The Russian Air Force's Super Weapon: Beware the PAK-FA Stealth Fighter


The Russian Sukhoi T-50 PAK-FA stealth fighter could prove to be a formidable competitor to American fifth-generation combat aircraft such as the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor and F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Indeed, in some measures, the new Russian warplane will exceed both U.S.-built jets, but the PAK-FA is not without its flaws.
“The analysis that I have seen on the PAK-FA indicates a pretty sophisticated design that is at least equal to, and some have said even superior to U.S. fifth-generation aircraft,” former U.S. Air Force intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Dave Deptula told the National Interest. “It certainly has greater agility with its combination of thrust vectoring, all moving tail surfaces, and excellent aerodynamic design, than does the F-35.”

McLaren P1 Suffers Serious Crash In Dallas

McLaren P1 Suffers Serious Crash In Dallas
Earlier this month, a McLaren P1 suffered a bit of pain when the driver tried to 50-50 grind a tollbooth curb in Japan. Now we have a stateside smash-up with a McLaren P1, which took place on a stretch of road near Dallas, Texas. There are no details yet surrounding the crash, but considering the damage sustained the car must have been traveling at some speed.

After Ferguson: Stop deferring to the cops

The case of Michael Brown shows that America is far too protective of those who have been entrusted to enforce order
A healthy dose of suspicion when it comes to power is our civic duty.
everal years ago, a friend of mine was pulled over by the police a few blocks from her house in Milwaukee while driving home from the airport following a business trip. Her crime? A few unpaid parking tickets. When my friend expressed dismay that they would bother to pull her over for such a minor infraction, the cops called for a paddy wagon. When it arrived, they told her to exit her car, handcuffed her, and shoved her into the van. Stunned, my friend first offered to write a check for the unpaid tickets. When that didn't win her release, she became agitated, asking about her rights as a citizen and suggesting that they must have something more important to do than arrest her.
That's when one of the officers turned around to address my friend: "Does anyone in the world know where you are right now? You better shut up or they're going to find you face down in the river."
My friend is white. She has a Ph.D. She earns a decent living at a world-renowned university. And for the remainder of her ride in the back of the paddy wagon, she had very good reason to fear for her life.

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ALTERNATE Fogg BMW

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Ribbed Steel Pan & Pan-Insulated Garage Doors

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Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson Reveals Why He's So Thankful To The Iron Sheik


The Rock says ... he is very thankful for the help of the Iron Sheik. When Dwayne Johnson was just breaking into professional wrestling, he learned some valuable lessons listening to the Iron Sheik, a former WWE champion. "His impact on my career has really been profound," Johnson says in the new documentary The Sheik. "The wrestling business has always been a cutthroat business.

Teri Hatcher Breaks Down While Speaking at the United Nations About Her Own Sexual Abuse

Emotional day: Teri Hatcher was seen wiping away her tears after giving a speech during the United Nations Official Commemoration Of The International Day For The Elimination Of Violence Against Women in New York City on Tuesday
Speaking at a United Nations event commemorating the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women on Tuesday, Teri Hatcher opened up about her own personal experience with abuse — she was molested by her uncle at the age of 7.

"I was convinced it was my fault and I blamed myself for what had happened, so I didn't tell anyone and I was silent," Hatcher, 49, said. "I did however, unsurprisingly, start to act out and my mother decided to keep me away from my uncle. I didn't see him anymore, but no one in my family ever asked exactly what happened. We remained silent."

US-CERT > REGIN : Malware Alert

The United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team has issued a warning today about the Regin malware that, according to reports last month, was created by our government. confused
Regin is a multi-staged, modular threat—meaning it has a number of components, each dependent on others to perform an attack. Each of the five stages is hidden and encrypted, with the exception of the first stage. The modular design poses difficulties to analysis, as all components must be available in order to fully understand the Trojan.

University of Virginia pledges zero-tolerance policy in Gang Rape cases?

(CNN) -- The University of Virginia has adopted a zero-tolerance policy for handling rape and sexual assault cases.
UVA's governing board held an emergency meeting Tuesday as the university scrambled to handle the aftermath of a Rolling Stone article that detailed a horrific gang rape of a student at a fraternity two years ago and that highlighted a trend of indifference toward victims.
Flawed policies were at the heart of the discussion at the special board meeting. However, the specifics of the new zero-tolerance policy will be worked out at a later meeting, university officials said.
A few weeks before the November 19 article hit the newsstands, the student-run WUVA interviewed the associate dean of students, Nicole Eramo, who guides women through their options when they report they've been assaulted.
In the interview, Eramo admitted that no student had been expelled for committing sexual assault, even when there was an admission, and even though offenses such as cheating regularly lead to expulsion.

GoldieBlox is 'more than a toy, it is a social mission' to empower girls

For over 50 years, Barbie has been the hottest doll on the market, but like all superstar divas in the limelight, she has attracted her share of controversy. Whether the issue is her unrealistic physical proportions, or most recently, the fact that she relies on help from her boyfriends in the book “I Can Be a Computer Engineer,” Barbie has consistently been seen to possess the beauty but not necessarily the brains.
The alternative to girls’ toys found in the "pink aisle" is Goldie, with her frizzy hair, tool belt and Chuck Taylor shoes. She is curious and smart, and together with her friends and animals, she sets out to construct machines and solve problems. The six books and construction-set combinations, called GoldieBlox,are found on over 1,000 toy-store shelves and they're meant not only to be entertaining, but ultimately to inspire girls to become engineers.

The Art of War Sun Tsu Full Documentary.


The Art of War is an ancient Chinese military treatise that is attributed to Sun Tzu (also referred to as "Sunzi" and "Sun Wu"), a high ranking military general and strategist during the late Spring and Autumn period (some scholars believe that the Art of War was not completed until the subsequent Warring States period. Composed of 13 chapters, each of which is devoted to one aspect of warfare, it is said to be the definitive work on military strategies and tactics of its time, and is still read for its military insights.

