Posts tagged flash
Picture Blocking Beer Cooler Keeps Your Face Out of Embarrassing Photos
Dec 16th
cylonlover writes “It may sound like something dreamed up by a cheesy men’s magazine as a joke, but apparently this is a real thing that actually exists. Ostensibly, the Norte Photoblocker is a functional beer cooler surrounded by four sensors that can detect the flashes from cameras or cell phones. If a flash goes off in the direction of the Photoblocker, it fires its own flash to flood the resulting photos with bright white and obscure anyone nearby. Now you can go about your usual business of cheating on your spouse, being an idiot around your boss, or drunkenly harassing fellow party-goers without worrying that some wildly irresponsible person will tag you in a photo and posts it online.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
View original post here: Picture Blocking Beer Cooler Keeps Your Face Out of Embarrassing Photos
Intel, Micron unveil first 128-gigabit flash chip, provide double the data density
Dec 7th
Realign the data and the previous 32 and 64 gigabit roadblocks to flash storage disappear. Today, Intel and Micron announced the first 128 gigabit NAND flash chip. The chip, which was created through the companies’ joint IM Flash Technologies venture, is smaller than a fingertip, created through a 20 nanometer manufacturing process and is capable of 333 megatransfers per second with the option of stacking as many as eight chips on top of each other. What makes the new NAND unique is its planar structure that allows individual memory cells to scale much smaller than before. When combined with a Hi-K/metal gate combo to keep the power leaks to a minimum, presto, you’ve got flash memory denser than your mother-in-law’s fruitcake. Mass production of the 128Gb chips isn’t due until the first half of 2012, but you can get a more in-depth intro to the future of flash right now in the PR below.
Continue reading Intel, Micron unveil first 128-gigabit flash chip, provide double the data density
Intel, Micron unveil first 128-gigabit flash chip, provide double the data density originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Dec 2011 05:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Open your IOPS to ioDrive’s next-gen SSDs
Oct 4th
We’re ripe for an ioRefresh and thankfully here it is: the ioDrive2 and ioDrive2 Duo will be out from November, bringing hugely faster speeds at a much lower dollar-per-gig compared to their predecessors. The single-level cell version of the next-gen Duo (depicted above) will deliver 700,000 read IOPS, 900,000 write IOPS and a 3GB/s bandwidth that could possibly surpass OCZ’s Z-Drive R4. Prices start at $6,000 and top out at something too ridiculous to mention for a maximum 2.4TB of storage. But you’re an enterprise, remember, so at least try to haggle before you settle for a cheaper alternative. Full PR after the break.
Continue reading Open your IOPS to ioDrive’s next-gen SSDs
Open your IOPS to ioDrive’s next-gen SSDs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 Oct 2011 11:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
BBC iPlayer app gets a new look on the PS3 now, other devices later
Aug 10th
While we keep waiting for the BBC to release a version of its iPlayer on this side of the Atlantic, it’s already upgrading UK PlayStation 3s with a brand new interface. Designed to be navigated by any standard remote, the main focuses are personalization and enhanced navigation to avoid scrolling through long lists, as well as bringing over synced iPlayer Favourites from the PC. The new UI is built on HTML5 and CE-HTML with an eye towards rolling it out easily on other devices soon, but there’s also plans for a version built with Adobe Flash and AIR technology. Check after the break for a quick video demo of the new features which sadly does not include a new episode of Top Gear (UK version) — we checked.
Continue reading BBC iPlayer app gets a new look on the PS3 now, other devices later
BBC iPlayer app gets a new look on the PS3 now, other devices later originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Aug 2011 19:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Samsung Galaxy S II LTE phone surfaces in Korea, codenamed Celox?
Aug 10th
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
Samsung Galaxy S II LTE phone surfaces in Korea, codenamed Celox? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Aug 2011 04:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Machinarium ‘hopefully’ coming to iPad next month
Jul 27th
Amanita Design’s lovely little automated adventure title Machinarium seems like a natural fit for the iPad, which is in many respects also a tiny, helpful robot. The game hasn’t made its way to the tablet due to its Apple-unfriendly Flash programming; however, Amanita founder Jakub Dvorsky recently told Pocket Gamer that the title’s iPad iteration “should be ready during the next month … hopefully.”
We suppose we can excuse the ambiguity, considering how difficult it must be to rebuild a Flash-based game on a non-Flash-based platform. We only ask for one thing in return: Extra robots. We don’t care who they are or what they do, we just need them to be adorable.
