After Breaches At Other Services, Spotify Is Resetting Users' Passwords

And now, Spotify is asking its users to reset their passwords. The popular music streaming service is “actively resetting a number of users’ passwords,” Motherboard reports, adding that the company is doing this because of the data breaches at other services and websites. In an email to customers, the company said, “Don’t worry! This is purely a preventative security measure. Nobody has accessed your Spotify account, and your data is secure.” The move comes less than a week after Dropbox began resetting its users’ passwords. Earlier today we learned that the cloud storage had been hacked, and as many as 68 million accounts are affected.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – After Breaches At Other Services, Spotify Is Resetting Users’ Passwords

Doubts about whether ancient hominin Lucy fell to her death 3.18 million years ago

One of the most famous fossils in human evolutionary history is at the center of a new scientific debate. The fossilized skeleton dubbed “Lucy” was part of an extinct species called Australopithecus afarensis, an early relative of Homo sapiens who was among the first hominins to walk upright. She died 3.18 million years ago, and her remains were discovered in the early 1970s in Ethiopia. Her skeleton is complete enough to give us a good picture of her anatomy, which is part of what led to the current controversy. A study published in Nature this week suggests that a careful analysis of her bones reveals how she died—by falling to her death from a very tall tree. But other scientists say the evidence is thin at best.

University of Texas-Austin anthropologist John Kappelman and his team did a complete X-ray CT scan on Lucy’s bones, allowing them to create high-resolution 3-D renders as well as 3-D printouts of her skeleton. By comparing the way her bones had fragmented with contemporary X-rays from people who fell, they came to the conclusion that the fragmentation of her leg bone was “green,” that is, it took place right before she died.

Kappelman and his colleagues write, “Although the fractures in Lucy’s humeri provide evidence that she was conscious when she stretched out her arms in an attempt to break her fall, the severity of the numerous compressive fractures and presumed organ damage suggest that death followed swiftly.” It appears that the joint in her leg suffered from extreme compression of the type you’d expect in somebody who fell on their feet from a great height, out of a local tree where nests might be as many as 23 meters off the ground. (They estimated this height based on the typical heights of chimpanzee nests today.)

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Doubts about whether ancient hominin Lucy fell to her death 3.18 million years ago

Lenovo Yoga Tab 3 Plus: Snapdragon 652, 10-Inch 2K Display, JBL Speakers and USB-C

Lenovo has introduced a new member to its Yoga Tab 3 product family this week at IFA. The new Yoga Tab 3 Plus tablet runs Google Android 6.0 and is aimed at demanding consumers. The novelty comes with a number of features previously only available on the Yoga Tab 3 Pro, including a higher-end octa-core SoC, a 2K 10” display, a lot of RAM, plenty of storage as well as Wi-Fi 802.11 ac connectivity. Surprisingly, the Yoga Tab 3 Plus will not be too expensive and will be available starting from $299.


When Lenovo introduced its Yoga Tab 3 family of products last year, the company drew a clear line between its mainstream Yoga Tab and considerably more advanced Yoga Tab 3 Pro tablets. The former were based on entry-level SoCs and were equipped with relatively low-res screens and limited amount of DRAM/NAND, whereas the latter were powered by Intel’s Atom SoC, were equipped with 2560×1600 displays and featured considerably better specs in general, but at a much higher price ($499/$599 for Wi-Fi/Wi-Fi+LTE model). Today, the Yoga Tab 3 closes the gap between the two product lines and attempts to wed the best of both: affordable price and high-end specs.


The Yoga Tab 3 Plus is based on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 652 SoC (4×A72 1.8 GHz, 4×A53 1.4 GHz, Qualcomm Adreno 510 graphics) and comes equipped with 3 GB of LPDDR3 DRAM as well as 32 GB of NAND flash storage (it also has a microSD card slot). The tablet uses USB Type-C (operates in USB 2.0 mode) connector for charging and connectivity and also supports WiFi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.0 and LTE (optional) wireless technologies.












