Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

The Internet is Running Out of Space

On February, 2nd around 4 a.m., the Internet will run out of its current version of IP addresses. At least that’s what one Internet Service Provider is predicting based on a rate of about one million addresses every four hours. Hurricane Electric has launched Twitter and Facebook accounts that count down to what it has termed the “IPcalypse.” Every device that is connected to the Internet gets a unique code called an IP address (it looks like this). The current system, IPv4, only supports about 4 billion individual IPv4 addresses. As PC World’s Chris Head explained in a blog post yesterday, some of these addresses are reusable. The problem, however, is that their one-time use counterparts will eventually lead to the complete depletion of IP addresses.

Fortunately, some smart folks foresaw this problem long before we did and invented IPv6, a system that invokes both letters and digits to handle 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 addresses (shall we just call it “a zillion?”). Hurricane Electric’s doomsday campaign encourages other Internet service providers to transition to that system. Fortunately, the Internet Society‘s Wiki assures us that IPv4 and IPv6 can coexist during the transition despite being largely incompatible. Software and hardware developers are working on transition mechanisms, and most operating systems install support for IPv6 by default. Since many of us still have some canned food and bottled water stacked up in our basement from the Y2K era, we should be OK either way.


Lush’s UK Website Hacked, Credit Card Numbers Used

Hackers are cashing out after stealing credit card numbers from Lush’s UK website, which was shut down on Friday and replaced with a message that warns customers that their account information may have been compromised. According to the message, anyone who made online purchases on the handmade cosmetic company’s UK site between October 4th and January 20th is at risk of having their credit cards used fraudulently. Lush also left a message for the hacker: “If you are reading this, our web team would like to say that your talents are formidable. We would like to offer you a job – were it not for the fact that your morals are clearly not compatible with ours or our customers. ” We’re sure that the hackers are absolutely broken up about the scolding — especially since comments on the cosmetic company’s Facebook profile make it clear that they have started a shopping spree on Lush customers’ dime. Several customers detail purchases made using their stolen credit card information. Others express anger over the length of time that Lush waited after discovering that hackers had penetrated the site on Christmas Day.

Hilary Jones, ethical director at Lush, told the BBC that the company used the time between Christmas and Friday to investigate what the hacker’s intentions were (perhaps they were just looking for information on bath soaps?). When it became obvious that the hackers had started to make small test purchases using Lush customers’ credit cards, Lush shut down its site. Other companies like Trapster-maker Reach Unlimited and Gawker Media, on the other hand, notified customers immediately when their sites were compromised recently. A temporary Lush UK website, which prudently will only accept PayPal payments, is scheduled to be launched in a few days. But it might be a while before its customers muster enough forgiveness to shop there.


The Stylish 3-D Specs for Fashionable Film Fans

With 798,000 pairs of disposable plastic glasses doled out per day at the peak of Avatar’s popularity, the many 3-D films headed to the theater in 2011 may not be good news for the planet. Getting your own pair of reusable 3-D glasses will offer you an improved viewing experience and comfort, as well as help you look less like a dork, especially now that 3-D screens are coming out of the darkness of the movie theater. “3-D entertainment is breaking out of the movie multiplex. Once you’re with your mates watching 3-D sports events in bars and clubs, it’s just not acceptable to wear glasses that look like they have been handed out by some Stalinist health care service,” says Stuart Newman, development director of Moshka 3D. We’ve found seven pairs of stylin’, RealD-friendly, passive 3-D glasses suitable for movie-goers across all budgets. Have a look through our gallery and let us know which pair you might consider sporting at your next trip to the movies.


