Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Video of the World's First Realistic Simulation of the Creation of Our Galaxy [Video]

Astrophysicists from the University of Zurich working with UCSC's astronomers have created the world's first realistic simulation of the formation of the Milky Way. It's amazing that all this clockwork perfection came out of such a galactic Charlie Foxtrot.

The video—which follows the original announcement of the study—starts less than a million years after the Big Bang. Previous simulations resulted in shapes that weren't exactly like our home galaxy. This one, created with two supercomputers from NASA and the Swiss National Supercomputing Center, resulted in good match of the real thing.

The results of the calculation has been published in the Astrophysical Journal and support the theory that dark matter's gravitational forces were key in the formation of the universe. This theory says that the matter that forms stars and planetary systems came into place because of the influence of dark matter's gravitational wells.

University of Zurich's scientist Lucio Meyer has a good explanation of how they created it and the implications of their research. [YouTube via La Información via Fogonazos]


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Jet Skiing Through Your Hurricane-Ravaged Neighborhood [Video]

Jet Skiing Through Your Hurricane-Ravaged Neighborhood What would you do if you woke up after Irene and saw your entire town had been flooded? Check your basement? Call friends and see if they're okay? Hell no, brah—get out the jet ski and get x-treme.

Oceanside, NY looks like a pretty fun place to hang out post-hurricane! Serious warning: the soundtrack to this video is unspeakably bad. Heinous; Like, worse than most actual natural disasters. So mute it and play the radical street-surfing track of your choice. I would recommend Prince. [BuzzFeed]

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Samsung Galaxy S II Hands On: Say Hi to Your Next Android Phone [Video]

Samsung Galaxy S II Hands On: Say Hi to Your Next Android PhoneIf you are going to get an Android phone any time soon, this is it.

Let's get this out of the way: These things are fast. They haul all kinds of ass, thanks to a 1.2GHz dual-core Exynos processor and 1GB of RAM in its guts. I did everything I could to try to make Galaxy S II stutter and I failed, miserably. Like really, that's the most major advancement in this phone. It's super-duper fast. And man that screeen. Gorgeous. Bright, clear, nice colors, responsive touchscreen. Super AMOLED Plus really delivers on just about every metric.

There's a few differences between the three models on each carrier. Most significantly, AT&T's has a 4.3-inch screen, while Sprint and T-Mobile's phones are 4.52-inch monsters. AT&T's felt the best—and I've got pretty damn big hands. But the 4.3 was just less of a reach for my fingers, and the screen seemed plenty big for anything I might be trying to read.

The rear camera, both for still and video, is excellent. It responded quickly, did well in low light, and video playback was smoother than Morgan Freeman's voice.

Samsung Galaxy S II Hands On: Say Hi to Your Next Android Phone Samsung Galaxy S II Hands On: Say Hi to Your Next Android Phone

They're all super light and super thin, and that's nice, but they're also super-plasticky. I'd rather they had some sturdy hardcore metal backs, so I didn't feel like they'd break if I dropped them. And despite the baller 8-megapixel, 1080p-shooting camera, none of these phones have a dedicated camera button. Why would you put an awesome camera on your phone and then not have a button for it?

I've gone on record as not being fan of Samsung's TouchWiz UI, but after playing with TouchWiz 3.0—I'm still not. I feel like Chris Crocker screaming, "Leave Britney alone!" except, substitute "Android" for "Britney". It's fast now, but I can't help but think it'd be even faster without the extra bulk. That said, TouchWiz 3.0 is more palatable than its previous incarnation. It's important to note that phones with custom skins like TouchWiz (and Sense and MotoBlur) have traditionally gotten updates slower than phones that run stock Android. We hope that Samsung will somehow break that trend.

Aside from the minute differences in screen size the only other way the carriers differentiate here is by loading it with their own custom junk. Sprint had no less than seven custom apps (Sprint Music, Sprint Zone, etc.) and AT&T had a good handful, too (AT&T Navigator, AT&T Code Scanner, etc.). This is bloatware.

From this quick hands on, it seems like the Galaxy S II is fastest smartphone you can get stateside. I'll have to do some additional torture testing to confirm that, but these things really fly. And while I don't like the plastic body, they're light, thin, fast, and pretty. Overall, if you're been waiting for a new Android phone to drool over, these fit the bill nicely. Though, with the rumored Nexus Prime (or Droid Prime, depending who you ask) coming within the next few months and bearing Android 4.0, these guys will have some stiff competition very soon.

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How Beyonce Is Bigger Than Hurricanes, Earthquakes and SuperBowl Sunday [Twitter]

How Beyonce Is Bigger Than Hurricanes, Earthquakes and SuperBowl SundayWhen I was a child, there was a number that crudely measured how many people paid attention to something. It was called the Nielsen rating. Perhaps you remember it. Today it's an unimportant relic that only reveals what was happening.

The VMAs had its biggest show ever this year. A record-breaking 12.4 million people tuned in live. Which actually seems like a very small number, given how many people were talking about it. Because while MTV had a hit with the VMAs, so did Twitter. News of Beyonce's uterine passenger, which she revealed at the show, generated some 8,868 Tweets per second. It was Twitter's biggest moment yet. And it shows that the company is sitting on the most valuable advertising data that there is: a way to measure, package and sell unexpected things that we care about right now, in real time.

We used to rely on ratings or audited circulation numbers to determine what people were interested in. Today, we increasingly talk about Tweets Per Second. (And by "we," I mean the always hungry media maw, smacking its lips in anticipation of sucking marrow from the next micro trend or attention spasm that might convince an otherwise disinterested viewer to flip the channel to 759—or even better, stay there.)

Whenever anything big happens in the news, CNN and Fox News and the networks increasingly break into Twitter mode, reading tweets on the air, talking about how many people are tweeting and generally going into wild-eyed social media mania.

Aside from making Mark Zuckerberg wish he had made status messages public by default from the get-go so that CNN would read Facebook updates on air, it's revealing in that it shows that even the professional media—the ostensible arbiters of opinion and news—have realized that you and I are no longer paying attention.

We're more interested in each other. We're all broadcasting now. I'd prefer to hear what you have to say, especially in aggregate, than tune into Wolf Blitzer. And when it comes to measuring the impact of events, social media ratings matter more than Nielsens, or at least they should, and here's why.

Twitter is the most important metric of attention. It is not based on past behavior. It is equally capable of measuring scripted events, and the completely unexpected. And it is remarkable because it measures not just consumption, but also interest.

Yes, the Nielsens will tell you how many people watched the VMAs, but social media can tell you how many people actually paid attention. And while maybe you could have foreseen they might be big this year, would anyone have been able to predict that the VMAs—not the Oscars, not the SuperBowl, not the final Shuttle launch—would be the most talked-about television event of the year? Twitter can tell you that. (Facebook should be able to as well.) And it can tell you that as it happens.

In 2008, when it was still a nascent service, Twitter revealed some numbers to me that showed its top events of the previous year, measured in the number of tweets per minute. How Beyonce Is Bigger Than Hurricanes, Earthquakes and SuperBowl Sunday

The chart is a remarkable demonstration of Twitter's growth. Tweets per minute? How quaint! Tweets are now measured at a faster rate per second than they were just three years ago per minute.

But it's more interesting to see how consistently interested we are in the unexpected. Because while Twitter has changed greatly in the past three years—from how it works, to the way we access it, to the number of people on it—the things we are simultaneously interested in haven't changed at all.

