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Your Torrent Client May Be Mining Bitcoin Without Telling You

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When you download the popular torrent client uTorrent, the website describes the software as "light, limitless" and "elegant, efficient." That's ironic because multiple users are reporting that the latest uTorrent update quietly installs processor-hogging bitcoin-mining software without your knowledge.

Comment threads in multiple uTorrents forums say that version 3.4.2 build 28913 of the software includes EpicScale, a bitcoin mining program that uses "unused processing power to change the world." There's obviously money involved in this deal. In one of those threads, a uTorrent representative confirmed the partnership: "EpicScale is a great partner for us to continue to generate revenue for the company."

But users never would've known if they hadn't investigated the issue, since uTorrent doesn't mention EpicScale when you install its bittorent client.

uTorrent denies it's doing anything in secret. In a statement the company said that it "can confirm there is no silent install happening… Most likely these users accepted the offer during install." Indeed, there is a window that pops up during installation that prompts the user to accept some other software installations. It looks like a terms of service document for uTorrent, but the fine print is actually details about a bunch of ad deals that install crap in your browser and so forth.

When I installed the OS X version of uTorrent, EpicScale was not mentioned in this document. Meanwhile, if this many uTorrent are complaining about not knowing about the bitcoin mining software, it's pretty clear that uTorrent's not doing a good job telling them about it.

Is this shady? Sure is. Is it the end of the world? Not really. Bitcoin mining software can create a bit of a drag on your processor, but it remains to be seen if users will really notice it much. Meanwhile, uTorrent is free, ad-supported software, so they have to make money somehow. It would just be nice if the company told you what software it was installing on your computer. That's not too much to ask.

http://www.trustedreviews.com/news/utorrent-silently-installing-bundled-bitcoin-mining-software

Looks like I won't be downloading the new upgrade then
 
That Decades-Old FREAK Security Flaw Affects Every Version of Windows

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A few days ago, computer scientists revealed a wide-spread security exploit called FREAK. At first it was thought to be a vulnerability confined to Android devices and Macs, but it turns out that it affects Windows machines too.

Essentially FREAK makes use of the United States 90's government policies—which called for the inclusion of weak encryption on exported products—to launch dangerous attacks on web browsers from secure sites like .gov websites and even banks.

In an advisory, Microsoft said that the exploit affects all supported versions of Windows, and that it's currently working on a fix that will come in the form of a monthly release or an out-of-cycle updated.

http://gizmodo.com/freak-attack-a-d...sed-by-us-go-1689331567/1689842048/+ericlimer

Damn, Microsoft needs to get it together
 
You'll Need a Nexus 6 to Enjoy Google's New Wireless Service

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More details have emerged about Google's plan to become a wireless carrier without actually being a wireless carrier. The Wall Street Journal reports that Google's service will launch later this month but only on the Nexus 6. In other words, this Google wireless experiment is just that, an experiment.

That's not bad news, per se. For starters, it's exciting that Google's apparently going to launch its new initiative to become a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) in the coming weeks, rather than the coming months, as we though. What's more, as the Journal's sources report, Google's weaving together service from T-Mobile, Sprint, and available wifi networks sounds pretty cool. It's not that cool if you have any phone except a Nexus 6. (Even a Nexus 5 isn't supposed to work with the new service.) But it's a cool idea!

http://fortune.com/2015/03/06/google-wireless-nexus/

I like where this is going
 
The Pizza From This Box-Shaped Oven Is Always Hot and Gooey

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Usually when you open a pizza box that's been sitting on your kitchen counter for weeks, you're not going to find a fresh, hot slice inside. So maybe it's time to take your local pizza place off your speed dial and start making your own using this compact oven that looks like a pizza box, except that it's not made of cardboard.

CuiZen's Pizza Box Oven is instead made of stainless steel with a 1200-watt heating element on the top and bottom so it can properly cook a 12-inch pizza. To ensure an even finish the pizza is slowly rotated as it's heated, and a pair of dials on the front lets users set a timer up to 30-minutes long, and a temperature as hot as 525 degrees Fahrenheit. At $60 it's not as cheap as getting a pepperoni pie delivered, but this is one of those 'pay for itself over time' deals.

