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, 19 December 2014

Scientists develop lens-free microscope that borrows tech from cellphones

Scientists develop lens-free microscope that borrows tech from cellphones


LOS ANGELES — Scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles, have created a lens-free microscope that relies on a silicon chip found in smartphones and digital cameras. You can't use it to snap a selfie, but it could help scientists detect cancer.
In a paper published this week in Science Translational Medicine, the research team shows that images taken with the lens-free microscope were just as capable of revealing cellular abnormalities in tissue samples as more traditional, and more expensive light microscopes.
"Our microscope provides the same level of quality as a state-of-the-art optical light microscope, and it has a significantly larger field of view, a simpler design, and it is more cost-effective," said Aydogan Ozcan, a professor of electrical engineering at UCLA and the senior author on the paper, published Wednesday.

Ozcan's lab specializes in creating computer codes that simplify the design of microscopes, nanoscopes and other instruments, and improve their performance.
His team recently created a device that turns a smartphone into a high-powered microscope capable of imaging individual DNA molecules. Another project turned Google Glass into a tool that can perform diagnostic tests on blood and tissue samples.
Like much of Ozcan's work, the design of the lens-free microscope borrows from existing technology.

"The bread and butter of this project is a CCD or CMOS imager, which is the same thin chip you find in every digital camera, whether it's a high-end SLR or a cellphone camera," he said.
The setup also requires a light source and a sample holder that keeps the slide hovering just a little above the chip. When the light shines down on the sample slide, the slide casts a shadow of the sample tissue onto the imaging chip.

You can get an idea of how this works by holding your hand above your desk and under a light source. The closer to the desk you put your hand, the more defined the shadow becomes. The shadow of your hand is solid, but because cells are translucent, their shadows are more detailed.

The shadow image the chip collects is a murky-looking holograph that bears little resemblance to what you would see if you looked at the same slide through a light microscope. After the image is captured, it is reconstructed with software developed by Ozcan's team that converts the messy patterns into an image that is at least as clear as what you would see through a traditional microscope.
"The hardest part was creating the computational transformation that takes those nasty-looking shadowy patterns and give you the truth of what is happening," Ozcan said. "That was the computational puzzle."

Ozcan and his team tested the accuracy of their microscope by showing a board-certified pathologist 150 images of breast cancer tissue — some taken with a light microscope, others taken with the lens-free microscope. The pathologist was asked to analyze the images and note if the samples showed benign cells, atypical cells or invasive carcinoma.

The pathologist had 99 percent accuracy using images acquired by the lens-free microscope, and 100 percent accuracy with images from the light microscope.

Still, the lens-free microscope is not ready for prime time, Ozcan said. Most importantly, the computer software that lets a user look at the digitally constructed image on a computer screen needs to be more user-friendly.
"You can think of our interface as a very early version of the personal computer, where you have to write code to do anything," said Ozcan. "For other people to use it, it needs to be like Windows."
Eventually, however, the team would like to see the microscope used in parts of the world where access to medical infrastructure is limited.

"A small nurse's office that doesn't have a pathologist on staff could transmit digital images created by our microscope to an expert in another city, or another country," he said. "Mobile health and global health is where I would like to channel the things we create."

Deborah Netburn
Los Angeles Times 





Cadillac's cars are getting smart rearview mirrors next year

Cadillac's cars are getting smart rearview mirrors next year


Hey, Nissan: you won't be the only big automaker with a camera-equipped rearview mirror next year. Cadillac has revealed that its future cars are getting a smart mirror that shows a 1,280 x 240 view of what's behind you without passengers or roof pillars getting in the way. You can flip between the camera's perspective and a conventional mirror at the drop of a hat, and the system is designed to both give you a wide view and hold up in harsh weather. It sounds cool (if familiar), but you'll be patient if you want a Caddy with this extra safety measure in place. The mirror will first be available when the CT6 launches in late 2015, and it could be a while longer before it spreads to other models.
Cadillac

Jon Fingas
Engadget 





Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith Will Sing at the 2015 Brit Awards!

Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith Will Sing at the 2015 Brit Awards!


