President Obama signs executive order focused on improving national cybersecurity

While the President is currently giving his State of the Union address (viewable on YouTube here ), earlier today he signed an executive order intended to improve the network security of “critical infrastructure.” As noted by The Hill , the order charges the National Institute of Standards and Technology with the task of creating a framework of best practices for operators in industries like transportation, water and health to follow, due in the next 240 days. The Department of Homeland Security is also heading up a voluntary program works with various agencies and industry groups to make sure the policies are actually adopted, and find ways to create incentives for that to happen. The order has arrived after cybersecurity legislation failed to pass through Congress, and has been rumored heavily throughout the last few weeks. The president called for Congress to pass legislation to prevent cyberattacks during his speech, and this order is reportedly meant as a step in that direction. The Wall Street Journal indicates many businesses want liability protection against attacks in exchange for following the guidelines, which would require approval form Congress in order to happen. It includes language accounting for privacy concerns as well, with agencies required to look over the potential impact of their work, and release public assessments. The DHS is to report in a year how its work impacts civil liberties and provide recommendations on mitigating such risks. There’s a lot to read through, so you can check out the document itself embedded after the break, or wait for those various agency reports for more updates. Filed under: Internet , Software Comments Source: The Hill , Reuters , Wall Street Journal

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President Obama signs executive order focused on improving national cybersecurity

Corsair pops the question, acquires Scotland-based Simple Audio

Scotland-based Simple Audio announced today that it has been acquired by American computer component maker Corsair . T he five-year-old audio firm is best known in Europe for its networked set-top receivers, which are capable of sharing music from PCs, Macs, TVs, iPods and MP3 players . In an effort to expand its reach, Simple Audio hopes that this multi-million dollar deal will help bring its products stateside sometime this year. While there’s no word how many doubloons Corsair shelled out, the company stated that it had been eyeing Simple Audio since 2010 and felt that it was the right time to make a move. To take a closer look at this acquisition, click through to the press release after the break. Filed under: Home Entertainment , Networking Comments Source: Simple Audio

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Corsair pops the question, acquires Scotland-based Simple Audio

Netflix and DreamWorks to launch original show for kids in December

While Netflix is trying to lure in the grown-ups with the launch of House of Cards , it’s not leaving kids without their own choice of original material. DreamWorks plans to follow up the July release of its animated movie Turbo with a Netflix-only series, Turbo FAST , in December. The episodes will arrive on the service roughly in line with DreamWorks’ 2013 slate of movies, including Turbo . Young viewers may well be happy, but Turbo FAST and the larger DreamWorks deal could be that much more satisfying for Netflix itself — they’re potential foils to Amazon’s multi-show plans that could keep some subscribing families from jumping ship. Filed under: Home Entertainment , Internet , HD Comments

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Netflix and DreamWorks to launch original show for kids in December

BlueStacks brings official, Surface Pro-optimized Android App Player to Windows 8 (video)

It’s been a year and change since BlueStacks announced a Windows 8 version of its App Player , which let you run most of your Android apps on the then-beta OS . Now the company has announced the official version, tweaked to play nicely with Redmond’s own Surface Pro and sporting a fresh, custom-built charm menu and start screen tile. You’ll now be able to run apps in “true” touch-enabled full-screen mode using your Win 8 tablet’s tilt/motion sensors, and everything will work faster, too. CEO Rosen Sharma also touted the release as a way for developers to bypass Microsoft’s “onerous” submission process to get Android apps onto the x86 Surface Pro, and you can’t argue with the price — it’s free, and available for download now. For more, head after the fold. Filed under: Cellphones , Desktops , Laptops , Tablets Comments Source: BlueStacks

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BlueStacks brings official, Surface Pro-optimized Android App Player to Windows 8 (video)

MIT crafts genetic circuits that remember their work through DNA

It’s easy to find work on gene-based storage ; finding genes that will do any of the heavy lifting is another matter. MIT believes it has a genetic circuit that will finally get to work, and then some. In using recombinase enzymes to alter DNA sequences serving as logic gates, researchers have developed a cellular circuit that not only mimics its silicon cousins, but has its own built-in memory. As the gate activation makes permanent changes to a given DNA sequence, any gate actions stay in memory for up to 90 generations — and will hang around even if the cell’s life is cut short. MIT sees its technique as having ultimate uses for areas where longer-term memory is important, such as environmental sensors, but could also see varying output values helping with digital-to-analog converters and other devices where there’s a need for more precision. While there’s no word on imminent plans for real-world use, the development raises the possibility of processors that could skip the traditional memory cache as they pass info down the family tree. Filed under: Science , Alt Comments Via: SciTechDaily Source: MIT

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MIT crafts genetic circuits that remember their work through DNA