Someone Built a Fully Functioning 1KB Hard Drive Inside Minecraft

Cody Littley is a computer science PhD student with a little time on his hands. Which perhaps explains why he built a working 1KB hard drive in Minecraft out of virtual building blocks. Read more…

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Someone Built a Fully Functioning 1KB Hard Drive Inside Minecraft

Solid State Drives Break the 50 Cents Per GiB Barrier, OCZ ARC 100 Launched

MojoKid (1002251) writes Though solid state drives have a long way to go before they break price parity with hard drives and may never with, at least with the current technology, the gap continues to close. More recently, SSD manufacturers have been approaching 50 cents per GiB of storage. OCZ Storage Solutions, with the help of their parent company Toshiba’s 19nm MLC NAND, just launched their ARC 100 family of drives that are priced at exactly .5 per GiB at launch and it’s possible street prices will drift lower down the road. The ARC 100 features the very same OCZ Barefoot 3 M10 controller as the higher-end OCZ Vertex 460, but these new drives feature more affordable Toshiba A19nm (Advanced 19 nanometer) NAND flash memory. The ARC 100 also ships without any sort of accessory bundle, to keep costs down. Performance-wise, OCZ’s new ARC 100 240GB solid state drive didn’t lead the pack in any particular category, but the drive did offer consistently competitive performance throughout testing. Large sequential transfers, small file transfers at high queue depths, and low access times were the ARC 100’s strong suits, as well as its low cost. These new drives are rated at 20GB/day write endurance and carry a 3 year warranty. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Solid State Drives Break the 50 Cents Per GiB Barrier, OCZ ARC 100 Launched

Intel’s Broadwell Chips Will Make Full-Fledged PCs as Tiny as Tablets

For more than a year, Intel’s 14-nanometer Broadwell chip, the successor to its Haswell microarchitecture, has been consistently delayed , due in part to early-stage manufacturing snafus. But today Intel gave a glimpse of this incredibly tiny powerhouse, and the computing future it will introduce in its wake. Read more…

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Intel’s Broadwell Chips Will Make Full-Fledged PCs as Tiny as Tablets

Unboxing a Cray XC30 ‘Magnus’ Petaflops Supercomputer

Bismillah (993337) writes The Pawsey Supercomputing Centre in Australia has started unboxing and installing its new upgraded ‘Magnus’ supercomputer, which could become the largest such system in the southern hemisphere, with up to one petaFLOPS performance. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Unboxing a Cray XC30 ‘Magnus’ Petaflops Supercomputer

Scientists Made This Entire Mouse Transparent Using Detergent

Last year, scientists did the wacky and cool thing of making a mouse brain transparent . Now they’ve gone and done it to an entire mouse by pumping detergent through its veins. The transparent mouse looks like gross rodent jello (yes, there is a photo), but it’s also an incredible new way to study what intact organs look like on the inside. Read more…

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Scientists Made This Entire Mouse Transparent Using Detergent

How to turn an entire watermelon into one giant Jell-O shot

At this year’s Fourth of July party, blow your guests’ minds harder than a Yonshakudama firework with a watermelon that splits to reveal a jiggly Jell-O core. All of the vodka and flavor, none of the seeds. Read more…

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How to turn an entire watermelon into one giant Jell-O shot

How many gigabytes does it take to make a human?

How much information is stored inside a human? Not as much as you think. All you need is a mere 1.5 gigabytes to fit your entire genetic code. Veritasium did the math in his latest brain tapping video and cooked up that number using bits to understand the molecules that make up a person’s genetic code. Read more…

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How many gigabytes does it take to make a human?

Your Cable Box Is Wasting Absurd Amounts of Energy and Money

Electricity bill got you down? Blame your cable box or PlayStation or printer or refrigerator or any of your smart, networked devices that have a gentle-sounding but energy-sucking “standby mode.” A new report from the International Energy Agency puts the energy from networked devices worldwide at 616 terawatt-hours. That’s more than the entire energy consumption of the United Kingdom. Read more…

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Your Cable Box Is Wasting Absurd Amounts of Energy and Money