Tag Archives: test

Predicting IQ With a Simple Visual Test

New submitter trendspotter writes “Scientists at the University of Rochester found a unique way to measure high IQ and IQ of the brain in general just by studying individuals and their abilities to filter out noise in images (abstract). The results of a visual test where people were told to quickly detect movements showed similar IQ results as a classic intelligence test. ‘The relationship between IQ and motion suppression points to the fundamental cognitive processes that underlie intelligence, the authors write. The brain is bombarded by an overwhelming amount of sensory information, and its efficiency is built not only on how quickly our neural networks process these signals, but also on how good they are at suppressing less meaningful information. … The researchers point out that this vision test could remove some of the limitations associated with standard IQ tests, which have been criticized for cultural bias.’”

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Missile Test Creates Huge Expanding Halo of Light Over Hawaii

The Bad Astronomer writes “A Minuteman III missile launch from California early Wednesday morning created a weird, expanding halo of light seen from the CFHT observatory on Hawaii’s Mauna Kea. The third stage of the missile has ports that open and dump fuel into the near-vacuum. This cloud expands rapidly as a spherical shell, shock-exciting the air molecules and causing them to glow, creating the bizarre effect.”

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Slashdot

Storms test Red Cross’ Tornado app

The Red Cross is using apps to help warn people about potential weather calamities. One of its more popular efforts is its new Tornado app.
Computerworld News

To Test The Bitcoin Waters, Adam Draper’s Boost.vc Accelerator Adds Backing From Lightspeed, Beluga Founder & More

press_logoAs a fourth generation venture investor, Adam Draper was pretty much predestined to work with startups. The son of Tim Draper, the founder of global VC firm Draper Fisher Jurveston, Adam has made it his mission to do everything in his power to help entrepreneurs bring their ideas to life — without relying on his family name to do so. After taking the plunge as an entrepreneur himself, co-founding a capital raising and trading platform and an equity crowdfunding portal, the 26-year-old again finds himself back in the Draper wheelhouse: Early-stage finance.
TechCrunch

Nokia Teases Lumia 928 In Low Light Camera Test, Pits It Against Galaxy S3 & iPhone 5

lumia 928Nokia is teasing the Lumia 928 — a phone it has not officially announced yet, despite all the leaks, rumours and, er, magazine ads — in a camera comparison video posted on its U.S. website. All this teasing smells like a new strategy for Nokia to try to manufacture a little hype for the forthcoming Windows Phone 8 flagship, which is apparently heading to Verizon.
TechCrunch

Firefox Is the First Browser To Pass the MathML Acid2 Test

An anonymous reader writes “Frédéric Wang, an engineer at the MathJax project, reports that the latest nightly build of Firefox now passes the MathML Acid2 test. Screenshots in his post show a comparison with the latest nightly Chrome Canary, and it’s not pretty. He writes ‘Google developers forked Webkit and decided to remove from Blink all the code (including MathML) on which they don’t plan to work in the short term.’”

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Physicists Attempting To Test ‘Time Crystals’

ceview writes “This story at Wired seems to have lots of people a bit confused: ‘In February 2012, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Frank Wilczek decided to go public with a strange and, he worried, somewhat embarrassing idea. Impossible as it seemed, Wilczek had developed an apparent proof of “time crystals” — physical structures that move in a repeating pattern, like minute hands rounding clocks, without expending energy or ever winding down. … [A] Berkeley-led team will attempt to build a time crystal by injecting 100 calcium ions into a small chamber surrounded by electrodes. The electric field generated by the electrodes will corral the ions in a “trap” 100 microns wide, or roughly the width of a human hair. The scientists must precisely calibrate the electrodes to smooth out the field. Because like charges repel, the ions will space themselves evenly around the outer edge of the trap, forming a crystalline ring.’ The experimental set up is incredibly delicate (Bose Einstein Condensate), so it implies this perpetual motion effect can’t really be used to extract energy. What is your take on it? It’s unlike to upend anything, as the article suggests, because at a quantum level things behave weirdly at the best of times. The heavy details are available at the arXiv.”

