Friday, January 29, 2016


According to the report, the smartphone won't be launched at the MWC 2016, instead, it will be launched later this year.According to the report, the smartphone won't be launched at the MWC 2016, instead, it will be launched later this year.
NEW DELHI: The specifications of HTC's 2016 flagship smartphone, expected to be called One M10, are out.

According to a report by VentureBeat, the smartphone has been codenamed "Perfume." It is said to feature 5.1-inch QHD AMOLED display with 1440x2560p resolution. Running on Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow and skinned with HTC's Sense 8.0 UI, the smartphone reportedly sports a fingerprint scanner, embedded in the home button.

In terms of hardware, the smartphone is said to be powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 system-on-a-chip with Adreno 530 graphics. According to the report, it comes with 32GB storage coupled with 4GB RAM.

Coming to the camera, the smartphone reportedly houses 12MP UltraPixel rear camera with laser autofocus and optical image stabilization. Although the leak did not specify the resolution of the front camera, it did reveal that it will too feature optical image stabilization.

The report also revealed that the smartphone won't be launched at the MWC 2016, instead, it will be launched later this year.
Javed Anwer 
 
HTC will soon launch M10, the company's flagship phone for the 2016. It will also be, according to a report at the VentureBeat, the Taiwanese company's most advanced phone yet. The M10, which is currently codenamed Perfume, will use an AMOLED display and come with a 12-megapixel image sensor.
The phone will also pack in top-of-the-line internal components. The leaked reports say that it would be powered by Qualcomm's upcoming Snapdrgaon 820 processor. The M10, which succeeds a not-so-memorable M9, will have 3GB RAM and 32GB internal storage. The M10's 5.1-inch AMOLED screen will have 1440p resolution.
The reports indicate that for the M10, the camera performance is going to be a key area. For the phone, not only the company is going to back to the ultrapixel technology -- which means bigger pixels -- but is also putting optical stabilisation in the both cameras in the phone. Yes, there is a possibility that even the front camera in the M10 will have optical image stabilisation.
For now not much is known about the design of the M10. But Evan Blass, who has written the latest report at the VentureBeat and who has a track record of successfully leaking unannounced phones through his Twitter profile called @Evleaks, earlier hinted that the M10 would have a design similar to that of the HTC A9.
The HTC A9, which we reviewed recently, is an attractive phone with a slick design and smooth aluminium body. Although it looks very similar to the existing iPhones, particularly with its rounded edges, the design has been hit with the consumers so it is possible that HTC may just tweak the same design for its flagship phone.
Earlier, there were also reports that HTC would make this year's Nexus phones and if that was accurate than you can expect that the smaller Nexus this year -- the one that will succeed the Nexus 5X -- may have the similar hardware that goes inside the M10.

HTC One M10 Tipped to Sport Snapdragon 820 SoC and Fingerprint Scanner
HTC has grand plans for its upcoming smartphone, it appears. The Taiwanese company has been long-rumoured to be planning to launch a flagship smartphone codenamed Perfume (widely believed to be the HTC One M10) featuring top of the line specifications including a fingerprint sensor.
For the upcoming flagship HTC One M10, HTC plans to bring back its UltraPixel camera, remove the company's signature BoomSound speakers, and perhaps also introduce substantial design changes, reports prolific tipster Evan Blass for Venture Beat.
Blass cites a person who has allegedly tested a prototype of the smartphone, and claims the the HTC One M10 will sport a 5.1-inch QHD (1440x2560 pixels) display - likely an Amoled panel (instead of SuperLCD 3 panel), and Qualcomm's recently launched Snapdragon 820 SoC coupled with Adreno 530 GPU.
Other features of the HTC One M10, as per the report, include 4GB of RAM, 32GB of inbuilt storage, and the presence of a microSD slot. The HTC One M10 'Perfume' is said to run Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow with HTC Sense 8.0 UI. The smartphone will reportedly also feature a Samsung Galaxy-like home button that will come equipped with a fingerprint sensor.
As for some bold changes, the HTC One M10 is said to have a 12-UltraPixel front-facing camera. To recall, the company had used a standard camera sensor in lieu of UltraPixel sensor in its last year's One M9 flagship. There's no word on how powerful the rear-camera is, however, the report insists that both the camera sensors offer optical image stabilisation capabilities.
The HTC One M10, as per the report, won't have the company's signature BoomSound audio front-facing speakers. Blass further claims that HTC One M10 won't be launched at Mobile World Congress in February.
Google My Tracks Android app
If you’re using Google’s My Tracks app on your Android device, you won't be for much longer.
Google has revealed that My Tracks will no longer be available after April 30. El Goog explains that it has “made the tough decision to invest our efforts into other, more wide-reaching, mapping projects.” To replace My Tracks once it goes kaput, Google recommends using Google Fit, Strava, Endomondo, Map My Run, Map My Hike, GPS Logger for Android, and GPX Viewer.
If you are using My Tracks, you can export your data before switching over to a new app. To export to Google Drive, simply launch the My Tracks app, tap the three dot overflow button, tap Settings, and then select Sync to Google Drive. If you’d prefer to export to external storage, you can go select Export All in the three-dot overflow menu. You can then select one of the four file formats:
  • KML: Contains locations, markers, photos, and sensor data
  • GPX: Contains locations and markers, but no sensor data like heart rate, cadence for biking, cadence for running, and power
  • CSV: Contains locations, markers, and sensor data
  • TCX :Contains locations, no markers, and some sensor data
The data will be in the /MyTracks folder in your external storage.
If you’re not familiar with My Tracks, it’s an Android app that’ll track your path, speed, distance, and elevation while you do things like walk, run, or bike. You can then look back at that data in maps, charts, and stats. Google now has Google Fit for tracking all of that data, though, and so it’s no surprise to see My Tracks getting killed off.



