Sunday, June 23, 2013

Why Do Americans Have the Worst DVRs?

Woman watching TV.

American DVRs are inferior to European ones for one very important reason.

Photo by Thinkstock

It took a few minutes shy of forever to get to the end of Game 1 of hockey?s Stanley Cup Final, but at least for non-Bostonians, it was worth the wait. Four hours and 38 minutes after the game began, Andrew Shaw finally scored the winning goal to push the Chicago Blackhawks past the Boston Bruins in the third overtime. The game?s not-so-sudden death didn?t come quite quickly enough for one unlucky hockey watcher. As that anonymous fan explained on Reddit, adding an extra two hours to the end of his DVR recording seemed like a smart move. But in the end, those buffer hours left him just six seconds shy of seeing the winning goal. Ain?t that a puck in the teeth.

I can relate. In the interest of sleep and sanity, I time-shifted the early rounds of the NBA playoffs, catching up on the previous night?s games each morning. Alas, my recording of Game 1 of the NBA?s Western Conference semis, in which the Spurs beat the Warriors 129?127 in double overtime, ended just before the final shot went in the air. (I think the Warriors could still pull this one out!) As a savvy DVR user, I of course padded my recording by an extra hour, just in case the game extended beyond its scheduled end time. But an hour, or even two, sometimes isn?t enough. That?s the peril of taping live sporting events. A long fifth set, a bee delay, or yet another period without the puck going in the net?all can lead to a game overspilling its programming window by hours. Worst of all, the sporting events most likely to be ruined in this manner are precisely the ones we most want to watch to the end: those extra-long, extra-tense games that go into overtime or extra innings.

It?s easy to imagine a universe in which DVRs worked better. Rather than forcing TV watchers to pad their recordings manually, broadcasters could send a signal to cable and satellite providers when a program begins and another when it ends. Your DVR would grab these signals, ensuring that it starts each recording when it should start and ends it when should end?not at some (often-wrong) scheduled time, but at the real time. This wouldn?t just solve ball, stick, and puck problems. It would also benefit everyone who?s suffered the pain of missing the last joke on 30 Rock because the show runs just a little bit beyond its allotted time.

Here?s the good news: This hypothetical DVR utopia actually exists, and a lot of people are living in it. The bad news for me and my fellow Americans: The United States is trapped in the bowels of DVR hell, and we?re not going to escape any time soon.

Now, let us take a journey to this magical land where DVRs work as they should. Our tour guide is Raj Patel, the chief solutions architect for the United Kingdom?s Freesat, a partnership between ITV and the BBC that provides free satellite TV service to 1.7 million homes. Patel explains that broadcasters supply Freesat and certain other international television providers with what?s called ?present and following? information?that is, the identity of the program that?s airing right now and the one that?s scheduled to air next. Even if a program (like, say, a sporting event) is supposed to end at 10:30 p.m., the broadcaster will not change that present and following data until the game is actually over. A customer?s DVR, in turn, will not stop recording until it?s been signaled that the present and following information has changed. This feature is called ?accurate recording,? and that?s exactly what it is. It means you?ll never miss the end of a game?not even a Champions League final that goes into extra time.

This isn?t a special feature reserved exclusively for couch potatoes with British accents. NorDig, the body that specifies digital TV standards in Scandinavia and Ireland, also mandates that DVRs come equipped with accurate recording technology. This feature is also available in Australia, where the TV provider Freeview calls it ?intuitive recording? and brags that ?you will never miss the end of a recorded show again? thanks to a system in which each show gets a unique reference code.

Why do Brits and Aussies get to watch impeccable recordings of ?football? while red-blooded, American football gets cut off by our inferior American DVRs? It?s not because the technology somehow doesn?t work on our side of the pond. Based on interviews with multiple people at various industry stakeholders, I believe that accurate/intuitive/non-terrible recording would be feasible in the United States. The reason it doesn?t exist, I believe, is that American broadcasters and service providers don?t want it to exist. But we need to make our voices heard. The time is now to save our country from substandard DVR technology.

Broadcast standards aren?t uniform across the world. Europe, Australia, India, parts of Africa, and a bunch of other places comply with the DVB standard, while North America goes by something called ATSC. But Dave Arland, a spokesman for ATSC, says there?s nothing about the North American broadcast standard that would prevent any company here from implementing accurate recording.

