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More Fanless Bay-Trail: ASRock Releases Two Pentium J2900 Motherboards
When we looked at AMD’s Kabini platform, AMD in its press materials pitted their high end APU against the Pentium J2900 in terms of price and performance. The only issue from the reviewer’s standpoint was the availability of the Pentium J2900 in a retail product. At the time, the J2900 was found only in OEM devices, or a single system was found through Google Shopping. Fast forward a few months and we are now seeing a small wave of J2900 motherboards coming to market for custom home builds. ASRock look poised to release the Q2900-ITX and Q2900M to meet that demand.
As both motherboards are using the quad core J2900 at 2.40 GHz (2.66 GHz turbo) and 10W, both are supplied with large fanless heatsinks to provide the cooling. The CPU is soldered on to the motherboard (this is an Intel limitation) meaning upgrading is not possible, but the CPU does offer dual channel DDR3, 2 MB of L2 cache and Intel HD graphics.
The Q2900-ITX is an ITX motherboard that relies on SO-DIMM DDR3 memory. The standard Atom chipset ports are here – two SATA 6 Gbps, two SATA 3 Gbps, four USB 3.0 ports, a PCIe 2.0 x1 slot, a mini-PCIe slot (for WiFi) and three standard video outputs (VGA, DVI-D, HDMI).
The Q2900M goes up to the micro-ATX size, which affords use of full-sized DDR3. Note how each of the DDR3 DIMMs are at right angles to each other, which comes across as really, really odd. The PCIe lane layout is a little different, giving a full sized PCIe slot capable of PCIe 2.0 x4. There is also two other PCIe 2.0 x1 slots, however judging by other motherboards of this ilk, using the PCIe 2.0 x4 will disable the other PCIe ports or vice versa.
Pricing and availability is not yet announced.
Source: XtremeHardware
Security expert calls home routers a clear and present danger
LAS VEGAS—During his keynote and a press conference that followed here at the Black Hat information security conference, In-Q-Tel Chief Information Security Officer Dan Geer expressed concern about the growing threat of botnets powered by home and small office routers. The inexpensive Wi-Fi routers commonly used for home Internet access—which are rarely patched by their owners—are an easy target for hackers, Geer said, and could be used to construct a botnet that "could probably take down the Internet." Asked by Ars if he considered home routers to be the equivalent of critical infrastructure as a security priority, he answered in the affirmative.
Geer spoke about the threat posed by home routers in advance of "SOHOpelessly Broken," a router hacking contest scheduled for the DEF CON security conference later this week sponsored by the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "Because they are so cheap, you can get a low-end router for less than 20 bucks that hasn't been updated in a while," Geer explained.
Attackers could identify vulnerabilities in particular models and then scan the Internet for targets based on the routers' signatures. "They can then build botnets on the exterior of the network—the routing that it does is only on side facing ISPs," he said. "If I can build a botnet on the outside of the routers, I could probably take down the Internet."
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OWC and SoftRAID create ThunderBay 4 RAID 5 Edition
One of the most poignant uses for Thunderbolt has always been Direct Attached Storage (DAS). Alongside supporting high resolution displays, Thunderbolt is all about the daisy chaining of both storage and displays. Anand has previously looked at the Pegasus storage options, but OWC is delving more into the mix with a Thunderbolt based DAS using software based RAID 5.
The ThunderBay 4 RAID 5 Edition will support four drives up to 5 TB each (this may change depending on QVL), and is rated at 675 MB/s for sustained data rates. This number is not listed as either the read or write speed, and OWC is keen to point out that their software RAID 5 solution is up to 35% faster than other hardware solutions. If we get a unit in to test, we will let you know if that figure holds true.
Alongside RAID 5, the device will support RAID 0, 1, 4 or 1+0 using the software RAID solution. The software interface will also include drive monitoring, e-mail notification and rebuild capabilities. The dual Thunderbolt 2 ports and the software will allow users to create larger extended RAID arrays, with the example given in this press release showing 16 drives across four devices all in the same array. It would be interesting to see how that large array deals with a power failure in an intermediate device, depending on which RAID option is in place.
OWC will sell the ThunderBay 4 RAID 5 Edition in either a version with the device by itself ($649) or with sets of four drives totaling 4 TB (4 x 1 TB, $870) to 20 TB (4 x 5 TB, $1770). Each model comes with a one meter certified Thunderbolt cable, and a three year limited warranty.
Source: OWC
Gallery: OWC and SoftRAID create ThunderBay 4 RAID 5 Edition
Pairing with a Game: Thermaltake announces Urban S71 World of Tanks Edition
The concept might come across and something strange. If a hardware manufacturer creates a product with a video game tie-in, then the product might only appeal to those that enjoy playing that particular video game and others need not apply. There also enters an issue about which direction the money is going – is the game distributor paying for the tie-in to compensate for the restricted appeal, or is the hardware manufacturer paying for the privilege to show trademarked images on their products to introduce that product to a new market? The details between Thermaltake and Wargaming Public Company Ltd have not been disclosed, but the Urban S71 case from Thermaltake is being relaunched as a World of Tanks edition.
