Cyanogen Inc. has announced another round of venture funding, said to be on the order of $22 million. “What does this mean for you as a CM user? Not much yet, except that you’ll see more new things from us more often. We will continue to invest in the community by way of increased resources, sponsoring more events, and of course staying open. You’ll see new apps and features from us, new services, and also more devices which run CM out of the box.“
GnuPG 1.4.16 Released
Version 1.4.16 of the GNU Privacy Guard is out; it contains a fix for the recently disclosed acoustic cryptoanalysis attack. “A possible scenario is that the attacker places a sensor (for example a standard smartphone) in the vicinity of the targeted machine. That machine is assumed to do unattended RSA decryption of received mails, for example by using a mail client which speeds up browsing by opportunistically decrypting mails expected to be read soon. While listening to the acoustic emanations of the targeted machine, the smartphone will send new encrypted messages to that machine and re-construct the private key bit by bit. A 4096 bit RSA key used on a laptop can be revealed within an hour.” Note that GnuPG 2.x is not vulnerable to this particular attack.
Also worthy of note: the GnuPG developers have launched a crowdfunding campaign to help with GnuPG 2.1 development, update the project’s infrastructure, and more.
Jolla Sailfish Phone Swims Into Europe
The 4G phone runs Sailfish OS, which started life as MeeGo — software that was briefly considered the future of Nokia. [Read more]
Read more at CNET News
Atheer Labs Brings Android Into 3D Augmented Reality
At the end of 2014, the company expects to ship the Atheer One to consumers who want to be at the frontier of virtual, wearable computing. [Read more]
Steam Machine Scores Near-Perfect Marks for Repairability
The device teardown reveals from iFixit reveals that its parts are worth about $1,300. However, the device is still in beta, so that will likely change. [Read more]![]()
Intel Haswell Linux Performance Improved A Lot In 2013
With the end of the year quickly approaching, at Phoronix I have been re-testing all of the Linux graphics drivers to see how the performance has changed in 2013 and the features added/removed over the calendar year. I’ve been doing these annual Linux driver yearly recaps going back to 2005 when Linux GPU drivers were in their infancy compared to Windows. Yesterday I started with the NVIDIA 2013 Linux Year-In-Review of their first-rate binary driver while today I have some performance tests done for Intel’s latest-generation Haswell graphics hardware.
Top 10 Raspberry Pi Hacks of 2013
With over two million Raspberry Pi’s in the field, the number of Pi-based hardware projects has mushroomed accordingly. Scores of websites and YouTube videos show how to use the Linux-based embedded boards to do everything from water your lawn to power your next Halloween costume. While the Pi may not be the most open source single board computer available, the infinitely creative ways people use it — and share their designs so freely — reflects the true spirit of open source.
The Top 10 slideshow published here highlights inspired, yet affordable, Raspberry Pi based projects that go beyond the typical baby cams and rolling camera robots. Sometimes this extra effort results in utility — often by providing a much more affordable alternative to a mainstream technology — and some could form the basis for a successful consumer or industrial product. More often, the projects verge on the artistic, the conceptual, the obsessed, or the absurd. Whatever the motivation or goal, they’ve got our attention.
As a prime example of projects that straddle brilliance and lunacy, this week we learned of an Indiegogo project called No More Woof. This Raspberry Pi based EEG headgear set for dogs aims to translate canine thoughts into human speech. Perhaps the developers could combine it with the inspired, yet demented, CD-ROM eject helmet, which can perform tasks like ejecting the tray every time one’s tweets have been retweeted.
Speaking of all things “insanely great,” but not quite useful enough to make our list, why not spend the dark winter months building a Mini Mac? This “world’s smallest working Macintosh” runs a Mac emulator on a well-disguised RasbPi. (Ashton Kutcher bobblehead not included.)
Pyrotechnics, bullet cameras, and a Toiletcam
Those for whom danger is a middle name might consider building the FireHero 3, a complex system that shoots flames up to 100 feet in the air for a synchronized pyrotechnic backdrop to a rock show. (The rig might be accessorized nicely with Hackcouture.io’s Pi-based gesture detecting air guitar glove.) Despite the FireHero 3’s built-in safety features, my buzzkill attorney advises me I should not include it in the Top 10 list. I won’t even bother to try to convince him of the twisted genius of the Toiletcam, which uses light detection to alert outsiders when the loo is free.
The parts list for the FireHero 3 may be a little pricey for the above-average, but less than affluent, hobbyist hacker we have in mind. For similar reasons, I’ll skip some of the more advanced — and undeniably cool — Pi-based devices like the 48-Pi Frozen Pi “bullet-time” effects camera, the 36-Pi Pi 3D Scanner, and the 15-Pi Twitter-triggered Photobooth. Other interesting Pi-array extravaganzas include the 18-pi, 18-Arduino FM Stream radio rack for streaming radio content to the Internet, and the University of Southhampton’s 64-Pi Raspberry Pi Supercomputer.
Sadly, I’ll also have to bypass the Mens Amplio sculpture, which debuted at the latest Burning Man. This 15-foot tall model of a human brain features Pi-controlled light and flame affects derived from real-time input from an EEG headset.
The top 10 slide-show winners shown below are similarly inspired, but are more affordable. Almost all have a parts list in the hundreds of dollars, if not the tens of dollars. I’m omitting a few cool expansion shields that require custom PCB manufacturing, such as the OpenSprinkler Pi (OSPi) lawn-watering computer or the student-built AirPi weather station. (Fortunately for us lazier types, both are available for sale.) I’m also skipping the many cool projects that are primarily firmware based, such as the Onion Pi Tor proxy device or the Casandra cluster for the Pi.
Most of the projects shown below were published with full specs and source code, almost always accompanied by a YouTube video. Most can be found on the Raspberry Pi Foundation blog. Other good sources for Pi hacks include the Raspberry Pi Reddit page, the Makezine Raspberry Pi page, and the MagPi zine.
Top 10 Raspberry Pi Hacks
Below are links to source pages for this year’s Top 10 Raspberry Pi Hacks, in alphabetical order. For the slideshow, click the Gallery button:
Bitcoin-operated Pool Table— Liberty Games
CNC Laser Engraver— Daniel Chai
Coffee Table Pi— Graham Gelding
Feeder Tweeter— Manifold
Fireball HD Pinball— Ian Cole
Jack the Ripper Bot— British Ideas
Ping Pong Robot— Will Jessop
R2D2 Robot Powered by Raspberry Pi— Lingxiang Xiang
#Upstagram— Hackerloop
Ted Bull Stratos — Dave Akerman
How To Set Up Xen 4.3 On Debian Wheezy (7.0.2) And Then Upgrade To Jessie
How To Set Up Xen 4.3 On Debian Wheezy (7.0.2) And Then Upgrade To Jessie
This will be a quick and easy setup of XEN(dom0-hypervisor) and one virtual system (domU-guest). I wanted to test out XEN as my second experience after VMware and since many web pages are outdated and have many old fixed bugs and errors. I have decided to give it a spin with XEN.
Why Android Won’t be Getting App Ops Anytime Soon
Don’t hold your breath hoping that Android will regain the hidden permissions toggle that Google pulled last week, because it’s going to be a long wait. [Read more]
FreeRDS Back-End For Wayland’s Weston Still Coming
A FreeRDS back-end compositor for Wayland’s Weston is still under development, but it doesn’t look like it will meet the deadline for the upcoming Wayland/Weston 1.4 release…