Nintendo Switch Android port work has begun

No gaming console has ever been safe from modders and hackers who try to make it do things manufacturers never intended it to, much less allow. More often than not, Linux is the go to OS that these hackers put on devices. Android, which is also based on Linux, is now becoming the next best option. Despite the initial hurdles, … Continue reading

I Only Care About This Giant Super Moon If It Is Inside My Living Room

There is allegedly a great, big super moon outside my window—not just any super moon, mind you, but potentially the biggest, brightest, super mooniest super moon we’ll get to see until 2026. I could look at it, but I will not. Sorry, moon! I’m sure you have many other, far more interested fans.

Read more…

Citroen's tiny EV concept is an alternative to bikes and scooters

Many automakers are designing vehicles for an era beyond car ownership, but Citroen is taking things one step further: it’s envisioning a car that you’d use in place of bikes and scooters. Its newly introduced Ami One Concept is a compact (8.2ft lon…

Chrome Loophole Which Enables Incognito Mode Blocking To Be Fixed


A loophole in Google’s popular Chrome browser which enables websites to not only detect but block users who access their sites through the browser’s Incognito mode is going to be fixed. Many users rely on the mode to not store local records of their browsing history. Websites are also prevented from tracking the user with cookies when they’re in Incognito mode.

9to5Google reports that future versions of the Chrome browser are going to address the issue which enables websites to block users that may be accessing their sites with Chrome in Incognito mode.

Websites require the tracking data for ad revenue and that’s one major reason why some sites prevent users from accessing their content if they’re using Incognito mode, this includes websites like the MIT Technology Review. Sites try to identify such users with the “FileSystem” API which is disabled when Incognito mode is being used as it allows permanent files to be created.

Recent commits to Chromium’s source code suggest that the browser may soon begin tricking websites that the FireSystem API is always operational. It would thus close the loophole that allows them to identify visitors using Incognito mode. It would do that by creating a virtual file system in RAM which will get deleted at the end of the Incognito session. It’s expected that this functionality might be rolled out to the public with the stable version of Chrome 76 that’s due in a couple of months.

Chrome Loophole Which Enables Incognito Mode Blocking To Be Fixed

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Eve Flare lets you set the mood anywhere at home

EVE Systems knows that everyone would like to return to a safe and comfortable place at the end of a particularly difficult day. After all, the home is meant to be a refuge for us, so why not help make your abode a little bit more welcoming with the all new portable LED lamp Eve Flare? Currently available in both the US as well as Canada, the Eve Flare is a unique lamp that delivers up to 6 hours of illumination without having to be plugged into a power outlet. This helps you set up the mood at just the right place no matter where you are, although it would be nice if the battery life could be a wee bit longer. Still, it is ideal for those intimate moments as well as when you have family and friends over for dinner.

The Eve Flare does not only deliver wireless lighting capability, it also offers the convenience of wireless charging as well as IP65 water resistance. As with many other home devices these days, the Eve Flare will work best with the Eve app, enabling the homeowner to explore ready-made shades or fine tune custom colors right from the comfort of their handheld device itself. By making full use of the power of Apple HomeKit alongside a direct Bluetooth connection to the iPhone or iPad, the Eve Flare is very simple to set up and does not need a bridge at all.

Those who are interested in sprucing up the home this spring will be able to pick up the Eve Flare for $99.95 apiece from either Eve or Amazon. I have got to admit that the inclusion of IP65 water resistance makes the Eve Flare all the more flexible in its home arrangement since you are able to place it outside by the window without worrying about whether a light shower is going to cause issues with it.

Press Release
[ Eve Flare lets you set the mood anywhere at home copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Ghostbusters Ecto-1 Is Now a Transformer: Ectotron

If you think you’ve collected all of the Transformers toys, think again. There’s one Transformers toy that’s missing from your collection. That’s because the Transformers Generations Collaborative: Ghostbusters Mash-Up, Ecto-1 Ectotron Figure is not available yet.

But you can pre-order it now from GameStop – with shipping starting this July. This is the Transformers/ Ghostbusters mashup you never knew you needed until now. The iconic Ecto-1 Cadillac from the 1984 Ghostbusters movie is now a Transformers robot called “Ectotron.” The 7-inch long figure comes with his own Proton Pack accessory and a Slimer accessory. It converts between Ecto-1 and robot modes in 22 steps. This piece has some great detail and is going to look amazing in your collection whether you display it in Ecto-1 mode or as a robot. I prefer the car to the robot myself.

Who ya gonna call? Hasbro apparently. Now if we could only transform the Ghostbusters reboot into something decent, life would be perfect. Can you help with that Hasbro? I wish you could. But this is a start to helping me forget about it.

[via Geekologie]

These hyper-efficient solar panels could actually live on your roof soon

The clean energy boffins in their labs are always upping the theoretical limit on how much power you can get out of sunshine, but us plebes actually installing solar cells are stuck with years-old tech that’s not half as good as what they’re seeing. This new design from Insolight could be the one that changes all that.