Another question comes to mind is if there is something special that a WoT player gets from buying this case? More in-game credit, or is the chassis bundled with a special item that only users that purchase the model can use? From the press release for the Urban S71 WOT Edition, it would seem that the underlying case is still the Urban S71 but with a WoT themed frontage and a red strip light without anything extra specifically for the game.
The Urban S71 WOT Edition will still have a tool-less design, have a top mounted hot-swap port or 2.5” and 3.5” drives, be equipped with a read 120mm fan and two 200mm fans in the top and front and use a windows side panel. Thermaltake is also listing a USB dust plug for the top panel, where two USB 2.0 and two USB 3.0 ports are located. The entire case measure 534 x 213 x 584 mm and weighs 10.5 kg. CPU coolers are limited to 160mm in height, and GPUs are limited to 344mm in length.
One of the biggest markets for World of Tanks is Russia, which is perhaps why the Urban S71 WOT Edition is set to be released there first. At this time we have no indication as to the price difference over the original Urban S71, or even if the S71 was released in Russia to begin with. Perhaps this is where the tie-in makes sense.
Source: Thermaltake, Russian Thermaltake
Gallery: Pairing with a Game: Thermaltake announces Urban S71 World of Tanks Edition
Thousands of Twitch videos silenced as streaming site mutes copyrighted audio
Game streaming site Twitch has started muting the audio of any video that is detected to include unauthorized audio—which is to say, any video that includes any reasonably mainstream background music.
While Twitch's main purpose is to be a platform for live game streams, which are, for the time being, unaffected, it also has a substantial library of archived broadcasts and highlight clips. These archives and highlights will have their audio muted if they're detected to contain any music owned or controlled by clients of Audible Magic, a music matching and recognition service already used by Vimeo, Facebook, and others. Twitch archives are stored in 30-minute chunks, and if any infringing audio is found in a chunk, the entirety of that section will be muted.
Earlier today, the company announced that full stream archival is being removed, but highlight clips will remain.
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CIA’s venture firm security chief: US should buy zero-days, reveal them
LAS VEGAS—In a wide-ranging keynote speech at the Black Hat information security conference today, computer security icon Dan Geer gave attendees a sort of personal top 10 list of things that could be done to make the Internet more secure, more resilient, and less of a threat to personal privacy. Among his top policy picks: the US government should move to “corner the market” on security vulnerabilities by paying top dollar for them and then publish them to the world.
Geer is the chief information security officer for In-Q-Tel, the not-for-profit venture capital firm funded by the Central Intelligence Agency to incubate technologies that aid intelligence operations. However, he noted that he was speaking in a private capacity at the event and not as a public official.
“We could pay 10 times the market price" for zero-day vulnerabilities, Geer said. “If we make them public, we zero the inventory of cyber weapons where it stands.”
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ASUS Launches Crossblade Ranger for FM2+: ROG Comes Back To AMD at $160
Back during Computex this year, we were at ASUS’ ROG press conference when the Crossblade Ranger was announced. This was ASUS’ ROG brand returning to AMD at the request of their users, ever since the last AMD ROG motherboard, the Crosshair IV Formula-Z. Using the FM2+ platform and the A88X chipset, building a ROG motherboard for AMD CPUs is understandably difficult – no user plans to spend $400+ on an AMD motherboard, and as such any motherboard manufacturer would be restricted in terms of the additions over the base chipset. The Crossblade Ranger attempts to make some headway into this change by offering the new ROG styling, enhanced audio, enhanced power delivery, ROG Front Base support, voltage check points and other ASUS features.
The motherboard uses the red and black ROG color scheme, with the name of the motherboard located on the power delivery. Note this is the same as written on the Z97 ROG Ranger, perhaps suggesting that the single custom part can be used on both products. Several of the features from the Z97 ROG branding have made it on the FM2+ version.
Here ASUS has used an Intel Gigabit Ethernet with GameFirst III and LANGuard: GameFirst being the integrated Windows software for program prioritization (allowing games or VOIP to have network priority) and LANGuard providing electrostatic discharge protection.
The Crossblade Ranger also gets the SupremeFX audio treatment, which translates as an enhanced Realtek ALC1150 audio solution. This means an EMI shield for the codec, filter caps for both front and rear audio and PCB isolation of digital and analog signals to avoid interference. Sonic SenseAmp is a new technology on Z97 and FM2+ ROG which will detect if low or high impedance headphones are used and adjust automatically. Sonic SoundStage is a similar new technology which is designed to work similar to an adjustable OP-AMP by providing audio presets (FPS, racing, combat, sports) for different sorts of games. Users can adjust these presets to their own settings as they with via the software. We covered Sonic Radar in our review of the Z87 ROG Maximus VI Impact, but an updated version is supplied with the Crossblade Ranger.
