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!! .

Sunday 24 August 2014

USGS: 6.0 earthquake shakes California's Bay Area

USGS: 6.0 earthquake shakes California's Bay Area

ELLEN KNICKMEYER 
Associated Press 

NAPA, Calif. — A large earthquake rolled through California's northern Bay Area early Sunday, damaging some buildings, knocking out power to thousands and sending residents running out of their homes in the darkness.
The extent of the damage wasn't immediately clear. Two major injuries have been reported, and hospitals have been very busy with moderate injuries, Napa Division Fire Chief John Callanan said.
The 6.0 magnitude earthquake struck just before 3:30 a.m. about 10 miles northwest of American Canyon, which is about 6 miles southwest of Napa, in California wine country, Leslie Gordon of the U.S. Geological Survey said. It's the largest earthquake to shake the Bay Area since the 6.9 magnitude Loma Prieta quake in 1989, the USGS said.
"There's collapses, fires," said Napa Fire Capt. Doug Bridewell, standing in front of large pieces of masonry that broke loose from a turn of the century office building where a fire had just been extinguished. "That's the worst shaking I've ever been in."
Bridewell, who said he had to climb over fallen furniture in his own home to check on his family before reporting to duty, said he was starting to see more reports of injuries.
The shaking emptied cabinets in homes and store shelves, set off car alarms and had residents of neighboring Sonoma County running out of their houses. Officials say widespread power outages have been reported in the area.
"It was a rolling quake, said Oakland resident Rich Lieberman. "It started very much like a rolling sensation and just got progressively worse in terms of length. Not so much in terms of shaking, but it did shake. It felt like a side-to-side kind of rolling sensation. Nothing violent but extremely lengthy and extremely active."

The USGS says the depth of the earthquake was just less than seven miles, and numerous small aftershocks have occurred in the Napa wine country.

"A quake of that size in a populated area is of course widely felt throughout that region," said Randy Baldwin, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colorado. "The 6.0 is a sizeable quake for this area. It's a shallow quake. It's about 6 miles deep. We received hundreds of reports on our website from people that felt it in the surrounding area."

A member of Napa County dispatch tells the AP that there has been one report of structural damage, but additional details weren't immediately available.

Numerous emergency vehicles were on the roads in Napa and Sonoma counties.
California Highway Patrol Officer Daniel Hill told KTVU-TV that road damage appears confined to the Napa and Sonoma areas. He said there appears to be no damage to major bridges in the Bay Area.
"They are in pretty good shape," he said, noting that a couple of the roadways in the Napa-Sonoma area have some bumps and cracks.
In Napa, a water main break left at least one street flooded, and power outages left streetlights dark.

Ufone Introduces 3G Android Smartphone for Rs. 5,999

Ufone Introduces 3G Android Smartphone for Rs. 5,999


Ufone has decided to take up with Smartphone manufacturers by introducing one of the lowest priced 3G enabled Android Smartphone.
Ufone is calling it Ufone Smart U5, which is amazingly priced at just Rs. 5,999 and comes with a six months warranty.
Its not only about such a low price for an Android Phone, with Smart Smart U5 – bought from Ufone – customers will get 500MBs of data free of charge for three months. And that’s not all, with this phone, customers will be able to use Facebook, Whatsapp and twitter totally free for three months.
Yes, Smart U5 is network locked, we have confirmed, meaning that you can’t use this phone on any network other than Ufone.
Considering the specs (given below) and price, this Ufone branded smartphone is surly going to give a tough time to phone makers, especially those Chinese phones and brands like QMobile.
Ufone says that Smart U5 is aimed at improving the low-end users’ access to 3G network. Masses will now be able to purchase an affordable phone that lies with-in their range to enjoy the benefits of 3G internet on the go.
Company believes that Smart U5 will be first device for countless Ufone users for connecting to internet.

