TiZYCORP
Saturday, 14 December 2013
Two million Facebook, Gmail and Twitter passwords stolen by ‘hackers’
Google acquires robotics company Boston Dynamics
Google acquires robotics company Boston Dynamics
Google
has acquired Boston Dynamics making it the eighth robotics company that
the internet giant has bought in the last six months
Latest News:The company, based in Waltham, Mass, has gained an international reputation for machines that walk with an uncanny sense of balance and even. Products that the firm has demonstrated in recent years include BigDog, a motorized robot that can handle ice and snow, an animal-like robot called Cheetah that can run at 29 mile-per-hour and an eerily convincing humanoid known as PETMAN. Specific details about the price and terms of the deal are currently unknown, though Google has said that existing contracts — including a $10.8 million contract inked earlier this year with the US Defense Agency Research Projects Agency (DARPA) — would be honored. Despite the DARPA deal, Google says it doesn't plan to become a military contractor "on its own". Boston Dynamics began as a spinoff from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1992, and quickly started working on projects for the military. In a tweet, Google's Andy Rubin — who led the development of Android’s operating system — said the "future is looking awesome." It is the eighth robotics company that Google has acquired in the last half-year. Executives at the Internet giant are circumspect about what exactly they plan to do with their robot collection. Boston Dynamics has also designed robots that can climb walls and trees as well as other two- and four-legged walking robots, a neat match to Mr. Rubin’s notion that “computers are starting to sprout legs and move around in the environment.” The deal is also the clearest indication yet that Google is intent on building a new class of autonomous systems that might do anything from warehouse work to package delivery and even elder care. |
You can read all about the tech banned in Germany in the latest issue of T3 which is out now
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0Latest smartphone news
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Wednesday, 11 December 2013
HP Spectre 13t - Cool isn't it
HP's decision to take the Envy name down-market left the company with an
ironic problem; it no longer had a true, dedicated premium brand. To
solve this, HP has turned to a specific model of Envy and stolen its
name for use with its most expensive laptop. That model is the Spectre, a
laptop that wowed everyone at CES 2012 with its glass display lid and strikingly thin design.
What you receive for your money is no different from more expensive competitors. The processor is the same Core i5-4200U found in most other mid-range Ultrabooks, the hard drive is a 128GB solid state model, and four gigabytes of RAM come standard. Even a 1080p touchscreen is included at no extra charge.
When you add all of this up, HP’s Spectre 13t looks like iSource: http://www.digitaltrends.com
Follow us: @donkristizy01 on Twitter | TizyCorp on Facebookt could be one of the strongest Ultrabooks on the market, providing quality and speed similar to a Dell XPS 13 at a much lower price. But do the good times last, or does the Spectre try too hard to hide its problems?
The interior is laid out about as you’d expect, with a large rear display hinge holding a thin-bezel display to a tapered metal chassis. Plenty of space can be found along the palm rest and material quality both looks and feels good, though the interior does flex a bit if handled roughly. Gloss has been banished from every surface besides the display itself, which means the Spectre should be easy to keep clean.
Like so many Ultrabooks, this HP is thinner at the front then the rear, which limits space along its flanks for connectivity. This means only two USB ports are available, both 3.0, along with HDMI, DisplayPort, audio and a card reader. Ethernet is nowhere to be found and HP, unlike Asus, does not include an adapter with the laptop.
Backlighting is standard. There are no brightness settings besides on and off, but the “on” setting is the perfect tone for use in a dim or completely dark room, and light-leak is minimal. We were annoyed by the keyboard backlight and Wi-Fi hotkeys, however, because they’re permanently lit even when the backlight is off. While this is obviously meant to make them easy to find, it also can be a distraction when watching media in a darkened room.

The touchpad is as strange as the keyboard is conventional. Though only two and three-quarters of an inch deep, it’s about five and half inches wide, and its surface texture is not consistent. Instead, an inch on the left and right side of the touchpad has a rough feel which instantly distinguishes it from the smooth mid-section.
