Monday, April 13, 2015

3D Robotics takes on DJI with Solo 'smart drone'

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/13/3d-robotics-solo-smart-drone/

If you're in the market for a camera drone, things just got real. Last week, DJI updated its ubiquitous Phantom series with a 4K video version. Today, 3D Robotics (makers of both consumer and professional craft) ups the ante with Solo -- a stylish "ready to fly" quadcopter that challenges the Phantom (on the 'copter side of things) in quite a few ways. You'll need to bring your own camera though.

Top of the 3DR Solo spec-sheet are twin 1GHz Linux computers: one in the drone, one in the controller. The idea is, the Solo has plenty of power for "smart" features, without taxing the core (and somewhat important) flight computer (3DR's own Pixhawk 2, for those asking). Other key features include live HD (720p) streaming direct from a GoPro to your phone (or any display via HDMI) from over half a mile away, several cinematic flight modes (more on these later), comprehensive autopilot features, and a modular/swappable "accessory bay."

The cost? $1,000 (drone only), or $1,400 with the purpose-built Solo GoPro gimbal (camera stabilizer). For anything more than the most casual of filmmakers -- i.e. those most likely to already own a GoPro -- this puts the Solo in the same ballpark to the Phantom 3 Professional ($1,260) in terms of initial outlay. First-time flyers without a GoPro will, of course, have to weigh up the cost benefits of the Phantom 3 Professional over the features 3DR is offering. Colin Guinn, SVP Sales & Marketing at 3DR, explains "90-percent of our buyers already own GoPros. That means we can put more of that cost, and more of that technology into the Solo." Essentially, 3DR focuses on the drone, leaving the camera expertise to GoPro (it will be compatible with other cameras soon).

Despite its name, the Solo has two sides: It's both a consumer-friendly product (Guinn says it'll be in 2,000 physical stores), yet customizable and hackable. Adding new features is as easy as swapping out a phone battery thanks to the accessory bay. Possible add-ons include indoor-flying or infrared sensors or even a ballistic parachute. Similarly, you're not tied to 3DR's gimbal, as that's swappable too. The battery bay is designed to accommodate bigger cells, and the motor pods are replaceable with just four screws.

3DR collaborated with GoPro so that Solo has direct access to the camera's settings. A simple, but huge benefit. Stop/start recording when you want, switch from video to photo, change the video mode, or basically anything you'd be able to do on the ground, directly from Solo's mobile app. No more taking off and recording 15 minutes on one setting. Or worse, landing only to find you forgot to record anything at all!

Most professional aerial video requires two people: one to fly the drone, another to control the camera. Pro setups will still want that, but the Solo's "cable cam" and "orbit" modes mean you can set up fancy shots on your own. For example, fly the Solo to point A, frame a shot press a button. Next, fly to point B, frame a shot, press a button. This creates a virtual "cable" between these points, and the Solo will only fly between them in a straight line, panning and tilting the camera as it goes. Or, manually pan the camera yourself, but remain on the fixed "cable." If you've ever flown a drone with a camera and been disappointed trying to get anything beyond smooth forward or backward sweeps, you'll know how useful this will be.

The Solo's appeal teeters on the brink between casual (but enthusiastic!) pilot ($1,400 for drone and gimbal isn't small potatoes), and aspiring pro user. Example: on the one hand you have some interesting cinematography modes, yet you can also share video clips directly to Instagram via your connected phone. The very definition of prosumer, perhaps? Solo also has an aggressive look -- it was designed by the same team behind the high-street products like the Nike FuelBand, and the Xbox 360 -- if you want to stand out from the white Phantom crowd. For those keen on creative filmmaking, the few hundred bucks between DJI's Phantom 3 Professional (which comes with a camera, but has fewer software tricks) and the 3DR Solo with gimbal (and GoPro) might seem pretty small. If, however, you're starting from scratch, the initial outlay on Solo (and optional, yet desirable gimbal, plus GoPro) is going to be a harder sell. Beginners might still like DJI's price and simplicity. But, if you've already got the flying bug, Solo should have you excited.

The Solo launches in May for $1,000 (drone only), or $1,400 with the GoPro gimbal.