More importantly, you'll never have to eat cold pizza straight from the box ever again.

http://www.amazon.com/CuiZen-PIZ-40...689822275[a|B00L0WHAKU[au|5722090666816357259

Very cool
 
Bluetooth Beacons Will Help Blind People Navigate London's Subway

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A new smartphone app and Bluetooth beacon system is currently being trialled at Pimlico Station on the London Underground, and could revolutionise the way blind and partially sighted people navigate the capital's Tube system.

Born from the Royal London Society for Blind People's Youth Forum, the Wayfindr system offers independence to those that would otherwise require assistance to get around the public transport hubs.

It makes use of signals transmitted by Bluetooth beacons, which are then picked up by a smartphone and cross referenced with ustwo's indoor positioning instructions. Paired with a set of bone conduction earphones, the user can then be fed navigation and direction instructions, without missing out on the vital ambient sounds at the station.

Following a month long trial, Wayfindr's ultimate goal is to have the system standardised and installed across the entire Transport for London network.

http://www.rlsb.org.uk/blogs/rlsb-youth-forum-set-a-new-direction-for-tube-travel

That's awesome!
 
Java Now Dumps Adware on to Macs, Too

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There are a lot of reason not to use Java—but here's one more to add to the list. The latest release of Oracle's ubiquitous software now also dumps a load of crapware on to your Mac.

Java has long installed adware onto Windows PCs, but now it also does the same to OS X too. The update instruction for Java 8 Update 40 on Mac explain that "Oracle has partnered with companies that offer various products." If you don't pay attention when you install the software, you'll be burdened with hi-jacked search function and ad-laden results thanks to Ask.com.

Of course, there's increasingly less need to use Java—but if you do, from now on you should be careful when you update it. With Lenovo's Superfish incident fresh in our memories, it seems that we still, in 2015, can't escape the corporate desire to fill our computers with junk.

http://www.engadget.com/2015/03/06/java-adware-mac/?ncid=rss_truncated

I knew it was only a matter of time before they got the Apple users too
 
A Ten-Minute History of Robotics

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Present-day robotics hasn't turned out quite as the futurists intended: for better or worse, we don't live in a world of robot butlers and Skynet. This ten-minute history of robotics does a nice job of explaining why.

Fundamentally, of course, the truth is that robotics as a discipline is just... quite difficult. Some headaches that were initially understood decades ago still persist, unsolved, while others have only presented themselves over the fullness of time. Though that shouldn't stop us celebrating the progress we have made, from robot vacuum cleaners to the first self-driving cars. Indeed, if anything, this video will make you celebrate them all the more.

http://gizmodo.com/a-ten-minute-history-of-robotics-1689806289

Good stuff
 
I Tried VR Porn, And It Was Weird

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"Have you ever tried VR porn?" Vander Caballero asked me. The video game developer was trying to convince me of VR's potential to revolutionize intimacy. "Do you want to try it right now?"

Of course I said yes. Of course I did. It's hardly what I expected from my demo session of his new game, but you don't say "no" when a game developer offers you the opportunity to try VR porn. I know this from experience. (I don't know this from experience.)

Caballero was the creative director on the critically acclaimed puzzle game Papo & Yo. I'd just finished playing through the GDC demo of his new game, a Pokemon Snap-alike called Time Machine, in which you go back in time to get up close and personal with living, breathing dinosaurs. And I mean close. The game's main mechanic is scanning (in order to collect data about how reptiles lived back when they were still cool and gigantic), and it's frequently tense, sometimes terrifying. I was inches away from a sea-dwelling Pliosaurus' eye, and I'd have been megaton fish food if not for my ability to temporarily slow time while preparing dinosaurs' for their close-up.

It was really cool—not to mention one of the more unique, strangely intimate experiences I've had with VR—but I still had my reservations. Caballero wasn't fazed. He wanted to convince me that VR won't just take over games; it will take over our lives. He said he already uses his Samsung Gear VR headset on buses, trains, and planes. He transforms his commutes by going to other places. His journeys are destinations. Or when he's at home and his wife is sleeping, he can just strap on his headset and chill out in his own fully modeled movie theater.