Today, Beyonce's VMA appearance holds the top spots for Tweets per second. Prior to that, the news of the Japanese Women's World Cup victory held the record. (Likely because it was an event intently watched by two very Twitter heavy countries.) And while it didn't break a record, the recent east coast earthquake generated 5,500 TPS. In 2008, a presidential debate held the top spot. It knocked off a Japanese earthquake. A Euro 2008 semi final match was the big event prior to that. What all of these events have in common is a certain unpredictability.

The thing about television ratings or audited circulation numbers is that they have never truly been about what we are paying attention to. They were (and are) a way for advertisers to make informed decisions about what to invest in based on what people have paid attention to in the past, as a predictor of future performance. They only measure what has already transpired. This may have been useful for buying chunks of time during a season finale of Dallas, but when something amazing and unexpected happens, there is no good way for an advertiser to catch up with it.

When Twitter measures tweets per second, it measures what people are interested in right now. It measures live attention. And that is very, very valuable. Imagine if, during an earthquake, a QuakeKit ad appeared in your timeline, one that was triggered only when earthquake tweets per second crossed a certain threshold. Tacky? Sure. But you can bet your bottled water it would sell a lot of kits.

This is the promise of real-time conversation, that our interests can be commoditized, live and on the fly. It doesn't have to be just about Twitter, of course. Facebook and Google+ should be equally capable of measuring, packaging and selling our real-time, trending interest data. But it's very clear that this new ability to measure what we care about enough to comment on right now, at this very instant, is much more valuable than measurements of past performance or passive consumption.

All the moreso because of how much society has fragmented. We no longer all watch the same four channels, or even tune in to television series at the same time. The only things that seem to capture our simultaneous attention anymore are those that offer the high drama of the unexpected and unknown: sports, politics (itself a sort of sport), provocative live television, and natural disasters that occur with little-to-no warning.

And, of course, Beyonce.

You can keep up with Mat Honan, the author of this post, on Twitter, Facebook, or Google+.

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International Tech Companies Helped Gaddafi Spy on Libyans [Libya]

International Tech Companies Helped Gaddafi Spy on LibyansMuammar Gaddafi was a desperate man even before the civil war, and it shows more since the recent fall of Tripoli. The Wall Street Journal reports that Gaddafi had the Libyan people systematically spied upon online for years. And international tech companies helped.

Implicated in the report are tech companies from the U.S., Canada, Europe, and Africa, and all had a hand in Gaddafi's obsession with security by providing phone tapping, internet filtering, and email monitoring technologies. Those companies include Boeing's own Narus, which reportedly looked into adding their own internet filtering products to Libya's established monitoring operation, and Amesys, a French security company that provided Libya with Deep Packet Inspection software back in 2009, and intercepted messages from Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, MSN Messenger, and AIM.

The messages were tracked all the way up to February of this year, shortly before the uprising and when Gaddafi shut down the internet entirely. It's a shame the revolution did happen then. They could have kept on making their money. [WSJ]

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Rich Schultz

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Tim Cook's Battle Cry Email (Updated) [Apple]

Tim Cook's Battle Cry Email (Updated)Pundits and investors keep whining that Tim Cook isn't Steve Jobs and that Apple's doomed, blah blah blah.

Well Tim's already taking a page out of the Steve Job's-customer-relations playbook and is reportedly responding to emails congratulating him on his new position as CEO of Apple.

The current favorite is Tim's response to Justin R., a fan of Tim's alma mater, Auburn university. Tim's response shows his everlasting love of Auburn, includes the school's battle cry, "War Eagle Forever!"

UPDATE: The Auburn battle cry is "War Eagle" or "War Damn Eagle!"

We look forward to the birds of prey-themed OS XI. [MacRumors]

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7 Tools for Riding in Style This Labor Day [Toolkit]

Labor Day weekend is coming up, the last chance to let loose before fall. These seven devices will make the final road trip of the summer your most memorable yet.

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Spotify Wants to Bake Itself Into All Your iOS Apps [Spotify]

Spotify Wants to Bake Itself Into All Your iOS AppsSpotify's been up for nearly two months, and it's shown amazing growth. Now it wants to find its way into everything else you do on your iPhone by handing developers and Premium users the new Spotify API.

Called libspotify 9, the code will allow the program to live inside any app developers can think of. Spotify sessions are already handled pretty well by iOS multitasking, but, as excellent as the app is, you tend to have to leave what you're doing to change playlists. By sticking the functionality into games, for instance, you won't have to jump out of what you're doing in the middle of a campaign. Pretty neat. [Spotify Blog via ReadWriteWeb]

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You've Got Less than 24 Hours to Pick Your New Netflix Plan [Psa]

You've Got Less than 24 Hours to Pick Your New Netflix PlanIn light of Netflix's crazy pricing plan shift last month, many of you probably already picked a new plan on your Netflix account. Unless you already left. Well, it goes into effect tomorrow. So if you stream AND get DVDs, switch already!

Seriously. You don't want to wind up paying $16 for next month because you forgot to check the date. [Huffington Post]

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A Beating Heart in a Box Looks Terrifying [Video]

A Beating Heart in a Box Looks Terrifying If I ever needed a heart transplant, seeing a living, tell-tale heart before before my eyes would probably scare me to death. But TransMedic's unique organ care system could prove to keep that heart fresher for longer until you need it.

Presently, you can only keep your heart or stolen kidneys on ice for up to six hours before they become irreparably damaged. Freezer burn sucks. TransMedic's method hooks the donor organ into an electromechanical physiologic environment that keeps it alive for longer. This way, doctors can keep the organs for longer while they shop appropriate recipients. Pretty cool. [DVICE]

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The Government Probably Just Killed the AT&T/T-Mobile Merger [At&t]

The Government Probably Just Killed the AT&T/T-Mobile MergerUncle Sam says no to AT&T eating up T-Mobile: The Department of Justice has filed an antitrust suit against AT&T, Bloomberg reports. Things just got real.

The US says "AT&T's elimination of T-Mobile as an independent, low- priced rival would remove a significant competitive force from the market." Yep, pretty much. AT&T's efforts just got a hell of a lot harder—the DoJ doesn't take kindly to monopolistic encroachment, and when the crosshairs are up, they're rarely lowered.

We're happy to see the feds sticking up for our freedom of choice as consumers—something we don't see often enough, even if they're threatening a network apocalypse if the deal fails. Nobody's going to be coerced into a merger that screws everyone but AT&T shareholders. [Bloomberg]

Update: AT&T's stock is currently down over 4 percent.

Update 2: The WSJ points out Sprint's stock is currently up over 9% after the news. This'll fluctuate all day, but no matter what, the antitrust complaint is good news for Sprint—who's been fighting the merger tooth and nail, on the national, state and local levels—and those who own its stock.

Update 3: You can read the DoJ's statement in its entirety here. A salient chunk:

"The combination of AT&T and T-Mobile would result in tens of millions of consumers all across the United States facing higher prices, fewer choices and lower quality products for mobile wireless services," said Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole. "Consumers across the country, including those in rural areas and those with lower incomes, benefit from competition among the nation's wireless carriers, particularly the four remaining national carriers. This lawsuit seeks to ensure that everyone can continue to receive the benefits of that competition."

Update 4: AT&T hasn't commented yet on the news today, although CEO Randall Stephenson did take the opportunity today to use 5,000 US jobs as a bargaining chip, in a move as cynical as it is misleading:

"At a time when many Americans are struggling and our economy faces significant challenges, we're pleased that the T-Mobile merger allows us to bring 5,000 jobs back to the United States and significantly increase our investment here."