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Source: 3DR

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ASUS' fitness-centric VivoWatch has a 10-day battery

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/13/asus-vivowatch-milan-design-week/

In our review, we became quite fond of ASUS' rather handsome ZenWatch except, perhaps, for its two-day battery that most Android Wear watches are getting these days. Apparently the company heard us loud and clear, and it's now prepping the launch of its VivoWatch to offer a more compelling 10-day battery life. While details are scarce at the moment, ASUS has so far revealed that its new fitness-centric wearable has a tough stainless steel body, an IP67 rating against dust and water, heart-rate monitoring and sleep tracking. Judging by the above picture, this new device -- which will likely not run on Android Wear -- appears to feature a power-saving black-and-white display, along with some sort of colored light indicator bar below it.

Of course, given that there are now several smartwatches -- namely the Fitbit Surge, Pebble Time, Basis Peak and Garmin Vivoactive -- on the market with similarly "generous" battery life (and more features on some), it'll ultimately boil down to how much the VivoWatch will cost. ASUS didn't comment on this, but we've been told that more will be shared after the device's debut at Milan Design Week, which starts tomorrow.

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Red's latest 'Weapon' is an 8K full-frame camera

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/13/red-8k-weapon-camera/

Red launched the first mainstream 4K camera when 1080p seemed like overkill, and now that this whole 4K thing might work out, it's got an 8K RAW model. The Weapon 'Vista Vision' features a mind-boggling 8,192 x 4,320, 35-megapixel sensor that can do up to 75 fps, widescreen 8K. The chip is also 40.96 x 21.6mm or Vista Vision-sized, considerably larger than the full-frame sensor on a camera like the Nikon D810. Video can be recorded in RAW and scaled-down ProRes formats simultaneously, just as with the company's 6K Weapon models.

So, how much does it cost to be on par with Peter Jackson and James Cameron? A helluva lot. If we're reading the (rather confusing) pricing correctly, you'll need to order the company's 6K Weapon Woven CF "brain," or bare camera for a cool $49,500, then add another $10,000 for the 8K sensor upgrade. That makes $59,500 by our counting, plus whatever your accessories, storage and lenses cost. The upgrade price is only good until the end of NAB on April 16th, after which time it'll be $20,000. If you already own a Red Scarlet or Epic camera, you can get credits in various amounts towards the Weapon models.

Other specs are still unknown, as is the exact shipping date. Red actually launched its 6K Weapon camera just a few months ago, and it's still not shipping. We're not sure who exactly needs 8K, since there aren't a lot of TVs out there in that format -- but it might look great blown up to IMAX size. Red said the sensor would arrive by the end of the year.

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Source: Red (forum)

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HP's Omen Pro is a slim laptop meant for serious work

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/13/hp-omen-pro/

Tempted by HP's svelte Omen gaming laptop, but need even more horsepower? Say hello to the Omen Pro. It shares the same aluminum 0.78-inch, 4.68-pound frame as its gaming sibling, but it packs in faster Core i7 processors and an NVIDIA Quadro K1100M graphics card. It also shares the original Omen's unibody aluminum case and 15.6-inch 1080p touchscreen, and it sits right alongside HP's ZBook workstations, except it balances style and hardware prowess. The Omen Pro is available today, but at $2,199, it's clearly targeted at the graphics-hungry professionals actually making games, and not just people looking for their latest Far Cry fix.

When it comes to storage, you've got a choice between HP's 256GB or 512GB Z Turbo PCIe solid-state drives. Its RAM capacity tops out at 16GB, so if you need even more memory, you'd have to forgo style for one of HP's ZBooks. And of course, the Omen Pro runs Windows 7 Professional -- because anyone buying a machine like this wouldn't stand for Windows 8 anyway.

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drag2share: IBM's cognitive computer will help solve your health problems

source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/13/ibm-watson-health-cloud/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

IBM's Watson Health Cloud in the abstract

Just because you can collect a lot of information about your health doesn't mean that you can easily make sense of it. How do you connect the dots between, say, your smartwatch and your medical records? IBM thinks it has the answer: it's launching Watson Health Cloud, a platform that uses the company's cognitive computer system to help companies and doctors make decisions based on data that might otherwise prove daunting. They could recommend a change in your prescription, for example, or outline your surgery recovery plans.

Appropriately, IBM is teaming up with a handful of companies to both scoop up more data and provide those all-important answers. If you're using iOS gear and the Apple Watch, the info you collect in HealthKit and ResearchKit can help Watson with decisions; Johnson & Johnson is helping with a coaching system for surgery, and Medtronic is working on extra-personalized diabetes treatment. Don't be surprised if your physicians ask a machine for advice the next time you're faced with a complicated health problem.

