5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Tuesday, 18 November 2014

China has arrested three suspects for spreading Wirelurker iOS malware


China has arrested three suspects for spreading Wirelurker iOS malware


Less than two weeks after the bug was first discovered, the Wirelurker iOS malware has already led to three arrests. First discovered by ZDNet, the Beijing Bureau of Public security has announced the arrest of three suspects charged with spreading the Wirelurker malware through a third-party app store. Police say the program that spread the malware has also been shut down.
Wirelurker was notable as the first malware program able to penetrate the iPhone's strict software controls, thanks to an "enterprise provisioning" setting designed to let businesses install their own software. Once a desktop computer was infected with the bug, the virus would infect any attached iPhone through the USB slot, supposedly lurking in the wires. Shortly after Wirelurker was announced, researchers at FireEye published a report on a similar bug that exploited the same loophole, which was enough to inspire an official government warning. Neither bug seems to have infected very many devices, but it's a rare blemish on the company's security record, and one that China appears to have taken very seriously.

By Russell Brandom
The Verge 


Chromebooks Get Blanket Approval For NYC Schools


Chromebooks Get Blanket Approval For NYC Schools


Google is already leading the pack in terms of tablets and notebooks sold to K-12 education providers, according to recent numbers from research firm IDC, and now it has gained another powerful new ally: The New York City Department of Education. The NYC CIO has signed on with Chromebooks, and Google Apps for Education, as par of their approved and supported (from an IT standpoint) tools for this school year, and they’ve also built a guide to help teachers in their district get started.
The arrangement is good for Google because it means the company can reach another 1 million plus students, across 1,800 schools more easily. NYC’s CIO explains in a blog post that the reason they ended up supporting Chromebooks and Google Apps for Education is that a number of schools were already using it, so this isn’t all new customer gain. It is a big vote of confidence in Google’s education push, however.
Google is basically doing all it can to seed education markets with its affordable Chromebook tech, and these minimal devices are the perfect partners for the mostly web-based Google Apps for Education. Google also made a commitment earlier this year to keep Apps for Education user data from being used to sell and target advertising, which has probably helped them convince more boards, schools, teachers and education departments to partake.
The recent announcement by Microsoft that Skype support will be coming to browsers, and eventually to Chromebooks as well, does a lot to make these more useful in educational settings, too.

By Darrell Etherington
TechCrunch


Artificial intelligence is now creating its own magic tricks


Artificial intelligence is now creating its own magic tricks


You might not have to be a professional magician to come up with clever tricks in the near future. Researchers at Queen Mary University of London have developed artificial intelligence that can create magic tricks (specifically, those based on math) all on its own. Once their program learns the basics of creating magic jigsaws and "mind reading" stunts, it can generate many variants of these tricks by itself. This could be particularly handy if you like to impress your friends on a regular basis -- you could show them a new card trick every time without having to do much work.
The best part? You can try some of these computer-generated tricks yourself. The 12 Magicians of Osiris magic jigsaw is available as a web pack, and you can download the Android component for one card trick, Phoney, from Google Play. Neither will give you as much satisfaction as developing tricks from scratch, but they're proof that computers can do more with math than solve equations.
QMUL
Frontiers

By Jon Fingas
Engadget 


Google Play Services 6.5 Adds New Features To Maps, Drive, Wallet, And Fit APIs


Google Play Services 6.5 Adds New Features To Maps, Drive, Wallet, And Fit APIs


The latest version of Google Play services will include several interesting new features in Google Maps, Google Drive, Google Wallet, and the recently launched Google Fit. The rollout will be made in the next few days.
In Google Maps, the API now includes a default toolbar that makes it quicker to get directions and navigation by automatically giving turn-by-turn directions to a destination, as well as a “lite mode” map option that allow developers to put thumbnail images of maps in their apps. Users who want to see a larger version can tap on the thumbnail, which launches the Google Maps app.
Google Drive now lets developers add public and application private custom file properties to a Drive file, which the company says will make search queries more efficient. It also claims that Drive’s new API makes syncing Drive files easier and more battery friendly, with the ability to control when files are uploaded based on network type and the amount of battery charge still left in phone. In addition, users can also now cancel pending uploads.
Meanwhile, Google Wallet’s API know lets developers add a “Donate with Google” button in addition to the “Buy With Google” button. Google Fit’s API update means that it is now easier for developers to support pauses in their apps or workouts with multiple activities by adding activities in “sessions,” or specific intervals of time.