The 2015 Brit Awards are going to rock so hard. Why? Because Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith have just been confirmed as performers for the show.
On top of performing, all three of these super stars are probably going to be nominated for award that night. Tay has been wowing people with her latest album, 1989. Ed’s x is super critically acclaimed and Sam has been nominated for a whopping six Grammys. The Brit Awards will take place on February 25.





Pakistan in mourning as parents bury children after school attack

Pakistan in mourning as parents bury children after school attack


Pakistan woke up to a day of mourning on Wednesday after 132 students were killed at a school in the city of Peshawar in a  attack which shocked the nation and put pressure on the government to do more to tackle the insurgency

People around Pakistan lit candles and staged vigils as parents buried their children during mass funerals in and around Peshawar

 In all, 148 people were killed in the attack on the military-run Army Public School. We are really sad and we are with all those families who lost their children in this attack.





The Austin & Ally Cast Try to Catch the Gingerbread Man, Fail

The Austin & Ally Cast Try to Catch the Gingerbread Man, Fail


Austin & Ally cast, you guys sure know how to make us laugh. Raini Rodriguez Instagrammed this hilarious pic of her and the rest of the A&A cast chasing the elusive Gingerbread Man. But, just like the song says, you can’t catch him. We love how into it everyone got, especially Ross Lynch and Calum Worthy. LOL!





Facebook will auto-enhance your photos, if you use an iPhone

Facebook will auto-enhance your photos, if you use an iPhone


Look, Facebook kind of has to be good at this whole photo-filter thing. Like, come on: It owns Instagram, of all things. As it happens, you can already use various filters to tweak your photos from the Facebook app before you upload them to the site. Now, though, Zuckerberg & co. are taking things one step further, by automatically enhancing your pics without you having to play around with any adjustment sliders. If that feature sounds familiar, it's because, well it is: Google+ has been doing this for about a year and a half. As on G+ too, if you find all this automagic to be too overbearing, you can still manually tweak shots, or even revert to the original. For now, the feature is exclusive to the iOS app, though it will soon make its way over to Android as well, according to TechCrunch. If you do happen to own an iDevice, though, enjoy the time savings (or you know, the overzealous photo-meddling -- depends how you look at it).
TechCrunch

Dana Wollman
Engadget 





Sony hackers issue threat in latest message: 'The world will be full of fear'

Sony hackers issue threat in latest message: 'The world will be full of fear'


LOS ANGELES — The hacking group behind the Sony cybersecurity attack has made its first physical threat.
In a message sent at around 9:30 a.m., the group — calling itself Guardians of Peace — issued a warning along with what appears to be files related to Sony Pictures CEO and Chairman Michael Lynton.

"We will clearly show it (our Christmas gift) to you at the very time and places 'The Interview' be shown, including the premiere, how bitter fate those who seek fun in terror should be doomed to," the hackers wrote.
The hackers also invoked the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, urging people to keep themselves "distant from the places at that time."

"The world will be full of fear," they wrote. "Whatever comes in the coming days is called by the greed of Sony Pictures Entertainment. All the world will denounce the SONY."
Sony did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The FBI and the Los Angeles Police Department also did not have immediate comment.

Hackers began releasing sensitive data after the studio's security breach became public on Nov. 24. The group has released data including thousands of pages of emails from studio chiefs, salaries of top executives and Social Security numbers of 47,000 current and former employees.

The releases include thousands of emails from the studio's co-chairman, Amy Pascal. Some have included exchanges with producer Scott Rudin over whether President Barack Obama prefers black-themed films such as "The Butler." Pascal and Rudin have apologized for their remarks.

Federal officials are taking seriously the possibility that North Korea could be behind the attack and that the hack was done in retaliation for the film "The Interview." The Seth Rogen- and Evan Goldberg-directed film is about an attempt to kill North Korea's dictator, Kim Jong Un. In June, North Korea called on the U.S. government to block the film's release or face a "decisive and merciless countermeasure."

