This Discounted, 4TB External Drive Doesn’t Need a Power Cord

It wasn’t long ago that portable, USB-powered external hard drives maxed out at 2TB, but Seagate’s new Backup Plus manages to double that, and you can pick one up for an all-time low $150 today. That price even includes 200GB of Microsoft OneDrive storage for two years, which is a $96 value on its own. Read more…

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This Discounted, 4TB External Drive Doesn’t Need a Power Cord

Voodoo Manufacturing Taps The Power Of 3D Printing To Make Things On Demand

 Four ex-Makerbot employees, Max Friefled, Oliver Ortlieb, Patrick Deem, and Jonathan Schwartz, have come together to create a Brooklyn-based rapid manufacturing system using – what else? – Makerbots. The group, called Voodoo Manufacturing raised $300, 000 to build their 3D printing shop and are currently profitable, a testament to the power of making things quickly. The company has… Read More

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Voodoo Manufacturing Taps The Power Of 3D Printing To Make Things On Demand

Building the ultimate X99 gaming and benchmarking PC

Armed with an Intel Haswell-E CPU, 32GB of DDR4 RAM, and an M.2 SSD, Ars UK puts together the ultimate gaming and benchmarking rig for the office. (video link) There are all sorts of reasons why you might want to get into PC gaming over, or in addition to a console: the huge library of comparatively cheap games on Steam, niche indie games that just wouldn’t find a home anywhere else, or maybe even the flexibility to run games on anything from lowly laptops all the way through to watercooled 4K behemoths. Then there are the other guys: the ones who obsess over clock speeds, how much wattage their power supply puts out, and if you really can cram an 8-core processor and a Titan X  into a PC the size of shoebox . Consider me one of those people. For me, picking out the right components and building it all into a sleek, cable-managed rig is as much a part of PC gaming as it is actually playing games. Read 23 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Building the ultimate X99 gaming and benchmarking PC

Nvidia crams desktop GTX 980 GPU into monster 17-inch laptops

MSI’s GT72 will be one of the first notebook’s to sport a GTX 980. 26 more images in gallery In what is one of the most Goldblum-like moments of the year so far, Nvidia has partnered with OEMs like Asus and MSI to cram the full desktop version of its high-end GTX 980 graphics card into laptops. Thanks to its full array of 2048 CUDA cores, up to 8GB of 7GHz GDDR5 memory, and 1126MHz core clock, Nvidia claims the new laptop GTX 980 offers around a 30 percent performance boost over its previous flagship laptop GPU, the GTX 980M. Even crazier, Nvidia has also managed to convince OEMs to let users overclock the GTX 980 too. Coupled with Intel’s upcoming unlocked K-series Skylake laptop CPUs, users will be able to eke out a significant amount of extra performance from their laptops, cooling permitting. To help things along, Nvidia’s laptop GTX 980s will differ slightly from their desktop counterparts in that they’ll be binned for improved leakage and power consumption. Nvidia says the binning process will ensure each laptop GTX 980 is guaranteed to hit the advertised 1126MHz GPU core clock and 1216MHz boost clock, as well as achieve overclocks somewhere in the region of 200MHz. That’s a modest increase over the stock clock, but given the thermal restraints of a notebook chassis it’s still rather impressive. To hit those overclocked speeds, users will be able to tweak the fan curve of the GPU (a first for laptops), as well as adjust the core clock and memory speeds. Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Nvidia crams desktop GTX 980 GPU into monster 17-inch laptops

Office 2016 arrives with features meant to take on Google (and everyone else)