Why the unusual design? It has to do with Windows 8, which includes new multi-touch gestures that are meant to be controlled by swiping along the side of a touchpad’s surface. On most laptops, this is annoying because there’s no tactile difference to alert you when your finger enters the zone which will activate the new gestures, but Spectre solves that problem with its textured sides. This is a creative solution to a real problem, and it makes Windows a bit easier to use on the Spectre than on other laptops we’ve reviewed.
Our subjective impressions live up to the test results, and even exceed them, putting the Spectre on par with the Dell XPS 13 and MacBook Pro 13 with Retina. Most of the credit goes to the laptop’s deep blacks, which are among the best we’ve ever seen on a laptop. This creates a realistic perception of depth that brings the best out of HD video and games.
The speakers complement the display well, providing strong sound even with the volume turned up to eleven. Bass does suffer from a hollow, echoing quality that’s less than ideal, but a lack of serious distortion and a reasonably clear mid-range is enough to make the Spectre a standout in the Ultrabook category. Headphones are in-arguably an improvement, but the speakers will be good enough for many.
We were skeptical of these results, so we fuddled with both power management and CoolSense, a fan-control technology HP uses to keep the system cooler when it’s not being used on a desk or table. Neither changed the result. The problem, then, may be the design; Intel Core mobile processors automatically alter clock speed based on thermal headroom.

While compute performance proved unimpressive, the solid state drive was a different story, racking up a PCMark 8 score of 4,903. This makes it among the quickest we’ve tested, almost tying the Dell XPS 12 (which scored 4,904) and coming close to the Origin EON 13s and Lenovo ThinkPad T440s, which scored 4,923 and 4,945 respectively.
Intel HD 4600 integrated graphics is the GPU option with the HP, and it led the Spectre to a 3DMark Cloud Gate score of 3,564 and a Fire Strike result of 549. This basically ties the ThinkPad T440s, which scored 3,861 in Cloud Gate and only 463 in Fire Strike, but is below the best competitors. Dell’s XPS 12, for example, managed 4,281 in Cloud Gate and 611 in Fire Strike, and the Asus Vivobook V551L reached respective scores of 5,174 and 912. Gamers will want to look elsewhere if they need to play on the go.
Battery life is solid. The Peacekeeper web browsing benchmark needed six hour and six minutes to drain a full charge and endurance was extended to nine hours and thirty-eight minutes in our light-load Reader’s Test. The ThinkPad T440s, Dell XPS 12 and Apple MacBook Pro 13 with Retina last thirty to forty minutes longer in our web browsing test, but other options like the Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro and ASUS UX301L last at least an hour less.
Those who care about power consumption will be happy to know this Ultrabook sips rather than chugs wattage. We recorded idle draw of only 7 watts with the display at 100 percent, a figure that jumped to 28 watts at load. Both numbers are slightly below average for the category.
The aggressive fan has its work cut out for itself when at full load. We measured a maximum external temperature of 102.6 degrees Fahrenheit during our benchmark loop, which is hotter than most competitors by a margin of 5 to 10 degrees. At idle, however, the Ultrabook keeps its cool at 82.8 degrees.

McAfee Internet Security is the only trouble, but in our experience, McAfee’s trial is far less aggressive with its pop-ups than Norton. The security suite bothered us with just two notifications during the course of our testing.
By every other metric, however, this Ultrabook excels. The display is wonderful, the speakers are loud, the chassis is sold and reasonably attractive, the touchpad works well, and the battery provides plenty of juice.
And then there’s the price. The Spectre has an MSRP of $999, and if you shop around a bit you’ll often find it sold for a fair bit less than that. A Dell XPS 13 or Apple MacBook Pro with Retina are better overall, but are they so superior that they justify selling for hundreds more? The answer to that question is ultimately between you and your wallet, but the Spectre certainly makes an argument for itself.