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Privately Built Antares Test Flight Successfully Launched From Virginia

After high winds (up to 140mph) delayed yesterday’s scheduled launch (itself a re-do because of a cabling problem), Orbital Science’s Antares rocket has made it to space. This launch was a test run, but Antares is intended to launch supplies to the ISS. Space.com reports: “The third try was the charm for the private Antares rocket, which launched into space from a new pad at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility, its twin engines roaring to life at 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT) to carry a mock cargo ship out over the Atlantic Ocean and into orbit. The successful liftoff came after two delays caused by a minor mechanical glitch and bad weather.” Congratulations to all involved.

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Private company succeeds in test launch of rocket that will carry cargo ship

A company contracted by NASA to deliver supplies to the International Space Station successfully launched a rocket on Sunday in a test of its ability to send a cargo ship aloft.


FOX News

Orbital’s Antares rocket successfully completes it first test launch

Orbital Science Corps. Antares rocket completed its first successful test launch today after seeing a series of complications over the last few days. Orbital attempted to test launch the rocket last Wednesday, however, a data cable located at the upper stage of the rocket detached prematurely. It was then rescheduled over and over due to

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SlashGear

Orbital’s Antares rocket makes successful test flight

The Antares launched smoothly from Virginia’s Wallops Flight Facility and released a simulated cargo ship. It’s slated to follow SpaceX’s Falcon 9 as a commercial ISS resupply craft. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Watch live: Orbital Sciences’ Antares rocket to lift off on test flight (video)

Watch live: Orbital Sciences' Antares rocket to lift off on test flight (video)

SpaceX may be the only private outfit currently shepherding cargo to the International Space Station, but Orbital Sciences, which is the second party in NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services effort, is taking a step towards its own ISS resupply missions. Today, the firm’s Antares rocket will undergo its very first test flight, taking off from the space agency’s Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Virginia. Liftoff is slated for sometime between 5PM and 7PM, with an 80 percent chance of favorable weather, as opposed to the 45 percent odds and high-altitude winds that foiled its initial attempt yesterday. To watch Antares embark on its maiden voyage, hit the jump for a live video feed.

[Image credit: NASA, Flickr]

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Source: NASA, Orbital Sciences

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East Coast test rocket launch scrubbed

A private company contracted by NASA to make supply runs to the International Space Station scrubbed a Wednesday test launch of an unmanned rocket, saying cables linked to the rocket’s second stage apparently detached too early in blustery winds.


FOX News

Death Test Reveals Strength of Social Interaction

Social ties between humans are stronger than those between fruit flies or ants but weaker than those between bees, according to a cheerful new ranking based on how quickly creatures die when they become isolated







New on MIT Technology Review

Asteroid tracking sensor passes critical design test

A NASA funded project designed to create a sensor for tracking asteroids has passed a key design test. The test was designed to assess the performance of the Near Earth Object Camera (NEOCam) in an environment mimicking the temperatures and pressure of deep space. The NEOCam is a key instrument that will be used in

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SlashGear

NASA’s Wallops Island to secure spotlight with Orbital’s Antares rocket test launch

Orbital Sciences Corp. will be conducting its first test launch of its Antares rocket on April 18th, and if all goes well, the company will be well on its way on delivering on its $ 1.9 billion contract with NASA. The contract requires Orbital to complete 8 unmanned cargo missions to the International Space Station (ISS)

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SlashGear

Chinese daily fooled by spoof that Win 8 glitch forced missile test delay

Paper reports as news a quote from a “source” that North Korea’s Kim Jong-un was considering declaring war on Microsoft. [Read more]

    




CNET News

FDA Approves Software For iPhone-Based Vision Test

anderzole writes “The FDA recently gave clearance to Vital Art and Science Inc. (VAS) to market software which enables people with degenerative eye conditions such as macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy to monitor their vision at home with their iPhone. The software, which is called myVisionTrack, isn’t a replacement for regular visits to the doctor, but rather allows patients to keep tabs on their vision in between visits with eye care professionals. VAS notes that retinal diseases affect approximately 40 million individuals worldwide and 13 million in the United States. While treatments have been developed to deal with degenerative eye conditions, early diagnosis is of paramount importance — which is why the software is so important.”

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Slashdot

Visualized: JetBlue and ViaSat test Fly-Fi in-flight WiFi… from the ground

Visualized JetBlue and ViaSat test FlyFi inflight WiFi from the ground

Gogo’s ground-to-air transmitters typically mandate evaluating service while jetting around the country above 10,000 feet. Sure, you don’t need to waste fuel flying around an empty airliner, but even the company’s small jet can burn through quite a bit of cash. ViaSat, on the other hand, can do much of its service testing on the ground, using that fairly ordinary Ford van pictured just above. The reason, of course, relates to the location of the company’s transmitter — namely, the ViaSat-1 satellite, positioned some 22,000 miles above the ground. In the air, planes will actually be nearer to the orbiting device, rather than farther away, and assuming a line-of-sight link from the road, the truck can work out kinks at a fraction of the cost.

