iOS 8 Said To Take Maps To The Next Level With Added Data And Transit Directions

Apple has just shipped iOS 7.1, which brings a number of small enhancements and some considerable performance improvements to older devices, but now the way is clear for iOS 8, and already the rumor mill has started cranking. 9to5Mac, which generally has reliable information for first-hand reported rumors, revealed today a couple of details about Apple’s next big mobile OS, which should… Read More

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iOS 8 Said To Take Maps To The Next Level With Added Data And Transit Directions

Nanomaterial May Be Future of Hard Drives

sciencehabit writes “Most magnets shrug off tiny temperature tweaks. But now physicists have created a new nanomaterial–an ultrathin 10-nanometer layer of nickel grafted onto a 100-nanometer-thick wafer of a substance called vanadium oxide–that dramatically changes how easily it flips its magnetic orientation when heated or cooled only slightly. The effect, never before seen in any material, could eventually lead to new types of computer memory.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Nanomaterial May Be Future of Hard Drives

The World’s Thinnest LED Is Only 3 Atoms Thick

LEDs have come a long ways. From the early 70s when a bulky LED watch cost thousands of dollars to LG’s announcement last month that it had created an OLED TV as thin as a magazine , these glowing little bits of magic have become wonderfully cheap and impossibly small. But guess what: they’re about to get much smaller. Read more…        

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The World’s Thinnest LED Is Only 3 Atoms Thick

You’ll Never Trip Over This In-Ground Solar Light

They’re the perfect accent to a well-manicured backyard, but the solar-powered lights dotting your gardens and walkways are just one misstep away from being accidentally destroyed. So Ikea’s come up with the perfect solution , LED lights that you press into your lawn so that they’re flush to the ground while still providing plenty of light. Read more…        

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You’ll Never Trip Over This In-Ground Solar Light

Where the Progress Bar Came From

We’ve all spent hours—maybe even days—of our lives cursing the slow crawl of the dreaded progress bar. But did you ever stop to think about how much worse it might be if the bar wasn’t there in the first place. Fortunately, thanks to one grad student’s genius idea back in the 80s , we’ll never have to find out. Read more…        

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Where the Progress Bar Came From

TechCrunch reports that your Facebook news feed is getting a design touchup.

TechCrunch reports that your Facebook news feed is getting a design touchup. Nothing major: new fonts, “bolder” images, and a simplified left sidebar. As for the glorious overhaul we were supposed to get last year—still no word. Read more…        

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TechCrunch reports that your Facebook news feed is getting a design touchup.

Ice Age Fossils Are Being Unearthed By L.A.’s Subway Construction

A 65-foot deep shaft being dug for Los Angeles’s newest subway line is filled with buried treasure. The so-called Subway to the Sea is still nine miles from the beach, but excavation has already revealed some creatures from the ocean floor… the prehistoric ocean floor! Read more…        

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Ice Age Fossils Are Being Unearthed By L.A.’s Subway Construction

PC Game Prices — Valve Starts the Race To Zero

An anonymous reader writes “Last week Valve made an interesting but seemingly innocuous announcement: they’re giving game developers control of their own pricing on Steam. Nicholas Lovell now claims that this has effectively kicked off a race to zero for PC game pricing. He says what’s starting to happen now will mirror what’s happened to mobile gaming over the past several years. Quoting: ‘Free is the dominant price point on mobile platforms. Why? Because the two main players don’t care much about making money from the sale of software, or even In-App Purchases. The AppStore is less than 1% of Apple’s revenue. Apple has become one of the most valuable companies in the world on the strength of making high-margin, well-designed, highly-desirable hardware. … Google didn’t create Android to sell software. It built Android to create an economic moat. … In the case of both iOS and Android, keeping prices high for software would have been in direct opposition to the core businesses of Apple (hardware) and Google (search-related advertising). The only reason that ebooks are not yet free is that Amazon’s core business is retail, not hardware. … Which brings me to Steam. The Steambox is a competitor to consoles, created by Valve. It is supposed to provide an out-of-the-box PC gaming experience, although it struggles to compete on either price or on marketing with the consoles. It doesn’t seem as if Steam is keen to subsidize the costs of the box, not to the level that Microsoft and Sony are. But what if Steam’s [unique selling point] was thousands or tens of thousands of games for free?'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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PC Game Prices — Valve Starts the Race To Zero

John Gruber believes that iOS 7.1 should ship any day now–because the app required to stream Apple’

John Gruber believes that iOS 7.1 should ship any day now—because the app required to stream Apple’s SXSW iTunes Festival, which starts in a week, requires the new OS. Let’s see! Read more…        

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John Gruber believes that iOS 7.1 should ship any day now–because the app required to stream Apple’

F-Secure: Android Accounted For 97% of All Mobile Malware In 2013

An anonymous reader writes “Back in 2012, Android accounted for 79 percent of all mobile malware. Last year, that number ballooned even further to 97 percent. Both those data points come from security firm F-Secure, which today released its 40-page Threat Report for the second half of 2013. More specifically, Android malware rose from 238 threats in 2012 to 804 new families and variants in 2013. Apart from Symbian, F-Secure found no new threats for other mobile platforms last year.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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F-Secure: Android Accounted For 97% of All Mobile Malware In 2013