Similarly, a source at a major U.S. television service provider?who refused to go on the record, perhaps fearing an onslaught of marauding customers?told me the company?s DVRs are capable of accurate recording. The issue, the source said, is that the broadcasters would need to provide them with real-time data on the start and end times of live events. That?s already happening in the United Kingdom and other places with accurate recording, but not in North America.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2013/06/accurate_recording_the_one_amazing_feature_that_makes_european_dvrs_so_much.html

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Famed aerialist to cross gorge near Grand Canyon

LITTLE COLORADO RIVER GORGE, Ariz. (AP) ? Famed daredevil Nik Wallenda is using the Navajo Nation as a backdrop to one of his most ambitious feats yet.

The 34-year-old Florida resident will set out on a quarter-mile cable stretched 1,500 feet above the Little Colorado River Gorge near the Grand Canyon. Sunday's stunt comes a year after he traversed Niagara Falls, only this time he won't be wearing a safety harness.

The last thing he'll do before setting out on the 2-inch-thick steel cable is kiss his wife and three children and say he'll see them later.

The Discovery Channel is scheduled to broadcast the event live.

Meanwhile, a group of Navajos is planning to protest what it says is a gamble on one man's life.

Wallenda says the only thing that would stop him would be lightning within a 15-mile radius.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/famed-aerialist-cross-gorge-near-grand-canyon-093307438.html

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Twitter exec joining White House tech office - Science News

The White House says Twitter executive Nicole Wong is joining the Obama administration as the deputy U.S. chief technology officer.

Wong was Twitter's legal director for products. She has also been a vice president at Google.

Rick Weiss is spokesman for the White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy. He says Wong's portfolio will include the Internet, technology and privacy. He says she has extensive expertise on those topics and has a reputation for fairness.

As a Google attorney, Wong testified before Congress about how the Internet company protects users' privacy.

Internet privacy has become a major issue for the White House following revelations about the government's massive collection of data from phone and Internet companies.

Explore further: Google asks US secret court to lift gag order (Update)

Source: http://phys.org/news/2013-06-twitter-exec-white-house-tech.html

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Chrissy Teigen: Nude in GQ!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/chrissy-teigen-nude-in-gq/

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Suicide bomb, shootings kill 9 northern Iraq

BAGHDAD (AP) ? A suicide car bomb and other militant attacks killed nine people in northern Iraq on Saturday, officials said, the latest in a wave of violence that has killed nearly 2,000 Iraqis since the start of April.

The deadliest attack was in al-Athba village near the northern city of Mosul, when a suicide car bomber rammed his explosives-laden car into a police patrol, a police officer said. Three civilian bystanders and one policeman died while six other people were wounded, he added.

With violence spiking sharply in recent months to levels not seen since 2008, al-Qaida in Iraq and other militant groups have been gathering strength in the area of Mosul, some 360 kilometers (220 miles) northwest of Baghdad.

In the city of Tuz Khormato, 210 kilometers (130 miles) north of Baghdad, gunmen on motorcycles riddled a civilian vehicle carrying four off-duty policemen with bullets, killing three and wounding another, a police officer said.

Another group of gunmen attacked a police checkpoint in the city of Samarra, killing two policemen and wounding four, another police officer said. Samarra is 95 kilometers (60 miles) north of Baghdad.

Police also said two civilians were killed and nine wounded when a bomb ripped through a small market late Friday in Baghdad.

Four medical officials confirmed the casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information.

Also on Saturday, the United Nations said another 27 residents of a camp housing members of an Iranian exile group have been relocated to Albania. The move follows a deadly rocket attack on the facility last week.

A total of 71 residents of Camp Liberty have now relocated to the southeast European country, which has agreed to accept 210 of them. Germany has also offered to take 100 residents. The U.N. is urging other member states to accept some of the more than 3,000 living in Iraq.

The dissident group, the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, is the militant wing of a Paris-based Iranian opposition movement that opposes Iran's clerical regime and has carried out assassinations and bombings there. It fought alongside Saddam Hussein's forces in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, and several thousand of its members were given sanctuary in Iraq. It renounced violence in 2001, and was removed from the U.S. terrorism list last year.

Iraq's government wants the MEK members to leave, and the U.N. has been working to resettle them abroad.

Two residents of Camp Liberty were killed in a June 15 rocket attack on the facility. A Shiite militant group claimed responsibility, saying it wants the group out of Iraq.

______

Associated Press writer Adam Schreck contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suicide-bomb-shootings-kill-9-northern-iraq-101725395.html

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Spectacular Sun Storm Sheds Light on Star Formation

A stunning eruption unleashed by the sun two years ago is providing clues about how stars form, scientists say.