That's when intimacy entered the picture. I suggested that it's kind of strange to hear Caballero—a person whose previous games have preached empathy, emotional intimacy, and understanding—rally behind habits that effectively cut him off from the rest of the world. I found it doubly strange because Caballero is such a warm, personable person. He grins frequently, he gestures broadly, he laughs easily. Conversations with him quickly take on their own sort of intimacy. He has a way of making people feel comfortable being open and honest, delving into topics that might not be in the realm of, for instance, a typical video game interview.

When faced with the idea that VR might—in certain cases—wall people off from each other, Caballero retorted that VR has the potential to put humanity into empathy overdrive, if applied correctly. Proximity, being close and connected to someone, the feeling that you could reach out and touch them if only there wasn't a wall of ones and zeroes in your way—that can be nearly as powerful as real life, he said.

Then came the porn. Not the type of intimacy I was thinking of, but sure!

Caballero handed me his Samsung Gear and opened a VR porn film he'd downloaded. It was a real person in a real environment—not a game engine—but I was able to look around at my leisure as the proceedings unfolded. 4

It was breakfast-themed. Sunlight lazily streamed into a white-walled kitchen as a red-haired woman stripped on a table that I—or my "avatar"—was seated at. Occasionally she took sips from a glass of orange juice because thematic consistency or something, I guess. As she slowly shrugged out of a thin white shirt, she frequently made eye contact with "me," whispered and giggled playfully, teased touch but witheld sensation.

She got close. Really close. If she were a real person, we'd have been nose-to-nose. It was weirdly uncomfortable. My brain—only partially aware that what it was experiencing wasn't real—surged its synapses with mixed signals, ones usually reserved for awkward encounters with actual humans. "Who is this person? You just met her. Why is she right in your face? Please step back please step back please step back she's not stepping back. Why can't you step back?" I could count the moments of eye contact in eternities, it felt so awkward.

I am sometimes scared of people—especially when I can't talk to them. VR porn triggered that reaction hardcore.

The illusion that she was a real human broke when she got even closer. My body was so confused by the lack of heat—no warm breath on the nape of my neck, not even a single heartbeat—that I felt it as a phantom sensation. I realized that I didn't feel like I was with another person so much as I was being "stroked" by the intangible ghost hand of some eerie automaton, a one-size-fits-all skeleton wearing intimacy's skin, paying no heed as said skin sloughed away to reveal its true nature.

Then she started eating her own underwear, and I wasn't into it at all. Apologies to folks who are into that, but it's not my thing.

Still, I couldn't deny that elements of the VR porn app were effective, even if only briefly. My brain believed it was dealing with another human being. It was really confusing and kinda weird, as a result. I couldn't deny that it prompted a strong reaction, though.

Later that day, I talked with someone else who'd also tried VR porn (albeit not with Vander Caballero; that is, to my knowledge, an honor only I can lay claim to), and his experience was totally different from mine. He explained:

"At first it felt surreal and disconnected, but I timed myself to get off at the same time she did," said this person, who preferred to remain anonymous. "And suddenly, I came, and we had that moment of [exhausted breathing sounds]. She was breathing at the same time. And then she looked me in the eye and leaned in and said, 'I love you, baby.' I was like, 'Wow, that was amazing.' And then I realized I'd only had that experience with a few girlfriends in my life. That's when I realized this crap is crazy. To connect with a human you need so many things, and this achieved it almost immediately. This girl was there with me, and she recognized me, and she appreciated me."​

So that's really... something! There's no denying that this person had a powerful, intimate experience thanks to VR. It didn't necessarily assuage my fears that some people might use VR to become more reclusive—in some ways, it made me more apprehensive—but the whole experience convinced me that possible pros are just as numerous as possible cons. Who's to say what the social ramifications of such a young technology will be? Maybe we'll strap on VR goggles to closer than ever before with people halfway across the world. Or maybe we'll use them to be millions of miles away from people while riding the same bus. Maybe we'll use them to avoid encountering people different than us—meeting strangers, learning to understand them—at all costs, or maybe we'll use them to inhabit their lives, literally take a walk in their shoes.

Maybe we'll stop having sex with each other. Maybe this is the end of humanity.