Land Rover pulled the plug on the iconic Defender today. The UK plant which was building the Land Rover Defenders had been in operation for over 68 years. The list of people who have owned this British legend include Sean Connery, Robin Williams and also member of the Royal family including Queen Elizabeth II.
To commemorate this special event, over 700 current and former employees were invited to see and drive some of the most important vehicles, like the first pre-production 'Huey' Series I as well as the last vehicle off the production line, a Defender 90 Heritage Soft Top. To make it even more special, there were more ...
Continue Reading...

coral reef in Caribbean


© David Gray
Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Paul Allen’s yacht almost entirely destroyed a coral reef in a protected ecosystem in the Caribbean. Allen, who has denied that his crew was responsible, would face a fine of up to $600,000 if found at fault.
According to local authorities, an anchor chain from Allen’s 300-foot-long vessel, the MV Tatoosh, ploughed into a sensitive reef in the Cayman Islands, ruining 14,000 square feet of it, which amounts to about 80 percent of the protected coral species.
“Early findings already indicate extensive damage and investigations into the circumstances of the incident are ongoing, with the assistance of staff aboard the Microsoft billionaire’s superyacht, which was anchored close to the Doc Poulson wreck and The Knife dive site,” Cayman news service reported, citing Department of Environment officials.
The incident occurred on January 14 and it is believed that Allen was not on board his luxury yacht at the time of. Yet, on Wednesday, Allen’s office rushed to deny any involvement of his yacht’s crew and put the blame on the Port Authority.
“When [M/V Tatoosh] crew was alerted by a diver that her anchor chain may have impacted coral in the area, the crew promptly, and on their own accord, relocated their position to ensure the reef was protected,” a statement from Allen’s investment firm Vulcan said.
This situation is particularly awkward for Allan, given his reputation as “a global leader in supporting ocean health,” as well as a for being a supporter of “cutting-edge research designed to stabilize and restore coral reefs,” as the statement implies.
If Allan is found responsible for the damage, he would have to pay up to $600,000 in compensation. His staff was said to be assisting and cooperating with the DoE enquiry at the time.
“In addition to assessing the damage and determining the cause of this incident, we are also paying close attention to lessons learned so that we can more effectively prevent these accidents while still hosting visiting yachts,” the DoE said.
The incident involving Allan’s yacht is just the latest in a series of mishaps that have contributed to the demise of the Cayman Islands’ coral reefs.
Just recently, Pullmantur cruise lines’ Zenith ruined a significant part of the reef. A Carnival Cruise Line’s ship, the Carnival Magic, dropped an anchor on the endangered coral reef in 2014, ruining more than 11,000 square feet of it. Though it failed to admit any responsibility for the incident, the company ended up paying $100,000 to the Cayman Islands National Trust, which went towards the Magic Reef Restoration Project.
 
 
 
Tesla is considering allowing smartphone apps from an iPhone or Android device to be mirrored on its giant 17-inch center console display, rather than building its own native app development kit for developers, which the company had hinted at several years ago.
Speaking at an event for Tesla owners in Hong Kong, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said the focus of Tesla's infotainment efforts would be to "enable you to project apps from your phone to the center screen." It's not clear whether Musk is referring to platforms like Android Auto or CarPlay, which allow a limited sort of mirroring of smartphone apps, or something more Tesla-centric.
It's also not clear what might have prompted the change, but 9to5Google suggests it may be due to the security concerns of developing a full-fledged app platform in a system that is so closely tied to the functionality of the car.
Most major automotive manufacturers have promised to implement Android Auto and CarPlay (with a couple notable exceptions), but Tesla has thus far declined to participate — of course, Tesla has one of the best infotainment systems, using a huge 17-inch touchscreen well before the rest of the industry started to embrace large central screens.

Tesla-model-3
This probably isn't the Model 3 but rather a rendering.
Image: ETAuto

We've been waiting for a mass market Model 3 from Tesla for a while now. Turns out, we might get more than just an affordable all-electric sedan. And we might get a crossover version, too.
"Tesla will be able to build multiple variations on the third generation platform, specifically a sedan and, later, an SUV," a Tesla spokesperson told Mashable.
Along with the Model 3 sedan, it's likely that the other variant of the Model 3 platform will be the Model Y compact crossover that company co-founder and CEO Elon Musk had tweeted about — and later deleted — last year.
When it's unveiled, the Model 3 will likely have a 240-mile range and cost somewhere around $35,000. The Model Y crossover (think Model X but, you know, smaller) will probably cost around $5,000 more than the Model 3, based upon the pricing structure of the Model S versus the Model X.
Although Tesla will likely price the two-wheel drive Model 3 around the mid-$30,000 mark, it'll probably lose money on each car sold at that price. That is, until its Gigafactory comes online, which is expected to produce such a glut of batteries that it will push the price of the lithium-ion cells down quite a bit.
Until we see it in the flesh, though, these specs and figures are all speculation.

