Pages

Project Loon | Balloon-powered Internet Access for Everyone



Google

For 2 out of every 3 people on earth, a fast, affordable Internet connection is still out of reach. A team at Google’s Project Loon believe that it might actually be possible to build a ring of balloons, flying around the globe on the stratospheric winds, that provides Internet access to the earth below.



They’ve built a system that uses balloons, carried by the wind at altitudes twice as high as commercial planes, to beam Internet access to the ground at speeds similar to today’s 3G networks or faster. As a result, the balloons could become an option for connecting rural, remote, and underserved areas, and for helping with communications after natural disasters.



The idea may sound a bit crazy—and that’s part of the reason they’re calling it Project Loon—but there’s solid science behind it.

China’s Tencent Offers 10 Terabytes of Cloud Storage for FREE


The Next Web

Cloud storage services often give away set amounts of free storage space as an incentive for users to sign up. Dropbox has offered free space amounts ranging from 25-50GB as part of promotional deals with Samsung and HTC, Box has offered 50GB of free storage with file-size limitations before, and just this week Microsoft upped the storage space for its SkyDrive Pro offering from 7GB to 25GB.

But over in China they are thinking really big. Chinese tech giants Baidu and Qihoo 360 are currently courting users with 1TB of free space and Chinese tech company Tencent has upped the game, offering a jaw-dropping 10TB worth of free storage.

How it works: sign up for a Tencent QQ account and download the latest version of the Tencent Cloud (Weiyun) mobile app. Click on the big blue button on Weiyun’s promo site and you will immediately receive 1TB worth of free space first. As the amount of space you use increases (and in turn lowering the amount of space you are left with), Tencent will top up your storage space automatically, up to a maximum of 10TB.

Xiaomi | High End Smartphones at Rock Bottom Prices


The Verge

You probably haven’t heard of China’s Xiaomi (pronounced SHAO-mee) but one day you may buy a smartphone from them.

Founded by Bin Lin, who is listed by Forbes as one of China’s wealthiest entrepreneurs, some have dubbed Xiaomi the “Apple of the East.” The company has only been making Android phones for the Chinese market for the past two years and despite its brief history has already taken a leading position in the country’s mobile market. Macworld reported that Xiaomi’s shipments had already surpassed Apple’s there.

Bin Lin is committed to selling high quality products at no profit margins. How do they do that? By selling services such as backup, security and customized versions of its software. They also offer accessories to their phones including different color backplates and even batteries .

To lower costs, the company cut out middlemen and distributors, selling directly through its Web site. The marketing was not just innovative for China, the company said, but allowed Xiaomi to sell smartphones for just half the price of the iPhone or Samsung Galaxy phones.

Xiaomi also outsources designs and features online from its so-called Mi-Fans, and releases a new version of the operating system every Friday, to add new features and keep the Mi-Fans excited.

The Xiaomi Phone 2S, its most recent flagship, has top end specs competitive with the Samsung Galaxy S4 or HTC One. It sells for a bargain price of ¥2,299 (roughly $370)—roughly half of what the Samsung Galaxy S4 is priced at.



Xiaomi phones, which run a customized version of Android that looks more like Apple’s iOS, sold $2 billion in handsets in China last year and it expects its revenue to double this year.

The company caters to young, college-educated people who want a smartphone but cannot quite afford one.

Xiaomi sold 100,000 phones online in 90 secondsXiaomi recently introduced a lower-cost model, known as “Red Rice,” that sells for 799 Chinese yuan (or $130, including the country’s value-added tax). The company sold 100,000 of the devices in 90 seconds when it offered Red Rice online.

Bin says that the company routinely sells out batches of 300,000 phones at a time through direct sales to consumers on its website. Recognizing this high demand, counterfeiters and pirates have swooped in to capitalize on it and sell lower-quality products under the auspices of the Xiaomi brand, tarnishing its reputation and providing poor experiences to customers. Lin says that it is working on increasing production to meet demand and working with the Chinese government to crack down on the piracy issue.

