Thursday, November 03, 2011

drag2share: Ultrathin LG U1 to be company's first Ice Cream Sandwich device?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/03/ultrathin-lg-u1-to-be-companys-first-ice-cream-sandwich-device/

Skinny? Check. Thin bezel? Present. Black and rectangular? Roger. This as-yet unconfirmed sliver of a phone is purportedly LG's first Android 4.0 device. Specifications remain even foggier than these pictures, but we can glean an eight-megapixel shooter with flash and a profile that looks like a possible second-generation Optimus Black, with design litigiously close to Samsung's Galaxy S II. As GSM Arena noted, the LG-owned phone network in Korea was renamed LG U+ last year, suggesting that U1 codename may translate to "domestic-only." Here's hoping otherwise, of course.

Ultrathin LG U1 to be company's first Ice Cream Sandwich device? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Nov 2011 11:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: ASUS Transformer Prime, disassembled: NVIDIA's quad-core Tegra 3 sees daylight

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/03/asus-transformer-prime-disassembled-nvidias-quad-core-tegra-3/

While the FCC already had its wicked way with ASUS' Transformer Prime, its intimate inner workings have now been spilled over at Wireless Goodness. Nestled between NAND memory from Hynix and some Elpida RAM is NVIDIA's great tablet hope, its new quad-core chip. The full gallery of shots has disappeared from the FCC site, but silicon fans can still check out the chipboards in full glory at the source link below.

ASUS Transformer Prime, disassembled: NVIDIA's quad-core Tegra 3 sees daylight originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Nov 2011 12:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Amazon Flow strikes low blow to brick and mortar, converts barcode scans to online sales

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/03/amazon-flow-strikes-low-blow-to-brick-and-mortar-converts-barco/

Remember when you had to "walk" to a "store" to buy things? Our grandkids are gonna weep uncontrollably when we explain queuing up at Our Price to buy VHS tapes. We'll recall the date the final nail was driven into brick and mortar's coffin: November 2nd, 2011 -- the day Amazon's A9 released Flow free on the App store. With Flow, you just walked into a store, scan the barcode of a book, DVD or jar of Nutella and it came back with Amazon's price, reviews and "multimedia content". It wasn't the first app to do the job, but we just couldn't help ourselves indulging in another. It wasn't long before the store detectives cottoned on to all the barcode snapping and started issuing automatic take-down tackles if they saw you holding a phone. After that, of course, war was inevitable. (But hey, it was worth it.)

Continue reading Amazon Flow strikes low blow to brick and mortar, converts barcode scans to online sales

Amazon Flow strikes low blow to brick and mortar, converts barcode scans to online sales originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Nov 2011 14:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Hyperspectral camera captures 1,000 colors, identifies contaminants

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/03/hyperspectral-camera-captures-1-000-colors-identifies-contamine/

Putting our dinky point-and-shoots to shame, researchers at Tel Aviv University have created a hyperspectral HSR camera that detects more than 1,000 colors -- something that can be used to pinpoint contaminants or hazards in the environment. According to lead scientist Professor Ben-Dor, different elements produce different colors, helping researchers identify hazards or contaminated soil without being forced to bring samples back to the lab. It works as such: the sensor analyzes sunlight as it bounces off an object, which it then interprets. The shooter is so sensitive that it can read samples anywhere from 0.4 inches to 500 miles away, meaning it could operate from weather balloons or even one of these -- rendering Joseph and his amazing technicolor dreamcoat most jealous. Check out the full PR after the break.

Continue reading Hyperspectral camera captures 1,000 colors, identifies contaminants

Hyperspectral camera captures 1,000 colors, identifies contaminants originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Nov 2011 15:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: HTC Rezound for Verizon unveiled: Beats Audio, Ice Cream Sandwich-ready, 4.3-inch 720p display available November 14th for $299

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/03/htc-rezound-unveiled/

HTC's Rezound first leaked its way into our gadget-lusting hearts in late summer. Then bearing the virile Vigor codename, we suspected a heartily specced, Beats Audio-branded destiny for the device. And today's official unveiling doesn't disappoint, setting this 4.3-inch handset on a 4G course for Verizon's LTE airwaves.

