Tech
Synology Launches 8-bay Rangeley-based DS1815+
In the last week of September, Synology launched their Intel Rangeley-based DS415+. In our review, we found it resolved most of the issues encountered in the previous Atom-based SMB NAS units (such as performance with encryption enabled and latencies when subject to multi-client access). While 4-bay units tend to cover the needs of the lower end of the SMB spectrum, higher bay counts are necessary for the other segments. Towards this, Synology is launching the 8-bay DS1815+ today.
The main SoC in the unit is still the Intel Atom C2538 (same as the DS415+). The differences between the DS415+ and the DS1815+ (in addition to the obvious difference in the number of bays) include expandable memory (one free slot), two extra GbE ports, and support for an additional DX513 expansion chassis (total of two, compared to one in the DS415+). Unlike the 100W external adapter in the DS415+, we have an internal 250W PSU in the DS1815+.
Gallery: Synology DS1815+ - Chassis Design & I/O
The specifications of the DS1815+ are summarized in the table below.
Synology DS1815+ Specifications Processor Intel Atom C2538 (4C/4T Silvermont x86 Cores @ 2.40 GHz) RAM 2 GB DDR3 RAM (+ 4GB max. in 2nd slot) Drive Bays 8x 3.5"/2.5" SATA II / III HDD / SSD (Hot-Swappable) Network Links 4x 1 GbE External I/O Peripherals 4x USB 3.0, 2x eSATA Expansion Slots None VGA / Display Out None Full Specifications Link Synology DS1815+ Specifications Price £790.80 (Span UK)Going by the models in the 13+ series, a 5-bay version to complement the 415+ and 1815+ should also be coming soon.
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RemoteIE gives free access to Internet Explorer VMs without the VM
For some time now, Microsoft has offered free Windows virtual machine images to make it easier for Web developers to test their work in a bunch of different Internet Explorer versions. A new beta scheme launched today takes that one step further: with RemoteIE, devs don't even need to download and run the virtual machine. Microsoft will run the VMs instead, using its Azure RemoteApp service to provide remote access.
Access to the remote Internet Explorer is provided through the RemoteApp client. This is a close relative of the regular Windows Remote Desktop app, and like the Remote Desktop app, it's available on a number of platforms; not just Windows and OS X, but also iOS, and Android.
With RemoteIE, developers have full access to Internet Explorer and all its features, albeit only with software-mode WebGL. F12 developer tools are available, though there's no ability to install add-ons or extensions to the remote browser. Sessions are limited to 60 minutes presently and will disconnect after 10 minutes of inactivity.
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Sprint dropping customers, losing money, and laying employees off
Sprint is losing money and laying off about 2,000 employees, the company announced today. Despite new offers designed to undercut the competition, Sprint lost 272,000 postpaid customers in the most recent quarter.
Sprint did gain 35,000 prepaid customers and reported "wholesale net additions of 827,000," largely from businesses that resell Sprint network services under their own names. But with $8.5 billion in quarterly revenue, Sprint posted an operating loss of $192 million. The loss was an improvement over the $358 million loss posted in the same period last year.
At T-Mobile US, the story is both similar and different. T-Mobile continued strong customer growth, announcing last week that it had its "best quarter ever" with 1.4 million new postpaid customers and another 411,000 prepaid additions. But T-Mobile didn't make a profit either, reporting $7.4 billion in revenue and $94 million in net losses. It was the fifth time in six quarters that T-Mobile posted net losses.
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Man sentenced to a year in jail for firing laser 50 times at police plane
Yet another man from Central California has been sentenced to jail time for firing a laser at a California Highway Patrol (CHP) aircraft. On Monday, Andrew Zarate, of Fresno, was given one year in prison for firing a green laser at Air 43, a CHP plane.
It may seem like a silly thing, but laser strikes against planes, helicopters, and other aerial vehicles have become an increasing epidemic nationwide. Since the FBI began keeping track in 2005, there have been more than 17,000 laser strikes—one-fifth (3,960) in 2013 alone. During the first three months of 2014, the FBI reported an average of 9.5 incidents daily.
While no serious injuries or deaths have occurred, pilots say that being struck by a laser can be a terrifying experience that may cause temporary blindness.
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Researchers bridge air gap by turning monitors into FM radios
A two-stage attack could allow spies to sneak secrets out of the most sensitive buildings, even when the targeted computer system is not connected to any network, researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel stated in an academic paper describing the refinement of an existing attack.