F*** if I know. All I know is, VR has the potential to cause widespread change, both in games and beyond. If nothing else, it will help you hide your porn better, seeing as it will be strapped to your face.

You thought I was gonna try to end with something more insightful, didn't you? Well, that's what you get for having expectations.

http://kotaku.com/i-tried-vr-porn-and-it-was-weird-1689987385

Well I think we all knew this was coming. I'll give it a shot :woot:
 
Backing Up An Entire Nation Is Unsurprisingly Difficult

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You might not realize it, but the most technologically advanced nation in the world is a small ex-Soviet state in Eastern Europe. Estonia has pioneered secure digital identities for its citizens, helping it become a frontrunner in everything from online voting to preventing Craigslist ripoffs. But it also makes the country a particularly juicy target for cyberattacks.

With tensions running high between Estonia and Russia, the country is spending more time than ever trying to make its extensive digital systems secure in the case of cyberattack. As The Economist details in this month's Technology Quarterly, that's no easy feat. The country has been working with Microsoft to try and design a system of 'digital continuity', to make sure that vital government systems are still accessible in the case of cyberattack.

But as well as being a technological challenge, the legal problems of storing private citizen data outside the country (which it needs to do, in order to ensure redundancy) are far from trivial. One solution is setting up backup servers in Estonian embassies around the world — which keeps the information on sovereign soil.

In any case, it's interesting to see the kind of challenges that a backup of this scale requires. Maybe you won't complain so much next time iCloud bugs you to take five minutes to back your phone up.

http://gizmodo.com/backing-up-an-entire-nation-is-unsurprisingly-difficult-1690043994

I hope they pay their IT guys well
 
Android Is Coming to Virtual Reality, WSJ Says

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Well, if Google's small cardboard-based foray into virtual reality last year wasn't a big enough hint, a new report from the Wall Street Journal says that Google is about to get even more serious about VR—by trying to become the standard OS for headsets everywhere.

The WSJ reports that two people "familiar with the situation" say Google has assembled a small team to start building an open operating system for VR. If this rumor is true (which lets be honest, of course it is), Android will already face competition from Samsung and Facebook who have already showcased their own software on the Gear VR and Oculus Rift.

What may become the fifth version of the OS—Android, Android TV, Android Auto, Android Wear—will probably most definitely be called Android VR, unless they want to give OCD people heart attacks worldwide. But Google hasn't made any official comment on the report and probably won't until Google I/O in late May. If true, these rumors would only further prove what we already know. VR isn't a passing fad.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/googles-android-to-take-on-facebook-in-virtual-reality-1425684553

I think we all knew Google wouldn't sit this trend out. The more the merrier I say!
 
VidCast Streams Almost Any Web Video to Your Chromecast

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Chrome: Chrome makes it pretty easy to stream YouTube videos to your Chromecast. If you're watching a video on another site, that's a bit trickier. VidCast adds a bookmarklet to Chrome that lets you cast videos from the current browser window.

Casting web video is nothing new, of course. You could just cast the page with the video, but that includes the ads and extra stuff on the page. VidCast casts just the video to your screen.

VidCast does this without installing any extensions beyond the normal Google Cast extension. After you find a web page with a video, click the VidCast bookmarklet and press play. They'll show a brief ad for dabble.me on your Chromecast while the video loads.

https://dabble.me/cast

I love my Chromecast and this thing works like a charm
 
Google CS First Teaches Kids Programming and Computer Science for Free

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There are a wealth of ways for kids to learn computer science and programming these days. Add to the mix: Google's own CS First curriculum, a free program with a variety of themes for all kinds of kids' interests.

CS First isn't new (the program started last year), but as a program that's meant for teachers and community volunteers to form computer science clubs for kids ages 9 to 14, you might not have heard about it.

Lesson themes include Music & Sound (create a music video and build an interactive music display), Fashion & Design (build fashion-themed apps), Storytelling (create interactive stories), Game Design (code a game), and so on.