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Manfrotto turns your iPad into a giant DSLR remote

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/13/manfrotto-digital-director/

Manfrotto's Digital Director

Manfrotto isn't just content with making tripods and backpacks for your camera -- it wants to improve the camera itself. The gear designer has unveiled the Digital Director, an adapter that turns your iPad into a remote controller for Canon and Nikon DSLRs. It's not wireless like its biggest rival, the CamRanger, but it still gives you a giant viewfinder and control over virtually every facet of your shot, from the aperture to manual focusing. Think of it as a conventional remote control app that doesn't require lugging a full-fledged computer to your photo shoots. Be ready to pay for that portability, however. The Digital Director will cost $500 when it ships in June, so it's clearly meant more for pro work than augmenting your hobbyist photography.

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Via: SlashGear

Source: Resource Online

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Recommended Reading: The internet can't handle streaming big TV events

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/11/recommended-reading-4-11-15/

Recommended Reading highlights the best long-form writing on technology and more in print and on the web. Some weeks, you'll also find short reviews of books that we think are worth your time. We hope you enjoy the read.

Wisconsin v Duke

The Internet's Clearly Not Ready to Stream Big TV Events
by Brian Barrett
Wired

Last weekend's NCAA Final Four provided some of the most-watched college basketball matchups in years -- unless, of course, your Sling TV stream didn't work. The newfangled internet TV service buckled under the weight of a wave of new subscribers looking to opt in for the big games. It was just the latest in a line of live-event-related issues web streamers encountered, and it shows that maybe major television events aren't ready to be viewed on the web. So, Sunday's Game of Thrones premiere should be... interesting.

There's a Massive, Illicit Bust of Edward Snowden Stuck to a War Monument in Brooklyn
Bucky Turco, Animal New York

... or at least there was before it was taken down. It was replaced by a hologram after that, as artists wanted to pay tribute to the NSA whistleblower by installing the statue before dawn Monday morning.

The Inside Story of the Civil War for the Soul of NBC News
Bryan Burrough, Vanity Fair

It turns out Brian Williams' recent admission is only the latest in a string of incidents for NBC News since Comcast took over in 2011. This piece from Vanity Fair chronicles those events.

Life After Prey 2: How Human Head Recovered from Cancellation
James Batchelor, Develop

Prey 2 would've been the biggest release for Human Head Studios, but Bethesda pulled the plug on the project before it was finished, putting an end to years of work.

Want to See Domestic Spying's Future? Follow the Drug War
Andy Greenberg, Wired

If you think the National Security Agency's surveillance tactics are something, the DEA was spying first. Its phone-collection program started years prior, inspiring the NSA's data-gathering we've heard so much about.

[Photo credit: Andy Lyons/Getty Images]

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drag2share: Amazon's web services are smart enough to make predictions

source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/11/amazon-machine-learning/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

Amazon's Jeff Bezos at the Fire Phone event

You no longer have to run a tech giant (or work in a lab) to take advantage of learning computers. Amazon has launched a machine learning feature for Web Services that lets any developer use this computer intelligence to make predictions. Instead of having to sift through data yourself and spend ages fine-tuning algorithms, you let Amazon's servers comb through the info and create predictions largely on their own. This potentially saves you a ton of time, especially if you're running a small outfit that can't afford a lot of servers -- Amazon claims that it took 20 minutes to solve one problem that previously took 45 days.

The service could make a big impact on more than just humdrum business tasks. You should see more games that can anticipate what you'd like to play next, and stores that are better at taking your feedback or suggesting new things to buy. Don't be surprised if your favorite apps and sites are noticeably smarter in the near future.

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The PC market is shrinking again as companies stop upgrading

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/12/pc-market-share-shrinking-again/

ASUS UX305

It's not a good time to be a PC maker... especially if you cater to the corporate crowd. Both Gartner and IDC estimate that the computer market shrank between 5.2 to 6.7 percent in the first quarter of 2015, in part because many companies stopped upgrading from Windows XP. Simply put, many of the businesses that wanted to modernize already have -- they're not propping up the market like they were for a good chunk of 2014. IDC goes so far as to claim that this was the lowest volume of PC shipments since the start of 2009, which is no mean feat given that the world was still reeling from an economic collapse at the time.

Still, there are a few silver linings on this dark cloud. Lenovo is still on the rise, and ASUS is enjoying a resurgence that's helped in part by its larger Windows tablets (at least, according to Gartner). However, the situation is still gloomy for Acer, Dell and most other system builders. The analyst groups are hopeful that the launch of Windows 10 will spur a recovery, but that doesn't happen until the summer -- the next few months could be particularly bumpy.