The technique, called AirHopper, assumes that an attacker has already compromised the targeted system and desires to occasionally sneak out sensitive or classified data. Known as exfiltration, such occasional communication is difficult to maintain, because government technologists frequently separate the most sensitive systems from the public Internet for security. Known as an air gap, such a defensive measure makes it much more difficult for attackers to compromise systems or communicate with infected systems.
Yet, by using a program to create a radio signal using a computer’s video card—a technique known for more than a decade—and a smartphone capable of receiving FM signals, an attacker could collect data from air-gapped devices, a group of four researchers wrote in a paper presented last week at the IEEE 9th International Conference on Malicious and Unwanted Software (MALCON).
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Acer Announces UHD V Nitro Black Edition Laptop
Back in late September, Acer announced a new line of laptops, the V Nitro Black Edition of their popular V series. The V series in many ways is the replacement for the earlier TimelineX models, but with a bit more punch thanks to the higher performance CPUs and GPUs. All of the V Nitro Black Edition laptops currently come with Core i7-4710HQ processors and GTX 860M graphics, which is generally sufficient for gaming (perhaps with a few dials turned down a notch or two) or any other work you might need to do. The Nitro Black Edition is Acer's current "mainstream high performance" laptop brand, and the overall design and build quality looks pretty good.
There are currently two V Nitro Black chassis, the V15 and V17 (15.6" and 17.3" displays, respectively), with pricing ranging from $1090 for the base model V15 (no SSD on that one) up to $1300 for the V15 with a 256GB SSD and 1TB HDD, or $1400 for the V17 with 256GB SSD and 1TB HDD. Right now, prices on Amazon are a bit higher than elsewhere, but that can change at a moment's notice so shop around. Today Acer has added another configuration for the V15, a $1500 model with 256GB SSD like the $1300 model, but now with a 4K UHD (3840x2160) display.
The V15 UHD laptop has an IPS display and is currently up for pre-order on Newegg with shipping slated for the end of the month. All Full HD V Nitro Black Acer laptops also use IPS displays, and they include a complimentary code for Assassin's Creed Unity (scheduled to ship November 11, if you're wondering), so that's a $50 value if you were planning on buying the game. Unfortunately, the new UHD model doesn't appear to include the free game. Full specs for the UHD V15 Nitro Black Edition are below.
Acer V15 Series VN7-591G-70JY Specificaiotns Display Size 15.6-inch Display Resolution Ultra HD (3840 x 2160) IPS Processor Intel Core i7-4710HQ (Quad-core 2.5-3.5GHz) Graphics NVIDIA GeForce GTX 860M (2GB GDDR5) Memory 16GB DDR3 dual channel memory SSD / HD 256GB solid state drive1TB hard drive Optical Drive n/a Keyboard Backlit; full size with dedicated numeric keypad Audio Four speakers with Dolby audio enhancements Interfaces/Ports 3x USB 3.0
1x HDMI w/HDCP support
Ethernet (RJ-45)
Headphone/speaker/ line-out jack
AC adapter
Kensington lock slot Battery 3-cell Li-Ion (4605 mAh); up to 4 hours Communication 802.11a/b/g/n (dual band 2.4GHz/5GHz)
Bluetooth 4.0
10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet LAN (RJ-45 port) Card Reader Secure Digital (SD) Webcam HD (1280 x 720) O/S Windows 8.1 Weight 5.29 lbs (2.4kg) Dimensions 15.34” x 10.14” x .94” (WxDxH)
(390mm x 257.5mm x 23.9mm) MSRP $1,500
Of course there is one potential problem with using a 4K display in this sort of laptop: there's no way the GTX 860M is going to handle most games at 3840x2160, at least not without turning down most of the quality settings. There are still scaling issues as well (e.g. I've seen at least a couple recent games where things break if Windows isn't set to 100% scaling). My opinion continues to be that while High DPI displays can look great, they're not without caveats.
Apple-1 computer sold out of Steve Jobs’ garage could pull in $600K or more
On December 11, Christie's Auction House will put up an original Apple-1 Personal Computer, which was sold out of Steve Jobs' Palo Alto, California, garage for $600 back in 1976. Christie's estimates that the computer, sold to Charles Ricketts, is worth between $400,000 and $600,000, “the highest estimate yet for an original Apple-1 offered at auction,” the auction house wrote in a press release.