by Catherine Shu
TechCrunch


Monday, 17 November 2014

U2's Bono injured while cycling, 'Tonight Show' gig delayed


U2's Bono injured while cycling, 'Tonight Show' gig delayed

Reuters


U2 frontman Bono was injured while cycling in New York's Central Park, forcing a delay in the Irish rockers' return to "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon," the band said on Sunday.
U2 was scheduled to perform on "The Tonight Show" from Monday to Friday. The band helped Fallon launch the late-night show in February as his first musical guest.
"It looks like we will have to do our Tonight Show residency another time - we're one man down," the band said on its website in a message signed by members The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr.
Bono, 54, "has injured his arm in a cycling spill in Central Park and requires some surgery to repair it. We're sure he'll make a full recovery soon, so we'll be back!" the band said.
The website did not give details about the incident or the injury.
Bono suffered a spinal injury in 2010 while preparing for a tour and underwent emergency surgery in Germany. The injury delayed part of the tour.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Ryan Woo)


Kids can now program toys that talk to just about anything


Kids can now program toys that talk to just about anything

Jon Fingas
Engadget 

There's no shortage of smart toys, but they tend only to talk to each other. What if your kid wants the freedom to use them with just about anything? That's where Dynepic's upcoming DynePod might help. It may look like a simple 25-pixel block of LEDs, but it's really the centerpiece of an "internet of toys" that lets it both respond to simple programming and dish out input of its own, whether it's talking to another DynePod or something else entirely. You can tell it to light up when there's movement, or buzz if another device is nearby; built-in motion sensors let it serve as a controller. Parents can even use it to set alarms, and at least the initial kits will come with a mounting clip and a bracelet. Yes, you can turn this into Junior's first smartwatch. The long-term plan is to have an open platform that has toys of all kinds speaking to each other.
If you want in early, you can pledge $79 or more to Dynepic's crowdfunding campaign to get a DynePod of your own. The first wave should ship in June, if all goes well. That's quite a bit to pay, but the hope is that young ones will learn to program and start tinkering with gadgets; if the DynePod helps them get comfortable with connected technology, it might pay for itself.
Kickstarter

Toyota's hydrogen car gets a name and more US filling stations



Toyota's hydrogen car gets a name and more US filling stations

Steve Dent
Engadget


Toyota's $69,000 fuel cell vehicle (FCV) coming next year is called the Mirai and will have a network of hydrogen stations in the US Northeast to support it. The Japanese automaker proclaimed that "the future has arrived," (Mirai means "future" in Japanese) which may make the thousands of people who've owned a Honda FCX Clarity FCV since 2005 gag. But despite being late to the game, Toyota is now making a huge bet on FCVs. It has teamed with Air Liquide to build 12 hydrogen stations in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. The stations will be "strategically placed" so that drivers of the 300-mile-range Mirai can tool around the region without (much) range anxiety. Previously, Toyota said that 19 hydrogen stations would be installed in California.

Ironically, Toyota's announcement comes at the same time Honda said that its own hydrogen car would be postponed until 2016. That must be galling for a company that built the first production FCV, but Honda added that it would soon announce its own infrastructure plans too. Hydrogen-powered cars are about half as energy efficient as battery-powered vehicles, because not only is energy lost in making hydrogen, but fuel-cells (like Toyota's) are only 60 percent or so efficient. In addition, both Honda and Toyota now have to play catch-up with Tesla and others on re-fueling infrastructure. Despite those issues, FCV's do have one big advantage for drivers -- it only takes 5 minutes to fill one up.
[Image credit: Autoblog]
Toyota

Taylor New Song About Justin Bieber Trying to Win Selena Gomez Back?



Taylor New Song About Justin Bieber Trying To Win Selena Gomez Back?



In an all-new interview, T-Swift reveals interesting details about her song “How You Get The Girl” that sounds like it could totally be about Selena and Justin!

“How You Get The Girl,” a song from her latest album, is eerily similar to Justin and Selena’s relationship struggles. 

“It’s written for a guy who has broken up with his girlfriend, then wants her back after six months,” she told Us Weekly. “But it’s not going to be as simple as sending a text like, ‘Sup? Miss you.’”

Justin and Selena have broken up more times than we can count, and it’s been pretty easy for Justin to win her back until now.

That type of easy reunion wasn’t going to be OK anymore, according to Taylor’s song. “That won’t work,” she continued. “You need to do all the things I say.”

