Thursday 21 July 2016

Kickass Torrents Goes Down; Owner Arrested



Bad news for Kickass torrent fans! If you use Kickass torrent you will probably see an offline message on the site that’s because its owner has been arrested and the site has gone offline since.
The US authorities have arrested the 30-year-old alleged owner of Kickass torrent Artem Vaulin in Poland and charged him with conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement and conspiracy to commit money laundering and criminal copyright infringement.
Kickass torrents was founded in 2008 and within no time gained a massive audience not far of The pirate Bay. Vaulin who is believed to be the owner of Kickass Torrent has been arrested because the site has its server based in Chicago, US.
The US Department of Justice has released a press release which reveals that the authorities have charged the owner of

Spreading like wildfire: Why wooden skyscrapers are springing up across the world

Photos: Timber and bamboo -- wooden buildings are branching out
Wooden skyscrapers – The Wood Innovation and Design Center (WIDC) is located in the province of British Columbia in Canada.

Story highlights

  • New super strength products such as engineered bamboo are making timber a more popular building material
  • Experts say wooden buildings have a positive psychological effect on people
Wood is being billed as the answer to creating greener cities -- lightweight and sustainable, it is even said to be more fire resistant than steel.
The newest addition to the timber trend is a proposed 19-storey structure that will be built in the Swedish city of                                                                       Skelleftea.


Wooden skyscrapers – The building is a hub for wooden design education and research.
Designed by architecture firm White Arkitekter, it was the winning submission in a competition to design a cultural center and hotel in the Swedish city.
Wooden skyscrapers – The "Sida Vid Sida" ("side by side") building is a proposed project by Swedish architects White Arkitekter.
The "Sida vid Sida" -- its name translated to side by side" -- submission was praised for paying tribute to the city's rich local timber industry, and the multiple design benefits attributed to wood as a building material.
Once complete, the 19-storey structure is expected to become the tallest wooden building in the Nordic countries.
 Wooden skyscrapers – CRG Architects proposed a skyscraper made entirely of bamboo at the World Architecture Festival in 2015.

Spreading like wildfire

An explosion of timber towers, either built or proposed, has gripped the architecture world over the past five years, every one seemingly a recorder holder in some respect.
In 2012, the 10-story, 104-feet-high Forte residential block was erected overlooking Melbourne's Victoria Harbour.
It was the world's tallest timber building until The Treet in Central Bergen, Norway, stole that title in 2014, with an extra four stories.
Wooden skyscrapers – At 80 stories high, it would be London's first wooden skyscraper, and another addition to the growing trend for structures made entirely of timber.
 Last year, the Cube, a 109-feet-high apartment block in London's Shoreditch, became "the tallest cross-laminated timber structure in Europe," according to its developers.
In Canada, work has begun on the descriptively named Tall Wood Building, which will provide student digs at the University of British Columbia.
At 174 feet and 18 stories tall, it was set to be the world's tallest building, until the Oakwood Tower came along.
The Oakwood Tower is a proposed joint project by PLP Architecture and Cambridge University's Department of Architecture. It's an experiment in pushing the frontiers of building with wood, and is part of a growing movement to build in timber.
The 80-story tower, if given the green light for construction, will be made of timber -- making it London's first wooden skyscraper and the tallest wooden structure in the world.
At 1,000 feet tall, it will only be overshadowed in London by The Shard.
 Wooden skyscrapers – Oakwood Tower is a proposed structure by PLP Architecture and Cambridge University's Department of Architecture.

Branching out

New types of ultra-strong timber are partly driving the trend.
"There's a whole bunch of new materials made out of wood that are structurally able to build big buildings," says Dr. Michael Ramage, of the Center for Natural Material Innovation at Cambridge University.
Cross-laminated timber, for example, sees thin layers of wood placed across one another at right angles, and laminated with fire-resistant glue to create a stronger weave.
But it's bamboo -- a material that has been used in Asian construction for centuries -- that most interests Ramage.
With a five-times higher growth rate than wood, but similar mechanical properties, there are 31.4 million hectares of bamboo worldwide, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization.
"We're working on engineered bamboo," says Ramage. "We can take the walls of bamboo tubes, cut them up into rectangles and glue them into big slabs.
"You get large pieces of what looks like lumber. But it's stronger than timber."
Kevin Flanagan, a partner at PLP architects, adds that in the future he can imagine the industry genetically modifying wood to make it even more conducive to high-rise construction.
Wooden skyscrapers – In Bali, the 18-home Green Village is constructed almost entirely of bamboo.