All of the materials (videos, programming in Scratch, and lesson plans) are freely available online, so parents—whether homeschooling or not—and kids with a lot of initiative can check out the lessons themselves. Or, better yet, start a club in your community.

http://www.cs-first.com/

I'm a firm believer that every child should be learning this stuff
 
This Air Traffic Control Plan Is Trying to Make Delivery Drones Legal

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NASA has been working on a plan for months to create an air traffic control system for drones to make sure the flying machines don't crash into things like people and planes. Now that plan includes trying to develop a reliable system so people can fly drones remotely.

It's a response to the massive wet blanket the Federal Aviation Administration's rules threw on the country's budding aerial industry: that drone operators need to have a line of sight to their aircraft. A working drone air traffic plan could potentially remove that restriction.

That's a is big deal for future aerial businesses—like Amazon's drone delivery—and also important to make sure other countries don't get a leg up on the US as the drone industry emerges.

But it's far from a sure thing. The FAA would still have to be convinced, and right now the agency's hard rule is absolutely no remote driving, ever.

Exelis, one aerospace company working with NASA, will release its solution this month on how remote drones can be worked into the FAA's existing radar surveillance system, using existing mobile towers and Exelis' own relay stations.

The system, called the Symphony RangeVue, would funnel FAA data and drone-tracking data into a mobile app that operators could use to see what planes or other aircraft were surrounding their drone.

Here's an infographic, created by Reuters, explaining the process.

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Of course, this doesn't directly solve the "line of sight" problem that the FAA requires commercial drones to have. But the hope is that such a system is in place, if it can be proven reliable, might persuade the FAA to ease its restriction.

Exelis plans to have the Symphony RangeVue ready for federal testing by the summer.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/10/us-usa-drones-exelis-insight-idUSKBN0M60BP20150310

I would love to have all my crap from Amazon delivered by drones, hope this all works out
 
These Terrifyingly Real Teeth Were Made By a New Dental 3D Printer

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The world is still trying to figure out why every home would need a 3D printer, but in the professional world they continue to thrive. At the International Dental Show currently going on in Germany, Stratasys announced a new 3D printer that uses multiple materials at once to create startlingly realistic dental models in a single print run.

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The Objet260 Dental Selection 3D Printer is a lot bigger than the consumer-friendly desktop models sold by companies like MakerBot. But with 16-micron accuracy and a triple-jet system that lets it produce dental models with realistic looking gums, bones, nerves, and teeth, it's designed for use in dental and orthodontic offices that need to be able to test dental appliances without having access to the actual patient.

The material used to 3D print the gingiva—or gums as they're more commonly known—is even soft and pliable like the real thing which allows implants, bridges, and crowns to be tested and refined to ensure they won't actually damage a patient's real tissue when eventually installed. Given the current limitations of 3D printing the new machine can't actually be used to create a false set of teeth for a patient to wear, but given how realistic these models look that doesn't seem like it would be too far off.

http://investors.stratasys.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=900653

When this tech takes off for consumers the world is going to change overnight
 
This Electric Skateboard Has Engines Inside Its Wheels

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I've ridden more than a few electric skateboards in my time, but they all have the same problems: they all feel too electric and not enough skateboard. They're often too thick to accommodate batteries and motors, and too heavy to push if the battery dies. Can't we do better? InBoard Sports thinks so: it's building an electric skateboard with engines inside of its wheels.

Apparently, wheel-housed motors solve a lot of the problems I have with electric skateboards. InBound Sports says its Monolith Skateboard's "Manta Drive Technology" eliminates the need for a bulky belt-driven motor, freeing up space and weight on the bottom of the board. The motor assembly also floats on free-spinning bearings, eliminating friction and allowing the board to coast at top speeds—which means that you should be able to push-drive the deck with just your legs when your battery dies. Neat.

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InBound Sports says it's also the first electric skateboard with a swappable battery—each one will carry you 10 miles at 24mph. Less if you make use of the deck's embedded USB port to charge your phone. Yes, that's just as weird as it sounds, and no, I'm not joking.

The firm's Kickstarter has already breached its $100,000 goal, and still has three weeks to collect backers. It's a neat idea, but no less expensive than other electric rideables: the lowest priced backer reward to come with Monolith starts at $1100.