This is the best laptop that HP has made since the 2011 version of the Envy 14, and is a strong contender against the best in the segment. If you’re looking at Apple, Dell or a high-end Asus Zenbook, but you can’t stomach their high prices, give this HP a chance. No other ultrabook provides a better value.
HP’s Spectre 13t isn’t an Envy, but it gives other Ultrabooks reason to be jealous.
The original Envy Spectre is no longer available, and its
replacement, the Spectre 13t, drops the Envy name entirely. Its base
MSRP of $999 makes this Ultrabook the most expensive consumer laptop HP
currently sells, which is surprising; most PC makers have at least one
model that’s starts between $1,200 and $1,500.What you receive for your money is no different from more expensive competitors. The processor is the same Core i5-4200U found in most other mid-range Ultrabooks, the hard drive is a 128GB solid state model, and four gigabytes of RAM come standard. Even a 1080p touchscreen is included at no extra charge.
When you add all of this up, HP’s Spectre 13t looks like iSource: http://www.digitaltrends.com
Follow us: @donkristizy01 on Twitter | TizyCorp on Facebookt could be one of the strongest Ultrabooks on the market, providing quality and speed similar to a Dell XPS 13 at a much lower price. But do the good times last, or does the Spectre try too hard to hide its problems?
Nothing new to look at
Though the Spectre 13t’s name isn’t preceded by Envy or Pavilion, the difference in branding doesn’t translate to a notable difference in design. This is an HP laptop from top to bottom, and that means metal construction with a brushed-aluminum look and a dark metallic display lid provide some extra class and maybe a little menace. Overall, the look is attractive, but not as striking as the glass used in the original Spectre.The interior is laid out about as you’d expect, with a large rear display hinge holding a thin-bezel display to a tapered metal chassis. Plenty of space can be found along the palm rest and material quality both looks and feels good, though the interior does flex a bit if handled roughly. Gloss has been banished from every surface besides the display itself, which means the Spectre should be easy to keep clean.
Like so many Ultrabooks, this HP is thinner at the front then the rear, which limits space along its flanks for connectivity. This means only two USB ports are available, both 3.0, along with HDMI, DisplayPort, audio and a card reader. Ethernet is nowhere to be found and HP, unlike Asus, does not include an adapter with the laptop.
My, that’s a big touchpad
The Spectre’s keyboard is typical for an Ultrabook. The layout is large enough, the key caps are island-style, and key feel is merely adequate. A lack of travel and mushy feedback places this keyboard below the best, like those found on the Lenovo T440s and Apple MacBook Pro 13 with Retina, but the Spectre is certainly usable.Backlighting is standard. There are no brightness settings besides on and off, but the “on” setting is the perfect tone for use in a dim or completely dark room, and light-leak is minimal. We were annoyed by the keyboard backlight and Wi-Fi hotkeys, however, because they’re permanently lit even when the backlight is off. While this is obviously meant to make them easy to find, it also can be a distraction when watching media in a darkened room.
The touchpad is as strange as the keyboard is conventional. Though only two and three-quarters of an inch deep, it’s about five and half inches wide, and its surface texture is not consistent. Instead, an inch on the left and right side of the touchpad has a rough feel which instantly distinguishes it from the smooth mid-section.
Why the unusual design? It has to do with Windows 8, which includes new multi-touch gestures that are meant to be controlled by swiping along the side of a touchpad’s surface. On most laptops, this is annoying because there’s no tactile difference to alert you when your finger enters the zone which will activate the new gestures, but Spectre solves that problem with its textured sides. This is a creative solution to a real problem, and it makes Windows a bit easier to use on the Spectre than on other laptops we’ve reviewed.