On June 7, 2011, the sun blasted out an enormous cloud of superheated plasma called a coronal mass ejection. Some of this material rained back down on the sun in a dazzling display that researchers say is helping them understand how newborn stars suck up plasma from their surroundings.

"This opens the way to new studies that link the sun to young stars, by both solar and stellar physicists," said study lead author Fabio Reale, of the University of Palermo and the Palermo Astronomical Observatory in Italy. [Watch video of the spectacular June 2011 solar eruption]

Newly forming stars siphon off material from a surrounding circumstellar disk. Such accretion plays a key role in the late phases of star formation, but the complex dynamics of the process ? which involves plasma slamming into the stellar surface at hundreds of miles per second ? make it difficult to understand in detail, researchers said.

The June 2011 solar eruption provides a window into the accretion process, Reale and his colleagues said. They studied images of the dramatic sun storm snapped by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory spacecraft in ultraviolet (UV) and extreme-UV light, and then compared those observations against the results of hydrodynamic simulations.

The team determined that the density (far more than 10 billion particles per cubic centimeter, or 164 billion particles per cubic inch) and impact velocity (670,000 to 1 million mph, or 1.1 million to 1.6 million km/h) of infalling material were similar to those seen during stellar accretion flows.

Impacts were spread over a large fraction of the solar surface, researchers said. Sun-striking plasma blobs typically measured between 1,250 and 2,500 miles (2,000 to 4,000 km) in diameter, and they generated detectable high-energy emissions when they crashed into the sun.

Most stellar accretion flows emit surprisingly little high-energy light. The new study could help explain this puzzle, suggesting that such light is produced but absorbed by surrounding dense material, Reale said.

"The analysis of the high-energy light should be able to tell us about the composition of the disk material," he told SPACE.com via email.

It may seem odd that observations of this solar system's 4.5-billion-year-old sun can yield insights about stars just bursting into existence. But scientists use templates and proxies to investigate phenomena all the time, Reale said.

"Some physical processes are universal," he said. "If we can zoom in, and make the correct scaling and extrapolations, they can be investigated in different ? even very different ? systems. The sun has been used to study much brighter stellar coronae and flares, for instance. Probably, even people studying accretion in neutron stars or black holes may find this work interesting."

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall?and?Google+.?Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook?or Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spectacular-sun-storm-sheds-light-star-formation-180833361.html

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2X Software Transforms Your Google Chrome Browser into a Complete Microsoft Windows Desktop

DALLAS, TX, ?-- 2X Software, a global leader in virtual desktop and application delivery solutions, announced that the company has launched the free 2X Client for RDP / Remote Desktop application for Google Chrome. The 2X Client for Chrome provides you with simple and secure remote access to your Microsoft Windows desktop using RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) whenever you want, wherever you are.

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The 2X Client for RDP / Remote Desktop is specifically designed for Chrome, making it compatible across different platforms such as Windows, Mac OS, Linux and Chrome OS. The 2X Client for Chrome provides a direct connection without using a public gateway, making your computing experience secure and private. It?s the first self contained, fully installable Chrome application allowing RDP connections. Additionally, as a user you can have multiple connections running?concurrently and even use the application offline.

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?We are very excited for the full version launch of the 2X Client for Chrome app. Our goal was to develop an easy to use, secure way for mobile device users to connect to their desktop and applications. It was equally important for us to provide the app for free, and I?m happy that we have achieved both objectives. We are proud to supply the Chrome user community with a 2X solution which will hopefully improve their computing experience. - Nikolaos Makris,?CEO,?2X Software

About 2X Client for RDP / Remote Desktop

The 2X Client for Chrome provides users with simple and secure remote access to their Microsoft Windows desktop using RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) whenever you want, wherever you are.

Key features include:

  • Cross platform supported (Windows, Linux, MAC OS and Chrome OS)
  • Provides secure direct RDP connection without using a public gateway, making your computing experience secure and private
  • Fully installable, self contained Chrome application
  • Supports Google Chrome 24 onwards
  • Unlimited connections running concurrently
  • Offline mode functional even when an internet connection is unavailable
  • Saves user settings to the Google Cloud for syncing across multiple systems
  • Fully developed with JavaScript and HTML5 technologies
  • Windows 2012 and Windows 8 compatible

Download 2X Client for RDP / Remote Desktop for Chrome

About 2X Software

2X Software is a global leader in virtual desktop and application delivery, remote access and cloud computing solutions. Thousands of enterprises worldwide trust in the reliability and scalability of 2X products. 2X offers a range of solutions to make every company?s shift to cloud computing simple and affordable.

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Source: http://www.dabcc.com/article.aspx?id=25835

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