The Purrfect Pouch, A Pouch For Carrying Your Cat

purrfect-pouch-cat-bag.jpgAll this: it’s just three things now.

This is the as-seen-on-TV commercial for the Purrfect Pouch cat carrier and grooming pouch, an adjustable pouch for carrying your cat or subduing them to cut their nails. Based on the over-the-top commercial, it was virtually impossible to travel with a cat until its invention. The commercial says they’re buy one for $10, get one free (plus S/H and a separate processing fee for the second pouch), but that must have been a special introductory offer because the official website says they’re two for $29.95 + $6.95 S/H. That is a significant price hike. But what if I only want one because I only have one cat? What am I going to do with two? I’m not some crazy cat lady carrying like seven Purrfect Pouches like my neighbor’s husband trying to carry all their grocery bags inside in one trip.

Keep going for the commercial and count how many times she says kitty.

Source: Geekologie – The Purrfect Pouch, A Pouch For Carrying Your Cat

Justin Trudeau Just Showed Up to Dunk On Marvel's Civil War II

Whose side is Justin Trudeau on in Civil War II? Is the Prime Minister of Canada, making his comic book debut today
in Civil War II: Choosing Sides #5, Team Tony or Team Carol? Turns out, he’s neither. He’s Team Justin Trudeau Doesn’t Give a Shit About Your Superhero Infighting Nonsense.

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Source: io9 – Justin Trudeau Just Showed Up to Dunk On Marvel’s Civil War II

Transmission Malware On Mac, Strike 2

New reader puenktli writes: Just five months after Transmission was infected with the first ‘ransomware’ ever found on the Mac, the popular BitTorrent client is again at the center of newly uncovered OS X malware. Researchers at security website We Live Security have discovered the malware, called OSX/Keydnap, was spread through a recompiled version of Transmission temporarily distributed through the client’s official website. OSX/Keydnap executes itself in a similar manner as the previous Transmission ransomware KeRanger, by adding a malicious block of code to the main function of the app, according to the researchers. Likewise, they said a legitimate code signing key was used to sign the malicious Transmission app, different from the legitimate Transmission certificate, but still signed by Apple and thereby able to bypass Gatekeeper on OS X.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Transmission Malware On Mac, Strike 2

Samsung Halts Galaxy Note 7 Shipments After Reports Surface Of Charging-Related Explosions

Samsung Halts Galaxy Note 7 Shipments After Reports Surface Of Charging-Related Explosions
Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 is the “new hotness”, so to speak, in the Android smartphone world. The Marshmallow flagship sports a 5.7-inch QHD display, Snapdragon 820 processor, futuristic retina scanner, and of course, stylus pen input. However, some users have found that the Galaxy Note 7 is a little too hot — explosively hot in fact.

Reports

Source: Hot Hardware – Samsung Halts Galaxy Note 7 Shipments After Reports Surface Of Charging-Related Explosions

Google Launching Ride-Sharing Pilot To Compete With Uber, Lyft

Uber and Lyft better watch out, Google is getting into the ride sharing business. Normally I wouldn’t think much of another company entering the ride-sharing market but, this is Google we are talking about, the amount of resources they have make them an immediate threat.


The Waze pilot program charges riders a maximum of $0.54 per mile (the current IRS mileage reimbursement rate, so a pretty common rate to see mileage reimbursement set to) to be matched to drivers headed their way. That’s lower than Uber’s rate, which is an incentive for passengers to try it. And for now at least, Google’s not taking a slice of the money — which may be incentive for drivers to pick up as many folks as they can cram into their cars.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Google Launching Ride-Sharing Pilot To Compete With Uber, Lyft

False memories arise because the brain codes similar ideas similarly

(credit: Walter Reed National Military Medical Center)

Recent advances in imaging have revealed that false memories can be held by the very same cells that hold accurate ones, but we don’t have much information about how false memories get there in the first place. A recent study published in PNAS provides some insight into this issue, finding that false memories may arise from similarities among the items being remembered.