Hackers disguise phone as keyboard, use it to attack PCs via USB

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We’ve seen hackers use keyboards to deliver malicious code to computers, and we’ve seen smartphones used as remote controls for cars and TV — but we’ve never seen a smartphone disguised as a keyboard used to control a computer, until now. A couple folks at this year’s Black Hat DC conference have devised a clever bit of code that allows a rooted smartphone — connected to a PC through USB — to pose as a keyboard or mouse in order to attack and control the computer. The hack takes advantage of USB’s inability to authenticate connected devices coupled with operating systems’ inability to filter USB packets, which would enable users to thwart such an attack. While utilizing a digital costume to hack a computer is a nifty idea, it doesn’t pose much additional risk to users because the method still requires physical access to a USB port to work — and most of us would probably notice someone plugging a smartphone into our laptop while we’re using it.


MotionX-GPS Drive exports full-screen nav on Pioneer and JVC head units, has love only for iOS

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MotionX-GPS has been a solid choice in the iPhone and iPad navigation game for some time now, but only recently has started to stretch its legs a bit. Nowadays, The application  has compatibility with a series of JVC and Pioneer head units that enables full-screen 3D navigation. In this mode the mobile device basically turns in to a remote control with a simplified interface, with POI searching and of course media playback. Connectivity is not using the Terminal Mode standard, this works exclusively with the iPhone and iPad, and we’re told that sadly the company has no plans on supporting any other platforms going forward. So, if you’re not on iOS you’ll just have to find your own way to wherever you’re going.

Compatible devices include:

  • Pioneer AVH-P3300BT
  • Pioneer AVH-P4300DVD
  • Pioneer AVH-P6300BT
  • Pioneer SmartCradle
  • JVC KW-AVX640
  • JVC KW-AVX740
  • JVC KW-ADV794
  • JVC KW-AVX840
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Acer Aspire One 522 with AMD Ontario shows up on Amazon

We had known a few bits and pieces about Acer’s forthcoming AMD Fusion-powered netbook but you can always count on Amazon to dish out the spec and pricing details we’ve been waiting for. Unlike the Fusion HP Pavilion dm1 we just reviewed, which packs a higher-end AMD Zacate E-350 APU, the Aspire One 522 is powered by AMD’s netbook-class 1GHz C-50 Ontario processor. The 10.1-inch laptop still melds that CPU with Radeon HD 6250 graphics so it should be able to handle full HD video and some light gaming, and for $330 we’re certainly expecting it to trounce Atom netbooks in both price and graphics prowess. Other than that, the 2.8-pound Aspire One 522 seems to be a lot like the previous AMD Neo-powered Aspire One 521 — it looks to have a similar chassis and has 1GB of RAM, a 250GB hard drive, HDMI port, Windows 7 Starter, and a 4400mAh battery, which apparently provides six hours of battery life. No word on when the 522 will actually come out of the pre-order stage and start shipping, but our guess is that it shouldn’t be too long of a wait.


Nexus One gets tiny update to Android 2.2.2, fixes SMS routing issues

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Not to be outdone by its Samsung successor, the Nexus One’s getting a miniature over-the-air update as well, sending users on a mind-bending ride from Android 2.2.1 (version FRG83D) to the FRG83G build of Android 2.2.2. When they emerge thoroughly dazzled and confused on the other side, what will they find? We spoke to Google and it’s just a few bug fixes, but one of them’s rather important — this update will go down in the annals of history as the one that doesn’t inadvertently send humorous texts intended for your co-workers to your deathly serious boss. Oh, and if that sounds like something you’d like to have immediately, rather than waiting for a formal rollout, you can find the file you need at Google’s servers right now.


