Monday, 25 November 2013

Do-it-yourself ghost hunting

"If you're looking for ghosts this Halloween, you don't need a Proton pack. A professional ghost hunter takes us to the reportedly haunted Brookdale Lodge and shows us some easily accessible gadgets you can use to search for paranormal activity."

Ghost hunters set up toys to try to lure spirits they believe haunt the abandoned Brookdale Lodge in California. 

A tea set, dolls, and a teddy bear set up at a table for a little girl. It would be sweet, if it wasn't in a dark, abandoned lodge filled with spider webs where a little girl named Sarah drowned in the late 1800s.
The toys were presumably laid out by someone trying to contact Sarah's ghost, which reportedly haunts the now-condemned Brookdale Lodge in Northern California's Santa Cruz mountains. In its heyday, the Brookdale Lodge played host to celebrities like James Dean and Marilyn Monroe and was a popular getaway for mobsters with its secret rooms and tunnels.
Now when you go inside, it's dark, dank, rundown, and eerie, with a definite chill in the air. It's the perfect place to get a demonstration of the technology ghost hunters use. Gloria Young, a self-described paranormal researcher, is our guide to things that go bump in the night.
"Throughout this particular building we know that people will hear glasses clink at night. There's always been voices," Young said. "In the bar, it's like a constant party."

 
Young uses a variety of electronics to hunt for evidence of paranormal activity.
"There are people trying to make equipment for ghost hunting, but because we don't know how to detect ghosts or how things work, they can only modify what we use and how we use it and what we can do with it," she said. "That's why we have such a vast array of stuff that is regular everyday stuff that you can buy on the shelf of your local electronics store."
Young showed off a so-called "spirit box," a modified AM/FM radio that quickly scans for radio frequencies. Young suggests asking questions and listening carefully for one-word answers amid the static. We gave it a try. See for yourself in this video.
Young also uses a $20 Geiger counter, which measures radiation. It usually clicks at regular intervals. She says irregular or frequent clicks could be interpreted as ghosts answering your questions. During our taped interview, the Geiger counter interrupted Young as she described a previous ghostly encounter.

 
 
She also employs electromagnetic detectors like a trifield meter, a rem pod, and a K-II to detect any entity that may be nearby. For video, she has a full spectrum handheld camera that she says picks up things the naked eye can't see.
Ghost hunters also use different devices that measure temperature, like thermal imagery cameras and non-contact thermometers. In this video, Young is explaining the relevance of temperature fluctuations, when something a little unexpected happens.
Maybe it's nothing. Maybe it's something. Maybe it's easy to believe in spooky things when you're in a creepy, deserted, dark place looking for them.
Happy hunting. Happy Halloween.

'Doctor Who'/'Hunger Games' mashup is a bloody good time

"Thirteen Doctors. Only one can survive. What will happen when "Doctor Who" enters the "Hunger Games" arena"
The Doctor Games logo
The Doctor Games is brutal.

It's a simple premise. All the Doctors, including new Doctor Peter Capaldi and the War Doctor, are brought together in an outdoor arena. Only one Doctor will be allowed to leave in the Tardis. Welcome to the "The Doctor Games."
In this bizarre alternate world where both Mockingjays and the Master co-exist, the Daleks round up all the incarnations of the Doctor, deposit them in a forest clearing and, let them duke it out "Battle Royale"-style.
The weapons and supply cache in the middle of the arena is stocked with very Doctor-y items like an incredibly long scarf, sonic screwdrivers, jelly babies, a question-mark umbrella, a fez, and a laser gun. Of course, there's bottled water, too, in case the Time Lords get thirsty.
Before you watch the video, you should go ahead and place your bets on who you think the finalists will be.
Spoilers: the fourth Doctor takes one of his other incarnations out by snapping his neck with his scarf; the fifth Doctor's celery stick becomes a deadly weapon; and one of the Doctors gets both of his hearts forcibly removed.
I have to give kudos to the impressively accurate fourth Doctor costume, right down to the checks on the shirt. In fact, all of the Doctors are extremely well-costumed.
The parody video promotes itself as "the motion picture event of all time and space." The tagline reads, "No regenerations and no timey-wimey." Just be sure you're cool with lots of spurting fake blood before you hit play.

Assemble the $99 Kano DIY computer in minutes

"With more than $460,000 raised from a Kickstarter campaign, Kano looks set to spark computer education and DIY chops among kids."