Misleading because however many jobs AT&T magically creates with this merger, they'll likely be eliminating just as many thousands, since that's the kind of "cost-reducing synergies" or whatever that companies merge for in the first place. Cynical because if they really cared that much about American jobs for their own sake they've have kept them here in the first place.

Update 5: Mobile industry expert and analyst Phillip Redman of Gartner tells us the AT&T-Mobile deal now has a "Very, very slim chance" of going through. He added that although he believes the DoJ's suit is unwarranted on the grounds of anti-competition, "It's very doubtful that this deal will ever happen" with AT&T as suitor.

Update 6: The FCC has come out in support of the DoJ's move:

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said, "By filing suit today, the Department of Justice has concluded that AT&T's acquisition of T-Mobile would substantially lessen competition in violation of the antitrust laws. Competition is an essential component of the FCC's statutory public interest analysis, and although our process is not complete, the record before this agency also raises serious concerns about the impact of the proposed transaction on competition. Vibrant competition in wireless services is vital to innovation, investment, economic growth and job creation, and to drive our global leadership in mobile. Competition fosters consumer benefits, including more choices, better service and lower prices."

Update 7: AT&T finally speaks, via Wayne Watts, AT&T Senior Executive Vice President and General Counsel:

We are surprised and disappointed by today's action, particularly since we have met repeatedly with the Department of Justice and there was no indication from the DOJ that this action was being contemplated. We plan to ask for an expedited hearing so the enormous benefits of this merger can be fully reviewed. The DOJ has the burden of proving alleged anti-competitive affects and we intend to vigorously contest this matter in court. We remain confident that this merger is in the best interest of consumers and our country, and the facts will prevail in court.

So AT&T's sure not giving up on their longterm plans, and we can expect a legal battle against the DoJ.

Update 8: PC Mag's Sascha Segan raises an excellent question amid all of AT&T's bleating: "Why can't AT&T bring call center jobs back to the US if the deal isn't approved? Nobody's stopping them."

Update 9: You can read the DoJ complaint in its entirety here.

Update 10: The DoJ's just held a press conference explaining their motives and argument in the case. Basically: the deal sucks for everyone but AT&T, which is afraid of T-Mobile, and they're not going to let it happen:

The Department filed its lawsuit because we believe the combination of AT&T and T-Mobile would result in tens of millions of consumers all across the United States facing higher prices, fewer choices and lower quality products for their mobile wireless services.

As can be seen in the Department's complaint, AT&T felt competitive pressure from T-Mobile. One example cites an AT&T employee observing that "[T-Mobile] was first to have HSPA+ devices in their portfolio…we added them in reaction to potential loss of speed claims."

So as you can see, a merged AT&T and T-Mobile would combine two of the four largest competitors in the marketplace, and would eliminate T-Mobile, an aggressive competitor, from the market.

[T-Mobile] compete[s] on price, plan structure, network coverage, quality, speed, devices, and operating systems. A combination of AT&T and T-Mobile would eliminate this price competition and innovation.

Emphasis is our own.

Update 11: Sprint just chimed in—surprise, they're really happy!

"The DOJ today delivered a decisive victory for consumers, competition and our country. By filing suit to block AT&T's proposed takeover of T-Mobile, the DOJ has put consumers' interests first. Sprint applauds the DOJ for conducting a careful and thorough review and for reaching a just decision – one which will ensure that consumers continue to reap the benefits of a competitive U.S. wireless industry. Contrary to AT&T's assertions, today's action will preserve American jobs, strengthen the American economy, and encourage innovation."

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The New Bestest Android Phone Is Finally Coming to America: The Samsung Galaxy S II [Galaxy]

The New Bestest Android Phone Is Finally Coming to America: The Samsung Galaxy S IIThe Samsung Galaxy S II is the blueprint for the next generation of Android phones. And now it's finally coming to the US, on AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile.

Only Sprint's announced the price and date so far, and they're first out of the gate: Sept. 16 for $200 (with 2-year contract). AT&T's saying Septemberish for an undetermined amount of bills, and T-Mobile touting availability "this fall."

There are, as with the last around of Galaxy phones that hit every carrier, some differences between the bunch. For instance! AT&T's Galaxy has a 4.3-inch screen, but Sprint and T-Mobile are pushing a monstrous 4.52-inch display that makes it officially giant-sized, like the Infuse 4G. Also, names. Sprint's is going by the Epic Touch 4G. I suspect AT&T and T-Mobile will come up with their own wacky names too.

It is the thinnest 4G smartphone on any of the three networks. Its processor is capable of recording 1080p at the highest bitrate of any smartphone on the market.

TouchWiz 3.0 has undergone some refinement. The chicklet tiles are gone (pressure from Apple, I wonder?). Easier to organize files into folders than before by grouping files into folders within the app drawer itself. The UI is definitely cleaner and looks slightly less toy-like.

Their SocialHub has gotten better. It aggregates your various social networks, but actually gives you a fair amount of control from within it. For example, on a Facebook post, you can like it, comment on it, share it, etc. right from within the SocialHub.

MediaHub will allow you to manage premium content from your phone, and you can connect via HDMI to any HDTV and get full DVD quality for movies. This was sticky before with DRM restrictions, but it looks like they've found a way around that. Watching HD content on a large TV looks very good. Samsung Kies Air allows you to control and edit the content (music, photos, video, etc) on your device from any computer, over the air, via a web browser.

Full specs below.


Specs
4.52 inches on Sprint and T-Mobile; 4.3 inches on AT&T
1.2GHz Samsung Exynos dual-core processor
1GB RAM
16GB internal storage
8MP rear-facing camera with auto-focus, flash, and 1080p video
2MP front-facing camera
microSD storage to 32GB
3g/4G Mobile Hotspot capabilities
Visual Voicemail
Bluetooth 3.0
Thickness: 0.38 inches (Sprint); 0.35 inches (AT&T); T-Mobile N/A
Weight: 4.55 ounces (Sprint); AT&T and T-Mobile N/A

[AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile]

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RankMyHack Gives You Achievement Points for Your Ballsiest Cyber Attacks [Hacking]

RankMyHack Gives You Achievement Points for Your Ballsiest Cyber Attacks2011 has seen some of the most brazen, daring cyber attacks to date, from the Arizona police to BART quite recently. It's a bad time to be a eve a medium-sized name on the net. So let's turn this into a game, shall we?

RankMyHack.com is an old-fashioned leaderboard for the "hacking elite." After singing up, you get points by breaking through the defenses of bigger and badder companies and organizations. Player can put out bounties on sites who they perceive as evil or just plain fun to mess with. And you can also challenge other members to dueling matches with their own time limits and stakes. It's all very in-depth and immersive... and even a little scary.

Not that think this so called gamification of hacker culture is going to bring down civilization as we know it. But having explored the site a little bit, one can see that with the right tools and some guidance you can start racking up points and making a name for yourself. Remember the single French girl who hacked her way into BART a few weeks ago. She said it was easy. A site like this could potentially give people a target to aim their blossoming hacker skills at.

Or, you know. Groups could, conversely, check out the site themselves and see if they should start beefing up their security in a hurry. [Washington Post]

Image Credit: dyoma/Shutterstock

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Sprint Nearly Doubles Early Termination Fee—Just Like Verizon Before the iPhone [Blip]

Sprint Nearly Doubles Early Termination Fee--Just Like Verizon Before the iPhoneYou used to be cool(er) Sprint. Now we're hearing that you're raising your pro-rated ETF (Early Termination Fee) to $350 from $200. Just because AT&T and Verizon are charging $350 doesn't you need to raise yours.

