Intel teams up with ESPN to build connected snowboards

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Intel has announced that it’s doing deals with two companies that’ll put its tiny computer module, Curie, in plenty of action sports gear. The first is with ESPN, the network that’s covering the 2016 Winter X Games later this month. The firm is installing Curie modules into the snowboards used for the Men’s Slopestyle and Big Air competitions. The hardware will transmit real-time data about athlete performance, such as jump height, in-air rotation and the force that they hit the ground with. These stats will then be pushed to the TV studio for commentators to bring up when discussing each participant’s chances.

In addition, the firm has shaken hands with Red Bull Media House to help put Curie technology into various other sports-related gear. We’ve already seen how Intel has crammed a Curie module into a BMX bike to help riders improve, and given how many activities Red Bull sponsors, we’re sure that plenty more could work.

You might be wondering why Intel has suddenly become obsessed with action sports and BMX stunts, which isn’t evidence of a mid-life crisis. The firm is facing up to the issue that its core business as a chipmaker for PCs and laptops is becoming increasingly irrelevant. As sales of such devices trend downwards, Intel’s woes begin to increase, and its last financials saw a 6.3 percent drop in profit. As such, it needs to get its products adopted by other industries, such as cash-rich action sports fans.

HaLow, is it me you’re hacking for? Wi-Fi standard for IoT emitted

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802.11ah could be too expensive and too late

The Wi-Fi Alliance has formally unveiled the 802.11ah Wi-Fi standard, dubbed HaLow, which has been designed for low-power, high-range uses by connected Internet of Things devices.…

Toyota to Build Data Center for Connected-Car Data

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AMD’s new graphics core is built for laptop gaming

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For all the talk of fast graphics in thin laptops, the technology isn’t quite there yet. You typically have to choose between a bulky gaming machine and a thin system with pokey low-end video. AMD thinks it might have the cure, however. It just offered a peek at a new graphics architecture, Polaris, that promises gaming-grade performance without the power draw. In Star Wars Battlefront, one of AMD’s future chipsets is 61 percent more energy-efficient than a GeForce GTX 950 with similar performance — in the mobile world, that could make the difference between a slim portable and a big desktop replacement. Even if AMD is cherry-picking the results, this could still lead to speedier visual in laptops and any other small PCs where heat and power are problems.

The main trick is a 14-nanometer FinFET design that lets AMD stuff more transistors into the same space. There are numerous extra upgrades under the hood, though, including improved memory use. Also, AMD is matching NVIDIA with support for newer tech like HDMI 2.0a (for HDR video) and 4K-friendly HEVC video.

The first Polaris-based graphics are due in the second quarter of the year, so you won’t have too long to wait. However, AMD is in a race against time here. NVIDIA is due to release Pascal, its own extra-efficient graphics architecture, around the same period. If Polaris isn’t a bigger technological leap, AMD is right back where it started… and you’ll still be more likely to find an NVIDIA graphics chip in your next PC.

Via: Eurogamer

Source: AMD

Another year!

So with another year almost over and before this years last sunset, before you start enjoying the next year & before the networks gets busy, I wish this coming year would be fantastic for you. HAPPY NEW YEAR…

Gracenote automatically tunes your car stereo for each song

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Gracenote has developed several ways to leverage its audio tech in the past few years, and the one unveiled today is all about making sure your music sounds its best while you’re on the road. Dynamic EQ is built on its ability to identify the music being played, and then adjust your car’s audio settings for that particular song. Pretty much any audio system out now has simple genre presets for the equalizer, but for drivers, switching between them as you listen to radio, streaming or CDs doesn’t usually make sense.

According to General Manager of Gracenote Automotive Brian Hamilton, it’s the first time anyone has used track-level metadata this way. The company’s database has profiles for "tens of millions of songs" so no matter how obscure your taste, it’s probably in there. There’s no mention of what cars will get this upgrade first, but Gracenote’s system is already in headunits from Tesla, Ford, GM and more, so it may be an option in your car very soon.

Source: Gracenote

A Free Tool for Recovering Lost Product Keys for Windows 10, Windows Server 2012 R2

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toolbox-heroimg

Need to recover a product key quickly? Here’s a free tool to help.

The post A Free Tool for Recovering Lost Product Keys for Windows 10, Windows Server 2012 R2 appeared first on Petri.