Kano
The $99 Pi-powered Kano computer can be assembled by kids.
(Credit: Kickstarter)
Can computers, and even coding, be as simple and fun as Lego?
Yes, says the London-based group behind Kano, a $99 DIY computer that's designed to provide a sense of play and exploration for what can sometimes seem like just a black box.
Since its debut on Kickstarter earlier this week, the concept has raised more than $460,000, far beyond its funding goal of $100,000. What's so exciting?
Available for $99 for early backers, the Kano kit comes with a Raspberry Pi Model B board, DIY speaker, keyboard, cabling, instructions, and decorative materials like stickers. It connects to a monitor, which is of course not included.
After assembling it (which seems to take less than half an hour), users can create games like Pong and Snake, build the speaker, and modify Minecraft using Kano OS, a Linux-based programming interface.
Kano is designed to challenge closed computer devices and "to start creating with technology -- not just consuming it," the campaign page says.
The instruction books are available so far in English, Spanish, Arabic, and Mandarin, with more languages on the way since Kano is trying to be a global grassroots computing project.
Check out the vid below and see more details about Kano here.

Microsoft montage reveals future Xbox One games

"What's ahead for the Xbox One? A fast-paced montage from Microsoft offers a glimpse at upcoming games destined for the new console."

Microsoft montage reveals future Xbox One games

What's ahead for the Xbox One? A fast-paced montage from Microsoft offers a glimpse at upcoming games destined for the new console.
 
 
Xbox One gamers can peek into their future via a new Microsoft video.
A lengthy clip appropriately called "Future Xbox One Games Montage" serves up quick teasers of a range of titles slated for the gaming console. So what's in store?
Xbox One owners will be able to dive into Halo, Watch Dogs, Tom Clancy's The Division, Quantum Break, Sunset Overdrive, Plants vs Zombies: Garden Warfare, Kinect Sports Rivals, Project Spark, Ultimate Fighting Championship, Fable Legends, Final Fantasy XV, The Elder Scrolls, Kingdom Hearts, Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes, Dying Light, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, and Titanfall.
Some of the games will also be available for the Xbox 360 and Windows PCs, but most will be exclusive to the Xbox One, at least in Microsoft's gaming world. Microsoft needs a strong lineup of titles to get gamers exciting about the new console, especially since the Xbox One can't play Xbox 360 games.

Chromecast jumps on HBO Go's dragon bandwagon

"It's a long wait till season 4 of "Game of Thrones," but HBO Go subscribers can now catch up on that and other HBO shows on their Chromecasts"

Google's Chromecast is now your ticket to Game of Thrones and other HBO shows.

There's no need to pay the iron price to get HBO Go support on your Chromecast, as Google announced on Thursday that Chromecasts will begin supporting HBO Go in the next few days.
The update brings HBO's popular breadth of shows and movies to Chromecast via the Android and iOS Chromecast apps, and the HBO Go Web site, to any TV with an HDMI port. Shows such as "Eastbound and Down," "Boardwalk Empire," "Girls," and yes, "Game of Thrones," can now be watched at will using HBO Go.

It may seem a bit odd that people would want to cast HBO Go to their TVs, because HBO is a cable TV channel. However, HBO Go has at least one benefit over the traditional cable channel: you get access to all over HBO's shows and movies a la carte. The Chromecast access will also free people to watch HBO on any modern TV.
So now for Chromecast owners, winter and HBO Go are coming. At $35 for the device, that makes for an affordable techie stocking stuffer.

Restaurant offers 50 percent discount for turning off phone

A restaurant owner in Israel has had enough of cell phone chatter and mute couples staring into their phones during dinner. So he's offering an incentive.

The sublime tomatoes at Aziza restaurant in San Francisco. I felt guilty taking this picture.

Look your lover in the face. Tell him or her why they're the best, most gorgeous, most intelligent, inspiring person you've ever met.
Then dig into your mackerel or your malloreddus.
That's how a romantic meal should go. Instead, these days, the obligatory phones lie on the table like needy puppies. Within moments, the lovers' eyes are buried in them, as if this were a table for one.
One restaurateur in Israel has decided that, rather than ban cell phones, he will offer an incentive so great that it makes your average Black Friday bargain seem like robbery.
Jawdat Ibrahim, owner of the Abu Ghosh restaurant in an Arab village outside Jerusalem, is offering a 50 percent discount if everyone at the table turns off his or her cell phone.
As the Associated Press hears it, Ibrahim got tired of the married or the loving sitting in silence. Why, sometimes they were so grossly engrossed that they didn't even eat. They asked him to reheat their food.
What has happened to our world when we prefer to Snapchat rather than sample perfectly cooked snap peas?
Ibrahim explained his feelings to the AP: "Technology is very good. But just when you eat, just especially when you are with your family and your friends, you can just wait for half an hour and enjoy the food and enjoy the company."
Of course you can't. You have to Instagram and tweet a picture of your starter. You have to check in on Foursquare. You have to post "Date night with Kasi The Office Librarian!" to Facebook.
And shame on you if you forget to inform your Google+ followers.

