CEO of Amazon flying accidents water tank, leaves tooth in his dream of space travel

In a profound moment of candor, Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos revealed that the failure of his mid-air unmanned spaceship 11 days ago was not the result of us wanted. Burning truth of his statement is certainly supported by the fact that NASA has poured millions of dollars of funding in the space company Bezos, Blue Origin, in the hope that people will one day ferry to the ISS and replace the shuttle program scuttled . Indeed, the last craft Blue Origin has looked every inch a shuttle-beater until it suddenly went Beserk at 45,000 feet, forcing the onboard computer to cut power Asimovian and dive nose in the ground in an effort to avoid civilian casualties. Not an ideal result, of course, but Jeff is unlikely to abandon its ambitions starry – everyone knows he has a thing for the thrusters .

Karaoke mic for iPad Soulo come to a thin wall near you

We just saw kit First Act karaoke wireless for the IPAD through the FCC, suggesting it could be on track for launch in the fall. The equipment will count for nothing if the soft support of sister company Seven45 Studios strikes a note missed, but we guess it looks pretty functional.

The receiver is on its dock-hogging ways, such as a video output so you can check your words on a bigger screen. It should also save your groans, cries and meows at a distance of up to 20 feet of the micro-AA power. No word on price or availability for now, but you can twittering your interest at below the second source.

Myths evaluate patent troll

from: http://rss.slashdot.org/ ~ r / Slashdot / slashdot / ~ 3/03Vcw56-tys/Evaluating-Patent-Troll-Myths:

An anonymous reader writes In a guest post on the blog Patently-O, Villanova University professor Michael Risch summarizes his detailed study of the methods and effectiveness of patent trolls He writes: It turns out that most of this I thought trolls. – Good or bad – was wrong …. Perhaps the biggest surprise in the study was the source of the patents I thought most of the patents from failed startups in these patents were represented (about 14% of the original assignees were dead), most are come .. companies still operating in 2010. Indeed, more than a third of the original assignees were listed, a subsidiary of a public corporation or the beneficiaries of venture capital. Only 21% were entities asserting patent at the time of grant, and many of those companies inventor property (such as Katz) rather than acquisition of entities (such as Acacia). … Another area of ​​surprise was the quality of patents. While the trolls almost never won their case if they were going to trial (only three cases have led to a violation conclusion on the merits), the percentage of patents invalidated on the bottom was lower than expected.

Microsoft training may have helped the Tunisian regime to spy on citizens

An anonymous reader writes A paper published in the recent leak Cablegate reveals that Microsoft has provided training to the Tunisian Ministry of Justice and the Interior, in exchange for exemption from the country’s political open source software. These departments would soon be training in the use phishing the credentials for social networking bloggers, journalists, political activists and protesters. Assistance from Microsoft led to the sale of 12,000 software licenses to the Tunisian government. The cable itself details the efforts Microsoft put into negotiating an agreement. Their intention was clear just expand into a new market, but the author has been skeptical of the cable on the Tunisian government’s adherence to its stated objectives. Quoting: In theory, the increased capacity GOT enforcement through training in IT is positive, but given the heavy-handed interference in matters GOT Internet shifts if there is capacity to expand GOT control its own citizens.

Jetstream HTC hits AT and T store, receives compared

from: http://www.engadget.com/2011/09/05/htc-jetstream-hits-atandt-store-gets-benchmarked/:

Thinking about picking up a (inconceivably expensive Jetstream) HTC? After all, it just slipped into the online store of AT and T this weekend. We’ll just leave this link HotHardware in the source below, in case you want to check some comparative benchmarks before trading $ 700 for a 2 year contract. Not that it performed poorly, mind you, he ran neck-and-neck with Lenovo IdeaPad K1 – we believe, like graphs and tables are cool. Videos too – hit the break to see the folks at HotHardware
give the slate of 10 inches a quick practice.

Invisibility Cloak BAE Infrared tanks cold as ice, hot like cows

The war is constantly changing. Daylight became nightly battles duels, and pre-noon skirmishes moved to sunset massacres – some might say we’re just lazy, but anyway, thermal imaging is now playing very vital role. Now BAE and the JVM – the equivalent of Sweden to the DARPA – have a way to hide the heat signature of heavy machinery. ADAPTIV is a wall of 14 cm panels that monitor ambient heat and it is, so it can not be selected from the background radiation. Technology can also be used to reproduce the profiles of other things – you know, like a calf or a Fiat 500 spotted. BAE believes that technology is scalable for buildings and ships of war, the only drawback being that all future commanders will ensure that their operations are completed before dawn. I would not want your soldiers to see that five o’clock (AM) shade, now would we?

Toshiba Qosmio DX730 all-in-one styles Regza brings to your desktop

Here’s one that momentarily escaped our attention throughout the IFA noise: the Qosmio DX730, which Toshiba says borrows its design and Resolution + technology of image processing from Regza TVs. The base model has a Pentium processor rather ugly, but the range also includes Core i3 and i5 models, with up to 6 GB of RAM, 1TB of storage, a Blu-ray, TV tuner and Onkyo high – speakers. The multi-touch panel 23-inch Full HD also works in his favor. The price has not yet been announced, although reports Akihabara
a lot of similar models in Japan from an incredible 120,000 JPY (1,500 USD). We will have to rely on the Dell Vostro 360 to maintain margins Toshiba should firmly in check.