Sure you're the carrier that offers real unlimited data unlike your rivals and maybe you're getting the iPhone this fall, which would be super cool. After all, Verizon raised their ETF right before getting the iPhone. So we'll give you that. But it's a slippery slope. [Phone Scoop]

Image from elwynn/Shutterstock

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Has the Sony Reader Wi-Fi Actually Got a Shot? [Sony]

Has the Sony Reader Wi-Fi Actually Got a Shot?Sony may have been the first major electronics manufacturer to bring ebook readers to the US, but a series of unfortunate products saw them cede the race to Kindle and Nook. The PRS-T1, though, could be Sony's comeback kid.

The six-inch E-ink ebook reader is the world's lightest at that size, and its touchscreen display means you can annotate pages on the screen using either your finger or included stylus (the finger may be clumsier, but it feels more magical). The 2GB internal memory is good for 1,200 ebooks, while a microSD slot allows for expansion up to 32GB. Battery life: a month, if you read a half hour every day. But most importantly? Sony finally put Wi-Fi in an ebook reader. No, really. They hadn't yet.

Those are features you can find by varying degrees in the Nook Simple Touch, yes, or the latest Kindle. But at least it competes! And looks a little, well, angular and maybe cold but hey some people are into that. That is, after all, how books look.

So maybe we think of the Reader Wi-Fi as a third party candidate, the Ralph Nader or Ross Perot of the ebook reading world. It's even got a niche platform: there's a limited edition version of the Reader Wi-Fi that includes a voucher that lets you download a book from Pottermore, JK Rowling's profoundly weird walled wizard garden. Enough, on its own, to make you jump ship from Amazon to the Reader Store? Probably (hopefully) not. But the device itself is different enough, capable-seeming enough, to make Sony part of the ebook reader conversation again. And that's a start. We'll find out just how much of one when it launches in October, for a surprisingly reasonable $150. [Sony via TechCrunch]

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The New York Times Is Developing the Last Kitchen Table You'll Ever Need [Video]

The New York Times Is Developing the Last Kitchen Table You'll Ever Need I keep forgetting how wonderful Microsoft's Surface technology is. Here, the New York Times R&D Lab have taken it, bent it to their will, and created news-centric tabletop interface that you'll want to play with every morning. Just maybe not eat on.

In the above demonstration, we get to see the Times' vision of how people might consume their news before their morning commute. With a fully-realized touch set up that completely eschews their more iconic—if cluttered—broadsheet design, it already looks like a better, more natural experience than their website. But it's not just the news; the table tries its best to know you. It can interact uniquely with your phone, your cup of coffee, and potentially any of the stuff you happen to throw at it.

This will probably be expensive. Check it out anyway. [Neiman Lab]

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Apple Stores Are Obsessively Designed to Look Perfectly Symmetrical from the Outside [Apple]

Apple Stores Are Obsessively Designed to Look Perfectly Symmetrical from the OutsideApple's obsessive compulsive, super-spartan, Kubrick-meets-Superman's-Fortress-of-Solitude industrial design goes way beyond phones and tablets. ifoAppleStore points out the meticulous, somewhat-insanely clever efforts Apple takes to make their stores visually enticing. Human brains like symmetry! So human brains like Apple Stores.

As much as China's faux Apple Stores looked pretty close to the real thing, there's no way they could come to this scary level of attention. Did you know Apple builds new sidewalks outside their stores to so that they match the interiors? Yeah. ifoAppleStore dishes, with California's 4th Street store in California as reference:

Store window panels and inside stone floor tiles all are dimensioned and positioned to present a symmetrical appearance. In this case, the master element is the stone floor tiles, which are 76 centimeters square (about 30 inches). The glass window panes are then manufactured to a multiple of that dimension.

This sounds like something straight out of the steel mind of Jobs. He did, after all, patent the staircases inside himself. [ifoAppleStore]

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Mozilla Brings the Best of Honeycomb to Firefox for Tablets [Internet]

Mozilla Brings the Best of Honeycomb to Firefox for TabletsMozilla released a sneak peak at Firefox for Tablets today, a version of the popular web browser built on the Firefox Mobile engine but optimized for a tablet's roomier screen.

As we can see from the screen shots, tabs will now either appear along the left or top of the screen—depending on its orientation. Yes, it looks like Android 3.0, likely because Mozilla drew inspiration from Honeycomb's design language. But, Android influence aside, Firefox's trademark elements like the large Back button and unique tab shape be included. [Firefox for Tablets via Mashable]

Mozilla Brings the Best of Honeycomb to Firefox for TabletsA closeup of the design details

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Sony, Toshiba, and Hitachi Merge Just Merged Their Small Screens, and Why That's Great [LCD]

Sony, Toshiba, and Hitachi Merge Just Merged Their Small Screens, and Why That's GreatEarly this morning, Sony, Toshiba, and Hitachi came out hand in hand to declare that they were merging their small screen divisions into one liquid crystal behemoth. The new entity will be known as Japan Display. And it's a good thing for you.

By Voltron-ing their LCD businesses, the three companies have created the largest manufacturer of LCD screens for phones, cameras, and tablet displays. Which is a good thing for their collective business, as all three companies have lost money in previous years. The merger allows them to focus their energies on combating the might of Samsung, as well as aggressive companies like Sharp, who's expected to get a billion dollar investment from Apple soon.

All this kind of screams anti-competition, but it's the exact opposite. Samsung, for one, is larger and more connected than any other Japanese company in the market. By joining forces, they're able to pool their resources and create better, more competitive products. More competitive also means cheaper, all great for the average consumer who wants a good phone or camera for a good price. And don't forget that all three companies will remain distinct save for this one sector.

Now let's see where this goes. [Reuters, NYT]

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara

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Gizmodo Hops the Pond with Giz UK [Announcements]

Gizmodo Hops the Pond with Giz UKThe Giz family just gained a surly, Cockney cousin: this fall, Gizmodo UK will kick off in full force, helmed by the incomparable Kat Hannaford. It'll be just like the Gizmodo you know and love, just with more crumpets. Welcome!

Gizmodo, perhaps the most (in)famous technology website in the world, is coming to the UK following a new partnership between Future Publishing and Gizmodo's publisher, Gawker Media.

Gizmodo UK will be a fully localised tech site, published by Future alongside its current UK market-leading portfolio, including T3, TechRadar and MacFormat.

Future Publishing is already the UK's biggest Technology Publisher, reaching millions of tech-hungry consumers each and every month in print, online and on the move.

Launching this autumn, Gizmodo UK will immediately and significantly increase Future's technology footprint to over four million monthly UK consumers – attracting a new and passionate UK audience to the world-famous site about gadgets and gadget culture.

The Gizmodo UK site will be edited by Kat Hannaford, previously a contributing editor for Gizmodo US and prior to that, a news editor at www.T3.com.

Gizmodo, with its informed yet irreverent take on tech news and rumour, perfectly complements T3's stylish, aspirational product showcase and TechRadar's authoritative and uncomplicated focus on reviews and group tests.

Nial Ferguson, Group Publishing Director of Future's Technology Division says: "We are very excited about bringing Gizmodo to the UK. It is a hugely influential brand and one that we are proud to have within our market-leading portfolio. Gizmodo UK allows us to speak to a completely new set of tech consumers and to offer our commercial partners even more exciting opportunities."

