Sony asks us to ‘see the future’ of PlayStation on February 20th (update: WSJ rumors)

Sony asks us to 'see the future' of PlayStation on February 20th

What’s this? A Sony invite to “see the future” of PlayStation on February 20th in New York City? From the looks of the very tease-y clip Sony’s released (found just beyond the break), it’s clearly PlayStation related. Perhaps involving a certain codenamed “Orbis” project? The company’s official PlayStation Twitter account says “See the future” and pushes followers to this website, where invitees can sign up and everyone can see the aforementioned video.

We’ll find out soon enough what the tease is about, as we’ve just finished up registration. From the video … well, the future features the same triangle, circle, square, and cross buttons, apparently. A recent report detailed some specs for Sony’s rumored next PlayStation, including an eight core AMD64 CPU and an AMD R10XX GPU — specs that may change dramatically before we hear anything official. Could this be the first volley in Sony’s rollout of the next PlayStation?

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Source: PlayStation Meeting 2013

Twitter silent on details surrounding today’s outage

If you’re one of the world’s millions of Twitter users, then there’s at least some chance that you were experiencing outages earlier today. Twitter first started reporting that some users may be having issues accessing the site this morning, but it seems that those issues have since been resolved. This problem doesn’t seem like it was a massive outage, but then again, the details Twitter gives about the issues are pretty general, so it’s difficult to know what was going on behind the scenes.

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The only update to the Twitter Status page says that the issue causing the outages, which were happening for a three-hour block this morning, has been resolved. “We apologize to users who were affected by this, and we’re working to ensure that similar issues do not occur,” the update reads. Other than that, we don’t have any details on the cause behind the problems.

Looking at previous posts on the Status page, however, it becomes clear that being specific isn’t really Twitter’s way. The other two days Twitter experienced outages this month, updates said something similar to what we’re hearing today. It looks like the reason behind Twitter’s outage will remain a mystery, though it is good to hear that Twitter is trying to prevent this from happening moving forward.

While Twitter didn’t go down for everyone today, it did seem to go out on a significant number of people. We’ll be keeping an ear to the ground and listening for more details from Twitter, but at this point it seems that the company is ready to move on from today’s problems. Is Twitter still down for you, or is everything running normally on your end?

[via ComputerWorld]


Twitter silent on details surrounding today’s outage is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

BlackBerry 10 tablet: three insane steps for success

The BlackBerry PlayBook as it was released back in April of 2011 was a mess, but the first BlackBerry 10 tablet certainly doesn’t have to be. Have a look back at our original BlackBerry PlayBook Review and you’ll find that right out of the gate the machine was far too “rough around the edges” to be a real competitor with the likes of the iPad or even the first big Android release with the Motorola XOOM. The direction the company is going with BlackBerry 10 presents a unique opportunity to take the tablet market by storm by hitting several specific arenas at once.

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1. Brand Power

Back when RIM introduced BBX, the system seemed like an exciting enterprise to BlackBerry users across the board. Fast forward to 2013 and the company formerly known as RIM is now called BlackBerry and the mobile operating system is called BlackBerry 10. The brand name BlackBerry is the most valuable asset the company has, and if they decide to create a new tablet, they need to call it the BlackBerry Tablet.

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If BlackBerry decides to call a new tablet something fun and new and unique, it will fail. The name BlackBerry PlayBook implied that there was a built-in audience for the device, people who loved BlackBerry and would therefor, inside that brand awareness, purchase a tablet called PlayBook. I can say iPad and you know that Apple made it. To a lesser degree I can say Galaxy Note or Galaxy Tab and you know Samsung made it.

If I say to a random stranger “hey, do you own a PlayBook?” They’ll think I’m speaking about a book of plays. If I ask that same stranger if they have a BlackBerry tablet, they may not know what that device looks like (yet) but they’ll understand what I mean. The BlackBerry Tablet must be the direction the company goes with the name.

2. Near-impossible ease of use in connecting with PCs and Macs

Two trends exist with tablets today regarding how they connect to larger, more powerful computers. The first is that a tablet will be powerful enough in and of itself that it does not appear to need to connect to any other computer, all of its connections appearing between itself and the internet. The second is a tablet that connects to a keyboard, becoming a laptop in the process.

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The BlackBerry Tablet needs to skip the keyboard dock altogether, first of all. BlackBerry creating a keyboard dock implies that they don’t feel the basic unit is awesome enough on its own, and it has to be. The BlackBerry Tablet should be able to exist with an on-screen keyboard alone at all times. If users want to use a keyboard, they’ve got hundreds of Bluetooth keyboards on the market already (most of them made for the iPad, at the moment) that’ll work just great.

With the BlackBerry tablet you need to be able to work with a PC as if it were a folder. This functionality has been lost as a secondary function with essentially every modern tablet because it’s assumed that users want to work with apps like iTunes. Business users need to be able to plug the BlackBerry Tablet in to their computer with a USB cord and have it appear as a folder where they can add or take files easily.

If I plug an Android tablet into my computer, the reaction my computer has depends solely on the version of Android I’ve got running on the tablet and the USB connection status I’ve selected in the software. This cannot be so with the BlackBerry Tablet. If I plug an iPad into my computer, iTunes pops up. This leads us into the third and most important insane step BlackBerry must take with the BlackBerry tablet:

3. A User-Developed User-Experience

Though I’m not entirely sold on the “UDUX” shortening of that term, a user experience as user-dependent as possible is what BlackBerry needs to create for the BlackBerry Tablet. They’ve hinted at this – in a way – with the BlackBerry Android toolset we’ve just posted about again today regarding apps. With this toolset you – as a developer – are able to rapidly and easily convert an APK (the file type for an Android application) into a BlackBerry-ready app for submission to BlackBerry for consideration in their official app store.

