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).
Among the many customers who were angry after Xbox experienced a global outage was rapper Snoop Dogg.
An Xbox Live outage has left thousands of gamers frustrated - but one angry user decided to take his complaint straight to the top.
Rapper Snoop Dogg posted an Instagram video calling out Microsoft founder Bill Gates, demanding that he 'fix your s, man'.
The outage happened at around 6am AEST, affecting in-game matchmaking, cloud storage, and leaderboards.
Microsoft technicians posted a message saying they were 'working hard' to fix the problem, but that was not enough for the music star.
He threatened to switch to PlayStation if the problem was not solved quickly.
In a clip posted to his account, which has eight million followers, he said: 'A message to Xbox One or Microsoft or whoever the f.
'Y'all f server is f wack, man. Y'all going to make me switch to PlayStation if y'all don't ever get this s fixed. Is it that difficult to play someone online?
'What the f is you doing, Bill Gates?! Fix your s, man.'
But he may have called out the wrong guy - despite founding the company, Bill Gates is now listed as a mere 'technical adviser' at the tech giant.
And switching to PlayStation might not solve his problems either - Sony's network suffered similar difficulties last week.
The issues with Microsoft's servers now appear to have been resolved.
Game review: Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen lives again on PC
Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen (PC) – better late than never
Capcom’s 2013 action role-player makes a belated appearance on PC, but with 4K graphics that do very well to hide its age.
So this is an odd one. Dragon’s Dogma was first released on Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 in May 2012. It was generally well received and got an enhanced version called Dark Arisen, with extra content and features, a year later. Although the situation is slowly changing it’s still not unusual for Japanese-made games not to have a PC version, and Capcom has decided, after three years, to reverse its earlier omission. Which is fine by us because this is still a game worth playing.
The original Dragon’s Dogma was a peculiar mix of Dark Souls, Skyrim, and Shadow Of The Colossus. It borrowed ideas liberally but carefully, in an attempt to make a kind of hybrid of Western and Japanese style action role-players. If this was a new release it’d also be compared to The Witcher 3, which just shows how successful Capcom was in creating a gestalt role-player of many influences.
Dragon’s Dogma avoids seeming like a clone of any one particular game, but there’s little in the way of interesting storytelling or characters. The game’s opening tutorial features a medieval style knight hunting down a large and surprisingly garrulous dragon. It’s hinted that both he and the knight are merely part of a never-ending cycle, with the game proper beginning years later as the dragon reappears and plucks the beating heart out of your custom-created character.
The fact that you manage to survive this encounter with nothing but a nasty scar has everyone referring to you as Arisen – a chosen one who not only stands up to dragons but can command strange otherworldly warriors called ‘pawns’.
Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen (PC) - making griffons a thing before The Witcher 3
Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen (PC) – making griffons a thing before The Witcher 3
Although Dragon’s Dogma is strictly a single-player only game you’re able to recruit up to three pawns to your party. The first you get to customise in the same way as your main character, the other two are recruited by either meeting them in the game world or using magical stones dotted around the landscape to pick and choose your allies.
Since both you and your primary pawn earn experience, and can be equipped with weapons and equipment independently, the idea is that you can lend and trade pawns with other players. The game constantly checks to see what other people are doing with their borrowed copies, and both you and their actions feed back on each other.
The pawns display an impressive level of artificial intelligence, and depending on whether a pawn is a fighter, archer or wizard they’ll tackle enemies and bosses intelligently and without being asked. Which is a good job because, despite their importance to the game, you have surprisingly little control over them – just a small set of tactical commands that don’t amount to much more than ‘stop’ and ‘go’.
Not only will pawns fight for you but they’ll also heal you when necessary, and even when you’re just exploring they’ll search for ingredients and hidden objects – as well as memorise a location for anyone you might later pass them onto. It’s a very strange concept, that the game’s story fails to make sense of, but in gameplay terms it definitely works.
Of course the pawns won’t do quite everything for you and given the team’s background with the Devil May Cry series it’s not surprising to find a very robust fighting system. You start off with little more than a light and heavy attack but can learn additional moves if you pay a trainer, all of which work with a satisfying sense of weight and power.
Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen (PC) - pawns are co-op without the other players
Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen (PC) – pawns are co-op without the other players
Visually the game was always something of a mixed bag, with some impressively large and detailed monsters but lots of very distracting screen tearing. Although it includes all the DLC ever released the PC version doesn’t really add or change anything in terms of content, but it does allow for an uncapped frame rate and 4K resolutions. Many of the textures are also improved, and although overall it’s not quite state-of-the-art some areas can look extremely impressive.
During the day it almost looks like you’re holidaying on some peaceful Greek island, but you’re told by everyone you meet that venturing out at night – or into any of the many dungeons and caves – is near suicide. And when you first start that’s very good advice for although Dragon’s Dogma doesn’t go to quite the extremes of Dark Souls it’s not afraid to punish the incautious.
But while Dragon’s Dogma mixes and matches its influences with impressive skill the game world is nowhere near as intricately designed as either Dark Souls or Skyrim. It lacks personality and, at least in daylight, atmosphere. And with no memorable characters and inevitability repetitive quests your interest begins to wane more quickly than any of its would-be peers.
There’s much to build on here though, and we always liked the old school bestiary filled with mythological oddities such as wyverns, hydras, and chimeras. Capcom has hinted that if this new PC version is well received then they’ll reconsider a full sequel, and we think they should. None of the game’s problems are difficult to solve and its best ideas are too good to waste.

Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen

In Short: Despite borrowing so much from so many different games Capcom’s Western style role-player is still very much its own game – with plenty of interesting ideas of its own.
Pros: Weighty, exciting action with some great boss encounters. Pawn system is odd but interesting in its implications. Hugely involved customisation options. 4K visuals often impress.
Cons: Game world and story lacks character. Combat and quests do get repetitive. Weak dialogue and poor voice acting.
Score: 7/10
Formats: PC
Price: £23.99
Publisher: Capcom
Developer: Capcom
Release Date: 15th January 2016
Age Rating: 18

Dragon's Dogma, Established 2012

Dragon's Dogma (PC)
If you’ve been holding out hope that last-gen RPG Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen would get a PC port someday...uh, well, that happened. Or it will happen, rather—the port hits Steam tomorrow, nearly four years after the game’s original Xbox 360/PS3 launch.
I booted the game earlier this week and ran through the first few hours. As you might expect, the game runs quite a bit better on a modern PC than it did on the old console hardware. Testing Dragon’s Dogma on my GeForce GTX 980 Ti-equipped machine was (no surprise) overkill, easily maxing out the game at 1080p and maintaining north of 100+ frames per second. That’s good news for Dragon’s Dogma fans, given that the original console versions often dipped down to 15fps to 20fps.
Here’s a look at the graphics options:
Dragon’s Dogma (PC)
Dragon’s Dogma (PC)
The catch? For all Capcom’s talk of “Stunning visuals”—I took that quote directly from the Steam page—Dragon’s Dogma looks decidedly like a last-gen game. It’s quite a bit crisper played at modern PC resolutions and the lighting effects nabbed an overhaul, but the textures, weirdly-empty streets, and sparse vegetation all scream 2012.
Dragon’s Dogma (PC)
But visuals were never the real appeal of Dragon’s Dogma anyway. The game had one claim to fame: Its combat system, which had you climb all over mythical beasts like some sort of bloodthirsty Shadow of the Colossus clone. Hundred-foot tall dragon threatening your village? Yeah, climb on its leg. See how far that gets you.
Dragon’s Dogma (PC)
This is still the best part of Dragon’s Dogma, in large part because nobody else has come along and cribbed it yet. The Witcher 3 is much better at telling a story, for instance, but its monsters rarely get more complicated than “Hit it a bunch.” Dragon’s Dogma, the bosses are equal parts combat and puzzle.
And Dragon’s Dogma has an interesting denouement, for those willing to plod through the full 30 to 40 hours to the game’s ending. Unfortunately I don’t think the game—not even a masterpiece in 2012—has aged particularly well. The open-world genre is probably one of the fastest to evolve nowadays, and much of Dragon’s Dogma feels conspicuously empty and archaic to me.
For those who are already fans or are curious about the combat, however, this seems like a perfectly competent port. There are a few oddities, like the fact you can’t use a gamepad to input a name during character creation, but by-and-large it seems to run well. Here’s hoping a more-refined Dragon’s Dogma II is in the works at Capcom.

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

I cover the collision of advertising and the Internet. 