Excellent entertainment
While 1080p touchscreens are not unusual in Ultrabooks, grabbing one along with an SSD at a starting price of $999 is not terribly common. Fortunately, this doesn’t mean HP has been cheap, as the Spectre’s display performs as well as the best competitors. We recorded a contrast ratio of 650:1 at maximum brightness and the panel rendered 97 percent of the sRGB gamut, numbers that are virtually identical to the ThinkPad T440s, Samsung ATIV Book 8 and Dell XPS 13.Our subjective impressions live up to the test results, and even exceed them, putting the Spectre on par with the Dell XPS 13 and MacBook Pro 13 with Retina. Most of the credit goes to the laptop’s deep blacks, which are among the best we’ve ever seen on a laptop. This creates a realistic perception of depth that brings the best out of HD video and games.
The speakers complement the display well, providing strong sound even with the volume turned up to eleven. Bass does suffer from a hollow, echoing quality that’s less than ideal, but a lack of serious distortion and a reasonably clear mid-range is enough to make the Spectre a standout in the Ultrabook category. Headphones are in-arguably an improvement, but the speakers will be good enough for many.
Surprisingly Slow
The Core i5-4200U that comes standard with the Spectre 13t is a processor we’ve tested many times before and, in theory, should perform the same in every system. Reality, however, proves that theory wrong. We received a SiSoft Sandra Processor Benchmark score of 25.29 GOPS and a 7-Zip compression/decompression score of 4,604 MIPs. Both numbers are well behind the similarly equipped ThinkPad T440s, which managed respective scores of 38.69 GOPS and 7,277 MIPs.We were skeptical of these results, so we fuddled with both power management and CoolSense, a fan-control technology HP uses to keep the system cooler when it’s not being used on a desk or table. Neither changed the result. The problem, then, may be the design; Intel Core mobile processors automatically alter clock speed based on thermal headroom.
While compute performance proved unimpressive, the solid state drive was a different story, racking up a PCMark 8 score of 4,903. This makes it among the quickest we’ve tested, almost tying the Dell XPS 12 (which scored 4,904) and coming close to the Origin EON 13s and Lenovo ThinkPad T440s, which scored 4,923 and 4,945 respectively.
Intel HD 4600 integrated graphics is the GPU option with the HP, and it led the Spectre to a 3DMark Cloud Gate score of 3,564 and a Fire Strike result of 549. This basically ties the ThinkPad T440s, which scored 3,861 in Cloud Gate and only 463 in Fire Strike, but is below the best competitors. Dell’s XPS 12, for example, managed 4,281 in Cloud Gate and 611 in Fire Strike, and the Asus Vivobook V551L reached respective scores of 5,174 and 912. Gamers will want to look elsewhere if they need to play on the go.
Lightweight, long-lasting
The Spectre’s weight of 3.2 pounds is light for a 13-inch Ultrabook, and its 15mm profile is among the thinnest available. These factors combine to make a very portable package that be toted in a backpack or carried with equal ease. Even the power adapter is small, a trait travelers will surely appreciate.Battery life is solid. The Peacekeeper web browsing benchmark needed six hour and six minutes to drain a full charge and endurance was extended to nine hours and thirty-eight minutes in our light-load Reader’s Test. The ThinkPad T440s, Dell XPS 12 and Apple MacBook Pro 13 with Retina last thirty to forty minutes longer in our web browsing test, but other options like the Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro and ASUS UX301L last at least an hour less.
Those who care about power consumption will be happy to know this Ultrabook sips rather than chugs wattage. We recorded idle draw of only 7 watts with the display at 100 percent, a figure that jumped to 28 watts at load. Both numbers are slightly below average for the category.
A bit hot under the collar
Though quiet, the Spectre 13t’s cooling isn’t consistent. At idle, the system fan usually spins at a very low speed, making it almost silent, but at seemingly random times it surges to a slightly quicker setting, which brings noise to a noticeable 41.2 decibels. Heavy stress testing increases noise to 45 decibels, and while that’s not excessive, it is louder than the Lenovo ThinkPad T440s, Asus Zenbook UX301LA or MacBook Pro 13 with Retina.The aggressive fan has its work cut out for itself when at full load. We measured a maximum external temperature of 102.6 degrees Fahrenheit during our benchmark loop, which is hotter than most competitors by a margin of 5 to 10 degrees. At idle, however, the Ultrabook keeps its cool at 82.8 degrees.
