Monday 27 February 2017

This week in space: rockets, telescopes, and exoplanets

Trappist monks are pretty cool: they’re widely appreciated for their excellent bread, preserves, and beer. At the ESO facility in the Atacama, one of their telescopes is named TRAPPIST, in homage to the monks. That telescope was used to discover seven earthlike exoplanets around TRAPPIST-1, a nearby ultracool dwarf star. Follow-up with the Spitzer space telescope revealed that all seven of those planets orbit much closer than Mercury orbits our sun, and they all transit the star. Three are within the habitable zone.

Friday 24 February 2017

New leak points to release dates for Samsung Galaxy S8 and LG G6

It’s getting to be that time of year when the big Android device makers release their flagship phones in quick succession. Hometown South Korean rivals Samsung and LG have been duking it out in recent years with near-simultaneous releases, but this time LG may have a few weeks all to itself. A leak from ETNews claims to have release dates for the LG G6 and the Galaxy S8.
LG took it on the chin in 2016 when consumers didn’t get on-board with its modular design, leading to substantial losses in the company’s mobile division. After a reorganization, the LG V20 was tweaked to offer a more premium feel and no module chin in late 2016. Now, the LG G6 is on the way. It’s been thoroughly leaked, and an announcement is expected at Mobile World Congress in a few days.

Monday 20 February 2017

Efficient power converter for internet of things

The "internet of things" is the idea that vehicles, appliances, civil structures, manufacturing equipment, and even livestock will soon have sensors that report information directly to networked servers, aiding with maintenance and the coordination of tasks.
Those sensors will have to operate at very low powers, in order to extend battery life for months or make do with energy harvested from the environment. But that means that they'll need to draw a wide range of electrical currents. A sensor might, for instance, wake up every so often, take a measurement, and perform a small calculation to see whether that measurement crosses some threshold. Those operations require relatively little current, but occasionally, the sensor might need to transmit an alert to a distant radio receiver. That requires much larger currents.
Generally, power converters, which take an input voltage and convert it to a steady output voltage, are efficient only within a narrow range of currents. But at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference last week, researchers from MIT's Microsystems Technologies Laboratories (MTL) presented a new power converter that maintains its efficiency at currents ranging from 500 picoamps to 1 milliamp, a span that encompasses a 200,000-fold increase in current levels.

Saturday 18 February 2017

Project Loon uses machine learning to make internet balloons ‘dance on the wind’

The aptly named Project Loon started as a “moonshot” experiment at Google’s X division in 2011. The goal was to provide wireless internet access to remote areas with high-altitude balloons, which does indeed sound loony. It has become one of the most well-known endeavors by X, now a division of Google’s parent company Alphabet. It’s not just a wacky idea anymore — it’s starting to work. X has announced improvements to its navigation algorithm that could vastly reduce the number of balloons needed to cover an area.

Friday 17 February 2017

Space & Sound Used to Help Visually Impaired Navigate with the HoloLens

We live in a marvelous age, a time where technology is driving us forward as a species at a rapid pace, and tech-driven miracles are becoming more and more commonplace. While the human race may not be focused on building the largest wonders of the world, as it once was in history, the current order of wonders are much smaller in scale—even internal.
Medical technology has made leaps and bounds in recent history. Sensory disabilities such as sight and hearing have long been an unrepairable issue, but these fields have started to become far less of a mystery. With over 4 million suffering from a hearing disability in the United States, and about 7.5 million suffering from blindness, it may be encouraging news to think that we are at a stage in development where 4 out of 5 cases of blindness are preventable or curable, with the other fifth of those cases likely being curable in the near future.

Google gives everyone machine learning superpowers with TensorFlow 1.0

It wasn’t that long ago that building and training neural networks was strictly for seasoned computer scientists and grad students. That began to change with the release of a number of open-source machine learning frameworks like Theano, Spark ML, Microsoft’s CNTK, and Google’s TensorFlow. Among them, TensorFlow stands out for its powerful, yet accessible, functionality, coupled with the stunning growth of its user base. With this week’s release of TensorFlow 1.0, Google has pushed the frontiers of machine learning further in a number of directions.

Capturing WPA Passwords by Targeting Users with a Fluxion Attack

With tools such as Reaver becoming less and less viable options for penetration testers as ISPs replace vulnerable routers, there becomes fewer certainties about which tools will work against a particular target. If you don't have time to crack the WPA password, or it is unusually strong, it can be hard to figure out your next step. Luckily, nearly all systems have one common vulnerability you can count on—users!
Social engineering goes beyond hardware and attacks the most vulnerable part of any system, and one tool that makes this super easy is Fluxion. Even the most antisocial hacker can hide behind a well-crafted login page, and Fluxion automates the process of creating a fake access point to capture WPA passwords.