What's remarkable is Ibrahim's apparent generosity. A 50 percent discount suggests an assault on his margins -- which, in most restaurants, are markedly thin.
Last year, LA restaurant Eva offered its customers a 5 percent incentive to leave their cell phones at the door.
Recently, another LA restaurant, Bucato, banned cell phones in order to prevent what it called "Gastro ADD."
Some New York restaurants, such as those owned by famed chef David Chang, ban the use of phones to take food porn. San Francisco's sublime La Ciccia is another that discourages phone use, albeit politely.
Ibrahim says he tried to encourage customers to leave their phones at the door, but this proved too complex.
His plaintive generosity has caused, he said, almost every customer to take him up on his offer. It's also brought in some new customers.
Perhaps the discount, then, is merely excellent publicity.
It's sad, though, that people have to be bribed to do something that their souls might tell them is the human thing to do.
But we began to sell our souls to technology a few years ago. In fact, we gave technology 50 percent of our selves just to take our souls away.

Saturday, 23 November 2013

ARM: Who needs 128-bit chips?

The mobile chipmaker says 128-bit processors might have a place in mobile devices in years to come, but for now, 64 bits is all we need.

Apple's Phil Schiller talking about the company's 64-bit A7 chip.
Apple's Phil Schiller talking about the company's 64-bit A7 chip.

ARM, the chip-architect that's behind nearly all of the mobile processors being used today, has no plans to work on 128-bit processors anytime soon.
In a blog post published on Friday, the company said that its 64-bit architecture will support "the needs of the computing industry now and for many years to come." The company added that it has no plans for "128-bit ARM-based chips because they simply aren't needed."

The blog post comes after Korea Herald published a story earlier this week saying that ARM is in fact working on 128-bit chip designs. That report included comments allegedly made by an ARM executive. In its official post, however, ARM denied any of those discussions took place.
"Comments attributed to any ARM executive including my colleague Antonio Viana that allegedly discuss any specific partner's chip plans for the future or 128 bit development are inaccurate: no such comments have been made," the company said.
Apple made waves earlier this year after announcing that its new iPhone 5S comes with a 64-bit chip. Not to be outdone, Samsung said it plans to put 64-bit processors in its smartphones, but those devices aren't expected until 2014. In its blog post on Friday, ARM said that it expects many more companies to announce 64-bit processors in the coming months.

LG's rumored Odin processors get ready for primetime

The LG G2
The LG G2
(Credit: CBS Interactive) 
 
LG is testing mobile processors that could make their way into the company's devices next year, according to a new report.
Codenamed "Odin," LG's upcoming processors come in quad-core and octa-core versions, Korean-based DigitalTimes reported Thursday, citing people who claim to have knowledge of the company's plans. The processors could be clocked at 2.2GHz and feature Cortex-A15 and Cortex-A7 cores, the report said. The A7s would be clocked at 1.7GHz.

Odin chipsets have been rumored for quite some time, but details have been slim. LG is reportedly aiming to make its own chipsets, like some of its competitors, to reduce component costs and have greater control over what's actually inside its products.
So, what devices are going to get Oden chips? LG is reportedly planning to bundle its quad-core chips in Smart TVs next year. The octa-core models will find their way to the company's flagship smartphones, the report claimed, and the LG G Pad tablet successor. Both the G Pad and LG's G2 smartphone currently sport Qualcomm's Snapdragon processors.

HP eyes Black Friday special with sub-$100 Android tablet

The HP Mesquite
The HP Mesquite
(Credit: Intel) 
 
HP and Intel are hooking up for a low-cost Android tablet. Other deals are in the works too. 
Intel has got the scoop on some tablet deals for Black Friday, including an Android tablet that's very light on the wallet.
That 7-inch HP tablet, branded the Mesquite, packs an Intel processor and will sell for $89 at Walmart. Don't expect any barn-burning specs, though. You'll likely get what you pay for.
And Intel has the skinny on a few more deals too.

For instance, if you buy a PC at Costco for $600 or more, you can get a $180 (regular price) Dell Venue 8 tablet (also Android) for $99.
Dell's Venue 8 is also slated to go on sale for $130 direct from Dell, according to Intel.
Intel also cited $100 off the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 at Best Buy, for a sales price of $300.
That $100-off number, however, appears to be slightly inaccurate, as that Tab 3 is already discounted to $360 on Best Buy's sales page.

