Inductees to 2013 Internet Hall of Fame revealed, class includes 32 new members

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Over the course of the past 12 months, the internet has witnessed negotiations between big-name sites, taken us inside the minds of social media innovators, and even given us a front row seat to what could be the biggest privacy-related story of the decade. Thus, it should come as no surprise that the Internet Society decided to debut its Internet Hall of Fame in April of last year, bringing on influential people like Vint Cerf and Al Gore as part of the first set of inductees. Now, it’s time for the Class of 2013 to shine, one which ushers in 32 new members who will join the Father of the Internet and former US Vice President in the list of illustrious names “instrumental in the early design and development” of the web.

This year’s individuals include the late Aaron Swartz under the Innovators category and more than 30 others spread across the Pioneer Circles and Global Connectors sections. President and CEO of Internet Society, Lynn St. Amour, tells us this is a way to celebrate the accomplishments of these visionaries, adding that she and her organization are always working with the utopian belief of everyone wanting to “participate fully in making the internet a platform that will continue to encourage innovation, communication, commerce, and social interaction for the benefit of people all around the world.” The 2013 Hall of Fame ceremony’s due to take place August 3rd in Berlin, Germany, but since we have the inductee list in the PR after the break, that means you won’t have to wait until then to find out who made it in.

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Source: Internet Hall of Fame

Three Isn’t a Crowd When Everyone’s in Conjoined Hammocks

Three Isn't a Crowd When Everyone's in Conjoined Hammocks

Two’s company, three’s a crowd, but that principle does not apply when you’re talking about hammocks. Trinity Hammocks triple hammock structures give you three times the relaxation.

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World of Warcraft Hacked; Blizzard Working On Resetting Accounts

World of Warcraft may not have been in the limelight as much as it has been in the past, but we know there are those of you who regularly feed your Warcrack addiction. World of Warcraft players have sinked several […]

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StickNFind Releases An SDK For Its Clever Bluetooth Tracking Sticker

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Think of the possibilities, developers. Find lost keys or the TV remote or a child. Make an electronic Marco Polo game! Embed the StickNFind Bluetooth sticker in a museum exhibit as a sort of supercharged RFID educational system. The world could be yours.

With StickNFind’s new SDK, the company behind the novel Bluetooth sticker is hoping developers will make the little device more than a one trick tiny horse.

Right now StickNFind is more of a proof of concept than practical consumer electronic. Attach this little Bluetooth sticker to something and then find it using the Android or iOS. It’s like an RFID tag but slightly thicker than a quarter.

StickNFind uses Bluetooth technology, so it still works in situations with limited cell phone reception. The company said it has a range of about 100 feet. Other features include a “virtual leash,” so you’re alerted when something moves a certain distance away. It plans to sell two stickers for $49.95 or four for $89.95.

The company demoed the technology at our CES booth earlier this year. It works as advertised. And now with this SDK, hopefully developers can take it from a novelty to a practical device.



Discovery Communications working on a HBO Go-esque streaming service

Discovery Communications working on a HBO Goesque streaming service

Discovery Channel, DMAX, 3NET (with Sony and IMAX) and Revision 3 owner Discovery Communications is pondering an HBO Go-style streaming service. In an interview with Reuters, company boss John Hendricks said that shows that are between three and 18 months old can still make money before they’re launched on Netflix. His plan is to let subscribers access that programming online for a small additional monthly fee, which, according to Hendricks’ autobiography, is between $6 and $8 a month. The boss also said that the company is developing the infrastructure for the platform, but that we won’t see such a service arrive for anything up to five years.

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Source: Reuters

Report: Twitter Is Adding In-Stream Photo Previews

Report: Twitter Is Adding In-Stream Photo Previews

If someone tweets an image, you have to click on the tweet to see it. But now Twitter is reportedly adding a small preview right in your stream.

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Fujitsu ARROWS A 202F launching on SoftBank this week, Snapdragon 600 and 3,000mAh battery in tow (video)

Fujitsu ARROWS A 202F launching on SoftBank this week, Snapdragon 600 and 3,000mAh battery in tow video

Fast smartphones are great and all, but they’re useless once the battery goes flat. Fujitsu aims to solve that with the ARROWS A 202F. Launching with SoftBank in Japan later this week, the phone features a 1.7GHz Qualcomm Snapdraon 600, 2GB of RAM, 64GB of internal storage that can be expanded via microSD, a 5-inch 1080p display and a generous 3,000mAh battery in a package that’s less than 10mm thick. Fujitsu’s “Human Centric Engine” is said to further increase battery life, to the tune of two days worth of juice, but details of how that works are light. Chances are slim the ARROWS will make it to US shores, though the recently announced HTC Butterfly s, with an even larger 3,200mAh battery, just might.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: Fujitsu

Intel Labs measures cognitive workload of distracted drivers, we go eyes-on with the demo (video)

Intel straps on cognitive spectrosometer, we go on a virtual test drive video

Many studies have shown that any kind of distracted driving is a bad thing, but Intel wanted to take a closer look at our driving behavior to determine if we could avoid it in the first place. Paul Crawford, a senior research scientist in Intel’s Interaction and Experience Research Lab, sought to do just that in a comprehensive investigation that seeks to understand not just where drivers are looking, but how they’re thinking. By doing this, Intel hopes to alert the driver of any mental warning signs before he or she even gets behind the wheel.

At a recent Research @ Intel event in San Francisco, Crawford used a racing car gaming set-up to demonstrate both visual and mental diversions with eye-tracking software and a functional near-infrared spectrometer headband. The latter is used to gauge the metabolic activity and cognitive workload of the brain under different driving conditions, which in this case fluctuated between a peaceful drive and a high-speed chase. Crawford also threw in a few questions and mathematical problems at the test subject to complicate matters. As you might expect, the brain was highly active during the more challenging scenarios and less so in the other. Crawford told us he hopes that the findings will point to ways we can optimize our environmental conditions and taskloads so that we can perform better, not just when driving but in everyday tasks as well. To see the demo in action and hear Crawford’s words for yourself, check out the video after the break.

Michael Gorman contributed to this report.

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Sharp announces first THX-certified 4K TV, the $8,000 Aquos Ultra

Sharp announces the Aquos Ultra, first THXcertified 4K TV

Sharp has just revealed the Aquos Ultra at CE Week, a 70-inch Ultra HDTV the company says is the only THX-certified 4K model on the market. Calling it the company’s “best designed TV ever,” Sharp said that it put the model through “four hundred rigorous performance tests” to gain the THX nod, which is meant to assure that programming is reproduced as closely as possible. On top of the 3,840 x 2,160 pixel count, the model features advanced HD upscaling tech via a dual-core signal processor, pre-calibrated THX Movie viewing modes, a dual subwoofer system with 35 watts of sound output, Sharp’s SmartCentral Smart TV platform and a flash-enabled web browser. You’ll also be able to change channels or send video directly from your smartphone via the Beam app, and watch 3D films at 4K with the set’s passive technology. If you’re not dissuaded by the $8,000 price tag, it’ll be up for grabs in mid-August — check the PR after the break for more.

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14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

14 Underground Lairs Fit For a Mega-Villain

Batman had one under his mansion outside Gotham. Osama bin Laden was found in one just in Pakistan. Underground lairs are an integral part of pop culture fantasy and real-life current events—but whether they’re fake or real, they’re always cloaked in intrigue. And frankly, they’re cool as hell.

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