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!! .

Tuesday 29 July 2014

Facebook Forces Users Worldwide To Download Messenger For Mobile Chat

Facebook Forces Users Worldwide To Download Messenger For Mobile Chat

Josh Constine
TechCrunch












Over the next few days, Facebook will stop allowing messaging in its main iPhone and Android apps, and force all its users around the world to download its standalone Messenger app. Facebook first started forcing users in a few countries in Europe to use Messenger in April, but after seeing “positive results” in terms of engagement, its rolling out the plan to the everyone. Facebook tells me Messenger is about 20% faster, and not supporting multiple version of mobile chat will help it make both its main apps and Messenger better.
We’ll have more details shortly.

Monday 28 July 2014

Eid Mubarak:

Eid Mubarak:



What Is Eid?
Eid al-Fitr
 (Arabicعيد الفطر‎ ʻĪd al-FiṭrIPA: [ʕiːd al fitˤr], "festival of breaking of the fast"), also called Feast of Breaking the Fast, the Sugar FeastBayram (Bajram), the Sweet Festival[3] and the Lesser Eid, is an important religious holiday celebrated by Muslims worldwide that marks the end of Ramadan, the Islamic holy month of fasting (sawm). The religious Eid is a single day during which Muslims are not permitted to fast. The holiday celebrates the conclusion of the 29 or 30 days of dawn-to-sunset fasting during the entire month of Ramadan. The day of Eid, therefore, falls on the first day of the month of Shawwal. This is a day when Muslims around the world show a common goal of unity. The date for the start of any lunar Hijri month varies based on the observation of new moon by local religious authorities, so the exact day of celebration varies by locality. However, in most countries, it is generally celebrated on the same day as Saudi Arabia.



First everyone offers morning prayer.


 Muslims hug each other after morning prayers at a mosque on the first day of Eid al-Fitr celebrations. 


Muslims make sweets on the first day of Eid al-Fitr


Muslims give gifts to love one specially children and also help the poor and needy people.


We wish everyone a happy Eid ! ! !

Self-driving mini truck put to the test by US Marines

Self-driving mini truck put to the test by US Marines

Billy Steele
Engadget
Automakers aren't the only ones working to implement self-driving technology. The US Marine Corps has teamed up with TORC Robotics' (among others) to work on a Jeep-esque option outfitted with the company's Ground Unmanned Support Surrogate system -- or GUSS to save the mouthful. Here, GUSS is used to power a self-driving version of the Marine two-seater truck dubbed the Internally Transportable Vehicle (ITV). As the name suggests, the compact option can be carried on a helicopter or plane for deployment, and its beacon can either send it to a specific location or maneuver it via remote control. As you may recall, TORC's GUSS system was installed on a Polaris 6x6 ATV a few years back, so the tech has been through its share of tests. The goal is for the vehicle to be used to deliver supplies (up to 1,600 pounds or evacuate wounded soldiers by determining its own route or being controlled from afar at a speed of 8 MPH. An unmanned ITV reamains in the testing phase, but the team sees similar options in the field in the next five years.

Strike on a Gaza park killed 10 people Monday

Strike on a Gaza park killed 10 people Monday


Earlier, a strike on a Gaza park killed 10 people Monday, nine of them children The Gaza park attack happened as children played on a swing in the Shati refugee camp on the edge of Gaza City, said Ayman Sahabani, head of the emergency room at nearby Shifa Hospital. Sahabani said nine of the 10 killed at the park were children under the age of 12 and 46 were wounded.

Palestinians look at a pool of blood from victims of an explosion that killed 10 people, 9 of them children, at a park at Shati refugee camp.

The strike occurred a few minutes after an outpatient clinic at Gaza's main hospital, Shifa, was hit, leaving several people wounded. Camera crews were prevented from filming the area of impact at Shifa.

Eid Mubarak To Everyone Who is Celebrating It Today:

Eid Mubarak To Everyone Who is 

Celebrating It Today:




We ThinknStop rejoice with all  muslim readers on this occasion of this year’s Eid-el-Fitr celebrations .We congratulate all of the countrymen and women who have successfully undertaken the purifying Ramadan fast. May the Joy of Allah continue to be with you all. Allah bless you all . and Happy Eid to everyone who is celebrating it today.



