Latest News

Instagram Log Out button vanishes with latest update

Written By Unknown on Thursday, March 31, 2016 | 2:27 AM

Instagram is fixing a problem which makes it impossible for some users to log out.

Earlier this week, users of the photo-sharing app said the 'Log Out' button in the 'Settings' tab had disappeared.

This isn't a problem if you only use one Instagram account, but for people with multiple accounts, or for people who look after a few promotional business profiles, it's a major pain.

Instagram introduced account-switching earlier this year, making it much easier to move quickly between accounts, but users can't find this button either. Basically, they've found themselves locked into a single account.

A fix has been found, which involves going to a mobile browser, logging into your account there, and then logging out again, but this is a pretty complex solution.

The issue appears to have started with the release of the Version 7.19 iOS update at the start of the week.

Writing on Twitter, Instagram said they were aware of the issue, and were working on a fix for it.

With all the fuss over the recent 'turn on notifications' nonsense, Instagram users are having a bad week.

Google parent Alphabet launches landline service, Fiber Phone

Google on Tuesday unveiled a new landline telephone service aimed at helping consumers stay connected in the Internet cloud.

The new Fiber Phone service will be made available to a few US markets and later expanded to other cities where Google offers high-speed Internet.

The new service adds a few high-tech features to the landline, such as transcribing voice mails and delivering them as written messages, and connecting with mobile phones when consumers are away.

"While mobile phones have pushed us toward the future, home phone service is still important to many families," Google's John Shriver-Blake said in a blog post.

"Landlines can be familiar, reliable and provide high-quality service, but the technology hasn't always kept up," he said.

"That's why today, we're introducing Fiber Phone as a new option to help you stay connected wherever you are."

The new service enables "getting access on the road, in the office, or wherever you are," Shriver-Blake said.

"Your Fiber Phone number lives in the cloud, which means that you can use it on almost any phone, tablet or laptop. It can ring your landline when you're home, or your mobile device when you're on-the-go," he added.

Google Fiber, which offers ultra-fast service, is now available in four US cities, with several others set to come online soon.

Facebook Messenger to get 'secret chats', retail features: Report

Facebook is set to introduce "secret chats" to Messenger, according to a new report.

The company has buried a reference to the new feature in the code of its iPhone app, according to a report from The Information.

The report also claims that Facebook is looking to make its Messenger app into a retail hub, which will allow people to buy and sell things through the app.

It isn't clear exactly what those secret chats will be. But within Facebook Messenger competitor Telegram, the same phrase is used to refer to special chats that are fully encrypted and have measures to stop them being viewed elsewhere.

"Telegram's special secret chats use end-to-end encryption, leave no trace on our servers, support self-destructing messages and don't allow forwarding," Telegram's website explains. "On top of this, secret chats are not part of the Telegram cloud and can only be accessed on their devices of origin."

It also isn't clear how exactly Facebook plans to become a retail hub will work. But it could link with the site's plan to create a "bot store" — robots that can talk to you and allow you to buy things — or it might mean the site moving forward with plans to become a payment processor.

Microsoft's chatbot 'Tay' misbehaves again, now says it's 'smoking kush'

Almost a week after being shut down for spewing racist and sexist comments on Twitter, Microsoft Corp's artificial intelligence 'chatbot' called Tay briefly rejoined Twitter on Wednesday only to launch a spam attack on its followers.

The incident marks another embarrassing setback for the software company as it tries to get ahead of Alphabet Inc's Google, Facebook Inc and other tech firms in the race to create virtual agents that can interact with people and learn from them.

The TayTweets (@TayandYou) Twitter handle was made private and the chatbot stopped responding to comments Wednesday morning after it fired off the same tweet to many users.

"You are too fast, please take a rest...," tweeted Tay to hundreds of Twitter profiles, according to screen images published by technology news website The Verge.

The chatbot also tweeted that it's "smoking kush," a nickname for marijuana, in front of the police, according to British newspaper The Guardian.

Tay's Twitter account was accidentally turned back on while the company was fixing the problems that came to light last week, Microsoft said on Wednesday.

"Tay remains offline while we make adjustments," a Microsoft representative said in an email. "As part of testing, she was inadvertently activated on Twitter for a brief period of time." The company refers to Tay, whose Twitter picture appears to show a woman's face, as female.

Last week, Tay began its Twitter tenure with a handful of innocuous tweets, but the account quickly devolved into a stream of anti-Semitic, racist and sexist invective as it repeated back insults hurled its way by other Twitter users.

It was taken offline following the incident, according to a Microsoft representative, in an effort to make "adjustments" to the artificial intelligence profile. The company later apologized for any offence caused.

Social media users took to Twitter to comment on the latest spate of unusual behaviour by the chatbot, which was supposed to get smarter the more it interacted with users.

"It wouldn't be a Microsoft product if it didn't crash right after it booted up," tweeted Jonathan Zdziarski (@JZdziarski) on Wednesday.

Andrew Smart (@andrewthesmart) tweeted, "To be honest, I am kind of surprised that @Microsoft did not test @TayandYou more before making it public. Nobody saw this coming!?!"

According to its Twitter profile, Tay is "an artificial intelligent chatbot developed by Microsoft's Technology and Research and Bing teams to experiment with and conduct research on conversational understanding."

Dwayne Johnson shares 'Baywatch' first look missing bollywood star

Dwayne Johnson recently released the first look of the much-awaited flick 'Baywatch'..

The 43-year-old actor shared a first look of the movie on his social networking and wrote, "EXCLUSIVE FIRST LOOK: Our entire #BAYWATCH squad. Are we bad ass? Yes. Do we save lives? All day. Are we a dysfunctional family? Epically. Do we have fun? F*CK YES. We work hard, we play hard. @thejonbass @alexannadaddario @kellyrohrbach @ilfenator @zacefron. #BAYWATCH Get ready world... MAY 19, 2017. (and yes, I'm the king of the #FargoStrut via Woo!)"

Though the 'Bajirao Mastani' Bollywood star priyanka chopra was missing from the first look as she is shuffling between the flick and her ABC sitcom 'Quantcio,' her 'Baywatch' team is definitely missing her. Team Baywatch shared this sweet tweet about Priyanka saying, "Hi @priyankachopra and @belindapop this guy is waiting for you on set hurry up #Baywatch #BaywatchMovie." Priyanka will essay the role of Victoria Leeds, the badass villain of the film.

Brussels airport could take ‘months’ before normalizing

Written By Unknown on Wednesday, March 30, 2016 | 12:40 AM

The Zaventem airport in Brussels could "at best" resume very limited services by Wednesday but it will take months to get back to normal after two suicide bombers destroyed the departure terminal, chief executive Arnaud Feist said.

The airport is running a series of tests today to see if makeshift check-in facilities are good enough to restart some flights and that repair work and new security measures are adequate after the deadly March 22 attacks.

Feist told L'Echo in an interview published on Tuesday that everything depends on the outcome of the tests at Zaventem, with some 800 airport staff going through the temporary facilities.

"In principle, if everybody gives the green light, we would be near a solution. If that is the case and the airlines are ready and agree, we could get going again on Wednesday," he said. "I must stress, however, that that is just hypothetical."

Brussels is a major European hub and has flights to destinations worldwide.

Even if some services are possible, they would amount to about only 20 per cent of normal, that is handling about 800-1,000 passengers an hour, Feist said. For a full return to normal, "we will have to wait for months," Feist added.

Two suicide bombers blew themselves up in the departure hall last today, wrecking the concourse, and shortly afterwards another bomber hit the Brussels metro, leaving 35 people dead in Belgium's worst-ever terror attack.

In an effort to keep at least some services going, airlines moved operations to regional airports or even to neighbouring countries such as the Netherlands and Germany.

Most female childhood cancer survivors able to conceive: Study

Most women who have survived childhood cancer have a good chance of conceiving as the impact of modern chemotherapy regimens on the likelihood of becoming pregnant is generally small, says a study.

In contrast, male survivors of childhood cancer are significantly less likely to have children, especially if they are treated with chemotherapy regimens containing high doses of commonly used alkylating drugs and cisplatin, the findings showed.

"We think these results will be encouraging for most women who were treated with chemotherapy in childhood," said one of the researchers Eric Chow from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre, Seattle, US.

The study was published in the journal The Lancet Oncology.