An Apple-1 specialist was hired by Christie's to see whether the Ricketts Apple-1 had suffered any deterioration. He was able to run “the standard original software program, Microsoft BASIC, and also an original Apple-1 Star Trek game” on the vintage computer. It will be sold along with two cancelled checks from Charles Ricketts made out to Apple Computer. The first is for the amount of $600, and Ricketts later added a note on the check that read, “Purchased July 1976 from Steve Jobs in his parents’ garage in Los Altos.” The second cancelled check is for $193 and contains a note that reads “Software NA Programmed by Steve Jobs August 1976.”
According to Reuters, the Ricketts Apple-1 was purchased by entrepreneur Bruce Waldack in 1999. Waldack lost his fortune and moved out of the US; he died in 2007. In 2004, a Virginia collector named Robert Luther acquired the computer when he bought a storage locker at a police auction. Luther apparently did not have any details on the computer's history.
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Nexus 9 review: A “premium” tablet with a not-so-premium feel
In Android's early days, the Nexus line served most notably as a comfortable, reliable tentpole. Really, the word "Nexus" was just about the only calm oasis during the operating system's Wild West period of varied hardware. New smartphones and tablets under Google's official banner usually came with the next big Android OS update, and they offered the kinds of stable hardware qualities (resolution, RAM, etc.) that developers could more easily target.
Specs at a glance: HTC Nexus 9 Screen 2048×1536 8.9" (281 PPI) IPS LCD OS Android 5.0 Lollipop CPU Tegra K1 dual-core 2.3GHz Denver RAM 2GB GPU Nvidia Kepler DX1 Storage 16GB or 32GB (non-upgradeable) Networking 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, DLNA, Bluetooth 4.1, A2DP, NFC, optional LTE Ports Micro-USB, headphone Camera 8MP rear camera, 1.2MP front camera Size 8.98" × 6.05" × 0.31" (228 x 154 x 7.9 mm) Weight 15 oz. (425 g) Battery 6700 mAh (non-removable) Starting price $399That's not the case in 2014. Across the phone-and-tablet spectrum, the hardware has become more homogenized, and even low-end hardware is good enough for typical mobile tasks. And while Android's next major update, Lollipop, offers some substantial visual changes and user requested features (look for the Ars Lollipop review coming separately), the OS is also about to roll out to other capable flagship devices, as if to say that eager upgraders don't need the newest model to dive in. What does the Nexus branding mean for a new device in 2014, then?
In the case of the brand's tablet half, the name seems to mostly signify power. Up until now, Nexus tablets—most notably, the Nexus 7's two iterations—have made waves with a combination of high quality parts and ridiculously low prices, undercutting a slew of other cheap, ho-hum tablets without skimping on performance. This year's Nexus 9, conversely, set its price point just a hair beneath Apple's similar iPad Air 2 while promoting its own industry-topping specs. This is not a tablet meant to blow the competition away with crazy new features or gimmicks; instead, it's a solid, familiar-looking Nexus device that just happens to have a ton of juice.
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AT&T’s outdated unlock policies cost it a loyal customer: me [Updated]
Watching Steve Jobs unveil the original iPhone in 2007, I knew that I had to have one. Seriously, if you’ve never watched Jobs’ Macworld keynote where he took the covers off the iPhone, it’s worth at least viewing the highlights. It’s a masterwork presentation and Jobs is in absolute top form, playing the audience like a piano (in spite of how shaky things were behind the scenes). When it launched in June 2007, the only way to get an iPhone was to sign up for service with AT&T. As a Cingular customer about to become an AT&T customer, this posed no issues for me at all. I happily entered into a long-term relationship with the company.
For the most part, it’s been a happy marriage since. In spite of a rate structure more complicated than the Voynich manuscript and a nasty habit of replacing unlimited data plans with metered plans that are "better values," I was happy with the actual cellular service. Coverage was good. Speeds in Houston were great, especially in my particular corner of Clear Lake, where Verizon’s coverage was essentially nonexistent for many years.
Artist's impression of a typical AT&T cellular bill. Wikimedia CommonsAnd so, I rode the upgrade treadmill, happily buying new devices every few years, unconcerned about the continual contract renewals because I had no intention of changing providers. Why switch? The carriers are all essentially identical dumb pipes, and most other carriers’ post-paid plans cost essentially the same—I’d done the math.
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Critics chafe as Macs send sensitive docs to iCloud without warning
Representing a potential privacy snare for some users, Mac OS X Yosemite uploads documents opened in TextEdit, Preview, and Keynote to iCloud servers by default, even if the files are later closed without ever having been saved.