A mixed bag of software
Our review unit arrived with an assortment of software which included a trial of Adobe Lightroom 5, a trial of Microsoft Office, an HP “Utility Center,” which provides access to recovery and support tools, and a few other assorted apps. Though this may sound like a lot, it’s actually less than many other laptops, as the Spectre lacks apps for Amazon, eBay, Hulu and other services often found pre-installed. None of the bundled apps put an icon on a desktop; they only appear in the Windows Start Screen.McAfee Internet Security is the only trouble, but in our experience, McAfee’s trial is far less aggressive with its pop-ups than Norton. The security suite bothered us with just two notifications during the course of our testing.
Conclusion
Performance is the Spectre 13t’s only problem. Though its specifications look fine on paper, they translated to below-average figures in both our compute and 3D benchmarks. Day-to-day use isn’t a problem, but you’ll notice the lack of grunt when editing video or playing games.By every other metric, however, this Ultrabook excels. The display is wonderful, the speakers are loud, the chassis is sold and reasonably attractive, the touchpad works well, and the battery provides plenty of juice.
And then there’s the price. The Spectre has an MSRP of $999, and if you shop around a bit you’ll often find it sold for a fair bit less than that. A Dell XPS 13 or Apple MacBook Pro with Retina are better overall, but are they so superior that they justify selling for hundreds more? The answer to that question is ultimately between you and your wallet, but the Spectre certainly makes an argument for itself.
This is the best laptop that HP has made since the 2011 version of the Envy 14, and is a strong contender against the best in the segment. If you’re looking at Apple, Dell or a high-end Asus Zenbook, but you can’t stomach their high prices, give this HP a chance. No other ultrabook provides a better value.
Highs:
- Thin and light
- Excellent 1080p display
- Loud, enjoyable speakers
- Great touchpad
- Long battery life
- Affordable
Lows:
- Compute performance is below average
- Only two USB ports and no Ethernet
Source: http://www.digitaltrends.com
Follow us: @donkristizy01 on Twitter | TizyCorp on Facebook
Follow us: @donkristizy01 on Twitter | TizyCorp on Facebook
Monday, 18 November 2013
Sony Playstation 4 hits 1million sales in less than 24hrs
Sony Corp. (6758) sold more than 1 million PlayStation 4 consoles in North America during the first 24 hours of sales, though the company said some buyers reported glitches including the device suddenly turning itself off.
The sales, which top initial results for the predecessor PlayStation 3 in 2006, come as Chief Executive Officer Kazuo Hirai tries to make the video-game console the centerpiece of a corporate turnaround strategy. Pressure has intensified on Hirai after the company last month surprised investors by reporting a second-quarter loss.
Brenden Hartnet, left, and Sydnee Mencuri, center, celebrate after purchasing the Sony PlayStation 4 console during its midnight launch event in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013. Photographer: Erin Lubin/Bloomberg
Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Mia Saini reports on the release of Sony's PlayStation 4 gaming console. She speaks on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)
Jordan Smith, left, and Kayla Brittingham, share a kiss after purchasing the Sony PlayStation 4 console during its midnight launch event in San Francisco, California, U.S. Photographer: Erin Lubin/Bloomberg
Sony is getting a head start on competing for the attention of game players with Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), which is releasing the Xbox One later this week. The Tokyo-based electronics maker has priced its console at $399, or $100 less than the Microsoft machine, as it seeks an edge in the $93 billion-a-year industry before the Christmas shopping season. Some players said the power-indicator light blinks before the device shuts down.
“No other consoles in the U.S. sold 1 million sets during the first day, so I think having some issue is not unusual,” Hideki Yasuda, an analyst at Ace Research Institute in Tokyo, said by phone. “In the long term, the major problem will be whether it can continue to provide interesting game software.”
