Think Bacteria Is Bad? Well You’re Covered In It

If you’ve ever tried a Paleo diet, or taken a course of antibiotics
after a nasty encounter with Bolivian water, you may be curious as to
what microbes live in your body, or lived until you killed them with
antibiotics. Today the founder of uBiome, a startup that allows you to discover your microbiome, was named as the leader of one of Indigogo’s hottest campaigns led by women. Jessica Richman raised $351,193 back in November for her world first citizen research campaign to sequence the human microbiome.

Bing search gets a scientific calculator almost two years after Google

If Bitcoin currency conversion is too trivial a use for you, loyal Bing user, perhaps the addition of a calculator will help solve the equation of your unhappiness. Simply type a math problem into Microsoft’s search engine and, as Windows Phone…

Introducing Spritz: A Paradigm Shift On How We Read Text

Welcome to Spritz, a new spin on reading.  By using speed, conditioning, and optimal recognition point science, you can learn how to read up to 1000 words-per-minute.  Available on the Samsung Galaxy S5 and Gear 2, will Spritz change the way we read as humans, or, will it need to wait until other technologies catch up first?

‘Talking Angela’ programmer talks hoaxes, AI mastery (Q&A)

Talking Angela

(Credit: Screenshot by CNET)

If you’re not a parent or teenager, it’s possible you first heard of Talking Angela because of a meme spreading virally on Facebook that it was a front for a pedophilia ring.

In fact, Talking Angela is a hugely popular artificial intelligence chatbot, a talking cat, aimed at teenagers, and the hoax has been fully repudiated. Available for iOS and Android, Talking Angela has been downloaded more than 57 million times. But thanks to word going around about the pedophilia hoax, the app jumped to No. 3 on the iTunes iPhone charts.

On the one hand, it’s scandalous that someone was able to create a viral meme that claimed such a popular (and technologically impressive) project had such dark motives. But on the other, it’s been somewhat of a boon for Out Fit7, Talking Angela’s publisher. Perhaps more importantly, it’s brought a lot of attention to the idea that it is really, really hard to create an intelligent chatbot, one that can conceivably fool a human being into thinking they’re talking to another person.

B… [Read more]

Related Links:
TrustyCon’s RSA Conference rebels promise more to come
‘RoboCop’ not so sci-fi anymore
5 apps that can earn you cold, hard cash (and other rewards)
IBM to take Watson mobile with developer challenge
Amazon’s second wave of original pilots goes live

    



Black Friday Store Hours 2012

This article was written on November 18, 2012 by CyberNet.

Best buy black friday 2012

It’s that time of year again! With Thanksgiving on Thursday in the United States that puts the busiest shopping day of the year, Black Friday, just a few days away. Each year stores compete to offer the best Black Friday deals, but there is a new competition that has been heating up over the last few years as well… and that would be which store can open the earliest. Last year we started to see several stores cracking open their doors at midnight on Friday, but this year it’s getting even crazier. Stores like Walmart are opening at 8PM on Thanksgiving, and Target is opening at 9PM.

Here is a look at what time some of the most popular stores are opening on Thanksgiving and on Black Friday:

StoreThanksgiving HoursBlack Friday Hours
Best Buy12AM
CompUSA5AM
Costco9AM
Dick’s Sporting Goods12AM
Home Depot5AM
JCPenney6AM
Kohl’s12AM
Lowe’s6AM-4PM12AM
Kmart**6AM-4PM and 8PM-12AM12AM-3AM and 5AM-11PM
Meijer6AM
Office Depot5AM
Office Max 6AM
RadioShack6AM
Sam’s Club7AM
Sears8PM-12AM12AM
Staples5AM
Target9PM-12AM12AM-11PM
Toys R Us8PM-12AM12AM
Walmart8PM-12AM12AM

**Kmart is a bit of an oddball. They open at 6AM on Thanksgiving for their Thanksgiving sale. Then they close down at 4PM and reopen at 8PM for their Black Friday Preview sale which goes until 3AM. Their main Black Friday sale start when they reopen at 5AM on Friday.

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

CyberNotes: Is Safari the Best Browser?