That white dome atop the van, which is similar to the device that’ll soon be mounted on JetBlue’s fleet, maintains a constant connection by rotating instantly as the van moves — if the vehicle’s heading changes, the antenna array will turn, too, so it’s always pointed directly at the sat in the sky. You may have seen ViaSat’s van driving down Southern California’s freeways, but the rig has just arrived in Orlando, for some additional testing a few degrees away from the company’s Carlsbad home. Assuming all goes well here, you’ll be shooting around the web courtesy of Fly-Fi in no time at all.

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James Bond test drives the new 2014 Range Rover Sport

In order to show off what a beast its new line-up of Range Rovers is, Land Rover enlisted the help of Agent 007 himself in order to show off its beauty and its power. James Bond, or Daniel Craig, drove the 2014 Range Rover Sport all the way from a Brooklyn Shipping Yard to the

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SlashGear

States compete to become FAA drone test sites

It’s the land where Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier, where the space shuttle fleet rolled off the assembly line and where the first private manned rocketship climbed to space.


FOX News

Astrophysicists Test Cosmological Defect Detector

Astrophysicists have built and tested the building blocks of a global detector capable of spotting topological defects in the cosmos as the Earth passes through them







New on MIT Technology Review

Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid test drive (video)

Ford Fusion Energi plug in hybrid test drive video

The Ford Fusion Energi joins the C-MAX Energi and Focus Electric as the company’s third vehicle with a charging connector and access to California’s HOV lanes. While it’s a larger car than the C-MAX Energi, it weighs about the same and features pretty much the same plug-in hybrid powertrain with 195 net horsepower and three EV driving modes. It combines a 2-liter DOHC 16V Duratec (Atkinson cycle) engine and CVT with an AC synchronous motor powered by a 7.6kWh Lithium Ion battery. This pack takes about 2.5 hours to fill up with a 240V charging station and provides a range of 21 miles (100MPGe) at up to 85mph in all-electric mode. Both autos share the same unfortunate battery protrusion in the trunk area, and while it’s less of an issue in the Fusion sedan than the wagon-like C-MAX, it detracts from the overall package. The Fusion Energi also packs the company’s latest and greatest tech, including MyFord Mobile, SmartGauge with EcoGuide, Eco Cruise and SYNC with MyFord Touch. Sure, that’s pretty exciting, but how does it actually drive? Find out after the break.

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Try-Before-You-Buy App Demo Platform AppSurfer Lets You Test Apps On Facebook; Debuts An Android App Of Its Own

appsurferAppSurfer, an Indian startup working to bring Android applications to the browser so users can “try before they buy,” is today launching an Android application which lets users browse, test, then install the applications they like. The startup has also added a number of new features to its platform since its debut last fall, including support for tablet apps, accelerometer support, and the ability to share app demos to Facebook.

TechCrunch

Will they switch? The Kid Test: Windows Phone vs. iPhone

Is Windows Phone’s unusual user interface enough to win over two boys, ages 12 and 14, who are both iPhone users? [Read more]


CNET News

Microsoft boosts SkyDrive with six month Office 365 University test drive, ad campaign

Microsoft boosts Skydrive with six month Office 365 University test drive, ad campaign

Office 365 University is already pretty cheap, but to get you hooked on the software while also promoting SkyDrive‘s collaboration tools, Microsoft’s giving up to six months worth of free access to US college attendees. It’s promoting the grab using Parks & Recreation’s Aubrey Plaza, who shows a trio of students in one YouTube video (after the break) how they can work together using the Office 365 / SkyDrive combo while staying in their own “creepy dorm” and “unicorn stable” instead of bugging her. Takers will get an extra 20GB of SkyDrive storage and three months of access to the suite, which can be extended to six by sharing the offer on Facebook. If Microsoft decides to include Aubrey and her pithy putdowns in place of Clippy, we’d actually be okay with that, too.