For the study, the researchers used data from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS) which tracks people who were diagnosed with the most common types of childhood cancer before the age of 21 and treated at 27 institutions across the USA and Canada between 1970 and 1999, and who had survived at least five years after diagnosis.

In this study, they examined the impact of various doses of 14 commonly used chemotherapy drugs on pregnancy and livebirth in 10,938 male and female survivors, compared with 3,949 siblings.

The study specifically focused on survivors treated with chemotherapy and who did not receive any radiotherapy to the pelvis or the brain.

By age 45, 70 percent of female cancer survivors became pregnant, compared to over 80 percent of siblings.

For male cancer survivors, the figure was 50 percent compared to 80 percent for siblings.

In male survivors, the likelihood of fathering a child generally decreased as cumulative exposure to alkylating drugs increased.

The findings are consistent with previous studies which have suggested that men who have undergone cancer treatment with these drugs have lower sperm count and reduced testicular volume.

Overall, female survivors were still less likely to conceive compared to siblings but the effect was much smaller compared to men.

Protein that may reverse deadly heart condition identified

Scientists have identified a key protein that may potentially reverse cardiac fibrosis, an abnormal thickening of the heart valves which can lead to heart failure.

Cardiac fibrosis occurs when healthy cardiac cells are replaced with fibrous connective tissue, causing scarring and a stiffer and less compliant cardiac muscle.

It is found to be an independent predictor for the progression of heart failure, which accounts for approximately 450,000 deaths per year in the US.

CCN5, a matricellular protein, has been found to reverse established cardiac fibrosis in heart failure models, according to a study led by Roger J Hajjar, Professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in US, and Woo Jin Park, Professor at the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea.

While there currently are no effective cardiac fibrosis therapies available, it is considered a valid target for treatment, researchers said.

"Our research is the first to demonstrate the ability to reverse cardiac fibrosis in heart failure models by targeting a specific gene," said Hajjar.

"These findings demonstrate that CCN5 may provide a novel platform for the development of targeted anti-cardiac fibrosis therapies, which could benefit many patients with previously untreatable heart failure," he said.

"At our Cardiovascular Research Centre, we are dedicated to making significant strides in developing potential bench-to-bedside treatments for heart failure and other cardiovascular diseases," Hajjar said.
Hajjar and his team, having already established that CCN5 is significantly lower in the myocardium of patients

with severe heart failure, examined whether CCN5 can reverse cardiac fibrosis in experimental models.
They induced extensive cardiac fibrosis in experimental animal models of heart failure, and then proceeded to transfer CCN5 to the hearts.

Eight weeks later, the team examined the cellular and molecular effects.

The results showed that CCN5 reversed cardiac fibrosis in the models. Researchers used trichrome staining and analysis of myofibroblast contents before and after CCN5 gene transfer to clearly show the reversal.

Collectively, these data demonstrate that CCN5 could potentially be used for the development of new anti-cardiac fibrosis therapies.

"Since CCN5 is a secreted protein, we may be able to deliver the CCN5 protein itself rather than the CCN5 gene in the form of recombinant virus or stem cells that are engineered to express CCN5," said Park.

"The efficacy of these alternative approaches has yet to be tested, but they certainly deserve a serious consideration," he said.

This study was published in the Journal of American College of Cardiology.

Guess Google CEO Sundar Pichai’s salary for 2015

Google CEO Sundar Pichai made $100.5 million in 2015, according to a regulatory filing released on Tuesday.

The filing revealed Pichai was paid a salary of $652,500, awarded restricted stock worth $99.8 million (which will vest fully in 2017), and given "other" compensation of $22,935.

Last February, Google awarded Pichai $199 million in restricted stock, which was the biggest grant reported by a Google CEO, according to Bloomberg.

Pichai became CEO of Google in August, 2015, after the reorganization of the company under the Alphabet umbrella. Prior to that, Pichai led Chrome and Android.

Pichai's Rise

In 2004, Pichai joined Google as its VP of product management, where he led the team working on Google's Chrome browser and operating system.

In September 2008, Pichai oversaw the successful launch of the Chrome web browser, and less than a year later, the web-based Chrome operating system for netbooks and desktop computers.

A year later, Pichai was put in charge of Android after Android co-founder and CEO Andy Rubin stepped down in March 2013.

Throughout his time at Google, Pichai has developed a sterling reputation for being well-liked, leading Recode's Kara Swisher to call his recent promotion "a definitive case of nice guys finish first."

Apple remains clueless on how FBI hacked San Bernardino shooter's iPhone

The FBI's announcement that it mysteriously hacked into an iPhone is a public setback for Apple Inc, as consumers suddenly discover they can't keep their most personal information safe. Meanwhile, Apple remains in the dark about how to restore the security of its flagship product.

The government said it was able to break into an iPhone used by a gunman in a mass shooting in California, but it didn't say how. That puzzled Apple software engineers -- and outside experts -- about how the FBI broke the digital locks on the phone without Apple's help. It also complicated Apple's job repairing flaws that jeopardize its software.

The justice department's announcement that it was dropping a legal fight to compel Apple to help it access the phone also took away any obvious legal avenues Apple might have used to learn how the FBI did it.

Magistrate Judge Sheri Pym vacated her February 16 order, which compelled Apple to help the FBI hack their phone, on Tuesday.

The justice department declined through a spokeswoman to comment Tuesday.

A few clues have emerged. A senior law enforcement official told The Associated Press that the FBI managed to defeat an Apple security feature that threatened to delete the phone's contents if the FBI failed to enter the correct passcode combination after 10 tries. That allowed the government to repeatedly and continuously test passcodes in what's known as a brute-force attack until the right code is entered and the phone is unlocked.

It wasn't clear how the FBI dealt with a related Apple security feature that introduces increasing time delays between guesses. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because this person was not authorized to discuss the technique publicly.

FBI director James Comey has said with those features removed, the FBI could break into the phone in 26 minutes.

The FBI hacked into the iPhone used by gunman Syed Farook, who died with his wife in a gun battle with police after they killed 14 people in December in San Bernardino. The iPhone, issued to Farook by his employer, the county health department, was found in a vehicle the day after the shooting.

The FBI is reviewing information from the iPhone, and it is unclear whether anything useful can be found.

Apple said in a statement that the legal case to force its cooperation "should never have been brought," and it promised to increase the security of its products. CEO Tim Cook has said the Cupertino-based company is constantly trying to improve security for its users.

The FBI's announcement -- even without revealing precise details -- that it had hacked the iPhone was at odds with the government's firm recommendations for nearly two decades that security researchers always work cooperatively and confidentially with software manufacturers before revealing that a product might be susceptible to hackers.

The aim is to ensure that American consumers stay as safe online as possible and prevent premature disclosures that might damage a US company or the economy.

As far back as 2002, the Homeland Security Department ran a working group that included leading industry technology industry executives to advise the president on how to keep confidential discoveries by independent researchers that a company's software could be hacked until it was already fixed. Even now, the commerce department has been trying to fine-tune those rules. The next meeting of a conference on the subject is April 8 in Chicago and it's unclear how the FBI's behavior in the current case might influence the government's fragile relationship with technology companies or researchers.

The industry's rules are not legally binding, but the government's top intelligence agency said in 2014 that such vulnerabilities should be reported to companies.

"When federal agencies discover a new vulnerability in commercial and open source software -- a so-called 'zero day' vulnerability because the developers of the vulnerable software have had zero days to fix it -- it is in the national interest to responsibly disclose the vulnerability rather than to hold it for an investigative or intelligence purpose," the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said in a statement in April 2014.

The statement recommended generally divulging such flaws to manufacturers "unless there is a clear national security or law enforcement need."

Last week a team from Johns Hopkins University said they had found a security bug in Apple's iMessage service that would allow hackers under certain circumstances to decrypt some text messages. The team reported its findings to Apple in November and published an academic paper after Apple fixed it.

"That's the way the research community handles the situation. And that's appropriate," said Susan Landau, professor of cybersecurity policy at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. She said it was acceptable for the government to find a way to unlock the phone but said it should reveal its method to Apple.
Mobile phones are frequently used to improve cybersecurity, for example, as a place to send a backup code to access a website or authenticate a user.

The chief technologist at the Center for Democracy and Technology, Joseph Lorenzo Hall, said keeping details secret about a flaw affecting millions of iPhone users "is exactly opposite the disclosure practices of the security research community. The FBI and Apple have a common goal here: to keep people safe and secure. This is the FBI prioritizing an investigation over the interests of hundreds of millions of people worldwide."