Ufone Smart U5 Specifications

Before we comment any further, let’s have a look at phone specs:
Processor: 1.2 GHz Quad Core ARM Cortex A7 + Adreno GPU 302 MHz
  • WCDMA & GSM Band:
    • GSM(850/900/1800/1900MHz)
    • WCDMA(900/ 2100MHz)
  • OS: Android 4.3 (Jelly Bean)
  • Size: 118.5 x 63 x 10.7 mm
  • Memory:
    • Integrated: ROM 4 GB
    • Integrated RAM: 512 MB
    • External: Expandable with Micro SD Up to 32 GB
  • Display
    • Screen Size: 4.0 inches WVGA IPS
    • Resolution: 480 x 800 Pixels
    • Touch panel: Capacitive Touch
  • Connectivity: GPRS, EDGE, HSPA, WiFi, Bluetooth, 3.5 mm Mic and Stereo Headphone slot
  • GPS: Yes
  • Camera:
    • Rear Camera: 5.0 MP Auto Focus (CMOS Sensor),
    • Video Recorder: 720p @ 30 fps
    • Front Camera: 0.3 MP
  • Battery: 1450 mAh

What’s in the Package

  • Ufone Smart U5
  • Charger + USB Cable
  • Ear phones
  • Screen Protector
  • Warranty Card

Free Data Bundles with Smart U5

  • 500MBs of data volume will be given each month for three months
  • Usage on Facebook, Whatsapp, Twitter  will be absolutely free for three months
  • Usage on any external link will be consumed from 500 MBs
  • Dial *706# to check the remaining internet bucket balance
  • This offer can be availed only on a Ufone SIM
  • This offer is available for Prepaid users only

Where to Buy Smart U5?

Ufone has made sure to make its Android Phone available in all the cities where its 3G network is available. Below are locations where you can get this phone:
  • Islamabad: Ufone Islamabad Head Office, 13-B, F-7 Markaz, Jinnah Super, Islamabad.
  • Rawalpindi:
    • Rawalpindi (Commercial  Center) 4-B, Sherbaz Business Center, Commercial Center, Satellite Town, Rawalpindi.
    • Rawalpindi (Saddar) Modern Radio Building, Bank Road, Saddar, Rawalpindi.
  • Peshawar:
    • I-E, Fakhar-e- Alam Road, Peshawar Cantt.
    • Peshawar University Road, Opposite Toyota Frontier Motors, Main University Road, Peshawar.
  • Gujranwala
    • Ufone Zonal Office, Main G.T. Road, Near Ghalla Mandi, Gujranwala.
  • Lahore:
    • Gulberg, 15, S, Gulberg II, Mini Market, Lahore
    • Davis Road, Ufone Customer Services Centre, 8-Amin Chambers, Davis Road, Lahore.
  • Sialkot: Plot # 2 Bungalow# 109, Aziz Shaheed Road, Saddar Bazar, Sialkot Cantt.
  • Multan: 32-Multan Arcade, Katchery Road, Multan
  • Karachi
    • PLOT # BC -11, Mehmood center Block 9, Clifton Karachi
    • Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Plot No. SB 33, Block 13-B, University Road, opposite Baitul Mukarram masjid Gulshan-e-Iqbal Karachi
    • Haidery, D-1, Block-D, Near Five Star Roundabout, North Nazimabad, Karachi
    • Saheed-e-Millat, Building No.2, Block No. III, Survey Sheet No.35/P-1, PCHS,Shaheed-e-Millat Road, Karachi.
  • Quetta: Ground Floor,Institute of Engineer Building,  Zarghoon Road, Quetta
  • Faisalabad: 27- Chenab Market, Susan Road, Madina Town, Faisalabad.