Now that sounds even more like Selena! After their latest breakup, Justin has tried all his old tricks to win her back, but to no avail. Justin’s not getting the easy way back in this time around so maybe this song is about selena and justin.


Taylor Swift,to Perform at New Year's Rockin' Eve, Join One Direction, Meghan Trainor and More!


 Taylor Swift,to Perform at New Year's Rockin' Eve, Join One Direction, Meghan Trainor and More!


The performance lineup for Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan Seacrest has been announced! The program will begin at 8pm ET/PT on ABC, and will be filming live from New York City's Times Square.
Here are the stars set to take the stage during the New Year's Eve event:
  • One Direction (with four performances from the Billboard Hollywood Party)
  • Meghan Trainor (from the Billboard Hollywood Party)
  • Charli XCX (from the Billboard Hollywood Party)
  • Fergie (from the Billboard Hollywood Party)
  • Taylor Swift (from Times Square)
  • Gavin DeGraw (from Nashville)
  • Lady Antebellum (from Nashville)





How To Wear Red Lipstick

How To Wear Red Lipstick

Red lipstick is back. Yes, we know it's a classic look that never really goes out of fashion but this season (and looking forward to spring/summer 2015) the only lip shade we saw on the catwalks was red. 
Forget everything you thought you knew about red lipstick. The post box hue may have classic 'Old Hollywood' connotations; you may think it's tricky to find a shade to suit, or that it's a faff to wear - but we have the tips and tricks you need to find your perfect shade and wear it in a way that requires very little maintenance

At the Maxmara A/W 2014 show the models wore a deep red shade, perfect for autumn. Wine red shades look great on dark skin, but if you're fair don't shy away but just ensure your complexion is perfected first with foundation and concealer - a dark lip tends to draw attention to a less than perfect skintone


Use a lip pencil like this one by MAC in Cherry, £12.50, ideal if you're new to wearing dark lips shades you can build the colour up gradually. Use a little balm over the top to prevent lips drying out.


Don't want a high maintenance lip look but want to go bold? Strike a balance by using a bright red shade and take your cue from the Prada show, but use a cotton bud to soften (read: blend) the edges and buff the lipstick in for a more wearable - and long-wearing - look.


Orange-red lip colours suit anyone with a tan, or an olive skintone and will make you look more glowy. But, as with all rules they are there to be broken (see Art Director Miette, pictured), so if you like the shade give it a try and see.


If you really want to wear a red lip but don't want to make a big commitment, make like Maybelle and opt for a soft red balm.
INSTYLE,BY Amy lawWRENSO


Russia plans alternative version of Wikipedia to ensure 'detailed and reliable' information

Russia plans alternative version of Wikipedia to ensure 'detailed and reliable' information
Reuters
Russia plans to create its own Wikipedia to ensure its citizens have access to more "detailed and reliable" information about their country, the presidential library says.
Citing Western threats, the Kremlin has asserted more control over the internet this year in what critics call moves to censor the web, and has introduced more pro-Kremlin content similar to closely controlled state media such as television.
Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia assembled and written by internet users around the world, has pages dedicated to nearly every region or major city within Russia's 11 time zones, but the Kremlin library said this was not good enough.
"Analysis of this resource showed that it is not capable of providing information about the region and life of the country in a detailed or sufficient way," the state news agency RIA quoted a statement from the presidential library as saying.
"The creation of an alternative Wikipedia has begun."

It was not known whether the project might affect Russians' access to the existing Wikipedia in any way. President Vladimir Putin has branded the internet a "CIA special project", and the Kremlin has said it must protect its online realm from threats from the West, as ties between the Cold War-era foes have hit a new bottom over the Ukraine crisis.
Since August, bloggers in Russia with more than 3,000 followers must register with the Moscow's mass media regulatory agency and conform to rules applied to larger media outlets.
And since February, state authorities have been able to block websites without a court order.
The webpages of two leading Kremlin critics were among the first to be barred.

The presidential library statement said that 50,000 books and archive documents from 27 libraries around Russia had already been handed over for the process of establishing the "alternative Wikipedia".


Doubts about a nuclear deal with Iran as talks near deadline

Doubts about a nuclear deal with Iran as talks near deadline

The Washington Post 



For the six global powers in talks with Iran, the goals have always been clear — blocking Iran’s path to a nuclear bomb while eventually lifting sanctions that have hobbled its economy and caused hardship for the Iranian people.