Google is collecting medical data to paint a picture of perfect human health

Google is collecting medical data to paint a picture of perfect human health

Rich McCormick
The Verge 






















Google has started to collect medical data from volunteers as part of an ambitious project designed to build a database of records that show what a healthy human being should be. The project, developed by Google's experimental Google X wing and called Baseline Study, sees the company first harvesting anonymous genetic and molecular information from 175 people. According to The Wall Street Journal, Baseline Study will soon draw information from thousands more in a bid to create a picture of a person in perfect health.

Project Baseline will collect genetic and molecular data
The project is designed to pull together a huge amount of data that will not only allow medical professionals to detect and treat major health issues such as heart disease and cancer earlier, but will also enable them to detect trends and patterns in human health, making medicine more about the prevention of illness than the cure. It's helmed by Dr. Andrew Conrad, who joined Google X in March 2013 after helping develop cheap, high-volume HIV tests for blood plasma donations. The Wall Street Journal reports Conrad has built of a team of between 70 and 100 experts for the projects, from medical fields including physiology, biochemistry, optics, imaging, and molecular biology.

Project Baseline will use Google's computational power to identify "biomarkers" in the data that could help people stave off or avoid health issues. Medical science has traditionally discovered biomarkers for late stage diseases, but it's Google's hope that Project Baseline will also be able to crunch through data to detect tendencies in our bodies that can be addressed before they become life-threatening.

Dr. Conrad posits an example where the data allows researchers to pick out a biomarker that shows some people can break down fatty foods efficiently. Others, he suggests, may lack the marker, putting them at risk from heart disease. By identifying such trends before the disease has become too severe and treatment is necessary, Project Baseline's information could suggest people change their behavior before their first heart attack, or enable scientists to develop something to help at-risk people break down fatty foods.

The exam includes the collection of bodily fluids including urine and tears
Dr. Conrad warns against expecting the data to spit out an immediate cure for cancer, saying that advances will be made in "little increments." The project began this summer when a clinical testing firm that Conrad declined to name enrolled 175 people in an exam that demands the collection of bodily fluids including urine and tears. The unnamed clinic, plus other facilities at Duke and Stanford Universities, will run further exams in the future, collecting samples and removing information such as names and social security numbers from participants.

The rapidly decreasing cost of collecting genetic and molecular information has only recently made Project Baseline possible. Participants' genomes will now be sequenced — a process that once cost $100 million, now reduced to around $1,000 — along with their parents' genetic history. The Wall Street Journal says data on how they metabolize food, nutrients and drugs, how fast their hearts beat under stress and how chemical reactions change the behavior of their genes will also be recorded.

Participants' genomes will be sequenced
The project promises much, but by collecting so much information about participants, it also raises privacy concerns. What happens if a person's molecular makeup get into the hands of others? Already Google has clarified the medical data it receives will be anonymous by the time it gets its hands on it, and specified that such information would not be shared with insurance firms. Dr. Sam Gambhir, a Stanford doctor who has been working with Google for more than year, says that the issue of privacy has been discussed. "Google will not be allowed free rein to do whatever it wants with this data," he told The Wall Street Journal.

It's unclear how Project Baseline will tie in to Calico, the Google company tasked with extending human life, but it's obvious the company is serious about making humans live longer. But although Google X is actively entering the health care market, creating glucose-measuring contact lenses, the company's leaders have expressed their frustration at the industry's regulation and restrictions. Speaking earlier this month, Google co-founder Sergey Brin said health care in the US was "so heavily regulated that it's just a painful business to be in;" at May's Code conference, he expressed his exasperation over how jealously medical companies guard their data, suggesting that by applying machine learning to existing sets of data to pick out patterns, hundreds of thousands of lives could be saved every year.

Google and Apple have both announced health-tracking platforms this year, but Project Baseline looks to be more ambitious than both Apple's Healthkit and Google Fit. If Google's attempt to apply its number-crunching capabilities to our medical records pays off, the hundreds of thousands of lives Sergey Brin mentions could be spared. We might also get the dubious pleasure of meeting the world's healthiest person in the process.

Drones hit roadblock on path to become farming tool

Drones hit roadblock on path to become farming tool


DECATUR, Ill. — They came from across the country to learn more about the ways farmers can use drones to manage their sprawling fields.

They watched flight demonstrations. Listened to presentations by experts. And learned what it costs to operate a well-equipped machine.
But what they didn't hear — at least not officially — was anyone urging them to actually buy a drone to use for farming.