New Details About Ebola In Dallas Revealed In CDC Report

TEXAS HEALTH PRESBYTERIAN
More details of exactly what happened in Dallas when three people there -- a Liberian man and two nurses -- were infected with Ebola are revealed today (Nov. 14) in a new report.

One of the new details is that 12 people who had contact with one or more of the Ebola patients were tested for the virus during their 21-day monitoring periods, because these 12 individuals developed a fever or other symptoms that can occur with the disease, according to the report, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). However, none these people actually had Ebola.

 In addition, of the nearly 150 Dallas health care workers who were monitored daily for symptoms of Ebola, 20 volunteered to quarantine themselves for the three-week monitoring period, the report said.

Subaru Releases STI-Enhanced Forester tS In Japan

Subaru Releases STI-Enhanced Forester tS In Japan
Subaru’s Forester has received a new STI-enhanced variant, but like the STI-enhanced BRZ the new hot Forester is being offered exclusively in Japan. We’re not talking a fully-fledged STI model like the Impreza WRX STI, but rather a run-of-the-mill Subaru that's been upgraded with some off-the-shelf STI parts. Subaru likes to call them tuned by STI vehicles, or tS for short.

Why I bought an old ’91 BMW M5 (and why you may want one)


Mind blowing. That’s what I thought of the second-generation BMW M5 in a time when the Ferrari Testarossa still captivated teens watching "Miami Vice." Even though it looked almost indistinguishable from a run-of-the-mill 535i, it had a straight-line acceleration nearing a Ferrari, and only came in a manual. Plus, they were rarer than the Prancing Horses roaming West L.A. But with a starting price of $55,000 (over $90,000 in today’s dollars), owning the sleeper was out of the realm of possibility for decades —t hat is, until a couple months ago, when I drove home a 1991, E34 Alpine White M5.

Remaking the Legend - Halo 2: Anniversary


Remaking the Legend - Halo 2: Anniversary is a documentary chronicling 343 Industries’ journey as they re-imagine Halo 2, one of the most beloved video games of all time, for its ten-year anniversary.

Get unprecedented access to the development process as 343 and their team of partners from around the world bring Halo 2 to the Xbox One, while maintaining and honoring its fabled past.

Google Predicts What You Are Getting for Christmas

Could you imagine what you'd get for Christmas if your search results determined your present? Yikes!
To get a sense of the hottest gifts likely to sell out this season, we used Google Trends to identify the top trending toys, devices and apparel searches on Google Shopping. Game consoles and tablets continue to be the top gifts trending on Google Shopping, but wearable technology such as the "fitbit" is also on the rise this month. Certain retro toys are making a comeback this season. Thanks to the new movie "Ouija," searches for "Ouija boards" are up 300% since October. And queries for "Barbie Dream House" and "My Little Pony" are up as well compared to last month.

Blu-ray Discs Make Solar Cells More Efficient

Here's a really good use for that Blu-ray version of Maleficent you bought because your significant other forced you to. wink
Researchers at Northwestern University have hit upon a way to give Blu-ray discs a second chance at usefulness: They make excellent molds for imprinting solar cells with quasi-random nanostructures. Even the ones with terrible movies on them.

Sony Paralyzed By Computer Hacker Attack

I have no idea if this story is true or not but, if it is, Sony is going to have its hands full for a while. eek!
Things have come to a standstill at Sony today, after the computers in New York and around the world were infiltrated by a hacker. As a precaution, computers in Los Angeles were shut down while the corporation deals with the breach. It has basically brought the whole global corporation to an electronic standstill.

Craigslist Explains Last Night's Hack

The Official Craigslist Blog has posted an explanation as to why you couldn't reach the site last night.
At approximately 5pm PST Sunday evening the craigslist domain name service (DNS) records maintained at one of our domain registrars were compromised, diverting users to various non-craigslist sites.

Epic semi jump for a world record — with an F1 car underneath


Lotus truck jump
If you know the name Mike Ryan, it's likely because of his work building and racing diesel-powered semis at unlikely places, like Pikes Peak, and videos of a five-ton, 2,400-hp truck dancing around the Long Beach docks like Ken Block. Now Ryan has crossed the ocean on assignment for a British firm, setting a world record for a semi jump — with a Lotus Formula 1 car there to capture the moment from the ground.

Here’s who is tracking your smartphone – and how to stop them

One of the problems with smartphones is that spy agencies and advertisers can use them to collect data and keep tabs on users, as many reports have shown in the last 18 months. While companies such as Apple and Google have started encrypting iPhone and Android devices by default, prompting the U.S. government to heavily criticize their encryption practices, that doesn’t mean smartphones are now free from spying.

Those of you who want to take additional steps to protect your data should check out WhoIsHostingThis massive infographic that reveals more details covering who can spy on your handset, how it’s done and what steps can be taken to limit such spying and tracking practices.
The infographic reveals that retail stores and hackers are equally interested in tracking and spying on smart devices including smartphones, although they have different agendas than spy agencies.
In order to try to limit the powers of all these agencies, users can disable location tracking, install anti-tracking apps, stop in-store tracking and even purchase a special phone that already comes with more advanced anti-spying features.

Federal agents arrest debt collectors in crackdown

The government is putting debt collectors on notice.

Federal agents in Georgia arrested John Todd Williams, 48, founder of debt collection agency Williams, Scott & Associates along with six other employees on Tuesday morning for allegedly running a $4.1 million debt collection scam that targeted more than 6,000 people across the United States.
The arrests stem from an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Attorney's Office, the Federal Trade Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. It appears to be the first time federal authorities have taken coordinated action against debt collectors, and could be the beginning of a broader crackdown.
"We are far from finished looking at the seedy side of debt collection," said Preet Bharara, the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan. "It affects too many people."
preet bharara

Related: Debt collector horror stories

Who’s Tracking Your Smartphone?


