May 31, 2011

5 top social media security threats

Social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn increasingly are being used by enterprises to engage with customers, build their brands and communicate information to the rest of the world.
But social media for enterprises isn't all about "liking," "friending," "up-voting" or "digging." For organizations, there are real risks to using social media, ranging from damaging the brand to exposing proprietary information to inviting lawsuits.
Here are five of the biggest social media security threats:

May 22, 2011

NASA: Space station becomes dark matter hunter

Astronauts use robotic arms to attach $2B particle detector to orbiter 
With a new $2 billion device successfully installed Thursday, the International Space Station has become a dark matter hunter.
Two robotic arms worked in tandem to lift the 15,251- pound instrument, called the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 (AMS-2), out of space shuttle Endeavour's payload bay and then attached it to the backbone of the space station.
The instrument will orbit the Earth sifting through cosmic particles, providing data that it is hoped will help find the answers to fundamental questions of physics -- antimatter and dark matter.
The main goal of this research is to understand the origin of the universe.
When Endeavour lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center on Monday, it was carrying the particle detector , along with supplies and spare parts, including an arm for the station's Dextre robot and a robotic arm and hand for the station's humanoid robot.
Endeavour's six-man crew has a busy schedule set up for its 16-day mission. They have to unload and install equipment and experiments, as well as complete four spacewalks. On Thursday, they spent their first day of work focusing on getting the AMS-2 unpacked and set up.
NASA astronauts Andrew Feustel and Roberto Vittori used the space shuttle's robotic arm to extract the particle detector from inside the Endeavour. Then the shuttle's robotic arm handed off the instrument to the space station's Canadarm2 , a robotic arm onboard the space station. Astronauts Greg Johnson and Greg Chamitoff used the Canadarm 2 to install the AMS-2 on the starboard side of the station's truss, which is the orbiter's backbone.
The particle detector is made up of a ring of powerful magnets and ultrasensitive detectors built to track, though not capture, cosmic rays. It will be operated remotely from Earth.
By studying these cosmic rays with its highly sensitive monitors, the machine should be able to identify a single particle of antimatter or dark matter among a billion other particles.
"The cosmos is the ultimate laboratory," said Nobel laureate and AMS spokesman Samuel Ting, in a previous interview. "From its vantage point in space, AMS will explore such issues as antimatter, dark matter and the origin of cosmic rays. However, its most exciting objective is to probe the unknown, because whenever new levels of sensitivities are reached in exploring an uncharted realm, exciting and unimagined discoveries may be expected."
Scientists have long been curious about antimatter. Scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) noted that matter, the substance known to make up the world, and antimatter, which, in the most basic terms, is thought to be invisible matter, would have been created in equal amounts when the universe was created. The mystery stems from the fact that we live in a universe that appears to be made only of matter.

Get A New Coat Of Skin At The Skin Factory

Need a new coat of skin? It's closer than you think.
A new German "skin factory" has opened up and they can actually mass produce sheets of human flesh. While the tech is there, the legal hurdles are large and will keep the tissue from reaching human recievers any time soon...but the tech is ready.

At the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology, machines slosh pink solutions around, and drizzle liquids through hair-thin pipettes. The machines monitor temperature, carbon dioxide, and humidity levels. After some time you have pieces of tissue sitting in nutrient solution: transplantable flesh.
According to Gizmodo this skin factory was just a concept back in 2009, but a group of researchers have built a factory in a very short time, with the aim of creating a world where there is never a shortage of flesh transplants.
This "skin factory" is capable of turning out 5,000 discs about the size of a penny every single month. The price for a penny sized chunk of skin? €50, or $72. That may sound expensive, but it sure beats the alternative...
The visionaries who built this factory hope that it will someday serve as a backbone facility that provides more than just muscle cultures; much more, like bladders, tracheas, entire organs, and possibly even entire limbs.
Unfortunately, there are some large hurdles to overcome. The EU has decided that tissues grown outside of the human body must be treated as pharmacological substances. This means that they must first do a lot of animal testing, and then get aproved by the European Medicines Agency before the lab-grown flesh ever makes it on to a person. Check out Der Spiegel for the full scoop.
It's an amazing time that we live in, with new innovations being realized every single day in everything from quantum teleportation to other discoveries similar to this one. Let's just hope that the EU doesn't take their time with this one -- people need it.
[Spiegel via Gizmodo / Photo via Kaibara87 (Flickr)]
Follow James Mulroy on Twitter to get the latest in microbe, dinosaur, and death ray news.