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This toolset has the right feeling – it’s a good step in the right direction as far as being open to the developers of the world who have already done a lot of work for operating systems that aren’t BlackBerry 10. Now this drive needs to be pushed to the actual operating system itself. The BlackBerry Tablet needs to have BlackBerry 10 existing as an experience for the user that never stops being open to changes and open to modifications.

The BlackBerry Tablet running BlackBerry 10 must be able to work for anyone and it has to be irresistible to not just business users, but all users. If a 5 year old has a BlackBerry Tablet in their backpack, a 35 year old should be jealous, and ready to find a way to save up the three $50 bills it’ll cost them to buy one of their own.

The BlackBerry Tablet: Available This Summer

Do you think we’ll see this magical unicorn of a tablet appearing this summer? What do you think it’d take for BlackBerry to bust out a device that’s so potentially valuable to every man woman and child in the world that they have trouble producing them fast enough to keep up with demand? And perhaps most important of all – does BlackBerry have enough steam right this minute to keep itself alive long enough to create the BlackBerry Tablet?


BlackBerry 10 tablet: three insane steps for success is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

DIY R2-D2 Heels Are Perfect For Your Next Black Tie-Fighter Event

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Fans of Star Wars can take their love of droids and kitten heels to the streets with this DIY Instructables project. Created by Mike Warren, an editor at the site, these are the droid shoes you’re looking for.

DIYers take note: this isn’t easy stuff. Note the tools list, for example:

MIG welder
soldering iron
propane torch
rotary tool
elecric drill
rubber cement
foam glue
2-part epoxy (extra strength – not “quick setting”)
white spray paint

Seriously. A MIG welder. For shoes.

You’ll also need a pair of shoes, some R2-D2 toys, and a little thinger that will light up like R2′s weird eye thinger. More important, the shoes Warren used came from outside his house because someone threw them away. In short, they were almost free!

So whether you’re trying to please your own Princess Leia or need to stab one of Jabba’s Daleks with your stiletto, now you have the perfect tool.

Chinese Hackers Have Also Been Hacking The Wall Street Journal

Not to be left out in the old boys club of the Great Chinese Hacking Scandal of 2013, the Wall Street Journal included themselves with the New York Times as being hacked by Chinese operatives. That’s two big name dead tree media organizations getting hacked by China. Who’s next? More »

OpenKit aiming to fill OpenFeint-sized hole, launches in private beta tomorrow

OpenKit aiming to fill OpenFeintsized hole, launches in private beta today

OpenFeint seed investor Peter Relan is fed up with his former creation’s lack of existence — the open source software once powered the social integration behind many mobile games. After Japanese social gaming giant GREE bought OpenFeint in April 2011 — primarily to stifle competition with its own, similar service — the service continued until it was closed this past December. Relan responded in turn, announcing plans for a new, similar service, called “OpenKit,” that same month. Tomorrow, that service goes into private beta, with a variety of mobile devs already signed on.

The service can be employed across Android and iOS, implementing cloud data storage, leaderboards, achievements, multiplayer functionality, push notifications, and in-app purchases — essentially exactly what OpenFeint once aimed to provide. Given the open nature of OpenKit, and Apple’s already existing Game Center (which serves very similar purposes), we’d say this is gonna be a bigger hit with Android devices than iOS. Whether it gets adopted at all, however, remains to be seen. For now, it’s in private beta, and “over 500 developers” have already signed on — head to the main site if you’d like to take part. And do it quick, as only another 20 developers can get into the beta starting tomorrow. If you do miss out, there’ll be more openings in the future, though Relan wouldn’t tell us exactly when just yet.

Gallery: OpenKit

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Bout: Play a Round of Photo One-Upmanship

Who among you can snap the funniest photo? Bout will settle the score. More »

Microsoft Surface Pro Unboxing Video + Gallery

microsoft surface pro unboxing 01 640x426 Microsoft Surface Pro Unboxing Video + GalleryWe’ve received the Microsoft Surface Pro at the office, and before we start working on the full review, we wanted to post a quick video and a photo gallery for those who want to see how the full-fledged Windows 8 tablet looks in the “real world”.

In the photo gallery, we’ve put the MS Surface Pro next to the Surface RT that we reviewed in October, so that you can see the difference in thickness. We’ve also shot a photo next to an iPad 3 which is about as thick as the Surface RT. The fact that the Surface Pro is a bit bulkier isn’t news, but it’s important to see it for yourself.

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By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Galaxy Note 8.0 Specs Supposedly Confirmed; Expected To Debut At MWC 2013 [Rumor], ASUS MeMO Pad Launched [Official],

Java, Silverlight left in cold as Firefox disables all plugins by default — except Flash

Plugins enabled by default in Firefox, step forward  not so fast, Java and Silverlight

In an effort to prevent “drive-by exploitations,” upcoming versions of Firefox will have Java, Adobe Reader and Silverlight disabled by default, according to a recent Mozilla Security blog. All other third-party plugins except Flash will also be disabled, requiring users to enable them using the so-called click to play feature introduced last year. All that is to prevent “poorly designed” Firefox plugins from crashing or recent headline-grabbing exploits involving the likes of Java, with Adobe’s Flash player being the one exception that works out of the box — though versions longer of tooth than 10.3 won’t see daylight without your say-so.

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Source: Mozilla Security Blog

Anti Aging Decollette Pads Keep Cleavage Wrinkles At Bay

Decollette PadDesigned to keep the chest area supple and smooth, the Decollette Pad reportedly turns back the hands of time for your cleavage and helps prevent future chest wrinkles too.