How often do you use your smartphone?
If you’re like nearly 80% of smartphone users, you have your phone with you nearly 24/7. Many of us can’t sleep without them by our sides, and they’re the first thing we check when we get up in the morning. Almost a third of us can’t imagine living without it.
Hard to believe that such a ubiquitous device hasn’t been around all that long. While the telephone has been around in one form or another for well over a century, and cell phones for a few decades now, the smartphone is still very new. The first modern touchscreen smartphones were the iPhone, launched in 2007, followed by the launch of Android OS in 2008.
But in just a few short years, the total number of people using smartphones worldwide has already surpassed a billion. Smartphone usage around the world is rapidly approaching 50% of the entire world’s population. We use our smartphones constantly for daily activities like chatting with friends, banking and shopping, and even monitoring our health. There’s an app for everything you can think of, from drunk dialing prevention, to detecting paranormal activity, and more.
Since our phones are always by our sides, they reveal a lot of information about us.
And even though they haven’t been around that long, there are already those who’ve learned to take advantage of all that information.
You’ve probably heard that the NSA has been spying on smartphones, reading our texts and emails and even tracking our movements.
But they’re not the only ones. With the wealth of easily accessible information about you that your smartphone can provide, many businesses, organizations, and others have learned to use that data to their own ends.
Here’s who’s doing the spying, and what steps you can take to keep your personal data private. LINK


Why I Book a Small Hotel Room and Other Travel Tips from Drew Barrymore

Why I Book a Small Hotel Room and Other Travel Tips from Drew Barrymore 
Drew Barrymore is not only a top-notch actress but a filmmaker, mother, wife, author, cosmetics maven, and winemaker as well. So, when she had the time to sit down and dish on her years of travel experience from all of her ventures, you’d better believe we took the time to listen. We spoke to Barrymore at the launch of her new Barrymore by Carmel Road Pinot Grigio to get her top travel tips.

China And Russia Team Up To Build World's Largest, Most Powerful Chopper

China And Russia Team Up To Build World's Largest, Most Powerful Chopper 
Currently, the largest and most powerful helicopter to have ever entered production is the gargantuan Mi-26 'Halo' of Russian origin, of which many still serve in governmental and commercial roles around the globe. After decades of the 'Halo' being on top, a new record holder is now said to be on the way, with Russia and China joining forces to make it happen.

China Tried To Get World Internet Conference Attendees To Ratify This Ridiculous Draft Declaration


This week, China hosted its first World Internet Conference in Wuzhen. The irony of a country with some of the strictest online censorship laws in the world holding an event with the theme “interconnected world, shared and governed by all” was underscored yesterday, when the events’ organizers made a pro-forma attempt to get attendees to approve a draft declaration by slipping it under their hotel room doors late at night.
TechCrunch has obtained a copy of the document, which is supposed to represent the consensus views of conference participants. A PDF is embedded at the bottom of this post.
Among other things, the draft declaration calls for countries to respect each other’s “Internet sovereignty,” impose stricter restrictions on online pornography, and “destroy all dissemination channels of information of violent terrorism.”

The Ridiculously Simple Way NSA Spying Could Be Stopped

Water, water everywhere and not a drop for the premier National Security Agency data collection center—if one conservative lawmaker gets his way.

Not only is Utah the second driest state in the nation, it’s also home to the largest NSA data collection facility. Located in the Salt Lake City suburb Bluffdale, the Utah Data Center guzzles up to 1 million gallons of water each day to cool its computers, according to the Salt Lake Tribune.
Cutting off the NSA’s water supply could effectively throw a wrench into the agency’s work collecting domestic phone and email records—and that’s just what Republican State Rep. Marc Roberts wants to do. His bill would force the city to “refuse material support or assistance to any federal data collection and surveillance agency.” That would mean no more cheap water to aid mass domestic spying, a regular practice unveiled by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden last year.

Sony and Microsoft are giving you games, and GameStop isn't happy

Sony and Microsoft are giving you games, and GameStop isn't happy
Generally speaking, hardware manufacturers and games retailers are natural partners, seeking to create order and control in the universe.
The console companies make the machines and the retailers sell the machines and both profit from the sale of games for the machines.
But as the nature of retail shifts, so too does the relationship between the retailers and the hardware companies, a ripple that threatens the harmony tying these powerful forces together.

McDonald's Worker Falsely Accused of Putting Glass in Big Mac Wins $437K


Two all-beef patties, special sauce and... shards of broken glass?
A former McDonald's employee who was accused of spiking a New York City police officer's Big Mac with broken glass a decade ago has just been awarded $437,000 by the city after convincing a court that the cop made the story up to get money out of the fast food franchise.

Three minivans flunk latest IIHS crash tests

The Toyota Sienna earned an acceptable rating in the small offset test.
Each day thousands of parents hit the button on their key fob that opens the power sliding door on their family minivan and watch their kids to amble into their seats, knowing that vehicle is among the safest on the road. They are wrong, according to recent crash test results.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety recently completed small overlap front crashes on four minivans sold in the U.S. – Toyota Sienna, Nissan Quest, Chrysler Town & Country and its twin, Dodge Grand Caravan – and three of the four earned “poor” ratings.

Game of Thrones Game Receives Its Debut Trailer


Telltale Games has released a short teaser trailer for the upcoming Game of Thrones rollout. The games will be episodic, following the show’s TV seasons and will star many of the original cast members. Game of Thrones will be available on all popular platforms sometime later this year.