Shogun Bros. Chameleon X-1 review: the mouse that’s a gamepad

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Peanut butter and jelly. Gin and tonic. Peaches and cream. Some strange combinations make perfect sense paired, but how about the mouse and the PC gamepad? Those two items are what a Hong Kong peripheral manufacturer decided to combine, and the result was the Shogun Bros. Chameleon X-1 — a gaming mouse you can flip to find twelve buttons and two miniature analog sticks on the bottom. It works as a gamepad, sure enough, and functions as a one-handed multimedi

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a remote too. But is it any good? We’ve used it as our primary peripheral for over a week, and after the break, we’ll tell you. If the Chameleon X-1’s basic shape looks familiar, that’s probably because you ’ve seen it before — it’s a dead ringer for the right-handed mouse design Logitech introduced in 2002, and could have nearly sprung straight from an MX518 mold. They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, though, and we don’t fault them one bit for it here, as the Logitech ergonomics are fantastic and dare we say it, the Shogun Bros. design looks and feels even better in the hand. Silky soft-touch rubber covers the entire surface, excepting the chrome trim, leading to a firm, comfortable grip, which doesn’t attract dirt nearly as much as the glossy plastic buttons on earlier Logitech mice. What’s more, the ruby red version tested we tested has a bit of a pearlescent sheen — pretty attractive compared to the drab, or overly flashy machismo competition.

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Pull off the rear panel under that X-1 logo and more welcome surprises await: compartments for a singleAA battery and the wireless USB dongle. The mouse comes with an alkaline cell by default, but you can actually replace it with a rechargeable unit instead and even juice it up with a mini-USB port underneath the cover too — though we would have preferred the charge port at the front of the mouse, so you could play and charge simultaneously. Meanwhile, the 2.4GHz dongle is of the pleasantly tiny variety, and cleverly holds itself in place with a magnet — something we wish Shogun Bros. had done with the entire rear panel, to be frank, as every time we pried it off, it responded with a sickening crack.

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Unfortunately, Shogun Bros’ buttons and optical sensor leave much to be desired, both in terms of their responsiveness and placement – sure enough, the components feel very last-gen, and there are some awkward design decisions. The left and right mouse buttons click well enough, and the mouse wheel scrolls just fine, but all three of these feel a little shallow when pressed, compared to competing mice at this price. What’s worse, the other four buttons for mouse sensitivity and paging forwards and backwards have been relegated to the right pinky side, and in places where they’re not terribly easy to reach on the fly. This is obviously a concession for Shogun Bros’ gamepad mode, and we’ll get to that in a sec, but it’s good to note that they’re going to be pretty useless when mousing — and honestly they’re not very good buttons to begin with. The 1600dpi optical sensor isn’t bad, and three PTFE feet propel the rodent across surfaces just fine, but there’s no comparison to that aforementioned Logitech MX518 in terms of accuracy.

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Spin that tiny transparent wheel up front to lock the mouse buttons in place, flip ‘er on her back, and hold down the Start button for three seconds to turn the Chameleon into a PC gamepad — albeit a fairly uncomfortable one to hold. Interestingly, it’s not the recessed thumbsticks and buttons that are a problem here, as most of them are actually fairly accessible; it’s just that the Logitech ergonomics that made for a good mouse didn’t leave many places for the rest of our fingers to go. The best we could do was curve our index fingers around the top edge to reach the shoulder buttons, middle fingers around back, and let the other four digits dangle. Not bad for short bursts of gameplay, but it got tiring after a while.

We’ve already spoken to the shallow, cheap shoulder buttons back when they were on the pinky side of the mouse, but the rest of the Chameleon’s gamepad controls aren’t bad. The two analog nubs are oh-so-slightly convex for better grip, comfortable, and the four face buttons are middling but with a good amount of give. With these, we could throw our share of fireballs and shoryuken uppercuts in Street Fighter IV, and could toss out Super and Ultra Combos with ten minutes practice (not to mention plenty of experience doing the same on the Xbox 360 gamepad). We can’t say the same for the Chameleon’s D-pad, though, as it’s not a standard directional pad at all, just a series of four discrete buttons in that shape with no directional rockers to roll one’s thumbs across. We’ll also say that while the analog nubs were convenient for sweeping motions, they’re not terribly good for pinpoint control, as we found when painstakingly trying to level weapons at foes in shooting games. Unfortunately, getting to the level of game functionality we describe above is mildly annoying to begin with, because the Chameleon only supports the DirectInput controller scheme, not the newer XInput one, and has a non-standard button layout (X is Button 1 here, for instance) which can’t be reconfigured in hardware. What that means in plain English is that the X-1 won’t play nice with recent PC titles designed to use an Xbox 360 controller — though you can find a free XInput emulator if you know where to look — and you may have to change your key bindings in other games to comfortably play them as well.

