report from Dell Secureworks earlier this week reported that up to 250, 000 systems have been infected with the pernicious ransomware known as CryptoLocker. Digging a little deeper, David Gilbert at IBTimes UK found that the average ransom being paid was $300, and than on a very conservative basis just 0.4% of people paid the ransom. What does this all add up to? $30 million for the gang controlling CryptoLocker — and this could be ‘many times bigger.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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CryptoLocker Gang Earns $30 Million In Just 100 Days

Hackers Broke into the Washington Post for "a Few Days"

Looks like Jeff Bezos’s new toy, The Washington Post, is the latest victim in the hacker war on newspapers . Company officials announced Wednesday that hackers had gained access to employees’ usernames and passwords, though it’s unclear how much data the company lost. Read more…        

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Hackers Broke into the Washington Post for "a Few Days"

LG’s 105-Inch Curved OLED Is Just Bonkers

LG has just revealed its new flagship curved OLED screen—the largest one in existence—ahead of next January’s CES convention. Because why wouldn’t you you want 105 inches of curved OLED goodness? Oh right, you can’t afford it. Read more…        

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LG’s 105-Inch Curved OLED Is Just Bonkers