That's because the Federal Aviation Administration, just days before the gathering, delivered a blow to this young but promising farm tool.

In a fresh interpretation of rules governing model aircraft, the agency says you can fly a drone for fun, but can't use one to make money or business decisions.

"It's made a lot of us rethink how to approach it," said Bill Wiebold, a soybean specialist and new drone enthusiast at the University of Missouri Extension.

Wiebold, who spoke at the Precision Aerial Ag Show earlier this month, said he's been forced to adjust the language he uses when talking to farmers, who are increasingly interested in the technology. With the FAA's current stance, he's fearful of making suggestions that could get someone in trouble with regulators.
"There's so much promise. But it's just potential, now," he said.

When farmers look at drones, or unmanned aircraft systems, they increasingly see tools capable of giving them a better handle on the health of their crops and their land. They can help determine the size of plants, weed infestations, insect problems and drainage issues. But most importantly, they can do these things quicker and more efficiently than is possible on foot, said Stu Ellis, an organizer of the show, which drew some 1,400 attendees from 33 states and six countries.
"You could spend four to five hours walking an 80-acre soybean field," Ellis said, noting the same ground could be covered in half an hour or less by drone.

But even further, he sees a day when farmers use a small drone for scouting, and a larger model for delivering herbicides or pesticides to troubled areas.

The potential is certainly drawing the attention of farmers such as Matt Ganz, of Compton, Ill.
Ganz, who traveled to Decatur on behalf of his family's farming operation, was intrigued by what he saw, though he was hoping for stronger diagnostic tools.

"From the air, it doesn't tell you what's wrong," Ganz said. "You still have to get out and look."
And with price tags in the $5,000 to $10,000 range for a well-equipped drone, he said it's a bit pricey for a smaller operations such as theirs, with a couple thousand acres.
And then there's all the uncertainty over what the FAA is going to do.

"I think we're going to wait right now and see what happens," he said.
Until recently, the agency essentially ignored the drone realm, simply offering a few basic rules for model aircraft hobbyists to follow. But as drones have grown more sophisticated — and with companies such as Amazon pushing to use them for deliveries to customers — the agency has been forced to reconsider its position.
One of its most closely watched cases started in early 2012, when the FAA went after Raphael Pirker, who used a drone in 2011 to shoot aerial footage for a University of Virginia Medical Center promotion. The agency slapped Pirker with a $10,000 fine for unsafe use of an aircraft.

In March, a federal administrative judge ruled against the agency, saying it had no basis for the fine and that it shouldn't have applied aircraft rules to what is essentially a model aircraft.

The agency is appealing the decision, even as it works to come up with a new set of regulations for unmanned flights, as directed by Congress.

In the meantime, the FAA is working to assert control over model aircraft — or at least those not being used by hobbyists. In its June notice, the agency made it clear that any commercial use of drones must have FAA approval. The agency specifically mentioned farming — along with photography and delivery services — as the types of businesses subject to regulation.
There is hope in agriculture and drone circles that the agency will soon offer some sort of exemption for commercial farming, perhaps as soon as this winter.

But some worry over the future of an industry projected by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International to have an $82 billion economic impact from 2015-2025.
Among them is Brendan Schulman, the New York attorney representing Pirker in his fight against the FAA.
Schulman expects any relief from the FAA to come at a significant cost to commercial users and makers of unmanned aircraft systems. Farmers, for example, could be required to get a pilot's license. And manufacturers may be forced to gain costly certificates of air worthiness, similar to those required of passenger planes.

"I think we are going to see onerous rules and regulations," Schulman said. "I think it will destroy a large segment of this industry."
It's a situation that certainly has the attention of the companies that have sprung up in recent years and months.

Steve Petrotto is a product designer for Champaign-based Horizon Precision Systems, an eight-month-old subsidiary of Horizon Hobby, which has been around for nearly three decades, selling radio controlled cars, boats and planes around the world. Horizon Precision has developed a quad helicopter-style drone that can be programmed to fly itself around a farm, while collecting images.

That the fledgling unit is backed by a larger firm should be helpful during times of uncertainty, he said.
"If we need to sit back for a year or two for things to get worked out, we can do that," Petrotto said.
For now, companies like Gibson City, Ill.-based Crop Copter are left to figure out ways to fit into a landscape where the targeted customers can't really use what's being sold. At least not without the fear of running afoul of the FAA.