SpaceX rocket malfunctions and explodes during 'complex' test

SpaceX rocket malfunctions and explodes during 'complex' test

Chris Velazco
Engadget
No one ever said rebooting spaceflight was going to be easy. The SpaceX team might know that better than anyone, especially on a night like this: one of the company's experimental F9R rocketsmalfunctioned in a test flight over McGregor, Texas and automatically aborted by self-destructing. Thankfully, the system kicked in before the rocket could veer off course, so there were no injuries (or near-injuries, as SpaceX was quick to point out) and no damage was inflicted. At time of writing there's no word on just what sort of anomaly prompted the F9R to terminate its flight, but SpaceX plans to dig into the flight data to figure out just what went south.
Let's back up for a second here, though -- what is the F9R? You may have heard of SpaceX's Grasshopper, an experimental rocket that can blast off and land on its own retractable feet again. The F9R (and its three engines) was the original Grasshopper's successor, and has been in active duty since the Grasshopper was retired last year. While the loss of the rocket must've hit the SpaceX team hard, it shouldn't be too long before they resume testing: a second F9R rocket is currently being built.

China targets own operating system to take on likes of Microsoft, Google

China targets own operating system to take on likes of Microsoft, Google

Reuters

SHANGHAI - China could have a new homegrown operating system by October to take on imported rivals such as Microsoft Corp, Google Inc and Apple Inc, Xinhua news agency said on Sunday.
Computer technology became an area of tension between China and the United States after a number of run-ins over cyber security. China is now looking to help its domestic industry catch up with imported systems such as Microsoft's Windows and Google's mobile operating system Android.
The operating system would first appear on desktop devices and later extend to smartphone and other mobile devices, Xinhua said, citing Ni Guangnan who heads an official OS development alliance established in March.

Ni's comments were originally reported by the People's Post and Telecommunications News, an official trade paper run by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT).
"We hope to launch a Chinese-made desktop operating system by October supporting app stores," Ni told the trade paper. Some Chinese OS already existed, but there was a large gap between China's technology and that of developed countries, he added.

He said he hoped domestically built software would be able to replace desktop operating systems within one to two years and mobile operating systems within three to five years.
In May, China banned government use of Windows 8, Microsoft's latest operating system, a blow to the U.S. technology firm's business which raised fears China was moving to protect domestic firms. Microsoft is also under investigation for anti-trust violations.

In March last year, China said that Google had too much control over China's smartphone industry via its Android mobile operating system and has discriminated against some local firms.
Mutual suspicions between China and the United States over hacking have escalated over the past year following revelations by Edward Snowden that U.S. intelligence planted "backdoor" surveillance tools on U.S.-made hardware.

The U.S. Justice Department, meanwhile, indicted five Chinese military officers in May on counts of extensive industrial espionage.

Ni said the ban on Windows 8 was a big opportunity for the Chinese sector to push forward its own systems, but that the industry needed further development and investment.

"Creating an environment that allows us to contend with Google, Apple and Microsoft - that is the key to success," he added.

Israeli airstrike levels 7-story building in Gaza

Israeli airstrike levels 7-story building in Gaza


Israeli airstrikes leveled a seven-floor office building and severely damaged a two-story shopping center in the Gaza Strip early Sunday, signaling a new escalation in seven weeks of fighting with Hamas.
The strikes in the southern town of Rafah came just hours after Israel bombed an apartment tower in Gaza City, collapsing the 12-story building with 44 apartments.

Saturday 23 August 2014

Google's modular phone gets cheaper thanks to a new processor

Google's modular phone gets cheaper thanks to a new processor

Jon Fingas
Engadget 

One of the biggest challenges behind Google's modular Project Ara phone platform has been getting processors to play nicely with the technology. How do you let someone swap out the very heart of their device as easily as they would a memory card?
By creating a CPU for that very purpose, that's how.
Rockchip has started work on a system-on-chip with modular tech built-in; your phone won't need any bridge chips or other special tricks to let you switch processors on a whim.
You won't see the hardware in action until a Rockchip-based Ara prototype arrives in early 2015. However, the plans show that Google's vision of a completely upgradable handset is both feasible and potentially inexpensive.
Don't be surprised if some of the earliest Ara phones (or rather, their parts) easily fit within your budget.