While Xiaomi has had great success in China selling unsubsidized phones directly to consumers via its website, western markets are still largely driven by in-store sales and on-contract, subsidized devices.

Xiaomi recently branched out into Hong Kong and Taiwan where the smartphone climate is similar to the West’s subsidy-dominated model. This may be a testing model before moving into the US and Europe.

Earlier this week, Xiaomi hired Hugo Barra, a top Android executive and VP at Google.

Closed Circuit



Following a mysterious explosion in a busy London market, the police swoop in, a suspect is detained, and the country prepares for one of the most high-profile trials in British history. Two exceptional lawyers with a romantic past step into a dangerous web of secrets and lies, and when evidence points to a possible British Secret Service cover up, it’s not just their reputations but their lives that are at stake.

Painting of Putin in Drag Seized | Artist Flees Russia



The Washington Post

Russian police seized a portrait depicting Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev wearing women’s lingerie from the Museum of Power in St. Petersburg and shut the gallery down. According to the Associated Press, the artist, Konstantin Altunin, has fled the country.

China’s Disneyland Knockoff Demolished



Daily Mail

It was to be China’s answer to Disneyland—a magnificent theme park attracting millions of visitors a year with state-of-the art rides in a chintzy fairytale setting.

But Wonderland, on the outskirts of Beijing, is being torn down after a catastrophic history stretching over 15 years.

Video: Catherine Hyland. Photos: David Gray, Reuters


Construction work at the 120 acre site ground to a halt in 1998 due to a dispute between the developers and the landowners and a corruption scandal that went right to the heart of the communist party.

Back in the mid 1990s, developers Huabin foresaw a bustling theme park attracting some three million visitors and generating $1 billion a year.


Crucially they had secured the backing Chen Xitong, then the Beijing Party Secretary who was being tipped to become the country’s next leader.

But when Chen was jailed for corruption in 1998, his successor, perhaps scared of being tarred with the same brush, refused to support the project.


Now the farmers that used to own the land have returned to grow their crops once again, with the decaying building site filling the skyline.

Narco Cultura

Narco-traffickers have become iconic outlaws, glorified by musicians who praise their new models of fame and success. They represent a pathway out of the ghetto, nurturing a new American dream fueled by an addiction to money, drugs, and violence. Narco Cultura is an explosive look at the drug cartels’ pop culture influence on both sides of the border as experienced by an LA narcocorrido singer dreaming of stardom and a Juarez crime scene investigator on the front line of Mexico’s Drug War.



Mademoiselle C



Carine Roitfeld ran French Vogue for 10 years. Mademoiselle C chronicles Carine’s launch of her new magazine “CR Fashion Book.”

Nissan To Go Autonomous By 2020



Forbes

Nissan Motor Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn says Nissan will be bring affordable autonomous cars to consumers by the end of the decade. He says:

“I am committing to be ready to introduce a new ground-breaking technology, Autonomous Drive, by 2020, and we are on track to realize it.”

The plan is to make Nissan’s entire model range capable of autonomous operation within two vehicle generations, or roughly eight to 10 years.

Fashion Glass



In the video DVF through Glass, designer Diane von Furstenberg uses Google Glass to record behind-the-scenes at New York Fashion Week last year (yes, that’s Sergey Brin seated in the front row).

Today Vogue released a series of images from the September issue of models wearing Glass photographed by Steven Klein near Lubbock, Texas, with the tag: “Beyond the blue horizon lies a futuristic vision of fashion—a beautiful minimalism tailored for the brave and the bold.”

Click any image for a larger view.





Me-Mover



Me-Mover

The Danish Me-Mover lets gets you out of the gym and on the streets. Like a step-machine but with the mobility of a bicycle, the Me-Mover feels like a mix of skiing and running, without the strain on your back, knees and ankles.

The stepping motion strengthens your leg and gluteal muscles as well as your hip flexor. The carving motion used when turning resembles downhill skiing and works your core muscles and improves your balance.

You don’t need to sweat, you don’t need to workout, you just need to move.