Lenovo Yoga Tab 3 Family  
Model Yoga Tab 3 8” Yoga Tab 3 10″ Yoga Tab 3 Pro 10” Yoga Tab 3 Plus 10”
SoC Snapdragon 212

4×Cortex-A7 at 1.3GHz

Adreno 304 graphics
Intel Atom x5-Z8500

Quad core, 2.24GHz
Snapdragon 652

4×Cortex-A72 at 1.8GHz

4×Cortex-A53 at 1.4 GHz

Adreno 510 graphics
RAM, NAND 1GB, 16GB NAND + MicroSD 2GB RAM, 16/32GB

NAND + MicroSD
3GB RAM, 32GB

NAND + MicroSD
Display 8″ 1280×800 IPS LCD 10.1″ 1280×800 IPS LCD 10.1″ 2560×1600 IPS LCD

299 ppi, 70% Color Gamut
Dimensions 210 x 146 x 3 to 7mm 253 x 185 x 3.5 to 9.5mm

655g
179 x 247 x 4.6mm at thinnest point, 665g 179 x 247 x 4.68mm at thinnest point, 637-644g
Camera 8MP Rotatable Camera 13MP Rear-facing

5MP Front-facing
Battery 6200mAh (23.56Wh) 8700mAh (33.06Wh) 10200mAh (38.76Wh) 9300mAh
OS Android 5.1 Lollipop Android 5.0 Lollipop Android 5.1 Lollipop Android 6.0
Connectivity 802.11b/g/n + BT 4.0, microUSB 2.0, Optional LTE SKU 2×2 802.11a/b/g/n/ac + BT 4.0,

microUSB 2.0, Optional LTE
2×2 802.11a/b/g/n/ac + BT 4.0,

USB-C, Optional LTE

Lenovo positions its Yoga Tab 3 Plus tablet for those, who want to have enhanced multimedia experience on-the-go, which is why its 10-point multitouch 10.1” WQXGA (2560×1600) IPS display comes with Technicolor’s color enhance software technology. In addition, the device is equipped with four front-facing speakers (made by JBL) and supports Dolby’s Atmos 3D surround sound processing. Now, unlike the Yoga Tab 3 Pro, the Tab 3 Plus does not feature a pico projector, but just like the aforementioned model, it has two cameras.



Battery capacity of the novelty is 9300 mAh and Lenovo claims that the Yoga Tab 3 Plus will last up to 18 hours on its battery. As it turns out, slightly lower battery capacity of the Yoga Tab 3 Plus compared to the Yoga Tab 3 Pro is offset by better energy efficiency of its SoC, which is why it promises to deliver similar battery life. Besides long battery life, the Yoga Tab 3 Plus also inherited premium chassis featuring metal, plastic and leather from the Pro model.


Lenovo will start shipments of its Yoga Tab 3 Plus this October. The MSRP for the Wi-Fi-only model will be $299, but the recommended price of the LTE SKU is currently unknown.




Source: AnandTech – Lenovo Yoga Tab 3 Plus: Snapdragon 652, 10-Inch 2K Display, JBL Speakers and USB-C

WTF Is That?!: Picking Up A Giant 10-Pound Black Sea Slug

giant-sea-slug.jpg

This is a video of the folks from Youtube channel Brave Wilderness playing with a black sea hare. It’s called a black sea hare because it’s black and its head tentacles kind of look like a hare’s ears provided you’ve never actually seen a hare before and only had them described to you by somebody who’s bad at describing things. I thought vaginas went from side-to-side until I was in college, I really did. The black sea hare is black as a result of its algae and seaweed diet and can grow to over 3 feet and 30 pounds. This one is only around ten pounds though, or a “little shrimp” as the much larger black sea hares like to call him. So — you think the tortoise could beat this guy in a race or what? Also, I’m still not convinced that isn’t just a piece of shit Ursula brought to life with a spell.

Keep going for the video.

Source: Geekologie – WTF Is That?!: Picking Up A Giant 10-Pound Black Sea Slug

With a Single Touch, the Predator Completely Disappears From This Incredible Poster

Artist Anthony Petrie thinks the pop culture art scene has gotten a little stale. So many rehashes of the same ideas, same properties, with the same old techniques. This is art! Do something different! Be bold! And with his upcoming solo show—and a little help from the Predator—he’s doing just that.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – With a Single Touch, the Predator Completely Disappears From This Incredible Poster

Motorola Adds The Moto Z Play Droid, Reveals Pricing For Unlocked Versions

Motorola’s modular Moto Z family gets a new member today. The Moto Z Play Droid costs less than the Moto Z Droid and Moto Z Force Droid, both of which went on sale just over one month ago, and while it maintains full compatibility with Motorola’s Moto Mods and retains the same design language, there are some interesting hardware differences.


The Moto Z Play Droid still uses a 5.5-inch Samsung AMOLED display like its brothers, but resolution drops to 1920×1080. Because of the PenTile subpixel layout, the effective pixel density is less than a 1080p LCD of the same size. For this reason, we prefer a 1440p (QHD) resolution for phablet-sized displays to mitigate the loss in sharpness and color artifacts caused by PenTile’s diamond layout. To my aged eyes, the difference between the Moto Z Play Droid’s 1080p display and the Moto Z Droid’s 1440p display is small but noticeable.