The two-year-old firm had its own tent at the expo, where it had a dozen or so drones on display, in prices ranging from $5,000 to $20,000.

Sales manager Tom King sees tremendous growth opportunities in the field, along with serious questions about whether there's any real future at all.
"What's going to hinder it is what the FAA decides to do. That could be the roadblock," King said. "At this point, we've formed a business plan to see what the FAA is going to do. From there, we'll make our decisions."

The next step in wearables? $100 vibrating smartshoes that can help the blind

The next step in wearables? $100 vibrating smartshoes that can help the blind

by Andy Weir
Neowin 

From headsets and smartwatches to fitness bands and smart-bras, technology companies are exploring all sorts of ways to make devices wearable, although not all of these will come to market. Some of these may, in some form, eventually replace the smartphones and tablets that we carry with us today, but some are designed to complement them, adding features and connectivity to open up new possibilities and, perhaps, to make life a bit easier.

That’s certainly the thinking behind the Lechal smartshoes developed by India’s Ducere Technologies. “The shoes are a natural extension of the human body,” said the company’s co-founder and CEO, Krispian Lawrence. “You will leave your house without your watch or wristband, but you will never leave your house without your shoes.”

As The Wall Street Journal reports, the Bluetooth-enabled shoes connect to an app on your phone that uses Google Maps. Once you’ve chosen where you want to go on the map, either the left or right shoe will vibrate as you walk, indicating where you need to turn.

As you might expect, the shoes also incorporate sensors for fitness applications, which can record how far you’ve traveled and indicate how many calories you’ve burned through on a walk, jog or run.
The name ‘Lechal’ means ‘take me along’ in Hindi, and was not chosen at random. The shoes were originally developed to help the blind to find their way; as Lawrence points out, a walking cane can help them to detect obstacles, but it cannot help them to navigate, especially in unfamiliar locales. “That’s where we come in and fill the void,” he said.

Ducere is not alone in exploring wearable technology solutions to help those with visual impairments. Earlier this month, we reported on Microsoft’s efforts to develop a 'smart headband' to help blind people to 'see' the world around them through audio instructions and alerts.

While the Microsoft system remains a research project for now, Ducere’s product will soon go on sale. Available either as complete shoes or removable insoles, they will be available to purchase in September and will be priced around $100-$150 USD. The company is also in the process of establishing relationships with not-for-profit organizations to sell the smartshoes to blind and visually impaired persons at a discounted rate.
The company says that its shoes will be compatible with Apple, Android and Windows devices. 

Report: The Next Nexus Phone Might Be a Gigantic Moto

Report: The Next Nexus Phone Might Be a Gigantic Moto:

Brian Barrett
Gizmodo 

Google and Motorola may have parted ways in January, but it if this latest Android Police rumor holds up, it appears to have been on good terms. The Nexus 6 may be a hefty Moto device, and while details are scant, it does have a delightful nickname: Shamu.

The only information contained in the Android Police report that hints at what kind of hardware we're potentially dealing with is that Shamu is a 5.9-inch device with a fingerprint sensor. That, and the phone is definitely distinct from the Moto X+1, the upcoming sequel to Motorola's excellent Moto X (pictured above).

But the Moto Shamu might be more interesting for what it represents than what it actually is or might be. Google has reportedly been toying with the idea of ditching the Nexus branding altogether in favor of Android Silver, a moniker that would bestow a range of devices with Google's blessing rather than just one phone per year.

That a Nexus 6 appears to at least be in consideration for release this fall is telling, as is the fact that it's apparently a giant hulking beast of a phone. In the absence of a new Nexus 10—which hasn't been refreshed since its 2012 launch—a phablet seems like as logical a choice as any to eat into iPad sales.

It seems unlikely that a new Nexus device of any stripe would appear before later this fall, which is far enough away that plans to change aplenty. But if you were worried about the Nexus program, it seems like you can rest a little bit easier. Not only is it still in play, it's got a whale of a prospect coming down the line.

Next-generation lithium cells will double your phone's battery life

Next-generation lithium cells will double your phone's battery life

 Jon Fingas
Engadget 


The lithium ion batteries in your mobile devices are inherently limited by the "ion" part of their name; they can safely use lithium only in the part of the cell that supplies ions, wasting a lot of potential energy.