Gaby Darbyshire, COO of Gawker Media, says: "Future is the perfect partner to run Gizmodo in the UK. They are experts in all things tech and understand the unique voice of Gizmodo. We are delighted that Kat, an old Gizmodo hand, will be running the site and look forward to working with the Future team."

Mark Wood, CEO of Future UK, adds: "This partnership between Future and Gawker Media is another example of our commitment to delivering best in class, must-read content in the digital space. After becoming the first magazine publisher to be named by the Association of Online Publishers as Consumer Digital Publisher of the year early in the summer, this deal reaffirms our intention to continue accelerating digital growth within our business."

Future recently confirmed the launch of its 100th digital edition for iPad – with the launch of Official Xbox Magazine – establishing itself as one of the UK's most successful digital publishers on the iPad, as well as online. iPad sales revenues have been growing at more than 10% a month this year and have now gone past the £2m-a-year mark.

Gizmodo UK will be the 9th international edition of the site. Localised versions are also available in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Poland, Japan, Australia, and Brazil. Other Gawker Media titles currently available internationally include Lifehacker, Kotaku and Jalopnik.

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1 in 10 Dead Bosses Are Murdered [Death]

1 in 10 Dead Bosses Are MurderedThe Bureau of Labor Statistics has its fascinatingly morbid fatality census report out! Are you a manager of some sort? Watch your back, because the study says if you die on the job, there's a 10% chance it's murder.

That's correct. Out of the 4,547 workplace deaths in 2010, 10% of the kaput management was a direct result of homicide. Gulp. We know it's an American tradition to despise your bosses (except at Gizmodo! Hey guys!), but 10% seems quite high! But maybe it's better to get offed than to die as a boss from falling (9%) or being "struck by an object" (12%). What kind of places are these people managing? Insane asylums? Explosion factories?

Now, we'll break down the rest of the ways you might soon die if you're not management:

Overall, "Transportation and material moving occupations"—people who work operating vehicles—dominated the death list, with 1,115 killed on the job. Only seven percent of them were murdered.

The 45-54 year-old bracket made up the plurality of deaths, with a full quarter. 16% of them plummeted to their demises.

The deadliest state to work in? Texas, with 456 fatalities. The safest? New Hampshire, with only 5. West Virginia won the explosion death contest, with 34—likely from all that coal mining, which is extremely dangerous and explosion-prone.

The most likely way to die? An old fashioned car accident—968 on the job deaths. 45 workers died from "contact with temperature extremes," which sounds particularly awful. 93 died from simply falling down on the ground. 224 died after being "caught in or compressed by equipment or objects," which to me sounds like easily the most gruesome and terrible. Wait, scratch that—the fact that 258 people killed themselves at work is simply horrendous. Ugh.

There aren't any figures for online tech writers, but I suspect the leading cause of death would be overly-bruised elbows sustained during MacBook charger maneuvering, or over-excited touchpad click-induced insta-death from over-exposure to cat videos. [BLS via Consumerist]

Photo: prodakszyn/Shutterstock

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The HTC Jetstream Tablet Is AT&T's First Tablet with 4G LTE [Tablets]

The HTC Jetstream Tablet Is AT&T's First Tablet with 4G LTEThe HTC Jetstream, formerly known as the Puccini, is headed to AT&T on September 4th. It's running Android 3.1 on a 10.1-inch screen (nice!) and will be AT&T's first tablet with real 4G LTE (really nice!). For some reason though, it's going to cost $700 (ugh).

Not only that, the HTC Jetstream is "discounted" to $700 only after you sign up for a 2-year contract that requires a new $35/monthly plan that gives you 3GB worth of data to play around with. AT&T hasn't mentioned how much it'll cost without that $35/month plan.

Other specs of the Jetstream include a Snapdragon 1.5GHz dual core processor, front-facing camera, 8-megapixel rear camera, HTC scribe stylus pen (included for free for a limited time) and HTC Sense running on top of Android 3.1. Everything sounds so good but the price hurts so bad. [AT&T]

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3G MacBook Pro Prototype Heads Back to Apple [Apple]

3G MacBook Pro Prototype Heads Back to AppleApple isn't too keen with their prototypes ending up in the wild, no matter how old they are or how they got there. The 3G MacBook Pro that appeared on eBay, garnered an incredible $70,000 bid before being pulled by Apple, is now awaiting transport back to Apple at their insistence.

The temporary owner Carl Frega, purchased the prototype from Craiglist for parts. He was surprised when the MacBook contained the tell-tale red circuit boards found in Apple prototypes and of course, the 3G antenna and SIM card slot that got the machine so much attention on eBay.

The prototype MacBook Pro seems to match a patent filed in 2008.

Frega told CNET that Apple has someone coming by this afternoon to pick up the prototype. No word on whether Apple intends on compensating Frega for the MacBook Pro.

CNET has the entire sordid affair including a lawsuit and Judge Mathis. Yeah, that Judge Mathis. [CNET]

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SEAL Team 6 Wants Special Remote Cameras for War Dogs [Weapons]

SEAL Team 6 Wants Special Remote Cameras for War DogsWar dogs fight! War dogs get shot! War dogs cry! War dogs rappel down walls! And soon, war dogs will be feisty canine war cameras. Their human pals in SEAL Team 6 want mobile, furry eyes in battle.

DefenseTech reports that DEVGRU—SEAL Team 6's formal name—requested the following hookup from the Pentagon:

The contractor shall provide a a canine transmit and receive kit (1.0 - 1.5GHz) comprising of Transmitter/Camera Unit; including a battery and antenna. Includes Receiver includes battery and antennas. Six-way Battery Charger, Peli-Case, and user manual shall be included.

Send out your cameradog, and get ground-level footage beamed back to you from cover. Just strap the (presumably night vision) camera on a war dog's bulletproof back, and you've got recon that runs faster than a robot, and can bite people. A bot may be harder to kill, but it's certainly less multifarious than a dog sidekick, and much more intimate than a drone. Not bad! And we're glad the user manual will be included. This will also mean the advent of first person war dog video, which has me grinning like an idiot. [DefenseTech]

SEAL Team 6 Wants Special Remote Cameras for War Dogs

Image via U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Elizabeth Rissmiller

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How Did A Man Survive After Being Impaled Through His Eye Socket with Pruning Shears? [Wtf]

How Did A Man Survive After Being Impaled Through His Eye Socket with Pruning Shears?Leroy Leutscher, an 86-year-old man from Arizona, was out on his yard when he dropped his pruning shears. As he reached down to grab them, he slipped and fell, landing face down on the handle. The handle went through his eye socket and down into his neck. Amazingly, he's okay.

That x-ray above was taken right after the horrifying accident, and it pretty much speaks for itself. Still, even in such ridiculous circumstances, the surgeons managed to remove the shears from his face, rebuild Leutscher's orbital floor with metal mesh AND save his freaking eyeball. Leutscher still has some slight swelling on his face and a little bit of double vision but Jesus H. Christ doctors are amazing. [Telegraph UK via BoingBoing, Image Credit: Shutterstock]

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Foursquare for Android Is Now Prettier and More Connected [Android Apps]

Foursquare for Android Is Now Prettier and More ConnectedFoursquare's most recent update for the Android has been pushed live (I actually received my update notice while writing this post) and offers a bevy of new features and menu redesigns. Here are some of the highlights.