Mythbusters vs. Gorilla Glass


Gorilla Glass is touted to be toughest around. To prove how tough or break-resistant the glass actually is, The Mythbusters have taken up the challenge to test the limits of Corning’s Gorilla Glass 4 in their own unique way. cool

WalMart Tightens Its Price-Matching Policy

Fool me once and all that Gomer-esque wisdom hasn’t fallen on deaf ears over at the hallowed corporate halls of WalMart. Not a corporation to fall for the same exploit twice and in light of the scam WalMart fell victim to this week, the company has revised and tightened its price-matching policy.
This kind of activity is unfair to the millions of customers who count on us every day for honest value. With this in mind, we’ve updated our policy to clarify that we will match prices from Walmart.com and 30 major online retailers.

Hackers Just Exposed Thousands of Gamer Passwords

If you have an account on the PlayStation Network, 2K Game Studios or Windows live, there is a chance your account may have been hacked and leaked to Pastebin as proof of the hack. A hacker group going by the name of DerpTrolling has claimed responsibility for the breaches. It is recommended that if you have an account with any of these networks, that you change your password ASAP.
The DerpTrolling group insists it wants to force these major gaming companies — Sony, Microsoft, and 2K — into upgrading their servers to prevent this type of hacking.

Strong earthquake shakes Japan's Nagano area

A road buckled after a strong earthquake hit central Japan.  
Tokyo (CNN) -- A strong earthquake shook central Japan on Saturday night, injuring several people as their homes collapsed in a village west of Nagano, an official said.
Reports of the intensity of the quake, centered in the Nagano area at 10:08 p.m., differed. The Japan Meteorological Agency reported it was a 6.8 magnitude temblor; the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said it was magnitude 6.2.

European Parliament to Call for Breakup of Google

A report from Financial Times says that the European Parliament is making preparations to draft a proposal to break up Google’s search engine from other Google services. The Parliament has no official standalone power of its own, but recommends actions to the European Commission.
The matter underscores worry over Google's expansive reach and the search giant's potential to abuse its influence to hurt competitors.

The 411 on Laser Hair Removal for Multicultural Skin

The 411 on Laser Hair Removal for Multicultural Skin
I’ve had an issue with unwanted facial hair since my 20’s. It started as one wild hair on my chin that seems to have invited more than a few friends to join in the fun, turning my daily beauty regimen into a crazed ritual of plucking and alternative hair removal solutions that have gone on for years—without actually solving anything. Deep down I knew it was time to consider laser hair removal, but as a woman of color, I’ve heard the concerns around the laser mistaking melanin for a hair follicle, resulting in burns and scarring. Turns out, lasers have come a long way in recent years.

Bye-Bye, Rows? New Airplane Design Has You Sitting in a Circle

image
Bye-Bye, Rows? New Airplane Design Has You Sitting in a Circle
Call it “airplane in the round.”
With its latest patent application for a new plane, Airbus has proven once again that it considers just about any wacky idea thrown out by its design team worthy of a patent.

Antarctica's Mysterious Mountains Preserved By Ice - "Fountain of Youth"?

Antarctica's Mysterious Mountains Preserved By Ice
Earth's best-kept secret to looking young is buried under Antarctica's deep, old ice.
The planet's fountain of youth is frozen water mantling Antarctica's mighty Gamburtsev Mountains, a new study reports. Roughly the size of the European Alps, by all rights, the 100-million-year-old Gamburtsevs should resemble the rolling Appalachians by now, having eroded away beneath grinding ice. Instead, the Gamburtsevs are as rugged as the Rocky Mountains.

Milky Way's Monster Black Hole Ignores Its 'Snack,' and Debate Swirls

Milky Way's Monster Black Hole Ignores Its 'Snack,' and Debate Swirls
Earlier this year, astronomers watched eagerly as a cloud of gas moved dangerously close to the colossal black hole at the heart of our Milky Way galaxy — like a wildebeest wandering toward a lion. Anticipation grew over whether or not part of the cloud would pass the point of no return and be pulled, helplessly, into that gaping black maw.
The destruction of the gas cloud G2 by the Milky Way's supermassive black hole (which scientists call Sagittarius A*) was set to be one of the main events of the year for astronomy.

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak thinks Tim Cook & Co should have made a giant iPhone much sooner.

"Apple could have had a much bigger share of the smartphone market if it had a larger-screen iPhone for the past three years," Wozniak told CNNMoney from Capital One's new Innovation Center in Plano, Texas. "It could have competed better with Samsung."
Samsung's 24% share of the smartphone market doubled Apple's 12% in the third quarter, according to tech consultancy IDC. Until the much bigger iPhone 6hit store shelves in September, Apple had kept the iPhone screen relatively small and missed out on the popularity of Android's ever more massive smartphones.
Wozniak, who left Apple (AAPLTech30) in 1987, remains a fan of the company he created with Steve Jobs. But he is by no means an Apple-exclusive tech buyer. He says he likes to try out and experiment with gadgets before committing to them.

Obama's Incoherent Immigration Speech

I count three ways President Barack Obama's speech on immigration last night contradicted itself.
First, there was the absolutist language he used to justify his policy -- coupled with restrictions that aren't compatible with such language. The argument Obama made for his policy of offering legal status to millions of illegal immigrants was highly moralistic: We're not supposed to rip apart families, we can't deny people "a chance to make amends" and so forth. But you don't qualify for the new forbearance if you've only been here a short time, or are coming here tomorrow. No chance to make amends for tomorrow's illegal immigrant.

U.S. Aircraft Carrier’s Cost Likely to Rise Again, GAO Says

The cost of the U.S. Navy’s new aircraft carrier is likely to keep rising from the $12.9 billion now estimated, with the final price masked by deferring some work until after the ship is delivered, the Government Accountability Office said.
In the latest in a series of reports offering political ammunition to critics of the Navy’s most expensive warship, the GAO yesterday reaffirmed its earlier concerns that the Ford-class carrier being built by Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc. (HII) will cost more and take longer to complete than advertised.
“With the shipbuilder embarking on one of the most complex phases of construction with the greatest likelihood for cost growth, cost increases beyond the current $12.9 billion cost cap appear likely,” the watchdog agency said.