This week in space: Pluto, Europa, and 96 nanosats

India just set a world record by sending 104 satellites into space in a single launch. One hundred and three of them were nanosats, but they were crated beside Cartosat-2D: a three-quarter-ton beast the Indian government is going to use for cartography, imaging and maybe weather mapping. Ninety-six of the 103 were actually American spacecraft from a company called Planet, which was founded by ex-NASA scientists to “image the entire Earth every day.” Counting the 96 new ones, that brings Planet’s constellation to 149, which is also a world record.
The latest news on Proxima b is that scientists have revised the odds on its habitability, probably downward. The reason is its parent star: Proxima Centauri, a red dwarf. To call a red dwarf’s early life violent would be an understatement of British proportion. X-ray and extreme UV (XUV) “superflares” wreak themselves upon any hapless planets in their paths, ionizing and driving away the lighter elements in the atmosphere: trivial stuff like carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen. Proxima Centauri is likely no exception to this rule, which means that it probably roasted Proxima b to a crisp and drove off its atmosphere long ago.

Wednesday 15 February 2017

Nokia is resurrecting the iconic 3310 phone

Back before the iPhone was a gleam in Apple’s eye, Nokia was the smartphone vendor everyone was trying to beat. For over a decade, Nokia dominated the smartphone and feature phone markets — and one of the devices that cemented its position as an early leader in the cell phone industry was the Nokia 3310. Now HMD Global, the company that manufacturers devices for Nokia, will refresh the device for MWC 2017 with the same candybar design, according to Evan Blass at VentureBeat.
At first glance, the Nokia 3310 doesn’t look like the kind of device anyone would care about in 2017. The original phone launched in 2000 with features like an 84×48 monochrome screen, games like Snake II, a calculator, a stop watch, and a reminder function. The 3310 could store seven custom ringtones, and supported SMS messages of up to 459 characters. In 2017, these “features” are so basic they could practically be integrated into a toaster(Please don’t -Ed).

Hubble could get another repair mission after all

The Hubble Space Telescope has been orbiting Earth for more than a quarter century. It’s sent back some amazing photos during that time, while also expanding our knowledge of the universe. The telescope got its last maintenance sweep in 2009, but now there’s talk in the government of sending another to the 27 year-old telescope. Of course, that’s going to be tricky without a Space Shuttle.
Hubble was launched in 1990 with great fanfare, but astronomers quickly realized it wasn’t working correctly. A defect in the mirror resulted in blurry images of objects the telescope should have been able to see in crystal clarity. Astronauts repaired the telescope in 1993 by adding an instrument to correct for the lens aberration — essentially eyeglasses for Hubble. That was the first of five service missions that added new cameras, repaired gyroscopes, and replaced the batteries.
The last Hubble service mission was in 2009, prior to the end of Shuttle flights in 2011. Hubble has long outlived its original life span, and it’s due for replacement soon. The James Webb Space telescope is going to launch in the next few years, but Hubble could get a new lease on life with another service mission. This is still in the early stages, but officials think that private space firm Sierra Nevada could have a vehicle capable of going on a Hubble refurbishment mission.
Sierra Nevada flies an unmanned “mini-shuttle” called the Dream Chaser, which it has developed over the course of the last several years. Dream Chaser is based on designs generated in the early days of the Shuttle program, as well as the Air Force’s X-37B space plane. An unmanned version of the Dream Chaser could be used for Space Station resupply missions as soon as 2018, but a Hubble service mission would require a manned flight.
Dream_Chaser_pre-drop_tests.6

India sets world record with 104 satellites in a single rocket launch

Gravity is a good thing when it keeps you firmly planted on Earth’s surface, but it’s quite a nuisance when you’re trying to launch things into space. The economics of space launches are harsh; every ounce sent up has an astronomical cost attached, but the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) just set an efficiency world record. It successfully launched 104 satellites into space with a single rocket. A lot of them were very small, but that’s still a big achievement.
The launch was carried out with a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), an expendable launch system developed by India specifically to get multiple satellites into orbit in a single rocket. It was previously used to launch 17 satellites from countries like Canada, the UK, and the US into space. That was impressive enough, but the new 104-satellite launch shatters the old record held by Russia of 37 satellites in a single launch. That one was set back in 2014.