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Source: Microsoft

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DNA Sequencing Giant Illumina Joins Hunt for Autism Blood Test

Illumina will work with SynapDx’s to find a blood-test that could allow treatment to start earlier.

Massachusetts startup SynapDx announced on Wednesday that it will work with DNA sequencer manufacturer Illumina  to develop early detection tools for autism spectrum disorders,  according to a release.







New on MIT Technology Review

Schools test ‘app store’ for learning through Gates-funded project

Some school administrators are testing a bold idea to integrate the multitude of systems that are used to store student data, giving teachers a single view of how students are performing and allowing them to better deliver the right learning materials.
Computerworld News

Volar-e EV racer goes for a test drive, hopes to turn heads

Volare EV racer goes for a test drive, hopes to turn heads

Still nervous about trading in your gas guzzler for an electric carriage? The European Commission wants you to cast your eyes on the Volar-e, a high performance EV prototype designed specifically to garner attention. Designed and built by Applus IDIADA, the Volar-e boasts 1,000 horses driven by four independently controlled electric motors, a regenerative breaking system and the ability to juice up in under twenty minutes. The prototype — which was built in only four months — saw its first public outing this week at Circuit de Catalunya, in Spain, giving onlookers at peek at what its four driving modes can do.

The company didn’t specify what differentiates the vehicles Eco, Dynamic, Racing and Wet modes, but did go out of its way to highlight the Volar-e’s acceleration and top speed: 62mph in 3.4 seconds and 186 mph. The European Commission says the vehicle is built to promote electric vehicles to European markets, standing as a reference point to category’s potential. Cool? Sure, but with performance like that, we can’t imagine the Volar-e will do much to calm our range anxiety. Check out the prototype racer in action after the break.

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Via: Motor Authority

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Tokyo subways to test how mobile content affects passengers

Tokyo's subways will soon offer a new mobile app with free Wi-Fi access, then track if the information it provides changes passenger habits.
Computerworld News

How The Nuke From N. Korea’s Test Could Damage SF, Via Google Maps

HYDESim: High-Yield Detonation Effects Simulator-soma-editedNorth Korea reportedly tested a nuclear weapon tonight. For perspective, its recently demonstrated long-range missile could potentially deliver a bomb capable of taking out downtown San Francisco.
TechCrunch

How we test: Monitors

Everything you’ve always wanted to know about monitor testing, but was afraid to ask. [Read more]


CNET News

Boeing completes first 787 test flight following battery investigation

It’s been quite a dramatic beginning for the 787 Dreamliner, probably one that Boeing and the airlines weren’t hoping for, but reoccurring failures to the lithium-ion batteries in several 787 aircrafts resulted in the entire fleet getting ground in order to investigate the issue. However, after a few weeks of investigating and troubleshooting, Boeing has

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SlashGear

FAA approves Boeing test flights of grounded 787 Dreamliner

Aircraft builder will be allowed to conduct test flights of the much-hyped aircraft after onboard battery fires led the FAA to ground the planes. [Read more]


CNET News

First Test of Seismic Invisibility Cloak







New on MIT Technology Review

Ravello Systems Raises $26M And Launches App Cloud Capsule For Test And Development

ravellologo2Ravello Systems has raised $ 26 million for a new way to launch applications into the cloud. The funding round was led by Sequoia Capital, with Norwest Venture Partners and Bessemer Venture Partners also participating.

The company uses the metaphor of a capsule to demonstrate how its software can package apps and launch them into public cloud services such as Amazon Web Services (AWS). Ravello Systems will initially offer its “application hypervisor” service for test and development, automating the way applications get deployed to the cloud.
TechCrunch

Space plane poised for key flight test

A private space plane is slated to fly on its own for the first time in the next six to eight weeks, a key drop-test milestone in the vehicle's quest to fly astronauts on roundtrip space missions.
FOX News

2014 KIA Forte test drive: luxury features in a compact sedan

The all-new redesigned 2014 KIA Forte made its debut at the LA Auto Show, and this week we were lucky enough to get up close and personal with the new driving machine for the KIA First Drive event. With tons of new features not seen before in the compact Sedan segment, new trim options, a

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SlashGear

Canada’s Dextre robot refuels faux satellite from the ISS in first-of-a-kind test

Canada's Dextre robot refuels faux satellite from the ISS in first-of-a-kind test