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Source: Gartner, IDC

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Thursday, April 09, 2015

drag2share: IBM starts testing AI software that mimics the human brain

source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/09/ibm-numenta-ai-software/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

We haven't talked about Numenta since an HP exec left to join the company in 2011, because, well, it's been keeping a pretty low-profile existence. Now, a big name tech corp is reigniting interest in the company and its artificial intelligence software. According to MIT's Technology Review, IBM has recently started testing Numenta's algorithms for practical tasks, such as analyzing satellite imagery of crops and spotting early signs of malfunctioning field machinery. Numenta's technology caught IBM's eye, because it works more similarly to the human brain than other AI software. The 100-person IBM team that's testing the algorithms is led by veteran researcher Winfried Wilcke, who had great things to say about the technology during a conference talk back in February.

Tech Review says he praised Numenta for "being closer to biological reality than other machine learning software" -- in other words, it's more brain-like compared to its rivals. For instance, it can make sense of data more quickly than competitors, which have to be fed tons of examples, before they can see patterns and handle their jobs. As such, Numenta's algorithms can potentially give rise to more intelligent software.

The company has its share of critics, however. Gary Marcus, a New York University psychology professor and a co-founder of another AI startup, told Tech Review that while Numenta's creation is pretty brain-like, it's oversimplified. So far, he's yet to see it "try to handle natural language understanding or even produce state-of-the-art results in image recognition." It would be interesting to see IBM use the technology to develop, for example, speech-to-text software head and shoulders above the rest or a voice assistant that can understand any accent, as part of its tests. At the moment, though, Numenta's employees are focusing on teaching the software to control physical equipment to be used in future robots.

[Image credit: Petrovich9/Getty]

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Wednesday, April 08, 2015

DJI's Phantom 3 brings 4K recording to its most popular drone

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/08/dji-phantom-3-professional-4k-hands-on/

DJI's Phantom series of read-to-fly quadcopters have been instrumental in bringing drones into mainstream consciousness. Particularly the Phantom 2 Vision+, which made silky-smooth aerial video possible for have-a-go pilots right out of the box (most other methods involve a fair amount of assembly). Today, the Phantom family grows again with two new members: the Phantom 3 Professional and the Phantom 3 Advanced. So what's new? And, more importantly, which one do you want?

Historically, DJI sells a base model Phantom without a camera, and you could pay a bit more for a Phantom "Vision" to get one built-in. At launch, the Phantom 3 comes with a camera and gimbal (stabilizer) built-in by default. The "Vision" branding has been replaced by "Professional" and "Advanced" to identify which camera you'll be getting: 4K(30fps)/12-megapixel and 1080p(up to 60fps)/12-megapixel respectively.

We asked DJI about a camera-less Phantom 3, and Director of communications, Michael Perry, tolds us "The only thing we're announcing is the Phantom 3 Professional and the Phantom 3 Advanced. As you can probably tell by the name there's scope for more." We're reading between the lines, but a Phantom 3 without a camera (and thus suitable for a third party cameras/a GoPro) at a later date seems very likely.

The Phantom 3 isn't just about the camera, the drone's been updated to include indoor positioning sensors (so if you film inside, it's less likely to crash) similar to what we saw in the Inspire 1, and GPS has been improved with support for GLONASS also. Newbie pilots will benefit from auto take-off and landing (another feature inherited from the Inspire). But for the most part (at least the looks), it's the same Phantom that we know and love (with swanky gold stickers!).

The Vision models introduced a feature that sent a low-quality live feed from the camera to your phone (known as first-person view, or FPV) that needed an ugly WiFi booster bolted onto the controller. This has been scrapped in place of DJI's own "lightbridge" technology baked right in the the Phantom 3 and its controller. What that means for you, is that there's no longer a WiFi dongle (that needs charging!) hanging off your controller -- and no more fiddly setting up of WiFi networks. Connect your phone/tablet (Android or iOS) to the controller by USB, and voila -- 720p HD live feed from the skies direct to your mobile device/DJI app from over a mile away. Flight times are estimated at about 23 minutes per battery.

This feed is where the fun starts. With your phone's data connection sat there, DJI decided it'd be a waste not to use it -- so (bandwidth provided) you can live stream from the Phantom 3 directly to YouTube (no need to jeopardize an iPhone running Periscope). When shooting something particularly cool, you can also mark the moment as a highlight, and when you're done, the app automatically edits a director's cut for you to share or enjoy later.