This article was written on June 13, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Web Browser Wednesday

Safari for WindowsThe new Safari on Windows is boasted as one of the fastest browsers available for the Windows operating system. Well, that might be a little biased considering that it is according to Safari’s homepage, but I’ve tinkered with it over the past day and it is among the fastest browsers that I’ve used. It also has some shortcomings though…

First and foremost there have been a number of security concerns with Safari on Windows, which is something I definitely expected. Apple released Safari saying that their “engineers designed Safari to be secure from day one.” We all know that talk is cheap, and the vulnerabilities are something that I expected since Apple doesn’t make Windows software very frequently. Not only that, but this is also a pre-release application, so they have time to correct things before anyone can really start criticizing.

All browsers have their security woes, so in this review I’m going to set that aside and look strictly at the features. I’m going to give a bulleted list of the things that Safari includes, and then I’ll provide a short screencast where I’ll point out some of the cool features as well as the things that it lacks.

–The Features–

Here are the more notable features in Safari (for Windows) that you should be aware of, as specified on the Safari homepage.

  • Performance – As the Safari homepage points out, this browser is very good at loading Websites quickly. I was able to notice a significant reduction in page load times as I was browsing the Web, but that’s not the only kind of performance that is important. The Safari site fails to say what the memory usage is like for the browser, and I’ll be the first to say it’s horrible. At any given time, it is twice what Firefox, Opera, or even Internet Explorer is using up even when visiting the same sites.
  • Interface – Ahh, this is something I don’t really know that I can touch on. Apple made sure that they gave people the feeling that they are using a Mac computer by preventing the Windows operating system from controlling any aspect of the appearance. I think it is safe to conclude that people will be able to easily see when you’re using Safari on a Windows computer. It sticks out like a sore thumb.
  • Bookmarks – This is something that I cover more in the screencast, but overall this is one of the biggest downfalls in Safari. I’m a right-click/drag-and-drop freak and the Bookmarks Bar hardly allows for any of that. You can’t arrange your bookmarks by dragging them around in that bar, instead you have to use the Bookmark Collections which is a hassle. Oh, and did I mention that there is no Bookmarks sidebar for you to use?
  • Safari SearchingSearching – The searching in Safari is almost its best feature. They have done a great job of making the results stand out, and that is something I very much appreciate.
  • Tabbed Browsing – Come on, all of the cool browsers have tabbed browsing these days. The only thing cool about Safari’s is that you can drag a tab off of the tab bar and it will open in a new window.
  • SnapBack – This is pretty nice as well since many of us perform a lot of searches. After doing a search and clicking on a result there will be a little orange icon in the upper-right search box in Safari. That will always be there as a means to take you back to the initial search that you performed.
  • AutoFill Forms – Meh, it’s a form filler and nothing more.
  • Safari Feed ReaderRSS Reader – The built-in RSS reader is a nice cross between the Live Bookmarks that Firefox has and a full RSS feed reader. It even has a cool slider that instantly lets you adjust the length of the articles being displayed. It’s important to note, however, that they do not let you configure an external feed reader for subscribing to the feeds though.
  • Resizable Text Fields – This seems to be the hot new thing since Netscape 9 Beta also has this feature. All it does is let you resize text boxes on a site, such as the one we have below for commenting.
  • Private Browsing – With Private Browsing enabled, Safari won’t store your Google searches, your cookies, the history of sites you’ve visited, your download history, or information from online forms you’ve filled out. With the increasing concern over privacy, this is a feature some users will appreciate.
  • Security – I think I said enough about this up top.

So that’s how I feel about the features Safari has in it that is supposed to make it the browser for you to use. Some of them are cool, but a lot of them have already been seen in existing browsers which makes them far from spectacular.

–The Screencast–

Latest take a more hands-on look at how I feel about the features in Safari:

–The Overview–

As you can see, Safari has several cool features that I would like to see available in other browsers. There is nothing in it that makes it better than Firefox, Opera, or even Internet Explorer in my opinion, so there will probably be few people actually using it. The only way that it will benefit me is allowing me to easily test my site to make sure it renders properly in the Safari browser.

Download the Safari 3 Preview

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Steam Family Sharing exits beta, lets your borrow all of your friends’ games

One of the inherent drawbacks of digitally distributed games is that you can’t loan them out to friends, but Steam has rewritten the rules a bit. Now that Valve’s Family Sharing feature is out of beta, pretty much anyone can authorize another user –…