Classic Duke Nukem games will be removed from sale December 31

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duke_nukem_01
If you forget about the last Duke Nukem (Forever) game to be released, then the series is held up as a part of history much like id Software’s titles are. And we’re still […]

Riddle of cash-for-malware offer in new Raspberry Pi computers

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We offer u an ‘exe.’ file

The Raspberry Pi Foundation was offered cash to smuggle malware onto its bargain-basement credit-card-size computers, we’re told.…

Researchers show off a working light-based processor

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The year has been chock-full of scientific breakthroughs, but the University of Colorado is determined to finish 2015 with a bang. Its researchers have created what they say is the first full-fledged processor to transmit data using light instead of electricity. The design isn’t entirely photonic, but its 850 optical input/output elements give it the kind of bandwidth that make electric-only chips look downright modest — we’re talking 300Gbps per square millimeter, or 10 to 50 times what you normally see. The key was finding a way to reuse existing conventional processes to put optics in places where regular circuitry would go.

The design isn’t a powerhouse with a tiny size (3mm by 6mm, or 0.1in by 0.2in) and just two cores. However, it shows the potential for dramatic improvements in computing power without having to completely reinvent the wheel. You could have networking gear that copes with massive amounts of data, for example. And there’s plenty of room for optimization, too, so the possibilities for this technology remain wide open.

[Image credit: Glenn Asakawa, University of Colorado]

Via: Phys.org

Source: University of Colorado, Nature

Install Nano Server in Microsoft Azure

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Deploy Windows Server 2016 TP4 Nano in an Azure VM (Image Credit: Russell Smith)

Russell Smith walks us through some quick steps on how to install Nano Server in Microsoft Azure with the Windows Server 2016 Technical Preview 4.

The post Install Nano Server in Microsoft Azure appeared first on Petri.

The Moment A World Cup Skier Was Nearly Hit By A Drone Falling Out Of The Sky

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skiiiiiiiii Drone registration may seem like unnecessary hassle for some, but an incident at the alpine skiing world cup this week illustrated why the FAA is pushing for regulation. Read More

OpenStack Community Newsletter (Dec. 12-22)

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Running an OpenStack cloud? Come to the first European Mid-Cycle Operators meetup

The meetup, held February 15 – 16, 2016 in Manchester, is a chance for operators to share best practices and give feedback.

The keys to OpenStack startup success: Platform9 Systems

Platform9 Systems opens its startup playbook, highlighting ecosystem challenges and tips for fellow startups including how they differentiate their product from competitors with simplicity, choice and interoperability.

OpenStack operators connecting together

To make meetups more productive and useful, Edgar Magana at Workday proposes smaller, operator-focused gatherings.

The Road to Austin

Community feedback

OpenStack is always interested in feedback and community contributions, if you would like to see a new section in the OpenStack Weekly Community Newsletter or have ideas on how to present content please get in touch: [email protected].

CFP Deadlines

OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest December 12-18

Tips ‘n Tricks 

Upcoming Events 

Other News

Amazon AWS IoT Cloud Service Now Generally Available

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Blaze Laser Projection Bike Light Comes To All 11,500 Santander Bikes In London

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gallery-slider_1 Blaze has come a long way. After participating in our Hardware Battlefield competition two years ago, the company signed a deal with a big client, London’s bike-sharing program. Read More

LG wants to make using smart TVs easier with webOS 3.0

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LG debuted its webOS-powered HDTVs back in 2014, bringing HP’s mobile technology to the living room and making for a smart TV that mostly succeeded in being simpler and faster. Last year the second edition focused on speed, and for 2016 — in world where dongles, set-top boxes and videogame systems are all competing to manage your streaming TV apps — LG says it’s working on usability and control. There are three new "Magic" features this year, with Mobile Connection that lets users toss apps up from their phone to the big screen, a new remote that’s supposed to control more set-top boxes, and Zoom that can blow up parts of the picture without ruining the quality.

LG has also partnered with a new company called Xumo for a feature called Channel Plus, that lines up video from the internet in a guide that’s as easy to search as live channels. The IoTV app is supposed to make it easy to control compatible LG boxes or other compatible hardware, there’s Multi-view to watch more than one channel or even input at once, and a music player that can keep working while the screen is off. The first two rounds with webOS have left us impressed, and we’ll find out at CES in a couple of weeks if this edition keeps the trend going.