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
The Division beta has already started
The Division – will you be playing the beta?
The closed beta for The Division has just started up on Xbox One, but you’ll have to wait until tomorrow for PS4 and PC.
If your weekend plans revolve around playing Tom Clancy’s The Division then you can get in a bit of practice early, as the beta has just gone live on the Xbox One.
Thanks to Microsoft’s one day exclusive though, PlayStation 4 and PC owners will have to wait until 12pm tomorrow to get stuck in.
The final version of The Division will be released on March 8, so it’s nearly finished and should ensure the beta looks and plays almost like the finished thing.

You’ll be able to play the beta both co-operatively and in the competitive ‘Dark Zone’. The beta will also give you a chance to explore the game’s role-playing elements, including perks and character customisation.
The only problem is that the beta is extremely short, and ends on Sunday, January 31. So if you haven’t got a code yet the clock is ticking.
Although you may find Ubisoft giving away beta codes on Twitter and the like, the only guaranteed way to get one is to pre-order the game.
Recently it’s been discovered that if you pre-order and then cancel once the code arrives you can get it for free, although it’s possible Ubisoft may have closed that loophole by now.

Xbox One owners can now play the new Tom Clancy game, The Division — a day before people with PCs or PlayStation 4s.
The Division is a third-person shooter in the vein of other recent Tom Clancy games. It is online only, and available for Xbox One, PlayStation 4 and PC.
The plot revolves around a smallpox pandemic that is transmitted across the US, and the game depicts a group of military agents as they attempt to survive after everyone else has left. The game challenges players to stay alive as long as they can, either competitively or against one another.
The game has opened exclusively on Xbox One, and will start on PC and PlayStation 4 on Friday. All of the betas will close on 31 January, at the end of the weekend.
The only sure-fire way to get onto the beta is to pre-order a copy of the game. But some codes are being given out on social media — and other players have had success ordering the game, receiving the code and then cancelling that order, though that loophole now appears to have been closed.

Thursday, January 28, 2016

  • By Angela Moscaritolo 
  •  
  • Microsoft is following Google's lead and making its deep learning tools a whole lot more accessible.
    The software giant has open sourced its Computational Network Toolkit, or CNTK, which the company says is "more efficient" than four other popular solutions used to create deep learning models for things like speech and image recognition — including Google's recently open-sourced TensorFlow. Now, the toolkit is available via GitHub for anyone who wants to use it, from deep learning start-ups to more established companies processing huge amounts of data in real time.
    "The CNTK toolkit is just insanely more efficient than anything we have ever seen," Microsoft's Chief Speech Scientist, Xuedong Huang, said in a statement, adding that it has the power to "drive artificial intelligence breakthroughs."
    Microsoft CNTK
    Huang and his team developed the toolkit out of necessity: They wanted to improve how well computers can understand speech, but all the tools they had were slowing them down. So they built their own.
    Internally, Microsoft is using its CNTK on a set of computers that use graphics processing units (GPUs). They were designed for computer graphics but are also "ideal" for processing the algorithms that are leading to "major advances in technology that can speak, hear and understand speech, and recognize images and movements," the company said.
    The toolkit can scale across more GPU-based machines than other publicly available solutions, making it useful for those with the resources to create their own large cluster of GPU-based computers for major experiments and calculations, as well as researchers on more limited budgets, Microsoft added.
    Meanwhile, the field of deep learning has "exploded" in recent years as more and more researchers have started running machine learning algorithms using deep neural networks, which are designed to mimic the way the human brain works, Microsoft said. Redmond's researchers have used this approach to create systems that can do everything from translate conversations to identify the objects in a photograph or video, and answer questions about images.
     

The deal brings AI and vision to mobile phones

Google wants to make your phone capable of faster, battery-sipping artificial intelligence. By taking AI out of the cloud and putting it on the device Google plans to make waiting for a response from your phone a thing of the past.
Your phone is one the most challenging environments to implement true artificial intelligence, yet it’s also the most important if the goal of letting computers aid people in everyday decision-making is ever to come to pass. The type of processing power required to enable a computer to learn is enormous, sucking up huge amounts of energy. In fact, when Facebook engineers were designing a new form of server to train computers to learn, one of their biggest battles was with the folks providing power to the data center. They wanted too much.
So combining battery-powered phones and AI is a challenge, but it’s one that Google is taking on with an order for new chips from Irish firm Movidius. Movidius makes a line of processors that that allow for computer vision on mobile devices in a power efficient manner. The search giant has been testing the Movidius Myriad first generation chips in its Project Tango computer vision and 3D mapping project and has now gone public with an order of the second generation product.
Now Google GOOG -0.01% wants to take Movidius’s expertise in computer vision and combine that with machine learning to create mobile phones that can presumably “see” and learn to recognize the world around them without having to rely on pattern matching. This is a tall order. Most machine learning relies on training the machines to actually learn, which happens in a lab with researchers using clusters of servers using graphics processors. It is time-consuming, power consuming and hugely iterative.
Then there is the second-aspect of machine learning, which is the execution of that training on data sets in the real world. That still benefits from specialized silicon, and Google plans to bring the models it builds over to the Movidius chips so it can run them on mobile devices. This reduces latency, or the amount of time between a request and the delivery of an answer.