Amazon Deploys Robot Army To Assemble Your Orders

ROBOTS ARE GOING TO KILL US A....wait, they are putting together my Amazon order? Carry on. wink
While government regulations are keeping Amazon’s delivery drones out of American skies for now, the company is still looking for ways to remove slow, error-prone humans from the fulfillment process in order to save time and money. One cool piece of machinery that will help the company with the holiday rush are robots that don’t pick items off the shelves: they bring the shelves to the human order-pickers.

Google Internet Balloon Crashes On Farm

"My internet just crashed" just took on a whole new meaning.
According to a report Thursday in the Afrikaans-language Beeld newspaper, Urbanus Botha, who farms in the arid landscape of the Karoo south of Bloemfontein and Lesotho in the center of South Africa, came across the crashed balloon and initially thought it a weather balloon from the nearby weather station at De Aar.

Elon Musk worries Skynet is only five years off

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO voices fears that artificial intelligence could become dangerous by the end of the decade.
For several months now, we've been reporting on tech iconoclast Elon Musk's public warnings about the dangers of artificial intelligence. What we hadn't heard was just how soon AI might become a threat.
Turns out Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, is worried that "the risk of something seriously dangerous happening is in the five year time frame. 10 years at most."
Or so Musk wrote in a comment that followed an essay by virtual godfather Jaron Lanier titled "The Myth of A.I." on Edge.org last week. A number of comments from notable personalities including XPrize Foundation founder Peter Diamandis, technology editor Kevin Kelly and author George Dyson also appeared alongside the essay. Musk's comment was quickly removed but not before it was noticed by Mashable and other outlets.

It's true, the rich do get richer—here's why...

The debate over inequality has focused mainly on taxes, fairness and government. But two new academic papers shed light on one of the biggest drivers of wealth inequality-the higher investment returns of the wealthy. The growing wealth of the rich, and the relative stagnation of the middle class, are due in large part to diverging incomes, but investments also play an increasingly important role. And it's not just that the wealthy have more investments. They also have better-performing investments.
Read More Widening gap: haves vs. the have-mores In a paper on household wealth over the past decade, economist Edward Wolff at New York University found that wealth inequality rose sharply from 2007 to 2010 and has remained largely unchanged since then.
One reason: The wealthiest 1 percent put three-quarters of their savings into investment assets. By contrast, the middle class had 63 percent of their assets tied up in their homes, with home equity accounting for about a third since they have large mortgage debt. Wolff found "striking differences in returns by wealth class." The top 1 percent earned an average annual return of 5.91 percent between 2010 and 2013-far more than the 3.27 percent earned by the middle three quartiles. And that was due mainly to having more exposure to the stock market.

'Counterfeit' tires pose consumer risk

Pegasus-Advanta-SUV-tire-CR-studio.jpg
What began as a routine tire test became a journey through a maze of deception, finger-pointing, and a lack of accountability that in itself could prove dangerous if the product should prove to be defective.
When it comes to safety and performance, Consumer Reports has long said that you shouldn’t skimp on tires. That’s what we discovered once again when we recently tested three sets of Chinese-branded all-season truck tires that cost as little as $89 apiece in our test size, 265/70R17. All three of these bargain-bin tires landed at the bottom of our Ratings, in part because of their performance in our winter-condition test, as well as so-so to poor tread life. The surprise came when the owner and distributor of one set of the tires alleged that the tires we tested were “gray market”—that is, produced or sold by a factory and vendor that were not authorized to make or distribute them—and from tire molds that may have been stolen.

Helicopters of the future: A brief history (Pics)

Sikorsky-Boeing team thinks X2

Cue up Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyries" -- the next wave of helicopter designs are on their way.
But don't hit play just yet. For the most part, those futuristic choppers are still months and years away from anything but the drawing board. Still, the Pentagon's plans are being set in motion, and now's as good a time as any to do some gazing at the far horizon.
There are several different projects we'll be looking at in this slideshow. A key one is the Future Vertical Lift (FVL) initiative, and its precursor, the Joint Multi-Role (JMR) Technology Demonstrator program, both led by the US Army but intended to produce rotary-winged flying machines for use across all the military branches. Just this week, the Army's Aviation and Missile Research, Development and Engineering Center issued awards to four companies under the JMR TD program to get them started on refining initial designs over the next nine months, with a hoped-for first flight of demonstrator aircraft late in the Pentagon's fiscal 2017.

One of the participants in the JMR TD initiative is this helicopter design, a joint concept put forward by a Sikorsky-Boeing tag team. It's based on Sikorsky's X2 technology, which in 2010 propelled a demonstrator helicopter to 250 knots in flight -- roughly twice the average cruise speed of conventional helicopters. PHOTOS

The U.S. government thinks China could take down the power grid

Washington (CNN) -- China and "probably one or two other" countries have the capacity to shut down the nation's power grid and other critical infrastructure through a cyber attack, the head of the National Security Agency told a Congressional panel Thursday. Admiral Michael Rogers, who also serves the dual role as head of U.S. Cyber Command, said the United States has detected malware from China and elsewhere on U.S. computers systems that affect the daily lives of every American. "It enables you to shut down very segmented, very tailored parts of our infrastructure that forestall the ability to provide that service to us as citizens," Rogers said in testimony before the House Intelligence Committee. 

Underground cities: the future of business

This is what a blank canvas looks like(CNN) -- London's 'ghost stations' are a paradise for urban explorers, daredevils who compete for the most spectacular photos of their visits to the abandoned labyrinths that stretch under the capital.But the party may be over, as London seeks to transform its abandoned tube stations into a powerhouse of urban development, and address the problem of expansion in one of the most expensive cities in the world.Ex-banker Ajit Chambers, 41, is leading a campaign to push the ghost stations into service. The founder of the Old London Underground Company has plans to develop 26 sites with an estimated value of £3.6 billion. He envisages leasing and converting them into retail parks, entertainment centers, offices and cultural experiences.