Dropbox spruces up its app for iOS 7

Dropbox version 3.0 for the iPad. 
 
Dropbox version 3.0 for the iPad.
(Credit: Dropbox) 
 
 The mobile app has been redesigned to look more similar to the iOS 7 interface, and includes support for AirDrop, as well as boasting faster performance.
Dropbox has a new look and new feature-set on iOS 7.
The company on Thursday launched version 3.0 of its mobile application, complete with a new design that mimics the look and feel of Apple's iOS 7. In addition, the application has added iPad functionality that allows for tapping on files and photos to toggle to full-screen mode. Dropbox has also promised that its revamped application will be faster than previous iterations.
In addition to the standard bug fixes that come with new app updates, the redesigned Dropbox features support for Apple's AirDrop. That means users can wirelessly save their files from other devices in the Dropbox running on their iPad or iPhone. Dropbox has also streamlined PDF viewing.
The new Dropbox is available now in Apple's App Store. Like the previous iterations, it's a free download.

NSA slapped malware on 50,000+ networks, says report

(Credit: nrc.nl
 
A new slide culled from the trove of documents leaked by Edward Snowden shows where the NSA placed malware on more than 50,000 computer networks worldwide, according to Dutch media outlet NRC.
The NSA management presentation slide from 2012 shows a world map spiderwebbed with "Computer Network Exploitation" access points.
Like all the NSA slides we've seen so far, this one is unlikely to win a Powerpoint beauty pageant anytime soon.
Not that this should distract anyone from the profoundly disturbing implications of this US government malware map that's being reported by a Dutch news agency -- an outlet to which the US government gave a "no comment."

Translated from Dutch:
The American intelligence service -- NSA -- infected more than 50,000 computer networks worldwide with malicious software designed to steal sensitive information.
Documents provided by former NSA employee Edward Snowden and seen by this newspaper, prove this.
(...) The NSA declined to comment and referred to the US Government. A government spokesperson states that any disclosure of classified material is harmful to our national security.
An NSA Web page that outlines the agency's Computer Network Operations program describes Computer Network Exploitation, or CNE, as a key part of the program's mission and says CNE "includes enabling actions and intelligence collection via computer networks that exploit data gathered from target or enemy information systems or networks."
In late August, The Washington Post reported on the NSA's "hacking unit" called Tailored Access Operations (TAO).
The Post wrote:
According to a profile by Matthew M. Aid for Foreign Policy, it's a highly secret but incredibly important NSA program that collects intelligence about foreign targets by hacking into their computers, stealing data, and monitoring communications.
(...) Dean Schyvincht, who claims to currently be a TAO Senior Computer Network Operator in Texas, might reveal the most about the scope of TAO activities.
He says the 14 personnel under his management have completed "over 54,000 Global Network Exploitation (GNE) operations in support of national intelligence agency requirements."
This is one letter away from being exact.
On the NSA's network ops page, there is no program with the acronym GNE -- only CNE and,
Computer Network Attack (CNA): Includes actions taken via computer networks to disrupt, deny, degrade, or destroy the information within computers and computer networks and/or the computers/networks themselves.
Computer Network Defense (CND): Includes actions taken via computer networks to protect, monitor, analyze, detect, and respond to network attacks, intrusions, disruptions, or other unauthorized actions that would compromise or cripple defense information.
Across the newly published slide top and bottom a stripe reads, "REL TO USA, AUS, CAN, GBR, NZL."
These are the  so-called Five Eyes nations -- the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand -- that share intelligence.
Last week, the very same Five Eyes nations moved to oppose the United Nations' anti-surveillance, right-to-privacy draft resolution called "The Right to Privacy in the Digital Age."
Security researchers online are speculating that telecoms were the most likely targets for the malware.
They may not be too far off the mark.
NRC cites an example of Britain's NSA counterpart, GCHQ, being found to use spoofed LinkedIn pages to install surveillance malware on target computers in Belgium telecom, Belgacom (translated):
One example of this type of hacking was discovered in September 2013 at the Belgium telecom provider Belgacom.
For a number of years the British intelligence service -- GCHQ -- has been installing this malicious software in the Belgacom network in order to tap their customer's telephone and data traffic.
The Belgacom network was infiltrated by GCHQ through a process of luring employees to a false Linkedin page.
NRC concludes its article by telling us that the Dutch government's intelligence service has its own hacking unit, but that it's prohibited by law from engaging in the type of operations that the CNE slide suggests the NSA carried out.

Wednesday addams series Wednesday in short

 Follow this link to watch the Wednesday Netflix series summaru fully explained-  https://youtu.be/c13Y4XLs_AY