Office 2016 is out of preview today , and in a sentence, it represents Microsoft’s most obvious effort yet to catch up with Google Drive. Though the new release looks generally the same as the last version, it’s designed for sharing and collaboration in a way that Office 2013 really wasn’t. In particular, Office 2016 introduces real-time co-authoring (a feature already available in the web version of Office), along with the ability to attach OneDrive files to emails in Outlook. In addition to Google, though, the new software takes aim at various other tools businesses might be using, including Slack (for chatting) and Trello (for to-do lists and task management). You might even be able to avoid the browser sometimes, thanks to built-in Bing search results. Microsoft’s goal with Office 2016, then, wasn’t just to match what Google Docs can do, but to ensure business users in particular barely need to leave the app.Slideshow-321997 It’s all about collaboration That flat Ribbon, that launch screen full of thumbnails — you’ve seen it all before. With a few exceptions, Office 2016 looks identical to the version that came before it, although each app now has a colorful header instead of a white one (think: blue for Word and green for Excel). Microsoft actually already does that with the Office for iPad app, so you could say even this tweak isn’t really new; the company’s just doing some tune-up to make sure its apps look consistent across different platforms. That dash of color aside, all the visual changes here were meant to make room for new features and functionality. Take a look at the upper-right corner in Word, Excel or PowerPoint, for instance, and you’ll see a new Share button. Click that, and you’ll open a panel from which you can share documents by entering an email address. (By default, you can share with whomever you want, although IT departments will have the ability to make it so that you can only share with people inside your organization.) From this pane, you can also see a list of each person who has access to the document, with notes like “editing” or “can edit” to help clarify who’s currently in the doc. Speaking of the sort, Office 2016 adds real-time co-authoring, a feature that’s been offered in the browser version for almost two years now. The way it’s implemented, you can see where your colleagues are in the document and see their edits as they make them, similar to how Google Drive works. This is a big improvement over Office 2013, whose few collaboration features were clearly an afterthought — at best, it would lock up whole paragraphs while someone else was editing. Needless to say, it’s about time. In addition to making it easier for folks to edit a document at the same time, Microsoft made another obvious, overdue move: It built in Skype so that you can send IMs and place calls from within Office apps. Notably, too, you don’t need a Skype for Business account to use this feature; even an individual consumer account will do. That said, for business users (the people this is really aimed at, anyway), having in-line Skype conversations could in theory eliminate the need for other chat apps, like Slack. Ya know, because having one fewer open window is always a good thing. Then again, this Skype integration probably makes the most sense for businesses that were already using Skype . I’m sure there are plenty of them, too, but that’s still a big “if.” At Engadget’s parent company, for instance, the entire organization uses Slack, which means it doesn’t come out of Engadget’s budget, specifically. That alone would make paying for Skype for Business a tough sell for us, however cool we find the Office 2016 integration. Basically, then, this new feature is a nice time- and space-saver for companies that already subscribe to Skype, but it won’t necessarily be reason enough to get new ones on board. Cortana, search and a replacement for Clippy If collaboration is the biggest theme in Office 2016, then “improved search” is surely the runner-up. As the first version of Office built for Windows 10, Office 2016 was designed to work closely with Cortana, Microsoft’s ubiquitous personal assistant. That means you can say to her things like, “Show me my schedule for the day, ” and she’ll read you a list of your meetings, pulled directly from your Outlook calendar. Meanwhile, the various Office apps themselves bring improved built-in search, including a feature called Smart Lookup that allows you to perform web searches from inside Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook, without having to launch your browser. Well, if you don’t need more than a quick reference, anyway. While playing around in Word, for instance, I did a search for carbon nanotubes, which brought up a mix of webpage previews from sites like Wikipedia, as well as thumbnails from Bing image search. If all I needed was a quick word definition or a little extra context on a topic with which I was unfamiliar, this inline search would have sufficed. As soon as you click on anything, though, whether it be an article link or an image from Bing, you’ll be taken straight to a new browser tab. In general, the new Office keeps you from having to use some other tools, but I suspect the browser will still be in heavy rotation in most people’s workflows. Even navigating the Office apps themselves is now easier. Thanks to a new feature called Tell Me, you can use a search bar in Word, Excel and PowerPoint to — wait for it — tell the app what it is you want to do. (You can also use the Alt-Q command if you’re into keyboard shortcuts.) So, when I type in “Sunburst” (the name of a new chart type in Excel), the app will give me the option of selecting from the two most relevant hierarchy charts, with Sunburst being one of them (“Treemap” is the other). I can not only add a chart from the Tell Me box, but also move my cursor over the different chart options listed and see my data transform in real time. All told, then, I was