But as negotiators gather in Vienna this week in one last push for a deal, decades of mutual mistrust and years of Iranian obfuscation on its nuclear program may be proving too much to surmount.

Three days of talks in Oman last week produced no leap forward, with a deadline for an accord fast approaching. Now, negotiators and nuclear experts are sounding increasingly skeptical that a comprehensive deal is likely or even possible by the Nov. 24 deadline.

Iranian and Russian negotiators, who recently offered assurances that there was plenty of time to strike a deal, acknowledged last week that talks may be extended. President Obama warned, “We may not be able to get there.”

“It’s pretty clear that, barring a miracle, there’s not going to be a comprehensive deal struck on the 24th of November,” said Mark Fitzpatrick, a former U.S. diplomat who is director of the nonproliferation and disarmament program at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “The two sides just remain too far apart, and the amount of horse-trading that would be required for a deal is too complex to get it all done in time, even if both sides really wanted to.”

Under an interim agreement, Iran has frozen the buildup of its nuclear capacity. Without an extension, that pact dies Nov. 24. If Iran chose to walk away and resume expanding its nuclear capacity, it could lead to a military confrontation that could escalate quickly beyond Iran’s borders in a region racked by war, violence and political instability.

The best-case scenario is that both camps agree to keep talking.

“What is still possible is a breakthrough that could justify adding more time to the clock,” said Ali Vaez, a scientist who focuses on Iran for the International Crisis Group.

High hurdles

The elusiveness of a final agreement after a year of intense negotiations indicates the seriousness with which both sides view the talks and the high hurdles that remain.

The negotiations had been sputtering along in fits and starts for almost a decade, then took on new life last year after a moderate, Hassan Rouhani, was elected president of Iran. He promised to rid the country of the bruising sanctions that have sent the economy into a tailspin, which has been compounded by plummeting oil prices.

The negotiators — Iran and the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany — have been tight-lipped on details, many of which are mind-numbingly complex and technical. But three broad sticking points have emerged.

The six negotiating partners, primarily the United States, want Iran to slash its 19,000 uranium-enriching centrifuges to levels low enough that monitors would notice if Iran cheated and tried to make a nuclear bomb. Iran says its nuclear industry is for civilian energy production and medicine, and it has balked at cuts.

Skeptics in the United States and elsewhere want to know whether Iran once had a nuclear weapons program, as many believe, and if it is ongoing. But Iran has not provided enough access or information for the International Atomic Energy Agency to conclusively rule on a possible military dimension to Iran’s program.

For its part, Iran appears to be insisting on a rapid lifting of all sanctions. American and European diplomats want the measures to be removed gradually, after Iran shows it is cooperating.

“If you can’t agree on key parameters, that will raise legitimate questions on whether a final deal can be concluded,” said Robert Einhorn, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution who specializes in arms-control and nonproliferation issues. “It’s going to take a lot of cooperation by Iran, and that’s going to take awhile. It’s unrealistic to ask Congress to vote to lift sanctions before Iran does that.”

Wild card in Washington

Congress is one of the wild cards in any delay. Many Republican and Democratic members believe that sanctions helped nudge Iran to the negotiating table and that they are being eroded by an administration ­eager for a legacy-building deal. Some already are talking about imposing more sanctions as leverage to make Iran more transparent and cooperative with IAEA monitors.

When the GOP gains control of Congress in January, Republicans are likely to be less willing to wait for the talks to evolve, particularly if the price of keeping Iran at the table is a partial easing of some sanctions.

George Perkovich, who focuses on nuclear and nonproliferation issues at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said more sanctions by Congress could push the Iranians to give up on talks entirely.

“It would create a lot of pressure within Iran from those who say, ‘Look, the United States is totally about regime change, it’s all they’ve ever been after,’” he said. “In my opinion, it makes more sense to let Iran be the ones who escalate, so the rest of the world sees them as provocateurs rather than the U.S. being the one seen as escalating things.”

Olli Heinonen, who works on nuclear nonproliferation issues at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, said Iran may be stalling out of a sense of overconfidence. He said some in Iran may believe they have the upper hand in talks because the United States and its partners are preoccupied with the spread of Islamist militancy elsewhere in the Middle East.

“This can’t go on forever,” he said of the talks, predicting they will be extended for a few months more. “It will be on the 24th, late at night, or early in the morning of the 25th, when we find out. It’s going to be a long, long night. I wouldn’t be surprised if the clocks in Vienna are stopped for a while.”