Thanks to the company's financial handshake with Dr. Dre, the Rezound's inbuilt Beats Audio integration gets its first stateside debut. Of course, that's not all that lies beneath the red and black tinged surface. Living up to the machissimo of its in-development moniker, the Rezound boasts a 4.3-inch 720p display and packs a dual-core 1.5GHz processor underneath, with 1GB RAM, 16GB of internal storage / 16GB on microSD card, WiFi and Bluetooth in tow. And for you Android fanatics, HTC's shipping the handset Ice Cream Sandwich-ready, but it comes out of the box with Sense 3.5 skinned atop Gingerbread 2.3.4. As for the phone's front-facing / 8 megapixel camera with f/2.2 sensor (capable of 1080p video capture), the suite of scene modes we've seen ship on the Amaze 4G is making an appearance here with panorama, action burst and instant capture. Those familiar custom-made Beats headphones will also come bundled with the device.

The Rezound's Verizon-bound on November 14th and if this audio-enhanced affair is your bag, expect to snag it for $299 on contract. Until then, enjoy the official PR after the break.

Continue reading HTC Rezound for Verizon unveiled: Beats Audio, Ice Cream Sandwich-ready, 4.3-inch 720p display available November 14th for $299

HTC Rezound for Verizon unveiled: Beats Audio, Ice Cream Sandwich-ready, 4.3-inch 720p display available November 14th for $299 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Nov 2011 15:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Nokia Lumia 800 review

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/03/nokia-lumia-800-review/

You might hear it said that Nokia is on a knife-edge, and that this old king of mobiles will live or die based on the success of its latest flagship phone. We love melodrama as much as the next guy, but such talk is overplaying it. Sure, the great manufacturer has its troubles, and yes, the Lumia 800 bears a heavy burden of responsibility on its 3.7-inch shoulders. However, now that Nokia's CEO Stephen Elop has set his company on a new path, there will no doubt be a slew of new products -- both hardware and software -- over the next few years. In fact, the Lumia 800 was probably rushed to market, having been designed and built within the space of six months and intended as a placeholder for greater things to come. Nokia simply grabbed the overall design of its orphaned N9 handset, threw it together with Windows Phone Mango and then whatever the Finnish is for baddaboom, baddabing. So, does the Lumia feel rushed? Or is this the first stirring of something special? Read on and we'll tell you what we think.

Continue reading Nokia Lumia 800 review

Nokia Lumia 800 review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Nov 2011 16:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: CHART OF THE DAY: How The Venture Capital Business Is Being Transformed

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-y-combinators-2011-11


Here's a look at the changing landscape of startup funding. As you can see, incubator Y Combinator is graduating more and more companies into the world, but the funds for VC firms are slipping.

Many of these new startups don't need the traditional VC model as cheaper startup costs, angel investment, and incubators like Y Combinator, transform the industry.

For more, take a look at Business Insider Research's look at how the funding landscape is changing →

chart of the day, y-combinators, vc fundraising, oct 2011

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drag2share: HTC Unleashes The Rezound: A 4G Smartphone Powered By Beats Audio (VZ)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/Gf2WPH3VfC8/htc-rezound-announcement-live-blog-2011-11


htc rezound 400

HTC announced the new HTC Rezound. A new smartphone on Verizon that has Beats Audio built in.

The Rezound goes on sale on November 14 for $299.99 with a two-year contract.

Key specs: 1.5 GHz dual-core processor, Ice Cream Sandwich ready (update coming early next year), and HTC Sense 3.5 skin.

Check out our live blog from HTC's big announcement below for more details.

All updates are paraphrased unless in quotation marks.



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drag2share: Researchers Glean 250GB of Facebook User Data with New Socialbot [Facebook]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5855883/researchers-glean-250gb-of-facebook-user-data-with-new-socialbot

Researchers Glean 250GB of Facebook User Data with New SocialbotFacebook's "Immune System" might not be as robust as Zuckerberg believes. In fact, four researchers from the University of British Colombia have recently demonstrated just how easily a new breed of bot can infiltrate the FB system and harvest user data.