Tuesday 14 February 2017

Build Your Own Projection Microscope with a Syringe, Laser Pointer, and Drop of Water

Have you ever wondered what sort of microscopic critters are floating around in your water? Well, you can find out with just a few bucks worth of materials and a laser pointer. Really. That's all it takes to build your very own homemade laser projection microscope, aka a water drop projector.

Materials

  • Syringe
  • Tape
  • Laser pointer
  • Wall (to project the image onto)
  • Stand
Some people have made their stands with styrofoam or wood. As long as it can support a syringe, it should be fine.

What’s behind Ford’s $1 billion on artificial intelligence: self-driving excellence



Why is Ford investing $1 billion over five years in a Pittsburgh startup called Argo AI? It’s looking to gain an edge in self-driving car technology in the four-year countdown to 2021. That’s when Ford has said it will be shipping cars with autonomous driving. Several other automakers said in 2016 they’d have self-driving cars within five years, too.
Ford CEO Mark Fields said, “With Argo AI’s agility and Ford’s scale, we’re combining the benefits of a technology startup with the experience and discipline we have at Ford.” Ford will continue work on the self-driving vehicle platform, including sensors, while Argo AI will build the virtual driver system.

Apple orders an estimated 160 million iPhone 8 OLED panels, plans massive shipments

We’ve been discussing the expected features on Apple’s iPhone 8 for a few weeks now, including some specific features believed to be limited to the highest-end 10th anniversary model, such as a massive 5.8-inch end-to-end screen, integrated Touch ID functionality baked into the display, and an OLED panel instead of the LCDs all previous iPhones have relied on.
Samsung has signed an agreement with Apple to provide a full 160 million screens for the Apple iPhone 8, according to the Korean Herald (we’ve heard rumors it could also be titled as the iPhone X, though that’s scarcely confirmed). That’s surprising, for several reasons. First, Apple only shipped 211 million devices last year, and 231 million in 2015. If Apple is ordering OLEDs for a full 76% of its previous year in sales, it clearly expects the consumer response to be massive. But that’s surprising given that the iPhone 8/X’s flagship model is expected to cost $1m000. Even if the handset ships with a huge number of new and unusual features, how many people will be willing to pay four digits to get one? Apple’s average selling prices (ASPs) for the iPhone as a whole hit $695 this past quarter, in a new record for the company — but $1000 is a full 1.44x more than that.

Monday 13 February 2017

Open Wi-Fi Settings, Share Passwords & More with Wi-Fi Widget for iPhone

The widget system on iOS leaves a lot to be desired when compared to Android's offering, but that's not really Apple's fault. The system is there, we just need some good widgets to really get the most out of it, so it's up to developers to create some awesome apps that work with the home screen and lock screen widget panels on iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
Johnny Lin is one such developer who's helping to make iOS 10's widget system better, as his latest app, Wi-Fi Widget, adds some great functionality that we've been missing. It lets you access your Wi-Fi settings menu in one tap (something Apple should include on the Control Center toggle), run a quick ping test on your network at the press of a button, and even share your Wi-Fi password with your friends in no time.

10 Easy, Last-Minute Origami Projects for Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day is a day for love, but it also just happens to be the time when every flower shop in town hikes up their prices. Chocolates are still relatively cheap, but I never understood why you have to give the gift of bigger love handles when something more creative gets the job done at a much cheaper price.
There are tons of DIY projects out there you can try your hands at, from a simple heart-shaped homopolar motor to an extremely difficult heart-shaped plasma lamp, but to keep costs down and spend as little effort as possible, origami is the way to go.
You can literally fold just about anything out of a sheet or two of paper, and depending on how crazy you get, it could take mere minutes to complete. It's the cheapest and laziest way to go for last-minute Valentine's Day gifts.

Sunday 12 February 2017

Root Android—Our Always-Updated Rooting Guide for Any Phone or Tablet

Without a comprehensive root method for all Android phones and tablets, a device-specific approach is needed. And since we always cover each new rooting method for all the popular phones and tablets here at Gadget Hacks, we've built this always-updated guide to rooting any Android device.
Any time we find a new and better way to root, we'll be updating this post. Bookmark it now, and we'll be ready when you get your next new phone or tablet. Currently, this guide covers the following devices and methods.

What Is Root?

In the simplest terms, "root" is the topmost folder on your Android device. If you have experience using Windows Explorer, you can think of root as the C:\ drive, where all of your other folders like My DocumentsProgram Files and your Windows files are stored.

