5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Friday, 21 November 2014

Selena Gomez's Leaked Song "My Dilemma 2.0" Wasn't Inspired by Justin Bieber



Selena Gomez's Leaked Song "My Dilemma 2.0" Wasn't Inspired by Justin Bieber


Selena Gomez recently dropped the painfully autobiographical "The Heart Wants What It Wants, and after two songs leaked this morning, everyone is speculating that "My Dilemma 2.0" and "Do It" are about Justin Bieber. While the latter talks about a chaotic, addictive relationship — with lyrics like, "I wish I didn’t feel so hypnotized, when I look at you baby its justified" — we're not sure "My Dilemma" was written with him in mind!

The track is an updated version of her song "My Dilemma," from Selena Gomez and the Scene's 2011 album, When The Sun Goes Down. The lyrics are exactly the same, so the track must have just been revamped for her upcoming Greatest Hits album, For You.

While the lyrics, “Here’s my dilemma/One half of me wants ya/And the other half wants to forget you," seem like they're directed at the "Boyfriend" singer, that might not necessarily be true! Even if Selena may share some of the feelings expressed in the track, she didn't actually write the song.
Of course, the songwriters could have been inspired by events in the singer's life, but Jelena only started dating in 2011 and their relationship wasn't that dramatic back then! Maybe it just has new meaning in her life now.

Gorilla Glass 4 shouldn't shatter when you drop your phone



Gorilla Glass 4 shouldn't shatter when you drop your phone


Plenty of mobile device screens can easily resist minor cracks and scratches, but let's be honest -- those aren't the biggest problems. No, the real crisis comes when you drop your phone and the display shatters into many pieces. Thankfully, Corning is tackling that accident-related damage in earnest with Gorilla Glass 4. The newly formulated cover material is designed to survive collisions with rough surfaces, like the sidewalk. It's reportedly very effective, if imperfect. While conventional soda-lime glass will always break if you drop it from a meter (3.3 feet) above the ground, Gorilla Glass 4 will remain intact 80 percent of the time. You shouldn't be careless, in other words, but the added resistance could mean the difference between a costly out-of-warranty repair and carrying on with your day.
Corning says it's already sending out test samples and shipments for the new glass, so you should expect to see it soon. It's not naming customers, but many of the largest phone, PC and tablet builders already use Gorilla Glass, even if they don't always mention it by name. There's a good chance your next mobile gadget will be considerably better at surviving a faceplant -- hopefully, you'll never have to learn this the hard way.Corning

By Jon Fingas
Engadget

Google Says It Can Now Launch Up To 20 Project Loon Balloons Per Day



Google Says It Can Now Launch Up To 20 Project Loon Balloons Per Day



Google’s Project Loon, the company’s effort to deliver Internet access from balloons that travel around the world in the stratosphere, continues to make strides toward a commercial launch. A few days ago we heard that Google will launch a test with Australia’s largest telco provider Telstra next month and today, Google released a bit more info about the state of the project.
Its balloons, for example, can now stay in the air up to 10 times longer than when the project started last year. Many now last over 100 days — and some even up to 130 days. In total, the balloons have now flown over three million kilometers (though this one, which apparently crashed in Africa a few days ago, probably didn’t make it quite as far).


Google also says that it has gotten much better at steering its balloons. “ By constantly computing thousands of trajectory simulations it turns out we can get pretty close to our targets,” the Loon team writes on Google+ today. “For example, one flight came within 1.5km of our target destination over a flight of 9,000 kilometers, purely through predicting and sailing with the stratospheric winds.”
Google also says it has developed new equipment to inflate its balloons. It now only takes about five minutes to get a balloon ready for launch and the company says it can launch up to 20 balloons a day now.

As Google X’s Astro Teller told us earlier this year, Google plans to partner with telcos on this project. This means Google isn’t buying spectrum itself, but it will work with existing providers to give them access to its balloons and they get to use their licenses to transmit from the stratosphere. The project may have indeed looked a bit crazy in the early days, but Google is obviously dedicated to the project and it’s clearly making progress right now.

By Frederic Lardinois
TechCrunch

Apple is already using one-fourth of the world’s sapphire supply




Apple is already using one-fourth of the world’s sapphire supply


The story of Apple’s now-bankrupt sapphire venture in Arizona is full of drama: The Wall Street Journal’s Daisuke Wakabayashi reports at length (paywall) on some of the challenges and disappointments that Apple and its partner, GT Advanced Technologies, have dealt each other.

But there’s one particularly interesting stat that explains why Apple and GTAT even bothered in the first place. Apple is already consuming “one-fourth of the world’s supply of sapphire to cover the iPhone’s camera lens and fingerprint reader,” Wakabayashi writes.

