12 Things You Can Now Do With Windows 10 After the Anniversary Update

It’s Windows 10 update time! The so-called “Anniversary Update” marks a year since the OS officially made it out of Redmond and it’s the biggest update yet. We’ve already posted our initial impressions of the update, but with the hefty patch now rolling out for everybody, here are 12 new tricks to try on your Windows 10 machine. Read more…

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12 Things You Can Now Do With Windows 10 After the Anniversary Update

‘GoldenEye: Source’ Updated: A Classic, Free Multiplayer Game

An anonymous reader quotes The Verge: GoldenEye: Source received its first update in more than three years this week. It’s free to download and it features 25 recreated maps, 10 different multiplayer modes, and redesigned versions of the original game’s 28 weapons. It was created using Valve’s Source engine, the same set of tools used to create Counter Strike and Half-Life games. So it’s a massive step up in both visuals and performance for one of the more drastically dated gaming masterpieces of the last 20 years… GoldenEye 007, the beloved N64 first-person shooter, has been recreated in high-definition glory by a team of dedicated fans over the course of 10 years…the attention to detail and the amount of effort that went into GoldenEye: Source make it one of the most polished HD remakes of a N64 classic. With 8 million copies sold, Wikipedia calls it the third best-selling Nintendo 64 game of all-time (although this version doesn’t recreate its single-player campaigns). Anyone have fond memories of playing Goldeneye 007? Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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‘GoldenEye: Source’ Updated: A Classic, Free Multiplayer Game

900M Android Devices Vulnerable To New ‘Quadrooter’ Security Flaw

An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes a report from CNET: Four newly-discovered vulnerabilities found in Android phones and tablets that ship with a Qualcomm chip could allow an attacker to take complete control of an affected device. The set of vulnerabilities, dubbed “Quadrooter, ” affects over 900 million phone and tablets, according to Check Point researchers who discovered the flaws. An attacker would have to trick a user into installing a malicious app, which wouldn’t require any special permissions. If successfully exploited, an attacker can gain root access, which gives the attacker full access to an affected Android device, its data, and its hardware — including its camera and microphone. The flaw even affects several of Google’s own Nexus devices, as well as the Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge, according to the article, as well as the Blackberry DTEK50, which the company describes as the “most secure Android smartphone.” CNET adds that “A patch that will fix one of the flaws will not be widely released until September, a Google spokesperson confirmed.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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900M Android Devices Vulnerable To New ‘Quadrooter’ Security Flaw

Windows 10 IoT Core for the Raspberry Pi Is Now Easier to Set Up, Adds Remote Client Access and More

Windows 10 on the Raspberry Pi is a great way to create your own internet connected devices , and today Microsoft pushed out an update that makes the set up process a bit easier. Read more…

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Windows 10 IoT Core for the Raspberry Pi Is Now Easier to Set Up, Adds Remote Client Access and More

Microsoft has two big Windows 10 updates slated for 2017

While announcing the gradual rollout of its Anniversary update for Windows 10, Microsoft confirmed that there would be two feature updates coming in 2017. This means moving to a twice-a-year schedule the company had previously set up for its ” Threshold ” updates for Windows 8, which used the codename for that operating system. According to Windows Central , the first update for 10, called “Redstone 2” after this operating system’s nickname, will come in early 2017, followed by “Redstone 3” four to six months later in late summer or early fall. The latest internal builds are around the 14900 range, the site said, meaning testers should soon receive bits of Redstone 2 to try out and give feedback. Source: Windows Central

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Microsoft has two big Windows 10 updates slated for 2017

