Hackers Broke Into a Public Utility Control Room By Guessing a Password

In a rare gesture of transparency, the Department of Homeland Security just announced that hackers recently targeted and compromised a public utility’s control system. They didn’t say exactly where, but it happened inside United States borders. And it doesn’t sound like it was even that hard. Read more…

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Hackers Broke Into a Public Utility Control Room By Guessing a Password

Chrome 35 Launches With New APIs and JavaScript Features

An anonymous reader writes “Google today released Chrome version 35 for Windows, Mac, Linux, and Android. The new version is mainly for developers, especially those building Web content and apps for mobile devices – this release doesn’t appear to have any new features targeted at the end user. ” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Chrome 35 Launches With New APIs and JavaScript Features

Surface Pro 3 Hands On: A Laptop Replacement That Just Might Work

The Surface Pro has never been a bad idea. One device that’s both your laptop and your tablet! Sounds great! The problem was that it was just never quite either; it was awkward on both counts. The new, bigger Surface Pro 3 though, might have actually pulled it off. Read more…

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Surface Pro 3 Hands On: A Laptop Replacement That Just Might Work

Every Neuron in a Brain Recorded in 3D on a Millisecond Timescale

To learn how the whole brain works, it doesn’t do to just record from one neuron—you want to know what every single neuron is doing every millisecond . Now scientists have invented a technique that can actually capture the 3D activity of an entire brain milliseconds at the time—possibly the most complete picture of brain activity we’ve ever had. Read more…

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Every Neuron in a Brain Recorded in 3D on a Millisecond Timescale

Cisco Complains To Obama About NSA Adding Spyware To Routers

pdclarry (175918) writes “Glenn Greenwald’s book No Place to Hide reveals that the NSA intercepts shipments of networking gear destined for overseas and adds spyware. Cisco has responded by asking the President to intervene and stop this practice, as it has severely hurt their non-US business, with shipments to other countries falling from 7% for emerging countries to over 25% for Brazil and Russia.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Cisco Complains To Obama About NSA Adding Spyware To Routers

This Infographic Tells You When Kids Eat Free at Chain Restaurants

Restaurants know that feeding kids for free brings in parents. Many restaurants have a “kids eat free” night. This infographic tracks those days at many popular chains, along with other money-saving restaurant tips. Read more…

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This Infographic Tells You When Kids Eat Free at Chain Restaurants

Emory University SCCM Server Accidentally Reformats All Computers Campus-wide

acidradio writes: “Somehow the SCCM application and image deployment server at Emory University in Atlanta accidentally started to repartition, reformat then install a new image of Windows 7 onto all university-managed computers. By the time this was discovered the SCCM server had managed to repartition and reformat itself. This was likely an accident. But what if it weren’t? Could this have shed light on a possibly huge vulnerability in large enterprise organizations that rely heavily on automated software deployment packages like SCCM?” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Emory University SCCM Server Accidentally Reformats All Computers Campus-wide

Your Old CD Collection Is Dying

Hugh Pickens DOT Com (2995471) writes “Adrienne LaFrance reports at the Atlantic that f you’ve tried listening to any of the old CDs lately from your carefully assembled collection from the 1980’s or 1990’s you may have noticed that many of them won’t play won’t play. ‘While most of the studio-manufactured albums I bought still play, there’s really no telling how much longer they will. My once-treasured CD collection — so carefully assembled over the course of about a decade beginning in 1994 — isn’t just aging; it’s dying. And so is yours.’ Fenella France, chief of preservation research and testing at the Library of Congress is trying to figure out how CDs age so that we can better understand how to save them. But it’s a tricky business, in large part because manufacturers have changed their processes over the years and even CDs made by the same company in the same year and wrapped in identical packaging might have totally different lifespans. ‘We’re trying to predict, in terms of collections, which of the types of CDs are the discs most at risk, ‘ says France. ‘The problem is, different manufacturers have different formulations so it’s quite complex in trying to figure out what exactly is happening because they’ve changed the formulation along the way and it’s proprietary information.’ There are all kinds of forces that accelerate CD aging in real time. Eventually, many discs show signs of edge rot, which happens as oxygen seeps through a disc’s layers. Some CDs begin a deterioration process called bronzing, which is corrosion that worsens with exposure to various pollutants. The lasers in devices used to burn or even play a CD can also affect its longevity. ‘The ubiquity of a once dominant media is again receding. Like most of the technology we leave behind, CDs are are being forgotten slowly, ‘ concludes LaFrance. ‘We stop using old formats little by little. They stop working. We stop replacing them. And, before long, they’re gone.'” You can donate CDs to be tested for aging characteristics by emailing the Center for the Library’s Analytical Science Samples. I haven’t had much trouble ripping discs that were pressed in the 80s (and acquired from used CD stores with who knows how many previous owners), but I’m starting to get nervous about not having flac rips of most of my discs. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Your Old CD Collection Is Dying

7.1 Billion People, 7.1 Billion Mobile Phone Accounts Activated

Freshly Exhumed (105597) writes “Tomi Ahonen’s newly released 2014 Almanac reveals such current mobile phone industry data gems as: ‘The mobile subscription rate is at or very very nearly at 100%. For 7.1 Billion people alive that means 7.1 Billion mobile phone subscriptions worldwide.’ Compared with other tech industries, he says: ‘Take every type of PC, including desktops, laptops, netbooks and tablet PCs and add them together. What do we have? 1.5 Billion in use worldwide. Mobile is nearly 5 times larger. Televisions? Sure. We are now at 2 Billion TV sets in use globally. But mobile has 3.5 times users.’ Which mobile phone OS is the leader? ”Android has now utterly won the smartphone platform war with over 80% of new sales. Apple’s iPhone has peaked and is in gradual decline at about 15% with the remnant few percent split among Windows, Blackberry and miscellaneous others.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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7.1 Billion People, 7.1 Billion Mobile Phone Accounts Activated

The European Union Court of Justice has ruled that people can ask Google to delete sensitive informa

The European Union Court of Justice has ruled that people can ask Google to delete sensitive information from its Internet search results. Maybe that’ll happen in the U.S. at some point, too? Read more…

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The European Union Court of Justice has ruled that people can ask Google to delete sensitive informa