able to bypass the help tool, as well as save time digging through menus in the Ribbon. In that sense, Tell Me feels like the closest thing we have to a replacement for good ol’ Clippy — just less annoying. Outlook Outlook has perhaps received more improvements in 2016 than any of the other Office apps. First off, continuing with the whole collaboration theme, Office 365 Groups are now built into Outlook, so you can see your shared inbox, calendar, notebook and OneDrive inline. Additionally, the live search feature is now faster, allowing you to whittle down your inbox. You can also attach recently used documents to emails, and that includes both locally stored items and files that live in the cloud. If you attach something from OneDrive, Outlook will attach a browser link and automatically grant permissions to that person. Basically, it works the same way as Gmail, when you want to share Google Drive files. Moving on, Microsoft also added a feature called Clutter that, over time, learns your habits, observes which mail you read and which you ignore and eventually starts putting your low-priority mail in a separate folder. The one thing you need to watch out for here is that Clutter doesn’t draw attention to itself in any way, meaning it’s not going to give you an occasional pop-up saying “you have 20 emails in Clutter waiting to be read.” You’ll have to remember to check it, as you would a spam folder. Also, Clutter is enabled by default, although you can turn it off if you like. For both these reasons, then, I think I prefer the “Sweep” feature in Hotmail, where you can set up rules for what gets shoved aside, and what happens to it. That approach is more passive, but also grants me more control. Excel Excel also received a few minor updates. And I do mean minor. All we really have here are six new chart types, including “Waterfall” (financial); “Pareto” (statistical); “Treemap” (hierarchical); Histogram; “Box and Whisker” (data distribution with range, quartiles and outliers); and “Sunburst” (hierarchical, shown above). The Tell Me feature works here too, so that you can enter the name of a chart and see the data instantly reshape itself onscreen to fit whatever new chart type you selected. Planner and Delve While Office 2016 largely brings updates to existing apps like Word, PowerPoint, Excel and Outlook, it also ushers in some new tools that simply didn’t exist in the last release. That would include Office 365 Planner , a browser-based tool that attempts to do basically the same thing as Trello or Asana: namely, task- and milestone-based management to make sure projects get done on time. In the dashboard, pictured above, you can view “buckets” (tasks) or instead search by a particular person on your team, to get an overview of everything you’re working on. From there, you can see how many days are left before a deadline, with a color-coded breakdown of what’s completed, late, in progress or not started yet. It’s that last part that’s particularly compelling to me. Something like Trello already lets you filter cards so that you can see what just one person is working on. But what if it’s a collaborative effort, with multiple people depending on each other to get stuff done on time? In situations like that, Planner would seem to have a leg up; it’s easier to understand at a glance where the bottleneck is. Also new in Office 2016 is Delve , which sounds a little like Planner in that it, too, shows a glimpse of what different people in an organization are working on. That said, the app’s Pinterest-style design makes it better-suited for less urgent things like brainstorming, or just generally being aware of what your colleagues are working on. Over time, too, the app will start surfacing articles and other things that might be of interest to you — yep, also kinda like Pinterest. Interestingly, though, Delve doesn’t currently share data from the Edge browser to learn about what you’re interested in. Not that you’d necessarily want that, but I suspect your browser knows more about what you like and don’t like than just about any other app you may have installed. Sway You may have already read about Sway , a newish Microsoft app that allows you to create presentations designed to look good in the browser and across different devices, with support for touch, embedded video, et cetera. In a way, if you look at the finished product, it’s kind of like creating a responsive webpage, except that you don’t get to customize the URL (the best you can do is upload it to Docs — kind of a YouTube for documents — and that can have a custom address). In any case, Sway is already out of preview and hasn’t seen any changes in the final Office 2016 release. Still, it’s worth recapping what it does, and mentioning that it is part of the Office family. In closing The new software is available now to Office 365 subscribers, which continues to start at $70 a year or $7 a month for the Personal edition (access on one computer, tablet and phone; with Word, PowerPoint, Excel, Outlook, OneNote, Publisher and Access included). There’s also a Student package that costs $80 for four years. While people with basic needs are still better off using either Google Drive or the web version of Office for free, business users in particular will appreciate the much-improved sharing features that finally allow them to use Office not just to get their own work done, but also to collaborate with coworkers. If Microsoft’s mission really is to ” reinvent productivity , ” and if businesses are the likeliest to bother paying subscription fees, then it was essential that Office cater not just to individual worker bees, but to whole teams. Microsoft clearly had to play catch-up, and took some cues from big-name competitors like Google and Trello in the process. The company is indeed late, but hopefully, it would seem, not too late. [Image credits: All screenshots courtesy of Microsoft; lead and closing images: Dana Wollman/Engadget.]