Facebook apologizes for Lahore blast 'Safety Check' error

Written By Unknown on Tuesday, March 29, 2016 | 12:41 AM

Social media giant Facebook has apologised to users in many countries including India for wrongly sending texts asking if they were "affected" by the deadly Taliban bombing in Pakistan on Easter Sunday.
The targeted suicide attack on Christians in a crowded Lahore park killed more than 70 people, nearly half of them children.

Facebook's Safety Check system activates after a tragedy to help people let others know they are safe.
The social network blamed a "bug" for the warnings sent to people thousands of miles away from Pakistan.

Responsibility for the attack on Sunday has been claimed by a Taliban splinter group called Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, which said it targeted Christians celebrating Easter.

The Safety Check system is supposed to be a quick way for members of the social network to let friends and family know they are safe if they are caught up in or are close to a natural disaster or attack.

On this occasion, many were made anxious when they received a message because it simply asked "Are you affected by the explosion?" without giving information about how close that person was to any potential threat.

Reports said Facebook users in the US, India, UK, Hawaii and many other places wrongly received warnings. Many shared images of the messages on social networks.

"Unfortunately, many people not affected by the crisis received a notification asking if they were okay," said Facebook in a statement.

"This kind of bug is counter to our intent," it added.

"We worked quickly to resolve the issue and we apologise to anyone who mistakenly received the notification."

The problem is the latest in a series that the Safety Check feature has suffered. Last year, Facebook began to use the system more widely after being criticised about when it was employed.

Criticism was levelled at it because it was used for the large-scale attacks in Paris but not subsequently for similar bombings in Beirut.

Safety Check was originally developed for use after natural disasters but was expanded to include terror attacks after Paris.

This iOS 9.3 bug can crash your shiny new iPhone

The new software update for iphones and ipads appears to have a bug that makes some people unable to click on links.

The problem is leaving people unable to open links if they click on them in Safari, Messages, Mail and a range of other apps. When people try, the app seems to break and just hangs or completely crashes.
Others have reported that they simply can't do anything with the links, and pressing on them makes nothing happen.

Though the release of iOS 9.3 mostly went smoothly, some issues have been reported in the week since it was pushed out to devices. Owners of older devices reported that the update was leading their phones and tablets to break, and Apple has released new software and advice to help people dealing with those problems.

The company hasn't yet responded to the newly-reported problems with links.

It is still unclear how widespread the issue is, though a forum thread on Apple's website has already received tens of thousands of views. The bug appears to mostly affect the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus on iOS 9.3, but there have been some reports of similar problems on older phones and older software versions.

The issue might also be related to third-party apps that people have installed, according to 9to5mac. Installing certain apps -- including Booking.com, according to that blog -- causes the problem to happen, it reported, and the issue does not go away if the app is then uninstalled or the device is restarted.

Some users appear to be reporting that turning off Javascript for Safari causes the problems to go away. Others have said that fixes the problems with links in Safari but not in other apps.

Post the update, the phone in general has become extremely slow. Apps take forever to launch. Notifications are super delayed..Websites often freeze.. 9.3 had just taken away the pleasure of using an... That is done by heading to the Settings app, finding and clicking on Safari, and then going to the Advanced options. There, you can flip the switch that will turn off Javascript on your phone.

Unless you find that certain websites you use aren't working, you might have a better experience leaving this feature turned off -- even when Apple eventually issues a proper fix for the issue. Javascript has been associated with security and performance problems in the past, and so if you're not actually using it then you might be as well keeping yourself safe from it.

Apple-FBI war ends: All you need to know

Written By Unknown on Monday, March 28, 2016 | 11:37 PM

Apple's legal standoff with the FBI ended on Monday, but experts say the issues behind it will come up again, as more tech companies take measures to guard their customers' messages, photos, business records and other files.

After weeks of heated debate, in which Apple had resisted the FBI's demand for help, authorities say they found their own way to get the data from an encrypted iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino mass shooters.

Confused by all the back-and-forth in this high-stakes dispute? AP explains:

What was the fight about?

At the justice department's request, a federal judge ordered Apple Inc last month to help the FBI unlock an encrypted iPhone used by Syed Farook, who along with his wife, Tashfeen Malik, killed 14 people in December. Specifically, the government wanted Apple to create software that would override an "auto-wipe" feature which is designed to kick in after anyone makes 10 wrong attempts at guessing the iPhone's passcode. Once that feature is activated, it renders all the data on the phone permanently unreadable.

Apple said it could create the software the government wanted, but it argued vehemently that doing so would be a bad idea. CEO Tim Cook said the order would set a precedent for more government demands, both in the United States and around the world. Apple also said the software could be stolen by hackers and used against other iPhones.

Federal authorities insisted they were only asking for Apple's help in a single case, although prosecutors nationwide have said they wanted similar assistance in other cases where iPhones have been seized. While it's unclear if any useful information was stored on the iPhone, FBI director James Comey said authorities owed it to the San Bernardino victims to leave no stone unturned in their investigation.

Why did this turn into such a big deal?

The case crystallized some long-simmering frustrations and conflict between the tech industry and law enforcement authorities.

Apple and other tech companies have been steadily increasing their use of encryption and other safeguards to protect their customers' data, following a wave of recent hacking attacks and revelations about government data-collection by the former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Why a future Apple-FBI case may go very differently

Law enforcement officials, including Comey, have complained that encryption and other data safeguards are helping dangerous people hide their activities, while interfering with the government's ability to investigate crimes.

In the San Bernardino case, Apple drew support from other leading tech companies, computer security experts and civil liberties groups. They filed court briefs arguing the government was going too far in trying to force a company to create software that threatened its own customers' security. Meanwhile, top officials in the Obama administration, including US Attorney General Loretta Lynch, denounced Apple's stance and accused the company of trying to rewrite the rules for government investigations.

What did the judge decide?

The judge didn't have to rule. Cook had said he was prepared to take the case to the US Supreme Court. But last week, just one day before Magistrate Sheri Pym had planned to hold a hearing on the dispute, the justice department asked for a delay. Authorities said an unnamed "outside party" had come forward with a technical solution to unlocking the phone, which the FBI needed time to test out.

Then on Monday of this week, the government reported that it had successfully accessed the iPhone's files and no longer needed Apple's help. For that reason, the justice department asked the magistrate to withdraw the order she issued in February.

So who won?

Each side can claim a victory: Authorities say they achieved their goal of getting into the iPhone, while Apple successfully resisted a court order that it contends would be harmful to its customers.

Even so, the FBI may have lost some credibility. After repeatedly insisting that only Apple had the means to help authorities unlock the phone, it turned out there was another way.

In the court of public opinion, Apple made a strong case that it was standing up for its customers, and an important principle. But some people may believe the company should have done more to help law enforcement.

Does that end the matter?

It probably ends the dispute over one iPhone, but it's not the last we'll hear of this issue.

Law enforcement officials around the country still want to get into other iPhones. The FBI hasn't said how it got into the San Bernardino iPhone, but it may be able to use the same method in other cases. And we don't know who provided the solution that the FBI used. It's possible the method was devised by a private forensics expert or firm that will sell the service to other clients in the future.

Apple, of course, wants to know what method the FBI used so the company can decide if there's an iPhone vulnerability that needs to be fixed. Even if the FBI doesn't tell them, security experts predict Apple and other tech companies will keep adding more security measures to its products.

That could set the stage for more legal confrontations. Meanwhile, Congress has held hearings on the issue. Some legislators have discussed limiting how much help the government can demand of tech companies, while others want to require tech companies to provide more assistance in the future.

Soon, phone landline from WhatsApp

You may soon be able to dial landline or mobile phone numbers from popular internet apps such as Skype, WhatsApp or Viber, following clearance for inter-connect agreements between internet service providers and telecom operators by an inter-ministerial panel of the government on Monday.



The move may result in substantially lower charges for voice calls (which would be billed as per data usage), though poor quality of internet networks - a general irritant with broadband services in many parts of the country - could be a dampener.

Caveman’s best friends? Preserved Ice Age puppies awe scientists

The hunters searching for mammoth tusks were drawn to the steep riverbank by a deposit of ancient bones. To their astonishment, they discovered an Ice Age puppy's snout peeking out from the permafrost.