US military looks for the elusive mothership


Washington (AFP) - It's a Hollywood sci-fi fantasy that has long eluded the Pentagon: a flying "mothership" that launches smaller aircraft.
The Pentagon's research agency put out a request to industry this month to outline how a large cargo plane could release drones to spy on or attack an enemy and then return to the flying aircraft carrier.
The concept conjures up fantastical images from "The Avengers" film and the "StarCraft" video game, with large, lumbering motherships sending out smaller craft -- but there are no cloaking devices involved in this particular project.

Militant attack deaths soar to all-time high

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of people killed in militant attacks worldwide jumped more than 60 percent last year to a record high of nearly 18,000 and the figure could rise further in 2014 due to an escalation of conflict in the Middle East and Nigeria, a report showed on Tuesday.
Four Islamist groups operating in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria were responsible for two thirds of the 2013 attacks and the vast majority of the deaths occurred in those countries, the Australia and US-based Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) said in its Global Terrorism Index.
However, militant attacks are on the rise more broadly, with two dozen countries seeing more than 50 deaths in 2013, it said.

Kim's former bodyguard tells of beatings, starvation in North Korean prison camp

Seoul, South Korea (CNN) -- The physical wounds are clear. Dozens of purple scars crisscross Lee Young-guk's lower legs. He says many are the result of beatings endured while imprisoned in North Korea's most notorious prison camp. Removing his dentures, Lee shows just five or six original teeth, wonky and cracked; the only ones he has left after countless punches to the head. Being hit with the butt of a rifle, he says, left him blind in one eye. Lee was the bodyguard to Kim Jong Il for more than 10 years, before the late North Korean leader assumed power in 1994.

A once loyal servant of the regime, Lee says he left Kim's employment without issues. He realized he was not a nice man, but only after he traveled out of North Korea, and saw how other parts of the world functioned, did it become clear to him that Kim was a dictator.

In Pentagon deal with Russians, big profit for tiny Florida firm

File photo of people watching as a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, carrying a classified payload from the U.S. government's National...
ATLANTA/MOSCOW (Reuters) - For months, a powerful U.S. senator has been pushing for details of a murky deal under which a Russian manufacturer supplies the rocket engines used to launch America’s spy satellites into space.
At issue: how much the U.S. Air Force pays for the engines, how much the Russians receive, and whether members of the elite in President Vladimir Putin’s Russia are secretly profiting by inflating the price.
Now, documents uncovered by Reuters provide some answers. A tiny Florida-based company, acting as a middleman in the deal, is marking up the price by millions of dollars per engine.

The weirdest, wildest concept cars of the Los Angeles Auto Show

Chevy Chaparral 2X Vision Gran Turismo Concept
The Los Angeles Auto Show kicks off a season of vehicle debuts from major automakers, including a crop of new concepts that range from sneak peeks of production vehicles to outlandish constructions meant for the show floor and nowhere else. Here's a look at the great and not-so-great from this year's concepts: PHOTOS

Russian website streams thousands of private webcams

A new website based in Russia is streaming video live from thousands of private webcams around the world, including images of babies and hospital patients.


Hackers accessed the cameras by using default passwords set by the manufacturers, British officials said Thursday. Those log-in details are freely available online, leaving the unsecured cameras accessible to anyone.
Many of the cameras have been installed in homes and businesses by people trying to improve security. The owner can use them to monitor their property remotely via the Internet.
But by providing public access to these devices -- including CCTV networks in shops and baby monitors -- the website is exposing their intimate moments.

Beats Music Will Become A Default iOS App In 2015

After spending $3 billion on Beats, you'd think Apple would have made it a default app immediately. eek!
If true, this move would be the first major Apple-branded action involving Beats, Inc. after acquiring both its hardware and software divisions in a $3 billion deal this past May. A forced app install will not replace or remove existing iTunes and iTunes Radio services, but the report didn't clarify whether iOS users would be given any promotional offer to sample the paid Beats service as new users.

World’s Largest GPU In-situ Visualization System Models Formation of Milky Way

Simulating the formation of an entire galaxy is no easy task. It takes precise calculations and massive amounts of computational horsepower. It’s even harder to run a simulation of this size while simultaneously rendering the results interactively on the same system. Yet researchers at the Swiss National Supercomputing Center (CSCS) have done just that. For the first time, they used the ultra-powerful Tesla GPU-accelerated Piz Daint supercomputer to run a massive in-situ visualization – simultaneously computing and generating a visualization of the formation of the Milky Way galaxy (for more on in-situ visualization see "Interactive Supercomputing with In-Situ Visualization on Tesla CPUs").

FTC Temporarily Shuts Down Massive Tech Support Scams

It's nice to see the Federal Trade Commission shut these guys down.
At the request of the Federal Trade Commission and the State of Florida, a federal court has temporarily shut down two massive telemarketing operations that conned tens of thousands of consumers out of more than $120 million by deceptively marketing computer software and tech support services. The orders also temporarily freeze the defendants’ assets and place the businesses under the control of a court-appointed receiver.

Mismanagement and Inexperience Contributed to GT Advanced's Sapphire Failures

It's widely known by now that Apple and GT Advanced's sapphire partnership fell apart after the latter company was unable to produce enough high-quality sapphire to meet Apple's production needs, but The Wall Street Journal has taken a deeper look into GT Advanced's failures and its defective sapphire boules, which ultimately led the company to file for bankruptcy.

GT Advanced COO Daniel Squiller suggested in a court affidavit that Apple had essentially forced the company into a contract with "oppressive and burdensome" terms that made it impossible for GT Advanced to produce quality sapphire and meet deadlines, but the profile from The Wall Street Journal, largely sourced from Apple's court filings, paints a different picture, putting much of the fault on GT Advanced's mismanagement.