For overclocking, ASUS has provided their Turbo Processing Unit IC along with an updated graphical BIOS for both automatic and manual overclockers. The new Z97 fan controls in the BIOS are present, with each of the five fan headers controllable via PWM or DC via Fan Xpert 3. ASUS is also running its new Keybot functionality, allowing users to assign macros to any key or key combination. We have not tested this feature yet, although if we get a new ROG motherboard in to test we will.
The motherboard also uses eight SATA 6 Gbps ports and six USB 3.0 ports. The PCIe slots are color coded for two-way CrossFire setups or three-way CFX if the PCIe 2.0 x4 slot is of interest. For integrated graphics based setups, the HDMI, VGA and DVI-D ports are on the back panel.
The Crossblade Ranger will also come with the ASUS ROG Front Base dual-bay gaming panel. This is a toned down version of the OC Panel we saw with the Rampage IV Black Edition, focusing more on the interaction with the panel (such as OC, temperature readings or fan controls) rather than additional features on the PCB.
MSRP for the whole package sits at $160, and should be available in NA by the end of the month.
Source: ASUS
Gallery: ASUS Launches Crossblade Ranger for FM2+: ROG Comes Back To AMD at $160VIDEO: Technology headquarters of the future
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California man sues Sony over Killzone’s 1080p graphics claims
The latest generation of game consoles has led to a fair share of pixel-counting debates and complaints from gamers and developers. But they all pale in comparison to the proposed class action lawsuit just filed against Killzone: Shadow Fall maker Sony Computer Entertainment, which accuses the game of falsely advertising 1080p graphics it did not deliver.
In the complaint (PDF) filed yesterday in California's Northern District federal court, plaintiff Douglas Ladore notes that Sony promised 1080p single and multiplayer graphics in advertisements and interviews for Killzone: Shadow Fall before the game was released last November. The game's packaging also features a "1080p HD video output" logo on the back of the box.
But, as Digital Foundry pointed out in a March analysis, Killzone's multiplayer mode actually outputs natively in 960x1080 resolution, half of the 1920x1080 standard for "1080p." To output full 1080p graphics, this source image is fixed with a "temporal upscale" that fills in gaps with a horizontal interlace made up of pixels from the previous frame. The result is graphical performance that the lawsuit (and many reviews) call "blurry to the point of distraction."
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New map of flood risks shows electricity and water do mix—quite often
Today, the US Energy Information Agency announced the availability of a new mapping tool that details the flood risk faced by our existing energy infrastructure. The map has icons located on sites like distribution terminals and power plants and allows users to overlay the existing flood risk on those sites. The clear message is that a lot of our infrastructure is already at risk.
Shown above is a region in New York City with multiple power plants and most of them are in the region that's considered to be at a one percent annual risk for a flood. (La Guardia Airport isn't in great shape, either.) This is partly the result of historical accidents. Generating stations were once supplied by barge, and once the infrastructure was in place (transmission lines, etc.) and land became scarce elsewhere in the city, the facilities became locked in place, even as they transitioned to natural gas.
Now the facilities need to be hardened against flooding—the extended blackout in downtown Manhattan after Hurricane Sandy highlighted the consequences of failing to do so. The challenge is that we need to harden hundreds of moving targets given the combination of local conditions and the continual sea level rise that's expected for the coming centuries.
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San Jose Police Department says FAA can’t regulate its drone use
Newly published documents show that the San Jose Police Department (SJPD), which publicly acknowledged Tuesday that it should have “done a better job of communicating” its drone acquisition, does not believe that it even needs federal authorization in order to fly a drone. The Federal Aviation Administration thinks otherwise.
Late last month, a set of documents showed that the SJPD acquired a Hexacopter called the Century Neo 660, along with a GoPro video camera and live video transmitter. The nearly $7,000 January 2014 purchase was funded through a grant from the Bay Area Urban Areas Security Initiative, a regional arm of the Department of Homeland Security. San Jose, which proclaims itself the “capital of Silicon Valley,” is the third-largest city in California and the tenth-largest in the United States.
The documents, which were sent to MuckRock as part of a public records request and were published on Wednesday for the first time, make a number of statements suggesting that the SJPD has a deep misunderstanding of current drone policy.
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Internet Explorer to start blocking old Java plugins
This month's Patch Tuesday update for Internet Explorer will include a new feature: it will block out-of-date ActiveX controls.