In neuroscience, false memories don’t necessarily refer to a sensational memory that might land you on a daytime talk show. Typically, neuroscientists are more interested in banal false memories. For example, a classic experiment in false memories involves showing a subject a series of words related to the winter season, like ice, snow, wind, etc. In this paradigm, even if subjects aren’t shown the word “cold,” they are still likely to remember having seen it. This is a classic false memory.

Neuroscientists have suspected that this type of false memory arises because the word “cold” is similar conceptually to the list of winter words that the subject did see. Even though the cognitive mechanism that causes this phenomenon (called conceptual similarity) is theoretically understood, however, its neural underpinnings have not been widely explored. Using a combination of the word-recall experiment described above and fMRI scans that could track the brain activity of the participants, the authors of this paper have begun to identify some of what’s behind the false memory effect.

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Source: Ars Technica – False memories arise because the brain codes similar ideas similarly

The Best and Worst Edible Shot Glasses (and What to Put in Them)

The number one function of a shot glass is to hold alcohol so you can get it into your mouth. Toasted marshmallow shot glasses sure look cute, but if they disintegrate en route to my lips, I will be less than amused. To see if any of these twee-ass vessels are worth your time, we made a whole bunch and tested them for leakiness, flavor contribution, and ease of assembly. We’ll start with the best and work our way down to the failures.

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Source: LifeHacker – The Best and Worst Edible Shot Glasses (and What to Put in Them)

What's The Best YouTube Channel For Repair Advice On Your Car?

It’s one thing to read about how to fix your car on a forum or in a Bentley manual. It’s another thing entirely to watch someone else do it correctly on video. Thankfully, the miracle of the internet makes learning to fix your car easier than ever.

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Source: LifeHacker – What’s The Best YouTube Channel For Repair Advice On Your Car?

Theranos reboot stalls as new test fails FDA standards—which were low

Enlarge (credit: Theranos)

Theranos has withdrawn its application to the Food and Drug Administration for an emergency clearance of a new diagnostic blood test for Zika virus infections, according to the Wall Street Journal. The FDA’s emergency clearance process, used in times of extraordinary medical need, such as the current Zika outbreaks, is a lower regulatory hurdle than normal for new medical products.

The Zika test would have been carried out on Theranos’ new MiniLab device; both were unveiled August 1 at a conference of the American Association for Clinical Chemistry. However, during a subsequent lab inspection, the FDA found that the company had collected some of the data on its Zika test prior to having patient-safety protocols in place. Theranos informed investors that it “recognized” the problem during the inspection and decided to withdraw its application.

The move is yet another stumble for the company, which appears to be trying to rebrand itself as a device manufacturer after federal regulators handed down heavy sanctions for safety issues in its clinical diagnostic work.

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Source: Ars Technica – Theranos reboot stalls as new test fails FDA standards—which were low

Why isn’t your old phone getting Nougat? There’s blame enough to go around

Enlarge / Another Android update means another stack of phones that will never see it.

Not all of the big Android phone makers have announced their plans for the Nougat update, but if you look at Sony’s and Google’s and HTC’s official lists (as well as the supplemental lists being published by some carriers), you’ll notice they all have one big thing in common. None of the phones are more than a year or two old.

And while this is sadly the norm for the Android ecosystem, it looks like this isn’t exclusively the fault of lazy phone makers who have little incentive to provide support for anything they’ve already sold you. Sony, for instance, was working on a Nougat build for 2014’s Xperia Z3, and even got it added to the official Nougat developer program midway through only to be dropped in the last beta build and the final Nougat release.

After doing some digging and talking to some people, we can say that it will be either very difficult if not completely impossible for any phone that uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 800 or 801 to get an official, Google-sanctioned Nougat update (including the Z3). And that’s a pretty big deal, since those two chips powered practically every single Android flagship sold from late 2013 until late 2014 and a few more recent devices to boot.

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Source: Ars Technica – Why isn’t your old phone getting Nougat? There’s blame enough to go around