Machinarium ‘hopefully’ coming to iPad next month originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 23:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Sony NEX-C3 hands-on (video)
Jun 12th

Sony announced the successor to its NEX-3 digital camera earlier this week, so we decided to take a post-E3 road trip down to the electronics maker’s US headquarters in San Diego to check out the $599 NEX-C3 for ourselves. We’ll analyze the new sensor’s image quality in a full review before the camera hits stores later this summer, but from our initial impressions, the new cam appears to offer fairly minor tweaks compared to its predecessor. It’s incredibly small for a camera with an APS-C sensor — perhaps even awkwardly so, when paired with the comparatively massive 18-55mm kit lens or Sony’s enormous 18-200mm optic — but not small enough to be any less functional than the previous iteration. Like the NEX-3, the camera was designed to be held by resting the lens on your left palm, rather than by the grip, so size isn’t likely to be an issue. Cosmetic changes include a magnesium alloy top panel, front microphone positioning, and a more efficient display hinge, which helped reduce the camera’s thickness. We’ll be posting a full review in several weeks, but jump past the break for more observations, and a hands-on video from Sony HQ.
Gallery: Sony NEX-C3 Hands-on
Continue reading Sony NEX-C3 hands-on (video)
Sony NEX-C3 hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 11 Jun 2011 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Samsung Galaxy Tab 7" 16GB Android Tablet – Wi-Fi + 3G
May 26th
A Galaxy Not So Far Away
You want to use a robot to transport your important files? What were you born a long time ago or something?
Flash Player 10.3 hits Android with optimizations, bug fixes aplenty (update: desktops too)
May 14th
It’s been saying that it was coming “soon” since March, and Adobe has now finally delivered Flash Player 10.3 to compatible Android devices. As expected, it brings mostly bug fixes and optimizations, the biggest of which appears to be NEON optimizations for OMAP4 (or Cortex A-9) processors, which should be good news for BlackBerry PlayBook owners (and those that eventually get their hands on an Optimus 3D). Otherwise, you can expect to find the usual batch of security improvements, and a few fixes for specific problems on Galaxy S phones, the HTC Evo, and various Motorola devices.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
Update: Adobe’s also now brought the desktop version of Flash Player 10.3 out of beta for Windows, Mac and Linux, and it’s confirmed that the Android update does indeed include support for Android 3.1. Hit up the links below for the complete details.
Flash Player 10.3 hits Android with optimizations, bug fixes aplenty (update: desktops too) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 May 2011 16:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
‘Alphaland’ Flash game goes behind the screens
May 6th
Ever wondered what’s going on in the background of your favorite video games, behind all the moving pictures and pretty sounds? A new Flash game from Jonas Kyratzes titled Alphaland answers that very question by placing players in a rough Alpha version of a minimalist platformer, and then placing them deep within said Alpha’s metaphysical guts.
If it sounds confusing … well, that’s because it is. But it’s also pretty short, and pretty sad, and pretty pretty. If you’ve got a few minutes, give it a play over at Newgrounds!
‘Alphaland’ Flash game goes behind the screens originally appeared on Joystiq on Thu, 05 May 2011 22:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
SanDisk and Toshiba announce world’s smallest NAND flash memory chips for tinier gadgets
Apr 22nd
20 nanometer manufacturing processes, you say? We say pshaw, be gone luddite. Sandisk and Toshiba just announced the latest product from their joint venture: a 19nm 64Gb (8GB) X2 memory chip; aka, the smallest NAND flash memory chip in the world. At least it will be when it hits production in the second half of the year. They are, however, sampling the monolithic chip this quarter in case you’re interested in stacking a batch of 16 into an ultra-high density 128GB SSD. Anyone?
SanDisk and Toshiba announce world’s smallest NAND flash memory chips for tinier gadgets originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Apr 2011 03:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Adult Swim Games planning slate of original mobile titles
Apr 18th
Adult Swim’s initial foray into gaming was not very promising. A 2005 partnership with now defunct Midway produced a by-all-accounts terrible Aqua Teen Hunger Force game in 2007. The following year’s Harvey Birdman collaboration with Capcom was only marginally better.
Jeff Olsen, VP of Adult Swim Digital and Games, told Joystiq that the brand’s audience is pretty savvy and “license games don’t have a great track record.” So the company tried something different: publishing original, Flash-based games on its website. From there, the popular originals, like Amateur Surgeon and Five Minutes to Kill (Yourself), were ported to social and iOS platforms with great success. Tomorrow the company will launch its first Android port, Robot Unicorn Attack, which has racked up more than 150 million combined plays online and on Facebook.
“The audience for a casual game based on completely original IP, in my experience, is almost unlimited,” Olsen said. “If you’re basing it on a show, you’re probably shutting more people out than letting them in.”
Olsen told us that the “next evolution” for Adult Swim Games is to create truly original titles for iPhone and other mobile platforms; ones that aren’t ports of Flash games from its website. He believes that the first of these should launch in the third quarter. Going forward, Olsen said, “We’re trying to get to the point where we can release a new mobile game a month.”