As soon as you start the app, you'll notice a redesigned title bar with more space between tabs and the Check-In button prominently displayed up top regardless of the tab you're on. The Friends list now also displays attached photos inline, saving you the hassle of having to click through to view it, while Specials has migrated over to the Explore tab and offers deals from partners like Groupon and LivingSocial.

Controlling what you post on Facebook and Twitter, whether it's a check-in, Mayorship, or badge is much easier as these services now have their own settings menu letting you toggle what you share with each. The latest version is available from the Android Marketplace.

Foursquare Blog via Scribbal

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Super Badass Photographer Joao Silva Talks About His Injuries and the State of Photojournalism [Photography]

Super Badass Photographer Joao Silva Talks About His Injuries and the State of PhotojournalismPhotographer Joao Silva lost both of his legs last year to an IED landmine explosion in Afghanistan. He kept shooting as he was dragged to safety and treated by medics. But to hear him tell it, he's just an ordinary guy who ran into some bad luck.

I heard the mechanic click. I knew: this is not good. And I found myself lying face-down on the ground, engulfed in a cloud of dust, with the very clear knowledge that this has just happened and this is not good. I could see my legs were gone, and everybody around me was dazed. I was like, "Guys, I need help here."

Beyond his chilling description of the explosion and its immediate aftermath, he also talks about the ethics and craft of being a photographer in a warzone—"The things that we see go through the eye straight into the brain. Some of those scenes never go away."—and the current state of photojournalism.

It's a moving and inspirational bit of wisdom from a supremely humble, self-aware, and talented photographer. And as a reminder, you can still buy prints of Joao's work to help support him, with any excess funds going to a charity of his choice. [NY Times, Support Joao]

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Sony's Wearable 3D Home Theater Sits on Your Face [3D]

Sony's Wearable 3D Home Theater Sits on Your FaceFile this one under crazy/awesome/but really more crazy. This fall, Sony will be releasing personal 3D home theater headgear for one viewer at a time. Called the HMZ-T1, it's your chance to finally quash your Geordi La Forge envy.

You connect the half-helmet, half-goggles contraption to its own gaming console-sized processor, which in turn attaches to your Blu-Ray player or gaming rig, and voila! The two 0.7-inch OLED screens—one for each eye—create an immersive 3D experience. Because each display is independent of the other, that should eliminate the horrible, heading inducing cross-talk that other 3D technologies (like active-shutter or glasses free) bring. Each screen packs in a resolution of 1280x720, and it's reportedly like looking at a 750 inch (62.5 feet) screen from about sixty feet away. At the same time, your ears are treated to some surround sound candy.

While it sounds like the HMZ-T1 delivers a high-quality 3D experience, I can't help but wonder if this is too crazy to catch on. I mean, it would absolutely kill the social element of watching a movie with someone. I could see it being extremely appealing to 3D gamers, but there isn't any mention of it having an accelerometer or gyroscope built in, which means (unless I'm missing something), turning your head and looking around wouldn't change your view at all. A feature like that would make it a gamer's wet dream (like what the Virtual Boy could only dream of being).

And if the pure weirdness doesn't turn people off, the price certainly could; it's set to come out in November for Japan and will cost 60,000 yen (aprox $800 USD) when it drops. That's more than a decent-sized and spec'd LED TV. There's a distinct possibility that it could be out in the US and Europe for the holidays, but that's just rumor at this point. [SF Gate and Slash Gear]

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Why Is HP Going to Keep Making TouchPads Through October? [WebOS]

Why Is HP Going to Keep Making TouchPads Through October?After killing the TouchPad and fire sale-ing them at a $100 to get rid of them, HP has announced that they'll still make TouchPads through October. What in the deepest depths of hell is going on?

Couple theories: According to analyst Shaw Wu of Strene Agee, HP's deal with Taiwanese manufacturer, Compal, was for between 500,000 and one million TouchPads. Maybe HP hasn't sold enough TouchPads to finish that contract and opting out of the contract would cost more than just building dead dead dead tablets. Or maybe they've paid for parts and figured they might as well use them. Or maybe the HP exec who said the Touchpad will make a comeback was right.

BUT WHAT IF it's the greatest bait and switch in technology history and HP ISN'T REALLY GOING TO KILL THE TOUCHPAD AND WEBOS. Yeah, um, probably not that. A boy can dream, though. Either way, if you've been itching to land the TouchPad for a 100 spot, more will be on its way. [HP via AllThingsD]

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T-Mobile May Roll Out In-Home Signal Boosters For Cancelling Customers [T-Mobile]

T-Mobile May Roll Out In-Home Signal Boosters For Cancelling CustomersIf you've your T-mobile coverage at home is spotty at best, don't cancel your service just yet. If you wait until Wednesday, September 7th, T-Mo might just give you a free in-home signal booster to get you to stay.

According to leaked images obtained by TmoNews, the signal boosters will only be available to customers who threaten to cancel their service on account of poor in-home coverage. It's described as "a new device that boosts T-Mobile's 4G/3G signal throughout a home when installed," but does require at least one bar of 3G anywhere in the house to work. Just make sure you return it if you do end up cancelling your service, otherwise you'll be on the hook for as much as $500 in fees. [TMoNews via This Is My Next]

Image: TmoNews

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Unique Video Captures the Sun Changing Its Spots [Video]

Unique Video Captures the Sun Changing Its Spots We knew that sunspots change quite rapidly from photos, but this video shows how fast this phenomenon is. The video was made from visible light frames captured by the NASA SDO's Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager. [NASA Goddard Flickr]

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Could Schizophrenia Be Treated With Nicotine? [Health]

Could Schizophrenia Be Treated With Nicotine?Smoking is bad for you blah blah we know. But you couldn't really tell that to the 80% of American schizophrenic patients who smoke. The jury is still out on why that number's so high, but could some form of treatment come out of this?

That so many schizophrenics smoke was actually established in a study published in 2006, but the figure has held up since then, even in the face of stiffer tobacco regulations and society in general backing away from it. There are a number of hypotheses that try to explain the link—personality, socioeconomic situation, etc.—but Mark Stewart for the University of Michigan Risk Science Center writes that the patients may be smoking as a means of self-medication.

Schizophrenics often have auditory hallucinations, paranoia, delusions, and disorganized thinking. These symptoms are predominantly caused by the inability of the brains of schizophrenics to differentiate, sort, and focus on the multitude of stimuli that go on around us. Think of being in a busy restaurant. Imagine that instead of being able to block out all the noises, conversations, and movements around you, every single piece of sensory information is as important as the interesting things said by the attractive person sitting across from you. The effects of cigarette smoking and nicotine help schizophrenics through increased selective attention.

This is because, it's theorized, nicotine acts on the flow of dysfunctional flow of dopamine on a schizophrenic's brain. By correcting that, they may feel some relief from their symptoms. Unfortunately, all the adverse side-effects of smoking follow, resulting in higher rates of lung and heart disease.

But the relief a cigarette may provide, at least in the short term, could outweigh the effects of the many anti-psychotic drugs they take. Is there some kind of middle ground then? Nicotine is still a highly addictive substance, but is there a way to use it in treatment? [Risk Science Blog via BoingBoing]

Image Credit: Igor Normann/Shutterstock

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The $40 Million Delivery Blimp [Airships]

The $40 Million Delivery BlimpThe Ice Road Truckers may soon have themselves some competition if Canadian specialty aviation company, Discovery Air, has its way. They want to deliver supplies to the Great White North's most remote locales via dirigible by 2014.

Discovery Air and Hybrid Air Vehicles have announced plans to launch a commercial Heavy Lift Air Vehicle service serving mining camps and secluded villages in the Northwest Territory using airships originally developed for long-term reconnaissance by the US military.