GT-logo2011-pms
The partnership between the two companies may have been doomed from the start, as GT Advanced had little experience mass producing sapphire before it inked a deal with Apple. A first attempt at a 578 pound sapphire boule was reportedly "flawed and unusable," while another was "cracked so badly" the sapphire was unusable. More than half of the sapphire boules that took $20,000 and 30 days to produce ended up in a "boule graveyard."

Apple Plans to Repurpose Mesa, Arizona Sapphire Plant to Preserve Jobs

Apple is not planning to abandon its now-defunct Mesa, Arizona sapphire facility, reports Bloomberg. The company has told city officials that it remains committed to bringing jobs and manufacturing to Mesa, Arizona, following the bankruptcy that caused hundreds of GT Advanced employees to be laid off.
"They've indicated their commitment to us: They want to repurpose that building and use it again," Mesa City Manager Christopher Brady said in a recent interview. Apple has said it's focused "on preserving jobs in Arizona" and promised to "work with state and local officials as we consider our next steps."
Back in October, Apple confirmed in a statement that it would look for other ways to utilize its Mesa, Arizona facility, stating that it "remained committed to the city" and planned to help GT Advanced employees who had been impacted by the bankruptcy to find new jobs.

Apple May Introduce 'Biggest Camera Jump Ever' in Next-Generation iPhone

Apple may introduce its "biggest camera jump ever" in the next-generation iPhone, according to Daring Fireball's John Gruber (via The Tech Block). In a recent episode of his podcast The Talk Show, Gruber said that he heard "from a birdie of a birdie" that Apple is working on major camera improvements.
The specific thing I heard is that next years camera might be the biggest camera jump ever. I don't even know what sense this makes, but I've heard that it's some kind of weird two-lens system where the back camera uses two lenses and it somehow takes it up into DSLR quality imagery.
Gruber says that he's heard that Apple's rear camera could incorporate a two-lens system, which sounds somewhat similar to the Duo Lens camera that was introduced with the HTC One M8. In the One M8, a standard sensor is combined with an "Ultrapixel" sensor that lets in much more light to improve image quality. The secondary lens in the M8 is used to provide additional image information to the first lens, which also lets the focus be shifted.

Fastest Android Phones As Of October 2014

Multimedia tasks and apps on mobile devices demand that the fastest Android smartphones be several times faster than models from a few years ago. To build up this list of fast Android smartphones, we use roughly these criteria:
  • Preferably at least 1.7 Ghz processor
  • Preferably 2GB of RAM
  • At least a dual-core processor (but preferably quad-core)
  • Most models shown below may also include other speed-enhancing features like 4G network capability and the occasional superior Graphics Processing Unit (GPU).
    LINK

    Sweden Considers Special Labels for Sexist Video Games

    I don't think adding "special" labels to sexist video games is going to work the way these guys want it to. Remember when they put "explicit lyrics" labels on CDs? Same thing is going to happen with this.

    A video-game trade group, inspired by the Bechdel Test, will study games' portrayals of women. A government-funded innovation agency in Sweden is considering creating specials label for video games based on whether or not the games’ portrayals of women are sexist.

    Inside Elon Musk's $1.4B Score

    Fortune just put up an article that takes a good look at how Tesla's CEO Elon Musk convinced Nevada to pony up $1.4B in exchange for a massive battery plant. Check out all the wheelin' and dealin' that happened.
    Still, the victory came at an eye-popping price, generating criticism in the press. Nevada is paying more than $200,000 for each of the 6,500 direct jobs the gigafactory is supposed to create. "I read Nevada’s incentive package," says former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who negotiated with Tesla for its first assembly plant. "They literally handed over Reno and Las Vegas, lock, stock, and barrel." Richardson is quick to add, in a rueful comment that captures the bind that states find themselves in, "I probably would’ve done the same thing as Governor Sandoval. It’s a lot of jobs in a recessionary period. You create a new kind of economy in your state."

    State Dept Computers Hacked, Email Shut Down

    The State Department has shut down its email system after a suspected attack by hackers.
    The official said none of the State Department's classified systems were affected. However, the official said the department shut down its worldwide email late on Friday as part of a scheduled outage of some of its Internet-linked systems to make security improvements to its main unclassified computer network. The official was not authorized to speak about the matter by name and spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Verizon: We Don't Think You Need 1Gbps = idiot.

    This guy seems to think that there is no real need for 1Gbps service in the home. roll eyes (sarcastic)
    Speaking at the Wells Fargo 2014 Tech, Media & Telecom Conference, Fran Shammo, EVP and CFO of Verizon, said that the company has put in the network infrastructure to support 1 Gbps, but he does not see a market for it today. "We're now offering 500 Mbps in the home and you could take it to a Gig even though there's no application today that would ever need a Gig in the home," Shammo said.

    This is exactly the same argument > There is NO need for home computers to go up to 1Ghz back in 2000 or there's No need for handphones to have Quad Cores running at 2.0Ghz back in 2010.

    Just give us the Maximum 1Gbps speed, Let us deal with what applications can or can not use that speed!

    Uranus Might Be Full Of Surprises

    Hands down, this is definitely headline of the day.

    Scientists used to think that things were pretty chill over in the south hemisphere of Uranus. In fact, they thought it was one of the calmest regions of any of the gas giants. But in analyzing images taken nearly three decades ago by NASA's Voyager-2 spacecraft, researchers think they've found a kerfuffle of activity — which might indicate that there's something unusual about the planet's interior. LINK

    FCC Probes AT&T On Plan To 'Pause' Fiber Rollout

    Attention AT&T, I think the FCC wants to have a chat with you.