Wearable device shipments have soared in the past year

Wearable device shipments have soared in the past year

Jon Fingas
Engadget

In case you had any doubts that wearable devices were catching on, Canalys just delivered some tangible proof. The analyst group estimates that the tech industry shipped roughly 4.5 million smartwatches and fitness trackers in the first half of 2014, or nearly 700 percent more than it managed a year earlier. Not surprisingly, most of the watches were Samsung devices -- the Korean company's rapid-fire Gear watch releases made it almost ubiquitous. Pebble and Sony also did well in this fledgling space. Fitbit and Jawbone, meanwhile, moved many of the simpler wristbands.
Having said this, wearables are still far from hitting the mainstream. Mobile device makers shipped over 300 million smartphones in the second quarter of the year alone; smart wristwear ultimately represents a drop in the bucket. And that's also assuming that it's selling well.
Samsung's quick reinvention of the Gear line was an admission that it didn't have many fans early on. Shipments may be up across the board, but it's possible that some of the companies involved are struggling. All the same, interest isn't likely to cool down any time soon -- between the arrival of Android Wear and rumors of watches from Apple and Microsoft, the category may just be getting started.

Sony is shutting down PlayStation Home in Japan

Sony is shutting down PlayStation Home in Japan

Sean Buckley
Engadget

Can you remember the last time you logged into PlayStation Home? Neither can anybody in Japan, apparently. According to a statement released on the Japanese website, the 3D social space will permanently close in March of next year. Sony didn't give a reason for the shuttering, but it's not too much of a surprise, the online hub -- an avatar-filled playground often compared to Second Life was never very popular, and seemingly fell short of the company's expectations. Sony's western divisions haven't announced if a similar shut-down is in store for Home's international versions. Oh, you say you do remember the last time you logged into Home? Well, take comfort in the knowledge that Sony is shutting down the service with a large-scale closing event.

Stars The Most Epic Hair Whips of All Time

Stars The Most Epic Hair Whips of All Time

If you want to be a star, then you must perfect the art of hair whipping. Whether they're on stage or in front of the camera, our favorite female singers know how to work their manes with some serious hairography.
Case in point: the girls of Little Mix always bring out their most incredible dance moves and hair flips while performing, and the live-action photos from their high-energy routines are so impressive! Similarly, Taylor Swift enhances her powerful ballads with ferocious hair whips.
Jade Thirlwall of Little Mix
Credit: Getty

Taylor Swift
Credit: Getty
Ariana Grande
Credit: Getty

Rita Ora
Credit: Instagram
Bella Thorne
Credit: Instagram
Demi Lovato
Credit: Getty

Victoria Justice
Credit: Getty


Computers reshaping global job market, for better and worse: Paper

Computers reshaping global job market, for better and worse: Paper

Reuters 

Automation and increasingly sophisticated computers have boosted demand for both highly educated and low-skilled workers around the globe, while eroding demand for middle-skilled jobs, according to research to be presented to global central bankers on Friday.
But only the highly educated workers are benefiting through higher wages, wrote MIT professor David Autor in the paper prepared for a central banking conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Middle- and lower-skilled workers are seeing their wages decline.

That is in part because as middle-skilled jobs dry up, those workers are more likely to seek lower-skilled jobs, boosting the pool of available labor and putting downward pressure on wages.
"(W)hile computerization has strongly contributed to employment polarization, we would not generally expect these employment changes to culminate in wage polarization except in tight labor markets," Autor wrote.
Any long-term strategy to take advantage of advances in computers should rely heavily on investments in human capital to produce "skills that are complemented rather than substituted by technology," he said.
Recounting the long history of laborers vilifying technological advances, Autor argues that most such narratives underestimate the fact that computers often complement rather than replace the jobs of higher-skilled workers.

People with skills that are easily replaced by machines, such as 19th-century textile workers, do lose their jobs.
In recent years computer engineers have pushed computers farther into territory formerly considered to be human-only, like driving a car.

Still, computer-driven job polarization has a natural limit, Autor argues. For some jobs, such as plumbers or medical technicians who take blood samples, routine tasks are too intertwined with those requiring interpersonal and other human skills to be easily replaced.
"I expect that a significant stratum of middle skill, non-college jobs combining specific vocational skills with foundational middle skills - literacy, numeracy, adaptability, problem-solving and common sense - will persist in coming decades," Autor wrote.