Socialbots, also known as "sock puppet" bots, are designed to mimic a human user. Those unsolicited Friend invites your receive from scantily-clad co-eds? Socialbots. And, once Friended, they obtain instant access to email addresses, phone numbers, and the rest of your personal details that you only share with your "Friends."

Researchers from UBC devised this eight-week test, employing a single botmaster and 102 bots, to infiltrate the Facebook network specifically because the team believed FB to have superior security measures compared to other social sites (*snicker*). Their ruse eventually garnered more than 3000 new—presumably human—friends with a network of nearly a million users. As for Facebook's "Immune System," only 20 bots were flagged and only because users reported them for spam. As the team explains in its research paper,

As socialbots infiltrate a targeted OSN [online social network], they can further harvest private users' data such as e-mail addresses, phone numbers, and other personal data that have monetary value. To an adversary, such data are valuable and can be used for online profiling and large-scale email spam and phishing campaigns. It is thus not surprising that different kinds of socialbots are being offered for sale in the Internet black-market for as much as $29 per bot.

$29 seems a steal given what the bots, well, steal. By targeting users with lax security settings, these bots gobbled an average of 175 pieces of private data every day and tallied 250 gigabytes of data by the end of the study. All of this data was encrypted during and deleted after the research concluded.

Some simply defenses against this sort of attack: first, tighten up your security profile—set as much to Only Me and Friends as you can; stop putting your goddamn phone number on the Internet; and don't accept any friends requests from girls named Jess whose profile pic is her in a bra. Unless, of course, you actually do know a girl that matches that description, in which case, carry on. [All Facebook via Sophos - Image via AP]


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

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drag2share: ASUS Eee Pad Transformer Prime arrives at the FCC, we feign surprise

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/02/asus-eee-pad-transformer-prime-arrives-at-the-fcc-we-feign-surp/

You've seen it in the wild and even in the hands of ASUS honcho Jonney Shih at AsiaD. Now the tablet set to continue the Eee Pad Transformer's legacy has reared its 10-inch face at the FCC. Considering the Prime's leaked November 9th launch date, it's no shock to see the tablet now surfacing at the Commission with confidentiality agreements in tow. Most of the slate's internal goods are hidden behind that wall of secrecy, but we can confirm the de rigeur presence of WiFi and Bluetooth capabilities. Shih's already dished out some of this quad-core tab's specs, so we know to expect a mini-HDMI port, 14.5-hour battery, SD card slot and a destined Ice Cream Sandwich OS. The only remaining question is whether this second coming will pack any wireless operator-friendly frequencies. We'll keep you posted on any new developments, but in the meantime, feel free to traverse the spectrum tests at the source.

ASUS Eee Pad Transformer Prime arrives at the FCC, we feign surprise originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Nov 2011 15:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: T-Mobile unleashes HTC Radar 4G, Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, myTouchQ and more today

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/02/t-mobile-unleashes-htc-radar-4g-samsung-galaxy-tab-10-1-mytouc/

We knew it was getting cold and dreary outside, but today at T-Mobile it's shiny and warm. The carrier has released several handsets today, including the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, HTC Radar 4G, myTouch and myTouchQ (online only until November 9th), LG DoublePlay, and the Samsung Exhibit II 4G. It's not too often we see six devices launch on the same day, but 'tis the season, right? If you've been eyeing any of these luscious gadgets for yourself or a loved one, it's high time to make the move.

T-Mobile unleashes HTC Radar 4G, Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, myTouchQ and more today originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Nov 2011 15:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Internet Explorer does less than 50 percent of world's web surfing, Chrome on the come-up

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/02/internet-explorer-does-less-than-50-percent-of-worlds-web-surfi/

It's been a long and winding road for Internet Explorer, Microsoft's venerable web browser, and for over a decade it's been the browser of choice for most netizens. According to Net Marketshare's latest numbers, however, IE now enables just under half of the world's total -- meaning mobile and desktop combined -- web traffic after owning 95 percent of the browsing market seven years ago. The decline is at least partially due to a rise in mobile web browsing and an increasing Chrome user base. Of course, Microsoft's finest still has a healthy 52.63 percent desktop market share, which gives it a sizable lead over the competition from Firefox (23 percent), Chrome (18 percent), and Safari (five percent). There's plenty more graphs and charts to show you exactly how the browser war is going, so hit the links below for the full pie-chart treatment.