    The FCC on Friday sent a letter to AT&T seeking more information about the company's fiber deployment plans, including the current rollout, the breakdown of the technology used and both its former and current plans on the number of households it plans to reach. LINK

    AT&T Stops Using 'Perma-Cookies' to Track Customer Web Activity

    In late October, researchers discovered that AT&T and Verizon had been engaging in some unsavory customer tracking methods, using unique identifying numbers or "perma-cookies" to track the websites that customers visited on their cellular devices to deliver target advertisements.

    Following significant negative attention from the media, AT&T today told the Associated Press that it is no longer injecting the hidden web tracking codes into the data sent from its customers' devices.
    The change by AT&T essentially removes a hidden string of letters and numbers that are passed along to websites that a consumer visits. It can be used to track subscribers across the Internet, a lucrative data-mining opportunity for advertisers that could still reveal users' identities based on their browsing habits.

    U.S. Justice Department Accused of Using Fake Cell Towers on Planes to Gather Data From Phones

    The United States Justice Department has been using fake communications towers installed in airplanes to acquire cellular phone data for tracking down criminals, reports The Wall Street Journal. The program has reportedly been in place since 2007 and uses Cessna airplanes that operate out of "at least five" metropolitan-area airports.

    Aircraft in the program out outfitted with "dirtbox" devices produced by Boeing that are designed to mimic cellular towers, fooling cellphones into reporting "unique registration information" to track down "individuals under investigation." According to the WSJ, these devices let investigators gather "identifying information and general location" data from thousands of cellular phones in one flight, and Apple's encryption policies don't prevent the collection of data.

    fakecellphonetowersplane

    U.S. Government Warns iOS Users About 'Masque Attack' Vulnerability

    The United States government today issued a bulletin warning iPhone and iPad users about the recent "Masque Attack" vulnerability, a security flaw that first surfaced on Monday of this week, reports Reuters. Masque Attack is a vulnerability that can allow malicious third-party iOS apps to masquerade as legitimate apps via iOS enterprise provision profiles.

    Written by the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center and the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Teams, the bulletin outlines how Masque Attack spreads -- luring users to install an untrusted app through a phishing link -- and what a malicious app is capable of doing.
    An app installed on an iOS device using this technique may:
    -Mimic the original app's login interface to steal the victim's login credentials.
    -Access sensitive data from local data caches.
    -Perform background monitoring of the user's device.
    -Gain root privileges to the iOS device.
    -Be indistinguishable from a genuine app.

    U.S. was ill-equipped to handle Ebola rescues, State Dept. contract reveals

    Life-saving gear needed to fly sick patients was in storage as epidemic grew.

    For now, the world has to rely on a small, Georgia-based flight company for Ebola evacuations. (AP)
    The air ambulance operation tasked with rescuing U.S. Ebola victims from West Africa was initially slowed by bureaucratic bungling and is now at risk of being overburdened as thousands of American troops deploy to fight the deadly disease.
    Yahoo News has learned the U.S. government spent millions last decade to develop and build two of the world’s only isolation chambers for flying contagious patients — but as the epidemic raged in West Africa this summer and American aid workers there needed evacuating, the medical inventions were packed away in a small-town Georgia warehouse.

    Cut the shawl talk: Chinese censors wipe Putin's move on China's first lady

    Hong Kong (CNN) -- It was fleeting moment, but one that Chinese censors were quick to snuff out.At an APEC event to watch the fireworks in Beijing on Monday night, Russian President Vladimir Putin created a few of his own by slipping a shawl over the shoulders of Peng Liyuan, wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping. A smiling Peng Liyuan kindly accepted the offer, but seconds later deftly slipped the shawl off into the hands of a waiting aide. 

    The small act of chivalry, quickly but politely rebuffed, unfolded live on state television, with voiceover from a CCTV anchor stating simply: "President Putin has placed a coat on Peng Liyuan."

    Coffee titan shines light on veterans

    The nation's capital will be rocking tonight as a star-studded group of performers including Bruce Springsteen and Rihanna take to the stage at the National Mall. It's all part of the Concert for Valor, a Veterans Day celebration sponsored by Starbucks, HBO and Chase.
    Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz is behind the effort to raise awareness for veterans and their families. His new book, "For Love of Country," which he co-wrote with the Washington Post's Rajiv Chandrasekaran, celebrates the
    dedication and sacrifice of this generation of veterans.
    Yahoo News Global Anchor Katie Couric spoke with Schultz and Chandrasekaran about their book and the amazing stories of bravery and sacrifice they discovered.
    "I've been so disengaged from the last 10, 15 years, of 2 1/2 million extraordinary young people serving at war, that I just felt this was something I had to become deeply involved in," Schultz told Couric during their interview.

    Historic protests convulse Mexico - 43 students killed, bodies burned, then dumped in river.

    (CNN) -- "Enough, I'm tired," Mexico's top prosecutor said, cutting off reporters' questions.Attorney General Jesús Murillo Karam had just revealed that authorities believe 43 missing students were kidnapped, executed and dumped in a river -- and he was ready to call it a day.His words spread like wildfire through an outraged nation.

    Mounting fury over government officials' response to -- and possible role in -- the students' disappearance has convulsed the country for weeks, posing a mounting challenge to Mexico's President amid demonstrations where at times violence has flared.

    It's one of the most serious cases in the contemporary history of Mexico and Latin America, Human Rights Watch Americas Director José Miguel Vivanco told Mexico's El Economista newspaper. He compared it to a massacre of students during a Mexico City demonstration in 1968.

    "At that time, these kinds of things happened: mass disappearances of people, where no one was held accountable," he told the newspaper.

    Watch a porcupine fend off 17 — yes, 17 — lions


    Now this is something you don't see every day: a porcupine defending itself from not one, not two, but 17 lions.
    The incredible nighttime spectacle was caught on video by Lucien Beaumont, a guide at the Londolozi Game Reserve in South Africa. The porcupine can be seen using its quills to ward off 13 lionesses and four male lions at the reserve.