Miley Cyrus | MTV VMA 2013



“So la da di da di, we like to party
dancing with Molly
doing whatever we want”

When Miley sang the lyric “dancing with Molly” at the MTV VMAs, MTV bleeped the word “Molly” a reference to MDMA or ecstasy.

Here’s what Miley says:

“It depends who’s doing what. If you’re aged ten [the lyric is] Miley, if you know what I’m talking about then you know. I just wanted it to be played on the radio and they’ve already had to edit it so much,” she told the Daily Mail. “I don’t think people have a hard time understanding that I’ve grown up. You can Google me and you know what I’m up to — you know what that lyric is saying.

The world is such a fucked up place the last thing people need to worry about is my cute little video for We Can’t Stop, you know what I mean?”

NASA Engineer Says He Has a Way to Move Faster Than the Speed of Light



io9

NASA engineer Harold White stunned the aeronautics world when he announced that he and his team at NASA had begun work on the development of a faster-than-light warp drive. His proposed design, a re-imagining of an Alcubierre Drive, may eventually result in an engine that can transport a spacecraft to the nearest star in a matter of weeks—and all without violating Einstein’s law of relativity—nothing with mass can accelerate to light speed.

The idea came to White while he was considering an equation formulated by Mexican physicist Miguel Alcubierre. In his 1994 paper titled, “The Warp Drive: Hyper-Fast Travel Within General Relativity,” Alcubierre suggested a mechanism by which space-time could be “warped” both in front of and behind a spacecraft.

Alcubierre’s notion takes advantage of a quirk in the cosmological code that allows for the expansion and contraction of space-time, and could allow for hyper-fast travel between interstellar destinations. Essentially, the empty space behind a starship would be made to expand rapidly, pushing the craft in a forward direction—passengers would perceive it as movement despite the complete lack of acceleration.

(Think of this bubble like a moving sidewalk: It carries you faster than you can walk, but your leg muscles still dictate how fast you can walk on the rubber surface. In the case of the space-time bubble, the “sidewalk” is moving faster than light, while objects inside that bubble still obey the speed limit.)

Concept for warp drive craft. Photo: Michael Stravato for the NY Times

In terms of the engine’s mechanics, a spheroid object would be placed between two regions of space-time (one expanding and one contracting). A “warp bubble” would then be generated that moves space-time around the object, effectively repositioning it—the end result being faster-than-light travel without the spheroid (or spacecraft) having to move with respect to its local frame of reference.

“Remember, nothing locally exceeds the speed of light, but space can expand and contract at any speed. However, space-time is really stiff, so to create the expansion and contraction effect in a useful manner in order for us to reach interstellar destinations in reasonable time periods would require a lot of energy.” ~Harold White

Early assessments published in the ensuing scientific literature suggested horrific amounts of energy—basically equal to the mass-energy of the planet Jupiter (what is 1.9 × 1027 kilograms or 317 Earth masses). As a result, the idea was brushed aside as being far too impractical.

The key, says White, may be in altering the geometry of the warp drive itself.

White has redesigned the theoretical warp-traveling spacecraft—and in particular a ring around it that is key to its propulsion system—in a way that he believes will greatly reduce the energy requirements.

White says, “I suddenly realized that if you made the thickness of the negative vacuum energy ring larger—like shifting from a belt shape to a donut shape—and oscillate the warp bubble, you can greatly reduce the energy required—perhaps making the idea plausible.” White had adjusted the shape of Alcubierre’s ring which surrounded the spheroid from something that was a flat halo to something that was thicker and curvier.

White’s new new design could significantly reduce the amount of exotic matter required. And in fact, White says that the warp drive could be powered by a mass that’s even less than that of the Voyager 1 spacecraft.

That’s a significant change in calculations to say the least. The reduction in mass from a Jupiter-sized planet to an object that weighs a mere 1,600 pounds has completely reset White’s sense of plausibility—and NASA’s.

The warp drive design appears to be based on an exotic form of matter that nobody has seen experimentally.


 

Archives