Autor, who has been studying technology and its impact on jobs since before the dot-com bubble burst, notes that some economists have pointed to the weak U.S. labor market since the 2000s as evidence of the adverse impact of computerization.

Such modern-day Luddites are mistaken, he suggested. U.S. investment in computers, which had been increasing strongly, dropped just as labor demand also fell, exactly the opposite of what ought to happen if technology is replacing labor.

More likely, he said, globalization is to blame, hurting demand for domestic labor and, like technology, helping to reshape the labor landscape. While in the long run both globalization and technology should in theory benefit the economy, he wrote, their effects are "frequently slow, costly, and disruptive."

This Chinese movie wants viewers to live-stream their comments—on the screen

This Chinese movie wants viewers to live-stream their comments—on the screen

Jeanne Kim
Quartz

If you thought people tweeting while watching a movie are a little much, get a load of this: a Chinese movie is allowing—make that encouraging—viewers to live-text their comments, and projecting them on a screen next to the main show.
Released in the city of Hangzhou late July, the animated martial-arts flick ‘Legend of Qin’ requires cinemas to add a “bullet screen” alongside the main screen, on which viewers comments are streamed. The film has had 500 other viewings with live commenting.
The response: While some viewers were delighted by the feature, and seemed to enjoy reading the thoughts of fellow viewers, others complained the screened comments dizzying and a huge distraction.
In a poll of 400 viewers conducted by Sina Weibo, the Chinese equivalent of Twitter, 27% said the live-commenting feature was exciting, but over a half of respondents found the comments annoying. (It can’t have helped that some texters projected what amounts to personal ads, seeking a potential spouse.)
But bullet screens may be here to stay: they are being installed in theaters across cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Hangzhou, as filmmakers seek to generate more audience participation.

“We are, in fact, putting the director and viewer on equal terms, and I think many of the opinions of the viewers are very helpful for film makers,” Shen Leping, the director of ‘Legend of Qin,’ told CCTV News. “For example, we can conduct live polls and even alter the development of the plot based on responses we receive from audiences.”

Researchers hack into Gmail app

Researchers hack into Gmail app

BBC News 

US researchers say they have been able to hack into Gmail accounts with a 92% success rate by exploiting a weakness in smartphone memory.

The researchers were able to gain access to a number of apps, including Gmail, by disguising malicious software as another downloaded app.

Gmail was among the easiest to access from the popular apps tested.
The hack was tested on an Android phone, but the researchers believe it could work on other operating systems.

A Google spokeswoman said the technology giant welcomed the research. "Third-party research is one of the ways Android is made stronger and more secure," she said.
The research is being presented later at a cybersecurity conference in San Diego by academics from the universities of Michigan and California.
Other apps hacked included H&R Block, Newegg, WebMD, Chase Bank, Hotels.com and Amazon.

Passwords stolen
The Amazon app was the hardest to access, with a 48% success rate.
The hack involves accessing the shared memory of a user's smartphone using malicious software disguised as an apparently harmless app, such as wallpaper.

This shared memory is used by all apps, and by analysing its use the researchers were able to tell when a user was logging into apps such as Gmail, giving them the opportunity to steal login details and passwords.
"The assumption has always been that these apps can't interfere with each other easily," said Zhiyun Qian, an assistant professor at the University of California and one of the researchers involved in the study.
"We show that assumption is not correct, and one app can in fact significantly impact another and result in harmful consequences for the user."

In another example the researchers were able to take advantage of a feature of the Chase Bank app which allows customers to pay in cheques by taking pictures of them with their device's camera.
The researchers were able to access the camera to steal the pictures as they were being taken, giving them access to personal information including signatures and bank details.

The tests were carried out on Android phones, but the researchers believe the attacks could be successful on other operating systems, including Windows and the iOS system developed by Apple.