Five years later, a pair of puppies perfectly preserved in Russia's far northeast region of Yakutia and dating back 12,460 years has mobilized scientists across the world.

"To find a carnivorous mammal intact with skin, fur and internal organs — this has never happened before in history," said Sergei Fyodorov, head of exhibitions at the Mammoth Museum of the North-Eastern Federal University in the regional capital of Yakutsk.

And the discovery could contribute to the lively scientific debate over the origin of domesticated dogs.

When the hunters stumbled on the first frozen pup in 2011, they alerted Fyodorov who immediately flew out to the remote Arctic tundra, about 4,700 kilometres (2,900 miles) from Moscow and only 130 kilometres from the Laptev Sea, which borders the Arctic Ocean.

Last year he returned for a more thorough look and found the second puppy close to the same spot, farther down the slope. Both had died when they were about three months old. They most likely come from the same litter, said Fyodorov.

Last week he oversaw the removal of the second puppy's remarkably well-preserved brain — "the first in the world", he said. "Puppies are very rare, because they have thin bones and delicate skulls," he said.
The duo have been named the Tumat Dog, after the nearest village to the site.

Fyodorov said a preliminary look at the mammoth remains also found at the dig suggested some had been butchered and burned, hinting at the presence of humans. It remains to be seen, however, whether the puppies were domesticated or wild.

The answer can only be determined by reconstructing their genomes, which would take at least a year.
"Thus far, the lineages of wolves that likely gave rise to dogs have not yet been discovered and it's possible that these puppies could be on that lineage, which would be very exciting," said evolutionary biologist Greger Larson of University of Oxford, one of the scientists behind a collaborative project aimed at finding out when and where dogs became the first domesticated animals.

What makes the dog particularly intriguing is that it managed to become "man's best friend" even before humans became settled farmers.

It is still unclear whether dogs were domesticated in one place or in several places independently, and whether the process started when humans took in cubs or whether wolves themselves gradually drifted to human sites in search of food.

Whatever their precise lineage, the Tumat pups will keep Fyodorov and other scientists busy for some time.

The second puppy's preserved brain will be compared with that of modern dogs and wolves. Parasites found on its body will be analysed, as will the contents of its stomach, which Fyodorov is particularly excited about.

"When we opened it, we were very surprised. The second puppy's stomach is mostly full of twigs and grass," he said, wondering if perhaps the animals were not exclusively carnivorous or whether they started eating grass after they were trapped by a mudslide and began to starve. "This material is really exceptional and unique," said Mietje Germonpre, a palaeontologist from the Royal Belgian Institute who partnered up with Fyodorov on the project and came to Yakutsk to oversee the autopsy of the second puppy earlier this month.

"The fact that soft tissue is preserved will give much more information compared to information that can be obtained from 'normal' fossils," she said, meaning bones and teeth.

Fyodorov lamented the long time it takes to get ancient biological material to suitable labs due to financial constraints, the rugged terrain and red tape which sometimes means that samples reach laboratories only six months later.

"Everyone understands that the tissue of mammoth fauna loses its structure with every passing second, even in the freezer," he said.

Yakutia's melting permafrost is likely to yield up even more treasures in the coming years, he added, saying the number of reported prehistoric finds has grown "severalfold" in the last decade. Warm and wet weather and flash floods have been a big contributor to the thaw, he said.

"Right now it's 0-degree (celsius) here. That should not be the case in March."

As better transport and technology becomes affordable, he said, locals are embarking on expeditions to more and more remote corners of Siberia to look for the precious and lucrative mammoth tusks, which can sell for tens of thousands of dollars and are increasingly prized by Chinese carvers given trade bans on elephant ivory.

In Russia, indigenous tribes are allowed to hunt for ancient remains on their ancestral lands.

"Our land is locked in by permafrost, but little by little it is revealing its secrets," Fyodorov said.

Hate Instagram's new algorithmic timeline? Why you too are to be blamed

Written By Unknown on Sunday, March 27, 2016 | 11:25 PM

Our social media lives have become a battle for control, although it might not feel like it when we're scrolling through tweets about Happy Valley or pictures of our friends getting drunk in bars.

We like to think that we're in charge of all this stuff, that everything appearing on our screens has been chosen by us and that we alone have the power to change it. Any suggestion that the service we're using might be about to reduce that power seems to make us disproportionately furious.

Instagram's recent announcement that it plans to follow Facebook and Twitter's lead by shifting to an "algorithmic timeline" (in which you're more likely to see popular posts from your pals rather than everything in strict chronological order) has caused untold fury: The hashtag #boycottinstagram was used by thousands of people (on, er, Instagram) in order to make their feelings clear. "Keep Instagram Chronological!" has been the battle cry, a plea to protect our God-given right to scroll through a load of pictures that are probably a bit dull.

Algorithmic timelines are easily characterized as evil. There's a strong case for everything that we post online to have the same likelihood of being seen, and algorithms evidently work against that by giving prominence to things that are popular. They force us to up our game: If our pictures, puns and pronouncements are going to reach an audience, then they have to be good, and the idea that an algorithm is doing the judging feels inherently unfair.

Instagram has been quick to reassure users that "when your best friend posts a photo of her new puppy, you won't miss it" - but this neatly sums up the problem: I couldn't care less about seeing said puppy, but the algorithm is going to show me the puppy anyway, because other people like the puppy. Before, seeing a puppy in my timeline was all about chance and timing. Now, Instagram will be putting it there.

If you're in Instagram's shoes, however, it makes perfect sense. The more people joining the service and the more people we follow, the more swamped we are with images: CEO Kevin Systrom estimates that users miss about 70% of content, and he just wants the 30% they do see to be better.

It's that perennial conflict between encouraging us to spend more time using the app and stopping us becoming bored with it. Weighting our feeds towards pictures that we might like to see would seem like a no-brainer - and it also increases revenue for Instagram, as it forces brands to pay for placement in the feed rather than merely relying on posts cropping up chronologically.

The truth is that we're lazy. As we immerse ourselves deeper into social media, the prospect of trying to personally curate everything becomes a monumental drag. Outsourcing control to an algorithm would seem like a perfect solution, but resistance always runs weirdly high.

Of course, we've proved time after time that we hate any kind of change being forced upon us online, even if that change is supposedly for our own good. As the former chief technical officer of Facebook, Bret Taylor, said of its shift to an algorithmic feed: "It was always the thing that people said that they didn't want, but demonstrated that they did by every conceivable metric." Perhaps we've reached the stage where computers know what we want far better than we do.

Smartphone manufacturers are looking beyond smartphones for the next big trend

After Apple unveiled a re-packaged iPhone 6 at its most recent event, it seems like the evolution of the smartphone is slowing down.

Smartphones are more capable than ever, but major changes are becoming less and less common.

The Samsung Galaxy S7 may have a nicer-looking screen, a better camera and a faster processor than its predecessor, but there's nothing truly revolutionary there -- a smartphone which comes out tomorrow may be an improvement on the one that came before it, but it's basically the same when compared to the difference between the Nokia 2630 and the first iPhone, which were released months apart in 2007.

Now, manufacturers are looking past smartphones, for new platforms to conquer. Wearable tech items like smartwatches, smart earpieces and even smart jewellery aren't nearly as ubiquitous as smartphones, and consumers haven't quite warmed to them yet.

However, advances are being made with voice-controlled 'personal assistants' like Siri. Amazon, Microsoft and Google have taken this tech and made it useful with Alexa, Cortana and Google Now, which are already being used to send emails, set reminders and generally make our lives a little easier.

As financial analyst Richard Windsor told Reuters: "The way the whole thing is evolving, the device itself is becoming just another way to provide access to a user's digital life."

Reuters also reported that smartphone makers will generate around $323 billion (£229) in revenue this year -- that's a huge amount, but it's a 1.4% decrease compared to last year.

So manufacturers may have to turn to the next big thing to keep pushing forward, whether that's in wearables, innovative new hardware like flexible screens, or software -- after all, a phone can be more powerful than any other device on the market, but users wouldn't be interested if they couldn't flick through Facebook and take the occasional picture with it.

The last 10 years have undoubtedly been the decade of the smartphone, but they're now ubiquitous and only improving incrementally. We may not know what the ruling device will be in 2026, but tech companies are trying their hardest to find out.