Already it’s frustrating to wait for translation or a service like Google Now to try to understand what you are trying to say, as Google shuttles your spoken words back to the cloud to try to get the words translated into a computer-understandable version and then implement the task at hand. Doing anything on device will help when there is no Internet access and will speed up the service.
Since Movidius is first and foremost a chip designed for vision and audio, its initial tasks might involve the above examples or something like identifying your friends in photos for Google’s Picasa service instantaneously. Or perhaps Google might create a service that offers a visual search engine for places and things. For example, if you snap a picture of a dog, you can get it’s breed and info immediately.
I’d love to see a visual search engine for food that corresponds with calorie data. I imagine Google would too.
,


NEW YORK—Human beings can instantly recognize the objects in a room. How many are there, what color are they? If anyone is speaking we understand that, too.
Google's next generation of digital devices will soon process and understand what they’re they’re seeing just like we humans.
On Thursday, San Mateo, Calif., chip designer Movidius announced that it was collaborating with Google to speed up the adoption of this type of deep machine learning within mobile devices.
As part of the arrangement, Google will license Movidius’ compact, cheap and low power chips, and in turn help Movidius with its complex neural network technology. Movidius is building its reputation in visual intelligence.
The two companies previously collaborated on Google’s Project Tango, which helps phones and tablets understand where they are and how they move through space. At CES earlier this month, Lenovo announced that it would launch the first such Project Tango phone for consumers this summer.
“Instead of us adapting to computers and understanding their language, computers are becoming more and more intelligent in the sense that they adapt to us,” says Blaise AgÏ‹era y Arcas, head of Google’s machine intelligence group in Seattle, in a video outlining the collaboration.
Consumers are already getting a glimpse of what’s possible when devices start to interpret scenes like we do. The Google Photos app, for example, can recognize people and objects in images and automatically tag scenes.
As part of this latest collaboration, Google will license Movidius’ so-called MA2450 vision processor. While consumers may start to see next-generation Android devices that take advantage of such machine learning advancements relatively soon, the specifics on timing remain sketchy.

Email: ebaig@usatoday.com; Follow USA TODAY Personal Technology Columnist @edbaig on Twitter

This reporter watched the space shuttle explode in Central Florida on Jan. 28, 1986.

The space shuttle Challenger lifts off from Kennedy Space Center, Fla., Jan. 28, 1986, in a cloud of smoke with a crew of seven aboard. The shuttle exploded after this photo, taken from atop the Vehicular Assembly Building, was made.
The space shuttle Challenger lifts off from Kennedy Space Center, Fla., Jan. 28, 1986, in a cloud of smoke with a crew of seven aboard. The shuttle exploded after this photo, taken from atop the Vehicular Assembly Building, was made.
 
 
 
By + More 
 
It was cold, at least for Central Florida, on Jan. 28, 1986. In Orlando, a record low of 26 prompted the usual concern about the effects freezing temperatures would have on the region's important citrus industry. Melbourne, some 35 miles south of the Kennedy Space Center, also posted a record low of 26 degrees.
By mid-morning, the Florida sun had warmed the air a little and it was 36 degrees when the space shuttle Challenger blasted off. That was 15 degrees cooler than any previous launch.
There was excitement and pride across the region, indeed the nation, in anticipation of Challenger's launch, with New Hampshire teacher Christa McAuliffe aboard. Making trips into space commonplace and getting the nation's youth excited about it again was a key goal of NASA. Around the country, classrooms took a break so children could watch on TV. Attending a regional economic conference as a business reporter for the Orlando Sentinel, I joined in to watch the launch from a rooftop some 50 miles away.
Tragically, a small, plastic O-ring used as a seal to block gases from escaping the shuttle's solid booster rockets and coming into contact with the massive external gas tank became less resilient as temperatures begin to drop, especially below 50 degrees. A written recommendation existed that advised against launches where the ambient temperature was below 53 degrees, but those in charge of the actual launch were unaware of it.
As the shuttle headed upward into the sky, the O-ring began to fail and gas began leaking. The spacecraft also encountered the high-altitude wind shear that is anticipated and the systems onboard reacted to counter it. But the leak continued, and in a matter of seconds structural failure overcame the external tank and the shuttle began disintegrating just 73 seconds into its flight. Those who were watching, whether in Florida or around the nation, could sense something was terribly awry. The seven crewmembers perished.
Investigations would later reveal the shuttle was anything but the safe space vehicle that NASA wanted the world to believe. The idea that there was anything routine about a space shuttle launch, even after 24 prior missions, was far from the truth.
Riding in the shuttle was more akin to strapping yourself to a gas tank and lighting the fuse. In the months that followed the tragedy, I and many other reporters would uncover vast evidence of problems with the shuttle. The culture of NASA and the willingness of personnel to speak out about issues also drew scrutiny. The nation had its "aha" moment when a mid-level government analyst provided information to The New York Times that there was a history of issues with the O-rings and that the seal had shown signs of erosion in a dozen previous launches. The Rogers Commission, which investigated the Challenger tragedy, then held closed-door sessions and learned that engineers for the maker of the solid rocket booster had advised against launch the night before.
In June of that year, the commission issued its report but by then the disclosures had already eroded NASA's "can-do" spirit and the nation would never again hold the space agency in such reverence.