Latest Apple TV rumor points to a TV guide for video apps

At the WWDC 2016 event , Apple revealed a number of improvements on the way for the Apple TV, including a new feature called single sign-on . That would let cable TV subscribers log in once, and immediately have all their supported apps authorized without needing to log in (often repeatedly) within each individual app. Now Recode cites industry sources saying that Apple is working on “digital TV guide” for the Apple TV and its other devices that would display content from sources like Netflix and HBO all in one place. The plan is described as growing from Apple’s previously rumored plan to offer a TV package of its own. In this iteration, Apple wouldn’t sell content, just create a showcase for others, and it has reportedly requested metadata from the providers to fill out its guide. The Xbox OneGuide at launch in 2013. If the plan comes to fruition, then Apple will be retreading ground covered by others. Microsoft may have the most ambitious attempt with the Xbox One’s OneGuide that blends live TV and apps while relying on an HDMI passthrough and IR blasters to pull in content from the cable box, but the UI and universal search on devices like Amazon’s Fire TV and the Roku platform serve similar functions. Apple already set up its move by bringing the Siri remote and voice search with its new Apple TV box, and when it announced single sign-on in June it mentioned the feature would work on iOS as well. The major remaining questions are if customers will be able to use the feature, and if they can, will they want to? On Xbox, Microsoft had limited success working with the cable TV guard. It did manage to get Comcast to allow logging in with HBO Go and other apps, but Comcast killed its Xbox 360 app after a while, and Verizon’s FiOS TV app for Xbox One suffered a similar fate earlier this year . The revamped OneGuide that launched last year. Apple’s challenge could be to build a guide that’s easier to access than simply diving into apps like Netflix or Hulu and poking around there. On Xbox, app channels do a good job of highlighting what’s best inside each app, but they’re not especially personal or deep. The OneGuide got a lot of attention during the Xbox One’s initial introduction a few years ago and is a big part of the new experience rolled out at the end of 2015 , but it didn’t merit a mention in details of the latest mid-year update . I don’t even see an app channel for Netflix on my Xbox One, and securing support from such a major provider would be key for Apple to launch any kind of guide. The only problem is getting all of those different providers to accept sharing space in a UI that none of them control — good luck doing that. Source: Recode

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Latest Apple TV rumor points to a TV guide for video apps

LibreOffice 5.2 Officially Released

prisoninmate writes from a report via Softpedia: LibreOffice 5.2 is finally here, after it has been in development for the past four months, during which the development team behind one of the best free office suites have managed to implement dozens of new features and improvements to most of the application’s components. Key features include more UI refinements to make it flexible for anyone, standards-based document classification, forecasting functions in Calc, the spreadsheet editor, as well as lots of Writer and Impress enhancements. A series of videos are provided to see what landed in the LibreOffice 5.2 office suite, which is now available for download for GNU/Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows operating systems. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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LibreOffice 5.2 Officially Released

Paper, Dropbox’s answer to Google Docs, now has apps for iOS and Android

It’s been almost a year since Dropbox formally introduced Paper , its vision for a collaborative workplace regardless of whether you’re a project manager, coder, designer or any other kind of employee. It’s been in closed beta since then, and we haven’t heard much of how the tool has progressed, but today that’s changing. Dropbox is announcing that the Paper beta is now open to anyone, and the company is also launching dedicated Paper apps for iOS and Android. Both the apps and a variety of new features Dropbox added to Paper come at the request of users; the company says it has been listening very carefully to feedback throughout the beta process and has implemented the top requests. For the web version of Paper, that includes enhanced table features, improve photo galleries and new notifications that are rolled into the Dropbox desktop app. The changes to tables are pretty straightforward. You can now make them the full width of your document or constrain them to a smaller space if you don’t want them to cover the entire screen. You can also resize the width of your columns, and Dropbox made it easier to add and delete cells. I hesitate to truly call these “new” features; they’re more like table stakes for any kind of spreadsheet, even a basic tool like Paper’s tables. Paper’s improved image galleries are similarly basic. It’s a lot easier to drag and drop images around to rearrange and resize them into a gallery — it’s kind of like the way Tumblr handles posts with multiple images. What’s more notable is that you can now comment on a single image at a time rather than just leaving a comment for the entire group. Again, a pretty simple feature that’s necessary for Paper to truly make a mark as a collaboration tool, but it’s good to see it in place as the open beta is launched. The last new feature for the web is a bit of a bigger deal, as Paper’s notification system has been revamped. You have always been able to “@” message peope in your organization who are using Dropbox and Paper, and now a new notification center collects all comments made on documents you’ve started. It’ll also keep track of any time someone pings you with an @ mention or replies to comments you’ve left in other documents. These notifications are visible both in Paper itself as well as in the Dropbox desktop app that sits in your toolbar, so even if you’re not in Paper, you can see who’s pinging you. Beyond the desktop are Paper’s first apps for iOS and Android — Dropbox says that these were the number one most requested feature from beta testers. Rather than try and throw ever Paper feature into the app, though, Dropbox kept things a bit more focused here. The app brings the same notifications from your desktop to the phone, giving you a glanceable view of what people are doing in the documents that you’ve created or are otherwise working on. Naturally, you’ll get push notifications as well. I don’t know that I’d want to have those turned on, but Dropbox says having access to this info on the go was a requested feature from users. You can also respond to comment threads from a dedicated tab within the app, and there are also some basic document editing features baked in. You won’t be able to embed the many different types of content that Paper supports, but you’ll be able to make quick changes to text from your phone and also drop in images from your camera roll. The app is also smart enough to save any document you’ve marked as a favorite to the app by default, so you can work on them when you don’t have a connection. All of these changes and the apps roll out today — and with the open beta, Dropbox will truly have a chance to see how many people are interested in its latest collaboration tool. It’s a bit of a change for the company, which has typically focused on first keeping files in sync. Now, Dropbox often says its mission has evolved into “keeping teams in sync, ” and it looks at Paper as a way to do that. However, Dropbox has killed off a few other initiatives that tried to move the company beyond straight file syncing: the Mailbox email app and Carousel photo-syncing app. I asked Dropbox project manager Kavitha Radhakrishnan if users should have any concern about their Paper docs going away in a few years if the company shutters its latest project, and she said user’s shouldn’t be worried because of Paper’s explicit link to that goal of keeping teams in sync. Dropbox’s new logo for Paper. “From a strategy perspective, Paper’s right at the center [of Dropbox], ” Radhakrishnan said. “We’re looking at Paper as being a core part of the Dropbox experience, and our momentum over the last year should be a pretty strong signal about how seriously we’re taking this.” She also told me that users have created 1 million Paper documents so far. In a vacuum, that number isn’t terribly meaningful, but given the small scale of the closed beta, Dropbox certainly hopes that number will skyrocket going forward. As to how Dropbox will be successful with Paper when there are lots of options like Microsoft Office and Google Docs that do many of the same things, Radhakrishnan says Paper’s flexibility makes it the kind of tool that makes it well-suited to being used across an organization. “We’ve seen products that do creation, organization and collaboration really well, but Paper fits across all three of those pillars, ” she said. “Paper’s uniquely positioned in that it’s not just one tool that does one part of the workflow well. It brings entire teams together.” Whether a one-stop shop for creation, organization and collaboration makes more sense than distinct, focused tools remains to be seen — but with the beta now open to everyone, Dropbox should find out whether Paper has a future very soon.

