Target Has Major Credit Card Breach

JoeyRox writes “Target experienced a system-wide breach of credit card numbers over the Black Friday holiday shopping season. What’s unique about this massive breach is that it didn’t involve compromising a centralized data center or website but instead represented a distributed attack at individual Target stores across the country. Investigators believe customer account numbers were lifted via software installed on card readers at checkout.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Target Has Major Credit Card Breach

Bitcoin Exchange Value Halves After Chinese Ban

An anonymous reader writes with news of the latest major fluctuation in the price people are willing to pay for Bitcoins. From the article: “China’s ban on its financial institutions handling bitcoin causes world’s largest exchange to cease trading, halving the value of the currency from $1, 000 to less than $500 in a matter of days. The country’s central bank took a hard line on Bitcoin in early December when it banned financial institutions from handling the decentralized crypto-currency, and as a result BTC China, the world’s largest bitcoin exchange, has stopped accepting deposits from its users.” Just watch that line trend downward. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Bitcoin Exchange Value Halves After Chinese Ban

Standardized Laptop Charger Approved By IEC

Sockatume writes “The IEC, the standards body which wrote the phone charger specification used in the EU, has approved a standardised laptop charger. While the ‘DC Power Supply for Portable Personal Computer’ doesn’t have a legal mandate behind it, the IEC is still optimistic that it will lead to a reduction in electronics waste and make it easier to find a replacement charger. Unfortunately the technical documentation does not seem to be available yet, but previous comments indicate that it will be a barrel plug of some kind.” I wish they’d push a yank-resistant and positive-connecting plug along the lines of Apple’s MagSafe. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Standardized Laptop Charger Approved By IEC

Polynesian People Were Using Binary 600 Years Ago

Binary lies at the heart of our technological lives: those strings of ones and zeroes are fundamental to the way all our digital devices function. But while the invention of binary is usually credited to German mathematician Gottfried Leibniz in the 18th Century, it turns out the Polynesians were using it as far back as 600 years ago . Read more…        

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Polynesian People Were Using Binary 600 Years Ago

The Ikea Nightmare Is Over, Magnetic Flat-Pack Furniture Is Here

Do you hear that? In the distance? That’s the sound of thousands of college students shouting with joy. Because designer Benjamin Vermeulen has created a line of easy to assemble flat-pack furniture that doesn’t require screws, nuts, bolts, or those dreaded allen wrenches. Just the magic of magnets. Read more…        

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The Ikea Nightmare Is Over, Magnetic Flat-Pack Furniture Is Here

Real life Jurassic Park exists in Australia and everyone needs to go

We’re going to Australia, everybody. You, me, your mother, my neighbor, your dog, the guy on the subway, the girl in the book store, everybody. Why? Because they’ve built the closest thing to a real life Jurassic Park there. Called Palmersaurus Dinosaur Park , it’s home to 160 animatronic dinosaurs that move, blink, roar and just look freaking awesome looking like dinosaurs. Read more…        

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Real life Jurassic Park exists in Australia and everyone needs to go

Apple just released OS X 10.9.1, the first update to Mavericks.

Apple just released OS X 10.9.1 , the first update to Mavericks. Included in the update are some fixes for Gmail support in Mail, smart inbox improvements for Mail, and most importantly, it resolves an issue that prevented VoiceOver from speaking sentences that contained emoji. You can grab the in the Mac App Store now. Read more…        

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Apple just released OS X 10.9.1, the first update to Mavericks.

Next-Gen Windshield Wipers To Be Based On Jet Fighter "Forcefield" Tech

cartechboy writes “It looks like the old-school windshield wiper is about to be replaced by new technology — but not until 2015. British car-maker McLaren is apparently developing a new window cleaning system that is modeled from fighter jet tech. The company isn’t revealing exactly how it will work, but the idea comes from the chief designer simply asking a military source why you don’t see wipers on jets as they land. Experts expect McClaren to use constantly active, high-frequency sound waves outside the range of human hearing that will effectively create a force field across a car’s windshield to repel water, ice insects and other debris. Similar sound waves are used by dentists to remove plaque from teeth.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Next-Gen Windshield Wipers To Be Based On Jet Fighter "Forcefield" Tech

Army Laser Passes Drone-Killing Test

Nerval’s Lobster writes “Commercial package-delivery drones such as those revealed by Amazon and DHL could face danger from more than shotgun-toting, UAV-hunting yahoos following the successful test of a drone-killing laser by the U.S. Army. Though it’s more likely to take aim at enemy observation drones than Amazon’s package-deliver ‘copters, the U.S. Army’s High Energy Laser Mobile Demonstrator (HEL-MD) did prove itself in tests last week by shooting down 90 incoming mortars and a series of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV). The original goal during the test at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico was to burn out or blow up mortar rounds and blind the cameras or other sensors carried by drones. The laser proved capable enough to damage or slice off the tails of target drones, which brought them down, according to Terry Bauer, HEL MD program manager, as quoted in the Dec. 11 Army announcement of the test. The quarter-sized beam of super-focused light set off the explosives in the 60-millimeter mortars in mid-flight, leaving the rest to fall ‘like a rock, ‘ Bauer said. The laser could target only one mortar at a time, but could switch targets quickly enough to bring down several mortars fired in a single volley. The laser and its power source are contained in a single 500-horsepower, four-axle truck but was directed by a separate Enhanced Multi Mode Radar system. The next step is a move from New Mexico to a testing range in Florida early next year ‘to test it in ran and fog and things like that, ‘ according to Bauer.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Army Laser Passes Drone-Killing Test

DeLorean’s Next Radical Idea: An Engine that Starts Using Lasers

You might not realize what a great engineer DeLorean was — until you look at these never-before-seen sketches for a next-generation engine. Which included laser ignition, and something that looks curiously like a flux capacitor. Read more…        

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DeLorean’s Next Radical Idea: An Engine that Starts Using Lasers