Adult Swim Games planning slate of original mobile titles originally appeared on Joystiq on Mon, 18 Apr 2011 09:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Windows Phone 7-certified microSD cards emerge at AT&T stores: $32 for 8GB
Apr 16th
Well, well — what have we here? For avid users of Windows Phone 7, you no doubt remember the hubbub last year surrounding the so-called difficulties with Microsoft’s latest and greatest mobile OS accepting microSD cards. We’d been pounded with news of “WP7 certified microSD cards,” but even now, they’re more ghost than reality. That said, it looks as if the tables are turning, with an nondescript AT&T store grabbing fresh stock of “certified” 8GB Class 4 microSDHC cards. Based on the packaging, it’s fairly clear that Microsoft’s taking the lead here, but SanDisk has been knighted to provide the hardware. $32 will soon get you a card that doesn’t destroy itself upon insertion in your Samsung Focus, and we’re guessing that they’ll be available to purchase sooner rather than later. So, you sizing up, or what?
[Thanks, Anonymous]
Windows Phone 7-certified microSD cards emerge at AT&T stores: $32 for 8GB originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Apr 2011 16:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Flash On Android Fails To Impress
Apr 16th
snydeq writes “InfoWorld’s Neil McAllister test-drives Flash Player 10.2 for Android 3.0 and finds its shortcomings too sweeping to be chalked up to beta status. ‘The worst part is the player’s inconsistent behavior. This gets really frustrating when there’s lots of HTML and Flash content mixed on a Web page. The UI turns into a tug-of-war between the browser and the Flash Player, where each touch produces varying effects, seemingly at random,’ McAllister writes. ‘As far as I could tell, there was one thing and one thing only that the Flash Player for Android 3.0 accomplished successfully. On the stock Android browser, Flash content is invisible, so you don’t notice Flash-based advertising. With the Flash Player installed, however, all those ads suddenly appear where once there were none, their animated graphics leaping and scuttling under your fingertips like cockroaches on a dinner tray — some achievement.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read the original post: Flash On Android Fails To Impress
Maqetta: Open Source HTML5 Editor From IBM
Apr 15th
PybusJ writes “IBM has released an online HTML5 editing tool called Maqetta, hosted by the Dojo Foundation. eWeek calls it an open source answer to Flash and Silverlight. That remains to be seen, but it does look interesting.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Originally posted here: Maqetta: Open Source HTML5 Editor From IBM
Adobe finds another ‘critical’ flaw in Flash, Steve Jobs smiles smugly
Apr 12th
Hey, guess what? Adobe has found yet another serious security flaw in Flash. Surprised? Neither are we. And we can already hear the iOS fanboys warming up their commenting fingers. The vulnerability affects all platforms, including Android, though only attacks on Windows have been seen in the wild so far. Just like last month’s exploit, this one is spreading via malicious .swf files embedded in Office documents, only this time it’s Word instead of Excel being targeted (a hacker’s gotta keep it fresh, after all). Once again Reader and Acrobat are also vulnerable, but attacks can be thwarted using Reader’s Protected Mode. When exactly Adobe plans on plugging this hole is anyone’s guess. Until then, might we suggest you become friends with a little browser extension called FlashBlock.
Adobe finds another ‘critical’ flaw in Flash, Steve Jobs smiles smugly originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 16:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Apple May Hate Flash, But Adobe TV Now Plays Nice With iOS
Apr 11th
Adobe TV – Adobe’s video training resources website – is now iOS friendly, despite Apple’s sustained lack of support for Flash content. Now, iOS device owners can access the website (http://tv.adobe.com) from their iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
Apple has made its dislike of Flash very public, and its iOS devices do not support Flash content (unless you use a service like Skyfire). Despite this, Adobe hasn’t given up on the iOS platform – and is even planning on releasing three new iPad apps this May.
Along with this move comes a much requested improvement to the Adobe TV website: Support for iOS devices.
Now, Apple users can access Adobe TV videos on iOS devices – meaning you can learn a whole lot about Photoshop or other products via the service, on an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. Personally, I think it’s great that Adobe has forgotten about Apple’s war on Flash, and made Adobe TV available to all their customers.
You can access Adobe TV on your iOS device by going to http://tv.apple.com in Safari. Let us know if you’re a fan of the website in the comments below.
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Nokia T7-00 surfaces again, looks like N8 redux
Apr 6th
Nokia T7-00 surfaces again, looks like N8 redux originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 01:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Security firm RSA attacked using Excel-Flash one-two sucker punch
Apr 6th
It has emerged that the underlying cause of RSA’s SecurID gaffe was the recently-reported zero-day vulnerability found in Adobe’s Flash Player.
