6TB Helium-Filled Hard Drives Take Flight

An anonymous reader writes in with some exciting news if you are a storage array manufacturer with a lot of money to spend on hard drives.”HGST Monday announced that it’s now shipping a helium-filled, 3.5-in hard disk drive with 50% more capacity than the current industry leading 4TB drives. The new drive uses 23% less power and is 38% lighter than the 4TB drives. Without changing the height, the new 6TB Ultrastar He6 enterprise-class hard drive crams seven disk platters into what was a five disk-platter, 4TB Ultrastar drive.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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6TB Helium-Filled Hard Drives Take Flight

Intel Open-Sources Broadwell GPU Driver & Indicates Major Silicon Changes

An anonymous reader writes “Intel shipped open-source Broadwell graphics driver support for Linux this weekend. While building upon the existing Intel Linux GPU driver, the kernel driver changes are significant in size for Broadwell. Code comments from Intel indicate that these processors shipping in 2014 will have “some of the biggest changes we’ve seen on the execution and memory management side of the GPU” and “dwarf any other silicon iteration during my tenure, and certainly can compete with the likes of the gen3-> gen4 changes.” Come next year, Intel may now be able to better take on AMD and NVIDIA discrete graphics solutions.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Intel Open-Sources Broadwell GPU Driver & Indicates Major Silicon Changes

Linux 3.12 Released, Linus Proposes Bug Fix-Only 4.0

An anonymous reader writes “Linus Torvalds announced the Linux 3.12 kernel release with a large number of improvements through many subsystems including new EXT4 file-system features, AMD Berlin APU support, a major CPUfreq governor improvement yielding impressive performance boosts for certain hardware/workloads, new drivers, and continued bug-fixing. Linus also took the opportunity to share possible plans for Linux 4.0. He’s thinking of tagging Linux 4.0 following the Linux 3.19 release in about one year and is also considering the idea of Linux 4.0 being a release cycle with nothing but bug-fixes. Does Linux really need an entire two-month release cycle with nothing but bug-fixing? It’s still to be decided by the kernel developers.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Linux 3.12 Released, Linus Proposes Bug Fix-Only 4.0

HealthCare.gov: What Went Wrong?

New submitter codeusirae writes “An initial round of criticism focused on how many files the browser was being forced to download just to access the site, per an article at Reuters. A thread at Reddit appeared and was filled with analyses of the code. But closer looks by others have teased out deeper, more systematic issues.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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HealthCare.gov: What Went Wrong?

Surface Pro 2 Gets Significant Battery Boost

SmartAboutThings writes “The original Surface Pro didn’t have quite a good battery life and that’s why Microsoft tried to fix this with the Surface Pro. After the Surface Pro 2 has hit general availability, Microsoft has silently pushed out a firmware update which, according to some new battery benchmarks run by Anandtech, made significant improvements to the battery life of the Surface Pro 2. After the new web browsing battery life test it was discovered that the Surface Pro 2 now manages better battery life than the ARM Surface 2, which is pretty impressive. With the firmware update, Microsoft was targeting over 8 hours, and AnadTech’s benchmarks show Microsoft has succeeded, registering a 25% increase in battery life over the no-firmware version. The unpatched Surface Pro 2 lasted for 6.68 hours while with the firmware update installed, its battery life increased to 8.33 hours. The video playback test involved playing a movie until the battery died, and here, albeit smaller, improvements with the battery life have also been noticed: 7.73 hours compared to 6.65 hours.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Surface Pro 2 Gets Significant Battery Boost

APK Downloads Lets You Pull APK Files Directly From Google Play

Being unable to install an app on your device from the Play Store is a pain. Fortunately, a developer has created a tool that lets you pull an APK directly from Google’s servers and side load it yourself . Handy! Read more…        

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APK Downloads Lets You Pull APK Files Directly From Google Play

Crazy Man Puts Computer Inside Arm (Without Help From Doctors)

German Tim Cannon is a “biohacker”. That unsightly bulge on his arm there is where he stuck a giant computer chip beneath his skin, which transmits his biometric data to Android devices. Which will be interesting data and all but oh God just look at those stitches . Read more…        

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Crazy Man Puts Computer Inside Arm (Without Help From Doctors)

An Awesome Flexible Display That Wraps Around the Edges of Your Phone

As if we needed any further convincing of the wonderful potential of flexible displays, a Japanese company called SEL has developed a high-resolution screen that can be rolled to a tight four-millimeter radius , allowing it to wrap around the edge of a smartphone while still working. Read more…        

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An Awesome Flexible Display That Wraps Around the Edges of Your Phone

Ars: Cross-Platform Malware Communicates With Sound

An anonymous reader writes “Do you think an airgap can protect your computer? Maybe not. According to this story at Ars Technica, security consultant Dragos Ruiu is battling malware that communicates with infected computers using computer microphones and speakers.” That sounds nuts, but it is a time-tested method of data transfer, after all. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Ars: Cross-Platform Malware Communicates With Sound

Victory! The FAA Approves Personal Electronics for All Phases of Flight

After years of will they or won’t they , the US Department of Transportation’s Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has finally given permission for airlines to allow passenger to use personal electronics for the entirety of their flights. Translation: You don’t have to shut down your phone anymore. FINALLY. Read more…        

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Victory! The FAA Approves Personal Electronics for All Phases of Flight