That is impressively high—and about to get a whole lot higher. Sure, Apple could sell 200 million fingerprint-reading iPhones and iPads next year, but such readers are relatively small. Imagine the volumes when the company starts making watches with sapphire displays, and iPhones with sapphire screens.

No wonder Apple wants more. As Wakabayashi notes, the Arizona venture was to “produce 30 times as much sapphire as any other plant in the world.”

By Dan Frommer
Quartz 

Thursday, 20 November 2014

Taylor Swift & Harry Styles Are Friends After Split in 2013




Taylor Swift & Harry Styles Are Friends After Split in 2013


Taylor Swift and Harry Styles are reportedly on good terms after their split last year!
“They have become pals,” a source shared to Us Weekly.

Another source added, “Taylor has been bragging to her trainer and celeb friends that she and Harry are talking again.”
In case you missed it, Harry recently chatted about how much he enjoyed Taylors songs about him from her latest album 1989.

Taylor Swift Hits New Milestones with '1989' Sales!




Taylor Swift Hits New Milestones with '1989' Sales!


The 24-year-old singer is breaking a whole new set of records this week with her album 1989 and her latest single “Blank Space.”
As previously reported, Taylor is the first woman to ever succeed herself at the top spot of the Billboard Hot 100. Last week her song “Shake It Off” was at number one and now her new single is there!

Also, her album 1989 has broken the 2 million sales mark after just three weeks in stores and it is still the highest selling album released this year. We’ll have to wait and see if it surpasses the Frozen soundtrack’s sales by the end of the year to be crowned the top album!

Nvidia's New GK210 GPU Powers Dual-GPU Tesla K80 For Accelerated Computing







Nvidia's New GK210 GPU Powers Dual-GPU Tesla K80 For Accelerated Computing

While the new Maxwell architecture leads the company's gaming portfolio, Nvidia has re-spinned the previous-generation Kepler GPU in order to produce the GK210 that powers the new Tesla K80 card for GPGPU accelerated computing applications. 










The new GK210 is a modified version of the GK110B found in the Tesla K40, but with doubled-up register file and shared memory cache. The goal is to give applications moreresources to enable more registers per thread without compromising the total number of threads that an SMX can process, reducing latencies and improving efficiency.












Note that the GK210 processors in the K80 have two of their 15 SMX blocks disabled, limiting the card to 4,992 CUDA cores (2,496 per GPU). This might not look as impressive as the Titan-Z, but keep in mind that the Tesla K80 is passively-cooled, with a tighter focus on performance-per-watt and limited at a 300 Watt TDP.











Of course, the Tesla K80 has other tricks up its sleeve, like an astonishing 24 GB of total graphics memory onboard, or 12 GB per GPU. At 5 GHz effective over a 384-bit memory interface, the GDDR5 RAM provides an aggregate 480 GB/s of bandwidth (240 GB/s per GPU). It's highly doubtful that we'll see a GeForce card ever carry the GK210, but when we asked, the company didn't rule out the possibility of a future Titan card poweredby this graphics processor.











With two GPUs, it's no surprise that performance is significantly higher than that of the single GPU-equipped Tesla K40 card released last year. The Tesla K80 is available now for "high-performance computing, computational science, supercomputing,enterprise, complex data analytics and machine learning applications", according to Nvidia. The card has no MSRP, as the company let us know that OEMs set the price, but we can expect it to be significantly more expensive than the Tesla K40 12GB card that currently ranges between $3800 and $6400 on Amazon.com.

By Don Woligroski
Tomshardware

Google's setting Photo Spheres and Street View images free from Maps



Google's setting Photo Spheres and Street View images free from Maps











It looks like soon enough we'll be seeing Street View pictures and those spiffy Photo Spheres making their way from Google Maps and onto our favorite websites. How's that, pray tell? An update to Mountain View's Maps Embed API (targeted at web developers) is setting those images free, naturally. The search giant says that this previously was an omission from the last API release, and that it was spotted by a Developers blog reader. Google also says there won't be any usage restrictions on the embeds either, so hopefully we'll get more 360 degree panoramas in various places sooner rather than later. If and when the average Joe will get this access, however, remains to be seen.
Google Developers

By
Timothy J. Seppala
Engadget

Apple, Xiaomi trade smartphone barbs in China



Apple, Xiaomi trade smartphone barbs in China

 

Top executives from US technology giant Apple and Chinese smartphone upstart Xiaomi traded light-hearted barbs on Thursday at a Chinese Internet conference, acknowledging the fierce competition between the rivals.

Apple's iPhones and iPads are wildly popular in China, encouraging smuggling and crowds at the company's stores as consumers try to lay their hands on the latest products.
Yet Apple stood in sixth place in China's fractured smartphone market with only a 6.9 percent share in the March-June period according to consultancy Analysys International, while Xiaomi -- which was only established four years ago -- ranked second with 13.5 percent.