The camera on the Phantom 2 Vision+ wasn't our favourite. It did a decent job, but a wide field of view, and modest specifications meant lots of distortion, and an overcast sky was all it took for it to give less than great results. The cameras in the Phantom 3's appear to be an all round upgrade. For example, the f/2.8 shooter now has a 94-degree fixed field-of-view compared to the Vision+, which was 140 and suffered fisheye pretty bad. The narrower view also means you should rarely see the landing gear in shot -- which is pretty much the quickest way to ruin a killer video. If you want a little more control, there are settings for ISO, exposure, shutter speed and color filters, plus the camera can be tilted through 120-degrees of pitch to further up your cinematic/Spielberg game.

If you were hoping for waypoint flying and other such tricks, sadly, no dice. The Phantom 3 still has the necessary hardware, but that's left for keeping its position, and returning to home if it loses connection/the battery runs out. DJI likely hopes this sort of feature is more for customers of the Inspire 1. But, as drone tech progresses, many are starting to expect this sort of thing as standard. This doesn't mean that's it for software features though, DJI is opening up access to the camera downlink, which means you can expect to third-part apps to start popping up to add extra functionality, albeit indirectly.

So, which one do you want? After all, DJI has quite a few drones to choose from now. The Inspire 1 is still the coolest product the company makes, but it's also a "cool" $3,400. A Phantom 2 and gimbal for a GoPro currently costs $850 (plus upwards of $400 for the GoPro -- you'll pay even more for FPV). At $1,260 the Phantom 3 is the same price as the Phantom 2 with camera and gimbal, but with the added indoor sensors, software perks and FPV features on top. If you can live without 4K, then the "Advanced" at $1,000, will be even more tempting. Until we know how well those cameras perform though (we'll be sure to let you know, soon), you'll have to make do with the official promo videos.

The Phantom 3 Professional and Advanced launch in the coming weeks.

[Image credits: Aaron Souppouris]

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drag2share: Microsoft just made an aggressive move against Google in the cloud wars

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/D8aivgQljzw/microsoft-launches-its-own-container-technology-2015-4

halo 5 guardians

There's a war going on between Microsoft, Google, and Amazon that's almost entirely invisible to the majority of the world that doesn't code. 

Each of the three technology giants has a cloud platform, where applications can run at tremendous scales more efficiently in their own data centers.

Obviously, each would rather developers use their cloud platform than those others. That means giving the people who build applications the tools they want and the tools they need. 

Today, Microsoft made a very aggressive move in that direction with the launch of Hyper-V containers and Microsoft Nano Server, two very boring-sounding technologies that have tremendous implications for how Microsoft works with developers.

Right now, there's a tremendous shift going on in application development. Developers are turning to what we call "containers" to package applications up in such a way that they can run anywhere, on any cloud. Google's been using containers in its own data center to great effect for many years.  

But most of those containers still need an operating system to run inside of them. Just this week, Google led a $12 million round of funding for CoreOS, which makes an extremely stripped-down version of Linux that's ideal for this — full operating systems make the containers slow and clunky, so leanness is a virtue. 

Now, Microsoft has its own competitor with Microsoft Nano Server, a version of its flagship Windows Server that strips out everything including the user interface in the name of making containers into lean, mean, computing machines. 

"As customers adopt modern applicat! ions and next-generation cloud technologies, they need an OS that delivers speed, agility and lower resource consumption," writes Microsoft in the official blog entry.

As for those Hyper-V containers, they use Microsoft's trademark hypervisor in conjunction with the hyper-hot Docker container technology to help customers manage the applications they have running in the cloud, all in the name of more efficiency. 

This is going to be a tightrope walk for Microsoft. On the one hand, Microsoft wants to ensure the dominance of Windows Server far into the future of the cloud. On the other hand, developers have never had more options, and containers give them even more choices about who they give their business to. The same is true for Google and Amazon, both of which also support containers. 

But with Google's CoreOS investment — and the fact that some of Google's technology made its way into CoreOS product — and Microsoft's announcements here, it looks like they're going to be fighting for cloud dominance with developers as their proxies, even as Microsoft works hard at opening the door to outside technologies like never before. 

Microsoft will release more details on the future of Windows Server at its Microsoft Build event later this month. 