More specifically, it will block out-of-date versions of the Java plugin. Although Microsoft is describing the feature as an ActiveX block, the list of prohibited plugins is currently Java-centric. Stale versions of Flash and Silverlight will be able to stick around, at least for now, though Microsoft says that other out-of-date ActiveX controls will be added to the block list later.
Old, buggy versions of the Java plugin have long been used as an exploit vector, with Microsoft's own security report fingering Java in 84.6 to 98.5 percent of detected exploit kits (bundles of malware sold commercially). Blocking obsolete Java plugins should therefore go a long way toward securing end-user systems.
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Big four carriers accused of violating the only remaining net neutrality rule
Only one portion of the FCC’s network neutrality rules survived a federal appeals court decision in January, and all four major US carriers have just been accused of violating it.
The court vacated anti-blocking and anti-discrimination rules, but it left in place a requirement to disclose accurate information about network management practices and performance.
Consumer advocacy group Public Knowledge today sent letters to AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon accusing them of violating the transparency rule.
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Why Oculus sees virtual reality as the “final compute platform”
In announcing its $2 billion acquisition of Oculus back in March, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg made it clear that he felt virtual reality was computing's "platform of tomorrow," which would soon supplant the handheld mobile devices dominating the tech space today. In a recent interview with Ars, though, Oculus CEO Brendan Iribe suggested that Zuckerberg might not have gone far enough, saying that virtual reality "actually may be the final compute platform."
The journey that has taken computing from mainframes to PCs to laptops to mobile phones could have a few more intermediary steps in the future, such as smartwatches, Iribe allowed. But, he said, "once you replace vision with a very comfortable virtual vision that you can look around in—that you get the sense of presence, you believe is real and is comfortable—if you can have this collaborative social experience where my brain truly believes we're in a virtual place together and that you're right here in front of me even if you're not, this is the ultimate platform and this is what we've been imagining for so many years. The Holy Grail."
It's the kind of grandiose vision that watchers have come to expect from Oculus, whose ambitions have certainly grown since asking for just $250,000 through Kickstarter about two years ago. It also highlights the company's expansion from its initial focus on gaming to its thoughts on virtual reality's other applications, from virtual tourism to social networking. That expansion has been worrisome to some gamers, who feel like Oculus' lack of focus will lead to a watered down vision for VR gaming.
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Scientists turn a brown butterfly purple—in just six generations
For most forms of life, coloration is synonymous with the presence of a pigment that absorbs some wavelengths and reflects others. But butterflies and birds are different. Their wings and features have incredibly fine, microscopic features that can help channel light and create interference patterns that enhance some wavelengths while suppressing others.
Now, researchers have tested just how readily these complex optical systems can evolve. In just six generations of selection, they took a brown butterfly and shifted it to a rich, purple color.
Turning a "brown bush" purpleThe species chosen for this work was Bicyclus anynana, an African species that also goes by the name of "squinting brown bush." As the name implies (and the image above shows), the majority of its pigmentation is brown, with a few prominent eye spots.
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Mercedes-Benz cars confirmed for US version of Mario Kart 8
On August 27, the US version of Mario Kart 8 will receive its first substantive patch, and just like the one announced for Japan back in May, its biggest feature will be the addition of Mercedes-Benz cars. Wednesday's news finally confirmed which models will be included, meaning that fans will soon be able to cruise through Rainbow Road behind the steering wheel of the 300 SL Roadster, the Silver Arrow, and the modern GLA wagon.
While most Nintendo game patches typically stick to bug fixes, Mario Kart 8's late-August patch will also make a few noticeable content changes. In particular, the game will begin collecting online race stats and add more viewing options to downloaded highlight videos via Mario Kart TV. Smaller tweaks include allowing players to display racetrack maps on the TV screen when the Wii U GamePad is showing the race itself. Patch notes indicate that online race stability will be addressed as well. (Sadly, the game's lousy, lousy battle mode won't receive any update in this patch.)
Once the patch goes live—which, including the Mercedes cars, will be free—players will be able to participate in a "Mercedes Cup" tournament that will run until September 23. No details for the tournament have been announced, which leads us to believe that it will simply be a Mercedes-only option for online races as opposed to a competition backed by real-world prizes.
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Monkey’s selfie at center of copyright brouhaha
An English nature photographer is going ape over Wikipedia's refusal to remove pictures of a monkey from the online encyclopedia that he says are being displayed without his permission.
Wikimedia, the operation that runs Wikipedia, says that the public, not photojournalist David Slater, maintains the rights to the works. That's because the black macaca nigra monkey swiped the camera from Slater during a 2011 shoot in Indonesia and snapped tons of pictures, including the selfie and others at issue.
"We received a takedown request from the photographer, claiming that he owned the copyright to the photographs. We didn't agree. So we denied the request," Wikimedia said Wednesday in its transparency report.
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