Photo: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
More than a year and a half after Google introduced what still looks more like a mockup of a virtual-reality device than a real virtual-reality device, it’s finally getting real on VR. But not for the reason most people seem to think.
Today, Google confirmed that it has created a new virtual-reality group headed by Clay Bavor, a vice president for product management who has headed apps such as Gmail, Docs, and Drive–and Cardboard, the cheapo device that turns a smartphone into a crude but surprisingly effective VR headset.
The assumption by many observers is that Google is playing catch-up to Facebook’s Oculus, which just released its high-end Rift device, and other VR headsets such as the Oculus-powered Samsung Gear VR introduced last fall.
But Google is playing a rather different game than Facebook, in particular, and other makers of VR devices. For one, it’s betting that smartphones will be the route to a mass market for virtual reality. (Samsung is also betting on the smartphone, but only its own smartphones, at least for now. If you have an iPhone, or any Android phone besides two Galaxy S 6 models, you’re out of luck.)
Cardboards can be had for less than $10, which makes them not only cheap enough to be impulse purchases, but cheap enough for many companies to give them out free. The New York Times, for instance, gave out 1 million of them to subscribers to jumpstart its move into VR content. As primitive as they look, it has been clear–and now is even clearer to everyone–that Google has been putting serious thought and effort into Cardboard.
 
Recommended by Forbes
Given the Oculus’ high price–$600 plus a capable enough personal computer at a cost of at least $1,000–it will not be a mass consumer device anytime soon. Moore’s Law will change that sometime down the road, but not for at least a year or two, maybe more.
What Google aims to create is a critical mass of users–tens of millions and eventually hundreds of millions–for virtual reality content that will keep its advertising system humming for decades to come. In that sense, it’s not really competing with Oculus, which for the foreseeable future will be mostly for hard-core gamers.

Image: AP
By tech2 News Staff /  13 Jan 2016 , 11:30
Facebook and Microsoft made their Virtual Reality (VR) intentions quite clear last year, and now Google wants to ensure it is at par with the rivals.
So, Google has announced a separate division that will solely focus on virtual reality. The search giant has now announced to ramp up and build a VR division. Citing a Google spokesperson, Re/code confirms that Clay Bavor will lead the VR team.
Clay Bavor is the VP, Product Management for Google’s apps like Gmail, Drive and Docs. He has also been incharge of Google Cardboard ever since it was launched. Now, he will be leading the VR team and completely focus on virtual reality products in 2016. Enterprise chief Diane Greene will be stepping into his shoes to overlook apps.
Interestingly, the announcement comes just when Facebook decides to finally start shipping the Oculus Rift. Sony, HTC and others are expected to follow suit with their own headsets too. In fact, the year 2016 is projected to be a big one for Virtual Reality. Apple is also known to be quietly building its VR arsenal.
Many recent reports have been predicting that the year 2016 is going to be all about virtual reality. VR is  a computer-simulated reality (in a device) that replicates, via photos, an environment that simulates a physical presence in places in the real world or an imagined world, allowing the user to interact in that world. Virtual reality artificially creates sensory experiences, which can include sight, hearing, touch and smell.
For example, with a VR device you can climb Mount Everest making your way gingerly across a shaky bridge while trying not to look down into an icy chasm — all while sitting on a couch in your house.

