Kobo unveils the Aura, a mid-size luxury e-reader

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It was around this time year that Amazon showed off the Paperwhite at an event in a Santa Monica airplane hangar, debuting a front-lit display technology that would blow the months-old Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight out of the water. A few weeks later, Kobo introduced the Glo, which featured illumination that put both of the aforementioned readers to shame. Back in April, the company added another member to the family, a — get this — luxury e-reader. Kobo made it very clear that the nearly 7-inch device was a limited time only deal — that is, unless the thing actually sold. Four months later, the Aura HD comprises nearly a quarter of the company’s global e-reader sales. So, naturally, the product is sticking around. It’s also serving as the inspiration for the Glo’s successor (the Glo, too, will stick around — though there’s no word on price cuts to that device just yet).

The Kobo Aura is, as its name implies, a smaller sibling to the Aura HD, with a standard-sized 6-inch E Ink display. And as ever, the company’s also including that best-in-class front light technology here. CEO Michael Serbinis tells us that his company has also worked directly with E Ink this time out to greatly reduce those full-page refreshes that we’ve been accustom to seeing once every six pages or so amongst the last few generations of readers. The Aura is also the thinnest and lightest 6-incher Kobo’s offered, at 0.32 inch thick and 6.1 ounces (compare that to the Glo’s 0.39 inches and 6.5 ounces) — a qualifier the company no doubt added to acknowledge the existence of the five-inch Mini.

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Kobo adds magazines, kids store to its online offerings

Kobo adds magazines, kids store to its online offerings

Kobo’s not quite done with the news tonight. In addition to an e-reader, three tablets and Pocket integration, the Canadian-turned-Japanese company has also got some announcements on the content side of things. First up is the addition of magazines to its store, bringing titles from Conde Nast, Hearst and a number of other publishers to its proprietary tablets and iOS / Android apps. Also on the docket is a brand new kids store that features safe-searching and nearly 100,000 offerings, including the likes of Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Hunger Games titles. Magazines are coming to Kobo’s mobile app in September and will be available for its new tablets when they launch the following month.

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Carroll Independent School District Gives Teachers Panic Buttons To Increase Safety

The Carroll Independent School District in north Texas is not messing around when it comes to safety this year.

In addition to having armed guards on every campus, the district is outfitting some teachers with domino-sized panic buttons. The company that makes the buttons, eTrak, announced the partnership in a press release Tuesday, one day after the new school year opened.

The panic buttons -– which include GPS tracking devices –- alert a regional dispatcher, who can warn a school resource officer that help is needed, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Teachers and staff can receive information about lockdown procedures through the button as well, reports THE Journal, an education technology magazine.

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Mike Rogers On Syria: There’s Compelling Evidence That Chemical Weapons Were Used By Government

By Tabassum Zakaria

WASHINGTON, Aug 27 (Reuters) – The chairman of the U.S. House intelligence committee said on Tuesday that the evidence is “convincing, if not compelling” that the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was behind the chemical weapons attack near Damascus this month.

Representative Mike Rogers, a Republican, said he has looked into the Aug. 21 attack and spoken to U.S. government intelligence analysts and operators, but his committee did not receive a formal consultation from President Barack Obama’s administration, despite the seriousness of the issue.

“I believe that evidence exists that is convincing, if not compelling, that the administration of Syria, the government of Syria, was involved in launching those attacks,” Rogers told Reuters. “I do not believe that it was a single source person deciding to do it. I believe it came from the (Syrian) administration.”

Rogers, whose committee oversees the U.S. intelligence community, said it would be very difficult to determine if Assad had ordered a chemical weapons attack, but such a move would likely involve at least his close associates.

“They have a very tight hold on their military. From what we know, historically, about how their chemical weapons units work, it is a fairly flat line to the office of the president in Syria. So there are not a lot of people that can intercede in that and make it happen,” Rogers said.

The “direction has to come from a pretty small group of people connected to the president” for a chemical weapons attack, he said.

Rogers would not comment on any specific pieces of intelligence, nor on what type of chemical weapon is believed to have been used.

The White House said the options being considered to respond to the chemical weapons attack do not include the ouster of Assad. A U.S. intelligence report is expected to be released in coming days.

One of the options that Obama is weighing is cruise missile strikes against Syrian targets, officials have said.

Secretary of State John Kerry, in a forceful statement on Monday about chemical weapons use in Syria, said there was “additional information about this attack” and it was being compiled and reviewed.