Insolight is a spinoff from the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, where they’ve been working on this new approach for a few years — and it’s almost ready to hit your roof.

Usually solar cells collect sunlight on their entire surface, converting it to electricity at perhaps 15-19 percent efficiency — meaning about 85 percent of the energy is lost in the process. There are more efficient cells out there, but they’re generally expensive and special-purpose, or use some exotic material.

One place people tend to spare no expense, however, is in space. Solar cells on many satellites are more efficient but, predictably, not cheap. But that’s not a problem if you only use just a tiny amount of them and concentrate the sunlight on those; that’s the Insolight insight.

Small but very high-efficiency cells are laid down on a grid, and above that is placed a honeycomb-like lens array that takes light and bends it into a narrow beam concentrated only on the tiny cells. As the sun moves, the cell layer moves ever so slightly, keeping the beams on target. They’ve achieved as high as 37 percent efficiency in tests, and 30 percent in consumer-oriented designs. That means half again or twice the power from the same area as ordinary panels.

Certainly this adds a layer or two of complexity to the current mass-manufactured arrays that are “good enough” but far from state of the art. But the resulting panels aren’t much different in size or shape, and don’t require special placement or hardware, such as a concentrator or special platform. And a recently completed pilot test on an EPFL roof was passed with flying colors.

“Our panels were hooked up to the grid and monitored continually. They kept working without a hitch through heat waves, storms and winter weather,” said Mathiu Ackermann, the company’s CTO, in an EPFL news release. “This hybrid approach is particularly effective when it’s cloudy and the sunlight is less concentrated, since it can keep generating power even under diffuse light rays.”

The company is now in talks with solar panel manufacturers, whom they are no doubt trying to convince that it’s not that hard to integrate this tech with their existing manufacturing lines — “a few additional steps during the assembly stage,” said Ackermann. Expect Insolight panels to hit the market in 2022 — yeah, it’s still a ways off, but maybe by then we’ll all have electric cars too and this will seem like an even better deal.

Space Force to be overseen by US Air Force under newly signed directive

The Trump administration is moving forward with its Space Force plans, officials have announced. Trump signed Space Policy Directive-4 today for establishing the Space Force under the Department of the Air Force, though the proposal still has to be submitted to Congress. The Air Force has estimated a substantial cost for the new military service at $13 billion. Trump has … Continue reading

Chrome Loophole Which Enables Incognito Mode Blocking To Be Fixed


A loophole in Google’s popular Chrome browser which enables websites to not only detect but block users who access their sites through the browser’s Incognito mode is going to be fixed. Many users rely on the mode to not store local records of their browsing history. Websites are also prevented from tracking the user with cookies when they’re in Incognito mode.

9to5Google reports that future versions of the Chrome browser are going to address the issue which enables websites to block users that may be accessing their sites with Chrome in Incognito mode.

Websites require the tracking data for ad revenue and that’s one major reason why some sites prevent users from accessing their content if they’re using Incognito mode, this includes websites like the MIT Technology Review. Sites try to identify such users with the “FileSystem” API which is disabled when Incognito mode is being used as it allows permanent files to be created.

Recent commits to Chromium’s source code suggest that the browser may soon begin tricking websites that the FireSystem API is always operational. It would thus close the loophole that allows them to identify visitors using Incognito mode. It would do that by creating a virtual file system in RAM which will get deleted at the end of the Incognito session. It’s expected that this functionality might be rolled out to the public with the stable version of Chrome 76 that’s due in a couple of months.

Chrome Loophole Which Enables Incognito Mode Blocking To Be Fixed

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Eve Flare lets you set the mood anywhere at home

EVE Systems knows that everyone would like to return to a safe and comfortable place at the end of a particularly difficult day. After all, the home is meant to be a refuge for us, so why not help make your abode a little bit more welcoming with the all new portable LED lamp Eve Flare? Currently available in both the US as well as Canada, the Eve Flare is a unique lamp that delivers up to 6 hours of illumination without having to be plugged into a power outlet. This helps you set up the mood at just the right place no matter where you are, although it would be nice if the battery life could be a wee bit longer. Still, it is ideal for those intimate moments as well as when you have family and friends over for dinner.

The Eve Flare does not only deliver wireless lighting capability, it also offers the convenience of wireless charging as well as IP65 water resistance. As with many other home devices these days, the Eve Flare will work best with the Eve app, enabling the homeowner to explore ready-made shades or fine tune custom colors right from the comfort of their handheld device itself. By making full use of the power of Apple HomeKit alongside a direct Bluetooth connection to the iPhone or iPad, the Eve Flare is very simple to set up and does not need a bridge at all.

Those who are interested in sprucing up the home this spring will be able to pick up the Eve Flare for $99.95 apiece from either Eve or Amazon. I have got to admit that the inclusion of IP65 water resistance makes the Eve Flare all the more flexible in its home arrangement since you are able to place it outside by the window without worrying about whether a light shower is going to cause issues with it.

Press Release
[ Eve Flare lets you set the mood anywhere at home copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]