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Paper, Dropbox’s answer to Google Docs, now has apps for iOS and Android

8TB disks seem to work pretty well, HGST still impressive

(credit: Alpha six ) Cloud backup and storage provider Backblaze has published its latest batch of drive reliability data. The release covers failure information for the 70,000 disks that the company uses to store some 250PB of data. This is the first quarter that Backblaze has been using a reasonable number of new 8TB disks: 45 from HGST and 2720 from Seagate. Drives from both companies are showing comparable annualized failure rates: 3.2 percent for HGST, 3.3 percent for Seagate. While the smaller HGST drives show better reliability, with annualized failure rates below one percent for the company’s 4TB drives, the figures are typical for Seagate, which Backblaze continues to prefer over other alternatives due to Seagate’s combination of price and availability. Annualized failure rates for all of Backblaze’s drives. (credit: Backblaze) But it’s still early days for the 8TB drives. While evidence for the phenomenon is inconclusive, hard drive reliability is widely assumed to experience a “bathtub curve” when plotting its failure rate against time: failure rates are high when the drives are new (due to “infant mortality” caused by drives that contain manufacturing defects) and when the drives reach their expected lifetime (due to the accumulated effects of wear and tear), with a period of several years of low failure rates in the middle. If the bathtub theory is correct, Backblaze’s assortment of 8TB drives should suffer fewer failures in the future. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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8TB disks seem to work pretty well, HGST still impressive

Cisco Finds $34 Million Ransomware Industry

Ransomware is “generating huge profits, ” says Cisco. Slashdot reader coondoggie shares this report from Network World: Enterprise-targeting cyber enemies are deploying vast amounts of potent ransomware to generate revenue and huge profits — nearly $34 million annually, according to Cisco’s Mid-Year Cybersecurity Report out this week. Ransomware, Cisco wrote, has become a particularly effective moneymaker, and enterprise users appear to be the preferred target. Many of the victims were slow to patch their systems, according to the article. One study of Cisco devices running on fundamental infrastructure discovered that 23% had vulnerabilities dating back to 2011, and 16% even had vulnerabilities dating back to 2009. Popular attack vectors included vulnerabilities in JBoss and Adobe Flash, which was responsible for 80% of the successful attacks for one exploit kit. The article also reports that attackers are now hiding their activities better using HTTPS and TLS, with some even using a variant of Tor. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Cisco Finds $34 Million Ransomware Industry