Skip iTunes and Add Your Own Books to iBooks with an Email

If you want to add books you don’t purchase from Apple into your iBooks library, you have two main methods: sync with iTunes or sync with the iBooks app in Mavericks. They’re both not the most intuitive things in the world though, so if you’re sick of bothering with them, Cult of Mac points out that sending an email with an Epub attachment does the job. Read more…        

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Skip iTunes and Add Your Own Books to iBooks with an Email

America’s Largest Carbon Fiber Ship Is a Seafaring Speed Demon

The answer to designing ships that are both fast and stable has traditionally been to make the vessels as narrow as possible (to reduce drag) and sit them lower in the water (to reduce the buffeting effects of plowing through waves). But US Navy’s M80 Stiletto is not your typical ship. Combining cutting edge construction and a unique hull design, this fast attack boat can cut through rough seas like a hot knife through drawn butter. Read more…        

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America’s Largest Carbon Fiber Ship Is a Seafaring Speed Demon

Make Your Own Cheap Home Automation in 10 Minutes with Ninja Blocks

Home security and automation are rarely mentioned in the same sentence as the word cheap, but it’s totally possible if you’re willing to do a few things yourself. We checked out a $200 DIY kit called Ninja Blocks , and were able to get a home automation and security system up and running in about 10 minutes. Read more…        

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Make Your Own Cheap Home Automation in 10 Minutes with Ninja Blocks

The Blistering New Snapdragon 805 Is Going to 4K All of the Things

The zippy Snapdragon 800 pushes pixels beautifully on gadgets like the Nexus 5 and the Kindle Fire HDX, but now there’s a new kid on the block. Qualcomm just announced its Snapdragon 805 complete with 4K powers, and it’s coming to devices starting next year . Read more…        

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The Blistering New Snapdragon 805 Is Going to 4K All of the Things

LED Carpets Guarantee You’ll Never Get Lost In an Airport Again

With a development that will surely appeal to airports, Philips has announced a partnership with flooring manufacturer Desso to produce a light transmissive LED-powered carpet that can be used to display warning messages, directions, or even fancy glowing designs. And airports are just the tip of the glowy-floor iceberg. Read more…        

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LED Carpets Guarantee You’ll Never Get Lost In an Airport Again

Google Maps, Lasers Reveal Vatican Catacombs

Nerval’s Lobster writes “The Vatican, while notoriously secretive about things buried in its vaults and archives, is being as public as the digital age allows it to be about the nearly completed restoration of catacombs early Christians used as secret churches as well as burial sites. Contractors, archaeologists and art experts spent the past five years restoring the Priscilla catacombs under the Vatican using lasers, among other techniques, to restore frescoes painted on the walls of the burial chambers. The Vatican unveiled the work Nov. 19 with a press conference in the Basilica of San Silvestro outside the burial tunnels, accompanied by a virtual tour of the Priscilla catacombs provided by Google Maps. The basilica is divided into an area for religious services and another that acts as a deposit for sculptures and artifacts dug up during excavations of the catacombs and other areas underneath the Vatican.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Google Maps, Lasers Reveal Vatican Catacombs

EveryDrop Purifies Water Instantly and Needs Few Filter Replacements

Most water filters make filling a glass a gaming of waiting, but EveryDrop changes that. The small raindrop-shaped device filters water through it almost as fast as it would come straight out of your faucet and lasts quite awhile. Read more…        

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EveryDrop Purifies Water Instantly and Needs Few Filter Replacements

Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “The Boston Globe reports that the pending use of GPS tracking devices, slated to be installed in Boston police cruisers, has many officers worried that commanders will monitor their every move. Boston police administrators say the system gives dispatchers the ability to see where officers are, rather than wait for a radio response and supervisors insist the system will improve their response to emergencies. Using GPS, they say, accelerates their response to a call for a shooting or an armed robbery. ‘We’ll be moving forward as quickly as possible, ‘ says former police commissioner Edward F. Davis. ‘There are an enormous amount of benefits. . . . This is clearly an important enhancement and should lead to further reductions in crime.’ But some officers said they worry that under such a system they will have to explain their every move and possibly compromise their ability to court street sources. ‘No one likes it. Who wants to be followed all over the place?’ said one officer who spoke anonymously because department rules forbid police from speaking to the media without authorization. ‘If I take my cruiser and I meet [reluctant witnesses] to talk, eventually they can follow me and say why were you in a back dark street for 45 minutes? It’s going to open up a can of worms that can’t be closed.’ Meanwhile civil libertarians are relishing the rank and file’s own backlash. ‘The irony of police objecting to GPS technology for privacy reasons is hard to miss in the aftermath of United States v. Jones, ‘ says Woodrow Hartzog. ‘But the officers’ concerns about privacy illustrate just how revealing GPS technology can be. Departments are going to have to confront the chilling effect this surveillance might have on police behavior.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Boston Cops Outraged Over Plans to Watch Their Movements Using GPS

Lead Contractor On Health-Care Web Site Led By Execs From Troubled IT Company

thomst writes “The Washington Post’s Jerry Markon and Alice Crites report that ‘The lead contractor on the dysfunctional Web site for the Affordable Care Act is filled with executives from a company that mishandled at least 20 other government IT projects, including a flawed effort to automate retirement benefits for millions of federal workers, documents and interviews show. CGI Federal, the main Web site developer, entered the U.S. government market a decade ago when its parent company purchased American Management Systems, a Fairfax County contractor that was coming off a series of troubled projects. CGI moved into AMS’s custom-made building off Interstate 66, changed the sign outside and kept the core of employees, who now populate the upper ranks of CGI Federal.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Lead Contractor On Health-Care Web Site Led By Execs From Troubled IT Company

Linux 3.13 Kernel To Bring Major Feature Improvements

An anonymous reader writes “There’s many improvements due in the Linux 3.13 kernel that just entered development. On the matter of new hardware support, there’s open-source driver support for Intel Broadwell and AMD Radeon R9 290 ‘Hawaii’ graphics. NFTables will eventually replace IPTables; the multi-queue block layer is supposed to make disk access much faster on Linux; HDMI audio has improved; Stereo/3D HDMI support is found for Intel hardware; file-system improvements are on the way, along with support for limiting the power consumption of individual PC components.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Linux 3.13 Kernel To Bring Major Feature Improvements