Tech News

  • Phobya WaCoolIT Bench Table @ PureOverclock

    Published: Thursday, July 5, 2012 | By: Dennis

    I'm still working on my test bench design.  It may not be as refined as this bench table but it should lend itself well to the type of testing and overclocking I do on a regular basis.

    Today we take a trip out of the norm in our typical case review. For those who use a case for your computer and do a lot of hardware changes, watercool or just plain cannot leave your system alone, you may want to think about a change of pace. The change being a bench table, and the Phobya WaCoolIT is a new one we’re looking at today. It packs some style and great features, so grab a frosty beverage and let’s take a look at the functionality of this stylish and large test bench.

    I have to admit, the design looks good, might have to give it a test run.

  • Google is killing off iGoogle

    Published: Wednesday, July 4, 2012 | By: Dennis

    I suspect that anyone reading this may have never heard of iGoogle and is likely one of the reasons the Google camp is killing a somewhat useful extension to their web portal.

    An un-remembered time ago Google launched a web portal called iGoogle that gave you a useful front-end to the normally stark and plain searching homepage.  The portal allowed you to add "apps" to the page so you could easily get to things like Google news, Gmail, Gchat along with custom things like RSS and flash games.  I've been using iGoogle ever since it was first announced and it has been my homepage ever since.

    Over the past year Google has been changing things on the Google homepage and eventually dropped the direct link to iGoogle which signaled the beginning of the end.  Today they have posted a very short explanation stating that iGoogle is going away in November of 2013 and to pack your shiz and get the flip out.  (not their exact words)

    What's happening to iGoogle?
    iGoogle will be retired in 16 months, on November 1, 2013. The mobile version will be retired on July 31, 2012.

    How did you come to this decision?
    We originally launched iGoogle in 2005 before anyone could fully imagine the ways that today's web and mobile apps would put personalized, real-time information at your fingertips. With modern apps that run on platforms like Chrome and Android, the need for something like iGoogle has eroded over time, so we'll be winding down iGoogle on November 1, 2013, giving you a full 16 months to adjust or easily export your iGoogle data.

    Check out the iGoogle announcement page for more gory details and the lack luster explanation for the change.  Makes you wonder how long it will take for Google+ to find a similar home.

  • Reality Show on Mars Could Fund Manned Colony by 2023

    Published: Tuesday, July 3, 2012 | By: Dennis

    Not really tech news but technology related.  A Dutch company is planning to setup a colony on Mars and exploit the experience by treating it like a reality TV show.

    Seems like a good idea, right?

    A Dutch company aims to land humans on Mars by 2023 as the first step toward establishing a permanent colony on the Red Planet.

    The project, called Mars One, plans to drop four astronauts on Mars in April 2023. New members of the nascent colony will arive every two years after that, and none of the Red Planet pioneers will ever return to Earth.

    To pay for all of this, Mars One says it will stage a media spectacle the likes of which the world has never seen — a sort of interplanetary reality show a la "Big Brother." 

    There is no denying how popular reality TV shows are, to a certain degree more popular in Europe, but sending a group of people to a alien planet seems like a plan best left for the film studios and not a real life adventure.

    With that being said the only way you could fund something like this in the modern world would be with the private sector with advertising dollars.

  • Foxconn reportedly to invest in Indonesia

    Published: Tuesday, July 3, 2012 | By: Dennis

    This is some good news for those living in Indonesia.

    Foxconn Electronics (Hon Hai Precision Industry) is said to be planning to establish manufacturing plants in Indonesia as the minister of Indonesia's Ministry of Industry recently revealed that Foxconn is set to invest US$1 billion in Indonesia, and the investment is expected to create about one million jobs, during his attendance of Indonesia Taiwan Chambers of Commerce, according to sources from the upstream supply chain.

    This brings company benefits in lowered labor costs and also more efficient transportation into other parts of Asia.  The expansion also helps to diversify their product offerings as it relates to raw manufacturing including famous items like the iPhone and not so well know things like CPU sockets and other raw computer components.

  • Drones vulnerable to terrorist hijacking

    Published: Monday, July 2, 2012 | By: Dennis

    In a "no duh" moment researchers are claiming that military drones can be hijacked and made to do anything the hijacker wants including taking out any number of targets including people.

    “Spoofing a GPS receiver on a UAV is just another way of hijacking a plane,” Humphreys told Fox News.

    In other words, with the right equipment, anyone can take control of a GPS-guided drone and make it do anything they want it to.

    “Spoofing” is a relatively new concern in the world of GPS navigation. Until now, the main problem has been GPS jammers, readily available over the Internet, which people use to, for example, hide illicit use of a GPS-tracked company van. It’s also believed Iran brought down that U.S. spy drone last December by jamming its GPS, forcing it into an automatic landing mode after it lost its bearings.

    There are several things that a drone needs to fly and, much like with a human driven aircraft, if any of those systems fails then the mission is in danger.  What is being discussed in the news article is the equivalent of placing blinders on the "eyes" of the drone and causing it to become confused.  I cannot be certain but communication with the drone is likely encrypted over a secure channel but who is to say that with enough data it cannot be hacked.