Move over, Canadarm. You may have helped the space shuttle fleet repair the Hubble Telescope and build the International Space Station, but there’s another robotic tool that’s the apple of the Great White North’s eye. Dextre, the Canadian Space Agency’s dual-armed mechanical “handyman,” has successfully refueled a faux satellite from the ISS as part of NASA’s and the CSA’s joint Robotic Refueling Mission. Not only did the exercise demonstrate how satellites could be juiced up in space and have their lives extended, but the CSA says it’s a first for the history books, to boot. Since 2011, Dextre completed a trio of tests to show how it could service satellites that weren’t built for being pried opened in space. Late this week, NASA and CSA robotics controllers removed two safety caps from a washing machine-sized mock satellite, snipped two sets of retaining wires and pumped in a bit of ethanol. Sure, you could take a Frankenstein-like approach and cobble together new satellites from old ones, but Dextre’s trials indicate there’s promise for a proactive tactic that would keep existing hardware humming.

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Dextre Successfully Refuels Mock Satellite and Aces a Major Test for Space Robotics

Longueuil, Quebec, January 25, 2013 – Dextre, the Canadian Space Agency’s robotic “handyman” on board the International Space Station (ISS), made space history last night by successfully refueling a mock satellite on the exterior of the station. Topping off the satellite’s fuel tank was the pivotal task in the experimental Robotic Refueling Mission (RRM), a collaboration between the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) to demonstrate how robots could service and refuel satellites on location in space to extend their useful lifetime.

For RRM, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center designed a module simulating a satellite, as well as custom power tools for Dextre. Since RRM operations began in 2011, Dextre has performed three series of tests to show how a robot could service satellites, which were designed never to be opened in space. In this latest set of operations, Dextre removed two safety caps, cut through two sets of thin retaining wires, and finally transferred a small quantity of liquid ethanol into the washing machine-sized module. The latter maneuver was particularly tricky, since handling liquids in space required perfect precision to prevent dangerous leaks. The specialized tools built for the job allowed Dextre to seal the connections between the tool and the fuel valve to eliminate the possibility of leaks. Adding to the level of difficulty was the fuel hose itself, which adds additional forces that tend to pull Dextre’s hands. It took the combined skills of the experienced NASA and CSA robotics controllers to pull off this first-of-a-kind space refueling demonstration successfully and without any mishap.

RRM is a significant step in pioneering robotic technologies and techniques in the field of satellite servicing-saving ailing space hardware by refueling or refurbishing them before they become space debris. The ability to refuel satellites in space could one day save satellite operators from the significant costs of building and launching new replacement satellites. With over 1100 active satellites currently operating in the near-Earth environment (many of them worth hundreds of millions of dollars), and an additional 2500 inactive satellites still orbiting around our planet, the savings could be substantial.

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Via: CNET

Source: Canadian Space Agency

Engadget

Bloggers Put Scientific Method To the Test

ananyo writes “Scrounging chemicals and equipment in their spare time, a team of chemistry bloggers is trying to replicate published protocols for making molecules. The researchers want to check how easy it is to repeat the recipes that scientists report in papers — and are inviting fellow chemists to join them. Blogger See Arr Oh, chemistry graduate student Matt Katcher from Princeton, New Jersey, and two bloggers called Organometallica and BRSM, have together launched Blog Syn, in which they report their progress online. Among the frustrations that led the team to set up Blog Syn are claims that reactions yield products in greater amounts than seems reasonable, and scanty detail about specific conditions in which to run reactions. In some cases, reactions are reported which seem too good to be true — such as a 2009 paper which was corrected within 24 hours by web-savvy chemists live-blogging the experiment; an episode which partially inspired Blog Syn. According to chemist Peter Scott of the University of Warwick in Coventry, UK, synthetic chemists spend most of their time getting published reactions to work. ‘That is the elephant in the room of synthetic chemistry.’”

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Slashdot

Facebook’s Graph Search Is a Privacy Test For Internet Users

An anonymous reader writes “An article in the NY Times makes the case that Graph Search, Facebook’s recently unveiled social search utility, will be a test for users of the social networking site which will have consequences for the internet at large. The test will show whether people are willing to take the next step in sharing parts of their lives, and whether social search is the future for online interaction. ‘…the company engineers who created the tool — former Google employees — say that the project will not reach its full potential if Facebook data is “sparse,” as they call it. But the company is confident people will share more data, be it the movies they watch, the dentists they trust or the meals that make their mouths water.’ CompSci professor Oren Etzioni says it’s a watershed moment for the social internet because of the scale at which Facebook operates. A decade ago, people began making the choice to share their lives online; buying into social search would be the biggest step since then. A related post by the Electronic Frontier Foundation can be summed up with this single line: ‘If you walk down a crowded public street, you are probably seen by dozens of people—but it would still feel creepy for anyone to be able to look up a list of every road you’ve walked down.’”

