AfterDawn: Tech news

News written by James Delahunty (November, 2014)

AfterDawn: News

Microsoft stops selling Windows 7 versions, Windows 8

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 7:22

Microsoft stops selling Windows 7 versions, Windows 8 Microsoft has halted the retail sale of some versions of its still-popular Windows 7 operating system, and of its successor Windows 8.

Specifically, Microsoft is no longer peddling copies of the Home Basic, Home Premium or Ultimate versions of Windows 7 to customers. Windows 8 is also no longer available at retail from Microsoft, as the Redmond-based giant just wants it to go away at this point. Of course, you can still buy Windows 8.1 from Microsoft, which already has a larger market share than Windows 8.

Many retail stores will still have stocks of the older versions of Windows so it is not impossible to buy a genuine copy just yet, and probably won't be for a while. Microsoft is hoping that the 2015 launch of Windows 10 will let it put the Windows 8 fiasco to bed and move on, but it also has to convince Windows 7 users that there is a need to upgrade.

More than half of all Windows users are running a version of Windows 7 presently, while estimates of Windows XP usage still range around 17%, with some commercial customers finding it tricky to move away from the 13 year old OS.


Sources and Recommended Reading:
Microsoft ends retail sales of Windows 7 and 8: www.bbc.com





AfterDawn: News

Piracy: Police raid 121 homes for sharing illegally online

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 7:20

Piracy: Police raid 121 homes for sharing illegally online Police have targeted members of a file sharing forum called Boerse, searching 121 apartments in 14 states in Germany.

The raids were announced by the office of the Cologne public prosecutor on Tuesday. They targeted people allegedly sharing music, movies and other products illegally through a portal "boerse.bz."

More than 400 officers were involved in raids of 121 apartments across 14 states. The press release indicates that uploaders profited up to several thousand users per month from their activities.

The raids also turned up plenty of evidence, with computers, hard drives and plenty of optical media seized for further analysis. Some suspects reportedly have already displayed a willingness to cooperate with the investigation.

Press Release (.DE): www.presseportal.de





AfterDawn: News

Dropbox and Microsoft partner up in mobile apps

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 7:18

Dropbox and Microsoft partner up in mobile apps Microsoft and Dropbox are teaming up to make life a lot easier for users of both of their products on mobile.

Dropbox users will soon be able to edit Office files from the Dropbox mobile apps, while Office app users will be able to access Dropbox directly. Changes to documents will be synced across devices as normal.

The Office app can use Dropbox to sync documents across devices without having to leave the app, or load the Dropbox app.

Office app users will also be able to share Dropbox links from the app, meaning you can finish up editing a document and share a link to it immediately.

The relevant mobile apps will be updated for iOS and Android smartphones and tablets in the coming weeks, while the features will be extended to the Dropbox website and Office Online for Desktop use in 2015.

According to Dropbox, its users already store over 35 billion Office documents, spreadsheets and presentations.





AfterDawn: News

WATCH: Traffic plagues Conan in Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 7:16

WATCH: Traffic plagues Conan in Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare "That was FANTASTIC! That was the greatest feeling I've ever experienced... and I've watched two of my children be born."

Conan has delivered another one of his "reviews" of a blockbuster video game this week. This time, Conan takes on Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, and has just a little bit of trouble with it, especially when he has to just cross the street.

The talk show host also has a fascination with Kevin Spacey's look-a-like Jonathan Irons, and how his eyes appear to be "dead".

watching Conan get lead character Jack Mitchell killed over and over again crossing the street makes the entire video though.

Check out another one of Conan's golden Clueless Gamer segments.

Read more...




AfterDawn: News

Windows 10 supports MKV, HEVC out of the box

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 7:15

Windows 10 supports MKV, HEVC out of the box Microsoft's next Windows revamp supports the popular Matroska (MKV) container in Media Player, along with immediate support for H.265/HEVC.

The flexibility offered by the MKV multimedia container format has made it popular over the years, particularly with HD content. Typically, on Windows you would need to install a splitter for the container, like Haali Media Splitter, or use a player with built-in support, such as VLC.

With Windows 10, Media Player supports the MKV container out of the box, as confirmed by Gabriel Aul, providing updates on the Windows Insider program on Twitter.

When asked later by another user whether Microsoft will include a codec for H.265/HEVC video streams, Aul confirmed that HEVC is "also supported in-box."

The promise of HEVC is to make it possible to stream and download ultra high resolution video content without having to push up the bitrate to the same degree necessary with other standards.

Windows 10 is set to ship in late in 2015.





AfterDawn: News

GCHQ: Tech firms in denial about extremists exploiting their services

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 10:51

GCHQ: Tech firms in denial about extremists exploiting their services The Director of the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in the UK claims that Twitter, Facebook and other tech firms are in denial about the use of their services by extremists, terrorists and criminals.