Some of its features include: 
Cortana in Edge is a personal assistant that helps make Web browsing easier for you, with whatever you're trying to get done.
Inking and sharing so you can capture and communicate your thoughts: Enables you to write or type directly on the page, comment on what's interesting or clip what you want – then easily share this 'Web Note' via mail, or a social network.
The Spartan browser is designed to be faster, clearer and even let people wrote on web pages using a stylus
The Spartan browser is designed to be faster, clearer and even let people wrote on web pages using a stylus
Reading List and Reading View
The new rendering engine is built around the idea that the Web 'just works,' while being fast, more secure and more reliable.
He also admitted the firm would still allow users to install Internet Explorer. 
'At the same time, we recognize that for some of our enterprise customers, it’s important they have the support they need and can continue to use Internet Explorer when and where they need it. 
'This is why we will continue to make it easy for our enterprise customers to make Internet Explorer 11 the default browser via group policy. 
'Internet Explorer 11 is supported on Windows 7, Windows 8.1, and Windows 10 for all customers, also providing a consistent platform that’s great for enterprise Web apps. ' 
Microsoft is hoping Windows 10 will help it rebuild loyalty among users who are increasingly relying on tablets, smartphones and other devices. 
A staff member of Microsoft Taiwan Corporation puts a sticker of Windows 10 on her face at a press conference in Taipei.
A staff member of Microsoft Taiwan Corporation puts a sticker of Windows 10 on her face at a press conference in Taipei.
PC sales have been shrinking in recent years and that trend is likely to continue, according to a new forecast from International Data Corp. 
Analysts at IDC predicted that 2016 will mark the fifth consecutive year of declining PC sales worldwide.
Computer-makers are hoping to get a boost from consumer interest in Windows 10, which manufacturers are making available on new machines being sold this fall. 
But IDC noted in its report that Microsoft is also offering the new software as a free download for people who want to install it on their existing PCs.
The free upgrades probably account for the bulk of the 75 million devices now using Windows 10, said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights & Strategy, although he said more new models will likely be sold this fall.
Windows 10, which is free when upgrading, had been installed on 75m computers by the end of August, accounting for 4.9% of desktop internet users according to data from web analytics firm StatCounter. 
Windows 7 still held a 48.1% share of global internet users. 
Some of the machines getting Windows 10 are quite old. 
Microsoft executive Yusuf Mehdi said in a Twitter post that, 'even some devices manufactured in 2007 have upgraded to Windows 10.'
Along with new features, the Redmond, Washington, software giant designed Windows 10 to fix some unpopular elements of Windows 8, the operating system's last version. 
Windows 10 is designed to bring together all of Microsoft's different hardware, such as a the surface tablet (left) and the Xbox One (right) under the same software

HOW POPULAR IS WINDOWS?

Across desktop PCs as a whole, only 13.4 per cent currently run Windows 8 or Windows 8.1, according to research firm NetMarketshare.
By contrast, it says 51.2 per cent are powered by Windows 7 and 23.9 per cent by Windows XP, a version that is no longer supported by Microsoft.
It's intended to work on PCs, tablets, smartphones and other devices, although the company released it for PCs and tablets first. 
Windows 10, the biggest update Microsoft has made to its computer software, finally launched after a massive beta test programme.
The start menu in Windows 10 will appear similar to what's found in Windows 7, but tiles opening to the side will resemble what's found in Windows 8.
Joe Belfiore, a Microsoft executive who oversees Windows design and evolution, said Windows 10 will offer 'the familiarity of Windows 7 with some of the benefits that exist in Windows 8' to help business users make the transition.
Belfiore said that the company was going 'back to basics' with Windows 10, and confirmed that the famous Start menu, which was removed from Windows 8, would be returning.
'We're looking to find the balance, so that all the Windows 7 users get a familiar experience on the devices they already have,' he said.
'It gives the familiarity of Windows 7 with some of the elements of Windows 8.'
He said that going from Windows 8 to Windows 10 is like going from a Prius to a Tesla. 
'They don't have to learn any new way to drive.' 
Mr Belfiore also confirmed that Windows 10 would be compatible with both traditional and touch-based device users like tablets through a new task view with buttons scaled up so that they're more friendly to those on touchscreen devices. 
Users on hybrid devices like the Surface Pro tablet will be able to jump between and keyboard and touchscreen modes, with Microsoft demonstrating how the interface will change as you do.
Although the new software won't be formally released until later this year, analysts have already said that its success is crucial for Microsoft and new CEO Satya Nadella.

Nintendo is celebrating Pokemon turning 20.

Nintendo is celebrating Pokemon turning 20.
February 27 marks the day that Pokémon hit our shelves 20 years ago, and changed gaming and pop culture history.
To commemorate the date, Nintendo have set up some hardware bundles that will sport the popular artwork from the original titles.
North America will see a 3DS bundle, including two cover plates that can be swapped out. One plate has the popular fire Pokémon Charizard emblazoned on it, while the other has the water Pokémon Blastoise – representing Red version, and Blue version respectively.
The system will also have both games pre-installed, and a distinctive Pokémon Home Menu theme.
European regions will get three different packages, one for each version of the game – Red, Blue, and Yellow. These bundles will have 2DS systems in them, but will each have a specific colour corresponding to the version.
Each bundle will only have their particular version of the game pre-installed, but will come with the special Home Menu theme, as well as a sheet of stickers.
Europe will also get a special Pokémon Super Mystery Dungeon cover plate on February 19. This will be followed later by another set of plates with classic Pokémon artwork, available for individual purchase.
News of the original Pokémon games being released for the 3DS Virtual Console hit last year.
The versions aren't remakes, but will have an online infrastructure in place for the multiplayer component, which back in the 90s was accomplished via a physical ca