‘Isolated Incidents’
Sony is aware some consumers reported issues with their PS4 systems and is monitoring for additional reports, Satoshi Fukuoka, a Tokyo-based spokesman, said in an e-mail today.
“We think these are isolated incidents and represent a very small percentage of total units shipped to consumers to date,” Fukuoka said, declining to elaborate. The company is still making and shipping the consoles, he said.
The company’s website said problems associated with the blinking light include no picture or sound coming from the television.
Sony shares rose 0.9 percent to 1,862 yen at the close in in Tokyo trading. The benchmark Topix index gained 0.2 percent.
Nintendo Co. (7974) also faced criticism last year after its new Wii U console required an immediate firmware update out of the box, and some consumers complained their machine was damaged during the process.
Sony will have adequate supplies of the PS4 through Christmas and stands by earlier projections for sales of 5 million units by March, Jack Tretton, president and chief executive officer of the company’s U.S. computer entertainment division, said Nov. 11. The device goes on sale in Europe and Latin America on Nov. 29.
Source>> Bloomberg
Thursday, 14 November 2013
Samsung and Intel introduces Open Source Operating System "TIZEN"
In the mobile
world, Android is one of the dominating forces. So it’s always
refreshing to see some new potential competition join the game which, as CNET reported, is just what happened this week at the Mobile World Congress. Pioneered by Samsung
and Intel, Tizen is an open operating system which could draw in some
major attention from mobile carriers because they are invited to play
around with it and customize it for themselves, something most other
OS’s don’t allow.
The reason carriers are so interested in having control over a phone’s operating system? It will allow them to maintain more of the interaction between its subscribers and the apps that they download. We can only imagine this would result in them being able to either put an end to, or take a cut of, the money that some of the bigger companies make via their apps. (Of the two, the latter makes more sense.)
Speaking of apps, though the Tizen Association won’t disclose numbers, it said that, by launch, there will be thousands of apps ready for users to download. No word yet on which apps will be available, but a good guess is that the top dogs – Facebook, Twitter, and Foursquare, for example – will likely be among them.
Samsung will release the first line of Tizen-operated phones, with Huawei models following suit shortly after. Europe-based Orange and Japan-based NTT Docomo are the first two carriers that have agreed to offer phones operating on Tizen, with the latter being the first to launch with Samsung models this summer. Orange says that by next year, they’ll introduce the phones to emerging markets, which could be a tough sell; the first Tizen phones will likely be priced in the $300 range, whereas phones in emerging markets typically fall in the $100 range.
We’re looking to see what the introduction of this operating system will do to the mobile market. No word yet whether it will make its way to the U.S. market; it will probably depend on how well it fares overseas.
Like us on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/tizycorp
The reason carriers are so interested in having control over a phone’s operating system? It will allow them to maintain more of the interaction between its subscribers and the apps that they download. We can only imagine this would result in them being able to either put an end to, or take a cut of, the money that some of the bigger companies make via their apps. (Of the two, the latter makes more sense.)
Speaking of apps, though the Tizen Association won’t disclose numbers, it said that, by launch, there will be thousands of apps ready for users to download. No word yet on which apps will be available, but a good guess is that the top dogs – Facebook, Twitter, and Foursquare, for example – will likely be among them.
Samsung will release the first line of Tizen-operated phones, with Huawei models following suit shortly after. Europe-based Orange and Japan-based NTT Docomo are the first two carriers that have agreed to offer phones operating on Tizen, with the latter being the first to launch with Samsung models this summer. Orange says that by next year, they’ll introduce the phones to emerging markets, which could be a tough sell; the first Tizen phones will likely be priced in the $300 range, whereas phones in emerging markets typically fall in the $100 range.
We’re looking to see what the introduction of this operating system will do to the mobile market. No word yet whether it will make its way to the U.S. market; it will probably depend on how well it fares overseas.
Like us on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/tizycorp
source>> Digital Trends
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