    These days you can hack a WEP key in a matter of seconds and WPA can fall in a matter of hours.  This isn't to say military drones fly via wifi but with enough data you can crack the code.  That is the main reason drones fly with a program and not so much with human interaction, remove the ability to run the program and you kill the device.

  • Micron to Acquire Elpida Memory in $2.5 Billion Deal

    Published: Monday, July 2, 2012 | By: Dennis

    Here is some hometown news. 

    Hometown being "my" home town considering that the Micron HQ is located about 10 miles from my present location.  Crucial, a division of Micron, is also close but not mentioned in the news story.

    Micron, based in Boise, Idaho, also announced on Monday that it was buying a 24 percent stake in the Rexchip Electronics Corporation from the Powerchip Technology Corporation for about $334 million. Since Elpida owns a 65 percent stake in Rexchip, Micron will own 89 percent of that company once both deals close.

    Elpida, which makes dynamic random-access memory chips used in personal computers and other products, filed for bankruptcy earlier this year amid mounting debt and falling chip prices. Although some analysts questioned Micron’s appetite for all of Elpida, the deal would allow Micron to expand its manufacturing capacity at a relatively low price.

    Good news for Micron, makes you wonder how that will change the enthusiast memory market considering that Elpida made some of the better chips out there.

  • Battlefield 3 Premium Subscriptions Top 800,000 in First Weeks

    Published: Friday, June 29, 2012 | By: Dennis

    DLC and micro transactions are the methods that most game developers have adopted to keep their games in the news and fresh with gamers, and why not, its almost free to the players and costs the game developers very little to market.

    Within the first two weeks of availability, more than 800,000 players signed up for the Battlefield 3 Premium service, says EA Games chief Patrick Soderlund in an interview with Game Hunters.

    The service tied to EA's popular first-person shooter gives players early access to the game's downloads, including the recently released Close Quarters.

    Soderlund says the initial response has topped EA's expectations. "We are very pleased with the performance so far," he says.

    They are offering the DLC on PS3 first (likely because of some grease from Sony) and then open it up for the other consoles and PCs a week later.  It would seem that buying a mission pack disk is no longer a viable option.

  • HP to hold off on ARM-based Windows tablet

    Published: Friday, June 29, 2012 | By: Dennis

    I think this is a good move for them, but I really (and I mean REALLY) hope they decide against using Atom in their designs.

    HP has confirmed that it is canceling plans to launch an ARM-based Windows RT tablet and will instead focus solely on Intel-based Windows 8 tablets for debut this fall. The company explains that the decision was influenced by customer feedback, which indicated that the ecosystem of x86 applications would offer the best customer experience.

    It would seem that HotHardware was the first to break this story.  I guess it pays to farm out your content digestion.

  • Hacker uses malware built-in chat to toy with researchers

    Published: Friday, June 29, 2012 | By: Dennis

    Fun story!  (kinda old, sorry about that)

    Malware researchers investigating a Trojan linked in a gaming forum as a how-to video for Diablo III got a surprise when the hacker started chatting with them—through a feature in the malware. Franklin Zhao & Jason Zhou of antivirus company AVG were looking for keylogging code in the malware with a debugger after downloading it to a virtual machine when a chat box popped up. The hacker asked, in Chinese, “What are you doing? Why are you researching my Trojan?”

    Gotta love when a hacker has a sense of humor, (so to speak) I think in this case the hacker was just looking to be an elitist.

  • NL: Review Block - Coolers and Keyboards, Keyboards?

    Published: Friday, June 29, 2012 | By: Dennis

    Yep thought it might be fun to include some keyboard reviews in this review block.  Gaming keyboards and mice are not part of the core focus "here at Ninjalane" (omg I hate having to write that) so I rarely post the reviews that get sent in.

    One of these days I may find another super awesome hardware enthusiast that enjoys writing and is willing to post news on a daily basis.  Maybe when that happens more of the un-core stuff will get some lime light.

    Until then this is what you get happy smile  (as always comments are accepted, please email or post in the forum)

    Cooler Reviews
    - Thermaltake Frio Extreme CPU Cooler Review @ Hardware Secrets
    - Noctua NH-L12 Review at Overclockers Online
    - Be Quiet! Dark Rock 2 CPU Cooler Review
    - Arctic Freezer i30 CPU Cooler Review on Technic3D
    - Lepa Vortex PWM Fan @ TechwareLabs
    - Antec KUHLER H2O 920 Liquid CPU Cooler Review @ NikKTech
    - Top 5 Heatsink Charts on Frostytech - June Update @ Frostytech
    - BeQuiet Dark Rock Pro 2 CPU Cooler @ Pro-Clockers
    - Funky Kit Review: Thermaltake Water 2.0 Pro - CPU Liquid Cooler

    Input Devices - Keyboards and stuff
    - Cooler Master Storm Trigger Gaming Keyboard Review @ Hardware Canucks
    - CM Storm Spawn Gaming Mouse @ Planet Overclock
    - Roccat Savu Gaming Mouse Review @ XSReviews.co.uk

    More to come.