Microsoft Ad Campaign Puts a Hotspot Inside a Magazine

An anonymous reader writes “Microsoft is putting in real Wi-Fi hardware hotspots inside some copies of the latest issue of Forbes magazine. The unique Office 365 promotion was revealed in a post on the Slickdeals.net message board. The WiFi router, when activated, offers 15 days of free WiFi service via T-Mobile’s network on up to five devices at once.” Which is more impressive: Wi-Fi hotspot in 2013, or E-ink display in 2008? Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft Ad Campaign Puts a Hotspot Inside a Magazine

Turn an iPad Retina Display Into a High Resolution PC Monitor

The iPad’s retina display offers one of the most pixel-dense screens you can buy, but unfortunately it’s attached to your iPad and can’t double as a high-resolution display for your PC. That is, unless you buy the part and convert it like Andrzej, an engineering student in Warsaw. Read more…        

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Turn an iPad Retina Display Into a High Resolution PC Monitor

China Behind 96% of All Cyber-Espionage Data Breaches, Verizon Report Claims

colinneagle writes “Verizon’s 2013 Data Breach Investigation Report is out and includes data gathered by its own forensics team and data breach info from 19 partner organizations worldwide. China was involved in 96% of all espionage data-breach incidents, most often targeting manufacturing, professional and transportation industries, the report claims. The assets China targeted within those industries included laptop/desktop, file server, mail server and directory server, in order to steal credentials, internal organization data, trade secrets and system info. A whopping 95% of the attacks started with phishing to get a toehold into their victim’s systems. The report states, ‘Phishing techniques have become much more sophisticated, often targeting specific individuals (spear phishing) and using tactics that are harder for IT to control. For example, now that people are suspicious of email, phishers are using phone calls and social networking.’ It is unknown who the nation-state actors were in the other 4% of breaches, which the report says ‘may mean that other threat groups perform their activities with greater stealth and subterfuge. But it could also mean that China is, in fact, the most active source of national and industrial espionage in the world today.'” The report also notes that financially-motivated incidents primarily came from the U.S. and various Eastern European countries. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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China Behind 96% of All Cyber-Espionage Data Breaches, Verizon Report Claims

Google’s Buying Provo’s Entire Fiber Network, Worth $39m, For $1

When Google announced it was rolling out a fiber network in Provo, Utah, it wasn’t clear how or why it had chosen the city. Turns out, Google has managed to secure a deal to buy its entire municipal fiber network—which cost $39 million to build—for just a single dollar. More »        

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Google’s Buying Provo’s Entire Fiber Network, Worth $39m, For $1

House Passes CISPA By Huge Margin

CISPA, or the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or ” the worst privacy disaster our country has ever faced ” has just passed through the House of Representatives with an astounding majority of 288 to 127. More »        

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House Passes CISPA By Huge Margin

Harvard Grid Computing Project Discovers 20k Organic Photovoltaic Molecules

Lucas123 writes “In June, Harvard’s Clean Energy Project plans to release to solar power developers a list of the top 20,000 organic compounds, any one of which could be used to make cheap, printable photovoltaic cells (PVCs). The CEP uses the computing resources of IBM’s World Community Grid for the computational chemistry to find the best molecules for organic photovoltaics culled the list from about 7 million. About 6,000 computers are part of the project at any one time. If successful, the crowdsourcing-style project, which has been crunching data for the past two-plus years, could lead to PVCs that cost about as much as paint to cover a one-meter square wall.” The big thing here is that they’ve discovered a lot of organic molecules that have the potential for 10% or better conversion; roughly equivalent to the current best PV material, and twice as efficient as other available organic PV materials. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Harvard Grid Computing Project Discovers 20k Organic Photovoltaic Molecules

Bugs can survive space-like vacuums with “nano-suit”

By bombarding insects with electrons, Japanese researchers formed a microscopically thin layer that protected them from the ravages of a vacuum. The discovery suggests a way that microbes might survive the harsh conditions of outer space — and perhaps humans as well. Read more…        

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Bugs can survive space-like vacuums with “nano-suit”