Just fresh in the new job as head of Britain's signals intelligence body GCHQ, Robert Hannigan wrote an interesting article for the Financial Times in which he describes the difference between how newer extremists like ISIS use social media and modern Internet services to spread messages and recruit.

When al Queda was public enemy number one in the majority of the first decade of the century, intelligence services were aware of its use of the Internet to recruit and to communicate. Back then, extremists hid their web presence in the dark corners of the web out of the limelight.

Contrast that with how ISIS uses social media. Hannigan points out how ISIS extremists openly use services like Twitter to recruit, and use hashtags to spread a message. They even hijack popular hashtags to expose their material to a wider audience, as was seen during the World Cup and as the Ebola crisis has grown.

Hannigan also pointed out that even in some beheading videos, the perpetrators stop the video before the actual beheading in order to conform to rules and guidelines of services.

Read more...




AfterDawn: News

Taylor Swift dislikes Spotify model, thinks labels should price albums

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 10:40

Taylor Swift dislikes Spotify model, thinks labels should price albums As you may have noticed, Taylor Swift has had a public break-up with Spotify, prompting sadness from the service and anger from some fans.

Swift, who's "1989" album just sold shy of 1.3 million copies in its first week - a feat not seen since The Eminem Show sold 1.33 million copies in its second week more than 12 years ago - suddenly removed her entire catalog from the the streaming music service this week.

While Swift has not publicly stated a reason for this decision, her past comments on the value of music and art serve as an explanation. In July, Swift wrote an Op-Ed for the Wall Street Journal, in which she showed considerable distaste for low-royalty streaming services and absolute opposition to the idea of free music.

"In my opinion, the value of an album is, and will continue to be, based on the amount of heart and soul an artist has bled into a body of work, and the financial value that artists (and their labels) place on their music when it goes out into the marketplace," Swift wrote.

"Music is art, and art is important and rare. Important, rare things are valuable. Valuable things should be paid for. It's my opinion that music should not be free, and my prediction is that individual artists and their labels will someday decide what an album's price point is."

Read more...




AfterDawn: News

Pirate Bay's Fredrik Neij facing extradition to Sweden following arrest in Thailand

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 10:33

Pirate Bay's Fredrik Neij facing extradition to Sweden following arrest in Thailand The last of the original founders of the notorious Pirate Bay BitTorrent site is in custody in Thailand ahead of an expected extradition to Sweden.

36-year old Fredrik Neij was arrested on Monday at the border with Laos reportedly wearing the exact same shirt he is wearing in a wanted poster. He has been a wanted man for several years after fleeing Sweden while out on bail, following a 2009 conviction for copyright infringement offences.

While no extradition deal exists between Sweden and Thailand, officials said they were working with Thai authorities to bring him back to his home country, according to The Local.

Another original founder of the popular share site, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, had also fled to Asia. He failed to attend an appeal hearing in Sweden in 2010, prompting an international arrest warrant being issued. In 2012, he was extradited from Cambodia to Denmark to face unrelated charges of hacking offences, resulting in a conviction and a three and a half year sentence in Denmark.

Peter Sunde was arrested in may in Sweden after he had also been on the run for two years. Carl Lundstroem was also sentenced to a year in prison as a "site financier".

Read more...




AfterDawn: News

Space Oddity video from ISS returns to YouTube

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 10:29

Space Oddity video from ISS returns to YouTube A music video recorded on the International Space Station (ISS) by retired Cdr Chris Hadfield has returned to YouTube, following the resolution of some copyright/legal issues.

It drew a very positive reaction from a global audience when it was uploaded to YouTube last year as Canadian Cdr Chris Hadfield was preparing to return to Earth from orbit after a six month stay on the International Space Station.

In his spare time, Hatfield recorded footage to be used in a music video of David Bowie's iconic Space Oddity. Under an agreement with Bowie and others, the video stayed on YouTube for a year before it had to be removed.

In that time, it received 23,489,187 views on YouTube, and had been reported across the web and replayed on TV all over the globe, pushing its exposure to hundreds of millions of people.



"The reasons we originally made the video were multifold. It was in response to repeated widespread requests via social media. It was a fun Saturday project with my son, Evan. It was a continuation of the other music that I was playing and recording while on ISS," writes Hadfield.

Read more...




AfterDawn: News

You can now play 900 arcade games in-browser from the Internet Archive

Written by James Delahunty @ 05 Nov 2014 10:22

You can now play 900 arcade games in-browser from the Internet Archive The Internet Archive has opened access to a library containing over 900 arcade games that are playable in-browser, although some may not work quite well just yet.

The games range from the very early days of arcade gaming with simple black and white interfaces, up to later developments in color and featuring digitized voices, images and music.

Dubbed the "Internet Arcade", the library provides research, comparison and entertainment to users.

Be warned though that some games won't work as nicely as others. They are emulated in JSMAME, part of the JSMESS software package, and aren't completely bug-free by any means. Additionally, some aren't really suited to a keyboard / mouse input.

Still, you can have fun shutgunning through them at: archive.org.






News archive