Fortunately, the Moto Z Play comes with two user-selectable color modes: a “Standard” mode calibrated for the sRGB color space and a “Vibrant” mode that takes advantage of the AMOLED panel’s wider color gamut to display more vivid colors. While we have not tested the Moto Z Play, the other two Moto Zs performed pretty well in our display performance tests apart from a cool white point that reduced grayscale accuracy.

















Motorola Moto Z Droid Family
  Moto Z Play Droid Moto Z Droid Moto Z Force Droid
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 625

(MSM8953)


8x Cortex-A53 @ 2.0GHz

Adreno 506 @ 650MHz

Qualcomm Snapdragon 820

(MSM8996)


2x Kryo @ 2.15GHz

2x Kryo @ 1.59GHz

Adreno 530 @ 624MHz

Qualcomm Snapdragon 820

(MSM8996)


2x Kryo @ 2.15GHz

2x Kryo @ 1.59GHz

Adreno 530 @ 624MHz

RAM 3GB LPDDR3-1866 4GB LPDDR4-3188 4GB LPDDR4-3188
NAND 32GB (eMMC 5.1)

+ microSD
32GB / 64GB (UFS 2.0)

+ microSD
32GB / 64GB (UFS 2.0)

+ microSD
Display 5.5-inch 1920×1080 SAMOLED

Corning Gorilla Glass
5.5-inch 2560×1440 SAMOLED

Corning Gorilla Glass
5.5-inch 2560×1440 SAMOLED

Moto ShatterShield
Dimensions 156.4 x 76.4 x 6.99 mm

165 grams
153.3 x 75.3 x 5.19 mm

136 grams
155.9 x 75.8 x 6.99 mm

163 grams
Modem Qualcomm X9 (Integrated)

2G / 3G / 4G LTE (Category 7)
Qualcomm X12 (Integrated)

2G / 3G / 4G LTE (Category 12/13)
Qualcomm X12 (Integrated)

2G / 3G / 4G LTE (Category 12/13)
SIM Size NanoSIM NanoSIM NanoSIM
Front Camera 5MP, 1/4″ OmniVision OV5693, 1.4µm pixels, f/2.2, Auto HDR, LED flash 5MP, 1/4″ OmniVision OV5693, 1.4µm pixels, f/2.2, Auto HDR, LED flash 5MP, 1/4″ OmniVision OV5693, 1.4µm pixels, f/2.2, Auto HDR, LED flash
Rear Camera 16MP, 1/2.4″ OmniVision OV16860, 1.3µm pixels, f/2.0, PDAF + Laser AF, Auto HDR, dual-color LED flash 13MP, 1/3.06″ Sony IMX214 Exmor RS, 1.12µm pixels, f/1.8, Laser AF, OIS, Auto HDR, dual-color LED flash 21MP, 1/2.4″ Sony IMX338 Exmor RS, 1.12µm pixels, f/1.8, PDAF + Laser AF, OIS, Auto HDR, dual-color LED flash
Battery 3510 mAh

non-removable
2600 mAh

non-removable
3500 mAh

non-removable
Connectivity 802.11a/b/g/n, BT 4.0 LE, NFC, GPS/GNSS, USB Type-C, Moto Mods connector 802.11a/b/g/n/ac 2×2 MIMO, BT 4.1 LE, NFC, GPS/GNSS, USB Type-C, Moto Mods connector 802.11a/b/g/n/ac 2×2 MIMO, BT 4.1 LE, NFC, GPS/GNSS, USB Type-C, Moto Mods connector
Launch OS Android 6.0.1 Android 6.0.1 Android 6.0.1
Launch Price

(No Contract)
$408 ($17/mo) $624 ($26/mo) / $674 $720 ($30/mo) / $770

There are differences inside the Moto Z Play too. Most significantly is a switch from Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820 SoC to the Snapdragon 625, which includes eight ARM Cortex-A53 CPU cores running at up to 2.0GHz and a slimmed down Adreno 506 GPU that supports the latest OpenGL ES 3.1 and Vulkan graphics APIs. The SoC is paired with 3GB of LPDDR3 RAM that should provide sufficient bandwidth for this SoC and enough room for efficient multitasking with the Moto Z Play’s near-stock Android OS.