As I wrote in a front-page article for the paper on June 10:
WASHINGTON — Calling it "an accident rooted in history," the Challenger commission Monday blamed the Jan. 28 shuttle tragedy on a faulty booster rocket joint that went unfixed for years by a bureaucracy buckling under the pressure of an unrealistic flight schedule.
NASA was trying to do too much with too little, leading autonomous mid-level managers to sweep under the rug critical safety concerns that were a threat to the lives of its astronauts, the panel concluded in its report to President Reagan.

The 13-member panel, representing the finest minds in academia, science and the aerospace industry, said a new management structure was needed at the space agency, along with a redesigned joint on the solid rocket booster.
The report faulted NASA for the way it dealt with safety issues that were known internally but not always communicated to those whose job it was to make critical launch decisions.
"We've suffered a tragedy and a setback," Reagan said in comments from the White House, "but we'll forge ahead, wiser this time and undaunted – as undaunted as the spirit of the Challenger and her seven heroes."
Reagan is gone now, too. And for many, the Challenger tragedy is but a memory. The nation has suffered other tragedies since, not least of which was 9/11. But 30 years back, Jan. 28, 1986, was one of the country's saddest days.
 
The space shuttle Challenger explodes shortly after lifting off from Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 28, 1986. All seven crew members died. FILE: BRUCE WEAVER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thirty years to the day later, Paul Okamura still remembers the smiling faces of the astronauts – not the fireball that came later.
It was Jan. 28, 1986, and Okamura, now 49, was a college-age guy at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida watching seven accomplished people climb happily into the space shuttle Challenger.
“A minute after takeoff we saw the explosion,” said Okamura, who now lives in Irvine. “At first, we thought it was the separation of the booster rockets.”
It wasn’t. Instead, the burst of fuel and flame that started to engulf the Challenger 73 seconds into the flight was the worst accident in the history of the U.S. space program.
“But then, over the PA system in the viewing area, they told us what had happened.”
In an instant, the crowd’s excitement became sorrow.
“People started crying and hugging,” he said. “It felt like a funeral.”
Shuttle launches had become ho-hum; the Challenger was on its 10th mission. But with Christa McAuliffe, a civilian, set to be the first American teacher in space, people across the country were paying attention to Challenger.
And even though the liftoff was in Florida, Challenger was an Orange County program.
Much of the Challenger was designed by Rockwell International, which had a division in Newport Beach and was later headquartered in Seal Beach. Thousands of local workers – from engineers to accountants to line employees – had, at times, worked on the Challenger or one of the many other spacecraft and aerospace technology built over the years in Orange County.
Even today, Challenger has strong local ties:
• McAuliffe Middle School in Los Alamitos is named after the teacher who died in the explosion. McAuliffe’s role in the Challenger mission had school classrooms across the country tuned in to watch the liftoff.
Today, her best-known phrase, “Be yourself, try your best and never be afraid to dream,” is taught at the school.
• On Tuesday, Chapman University’s Leatherby Libraries added documents to its archives from Allan J. McDonald, the scientist who refused to give a go-head for the Challenger launch the night before the explosion.
The Chapman collection includes information from McDonald and another Challenger scientist, Roger Boisjoly. Those documents form the largest repository of Challenger information outside of the federal government.
• Cal State Fullerton alum Tracy Caldwell has said it was McAuliffe who inspired her to become an astronaut. In 2007, Caldwell, who also researched at UC Irvine, went into orbit aboard space shuttle Endeavour to help expand the International Space Station. She has spent 188 days in space and made three space walks.
• Mark Maier, founding chairman of the Chapman Leadership Studies Program, uses the Challenger catastrophe as an opportunity to learn. Many say that the accident could have been avoided with better communication and decision making leading up to the launch, and Maier has used the event to create training videos for students. He has said Challenger teaches the importance of decision making and leadership.
• A cluster of seven redwoods at Jessamyn West Park in Yorba Linda was planted in memory of the Challenger astronauts.

Staff writers Roxana Kopetman and Lou Ponsi contributed to this report.
Contact the writer: bseipel@ocregister.com

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Supermodel Stephanie Seymour Arrested, Charged With Drunken Driving

 

Police say Seymour was unsteady on her feet, her eyes were bloodshot and her breath smelled of alcohol.

X
GREENWICH, Conn. (AP) — Supermodel Stephanie Seymour was arrested over the weekend in Connecticut and charged with drunken driving.
Police say Seymour backed her SUV into another car Friday evening at an exit ramp on Interstate 95 in Greenwich. Nobody was injured in the crash.
A Connecticut State police report says Seymour was unsteady on her feet, her eyes were bloodshot and her breath smelled of alcohol. It says Seymour refused to perform field sobriety tests.
The 47-year-old celebrity was arrested and charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol and unsafe backing. She was released on a $500 bond.
Seymour, who has a Greenwich address, is due in Stamford Superior Court on Feb. 2.
A number listed for IMG Models, which represents Seymour, rang unanswered Monday.
She frequently graced magazine covers in the 1980s and '90s.