Use Google's Reverse Image Search on Your Android Device

Considering that Google makes Android, it's rather strange that the operating system doesn't have a baked-in solution for doing a reverse image search. Sure, you can long-press pictures in Chrome to search for other instances of a photo, but it's not possible with pictures you find in other apps, or photos you've downloaded to your phone.
Such functionality would be handy if you'd like to find images that are visually similar to your favorite background wallpaper, or if you're looking for a higher-resolution version of a photo you've already downloaded. And with the recent advent of catfishing, it would be nice to see if someone's profile pic in a dating app were actually their own.

Get Rid of the Built-in Google Search Bar on Almost Any Launcher



Almost every Android device comes with a Google search bar embedded directly into its stock home screen app. But Google search is available in so many different places on Android that having this bar in your launcher is almost overkill. On top of that, Google recently changed the logo overlay to a more colorful one that may clash with your home screen theme, so there's plenty of reasons to dislike this feature.
Unfortunately, most stock home screen apps don't allow you to get rid of this search bar, so in the past, your only option to remove it has been to switch to a custom launcher. But now, thanks to a new Xposed module from developer jeboo, you can give the Google search bar the ax in one simple step—and to top that off, it will work with almost any stock launcher out there.

South Africa may be the epicenter of a geomagnetic pole reversal in progress

Don’t start running around like your hair’s on fire, but this might actually matter. The Earth’s magnetic field is so discombobulated over South Africa that some scientists believe we’re seeing the opening strains of a planet-wide polarity change.

What have scientists observed?

We already knew that the poles of the Earth’s magnetic field sometimes reverse, which is to say their direction flips from herding particles in to shooing them out, or vice versa. And the Earth’s magnetic field isn’t perfectly even, either. It’s sort of lumpy and thin in places. This is because the innards of our planet aren’t perfectly evenly distributed. There’s one particular region of the planet, toward the South Pole, where the liquid iron core meets with a hot, dense patch of the mantle. Studies of the planet’s magnetic field show that its poles are reversed over that patch.

Saturday 11 February 2017

6 upcoming space missions worth keeping an eye on

Having pretty thoroughly explored the Earth, humanity has since turned its attention to the stars. There are a myriad of missions already in the history books, and many more underway. We’re at a pivotal time in our exploration of space. With a bit of luck and science, we may soon be able to explore more freely and understand the nature of the universe — it’s a bright future. These are six of the most important upcoming missions that will get us there.

Extreme science: the biggest, fastest and hottest breakthroughs of 2016

This year we pushed the boundaries of science to new extremes. We saw new levels of supercomputer performance, peeled the plastic off the biggest telescope and solar plant on earth, did the first-ever spectroscopy on antimatter, and even made liquid light.
To start with, we put spinners on the world’s most powerful X-ray laser. The SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is a linear electron accelerator at Stanford. The X-ray laser is created by forcing electrons through a gauntlet of carefully spaced magnets, which provokes the emission of a beam of X-rays so powerful that it can even image a single molecule, without needing to produce a crystal first. This means that it can be used to capture chemical reactions in progress.
The current XFEL laser, no slouch by any means, is still limited by its copper linac line. So, Stanford teamed up with Cornell, Berkeley, Fermilab, Jefferson Lab, and Argonne to install a niobium superconductor, because it’ll let the linac run ten thousand times faster and brighter than ever before. LCLS-II, as the new accelerator will be called, will be capable of producing bursts of electrons at rates of up to a million pulses per second.

Rumor: Apple may add wireless charging to iPhone 8, but top-end model could cost $1,000

There are rumors swirling around the iPhone 8 suggesting Apple could be planning to offer a major technology leap forward with its 10th Anniversary iPhone, but the highest-end devices may not be cheap.
Business Insider has published a pair of rumors on various aspects of the upcoming iPhone 8. KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo Apple will move back to all-glass construction with the iPhone 8 for all three models. The use of glass could make it more difficult to implement the wireless charging support Kuo expects the new device to offer, and overheating could be a problem due to the difference in thermal dissipation between glass and metal. Kuo writes:
Adoption of glass casing & wireless charging unfavorable to thermal system operation for three new 2017F iPhone models; bigger impact on OLED model. The thermal system becomes less efficient with glass casing, as compared to metal casing used previously. Furthermore, wireless charging increases handset temperature. While we don’t expect general users to notice any difference, lamination of an additional graphite sheet is needed for better thermal control and, thus, steady operation; this is because FPCB is replaced with film, which is more sensitive to temperature change of the 3D touch sensor in OLED iPhone.