Bruce Sewell, Apple's general counsel and senior vice president of legal and government affairs, told a panel discussion at the World Internet Conference that there are "many good competitive phones in China" in a nod to Xiaomi founder Lei Jun, sitting alongside him.

But when asked about Lei's previous claims that Xiaomi will become the world's market leader in smartphones, he said: "It is easy to say, it is more difficult to do," to laughter and applause from the audience in Wuzhen.
Lei shot back: "In this magic land, we produced not only a company like Alibaba, but a small miracle like Xiaomi."

Alibaba founder Jack Ma was also onstage, fresh from the listing of his company on the New York Stock Exchange, the world's biggest initial public offering to date.
Xiaomi phones boast processors that use Google's Android software and sleek designs which some say mimic top Apple models.

But they compete at a different price point, selling at a fraction of the cost of a Galaxy S5 from market leader Samsung, or the latest iPhones.

AFP
Wang Zhao

Hackers turning smartphones into slave armies!

Hackers turning smartphones into slave armies















Mobile security firm Lookout on Wednesday warned that Android-powered smartphones or tablets are being targeted with malicious software that puts them at the mercy of hacker overlords.
The persistence and sophistication of malware dubbed NotCompatible is another sign that cyber criminals are hitting smartphones and tablets with tactics and tenacity once reserved for desktop computers, according to Lookout security researcher Jeremy Linden.

"Mobile is becoming the dominant computing platform and, because it is so ubiquitous, we are seeing heightened malware targeting it," Linden told AFP.
"Mobile malware is becoming very advanced and rapidly reaching parity with PC malware."
Information that can be mined from hacked smartphones includes where people have been, pictures taken and call logs.

"It is the jackpot when it comes to valuable data, so obviously bad guys are doing a lot of work to get at it," Linden said.

So far, it appears to Lookout that control of smartphones and not pilfering what they hold is the primary use of NotCompatible.

Armies of enslaved mobile devices are used for sending spam hawking goods such as diet pills, or snatching up hot concert tickets when they go on sale so they can be scalped later at higher prices, according to Lookout.

Hackers operating networks of infected mobile devices likely rent out the "botnets" for uses such as unleashing barrages of email ads and attacking websites.

The most common way for the virus to get on a smartphone is by visiting legitimate websites that have been hacked and then booby-trapped to secretly infect visitors, Linden said.

NotCompatible typically introduces itself as an Android system update and asks for permission to install in mobile devices. One way to safeguard against infection is to decline such prompts and go through smartphone settings to check for system updates.

The malware has grown in sophistication since it was first detected in 2012, adopting measures to elude detection by researchers and adding the ability to endure even if servers being used by hackers to control it are taken down, according to Lookout.

Those behind NotCompatible were said to be running it like a savvy business operation, and are doing well enough to invest heavily in beefing up the back-end on which the malware relies.
"While it is true we haven't seen any data stealing, you don't want anything like this on your device," Linden said.

"You are adding to the general danger of the Internet by letting an attacker use your network for something unsavory, and you could be responsible for any data plan charges."
If people use infected smartphones on the job, there is risk the virus could provide openings for hackers to slip into company networks.


AFP



Motorola's smart fob will find both your keys and your phone




Motorola's smart fob will find both your keys and your phone














Motorola isn't done releasing small yet convenient accessories this year, apparently. It just unveiled the Keylink, a Bluetooth key fob that helps you find both your smartphone and your keys. If you lose your phone between the seat cushions, you can push a button on the Keylink to make it ring from as far as 100 feet away; if your keys disappear, you can use Motorola's Connect app to make the Keylink sound off. It plays nicely with both Android phones and iPhones, and it'll also serve as a trusted Smart Lock device if you're using Android 5.0 Lollipop -- you may never have to unlock your phone so long as your keys are nearby. The Keylink is relatively costly for a narrow-purposed device at $25, but the price might be justifiable if you periodically misplace your gear.


By
Jon Fingas
Engagets



Amazon recruiting drone pilots

An opportunity for drone pilots!

Amazon  is looking for engineers to help test and develop Prime Air, its drone delivery service.

According to the job posting, candidates should have at least five years of experience flying drones. It helps if you can fly actual airplanes. The company lists a pilot's certificate among the "preferred qualifications" for the job.

Amazon first announced that it was working on delivering packages via drones last year.
The type of drones proposed by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos are currently not allowed for private use under federal law.
But federal aviation rules are slated to change in 2015 and the company has suggested that it could start testing its "octocopters" -- as its drones are called -- to deliver small packages.




Amazon is also looking for candidates who are knowledgeable about laws governing the use of unmanned aircraft.
"We're looking for aerospace, systems, or other engineers with extensive UAS flight experience, and preferably experience in working with authorities on UAS certification," the job description states.