The behavior, as noted in an article from Slate, is documented in a Knowledge Base article from December. But it nonetheless came as a surprise to researcher Jeffrey Paul, who said he was alarmed to recently discover a cache of in-progress files he intended to serve as "temporary Post-It notes" that had been silently uploaded to his iCloud account even though he never intended or wished them to be.
"Apple has taken local files on my computer not stored in iCloud and silently and without my permission uploaded them to their servers," Paul wrote in a recent blog post.
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Yes, the 5K Retina iMac’s screen runs at 60Hz at 5K resolution
I’m at the end of my time with the Retina iMac now that our Senior Applemeister Andrew Cunningham is back from his nuptials. He’ll be finishing up our coverage of the device, but I wanted to touch on a couple of final points with the big Mac before I send it on its way to the East Coast. We’ve received several variations of the same question submitted to our feedback form: does the Retina iMac operate at 60Hz in its native 5120x2880 resolution? And if so, how is that even possible, given that DisplayPort 1.2 doesn’t have the bandwidth to support that resolution and refresh rate?
To answer the first question: yes, the iMac’s display runs at 60Hz, even when driving all 14.7 million pixels of its native 5k resolution. Apple directly verified this when I asked; the company also told Daring Fireball’s John Gruber the same. Further, it can be confirmed with apps that measure your refresh rate, like SwitchResX:
The output from SwitchResX on the Retina iMac, showing the 60Hz refresh rate.For additional verification, a quick visit to a Web-based app that demonstrates 60Hz movement shows that the screen is operating at that refresh rate:
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Does your phone company track you?
This article originally appeared on ProPublica on October 31, 2014.
Wired and Forbes reported earlier this week that the two largest cell phone carriers in the United States, Verizon and AT&T, are adding the tracking number to their subscribers' Internet activity, even when users opt out. The data can be used by any site—even those with no relationship to the telecoms—to build a dossier about a person's behavior on mobile devices, including which apps they use, what sites they visit, and how long. MoPub, acquired by Twitter in 2013, bills itself as the "world's largest mobile ad exchange." It uses Verizon's tag to track and target cellphone users for ads, according to instructions for software developers posted on its website.
Twitter declined to comment. AT&T said that its actions are part of a test. Verizon says it doesn't sell information about the demographics of people who have opted out.
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Napster, Netflix founders top donors in California voter politics
Reed Hastings, the 54-year-old Netflix chief executive, and Sean Parker, the 34-year-old former co-founder of Napster, have donated a combined $1.6 million in support of California ballot measures before voters head to Tuesday's election.
Parker gave a combined $1 million for Propositions 1 and 2. The former measure authorizes $7.2 billion in bonds for the parched state to pay for water-supply projects. Proposition 2 concerns how the Golden State pays its debts.
For his part, Hastings gave $250,000 to Proposition 1 and another $246,664 to a voter ballot measure that would cut penalties for one in five criminals in the Golden State, campaign finance records show. Parker also gave $100,000 to support Proposition 47, according to data supplied by Maplight, a nonprofit in Berkeley, California that chronicles campaign financing.
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Cell carrier was weakest link in hack of Google, Instagram accounts
If you think the two-factor authentication offered by Google and other cloud services will keep your account out of the hands of an attacker, think again. One developer found out this weekend the hard way; Google’s account protection scheme can be bypassed by going after something most people would consider an even harder target—the user’s cell phone account.
As Wired’s Mat Honan found out two years ago, customer service representatives are the weakest link in cloud security. And mobile phone carrier customer service representatives are just as susceptible to social engineering attacks, apparently. That’s what Grant Blakeman, an independent software developer and designer, learned when he woke up to find his Google account’s password had been changed and his Instagram account—desirable because of its two-letter name (@gb)—had been hijacked despite the use of two-factor authentication on his Google account.
Blakeman contacted his cell provider after an online conversation with Honan about what happened. He found that someone enabled call-forwarding on his cell account without his knowledge. That call-forwarding setup allowed the attacker to get an authentication code from Google to take over his Gmail address, which was in turn tied to his Instagram account.
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Google’s Nexus Player: More prototype than finished product
Just about every major tech company offers some device that will put Netflix and YouTube on a TV screen—a Chromecast, Apple TV, Playstation 4, Xbox One, Wii U, Fire TV, or a Roku 3 will all do the job. For Google, the Chromecast was rather successful in this area because it was dead simple to use and the cheapest out of the bunch at just $35, but the company has decided that something more is needed. Today, Google is back with yet another device that will try to take over your living room: the Nexus Player.