Internet Explorer does less than 50 percent of world's web surfing, Chrome on the come-up originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Nov 2011 17:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Ars Technica  |  sourceNet Marketshare  | Email this | Comments

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drag2share: Apple confirms iOS 5 bugs causing battery drain, promises a fix 'in a few weeks'

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/02/apple-confirms-ios-5-bugs-causing-battery-drain-promises-a-fix/

iOS 5
Anecdotal reports have been pouring in since iOS 5 landed that battery life had suddenly dropped off on some people's iPhones. A full 15-percent of you who responded to our poll reported suffering from the issue. Now Apple has officially confirmed that several bugs are negatively affecting battery life. In a statement given to All Things D the Cupertino company acknowledged the problem and said it would "release a software update to address those [bugs] in a few weeks." In recent days the complaints in both the Apple forums and our own tips box have reached a deafening volume but, sadly, Apple isn't offering any temporary work arounds or advice for those constantly attached to a charger. So there you go folks -- Apple is working on it. You're the patient type, right?

Update: Well, iOS 5.0.1 Beta, which includes the aforementioned bug fixes, just landed for devs. So Apple isn't just working on it, they've fixed it... theoretically. Lets hope this test run is a bit shorter than expected.

Apple confirms iOS 5 bugs causing battery drain, promises a fix 'in a few weeks' originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Nov 2011 18:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: HP replaces the Slate 500 with the Slate 2, adds Swype and cuts the starting price to $699

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/02/hp-replaces-the-slate-500-with-the-slate-2-adds-swype-and-cuts/

Until Microsoft gives Win8 the final seal of approval, the Windows tablet show must go on, right? Right. HP just refreshed its enterprise-friendly, Windows 7-flavored Slate 500 with the Slate 2, and took the opportunity to knock the starting price down a hundred bucks to $699. In terms of design, there's nothing much to see here -- it's the same 8.9-inch tablet that's been on sale for the past year. Only this time, HP added Swype, refreshed the CPU with Intel's Atom Z670 and proffered a smaller 32GB SSD option to appease the IT guys who are going to heavily lock these down anyway. Speaking of security, it also packs TPM circuitry and Computrace Pro for tracking lost or stolen laptops and then deleting the data remotely. It'll be available worldwide this month -- just in time for corporate to buy you a lil' somethin' somethin' for the holidays.

Gallery: HP Slate 2

Continue reading HP replaces the Slate 500 with the Slate 2, adds Swype and cuts the starting price to $699

HP replaces the Slate 500 with the Slate 2, adds Swype and cuts the starting price to $699 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Nov 2011 19:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Stanford program cracks text-based CAPTCHAs, shelters the replicants among us

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/02/stanford-program-cracks-text-based-captchas-shelters-the-replic/

CAPTCHAs. In the absence of a Voigt-Kampff apparatus, they're what separate the humans from the only-posing-to-be-human. And now three Stanford researchers have further blurred that line with Decaptcha, a program that uses image processing, segmentation and a spell-checker to defeat text-based CAPTCHAs. Elie Bursztien, Matthieu Martin and John Mitchell pitted Decaptcha against a number of sites: it passed 66% of the challenges on Visa's Authorize.net and 70% at Blizzard Entertainment. At the high end, the program beat 93% of MegaUpload's tests; at other end, it only bested 2% of those from Skyrock. Of the 15 sites tried, only two completely repelled Decaptcha's onslaught -- Google and reCaptcha. So what did the researchers learn from this? Randomization makes for better security; random lengths and character sizes tended to thwart Decaptcha, as did waving text. How long that will remain true is anyone's guess, as presumably SkyNet is working on a CAPTCHA-killer of its own.

Stanford program cracks text-based CAPTCHAs, shelters the replicants among us originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Nov 2011 20:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Softpedia, ITWorld  |  sourceElie Bursztein  | Email this | Comments

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