In an email statement to the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday, a FBI spokeswoman said: "The FBI is aware of recent threats and continues to work collaboratively with our partners to investigate the Sony attack."
Ralph Echemendia, chief executive of cybersecurity firm Red E-Digital, said that he's unaware of any other instance in which hackers "threatened large-scale physical violence."

"This now borders on terrorist activity and would define the Guardians of Peace as a terrorist group," said Echemendia, who has previously consulted for Sony Corp. on cyber security issues.
The film held a low-key premiere at the Theatre at the Ace Hotel in downtown Los Angeles last week. A strong security presence sternly guided attendees around the event. Reporters were also told there would be no interviews on the carpet.

The New York premiere is scheduled for Thursday at a Lower East Side bar before a screening at Sunshine Cinema.

In an interview conducted with Rogen and Goldberg a week before the hacking, the co-directors said serious potential repercussions — beyond the initial protest from North Korea — seemed far-fetched.
"When they say, 'we declare war on this movie' and all that, nothing is for us," Goldberg said. "It's all for their people to see."
Rogen added, "It's all for show."

The film is expected to hit theaters on Christmas Day.
Ted Mundorff, CEO of Landmark Theatres, which owns Sunshine Cinema, said they are moving ahead as planned.

"First of all, we won't comment about security. We will be properly prepared for any incidents," he said. "If Sony changes their mind ... I haven't heard from (Homeland Security) but I don't know that anyone in the organization hasn't."

(Los Angeles Times staff writers Amy Kaufman, Daniel Miller, Ryan Faughnder and Josh Rottenberg contributed to this report.)


Saba Hamedy
Los Angeles Times





5 Seconds of Summer's Ashton Irwin Helped Calum Hood Adjust to Fame

5 Seconds of Summer's Ashton Irwin Helped Calum Hood Adjust to Fame


5 Seconds of Summer's Ashton Irwin gave Calum Hood the best performance advice ever! While speaking to News Corp, the bassist said that his bandmate gave him great tips on having a real stage presence — especially in front of such a large audience.
"I was just sitting in the dressing room backstage in LA and Ashton came up to me an hour before the show and said 'This is your chance to have an influence on people as a performer'," he recalled
"And that really hit me. I look up to Billie Joe [of Green Day] and Dave Grohl and how they are on stage."
Because the guys are so amazing on stage, we think he took that advice to heart — and it's done him so well.





Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Ex-Google employees launch app to make you smarter about health, fitness

Ex-Google employees launch app to make you smarter about health, fitness


A group of former Google employees are betting they can boost the world's medical knowledge with a mobile IQ test.
Hi.Q, a free app for the Apple Inc iPhone and iPad launching on Monday, includes 10,000 questions across 300 topics, such as food allergies, childhood health, and portion control. After taking the test, users are given a breakdown of their expertise across certain health areas.

Founder and Chief Executive Officer Munjal Shah, who sold his prior company Like.com to Google Inc in 2010, said early data show a strong correlation between health literacy and obesity. Shah's team is also tracking whether a person's health knowledge correlates with the rate of hospitalizations.
The Hi.Q team believes that Silicon Valley jumped too quickly into developing wearable devices to track fitness and wellbeing. A recent study from research firm Endeavor Partners found that one-third of people who owned a wearable stopped using it after six months.

Shah believes the first step to get more people engaged in their health on a daily basis should be "quantified knowledge."
"Wearables are ending up in a drawer, [and] I believe that's because most people fundamentally lack the practical knowledge to stay healthy in the modern world," he added.
The company said 250,000 people have already used the app in its trial phase. According to Shah, 84 percent of those who opted to take the test were female. The most engaged users are mothers between the ages of 30 and 60.

Shah told Reuters he started kicking around ideas for a health startup after some first-hand experience with the current U.S. health system. After settling on health literacy, he recruited some fellow Google employees to join the team.

The app's founders are primarily drawn from the tech sector, rather than the medical field. To ensure accuracy, Shah said the questions have been carefully vetted by subject matter experts, such as a former orthopedic surgeon for the U.S. Olympic team.
The team is more focused on building the product rather than making money in the coming months, said Shah. He stressed that the company would not sell data on people's health knowledge to medical insurance providers.