London's burning?

Obviously, when it comes to wooden buildings, there's one burning question.
Are timber skyscrapers a fire hazard?
Ramage says Oakwood Tower -- which will be an extension of the Barbican Center in Central London -- will exceed the fire standards of regular steel and concrete buildings.
His center has been awarded £250,000 ($353,785) from the Engineering Physical Sciences Research Council in the UK to research timber construction techniques, such as fire proofing.
"There is a huge perception problem," says Ramage. "Timber doesn't burn in the way the public imagines.
"The great fires of London and Chicago were both sparked by very small pieces of wood. Very big pieces of wood are quite hard to set on fire -- they aren't kindling material."
Wood, he says, burns predictably. Therefore, fire engineers can calculate how large a block of wood is needed to provide a protective layer to sustain a building for a certain period of time.
"All buildings over a certain size need to have sprinklers and active fire suppression systems -- irrelevant of whether it's wood, concrete or steel," he adds.
A series of blazes at Dubai skyscrapers in recent years have highlighted that it isn't just timber buildings at risk of catching fire.
 Wooden skyscrapers – Bamboo was recently recognized by the United Nations as a green building material that can help combat climate change.

Wooden skyscrapers – The Forte in Melbourne was completed in 2012, and is a 10-story structure built entirely of wood.
 Does wood make us happier?
According to Flanagan, wooden buildings have a positive psychological effect on people.
"People tend to feel relaxed around wooden buildings," says Flanagan. "People associate wood with green spaces, they have an affinity to it. There would be a real benefit to introducing wooden structures to the cities where people live."
In 2009, the Austrian Joanneum Research Institute compared four classrooms: two with timber flooring, ceilings and cupboards, and two fitted with linoleum floors, plasterboard walls and chipboard cupboards.
Children working in the timber classrooms, researchers found, were more relaxed, displaying lower heart rates.
Wooden skyscrapersFor two years, the 104-foot tall structure was the tallest wooden building in the world.

Wooden skyscrapers – Treet was completed in 2014, and is 14 stories tall.

Wooden skyscrapers – That title was soon taken by the Treet in Norway.

Wooden skyscrapers – The building is expected to be completed in 2019

Aren't we meant to be saving the rainforest?

Yes. According to the World Wildlife Organization, up to 58,000 square miles of forest are lost each year -- that's equivalent to 48 football fields every minute.
But Ramage explains that Oakwood Towers, if approved, would be built from "white wood" -- that is, crops grown over a 40-year-period specifically for construction purposes.
"Russia has huge timber reserves, largely because we're finally using less paper," he explains.
In fact, using wood could be more sustainable. Ramage says wood is, on average, four times lighter than concrete, so transporting it uses less energy.
Furthermore, timber buildings are increasingly being assembled in a factory, and then craned into position and fixed together on site -- like an Ikea-style skyscraper that can "self-assemble".
"This has huge time and financial savings implications," says Flanagan..


Wooden skyscrapers – The proposed design won an architecture competition in the city of Skelleftea. There were 55 entries from 10 countries.

Wooden skyscrapers – The design was selected for its use of wood as a building material, as it pays tribute to Skelletea's rich local timber industry.

Wooden skyscrapers – "This is the future. It's pure architecture ... to breathe fresh air and touch nature, that's everything," says architect Defit Wijaya.

Won't wood rot?

From the magnificent Tudor timber arches of Westminster Hall in London to the wooden rooftops of the Forbidden City in Beijing, wood has been used to construct some of the world's most beautiful, iconic buildings.
And they haven't fallen victim to rot.
"We know from a very long history of building in wood it can last -- we have 600, 700-year-old buildings in the UK which are fine," says Ramage. "The one constant they have is that they have all been well looked after."