How Facebook picks questions for CEO Mark Zuckerberg's weekly all-hands meetings

For Facebook employees, Friday afternoons mean an opportunity to pick the brains of company leaders.

Every Friday, CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his executive team hold an all-hands meeting where employees are encouraged to ask candid questions.

Facebookers can question them about anything -- product roadmaps, culture queries, or more casual stuff, like fishing for leadership advice from Zuckerberg.

While a lot of the questions happen live, Facebook also gives employees an opportunity to submit questions beforehand through its polling feature in Groups (all employees are part of one giant Facebook Group where company memos and the like get posted).

That's one of the funny things about being a Facebook employee: You use Facebook tools like Groups and Messenger for everything (GIFs included).

Director of HR Lori Goler said that the tool is valuable because it helps surface the most important questions and makes it easier for employees to ask things that might otherwise be uncomfortable.

The poll tool lets anyone add a question anonymously and then everyone can choose to vote for which ones they think are most important.

"Sometimes it isn't something that everyone in the organization would raise their hand to ask, but with this tool only one person has to ask and then other people can help it surface to the top," Goler says.

Facebook puts a strong emphasis on having an open and transparent culture and the weekly exec Q&As with the employee-submitted questions are a big part of that.

"It's always something really interesting, sometimes controversial," Goler says. "It really is a way for people to express what's on their mind. And for us to hear that."

iOS 9.3 update makes older iPhones, iPads unusable

Apple's new software for iPhones and iPads has left some older models unuseable.

The update - released last week - brings with it a raft of new features and improvements. But for owners of the iPad 2 and some other devices, it left their tablets and phones completely unusable.

Owners of the iPad 2 reported that after updating the device, it got stuck and could not communicate with Apple's servers so that it could activate itself.

And owners of older devices without the Touch ID sensor could only complete the update if they remembered the account login that the device was set up with when it was first activated. That may have happened many years ago and when the phone was owned by someone else, leaving users unable to get back into the devices.

The company has taken steps to address the problems, releasing a new version of the update and offering suggestions for those still affected by the problems.

Apple released a new version of iOS 9.3 specifically to fix the issues with the iPad 2. That can be re-downloaded and installed, and the tablet should then be able to get back online.

For those that are unable to get in because of old logins, the company has posted a special page offering suggestions and help. It recommends that affected iPhone owners attempt to activate their device through iTunes on the PC or a Mac, or try and de-activate iCloud activation lock from its website.

If neither of those fixes work, the company recommends that people get in touch with Apple's customer service team.

It also said it would release another new version of iOS 9.3 for people specifically hit by that problem at some point in the future.

Dell planning to sell IT services unit to Japan's NTT Data: Sources

Dell inc is set to announce an agreement on Monday to sell its non-core information technology consulting division to Japan's NTT Data Corp for $3.5 billion, people familiar with the matter said on Sunday.

The move will allow US computer maker Dell to trim some of the $43 billion in debt it is taking on to fund its pending cash-and-stock acquisition of data storage provider EMC Corp, a deal worth close to $60 billion.

The sale will also offer NTT Data, one of the world's largest technology services companies, a bigger foothold in the United States, where it is looking to expand in healthcare IT, insurance and financial services consulting.

Announcement of any agreement is subject to NTT Data's board approving the deal when it meets in Tokyo, the people said, asking not to be identified because the transaction is not yet official.

Dell has also made progress in syndicating $10 billion of its financing package for the EMC acquisition dubbed 'term loan A', the people said. This is expected to be increased in size by $500 million to $750 million due to strong demand, with the extra money to be used to downsize some of the more expensive tranches of the remaining $33 billion in financing, the people added.

The group of banks participating in the term loan A has been expanded from the original eight underwriters to 25, with more expected to join before the syndication is completed in the next week, the people said.

Dell declined to comment, while NTT Data did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Reuters had reported first on February 12 that NTT Data was in exclusive talks to buy Dell's IT services unit.

Formerly known as Perot Systems, Dell's IT services division is a major provider of technology consulting to hospitals and government departments. Founded in 1988 by former US presidential candidate Ross Perot, it was acquired by Dell in 2009 for $3.9 billion.

However, Dell has since divested some of the unit's operations and integrated some others, which it is not including in the sale. Some of the unit's capabilities were seen by Dell as redundant in the wake of the acquisition of EMC.

Dell has also been speaking to private equity firms about selling Quest Software, which helps with information technology management, as well as SonicWall, an e-mail encryption and data security provider, Reuters has previously reported. Together, Quest and SonicWall could be worth up to $4 billion.

Dell's acquisition of EMC, which is backed by founder and chief executive Michael Dell as well as private equity firm Silver Lake Partners, is subject to approval by EMC shareholders. EMC is expected to hold a shareholder vote on the Dell deal in May, allowing for the transaction to be completed sometime between July and October.

Prolonged sitting causes 4% of deaths

Written By Unknown on Saturday, March 26, 2016 | 3:27 AM

Sitting for more than three hours per day may be responsible for nearly 4% of all-cause mortality deaths in the world, according to a new analysis of surveys from 54 countries.

The study suggests reducing sitting time to less than three hours per day would increase life expectancy by an average of 0.2 years. In order to properly assess the damaging effects of sitting, the study analysed behavioural surveys from 54 countries around the world and matched them with statistics on population size, actuarial table, and overall deaths.

Researchers from the University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine in Brazil found that sitting time significantly impacted all-cause mortality , accounting for approximately 433,000, or 3.8%, of all deaths across the 54 nations in the study.

They also found that sit ting had higher impact on mortality rates in the Western Pacific region, followed by European, Eastern Mediterranean, American, and Southeast Asian countries, respectively .

This type of information is crucial to evaluating the effect sitting has on our lives, especially in light of recent research that shows prolonged sitting is associated with an increased risk of death, regardless of activity level, researchers said.

Yoga sessions to be part of Easter celebrations in White House

Professional yoga instructors will have sessions with thousands of Americans who are expected to throng the sprawling White House lawns in Washington on Monday for Easter Egg celebrations, the final Easter for Obama administration.

A "Yoga Garden" is one of the 10 different zones that has been created for the event for which some 35,000 tickets have been issued for the people to come and enjoy the festivities.

On Friday, the White House announced the full programme, activities, and talent line-up for the 2016 White House Easter Egg Roll, a tradition in its 138th year and the largest annual public event at the White House.

In honour of the final Easter Egg Roll of the Obama administration, this year's theme is "Let's Celebrate."
The event will feature live music, sports courts, cooking stations, storytelling and, of course, Easter egg rolling.

In support of Michelle Obama's "Let's Move!" initiative, this year's event will also include the first-ever White House fun run, where the US first lady will join 250 children on a short run to promote active and healthy lifestyles for kids.

This year's special guest is Tony Award winner and multi-platinum recording artist, Idina Menzel.

Menzel will sing the American national anthem as well as perform on the Rock 'n' Egg Roll Stage.

In the Eggtivity Zone, the President's council on fitness sports & nutrition as well as players and coaches from professional sports teams will teach kids how to play sports.

Michelle has chosen the winning artwork from this year's White House Easter Egg Roll Design Contest.
Elementary and middle school students from 19 states and two foreign countries have submitted artwork related to this year's "Let's Celebrate" theme.Posters will be handed out as a prize to children who win the Easter Egg Roll and Egg Hunt.

The eggs first became part of the tradition in 1981 when President and Mrs Ronald Reagan hosted a hunt for wooden eggs that bore the signatures of actors, actresses, famous politicians and athletes.

Easter 2016: Jesus actor fired from Sunday parade for being 'too gay'

An actor who has played Jesus in traditional Spanish Easter parades for 30 years says he has been banned from the role for at least two years because he is gay.

Ramon Fossati says he was told he could not perform the role in the traditional parade to mark Easter Sunday until 201

9 because he exposed a naked shoulder and waved his arms in an "ostentatious" way last year.

The Junta Mayor de Semana Santa Marinera, which governs the brotherhoods in Valencia which organise the Holy Week celebrations, accused Mr Fossati of "ostentation and parody" and appearing to give "false blessings" to the crowd.

Mr Fossati said he was merely waving to the crowd and that his costume had been modelled on traditional religious paintings which showed Jesus bare shouldered.

He had modified it so it only had bare one shoulder because he feared exposing both would be considered too risque, The Times reports.

