Tuesday, March 11, 2014

drag2share: Hacker Claims This Crucial WhatsApp Flaw Can Expose Your Messages in Minutes

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/DYucUkMsGZw/crucial-whatsapp-security-issue-2014-3

WhatsApp users should be careful when downloading Android apps. If you don't read an app's permissions attentively before installing, your WhatsApp chat history could end up in a stranger's hands, according to one IT specialist from the Netherlands. 

Bas Bosschert, a technical consultant with more than 10 years experience working with Linux and Unix, explained how developers can trick WhatsApp users into granting access to their entire message database. Since WhatsApp backs up messages on your phone's SD card, apps can easily access this information if granted permission to do so. This data can then be uploaded to the developer's personal Web server. 

Bosschert's blog post details how to create these types of apps. The Netherlands-based technical consultant says that if the code shown in his screenshots was added to an Android game, it could be used to extract a WhatsApp user's database.

"People would only see a loading screen when they started the game," Bosschert said in an email to Business Insider. "They wouldn't notice that their WhatsApp database has been uploaded."

Security concerns surrounding WhatsApp aren't new, but have been attracting more attention since Facebook acquired the text messaging alternative last month

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drag2share: Mute Mic Prevents Your Phone's Microphone From Recording Audio

Source: http://lifehacker.com/mute-mic-prevents-your-phones-microphone-from-recordin-1541038683

Mute Mic Prevents Your Phone's Microphone From Recording Audio

Android: Your phone is a hot bed of paranoia-inducing sensors. If you're worried about your microphone being used to record audio surreptitiously—or you'd like to do something simple like record a video without sound—Mute Mic can block other apps from using your mic.

The app is a one-button affair that mutes the microphone input volume system-wide. There are no settings or extra buttons to fiddle with. Just tap the button and you're done. This is particularly handy if you need to restrict the microphone permission on an app that you need, but that might be requesting too many permissions.

Mute Mic | Google Play Store via Ghacks

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drag2share: Wall Street Is Going Crazy For A Revolutionary Technology That Could Change The Energy Market As We Know It (PLUG, BLDP, FCEL)

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/fuel-cell-rally-2014-3

Screen Shot 2014 03 11 at 9.54.18 AM

Stocks of companies that develop and cell fuel cells are going crazy — their shares are about 50% in the past five days.

The gainers include:

  • Plug Power: 67%
  • Ballard: 48%
  • Fuel Cell: 49%

Among the catalysts for the surge was the announcement of a huge new Walmart order for Plug Power's fuel cells — which use Ballard materials; as well as a strong revenue report from Fuel Cell.

The market caps of these companies are tiny, but still, the surge cannot be ignored. Are we really on the verge of fuel cells going mainstream? 

Let's back up for a moment.

What are fuel cells? 

Basically, fuel cells take hydrogen and turn it into electricity. The most common way of doing this involves using a proton exchange membrane.

This is a membrane that separates out the positive and negative charges — the proton and electron — of a hydrogen atom. The membrane is treated in such a way that the electron cannot pass through it; instead, it only captures the proton. This allows the electron to go through an external circuit and get momentarily captured as electricity.

The exhaust product from the system is created by the proton and electron recombining with an oxygen molecule, which is flowing through the other side of the membrane. The only "waste" created from a fuel cell is water heat, meaning they are essentially carbon neutral.   