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Slashdot

Microsoft Fails Antivirus Certification Test (Again), Challenges the Results

redletterdave writes “For the second time in a row, Microsoft’s Security Essentials failed to earn certification from AV-Test, the independent German testing lab best known for evaluating the effectiveness of antivirus software. Out of 25 different security programs tested by AV-Test, including software from McAfee, Norman, Kaspersky, and others, Microsoft’s Security Essentials was just one out of three that failed to gain certification. These results are noteworthy because Microsoft Security Essentials is currently (as of December) the most popular security suite in North America and the world.”

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Slashdot

Microsoft bombs another security test

AV-Test.org’s latest security suite efficacy test fails Microsoft Security Essentials — for the second time in a row. This round, though, it’s not alone. [Read more]


CNET News

Germans build, successfully test laser weapon

A German company recently used a futuristic laser weapon to cut through a half-inch thick steel girder from 2/3 of a mile away.


FOX News

Taste test: Does hot cocoa taste better from an orange cup?

A recent study suggests hot chocolate tastes better out of an orange-colored mug. Intrepid Crave reporter Amanda Kooser dives tongue-first into her own experiment to see if she agrees. [Read more]


CNET News

Revealed: NSA targeting domestic computer systems in secret test

The National Security Agency’s Perfect Citizen program hunts for vulnerabilities in “large-scale” utilities, including power grid and gas pipeline controllers, new documents from EPIC show. [Read more]


CNET News

Ask Slashdot: Do You Test Your New Hard Drives?

An anonymous reader writes “Any Slashdot thread about drive failure is loaded with good advice about EOL — but what about the beginning? Do you normally test your new purchases as thoroughly as you test old, suspect drives? Has your testing followed the proverbial ‘bathtub’ curve of a lot of early failures, but with those that survive the first month surviving for years? And have you had any return problems with new failed drives, because you re-partitioned it, or ‘ran Linux,’ or used stress-test apps?”

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Slashdot

Rheinmetall 50kW laser weapon aces latest test, pew-pews a 3-inch ballistic target

Rheinmetall 50kW laser weapon aces latest test, pewpews a 3inch ballistic target

In the “sure wish we had a video” category, aptly-monikered defense contractor Rheinmetall has run a highly successful test of its 50kW high-energy laser weapon. It works by hunting down incoming targets using a so-called Skyguard radar system, then locking in with an optical scanner before firing multiple, superimposed beams for extra energy. During the Swiss trials, the German-made HEL cannon managed to cut through a 15mm steel girder from over 3,200 feet away and knock down several drones diving at over 110 mph. Most impressively, the laser succeeded in dipatching an 82mm steel projectile in flight, showing the viability of beam-based weapons against potential mortar attacks. Rheinmetall has quintupled the power in just the last year, and plans to ramp up the juice to 60kW in 2013 trials, saying “nothing stands in the way” of a future 100kW system. Of course if that doesn’t work out, it could always start up a death metal band.

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Via: Gizmag

Source: Rheinmetall

Engadget

Dell and HP tablets delayed: Intel chip test trouble blamed

Dell and other Windows 8 tablet manufacturers are apparently experiencing unexpected problems with drivers for their new touchscreen slates, insiders claim, forcing delays of certain models into early 2013. The Dell Latitude 10 and other Intel Atom Z2760 based tablets are now not expected until late January, with sources telling InformationWeek that the problem is in getting

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SlashGear

U.S. Federal Agency That Switched From BlackBerrys To iPhones Has A Rethink: Plans To Test BB10 Devices Next Year

blackberry10-layersSome good news for embattled smartphone maker RIM: the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) has said it plans to test BlackBerry 10 devices next year. ICE had previously announced it would switch its staff from BlackBerrys to iPhones but now plans to begin a pilot program on RIM’s new line of BlackBerry 10 smartphones and BlackBerry Enterprise Service 10 early next year.
TechCrunch