 It's good news, then, that researchers at Stanford have developed a new lithium battery that could last for much, much longer. The technique allows for denser, more efficient lithium in the battery's anode (which discharges electrons) by using a nanoscopic carbon shield that keeps the unstable chemical in check -- uncontrolled, it can quickly shorten the device's lifespan.

The result is a power pack thatlasts considerably longer on charge, won't decay quickly and remains relatively safe. Stanford's Steven Chu (the former US Secretary of Energy) reckons that a cellphone equipped with these advanced lithium cells could have two to three times the battery life, and automakers could build cheap electric cars that still offer a healthy driving range. There's more engineering work required before you see any shipping products, but it's entirely possible that future portable gadgets will run for more than a day on a charge without resorting to giant battery packs.

Sunday 27 July 2014

This Website Makes Building Lego Mosaics as Easy as Uploading a Photo

This Website Makes Building Lego Mosaics as Easy as Uploading a Photo

Darren Orf
Gizmodo 

Lego gives you unrestricted artistic and architectural expression. That is what's so great about those tiny blocks of awesome, but not everyone has the time or patience to create a brick-filled masterpiece. One website hopes to change that.

Brick-A-Pic wants to help you create your own designs and photos with Lego. Once you've chosen a photo up to 5,000 pixels, the site's software algorithm will spit out a parts list and instructions. The team will then pick out your parts (for a price) and ship them to you so you can create and be amazed by your artistic genius. Right now, the website only creates Lego-like avatars, giving a glimpse at the piece-by-piece possibilities, but one successful round of crowdfunding can bring their art ambitions to life.

The project faces a few challenges, as the team explains on its Kickstarter page. For one, Lego only makes 16 colors, which would make for pretty abstract creations. By adding in Lego's retired color roster, that number jumps up to 45, making more accurate representations possible.

Also, the team needs to build on the software it already has by adding an image editor so customers can tweak photos to perfection. Oh, they also need to buy a crap ton of Lego—87,527 bricks to be exact—just to fulfill initial crowdfunding orders.

Sure, you could do all of this guesswork yourself through painstaking trial-and-error, or you can have someone else do the boring parts for you. Go ahead, and take the credit: I'm sure Brick-A-Pic can keep a secret.

UV-Powered Blood Test Could Make Universal Cancer Detection Possible

UV-Powered Blood Test Could Make Universal Cancer Detection Possible


Early detection is the best tool to fight cancer, but biopsies can be painful and inconclusive. New research shows a simple blood test can detect cancers by blasting white blood cells with UV and seeing how they respond. Painless, universal cancer detection could be a drop of blood away.

Researchers at England's University of Bradford tested patients with melanoma, colon cancer, and lung cancer, alongside patients with non-cancer illnesses and healthy control patients. They found that the DNA in cancer patients' white blood cells is easily damaged by long-wave Ultraviolet A waves. White blood cells from cancer-free patients were not nearly as susceptible, while cells from patients with pre-cancerous conditions showed an intermediate response. The team says normal illnesses like cold or flu shouldn't lead to false-positive test results.

Dr. Diana Anderson, who led the research, explained to the BBC why she went down this investigative path:
White blood cells are part of the body's natural defense system. We know that they are under stress when they are fighting cancer or other diseases, so I wondered whether anything measurable could be seen if we put them under further stress with UVA light.

Doctors and medical researchers have long sought an easy, non-invasive test that could detect cancer early, no matter where in the body it arises. Currently, a doctor's best way of diagnosing cancer is by biopsy, where a tissue sample is removed from the suspected cancerous area and tested in the lab.
Biopsies take time, and they're not always 100 percent accurate, but more importantly, a doctor will only perform a biopsy if there's reason to suspect cancer is present. Many cancers develop without symptoms over a long period of time, only becoming apparent once they've already taken hold. By the time a doctor has reason to perform a biopsy, cancer may have already spread.

So a simple test that can be performed as part of a routine exam, and can detect a wide variety of cancers, is the answer researchers have been searching for. This could be that test, but determining that will require much further testing: the initial findings, published this week in The FASEB Journal, only observed 208 patients, 94 of whom were healthy controls.

"These are early results completed on three different types of cancer and we accept that more research needs to be done," Dr. Anderson told the BBC. "But these results so far are remarkable.