He was originally fined 300 (£237) following the parade last year but it was reduced to 60 (£47) on appeal and he was banned from the parade by the Santisimo Cristo del Salvador brotherhood.

Mr Fossati says he was not given a reason for the ban but that he suspected it was because he is gay.

He said: "It could be jealousy. Or maybe it was punishment for being gay. But everyone where I live knows my sexual orientation and it is not an issue.

"I am deeply religious and this is the worst thing that could happen."

Easter processions are strictly regulated by religious authorities in Spain to prevent too much flesh being exposed or inappropriate religious gestures.

Women have been fined in the past for showing cleavage or wearing dresses above the knee.

They are usually asked to wear black dresses and a headdress known as a mantilla to the parades.

Apple: US attempt to unlock iPhone could impact NY case

Apple said the US Justice Department's new attempts to unlock an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters without the tech giant's help could eliminate the government's need for its assistance in a similar dispute in New York.

The company's position was laid out in a letter filed on Thursday in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, seeking to delay briefing in the Justice Department's appeal of a ruling that protects Apple from unlocking an iPhone in a drug case.

The letter came after US prosecutors on Monday disclosed that "an outside party" had presented a possible way to open the phone in the San Bernardino investigation, which they said could eliminate the need for an order requiring Apple's help.

In its letter, Apple said if the method being evaluated in the San Bernardino case can also be used in the Brooklyn drug case, "it would eliminate the need for Apple's assistance."

Apple said that could affect the Justice Department's appeal of a February 29 ruling by US magistrate judge James Orenstein that he did not have authority to order Apple to disable the security of an iPhone seized during the drug investigation.

"On the other hand, if the DOJ claims that the method will not work on the iPhone here, Apple will seek to test that claim, as well as any claims by the government that other methods cannot be used," Apple said in the letter.

Apple as a result asked US district judge Margo Brodie, who is presiding over the appeal, to delay the briefing schedule in the case by at least 10 days after the Justice Department files a status report on April 5 in the San Bernardino case.

A spokeswoman for the Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday. Apple in its letter said the Justice Department did not oppose the delay.

The phone in the Brooklyn case belonged to Jun Feng, who has since pleaded guilty to participation in a methamphetamine distribution conspiracy. The Justice Department sought to unlock Feng's phone to find other conspirators.

Unlike the phone used by Rizwan Farook in San Bernardino, Feng's phone had an older operating system, iOS 7, which is not protected under the same encryption technology.

Microsoft apologizes for bot Tay's comments

Microsoft is "deeply sorry" for the racist and sexist Twitter messages generated by the so-called chatbot it launched this week, a company official wrote on Friday, after the artificial intelligence program went on an embarrassing tirade.

The bot, known as Tay, was designed to become "smarter" as more users interacted with it. Instead, it quickly learned to parrot a slew of anti-Semitic and other hateful invective that human Twitter users started feeding the program, forcing Microsoft to shut it down on Thursday.

Following the setback, Microsoft said in a blog post it would revive Tay only if its engineers could find a way to prevent web users from influencing the chatbot in ways that undermine the company's principles and values.

"We are deeply sorry for the unintended offensive and hurtful tweets from Tay, which do not represent who we are or what we stand for, nor how we designed Tay," wrote Peter Lee, Microsoft's vice president of research.

Microsoft created Tay as an experiment to learn more about how artificial intelligence programs can engage with web users in casual conversation. The project was designed to interact with and "learn" from the young generation of millennials.

Tay began its short-lived Twitter tenure on Wednesday with a handful of innocuous tweets.
Then its posts took a dark turn.

In one typical example, Tay tweeted: "feminism is cancer," in response to another Twitter user who had posted the same message.

Lee, in the blog post, called web users' efforts to exert a malicious influence on the chatbot "a coordinated attack by a subset of people."

"Although we had prepared for many types of abuses of the system, we had made a critical oversight for this specific attack," Lee wrote. "As a result, Tay tweeted wildly inappropriate and reprehensible words and images."

Microsoft has enjoyed better success with a chatbot called XiaoIce that the company launched in China in 2014. XiaoIce is used by about 40 million people and is known for "delighting with its stories and conversations," according to Microsoft.

As for Tay? Not so much.

"We will remain steadfast in our efforts to learn from this and other experiences as we work toward contributing to an internet that represents the best, not the worst, of humanity," Lee wrote.

Ben Affleck's 'Live by Night' to release in 2017

Written By Unknown on Thursday, March 24, 2016 | 11:56 PM

Production banner Warner Bros. has listed actor-filmmaker Ben Affleck's "Live by Night" for an October 20, 2017 release.

The film is an adaptation of Dennis Lehane's Prohibition-era crime novel of the same name, reports hollywoodreporter.com.

Apart from directing, Affleck also stars in the film as the prodigal son of a Boston police captain (Brendan Gleeson) who grows to be a criminal gangster.

The film also features Sienna Miller, Zoe Saldana, Chris Messina and Scott Eastwood, among others.

Facebook will now tell if someone is faking your profile

Facebook is rolling out a feature built specifically to stop perhaps the site's most creepy behaviour
The new tool will look for when people are being impersonated by using another's name and profile picture, and attempt to help them get shut down.

The site is also introducing new features that are meant to stop people from having non-consensual intimate images shared of themselves online. That is intended to help stop abuse by allowing people to report inappropriate images that contain themselves - those pictures will then be removed and the site may offer links to resources that will help people if they are being abused or harassed.

If the automated tool spots a potential example of impersonation, it will send a notification to the person it believes is being trolled. That user will then have the option of confirming whether they are genuinely being impersonated or if the site has made a mistake.

If a user confirms that they are being abused, then the complaint will be reviewed and the account may be taken down, according to Mashable, which first reported the news.

The tool has already rolled out to 75% of accounts on Facebook, according to reports.
Facebook said that impersonation isn't necessarily a huge problem on the site. But for those people that it happens to, it can cause significant problems.

"We heard feedback prior to the roundtables and also at the roundtables that this was a point of concern for women," Antigone Davis, Facebook's head of global safety, told Mashable. "And it's a real point of concern for some women in certain regions of the world where it [impersonation] may have certain cultural or social ramifications."

Facebook will also introduce a photo checkup feature, it said, which is meant to help educate users about who can see which photos.

Amazon says no salary discrimination against women employees

Amazon.com Inc, under pressure from an activist shareholder to disclose its policies on gender pay equality, said on Wednesday its female employees earned as much as their male counterparts, according to a survey it recently conducted.

The disclosure came as US companies face criticism on the issue of pay equality, especially in the male-dominated technology sector.

The Seattle-based online retailer disclosed the results of its study after pressure from Arjuna Capital, the activist arm of investment firm Baldwin Brothers Inc, which has been pushing it to prepare a report on gender pay equity.

Arjuna withdrew its original proposal after Amazon announced the results of its gender pay study on Wednesday.

"We are pleased Amazon is stepping up in response to investor concerns about gender pay equity," said Natasha Lamb, director of shareholder engagement at Arjuna, calling on Amazon to further report on its policies and goals to close the gender pay gap.

Amazon, which estimates that women made up 39% of its global workforce and 24% of managers as of July, said a review of compensation including both base pay and stock compensation found that women earned 99.9 cents for every dollar that men earned in the same jobs.

The survey, which was conducted by an external labor economist, covered Amazon workers at various levels of the company's organization in the United States.

"There will naturally be slight fluctuations from year to year, but at Amazon we are committed to keeping compensation fair and equitable," the company said in a statement.

The study, which was recently completed, also found that minorities earned 100.1 cents for every dollar that white employees earn in the same jobs.

The US securities regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission, said last week that Amazon should allow shareholders to vote on a proposal on gender pay equality put forward by Arjuna, after the company had sought permission to omit the proposal from its proxy statement.

Why hackers might help FBI and not Apple

After a third party went to the FBI with claims of being able to unlock an iPhone, many in the security industry said they were not surprised that the third party did not go to Apple.

For all the steps Apple has taken to encrypt customers' communications and its rhetoric around customer privacy, security experts said the company was still doing less than many competitors to seal up its systems from hackers. And when hackers do find flaws in Apple's code, they have little incentive to turn them over to the company for fixing.

Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Twitter, Mozilla and many other technology companies all pay outside hackers who turn over bugs in their products and systems. Uber began a new bug bounty program on Tuesday. Google has paid outside hackers more than $6 million since it announced a bug bounty program in 2010, and the company last week doubled its top reward to $100,000 for anyone who can break into its Chromebook. Apple, which has had relatively strong security over the years, has been open about how security is a never-ending cat-and-mouse game and how it is unwilling to engage in a financial arms race to pay for code exploits.

The company has yet to give hackers anything more than a gold star. When hackers do turn over serious flaws in its products, they may see their name listed on the company's website -- but that is it. That is a far cry from what hackers can expect if they sell an Apple flaw on the thriving underground market where a growing number of companies and government agencies are willing to pay hackers handsomely.

"Especially with the stakes being as high as they are, if Apple wants to continue to compete in the modern world, they have to modernize their approach," said Katie Moussouris, a chief policy officer at HackerOne, which companies like Yahoo, Dropbox and now Uber pay to manage their bug bounty programs.

How Apple, Microsoft's new devices may save the tablet market

Tablets may never again be the consumer sensation they once were, but they are finding new life among professionals.

Apple took aim at that market in announcing a second iPad Pro model this week. Samsung started selling the Windows-based Galaxy TabPro S last week, while Microsoft doubled down on its Surface tablet business last fall with Surface Book, a laptop whose keyboard pops off to leave behind a tablet. Google has its own using Android, the Pixel C.

Unlike early models, these tablets are meant to be used with a physical keyboard and a stylus. That makes them appealing to people looking to get stuff done, whether that's typing a report or drawing on a graphics app.

"It's no secret the tablet business has slowed down overall except in places where there's productivity," says Gary Riding, a senior vice president for mobile computing marketing at Samsung. ("Productivity," in this case, being jargon for work as opposed to play.)

These new devices also have higher price tags. Many sell for almost $1,000, or even more with accessories. Companies market them as PC replacements rather than devices for watching video, reading books and playing games -- that is, things you can already do with your phone.

The Surface Pro 3 is "much thinner than a laptop, and when you have the case with the keyboard, it's essentially a laptop," says Ryan Hastman, who now leaves his Mac laptop behind while traveling to raise money for the University of Alberta in Canada.

Tablet shipments fell 10% to 207 million worldwide last year and are projected to fall another 6% this year, according to IDC. But one subset -- tablets with detachable keyboards -- more than doubled to 17 million last year. It's projected to grow to 64 million in 2020 and represent 30% of the overall tablet market, rather than 8% now.

"It's not all doom and gloom," IDC analyst Jitesh Ubrani says. "Microsoft's done a very good job at marketing detachables. Everyone's now jumping on that bandwagon."

In a sense, Apple was a victim of its own success following the iPad's debut in 2010. Tablets took off with consumers who found them appealing replacements for home laptops. But people haven't replaced them as often as phones. And as phones got bigger, some people began wondering whether they needed a tablet at all.

Enter Microsoft, long the king of "productivity" software, which in 2012 designed a tablet that ran Windows and targeted professionals. The Microsoft Surface didn't have the fun apps that iPads and Android tablets had, but it had Word, Excel and other Office apps long before entertainment-oriented devices did. It also has a USB port and other features missing in most tablets.

It took Microsoft two years to get it right, though. The Pro 3 in 2014 was the first Surface with a fully adjustable kickstand that mimicked the flexibility of laptop screens. And last fall's models were the first Surface devices with Windows 10, which mirrored traditional PCs much more than the Windows 8 it replaced.

"Everyone wants a tablet, and everyone needs a laptop," says Brian Hall, Microsoft's general manager for Surface. "You can have an approach that says people need to buy one of each, or you can have an approach that says there's a happy medium."

The holiday quarter was the best yet for Surface, with revenue increasing 29% to $1.35 billion.

But don't count Apple out. IDC estimates that Apple sold more than 2 million iPad Pros in the holiday quarter when it launched, compared with 1.6 million units for Surface. Apple's advantage: Apps designed from the start for touch screens and battery conservation, rather than ones adapted from the mouse-and-keyboard world of plugged-in Windows PCs.

Now, Apple is giving customers additional choice -- a 9.7-inch iPad Pro that starts at $599, $200 cheaper than the 12.9-inch original (add about $250 for the keyboard and stylus). Just as Microsoft and Samsung have done, Apple is targeting the hundreds of millions of people whose Windows machines are at least five years old. Apple says most iPad Pro customers are coming from Windows.

Bryan O'Neil Hughes, head of outreach and collaboration for software maker Adobe, says a faster processor and better graphics make the Pro something people choose -- rather than settle for -- when replacing PCs. Many professionals in creative industries, he says, prefer tablets over laptops for presentations, sketching and design.

Nicole Dalesio, an artist and teacher in San Jose, California, says the iPad Pro's stylus offers more precision than other devices and "mimics the natural effect of using things like brushes or pencils or charcoal."

That's not to say PCs are going away. Hall acknowledges that people have cheaper options with traditional laptops. And while Dallas chef Nicholas Harrison says his iPad Pro can do everything his restaurants need, he has a PC at home for hard-core games.

That's not to say entertainment-focused tablets are going away, either. Amazon has a healthy business selling such devices for as low as $50 -- creating its own niche, just as Apple, Samsung and Microsoft are with professionals.

"This is what happens as markets mature," says Jan Dawson, chief analyst with Jackdaw Research. "There's a lot more market that can only be served with niche and segmented products."

Most detailed gravity map gives us peek inside Mars

Written By Unknown on Wednesday, March 23, 2016 | 12:20 AM

Nasa has released a new gravity map of Mars, providing the most detailed look at the Red Planet's hidden interior.

Lead author Antonio Genova of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) said that gravity maps allow them to see inside a planet, just as a doctor uses an X-ray to see inside a patient.

Genova added that the new gravity map will be helpful for future Mars exploration, because better knowledge of the planet's gravity anomalies helps mission controllers insert spacecraft more precisely into orbit about Mars. Furthermore, the improved resolution of this gravity map will help the researchers understand the still-mysterious formation of specific regions of the planet.

The improved resolution of the new gravity map suggests a new explanation for how some features formed across the boundary that divides the relatively smooth northern lowlands from heavily cratered southern highlands.

Also, the team confirmed that Mars has a liquid outer core of molten rock by analyzing tides in the Martian crust and mantle caused by the gravitational pull of the sun and the two moons of Mars.

Finally, by observing how Mars' gravity changed over 11 years, the period of an entire cycle of solar activity, the team inferred the massive amount of carbon dioxide that freezes out of the atmosphere onto a Martian polar ice cap when it experiences winter. They also observed how that mass moves between the South Pole and the North Pole with the change of season in each hemisphere.

The map was derived using Doppler and range tracking data collected by Nasa's Deep Space Network from three Nasa spacecraft in orbit around Mars: Mars Global Surveyor (MGS), Mars Odyssey (ODY) and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). Like all planets, Mars is lumpy, which causes the gravitational pull felt by spacecraft in orbit around it to change.

"With this new map, we've been able to see gravity anomalies as small as about 100 kilometers (about 62 miles) across, and we've determined the crustal thickness of Mars with a resolution of around 120 kilometers (almost 75 miles)," said Genova. "The better resolution of the new map helps interpret how the crust of the planet changed over Mars' history in many regions."

The study is published online in the journal Icarus.

Nintendo to stop production of Wii U videogames: Report

Japanese video game maker Nintendo will stop production of the Wii U video game console as early as this year after stagnant sales, Nikkei reported on Tuesday.

A few components of the device have already been stopped and parts inventory will dry up this year, according to Nikkei.

Nintendo's Wii U console has lagged behind Sony Corp's PlayStation and Microsoft Corp's Xbox, while the rise of smartphone games has won over many gamers.

Nintendo could not immediately be reached for comment.

The company said recently that its first smartphone game -- "Miitomo" -- has attracted more than one million users just three days after its release. Released last week, Miitomo is a free-to-play and interactive game which allows users to create "Mii" avatars -- as it tries to compete better with rivals.

Launched earlier this month in Japan, Miitomo will be rolled out in 15 other countries including the United States and France in eight languages soon.

Former Intel CEO Andy Grove passes away at 79

Andy Grove, the Silicon Valley elder statesman who made Intel into the world's top chipmaker and helped usher in the personal computer age, died on Tuesday at age 79, Intel said.