Representative Adam Schiff, a Democrat on the House intelligence committee, said the administration may be waiting for more clinical analysis of tissue samples from the scene.

“It’s clinical analysis of the tissue samples that have been gathered, it’s the evidence that has been obtained by the U.N. team, and by some of the non-governmental organizations that are treating patients there – I think that’s a big piece of what the administration is waiting on,” Schiff said.

“We have obviously our own intelligence. We have the insights of our regional allies and their intelligence agencies, and a lot in the public domain in terms of these videos. But I think the piece that I haven’t seen yet is the clinical piece,” he told Reuters.

Rogers said he did not know what additional information Kerry was referring to.

“We do our own independent look, but I have had no formal consultations with the administration on what they are claiming now is new information. I have not had that,” Rogers said.

“Informal status updates should not pass as consultation with Congress,” he said. “Calling an individual member on an unsecure line – that doesn’t count.” (Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Stacey Joyce)

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Xbox One Processor: 363 sqmm, 47MB, 200GBps

Xbox One Processor: 363 sqmm, 47MB, 200GBpsAs we approach the launch of Xbox One, more official details are coming and the Hot Chips conference, John Sell (Xbox One chip architect) himself has shed new light on what the Xbox One Processor is and what it can do. First of all, he confirmed what the Xbox One design already told us: Microsoft absolutely wants to avoid a repeat of the initial overheating, crash (ring of death) and product return problems that plagued the initial release of Xbox 360. That probably explains the ample (oversized?) inside volume, and the presence of cooling vents all over the console. (more…)

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  • Xbox One Processor: 363 sqmm, 47MB, 200GBps original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Jezebel Texas Loves Teens, Cali Wants Asians: What’s Your State’s Fave Porn?

    Jezebel Texas Loves Teens, Cali Wants Asians: What’s Your State’s Fave Porn? | Lifehacker Eight Ways I Hacked My Tiny Apartment to Fit All My Stuff | io9 Who’s the most awesome villain of all time? | Jalopnik What Happens When A Turbo Toyota GT86 Races A McLaren 12C?

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    ReadQuick for iOS: Speed Through Your Saved Reading

    ReadQuick for iOS: Speed Through Your Saved Reading

    Everyone’s busy. Now, whether it’s for legitimate reasons or own anxious need to feel like we’re busy at all times is a different story. Regardless, anything we can do to save time is going to free up precious minute we (think) we so desperately need. Speed-reading app ReadQuick is here to do just that.

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    Supermodder Ben Heck builds a quadcopter

    (Credit: Ben Heck)

    At the behest of his fans, supermodder Ben Heck is building a quadcopter from scratch for “The Ben Heck Show” on YouTube channel element14.

    Heck — Benjamin Heckendorn — is famous for his game console mods, including an Xbox 360 converted into a gaming laptop and a one-handed Xbox controller that’s suitable for disabled gamers.

    In part one of the two-part video, Heck started building the quadcopter from scratch — the first time he has attempted building one — using model aeroplanes cannibalized for their propellers, controllers, motors, and wires. Part of what he wanted to do was cut down on the wire tangle that’s usually found in homemade quadcopters.

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    DNS hack takes The New York Times offline (update: Twitter images were affected too)

    DNS hack brings The New York Times offline

    For the second time this month, The New York Times has gone offline. This time around, the Syrian Electronic Army is likely to blame, with a Domain Name System (DNS) hack crippling the news org’s online operation. The NYT’s web servers are still online, however, so the publication has begun tweeting out direct IP links to recent articles. Meanwhile, Twitter itself may be vulnerable. Hackers have managed to modify some of the registration data, including the contact email address, suggesting an attack on the social site may be imminent.

    Update: According to a tweet from the paper’s official account, it’s temporarily publishing updates at news.nytco.com.

    Update 2: Twitter has confirmed the twimg.com domain used for images and photos was among those affected. According to the post, the original domain record has been restored and no user information was affected.

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    Via: TechCrunch

    Source: NYT (Twitter)

    Angry Birds GO teased by Rovio as DIY kart racer

    As the infamous original “kart” racer from Nintendo continues to be console or Nintendo-device-limited, the folks at Rovio are hard at work creating their own racer. This is Angry Birds GO! In the teaser shared this week, the folks at Rovio have suggested that they’ve been conjuring up not just another endless runner, not just […]