The Qualcomm X9 modem that comes integrated within the Snapdragon 625 SoC supports 2×20 MHz carrier aggregation on both the downlink and uplink, providing up to 300 Mb/s and 150 Mb/s, respectively. Other connectivity options include Bluetooth 4.0 LE, NFC, and Wi-Fi, although the latter option receives a downgrade relative to the other Moto Zs. Instead of 802.11ac and 2×2 MIMO, the Moto Z Play only supports 802.11n over 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands.



Moto Z Play Droid (left) and Moto Z Force Droid (right)


The Moto Z Play also packs in a 3510 mAh battery, basically the same size as the Moto Z Force, that when combined with the relatively low-power A53 CPU cores in the Snapdragon 625—manufactured on Samsung’s 14nm LPP FinFET process—should result in good battery life. It also includes Motorola’s TurboPower rapid charging technology and ships with the same 15W charger with permanently attached cord as the Moto Z Droid.


All three Moto Zs use the same 5MP front-facing camera with automatic HDR imaging and a dedicated LED flash. The rear cameras are all different, however. The Moto Z Play’s rear camera looks like an upgrade over the standard Moto Z’s and is very similar to the Moto Z Force’s camera, at least on paper. The 16MP OmniVision PureCel Plus-S sensor includes a buried color filter array and deep trench isolation (DTI) technology to reduce electrical crosstalk and improve color fidelity. The stacked die uses larger 1.3µm pixels that improve full-well capacity too. It uses the same hybrid autofocus system as the Moto Z Force that combines laser AF, phase detect AF (PDAF), and standard contrast AF to improve focusing speed and accuracy over a broad range of lighting conditions. The Moto Z Play does give up OIS, however, and its f/2.0 aperture has 13% less area than the Moto Z Force, but 31% more area than the Moto Z.



Moto Z Play Droid (left) and Moto Z Force Droid (right)


The Moto Z Play looks very similar to the other two Moto Zs with a few minor differences. It has the same thickness and nearly the same dimensions as the Moto Z Force, but its smooth metal sides, which lack the Force’s double taper, make it just a little more difficult to pick up from a table. A combination NanoSIM and microSD card tray and one of three microphones are located on the top edge, while a USB Type-C port is centered on the bottom edge. There’s also a 3.5mm headphone jack on the bottom, an analog port the other Moto Zs lack.


The back of the phone is still flat with a proprietary connector near the bottom to accommodate Motorola’s Moto Mod accessories. The same raised, circular camera module is also present, but the back appears to be made entirely out of plastic now, which really is no big deal. It also has a more prominent Motorola logo and a subtle circular pattern centered around the camera module instead of the horizontal lines like the other Moto Zs. Despite Motorola’s attempt to dress it up, the phone really looks naked without something attached to the back. Fortunately, a Charcoal Ash wood Style Shell is included in the box.



There’s a few changes on the front too. Up top the Moto Z Play uses a different earpiece/speaker that’s less prone to collecting crud, and the front-facing camera and LED flash switch sides. The first two Moto Zs have large, ugly lower bezels, a byproduct of using a square fingerprint sensor and placing the display circuitry below the screen. For the Moto Z Play, Motorola moves the display circuitry up top, allowing for a more reasonably sized lower bezel. This does mean that the upper bezel is now larger, although this does not negatively affect one-handed use like the previous model’s larger lower bezel.


In addition to authenticating purchases and signing into apps, the fingerprint sensor also instantly wakes and unlocks the phone, or turns off the display and locks the phone, after enrolling one or more fingers, a nice convenience feature that’s similar to double-tapping the screen to wake or lock the phone. One thing it does not do, however, is function as a home button, which takes a little getting used to. Instead of physical navigation buttons, the Moto Zs use onscreen controls.



The Moto Z Play is an interesting addition to the Moto Z lineup. It sacrifices display resolution and some performance for better battery life and a lower price. It fixes some of the first Moto Z’s flaws—missing headphone jack, awkward lower bezel, small battery—and retains its more unique features—Moto Mod functionality, water repellant coating, front-facing LED flash. The rear camera also has flagship-caliber specs, OIS the only omission.


Like the Moto Z and Moto Z Force, the Moto Z Play will initially be a Verizon exclusive. The Moto Z Play Droid Edition will be available for sale on September 8 online at motorola.com or in Verizon stores for $408 or $17 per month for 24 months using the Verizon device payment plan. Color choices include silver with black front and back or gold with white front and “Sugar White” back.