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Though Shogun Bros. certainly plays up the gamepad angle, the wireless peripheral actually has a third function too — if you hold down the Select button for three seconds rather than Start, it becomes a fully-functional multimedia remote. You can pull up iTunes with a single press of the X button; change tracks, volume and mute; flip through documents with the shoulder keys a page or a line at a time; shut down or put the computer to sleep; or even — using one of the analog nubs and a pair of nearby buttons — emulate a slow-moving mouse pointer. While the latter was a little too lethargic to be much use on our 1080p screen, the remote came in handy when sick in bed, and the function works equally well with OS X. Shogun Bros’ Chameleon X-1 combo mouse may look like a hundred bucks, but looks can be deceiving. The X-1 is a few design decisions and some circuitry short of what even entry-level gaming mice and gamepads can achieve individually. While we could see the all-in-one functionality appealing to travelers who want to pack a single device, the battery life just isn’t there — our pack-in alkaline lasted barely a week before the mouse sensor started puttering out, a travesty in an era where mice can squeeze out years. But you know what? It works, and we’re as gung-ho about the idea of combining a mouse and gamepad as ever, because the X-1 honestly comes within a (hefty) stone’s throw of something we’d highly recommend. We have the technology to build one better, stronger… more accurate. Here’s hoping a peripheral manufacturer sees the same potential.


Audi Auto Union Type C e-tron study puts your pow-pow-Power Wheels to shame

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Top speed of 18mph, and a range of 15 miles? Charges in only two hours? No, this isn’t the future of transportation we’re talking about here, it’s a toy. A toy from Audi, of all places. The company has created this electric-powered and half-scale recreation of an Auto Union Type C, grand prix racer of the late 1930s, and done it in e-tron guise, applying the moniker from its grown-up line of EVs, like the luscious e-tron Spyder. This one’s intended for kids of all ages — so long as they’re shorter than 5′11” — and it will be on display at the International Toy Fair in Nuremberg. At this point there’s no mention of a plan to produce it nor a price if Audi did, but surely it’s one of those “if you have to ask” things — that body is entirely made of carbon fiber, and that stuff doesn’t come cheap.


Sony Ericsson MT15i / Vivaz 2 ensnared by Eldar Murtazin, given glowing preview

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The choice of Android Gingerbread handsets just grew by one, courtesy of the Sony Ericsson MT15i and Russia’s premier mobile reviewer, Eldar Murtazin, who has put it through his rigorous preview cycle. The typically curmudgeonly gent was pleasantly surprised by SE’s latest (and entirely unofficial) handset, claiming that the company “has developed and is about to launch truly cutting edge devices and … has almost nothing to fear in the hardware department as well.” He has praise for the above-average front-facing cam, the endurance offered by the 1500mAh battery, and the 854 x 480 res on the Reality Display — though he does warn that Sony’s Bravia Engine is only used when consuming multimedia and therefore has limited impact on improving output quality.

Internally, you’re looking at 512MB of RAM and a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM7630 with Adreno 205 graphics, all of which resulted in perfectly smooth, lag-free operation. In spite of its many pluses, Eldar describes the MT15i as a phone targeting the mid-range, which invites all sorts of delicious pricing speculation, though we’re not entirely sure we agree with his postulation that this handset will be called the Vivaz 2. The Xperia branding up front and the replacement of Symbian with Android would collectively suggest it’ll bear an altogether new name when it’s unveiled — which we’ll go ahead and presume is going to happen at MWC next month.



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