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Canon's C300 Mark II cinema camera will cost you $20,000

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/08/canon-c300-mark-ii/

More than three years after launching the C300, Canon is refreshing its line of cinema cameras with the C300 Mark II. On the outside, the C300 Mark II is quite similar to its EOS siblings, although it does come with a slightly tweaked design that features a wider body. But the most important changes are elsewhere. For one, Canon has made the new cinema camera capable of recording 4K internally, via CFast 2.0 cards -- as opposed to the first version, which couldn't handle this type of footage natively. The C300 Mark II sports a pair of DIGIC DV 5 processors, an ISO range of up to 102,400 and a brand new 8.85-megapixel, Super 35mm CMOS sensor, which can shoot video at full HD (1,920 x 1,080), 2K DCI (2,048 X 1,080), 4K UHD (3,840 x 2,160) and, perhaps most importantly, 4K DCI (4,096 x 2,160).

Canon's now using a high-bitrate codec named XF-AVC, with support for up to 410 Mbps; there's the option for uncompressed RAW output as well, but you'll need an external recorder to do that. Now, the C300 Mark II isn't here to replace the original model, but rather sit between it and the C500, the company's higher-end, pro-grade camera. But being in the middle of the pack doesn't mean that it'll be cheap. The C300 Mark II is set to be priced at $20,000 when it launches in September -- and Canon says you'll have the option to choose between an EF or PL mount, depending on your needs.

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Canon XC10 camcorder shoots 4K and looks damn good doing it

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/08/canon-xc10-4k-camcorder/

It's hard to get too excited about camcorders these days, what with most of them looking basically the same -- never mind how useful they may be sometimes. Canon's new XC10, on the other hand, is one that instantly caught our attention, thanks to its distinctive, out-of-the-ordinary design. And that's not even the best part. The XC10 can shoot 4K and 1080p video at up to 30 fps and 60 fps, respectively; on the former, there's support for both Ultra HD (3,840 x 2,160) and cinematic 4K (4,096 x 2,160), bringing it on par with the newly announced C300 Mark II. What's more, this Canon 4K camcorder features a 1-inch, 12-megapixel CMOS sensor, alongside a Digic DV 5 processor, 10x wide-angle zoom lens and optical image stabilization -- which should make for rather smooth videos.

Canon says that the XC10 is lighter than many of its DSLRs, including members of the 5D and Rebel lines, noting that it could be perfect for drone shoots. With an ISO range of up to 20,000, a continuous AF mode (with face detection), fast-motion recording, dedicated microphone and headphone jacks, WiFi and support for still photography, there's no doubt the company wanted to make this a top-of-the-line camcorder. When it arrives in June, Canon's 4K-ready XC10 will be $2,500 (64GB CFast 2.0 card included), a reasonably affordable price for a camera that's packed to the punch.

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Some Anonabox routers recalled for lack of basic security

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/04/07/anonabox-security-flaw-recalled/

The story of the Anonabox internet privacy router has a new ridiculous chapter. The initial production batch of the device has a major security flaw and Anonabox's overlords, Sochule have informed customers that it will replace those routers for free. It turns out the routers in question shipped without Wi-Fi password protection. Yup, the Anonabox "cloaking device" didn't have the simplest form of router security, a network password. Sure users could anonymously surf the Internet via Tor, but they couldn't stop anyone from within Wi-Fi range from hopping on their network and potentially hacking their devices. It was also determined that the root password of the affected devices is the incredibly easy to guess "Admin." According to a Wired report, 300 of the approximately 1,500 routers sold were about as secure as a screen door.

From its launch on Kickstarter, the Anonabox saga has been series of false claims. After blowing past its funding goal on Kickstarter, the crowd-funding site pulled the product citing false hardware claims. It was also discovered that many of the security declarations made by the company were inaccurate. After the device was moved to Indiegogo, creator August Germer's claims of involvement with the Tor community were also debunked.

Also, as noted by security researcher Nicholas Weaver, Anonabox users will most likely use non-Tor browsers on the Tor network. You should never use the same browser for Tor and non-Tor traffic because your ID cookie is logged in both instances.

Hey @anonabox, even IF your shit was secure (instead of grossly vulnerable), non-Tor Browser over Tor is EPICFAIL and known insecure.

- Nicholas Weaver (@ncweaver) April 7, 2015

Still, the company was able raise more than $82,00 and has apparently already sold about 1,500 devices. We'll never know how many of those were purchased by individuals believing the privacy hype and how many were bought by security researchers for the lulz.

[Image credit: Anonabox]

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Source: Wired, Reclaim Your Privacy

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