 

Monday, January 18, 2016


YouTube formally restored in Pakistan

Federal Ministry of Information Technology has removed the ban on YouTube in Pakistan. The ban had been in place for the past three-and-a half years.
According to media sources the IT Ministry has introduced the local version of YouTube in Pakistan. "Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has told Supreme Court about the removal of objectionable material from the site," media reports stated. "Any objectionable material can be removed on the request of Pakistan government," reports added.
"You Tube will be revived in next 48 hours all around the country," PTA sources told the media.
YouTube was banned after a video deemed 'offensive to Islam' was uploaded in 2012. Pakistan had requested YouTube administration to remove the video from the site but the request was denied. Following this issue the social site was banned in Pakistan.
Hurray! Ban on YouTube to be lifted in Pakistan after three years
Zee Media Bureau
Islamabad: In a significant development for internet freedom, YouTube has been allowed to function in Pakistan again, where the site had been banned for more than three years in the country.
According to the ARY News report, the Ministry of Information Technology has given directions to allow YouTube to function once again in the country.
The popular video-sharing website had been blocked in the country since 2012, when a blasphemous video had been shared over the internet.
When Pakistani authorities asked the website to take it down, the request had been rejected, leading to a ban in the country since then.
imageThe ban on Youtube has officially, been lifted after the hiatus of three years. The website was blocked by the Pakistani government after blasphemous content was not removed from its platform.
According to local media sources "Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has told Supreme Court about the removal of objectionable material from the site," media reports stated. "Any objectionable material can be removed on the request of Pakistan government," reports added.
"You Tube will be revived in next 48 hours all around the country," it added.
Youtube, the Google subsidiary, launched a localized version of the website in Pakistan earlier this week. After the launch of the localized version, hopes were ignited that the official announcement of the ban termination would be made soon making it accessible to the public.

Published 18/01/2016

Apple declined to comment on reports that a bomb threat had been made online
Apple declined to comment on reports that a bomb threat had been made online
Thousands of workers at Apple have returned to work following a security alert at its operations in Cork.

 Up to 4,000 staff at locations in Holyhill, Lavitt's Quay and Model Farm Road were ordered off site for more than two hours as a precaution.

Apple declined to comment on reports that a bomb threat had been made online.
The technology giant said it was co-operating with gardai and three sites were affected, with staff allowed to return to work shortly before 12.30pm
Apple European headquarters briefly evacuated by police
An Apple logo is seen inside the Apple Store in Palo Alto, California. Photo: Reuters




DUBLIN - Apple's European headquarters in Ireland was briefly evacuated on Monday while police searched the premises following a security alert that staff said had been completed and they had returned to work.

Irish police, who were assisting in searches with security teams from Apple's county Cork facility, said it could not confirm if the security alert was over but a staff member told Reuters employees had returned to their desks.
The iPhone maker employs 5,000 people in the southern Irish county of Cork. Police said the company's main campus where most of the employees are based had been evacuated.
A police spokesman said an army bomb disposal team had not been called to the scene REUTERS
(SpaceX / Twitter)
SpaceX has failed to land its Falcon 9 rocket on an autonomous drone ship in the Pacific Ocean after launching the vehicle into space. The company originally said that the rocket came in too hard, but after further review of the data, SpaceX concluded that one of the rocket's legs failed to lock, causing the whole thing to tip over. Waves at the landing site today were 12 to 15 feet high, which may have contributed to difficulties in landing. But when asked if the same scenario would have happened on land, Musk answered, "Probably."

This marks the third time the company has failed to land the rocket upright on the floating ship; the last two times the company attempted ocean landings, the rockets exploded. SpaceX successfully landed a rocket after a trip to space for the first time in December, but that vehicle had the easier task of landing on solid ground.
Despite today’s failure, SpaceX will continue to push for sea landings, as it gives the company multiple options for recovering its rockets post-launch. Landing the Falcon 9 on land is an easier task, but only certain missions are suitable candidates for landing on solid ground. Redirecting a returning rocket to land on a launch pad requires extra fuel capacity that some missions just can’t spare. SpaceX wants to recover most, if not all, of its rockets in the future, no matter the type of mission. And sometimes, landing at sea is the only option.
Ocean landings let SpaceX recover rockets it can't route to solid ground
Landing on ships at sea helps to save on fuel, namely because the ships can move. To get into orbit, rockets launch up and away from their launch pads, following a parabolic path. Once the Falcon 9 gets into space and separates from the top portion of the vehicle, the rocket must retread both the horizontal and vertical distance to land back on ground near the launch pad. But for ocean landings, the landing target comes to the Falcon 9; the drone ships can situate themselves more or less underneath the rocket, eliminating much of the horizontal distance the vehicle must cover and saving on the amount of fuel needed to return to Earth. This is ideal for high-velocity missions or ones that carry heavy payloads, since they need a lot more fuel.
For this particular launch, the decision to land on the drone ship was based on a number of factors. First, SpaceX was unable to get environmental clearance to land the Falcon 9 on ground at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California — where the vehicle launched from. The company also used an older version of the rocket, called the Falcon 9 v1.1. That's the version SpaceX was using before it unveiled its newer, more powerful Falcon 9 in December, which performed the first landing. The Falcon 9 v1.1 isn't as capable as the newer rocket, though, so landing on the drone ship eased some of the fuel burdens the rocket needed for its return to Earth.