These hybrid aircraft—"hybrid" in that they use both the lift from non-flammable Helium and the aerodynamics of the ship to stay aloft—employs laminated fabric covering an internal catenary system as the hull. The airships will be able to carry up to 50 tons of cargo as a time and will purportedly be able to land or take off from virtually anywhere—thanks to its four propulsion fans.

"The North has been waiting a long time for a year-round, heavy-lift, transport capability." Dr. Barry Prentice, Professor of Supply Chain Management at the Asper School of Business in Winnipeg, Manitoba, stated. "The conditions are right for a new form of transport that is capable of heavy lift, but is also low cost and environmentally sustainable."

These blimps will be able to travel up to 115mph (185km/h) without the dangers of an overland route. They will, on the other hand, run about $40 million apiece.

[CBC News via Ubergizmo via MobileMag - HAV Press Release - Discovery Air Press Release]

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Exotac nanoStriker Lightning Review: Fire, On Demand [Fire]

Exotac nanoStriker Lightning Review: Fire, On DemandWhen you find yourself in the back-country during a downpour and need a fire—like 5 seconds ago—that fancy Zippo of yours isn't going to cut it. The Exotac nanoStriker, however, will get your fire going with a shower of burning Ferrocerium.

It's so tiny! The nanoStriker is less than 3.5-inches long and weighs just 14.5 grams, which means I can dump it in a pocket or tie it to my pack and just forget about it until I need to set something alight. I also dig that the entire system is completely self contained—the ferrocerium rod and steel striker just unscrew from either end of the handle. Plus, it even works when it's wet.

There isn't much to fault with the nanoStriker though I wouldn't have minded the rod itself were a bit longer. As it is, you've got to hold the striker at precisely the right angle to get a solid shower of sparks.

While it won't be the first fire starter I reach for when lighting a cigarette, it will be the first I reach for when lighting a campfire. [$27 from Exotac]

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Black Death DNA ID'd by Scientists and What It Means For the Next Zombie Plague [Disease]

Black Death DNA ID'd by Scientists and What It Means For the Next Zombie PlagueThe source of Black Death, a plague that devastated Europe in the 14th century, has finally been pinpointed thanks to an analysis of rotting bones and teeth extracted a mass burial site in London.

Until this study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, some scientists were skeptical that the incredibly deadly plague came from the Yersinia pestis bacterium, despite a fair amount of evidence that it did. The latest research is proof positive that Y pestis is to blame. Scientists took DNA from 53 bones and 43 teeth that had been buried in East Smithfield, a cemetery build preemptively in 1348 in expectation of much death.

The effort wasn't wasted: two years after the cemetery was in place, the bubonic plague had killed one-third of London's population. East Smithfield holds 2,400 of the victims stacked five deep.

The plague still exists, but it behaves much differently than it did back then. For example, today the plague is carried by rats and is contracted directly from them (or their fleas). In the 14th century, the Black Death passed from person to person, which is what made its destruction so swift. That difference among others made some scientists doubt that the same bacterium caused the disease back then and today.

Knowing that it's one and the same is important because scientists fear the bacterium could morph to become the evil satan of a pathogen it was during medieval times. But they still don't know what made the old Y Pestis so much more deadly than the modern version. If they can figure that out, they'll have a better idea of how to combat the next zombie plague.

"It's probably exceptionally important to find out what made this bug so deadly in the past," Hendrik Polinar, one of the authors of the study, told The New York Times.

Makes sense to me—someone give these scientists more money to figure it out, STAT! Look at those plague researchers. If they're willing to do that for the greater good, I'm happy for my tax money to help make their work happen. And a giant thank you to the (mostly Canadian) organizations who funded (scroll down to acknowledgements) this study.

If you are disease (or DNA) obsessed, you can also see all the DNA sequences for free online.

[PNAS; Image: National Geographic]

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The LaCie Little Big Disk Is Pretty—Pretty Fast (Like Thunderbolt Fast) [Hardware]

The LaCie Little Big Disk Is Pretty—Pretty Fast (Like Thunderbolt Fast)It's got a 500GB solid state drive and an exterior designed by Neil Poulton—what more do you want? Thunderbolt? Yes, it does that too.

The LaCie Little Big Disk is available as either a 240GB and 500GB SSD, or as a 1TB traditional 7200RPM hard drive. All three varieties use dual disks as a striped RAID set—wherein data is split evenly between the two disks.

And because the Little Big Disk is built with Apple's new Thunderbolt technology, it's lightning fast—with data transfer rates of up to 10Gb/s (double that of USB 3.0). Plus, Thunderbolt allows the LBD to daisy-chain between your MBA, Mac Mini, and Thunderbolt Display.

The LBD measures 1.6 x 5.5 x 3.3 inches and weighs just 1.4 pounds (630 grams). Its aluminum case's unique heat-sink shape keeps the unit cool without requiring a fan and was designed by award-winning designer Neil Poulton, who has worked with LaCie in the past.

No word yet on price but the Little Big Disk is expected to be released Summer of 2011—which can't come soon enough. [LaCie]

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Go Inside Gaddafi's Security HQ [Blip]

Go Inside Gaddafi's Security HQThe Wall Street Journal takes the first look since the fall of the regime inside Col. Gaddafi's security headquarters. You know, the one with all the tech purchased from international security firms. The complete photo journal is available at WSJ.com.

Image: Edu Bayer for The Wall Street Journal

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Dolphin Browser for iPhone: Gesture-Based Web Browsing and More [IPhone Apps]

Dolphin Browser for iPhone: Gesture-Based Web Browsing and MoreSafari on the iPhone is as good as it gets for mobile browsing. But it's missing the deeper features, like true tabbed browsing, a full screen mode and a slew of other settings. Dolphin Browser adds all that.

Dolphin Browser has been wildly popular on Android for quite some time already but it's finally on the iPhone now. What makes Dolphin Browser stand out in the glut of third-party browser apps (tabbed browsing, porn mode, full-screen are all common now) is that it throws in a gestures features that let's you finger draw actions (like a G or a ?) that'll trigger actions (like send you to Gizmodo or Find on page). It's a clever little feature that once you get used to, will change the way you browse. The webzine feature is also nice, it turns any compatible website into a great looking feed of entries (Psst..I use webzine for Gizmodo).

It looks great (it vaguely reminds me of Lifehacker)! Even though Safari lacks the features I enjoy on third-party browsers, it's just so much prettier than the other that I can't use the third-party browsers without sticking a pruning shear through my eye socket. Dolphin is light and well designed, and that may be because of the springtime color choices, but the developers made some excellent choices: hiding the bookmarks and settings "behind" the page, only to reveal them when swiped is smart, using real tabs is a must, the webzine feature is super slick, etc.

Dolphin Browser

Download this app for:

The Best

Tabbed browsing

The Worst

No add ons

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The First Hi-Res Simulation of the Milky Way's Formation [Space]

The First Hi-Res Simulation of the Milky Way's FormationIt took nine months and 1.4 million processor-hours of work from NASA's Pleiades supercomputer but a group of researchers from UC Santa Cruz have discovered how, exactly, our galaxy was born.

The Cold Dark Matter theory posits that right after the Big Bang, gravitational forces influenced the minute variations in density of dark matter, slowly clumping them together into large and larger forms. These clumps eventually became gravity wells that, in turn, pulled together the remaining visible matter into the galaxies we see around us.