Via Ballard, Here's the visual demonstration. The flow field plate is charged to separate out the proton and electron.

how fuel cells work

Hydrogen and oxygen pass through along either side of the charged membrane. 

ballard fuel cell

The hydrogen atom gets split into its positive and negative charges — protons and electrons.

how fuel cells work

The proton passes through the membrane, where it will become part of an exhaust product...

how fuel cells work

While the electron gets temporarily captured as electricity.

how fuel cells work

The split proton and electron are reunited with an oxygen atom to produce water and heat — a nearly pure form of energy exhaust.  

how fuel cells work

If you stack a bunch of these guys together, you get a fuel cell.

how fuel cells work

( You can watch the whole video here » ) 

More demand, and getting cheaper

The long-term shift in the marketplace is that hydrogen — namely in the form of natural gas, which is simply hydrogen and carbon — is getting cheaper and more abundant, according to Bloomberg's Christopher Martin. On the higher end, solar-based fuel cells, which convert, converts solar and wind energy into hydrogen, have seen cost improvements as solar use has expanded. And fuel cells form part of the push toward cleaner energy, something Walmart has been pushing. And a recent note from Navigant notes more sectors are looking to fuel cells to provide grid-independent sources of power in case of natural disasters.

“With the growing need to enhance grid resiliency and the accelerating adoption of distributed generation technologies worldwide, the stationary fuel cell industry is well-positioned for growth over the next decade,” says Mackinnon Lawrence, research director with Navigant Research.  “Expected to break through the $2 billion mark in annual revenue in 2014, stationary fuel cells are seeing increased financing options for adoption, particularly in the healthy residential combined heat and power segment.”

Walmart also sees the cells as cost and labor-saving devices, since it takes less time to refuel a lift, and thus creates less downtime.  

The hype cycle

But again, the market cap of these firms remains relatively minuscule. As far as their use in transport, fuel cell use is so far limited to light industrial machines like forklifts. Navigant says the stationary fuel cell market will reach $9 billion in annual revenue by 2022.

 

More importantly, these stocks have come under huge waves of hype before when he market gets frothy.  Plug Power went public during the dot-com bubble, and while it survived, its stock has gone nowhere for the past decade. Check out the insane heights it reached during the bubble.

 

plug power

Some analysts believe everything will ride on whether automakers ultimately start rolling out fuel cell vehicles en masse. But given the surge in demand for electric vehicles, there is a decent chance the bump doesn't go much higher from here.

SEE ALSO: These fuel cell charts should bring back bad memories

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drag2share: Another major game engine gets Linux support ahead of Steam Machines launch

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/03/11/cryengine-linux/

The engine that powers the Crysis series, CryEngine, is headed to Linux. That means games like Crysis 3 and Ryse: Son of Rome could see ports on Valve's forthcoming Linux-powered platform, SteamOS. At very least, it means that developers already working with CryEngine have a shortcut to porting their work to Steam Machines; Crytek will show it off in detail next week at the annual Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. Linux support was long-rumored for CryEngine, with job listings as far back as last July hinting that it was coming. It's unclear when the engine will get updated to support the new platform, but we expect it'll be long before Valve's Steam Machines initiative gets seriously underway.

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drag2share: Archos' octa-core smartphone is surprisingly quick for the price

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/03/11/archos-50c-oxygen-hands-on/

When it comes to smartphones, hugs and all-you-can-eat buffets, more is better, right? That's why we had to sit down and play with Archos' 50c Oxygen. The gassy, Jelly Bean-running handset is one of the first to use MediaTek's 1.7GHz octa-core MT6592 CPU, housed behind a 5-inch 1,280 x 720 IPS LCD display. Archos has found room for dual-SIM slots, 1GB RAM, 8GB of on-board storage and a microSD card slot, while the 2,000mAh battery should last you at least a day.

Aside from the thinness of the device, some of the design cues, like the light-up strip for the menu buttons, reminded us a little of Sony's old Xperia handsets, which we always had a soft spot for. Being a budget device, alas, there's no LTE modem, and instead users will be forced to suck down data on HSPA+. Of course, the star here is the CPU, and while we weren't able to put this device through the normal barrage of benchmarks that we use in our reviews, a casual run-through revealed that it was a lot more responsive than other devices that we've seen at this price. The 50c Oxygen will launch in April, around the same time as its phablet-sized brother, priced at €230 ($320).

Sharif Sakr swore off the all-you-can-eat buffet during this report.

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