The purpose of landing these rockets is so that the company can save money by launching them again. Right now, SpaceX must build an entirely new rocket for each launch, which Musk said costs about $60 million. Reusing rockets means that the cost of launching the vehicle would only be the $200,000 needed for fuel, plus however much it takes to inspect the rocket and bring it up to code for the next mission. If SpaceX wants to maximize the reward from this new business model, it will need to start reusing its rockets with some regularity. The company has quite a few launches coming up, and SpaceX has said it will be returning to ocean landings for the next few missions. So there are many more opportunities to get the landing right.
Today's mission was successful in sending NASA's Jason-3 ocean monitoring satellite into orbit. The probe, which was built in cooperation with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, will measure the ocean's surface level, to help forecasters better predict major weather events like hurricanes.

If you find yourself this week with an Xbox One and a lot of free time and hard drive space, EA may have the answer. The company's EA Access subscription service, which lets you play reasonably new games from a gradually expanding vault on Xbox One, is going free for a week on Microsoft's console for Xbox Live Gold members.
That means you can download games like Battlefield Hardline, Titanfall, and Dragon Age: Inquisition through the EA Access Hub app and play them in full for a week. EA Sports games like Madden NFL and FIFA are also in the vault, though the most recent versions haven't yet been added to the service — you'll have to make do with the 2015 editions.
The promotion runs from Tuesday through Sunday. EA Access normally costs $4.99 a month or $29.99 for a year, and also gives you a 10 percent discount on new EA games and lets you play them a week before the release date. The company launched a similar service for PC games this month called Origin Access.
Raising the alarm: ICS-CERT said in a report that it investigated 97 incidents at critical manufacturers – including makers of vehicles and other types of transportation equipment as well as metals, machinery and electrical equipment producers – during its most-recent fiscal year. — Reuters
Raising the alarm: ICS-CERT said in a report that it investigated 97 incidents at critical manufacturers – including makers of vehicles and other types of transportation equipment as well as metals, machinery and electrical equipment producers – during its most-recent fiscal year. — Reuters
US Department of Homeland Security investigations of cyberattacks on the nation's critical manufacturing sector nearly doubled in the year ended Sept 30, according to the agency. 
The Department of Homeland Security's Industrial Control Systems Cybersecurity Emergency Response Team, or ICS-CERT, said in a report distributed this week that it investigated 97 incidents at critical manufacturers during its most-recent fiscal year. 
That category includes makers of vehicles and other types of transportation equipment as well as metals, machinery and electrical equipment producers. 
ICS-CERT said that altogether it responded to a total of 295 cyber incidents, up 20% from the previous fiscal year. 
After critical manufacturing, the next most active sectors were energy, with 46 incidents, water, with 25, and transportation systems, with 23, according to the report. 
The document did not say whether any of the incidents caused outages or say who was behind them. A DHS spokesman declined to elaborate. 
Cyber experts say that such incidents could be caused by unintentional infections of criminal malware, nations and criminals gathering data to prepare for potential destructive attacks in the future, or attacks looking to disrupt service. 
The annual data provides a rare glimpse into investigations by ICS-CERT, a body that helps critical infrastructure operators defend against cyber attacks. ICS-CERT provides more detailed data on cyber incidents through private channels including a secure web portal. 
ICS-CERT released the data after the agency's chief, Marty Edwards, warned of an increase in attacks that he said were caused by operators exposing industrial control systems to the Internet. 
“I am very dismayed at the accessibility of some of these networks... They are just hanging right off the tubes," he said at the S4 security conference in Miami. 
He did not provide statistics detailing the extent of the increase. 
Industrial control systems are computer systems that run industrial processes at facilities ranging from energy plants and steel mills to water systems and breweries. — Reuters

Saturday, January 16, 2016

US software giant Microsoft is trying to perk up sales in the shrinking personal computer market with its new high-end laptop-tablet hybrid, the Surface Book.
It is the highest-spec model of the Surface series of products, which earned Microsoft revenue of US$3.6 billion last year, according to the company’s annual report.
Analysts say the US company has helped popularise a new product category of hybrid computers that will help the PC market to gain momentum.
“Hybrids have become a trend and many big players are joining in,” said Alex Ng, an analyst from China Merchant Securities Hong Kong.
Other PC manufacturers such as South Korea’s Samsung and China’s Lenovo have also released similar products recently.
“Nowadays most people already own a laptop and they are not likely to replace them often,” Ng said. “The thin and powerful Surface devices provide them with a reason to update their computers.”
The Surface Book is a lightweight computer with a touch screen and detachable keyboard. It packs powerful processors that would normally be found in high-performance laptops and desktop computers.
The new Microsoft Surface Book starts from HK$11,588 (US$1,489) in Hong Kong. Photo: SCMP Pictures
“What we have heard from users is that they want a [high performance] touch screen device, and they prefer [working with] a pen,” Chester Wong, director of Microsoft Hong Kong’s consumer channel group, told the South China Morning Post.
“But right now there is no single device that provides all these features, so the Surface Book is addressing that need,” he added.
He said the powerful Surface Book enables designers and architects to complete demanding tasks like rendering 3D graphics and editing video.
While Wong was unable to provide an estimate of how well the product is expected to sell, he said the “the demand is there” despite the high price tag.
The Surface Book starts from HK$11,588 (US$1,489) but Wong said he was not worried that the hefty cost may deter buyers.
“We are quite confident that this is a device that consumers out there are looking for.”
Ng said Microsoft must now make a strategic choice.
“It needs to decide whether to go on being a major hardware manufacturer, or stay smaller to leave more room for other PC manufacturers to enter the hybrid market,” he said.