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Office 2016 arrives with features meant to take on Google (and everyone else)

How Much Extra Battery Power You’ll Actually Get with iOS 9’s Low Power Mode

iOS 9 is packed with all kinds of great features and one of the most useful is a new low power mode that triggers when your battery gets to 20%. Wired took a look at exactly how much extra time you should be able to get out of your phone with this mode enabled. Read more…

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Air Force fighters will carry Laser cannons, cyber weapons by 2020

An artist’s rendering of HELLADS, a General Atomics-built laser weapon now in ground testing. Air Force leaders say a laser pod based on the technology could be aboard fighter aircraft within five years. DARPA Sometime very soon, combat aircraft may be zapping threats out of the sky with laser weapons. “I believe we’ll have a directed energy pod we can put on a fighter plane very soon,” Air Force General Hawk Carlisle said at this week’s Air Force Association Air & Space conference in a presentation on what he called Fifth-Generation Warfare. “That day is a lot closer than I think a lot of people think it is.” Some low-power laser weapons were on display in mock-up on the exposition floor of the conference, including a system from General Atomics that could be mounted on unmanned aircraft such as the Predator and Reaper drones flown by the Air Force. But the Air Force is looking for something akin to a laser cannon for fighter aircraft, more powerful systems that could be mounted on fighters and other manned Air Force planes within the next five years, Air Force leaders said. Directed-energy weapons pods could be affixed to aircraft to destroy or disable incoming missiles, drones, and even enemy aircraft at a much lower “cost per shot” than missiles or even guns, Carlisle suggested. The Air Force isn’t alone in seeking directed energy weapons. The US Navy has already deployed a laser weapon at sea aboard the USS Ponce, capable of a range of attacks against small boats, drones, and light aircraft posing a threat—either by blinding their sensors or operators, or heating elements to make them fail or explode. Other laser weapons are also being tested by the Office of Naval Research for use on helicopters to protect against man-portable antiaircraft missiles. (And there’s a railgun , but that’s not really a directed=energy weapon, and it’s too massive to be mounted on an aircraft). Read 18 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Air Force fighters will carry Laser cannons, cyber weapons by 2020

Purdue ‘HUSH’ Tool Promises 16% Battery Life Gain For Wasteful Android Phones

MojoKid writes: Researchers from Purdue University have developed a software tool for Android smartphones that purportedly slows down battery drain when handsets enter a sleep state. With the software tool installed, the researchers claim that smartphone battery life can be extended by nearly 16 percent. Called “HUSH, ” the software solution was developed in response to what the researchers say is the first large-scale study of smartphone energy drain occurring from everyday use by consumers. According to their research, apps drain 28.9 percent of battery power while the screen is turned off. HUSH dynamically identifies app background activities that it deems aren’t useful to the user experience on a per-app basis and suppresses those apps when the screen is turned off. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Purdue ‘HUSH’ Tool Promises 16% Battery Life Gain For Wasteful Android Phones

Solar Windows Could Help Power Buildings

Lucas123 writes: Several companies are now beginning to roll out translucent photovoltaic films or solar cells embedded in windows that can supplement a significant amount of energy in the buildings where they’re used. SolarWindow Technologies, for example, is preparing to launch a transparent product made with organic PVs, while another company, Solaria, is cutting solar cells into thin strips and embedding them in windows. Both companies admit their products can’t produce the 20% efficiency ratings of today’s best rooftop solar panels, but they say that’s not their objective. Instead, the companies are looking to take advantage of millions of skyscraper windows that today are simply unused real estate for renewable energy. One company is aiming at supplementing 20% to 30% of a skyscrapers power requirements. Meanwhile, universities are also jumping into the solar window arena. Oxford University has spun off a PV window company that produces semi-transparent solar cells made of semi-transparent perovskite oxide that has achieved a 20% solar energy efficiency. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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AMD’s R9 Nano crams a full Fury X into a tiny 6-inch form factor

12 more images in gallery Earlier this year, AMD unveiled three new graphics cards: the R9 Fury X, R9 Fury, and R9 Nano. While the top-of-the-line water-cooled R9 Fury X and air-cooled R9 Fury have both since been released to positive reviews, the mini-ITX sized R9 Nano has remained something of a mystery. Fortunately, the Nano appears to have been worth the wait. While the Nano costs the same as a Fury X—$649, or about £530 (UK pricing is unconfirmed)—the diminutive card also sports same full-fat Fiji chip, which is crammed into its teeny 6-inch form factor. With the R9 Nano you get a full 4096 stream processors, 256 texture units, 64 ROPs, and 4GB of 4096-bit memory high-bandwidth memory operating at 1000MHz. AMD claims performance is around 8.2 TFLOPS, which is only five percent below that of the Fury X. Even better, the Nano needs just a single 8-pin PCIe power connector, with a typical power consumption of 175W, which is miles below the 275W of the Fury X. Of course, such dramatic power savings have to come from somewhere, and for the Nano that means a reduction in clock speed. The Nano’s GPU is rated for “up to 1000MHz,” with AMD saying that under typical usage in most games it runs between 850MHz and 900MHz. That’s around a 14 percent decrease over the 1050MHz of the Fury X, but it’s still impressive given the Nano’s size. AMD puts performance somewhere between the Fury and Fury X, with the full shader count helping to mitigate the drop in clock speed versus the Fury. Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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AMD’s R9 Nano crams a full Fury X into a tiny 6-inch form factor