Source: LG

25 years ago: Sir Tim Berners-Lee builds world’s first website

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Downhill from there

There are just under a billion web domains registered in the world today, and over four billion webpages, by some estimates.…

OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest December 12-18

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Success Bot Says

  • jroll: Ironic is using the devstack plugin.
  • Tell us yours via IRC with a message “#success [insert success]”.

Cross-Project Specs

  • Approved by the Technical Committee:
    • Chronicles Of A DLM [1].
      • OpenStack will adopt Tooz as an abstract layer to distributed lock managements solutions. This will allow projects to provide all the options Tooz provides for their distributed lock management needs.
      • Reference implementation is currently ZooKeeper for testing.
  • Close to approval:
    • Backwards compatibility for libraries and clients [2].
    • Deprecate individual CLIs in favor of OSC [3].

New Things In Gerrit 2.11 To Enjoy

  • New search strings:
    • Patch size
      • delta:<=10
      • show patches with <= 10 lines of change
    • Scoring by group
      • label:Code-Review<=-1,nova-core
      • filter by -1 from nova-core team
    • message:/comment:
      • Queries work with more than one word
  • UI Features:
    • is:amergable field
    • Column 3
      • Related changes: all changes in linear patch series.
      • Conflicts with: all open patches in the system that will conflict with this one.
      • Same topic: Grouping reviews.
    • Inline edit an entire patch.
      • Click the ‘edit’ button above the list of files. Once you’re done click ‘save’ and eventually ‘Publish Edit’ on the main page.
      • “Follow up” button: builds an entire follow up patch that you can inline edit to fix something like typos.

Stable Meeting Time Proposal

DocImpact vs. Reno

  • Sean notes a new job on all Nova changes that is processing commit messages [5].
  • UpgradeImpact got dropped for having an upgrade comment in Reno.
  • Instead of DocImpact, SecurityImpact in commit messages, new special sections using Reno will be created that trigger creating bugs and sending out emails like today. The hope is for better quality in these notifications.

Nominations open for the N and O names of OpenStack

  • For the N release, where the geographic region is “Texas Hill Country” [6]
  • For the O release, where the geographic region is “Catalonia” [7]
  • OpenStack foundation individual members should have received a vote link via email. [8]
  • Polls end of Dec 22nd UTC.

Afero Is An IoT Dev Platform Play Built By Danger Co-Founder Joe Britt

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Afero Remember Danger? The mobile maker Microsoft acquired for $500 million back in 2008 in the hopes of firing up its mobile fortunes? Things didn’t pan out quite so well for Microsoft of course, but Danger co-founder Joe Britt is doing just fine. In fact he’s uncloaking his new startup today — one he’s presumably been ploughing some of his unspent Danger money into. Read More

Use a Raspberry Pi Zero to Make Your Own Miniature Information Display

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The Raspberry Pi Zero’s best feature is its size, and DIYer Frederick Vandenbosch took advantage of that by using the Zero as a tiny little information display.

Read more…



Microsoft releases Windows Live Writer as open source

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Favourite blogging tool now ready for hacking – but cross platform will not be easy

Microsoft has released Windows Live Writer, a popular blog authoring tool, as an open source project on GitHub, under the MIT licence.…

VDI comes to the Raspberry Pi

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Citrix HDX and ThinLinx deliver super-cheap endpoints and flawless 1080p video

The Raspberry Pi is now a threat to thin clients.…

Comparing Azure Active Directory Editions

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What is Azure Active Directory, and what are the features? Here’s a feature comparison for the free, basic, and premium editions of Active Directory in the cloud.

The post Comparing Azure Active Directory Editions appeared first on Petri.

Speed away with a Cortex-A15 based Titanium computer

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Curve ball thrown before London Show finally lands! First announced the night before this year’s London Show, at which it was being demonstrated on the RISC OS Open stand, Elesar Ltd‘s Titanium motherboard is now on sale and shipping. The board comes in two forms, one with RISC OS 5.23 and the other with Linux, […]

The 10 Best Christmas Gifts and Presents for Raspberry Pi Lovers

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If you’re on the lookout for the perfect Christmas gift for your Raspberry Pi loving pal, this guide is for you.