Friday, January 15, 2016

By Robert McNamara
Reporter

It has emerged today that pictures of at least 40 Irish girls as young as 14 have been copied from social media and posted on a pornographic website without their consent. Here, we outline 10 things parents should be aware of before posting pictures of their children online what they should know about their kid's own digital footprint.
We see it every day on our social media accounts. Friends posting pictures or video of the latest milestone in their children’s lives, such as their first steps, their first trip to the swimming pool or a joyous family holiday.
It’s understandable that proud and well-meaning parents want to record all the pertinent moments in their child’s formative and teenage years, but using social media sites to share these moments with friends and family on even ‘private’ accounts opens up a myriad of possibilities for your child to be exposed to people you have never me.
For parents with older children, many are not aware of their teen's presence on networking sites and have little control over what is being shared by their kids even if they do.
Often, a person's internet circles are more widespread than they imagine. Understanding where you and your kid's content may end up can prevent it being used against your will.
You have little control over your friend’s likes and shares of your content, or whose timelines they end up on.
Ownership of your content is a legal grey area and social media sites are well equipped to expose holes in copyright law, an area which struggles to keep up with the ever-changing nature and usage of the internet.
Here are some things parents should consider before pressing the post button on images of their child.
1. Your metadata and copyright are not protected
Data recorded by smartphones, cameras and other devices, such as the location, date, time, and the type of device used, are automatically deleted upon upload to Facebook and Twitter.
Facebook also asks to tag the location and enter a description of the photograph.
This is a tactic for social media sites to encourage people to use them as their preferred way of storing photographs, through creating new metadata specific to the website.
It also whittles down your copyright claim on the content, which makes it easier for social media sites to use your photographs for other, revenue generating, purposes such as sponsored stories.
Facebook and Twitter, according to the legal jargon in the terms and conditions, basically retain the right to use your content and photos for any purposes they deem necessary - so you need to be very wary of your rights.
2. The ‘Save As’ and screenshot options on every computer are very dangerous tools
In 2012 it was reported in the Boston media that pictures of a number of local teenage girls, originally from their personal Facebook accounts,  were re-posted on pornographic websites.
Unfortunately this is more common than we think. The ability to save and screenshot pictures is a simple tool available to all who have access to your account, meaning they can copy and store your family photographs if they so wish.
Today's horrifying story about young Irish girl's pictures being used on pornographic sites sees the problem reach Irish shores.
3. You can unwittingly identify your children
Your children can be exposed to people you don't want to associate with - such as estranged family members, dangerous individuals/groups or those you may have conflicts with. There are numerous pathways into your social media feeds open to individuals who want to snoop or garner information on you (usually via shares or likes by your friends).
Consider, carefully, who will be seeing the post before posting details about your children's whereabouts, movements or identifying features.
4. Young children cannot decide for themselves
Some decisions you have to make for your children but their privacy is not something you should treat lightly.
Your kids may come to resent you in later life for posting intimate family moments. Once you post something on Facebook it remains there forever, even if you delete your account.
The only way for it to disappear is if everyone who has interacted with the post also deletes their account. This is assuming it has not been saved as a file or screenshot by someone else and shared elsewhere.
You must consider that your child may want to start off their own social media journey when they get older and the trail of information you have left behind may not be appreciated by them.
5. Social media sites can be hacked
Facebook, Twitter and all social media sites are just as vulnerable to hacking as other websites.
You should regularly check who has accessed your account by checking your privacy settings and log-in details. Most websites will tell you when and where your account has been accessed from.
Make sure you use unique and hack-safe passwords to make your log-in as safe as possible.
6. Algorithms are more far-reaching than you think
You must be aware of websites’ ability to collate information and determine user’s circles on social media - Facebook in particular are extremely good at this.
What you may think is private or shared between a few friends may be circulating in much wider patterns then you believe.
Pictures of your children can be exposed to outsiders by the likes and shares of your well-intended friends, leaving you in little control of where they end up.
7. You are open to prosecution test cases
Posting pictures of your children naked in the bathtub might seem funny or cute to you, but legal experts are eagerly awaiting a test case where parents or guardians are subjected to the mercy of the law for sharing what could be deemed as illegal or indecent imagery.
8. You may expose your child to cyberbullying
Children and teenagers are becoming more and more internet savvy and most are more up-to-speed on the newest social media platforms than their adult counterparts.
Posting what you might think is a cute, funny or happy image of your child, may leave them exposed to cyberbullying by their peers or even people from further afield that they have never even met.
Cyberbullying is becoming an issue that is increasingly forcing governments to consider legislation due to how widespread it is.
9. Your personal info is vulnerable
Pictures of your house, what car you drive and personal information in your biog are particularly vulnerable to outside users who are fishing for information about your private life and movements.
You should avoid posting details of your address or whereabouts on Facebook.
10. Check your privacy settings regularly
If you still feel the need to post pictures of your children online to share with distant family members or friends, then you should be aware of your privacy settings and who can access the photos.
Read the terms and conditions of your social media accounts at regular intervals, they change often, and check how your profile appears to different users (this is an option setting on Facebook and can also be accessed on most social media sites).

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