The Mountain View, California based company has previously raised a small and undisclosed seed round of funding from Silicon Valley venture firms, including Greylock Partners, Menlo Ventures and Rock Health.

(Reporting By Christina Farr; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
Reuters





Monday, 15 December 2014

Hackers vs James Bond: 'SPECTRE' script stolen in Sony attack

Hackers vs James Bond: 'SPECTRE' script stolen in Sony attack


Early villains have emerged in the next James Bond film "SPECTRE": hackers who stole a version of the screenplay as part of a devastating cyberattack on Sony Pictures.
Producers of the James Bond films said they learned on Saturday morning that an early version of the "SPECTRE" script was among material stolen and made public by hackers who infiltrated computers at the Sony studio.

"Eon Productions is concerned that third parties who have received the stolen screenplay may seek to publish it or its contents," Eon said in a statement, while warning that the script is protected by U.K. copyright laws.

"SPECTRE," starring Daniel Craig as 007, is set for release on Nov. 6, 2015. Filming began this month after producer Barbara Broccoli and director Sam Mendes unveiled the title, cast and new car, but little about the plot.

"I was so excited to tell this story but to explain why, I would have to tell you the plot and I can't do that," said Mendes at the presentation in England, a reminder of Sony's might in the movie world.
The Bond franchise is one of the most lucrative for Sony Pictures and the last instalment "Skyfall" brought in $1.1 billion (699.97 million pounds) worldwide, more than any other Bond film.

A Sony spokesman said news reports that the cyberattack forced the studio to stop production on films, including "SPECTRE," were wrong.

"Productions are still moving forward," Robert Lawson told Reuters.
Hackers launched an attack on the Sony Corp. entertainment arm on Nov. 24, disabling the computer network and stealing and leaking a trove of sensitive information in the most severe cyberattack on a company on U.S. soil. The identity of the hackers has yet to be determined.

(Reporting by Mary Milliken in Los Angeles and Mike Davidson in London; Editing by David Gregorio)
Reuters





PlayStation Plus gave you $1,349 in 'free' games this year

PlayStation Plus gave you $1,349 in 'free' games this year

It won't surprise you to hear that your PlayStation Plus subscription provides a healthy amount of gaming goodness for $50 per year, but have you ever crunched the numbers to see just how much you're getting? Push Square has. According to its calculations, Sony offered Plus subscribers a whopping $1,349 (£960 in the UK) in PS3, PS4 and PS Vita software during 2014. If you were diligent enough to add every title to your library, you got quite a bargain -- especially since many of the titles (such as Don't Starve and Dust: An Elysian Tail) would arguably be worthwhile as stand-alone purchases.
Of course, Sony didn't hand out those games purely out of generosity. It did some hard math, too. It's safe to say that few gamers claimed every single title, and you have to remain a Plus member to keep those offerings in your collection. They're not really freebies, then. Also, while Microsoft "only" gave out $585 in Xbox games throughout the year, it both has one less platform to support and lets you keep your games even if your Xbox Live Gold subscription lapses. Nonetheless, it's clear that Sony is willing to outspend Microsoft in giveaways if that means winning you over -- and until very recently, that strategy has usually paid off.Push Square

Jon Fingas
Engadget 





Viber grows its ecosystem with a new section for games

Viber grows its ecosystem with a new section for games


If you're going to try rivaling Skype, you may as well go big or go home. For Viber, over the past few months, this has meant taking its messaging and VoIP calling services to a different level, one that feels more like a mini social network with each passing update. And, without doubt, it helps to have resources at hand from Rakuten, its parent company. Accordingly, Viber has now announced that it is adding games to its platform, in a push to continue growing its ecosystem and give users features beyond calling and messaging.
At launch, Viber Games is going to have Candy Mania, Pop and Wild Luck Casino, which Viber created in tandem with developers Storm8 and Playtika. Along with the plans to expand its initial game lineup, Viber will bring the new feature to every country where its service is available -- for now, Viber Games is limited to Belarus, Israel, Malaysia and Singapore.

Edgar Alvarez
Engadget