As Piero Madau, professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UCSC and coauthor of the study states:

Star formation in real galaxies occurs in a clustered fashion, and to reproduce that out of a cosmological simulation is hard. This is the first simulation that is able to resolve the high-density clouds of gas where star formation occurs, and the result is a Milky Way type of galaxy with a small bulge and a big disk. It shows that the cold dark matter scenario, where dark matter provides the scaffolding for galaxy formation, is able to generate realistic disk-dominated galaxies.

Until now, numerous lower-resolution computer simulations had failed to generate a spiral galaxy similar to our own—slight bulge in the middle with a large, well-formed disk surrounding it—instead creating one with an impossibly large bulge-to-disk ratio. Turns out that this was caused because the low resolution of the models averaged gas densities over too large an area which resulted in low-density stars. In the high resolution study by US Santa Cruz, dubbed Eris, gas densities were more locally concentrated which resulted in a more realistic distribution of stars that only form in the highest density areas.

[UCSC via Popular Science]

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Daily Desired: Let the Force Protect Your iPad in this Case [Desired]

The iPad's a joy for reading, but you're screwed for writing anything longer than: "rad man, I'll see u ther. Excuse my brevity and any typos but touchscreens suck for typing, ok?" That's why I want a ClamCase. Star Wars-style.

The ClamCase is made of hard polycarbonate which protects your iPad on all sides. As the name suggests, the case opens up just like a laptop to reveal a Bluetooth keyboard. Shazzam. Blaster-proof Laptop-iPad. The ClamCase's center hinge rotates 360 degrees making it a flexible stand for watching video. The case weighs 1.7 pounds—ouch!—but it does come with a lithium-ion battery which the company claims will keep your iPad going for 90 hours of use. The force is with this one indeed!

We were excited about the ClamCase before, and we're positively stoked about the new limited-edition design called "The Trooper." The white design with black trim is supposedly based on a certain imperial cannon fodder from Star Wars. It's subtle, but we'll buy anything that smacks of Star Wars at all. Just don't tell George Lucas, because "The Trooper" looks to be completely unlicensed. The Trooper will cost you 150 clams. [ClamCase via Geeksugar]


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Samsung's New Notebooks Are Super Skinny MacBook Clones (and Look Damn Good) [Laptops]

Samsung's New Notebooks Are Super Skinny MacBook Clones (and Look Damn Good)Samsung's heavy borrowing of Apple's design is pretty established by now—they're getting the shit sued out of them for it! But, undeterred, they're dropping the new Series 7 notebook, with wonderfully thin bezel, Apple looks, and great specs.

The Series 7 is only 0.9 inches thick, but the tiny bezel's what catches my attention: only 0.25 inches. That's a gorgeous thing to have in front of your face. Underneath all that brushed aluminum are some pretty damn good guts for the price: a 2.2-GHz Core i7 processor, 8 GB of RAM, a 750 GB (mechanical) harddrive, AMD Radeon HD 6750M graphics, and two USB 3.0 ports. For $1,300? Very nice. It may be a MacBook ripoff, but I'd like to see Apple ripoff that price. [BusinessWire via Laptop Mag]

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Turn Your Magic Trackpad Into a Magic Numpad [Apple]

Turn Your Magic Trackpad Into a Magic NumpadThe numpad, as antiquated as it is, is still useful for many. Bankers! Gamers! Crude mathematicians! But damn it takes up so much space. That's why Mobee is letting you transform your Magic Trackpad into Magic Numpads.

It's clever, you just put a film on top of your trackpad and all of a sudden, a numpad is overlaid on your trackpad. The program will read your inputs as they would a traditional numpad. Making the trackpad pull double duty lets you avoid the annoyingness of owning the longboard keyboard but of course, you'd still need another trackpad or mouse to navigate around your computer. Can't have everything. $30 [Mobee Technology via This Is My Next]

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Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet Comes A-Courtin' Business Folk [Android]

Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet Comes A-Courtin' Business FolkThe lid is off the Lenovo ThinkPad, touted as the first tablet for enterprise-level business. I just spent some time sizing it up, and you know what? It's kind of exactly what the suits are looking for.

This tablet doesn't try to be particularly sleek or sly; it's just a big, businessy rectangle. I'm fine with that, but it may lose some consumers in the looks department. The thing feels solid. It's not particularly light or thin, but it feels like it could probably survive a drop (and the 10.1 inch Gorilla Glass display doesn't hurt on that front). Its case packs in a full keyboard with an optical red pointer that'll look familiar to any ThinkPad user. It comes pre-loaded with a ton of software from Lenovo and their partners which give it enterprise-class security. Throw in the now-standard front-facing 2MP camera and a rear-facing 5PM camera, video chat software, and oh yeah, an included stylus, with a handful of software to make it app-friendly, and you've got yourself a pretty well-loaded machine.

PORTS! I love ports. Especially full-sized ports. The ThinkPad Tablet has a full-sized USB port and a full-sized SD card slot, which makes it great for photographers. It also has a SIM card slot so you can get your 3G on (in addition to Wi-Fi, naturally) and a mini-HDMI port. The keyboard/case was really, surprisingly good, given how iPad cases so often disappoint. ThinkPad laptops generally have the best keyboards out there, and this skinny-sized version follows suit. It's thin, but there's ample space between the keys, and they have a nice sturdy click to 'em. I was typing like a mo-fo with very little adjusting (though at first I kept hitting the right-click button instead of the spacebar).

The enhanced security can't be dismissed; that's something that's really slowed up Android's adoption in the business world, and the case for enterprise tablets has been a tough one to begin with. The ThinkPad offers higher levels of encryption than competitors have, and a lot of control for your IT manager.

Lenovo also brings their own app store which has a nice UI, and features apps they've vetted themselves and declared ThinkPad compatible and free of malware. Smart, and that vetting process makes it not feel like just another bloatware bazaar. One of my favorite enhancements is that in Honeycomb's app-switcher, Lenovo has added a way to close your open apps with just one click. Why isn't this built into Android? It's a welcome change, though I do wonder if closing apps in this way could cause the same kind of crashy-problems we see with task-killers that already exist for Android.

Despite the ThinkPad tablet's Nvidia dual-core processor, it seems to lag a lot (maybe all that pre-loaded software is bloatish after all?). Flipping from landscape to portait would often take a while, which was annoying. I really wanted to like the stylus, but it didn't work particularly in the demo unit I was playing with. While the handwriting recognition software generally worked all right, when I was scribbling fast it didn't work so well. Going back and editing was extremely problematic, and sometimes it would just stop accepting input. It's got a few bugs to be worked out, for sure.

The plus-sized Toshiba Thrive tablet is its closest relative, as it also packs in a bunch of ports, and that makes them both chubbier than a lot of the competition. The full-sized USB port could have been so good, but they kinda screwed it up: the tablet connects to the keyboard case is through the sole USB port, meaning that you can't use a thumb drive or anything else when you're using the keyboard. It seems to me that when it's in laptop mode is exactly when you'd want USB the most. Ooops. Also, the ThinkPad tablet has hardware buttons for home/back/search/etc. While normally I am categorically pro-button, it seems weird in this tablet's case. A) You don't really need them for Honeycomb, and B) they are extremely stiff and don't work very well.

There are some really good ideas at work here, and this thing has a lot of potential. For business users, it's very likely the best tablet solution out there. It's available now, but it seems like there are some software gremlins that still need to be worked out. Hopefully they can resolve those in an over-the-air update in the near future. We'll update a little later with video.

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