The exploit, which used specially-crafted Flash embedding in Excel spreadsheets, was first reported on March 15 and has since been fixed. RSA was hacked sometime in the first half of March when an employee was successfully spear phished and opened an infected spreadsheet. As soon as the spreadsheet was opened, an advanced persistent threat (APT) — a backdoor Trojan — called Poison Ivy was installed. From there, the attackers basically had free reign of RSA’s internal network, which led to the eventual dissemination of data pertaining to RSA’s two-factor authenticators.
The attack is reminiscent of the APTs used in the China vs. Google attacks from last year — and indeed, Uri Rivner, the head of new technologies at RSA is quick to point out that that other big companies are being attacked, too: “The number of enterprises hit by APTs grows by the month; and the range of APT targets includes just about every industry. Unofficial tallies number dozens of mega corporations attacked [...] These companies deploy any imaginable combination of state-of-the-art perimeter and end-point security controls, and use all imaginable combinations of security operations and security controls. Yet still the determined attackers find their way in.”
What we’d like to know, though, is whether the attack on RSA was caused by Adobe’s lackadaisical approach to patching Flash — or was it the other way around? Was it the RSA attack that first brought the zero-day vulnerability to Adobe’s attention?
Security firm RSA attacked using Excel-Flash one-two sucker punch originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 06:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Yahoo Search Direct offers suggestions, previews in an instant
Mar 24th

Late in 2010, Yahoo began showing a limited number of testers something it called Rich Search Assist. Type a few letters into the search box, and Yahoo displayed a floating pane with suggested search terms in one column and a results preview in the other.
Now, the feature has launched as Yahoo Search Direct. As you can see, the previews also include Yahoo’s contextual customizations for topics like weather, gadgets, and sports teams. Future plans for Search Direct including the introduction of sponsored ads in the preview pane — search for Ford vehicles and you’ll see its current promo, for example — and the integration of Facebook results.
Suggestions and previews appear in a flash, and Search Direct does a good job of simplifying the search process. Head over to search.yahoo.com to take Search Direct for a spin.
Yahoo Search Direct offers suggestions, previews in an instant originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 23 Mar 2011 14:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Hire Web Developers
Mar 24th
… Hire PHP Web Developer, Hire ASP.NET Web Developer, Hire Flash Web Developer, Hire Web Designer, Hire html Web Developer, Hire Oscommerce Web Developer, Hire Iphone Web …
Read the original here: Hire Web Developers
Zero-day Flash vulnerability fixed in Chrome, still unpatched elsewhere
Mar 23rd
Google, proving the efficacy of Chrome’s built-in Flash Player and its early, insider access to Adobe’s developer builds, has fixed the zero-day vulnerability that emerged last week.
The hole will be plugged on other platforms and browsers by a new version of Flash 10.1 and 10.2 that should’ve been released by now.
If you’ve restarted Google Chrome in the last few days, you should now have the updated Flash Player. Otherwise, go ahead and restart your browser now and it will automatically update.
Zero-day Flash vulnerability fixed in Chrome, still unpatched elsewhere originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 21 Mar 2011 09:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Scribd HTML5 viewer goes mobile, Flash ditched on 20 million embeds
Mar 20th

In 2010, Scribd announced that it planned to dump Adobe Flash embeds in favor of an HTML5 viewer for its user-uploaded documents. Now, the Scribd HTML5 experience has gone mobile as well. That’s a very welcome update, since certain shiny touchscreen mobile devices don’t offer support for Flash embeds.
Scribd has also announced that all of its existing embeds — which number more than 20 million — are in the process of being updated to the new HTML5 viewer code. The conversion will happen automatically, and CTO Jared Friedman told TechCrunch that site owners don’t need to worry about any breakages occurring.
Scribd HTML5 viewer goes mobile, Flash ditched on 20 million embeds originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 18 Mar 2011 12:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.












PQI USB 3.0 flash drive is world’s smallest, easiest to misplace
May 10th
Posted by admin in Gadget News
Storage in the cloud has limited the appeal of previous-generation flash drives, but until we can beam 32GB video clips across the web in less than a minute, there’s always room for a USB 3.0 “traveling disk” on our key rings. Especially when it’s smaller than a key. The PQI U819V measures just 3.15cm long, but ships with a keyring and attached cap, so at least its accessories will be nearby when it gets misplaced in your desk drawer. We’re still waiting on pricing and availability information, but we do know that storage capacity ranges from 4GB to 32GB, and the drive is backwards-compatible with USB 2.0 ports. PQI says the drive’s cap also doubles as a cell phone ornament, but if you need a square silver USB cap to dress up your mobile, you may want to redirect some cash from your flash drive fund to upgrade your cell.
Continue reading PQI USB 3.0 flash drive is world’s smallest, easiest to misplace
PQI USB 3.0 flash drive is world’s smallest, easiest to misplace originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 May 2011 10:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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