Unlocked versions of the Moto Z and Moto Z Play will also be available for presale in the US on September 15 with shipments beginning in October. The unlocked Moto Z will cost $699.99 and the unlocked Moto Z Play will cost $449.99, a small price premium over the Verizon Droid Editions. The Moto Z Play will also be available globally starting in September.




Source: AnandTech – Motorola Adds The Moto Z Play Droid, Reveals Pricing For Unlocked Versions

The Thinnest Laptop in the World Needs a Touchscreen Keyboard

At IFA in Berlin Lenovo announced a nice array of refreshed laptops and tablets, updating great devices
like the Lenovo Yoga 900 series (now the Lenovo 910) with 7th generation
Intel processors, but one device stood out among the rest. It’s the tiniest laptop Lenovo has on display, so tiny the company is classifying it as a tablet. The Lenovo Book is just 0.38-inches thick, which makes it the thinnest laptop currently available, and makes ultra slims like the half-inch thick Samsung Notebook 9 and Apple Macbook look positively chunky.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – The Thinnest Laptop in the World Needs a Touchscreen Keyboard

The Moto Z Got a Giant Hasselblad Attachment and a Phone Jack

It’s been a couple of years since I’ve used a Motorola phone that I could confidently recommend to a friend (RIP Moto X 2013
). Today, that sentiment changed when I picked up the new Moto Z Play Droid and its funky camera attachment that magnetically snaps onto the back of the phone, called the Hasselblad True Zoom Mod.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – The Moto Z Got a Giant Hasselblad Attachment and a Phone Jack

Lenovo's two new tablets include a lower-cost Surface Pro rival

Lenovo’s hoopla at IFA may be focusing on its creative-minded Yoga Book, but there are two new bread-and-butter tablets that are worth your attention, too. The 12.2-inch Miix 510 is a Surface Pro-alike for people who want a reasonably speedy 2-in-1…

Source: Engadget – Lenovo’s two new tablets include a lower-cost Surface Pro rival

Hasselblad reveals a Moto Mod that replaces your Moto Z's camera

Remember the days before the Moto Z launched, when a mysterious camera MotoMod was leaked along with a handful of other snap-on accessories? Remember when the Z and Z Force launched, and that camera was nowhere in sight? Well, the wait is (almost) ov…

Source: Engadget – Hasselblad reveals a Moto Mod that replaces your Moto Z’s camera

Reminder: Now's the Best Time to Sell Your iPhone If You Want to Upgrade to the iPhone 7

Apple’s set to announce its new model of iPhone next Wednesday, which means it’s time for that yearly upgrade consideration. If you do want to upgrade, selling off your old one before Apple’s announcement is your best bet to get the most cash.

Read more…



Source: LifeHacker – Reminder: Now’s the Best Time to Sell Your iPhone If You Want to Upgrade to the iPhone 7

New find might be oldest evidence of life on Earth

Enlarge / One set of the possible stromatolites—with two slices cut out by the researchers. (credit: Allen Nutman)

In the history of life on Earth, the first chapter is still the most incomplete—and any good epic needs its origin story. The problem with finding that story is preservation. The earliest lifeforms were microscopic sacks of organic chemistry, so finding evidence for them, as far as needles in haystacks go, is not exactly equivalent to spotting a six-foot Apatosaurus bone. To make matters worse, most of the haystack has been burned to a crisp by geology since then.

Fossil evidence goes back about 3.5 billion years, with controversial isotopic signs that might signify life about 3.8 billion years ago (or perhaps even earlier). At this age, you run out of rocks. Although the planet is about 4.5 billion years old, very few rocks have survived for more than 3.5 billion years. The ones that have look their age, metamorphosed so much over the eons that signs of life might have been erased.

Still, the quest to push back the earliest evidence for life goes on. New finds are subject to rigorous debate, and researchers have to work hard to figure out whether a physical process could be responsible for a feature that has the appearance of a fossil.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – New find might be oldest evidence of life on Earth

EA Exec Responds To "Worst Company In America" Controversy

Whether we agree or not, most of us know why Electronic Arts has the dubious distinction of being the “Worst Company in America.” With that said, do any of you really think this “put players first” initiative will help them shake that title? Or do you think this is all just lip service?

“You try and be defensive and say this is stupid, this is ridiculous; and then you go, ‘Maybe there’s a kernel of truth here.’ Maybe this is a moment we can step back, look in the mirror, look at who we are, look at how we’re perceived, and figure out what we need to do to do something about it. Perception is reality so if there perception is that we’re not a company that puts players first, then how do we change that?”

Comments

Source: [H]ardOCP – EA Exec Responds To “Worst Company In America” Controversy