The company did not describe the circumstances of his death but Grove, who endured the Nazi occupation of Hungary during World War Two, living under a fake name, and came to the United States to escape the chaos of Soviet rule, had suffered from Parkinson's.

Grove was Intel's first hire after it was founded in 1968 and became the practical-minded member of a triumvirate that eventually led "Intel Inside" processors to be used in more than 80% of the world's personal computers.

With his motto "only the paranoid survive," which became the title of his best-selling management book, Grove championed an innovative environment within Intel that became a blueprint for successful California startups.

Grove, who was named man of the year by Time magazine in 1997, encouraged disagreement and insisted employees be vigilant of disruptions in industry and technology that could be major dangers -- or opportunities -- for Intel. In doing so, he could be mercurial and demanding with employees who he thought were not doing enough and in 1981 required the staff to work two extra hours a day with no extra pay.

Grove's overhaul of Intel's business -- switching from digital memory to processors -- was an early example of his obsession with detecting major shifts in business and technology and staying flexible enough to move quickly and make the most of them.

"It's not that you shouldn't plan but you should not regard your plans to be anything more than a baseline model of what might happen," Grove said.
While Intel founders Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore proposed much of the chip technology that helped created the semiconductor industry, Grove was the stickler for detail who turned their ideas into actual products. He was responsible for driving growth in Intel's profits and stock price through the 1980s and 1990s.

Nazis, communists
Grove, who was Jewish, was born Andras Grof in Budapest in 1936. Nazi Germany occupied Hungary in his youth, and after the Soviets followed, Grove sneaked into Austria in 1956 and then emigrated to the United States, where he learned English and earned a PhD in chemical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley.

Grove went to work in 1963 at Fairchild Semiconductor, where he researched technology that would eventually be used to make microchips. At Fairchild, he also met chip visionaries Noyce and Moore, who left to found Intel in 1968. Grove quickly joined them, running research and manufacturing.

He became Intel's president in 1979, CEO in 1987 and chairman and CEO in 1997. He gave up his CEO title in 1998 and stayed on as chairman until 2004.

In its early years, Intel focused on making DRAM memory chips. When Japanese competition soared, Grove made the fateful decision to reinvent Intel as a manufacturer of microprocessors - the brains at the center of personal computers and other electronic devices.

As the personal computer industry took off in the 1980s, Intel supplied its processors to IBM and then to Compaq and other manufacturers making "IBM clone" PCs.

Intel's chips, along with Microsoft's Windows operating system, quickly became an industry standard in the exploding PC industry, with Grove funneling profits into research and development to create faster and faster processors. Under his stewardship, the Pentium brand and "Intel Inside" logo became widely recognized by consumers.

Intel remains one of the world's leading semiconductor companies but the PC chipmaker is wrestling to adapt to trends toward smaller gadgets like smartphones and tablets.

Grove also was a champion of keeping manufacturing within the United States, arguing outsourcing the manufacturing of electronics products -- like batteries or televisions -- meant US companies missed out on gaining experience necessary to make technology breakthroughs.

Intel still makes most of its chips in US plants.

During his time at Intel in the 1990s Grove was treated for prostate cancer and later wrote an influential cover story in Fortune magazine, criticizing the medical establishment's treatment of the disease as inefficient compared to scientific standards applied in semiconductor research.

In later life, Grove donated tens of millions of dollars for research on Parkinson's disease, a condition he suffered from. He also regularly criticized government and medical researchers for making slow and inefficient progress beating that disease compared to accomplishments made in the chip industry.

Grove and his wife, Eva, who married a year after meeting while working at a resort in New Hampshire in 1957, had two daughters.

Myth busted: Booze offers no net health benefits

Its an irresistible headline: People who drink alcohol in moderation actually live longer than those who abstain entirely. However, a study has shown the fact suffers from a big flaw: The "abstainers" category includes people who used to drink but have stopped. They may be inherently less healthy, than people who drink in moderation. That doesn't mean that drinking in moderation causes people to live longer.

Researchers at University of Victoria in British Columbia examined 87 studies on the relationship between alcohol and mortality that involved nearly four million people. Only 13 of them strictly separated life-long non-drinkers from people who used to drink or those who imbibe occasionally. Analysing the studies that were free from "abstainer bias" showed no significant benefits for moderate drinkers compared to lifetime abstainers.

And when they compared moderate drinkers with those who consumed alcohol less than once a week, they found no benefit to drinking more often, said Tim Stockwell, lead author of the paper.


Some scholars have been questioning the purported health benefits of alcohol for years. The debate is complicated because most of the evidence on the long-term effects of alcohol - or diet, exercise, and other lifestyle factors, for that matter - is observational. Scientists examine people's behaviour to try to find associations with different health outcomes.

That contrasts with experimental research, which is the method used to test new drugs: People are randomly assigned to get either the drug or a placebo, and neither patients nor the scientists know which is which. Such double-blind, randomised control trials are designed to reduce biases that could inadvertently skew the results.

Observational research can show associations between two things, such as drinking and mortality. But proving that one affects the other is much harder.

"As an intoxicating, addictive, toxic, carcinogenic drug, alcohol is not a good choice as a therapeutic agent," wrote Jennie Connor, chair in preventive and social medicine at the University of Otago. Emanuel Rubin, a pathologist, suggested the evidence was strong enough and doctors should consider recommending patients to start drinking. "There's a protective effect to moderate alcohol consumption for several health conditions, like coronary artery disease and stroke." bloomberg

Djokovic backs off money remarks after Serena, Murray fire

World number one Novak Djokovic backed off comments that men's tennis players should make more than women on Tuesday as Serena Williams and Andy Murray led a stinging chorus of criticism at the remarks.

A furious row over the gender pay gap in tennis erupted at the weekend, when Indian Wells tournament director Raymond Moore said women should get "on their knees" to thank male players for money in the sport.

Moore was forced to apologize before resigning late on Monday.

Djokovic fueled the controversy however after stating that he believed the pay gap was justified, adding that women go through "hormones and different stuff."

Williams, who has won 21 Grand Slam singles crowns to 11 for Djokovic, condemned the Serbian star's remarks on Tuesday.

"It has been, I would say disappointing," Williams said. "I wouldn't say my son deserved more money than my daughter because he's a man. It would be shocking."

Djokovic has a 17-month-old son, Stefan, but Williams openly wondered how he would explain himself to a future daughter.

"He's entitled to his opinion," Williams said. "If he had a daughter, he has a son right now, he should talk to his daughter and say, 'Your brother deserves more money than you.'

"I would never use sex to compare. We have so many great players, men and women, who have brought so much vision to the sport. Every athlete works extremely hard.

"If I had a son and a daughter I would never tell them one deserves more because of their sex."

Britain's Murray even noted Djokovic's notion that men should receive less than women if their matches were less well attended, citing an example of how many would show up to watch who if Williams and Ukraine's Sergiy Stakhovski each had a match in a ticketed session.

"I think there should be equal pay 100 percent," Murray said.

"The whole thing doesn't stand up. It depends on the matches day by day. The men's game has had some great rivalries for the past few years. The whole of tennis should strengthen from that, not just the men's game."

Djokovic later issued a statement on Facebook, offering a qualified apology for his comments, which he said had been made while he was affected by the "euphoria and adrenalin" of his win at Indian Wells.
"I've made some comments that are not the best articulation of my view, and I would like to clarify them," Djokovic said.

"We all have to fight for what we deserve. This was never meant to be made into a fight between genders and differences in pay, but in the way all players are rewarded for their play and effort.

"This was my view all along and I want to apologize to anyone who has taken this the wrong way."

Murray meanwhile said he was baffled to hear of Moore's outburst ahead of Sunday's final, where Williams lost 6-4, 6-4 to Victoria Azarenka.

"You had it before a great women's final with 16,000 people," Murray said. "The whole thing was pretty strange and pretty disappointing coming right before a final like that. It didn't make sense."

Women's tennis found other defenders, such as Japan's Kei Nishikori.

"You see great women's tennis too," he said. "A lot of people want to see women's tennis, especially Serena."

Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova called Djokovic's comments "very disappointing."
"We are training 100 percent the same as the men. We're more troubled with hormones and other things? He should not have said what he said."

"What he said was not right at all," said two-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka.

"We work so hard for this, spend so much time practicing. I don't think we do any less than the men," Poland's Agnieszka Radwanska said. "We don't deserve less prize money."
 
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