Microsoft VP introduces Internet Explorer 9

Sunday, January 10, 2016

LeTV's Le Max Pro Smartphone With Snapdragon 820 SoC Price Tipped
Qualcomm at its recent CES keynote address confirmed the Chinese brand LeTV's Le Max Pro will be the first handset to sport the Snapdragon 820 processor.
The smartphone however was not officially revealed at the event and was announced to be on sale in the first half of 2016. Now, a Chinese mobile site has claimed purported pricing of the Le Max Pro. According to Mobile-Dad, the Le Max Pro will be priced at CNY 3,500 (roughly Rs. 35,500).
(Also see: LeTV Le Max Pro Full Specifications)
We got a chance to play with the Le Max Pro at CES 2016, and some of the specifications we gleaned include a 6.33-inch display with a QHD (1440x2560 pixels) resolution, and 4GB of RAM. It is backed by a 3400mAh battery. It will be available 32GB, 64GB, and 128GB storage variants. The handset sports a 21-megapixel rear camera and comes with optical image stabilisation (OIS). The dual-SIM Le Max Pro supports 4G LTE connectivity option and comes with USB Type-C port. The smartphone is running Android 6.0 Marshmallow with a customised UI from LeTV on top. The Snapdragon 820 SoC was found to be clocked at 2.2GHz, which means LeTV has not under-clocked the processor from the reference clock speed.
Qualcomm during the CES keynote had also revealed that the Le Max Pro will support Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 technology that can charge the phone from 0 to 60 percent charge in 30 minutes.The Chinese company hasn't officially launched the Le Max Pro and we will have to wait for the unveiling. Unfortunately, the smartphone is still not listed on the company's official store, the lemall.com. Apart from the Snapdragon 820, the Le Max Pro will also pack features such as Qualcomm's Snapdragon Sense ID ultrasonic fingerprint technology that's claimed to be more secure than capacitive sensors.
At CES, China-based LeTV also unveiled Super 4 Max65 Blade claiming it to be the "world's thinnest TV 65-inch TV."


Letv, a global leader in smart device technology announced the launch of two SuperPhones to be held on January 20, according to a Facebook post. The next generation smartphones -- unlikely to launch in India -- will be the first to run on Snapdragon 820 processor from Qualcomm. The Le Max Pro smartphone seen at CES 2016 is the first in the lineup.
“Letv has already established itself as one of the world’s top innovators and our decision to include the Snapdragon 820 processor in these new devices demonstrates our commitment to creating and delivering the best technology available to our customers,” said Jun Liang, chief operating officer at Letv.
“Once the marketplace sees the dramatic performance enhancements in our smartphones, we are confident they will not accept anything less.”
The Le Max Pro boasts a robust set of features, including Snapdragon Sense ID fingerprint technology, the mobile industry’s first comprehensive ultrasonic-based fingerprint biometric solution, providing a more secure, reliable alternative to capacitive-based fingerprint sensors.
Snapdragon Sense ID fingerprint technology now includes a new live-ness detection feature, helping to ensure that an actual finger is being used for biometric authentication, and making the solution even more difficult to spoof. The Le Max Pro is the first commercial device with Snapdragon Sense ID fingerprint technology and will be the first with the new live-ness detection capability as well.
The Le Max Pro also features Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 for up to 75% faster charging than conventional methods.
Additionally, Letv will be the first to roll out commercial devices integrating 802.11ad multi-band wireless connectivity for multi-gigabit speeds and nearly uncompressed content transfer.
“We are very pleased that Letv is first to bring compelling and advanced smartphones to consumers that are powered by the Snapdragon 820 processor and feature Snapdragon Sense ID fingerprint technology,” said Alex Katouzian, senior vice president, product management, Qualcomm.
With an ability to move content between devices in near real-time, and with an uncompressed signal, QTI’s technologies in Letv’s ecosystem of products maximize the user-experience, as well as the display quality on beautifully designed mobile and television devices.
The Le Max Pro is the latest addition to Letv’s Le Superphone family, which sold more than one million units last November.

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