The Asus-built device is a standard set-top box in the same vein as the Apple TV or Fire TV. The "Nexus" in "Nexus Player" indicates that this is the launch device for Android TV, Google's new living room software that replaces the lackluster Google TV OS. All these TV OSes look similar—grids of content thumbnails—but Android TV is based on Android 5.0 and throws an app store and Google's excellent voice search into the mix. Unlike some earlier Google TV devices, the Nexus Player doesn't do anything with live TV or with your DVR—for that you'll have to switch TV inputs.
The Nexus Player has 3 components. For $99, you get the set-top box and remote control, while another $40 gets you the optional Nexus Player Gamepad. The total package is a $105 premium over the $35 Google Chromecast, but the Chromecast is just a streaming stick. While the Nexus Player supports Google Cast (the retconned name for the Chromecast protocol), it also brings a dedicated TV interface along with local apps and games. In other words, it's a smartphone for your television. The addition of a gamepad is interesting. We've been tracking rumors of a "Nexus TV" product that was considered to be Google game console, and this appears to be it.
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Hearthstone bot maker closes shop after Blizzard crackdown
Blizzard seems to have scored a decisive win in the never-ending battle against automated "bot" programs that play games like Hearthstone without human intervention. Crawlerbots, maker of the popular Hearthcrawler bot, announced this morning that it is closing up shop in the wake of a recent crackdown on users of the automated play tools.
In what's dubbed as its "last official announcement," Crawlerbots writes that "the recent ban wave in Hearthstone hit a lot of users. After discussing this with Blizzard, it’s clear we have to take off our services/products now. Please note that we’re not going to be commenting further on this."
"Thank you all for being part of our community," the message continues. "We are very sad about this but you also know botting is against the rules and we all knew that the day when our products doesn't [sic] work anymore would come. With tears in our eyes we have to say bye."
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Google Nexus 9: Preliminary Findings
For a few years now, Google has had a generally consistent tablet strategy. Instead of chasing after the ~10 inch tablet segment and focusing upon the high end, we’ve seen tablets closer to the ~7 inch display size at extremely low cost. While this has been an immensely successful strategy in driving hardware adoption, the formfactor made it possible for the tablet to be closer to a large phone than a small tablet. The flexibility of Android’s scaling system meant that an app designed for a phone worked acceptably well for a small tablet, even if the space efficiency was a bit poor. There’s no question that the Nexus 7 (2013) was and still is a great tablet, but even now it’s obvious that there’s a dearth of applications designed specifically for the larger display. The other issue is that of cost. With the Nexus 7 line, Google managed to integrate an incredible amount of hardware into a tablet priced well below the ~500 USD price point that the original iPad established. This is great for the consumer and no doubt great for Google, but the Nexus 7 line was good enough that there wasn’t much in the way of competition.
This brings us to the Nexus 9, Google’s attempt at changing the Android tablet space. From the start, this device seems to be intent on pushing the Android tablet to a more premium segment. To find out how Google does at this task, read on for our preliminary findings.
Continuity in Yosemite/iOS 8: Which network powers what service?
If you have the latest Mac and the latest iPhone or iPad running Apple's latest OSes, and if you have Wi-Fi and Bluetooth turned on, the new Continuity features work like magic. What powers that magic? A wide range of network options, including Bluetooth Low Energy (BTLE), peer-to-peer Wi-Fi, regular local networking, and iCloud/iMessage. Each aspect of Continuity actually picks and chooses from these connectivity options, sometimes using more than one.
We looked at Continuity while both iOS and OS X were in beta. Now that they are out, we've gone back and tested what the released version can accomplish. I think this is a complete list of what the current version of Continuity can do, as well as a couple of similar features that Apple doesn't cover under the "Continuity" umbrella:
- Let Macs and iPads send and receive SMSes if you have an iPhone
- Let Macs (and iPads?) make and answer phone calls through an iPhone
- AirDrop files between devices
- AirPlay to an Apple TV
- Remotely control a Keynote presentation
- Start work on one device and Handoff to another in Safari, Maps, Contacts, Notes, Reminders, Keynote, Pages, and Numbers, as well as third-party applications in the future
- Set up an Instant Hotspot
Let's take a look at the various network requirements behind each feature.
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