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/inboard/the-monolith-worlds-first-skateboard-with-in-wheel

That's awesome, I want one to cruise around the boardwalk when I'm at Clearwater beach
 
This Is the Rocket Booster That May Put Humans on Mars

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This is the most powerful booster ever built by man, and it will be the driving force behind NASA's Space Launch System (SLS), the vehicle that will one day put humans on Mars. This engineering marvel will have its first major ground test tomorrow (Wednesday) at 11am EDT.

According to NASA, this test fire tomorrow is major milestone for humanity's exploration into the deeper reaches of space.

The two-minute static test is a significant milestone for the SLS as part of NASA's journey to Mars, and follows years of development. It is one of two ground tests to qualify the booster for flight. A second test is planned for early 2016. Once qualification is complete, the hardware will be ready to help send the rocket, along with NASA's Orion spacecraft, on its first flight test. When completed, two five-segment, solid-rocket boosters and four RS-25 main engines will power the SLS as it begins its deep space missions. The boosters operate in parallel with the main engines for the first two minutes of flight, providing more than 75 percent of the thrust needed for the rocket to escape Earth's gravitational pull.​

Exciting times we live in.

http://gizmodo.com/this-is-the-rocket-booster-that-may-put-humans-on-mars-1690648385

That's amazing, I can't wait till we land on Mars
 
For anyone wondering I don't like Apple at all so I did not cover all the overpriced crap they announced the other day. If any wants to post about it feel free but I don't feel it's worth my time
 
Subscribing. Can't believe I've never seen this thread!
 
Well it used to be the Business and Tech thread but I never posted much about business so I had a mod change the name.
 
Cool. I'm very interested in the future of home cinema and gaming tech. Looking forward to getting a 4K film projector and TV and upgrading my sound system in the not too distant future. Plus will get a beast of a gaming pc in a couple of years. NVidia are releasing news about their new GTX Titan X graphics card next Tuesday which should be the leading card on the market in terms of specs (will probably be crazily overpriced though).
 
You should check out the last page, it has tons of stuff about Virtual Reality and I'm sure you would love that stuff, some very cool things are coming out by the end of the year. Also there is a post about the new IMAX digital projectors you will probably enjoy as well, they are freaking amazing! I really want to go see a movie on them
 
UPDATE: Here's NASA's Deep Space Rocket Booster In Action, On The Ground

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It's the most powerful rocket booster ever built, could be our best bet to set a foot down on Mars, and it just successfully fired up in this test explosion not out in the wilds of space, but right here on the ground — and you can see it in action in these incredible pictures.

The rocket booster test for NASA's Space Launch System took place this morning in the Utah desert at NASA's propulsion test facilities. As you can see from the pictures below, it went extremely well:

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With this successful test behind it, the 77-ton rocket booster for NASA's Space Launch System is now halfway to being cleared for flight. The second test is scheduled to take place about a year from now, in 2016. Once it passes that second hurdle, NASA will be in possession of a fully-operational set of rocket boosters capable of taking us not just on their scheduled trip to Mars, but perhaps beyond.

Even with those working rocket boosters, however, the question of when and how the entire Space Launch System will finally be able to get us off this dusty little planetary rock we call home remains to be answered. Still, these successful booster test puts us another step closer to the stars.

http://io9.com/heres-nasas-deep-space-rocket-booster-in-action-on-the-1690817305

Hooray! Glad it went well
 
IMAX's New Laser Projectors Make Me Wish I Lived In a Movie Theater

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http://gizmodo.com/imaxs-new-laser-projectors-make-me-wish-i-lived-in-a-mo-1689480610

Wow, who would have thought the IMAX experience could get even more awesome

Very interesting. Is this installed anywhere near abouts Los Angeles? I heard a rumor that the TCL Chinese theater was going to install one, but I called and they pretty much said "no". I'm going to have to look into this. Every time I go to an IMAX theater, I think "Man, I wish I had one of these bad boys in my home". When 4K source material becomes more common, I'll definitely buy a 4K PJ for my home use. I'll probably go through the same thing I did with DVD, upscale DVD, ripped off on the discontinued Hi Def player, and getting Blu Ray.

Thanks DJ and Ice for the heads up.
 
No problem man, from what I understand IMAX is in the process of converting all of their real IMAX theaters to this equipment but it will take some time before all of them are like this.
 
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