HTML5 animation tool Hype debuts

Animators and designers have long had to rely on Adobe's Flash and Dreamweaver software to create animation and interactive experiences for the Web. While HTML5 offers an alternative, there's been no easy tool for creating it--until now. Tumult's Hype, released on Friday, offers creative professionals an easy-to-use WYSIWIG editor for creating interactive Websites, animations, and more, all encoded in HTML5.

Hype boasts that no coding knowledge is required to use the application; indeed, it presents the user with a WebKit-rendered preview pane and a rich text editor for adjusting shapes, text, and images. But if you'd like to take a peek under the hood, it's easy enough to access the code for each individual element.
Users can incorporate the latest HTML and CSS elements into their Websites with a few clicks using the app's Inspector, and Hype will automatically adjust the behind-the-scenes code to work with as many browsers as possible. You can preview your Website at any time in Safari, and view any incompatibilities in a separate window--in case you're worried about how poorly it will render in Internet Explorer 6, for example. And manually adding JavaScript actions is only a click away, thanks to the application's integrated editor.
Animations are keyframe-based and can be controlled one of two ways: manually, or by using the application's Record option. With Record, you can adjust anything on your canvas, and Hype will automatically render the transitions needed to create the animation. You can isolate individual pieces of elements--only adjusting the shadow or reflection on an image animation, for example--and even use multiple timelines for greater control.
Exporting, too, is a snap: Hype will automatically generate a folder with all the necessary elements and code for you to place at your leisure. You can even upload a Hype project directly to Dropbox and preview your Website there.
Hype is available solely on the Mac App Store for an introductory price of $30. It requires Mac OS X 10.6.6 or later.

Firefox Brings 'Do Not Track' to Mobile Browsing

The latest beta of Firefox for Android brings cutting-edge privacy to mobile devices for the first time


Tired of advertisers that track your Internet surfing? Your mobile device can help you just say No.
The latest software development phase of Firefox for Android introduces the same Do Not Track add-in as the desktop release of Firefox. The beta is available for download in the Android Market.
Do Not Track is a W3C-driven initiative that lets users inform websites and advertisers that they want to opt out of any advertising that works by tracking their surfing. Visiting Expedia, for example, might show recommendations for London tourist attractions if you've recently visited a site about vacationing in Europe.
The new feature can be found under the privacy and security setting of the Firefox for Android setting panel, and can be activated with a single tap.

Mozilla's Do Not Track implementation works by adding a "DNT: 1" component to HTTP headers. This means every request sent by the user's browser tells the website that the user does not want to be tracked. This approach avoids pitfalls in using privacy cookies, which can be deleted (or simply ignored), and blacklisting, which can be difficult to setup and successfully implement.
Once you've activated the Do Not Track feature, you can use Microsoft's Do Not Track Test Page to confirm it's working.
Users of Apple's mobile devices will have to wait a little longer to receive the same kind of privacy feature. However, Apple recently added a Do Not Track implementation to the desktop version of Safari, to be offered in the forthcoming release of OS X. The signs are good that the feature will soon make it to the mobile version.
DNT does not turn off advertising. Mozilla hopes that websites will simply swap-in a generic ad for any that are targeted at a user's online behavior.
Do Not Track has been spreading since it was introduced with Firefox 4 and Internet Explorer 9 earlier this year. The Associated Press has utilized it on 800 news sites, for example, while the Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA), which represents major advertising agencies, is looking at using it as part of its Self-Regulatory Program for Online Behavioral Advertising.

May 18, 2011

angela aki - Tegami~Haikei Juugo No Kimi e~.mp3

Title :  Tegami~Haikei Juugo No Kimi e~
Artist : Angela Aki
Legth :  5:08
size : 7.33 MB
Genre: ballad piano

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SMADAV 8.5

SMADAV 8.5 the lates update

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