Bulgarian Government Embraces Open Source



Bulgaria's Parliament recently passed legislation mandating open source software to bolster security, as well as to increase competition with commercially coded software.
Amendments to the Electronic Governance Act require that all software written for the government be Free and Open Source Software (FOSS)-compliant. The new provisions reportedly took effect this week.
Software developer Bozhidar Bozhanov, advisor to one of Bulgaria's four deputy prime ministers, orchestrated the new law.
It requires that contracts to create software for the government be developed publicly, meet stated open source definitions, and be provided free for use without limitations. The law affects government-commissioned software only. Existing license agreements are still intact.
The Bulgarian government will continue to buy proprietary software.
"The likely reasons for adoption are to increase transparency and reduce corruption," said Rudolf Olah, a software developer at NeverFriday.com.
"Proprietary vendors use trade secrets to keep

What is ARM and why is it worth £24bn?


Most of today's smartphones are dependent on chips based on ARM's designs
ARM Holdings has been often described as the UK's leading technology company. And while it might not be a household name, many products that qualify rely on the Cambridge company's brainpower.
Samsung's Galaxy smartphones, Apple's iPad tablets, Amazon's Kindle e-readers, Nest's smart thermostats, Ford's cars, DJI's drones, Canon's EOS cameras and Fitbit's fitness trackers barely scratch the surface.
So, news that the business has accepted a £24.3bn offer from Japan's Softbank has wide-ranging ramifications.

Impressive. ARM must be making lots of chips then?

Image captionARM sells the rights to use its designs rather than physical products
No.
ARM doesn't actually manufacture computer processors itself, but rather licenses its semiconductor technologies to others.
In some cases, manufacturers only

Tuesday 28 June 2016

Chemists Find New Method For Recycling Common Plastics As Fuel



If you still lack the motivation needed to kick-start your recycling efforts but appreciate energy efficiency, a team of chemists may have just the innovation to get your engines revving.
Researchers from the Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry (SIOC) and University of California, Irvine (UCI) have discovered a new way to process the millions of tons of waste plastic we produce each year into usable fuel. As described in an article published this month in Science Advances, the project involved developing a method for using byproducts of oil refining processes to break down polyethylene plastic, the most common commercially available type, into useful compounds of polymer molecules, including liquid fuel. 
The new method poses an efficient way of tackling two of our biggest environmental concerns: disposing of potentially harmful, slow-dissolving waste, and securing access to cleaner, cheaper energy. “Synthetic plastics are a fundamental part of modern life, but our use of them in large volume has created serious environmental problems,” UCI chemist Zhibin Guan explained in a press release. “Our goal through this research was to address the issue of plastic pollution as well as [achieve] a beneficial outcome of creating a new source of liquid fuel.”

In recent years, researchers and companies around the world have been exploring how to better utilize certain waste products as resources, from re-imagining used cardboard to recycling unused nuclear fuel. The Ocean Recovery Alliance’s Doug Woodring and the American Chemistry Council’s Steve Russell told Live Science in 2012 that because plastics are predominantly made using energy feedstocks from oil or natural gas (typically the latter in the U.S.), the stuff is particularly suited for reclaiming some energy from our waste stream. They explained,
The hydrocarbons that make up plastics are embodied in the material itself, essentially making plastics a form of stored energy, which can be turned into a liquid fuel source … [So it] makes sense that people are asking how to keep more of this valuable fuel in play, even after plastics are used, and how to keep it out of landfills.
The push to develop waste-to-energy” options for our garbage has already had various companies processing plastic bags and bottles into liquid fuel, but methods-to-date have required the use of toxic, caustic chemicals (called “ radicals”) and large energy expenditures to break down the bonds between polymers, UCI and SIOC researchers point out. With their new method, waste plastics are instead broken down more efficiently through a process called cross-alkane metathesis, which uses “readily available” byproducts of oil refining as catalysts.
The team is still working to make the process even more efficient and to bring its costs down, but the project’s success is a happy harbinger for waste-to-energy recycling methods to come. A press release for the project noted, too, that the team is also looking ahead toward finding the right catalytic processes to “turn other plastic trash into treasure.”
A more detailed breakdown of the team’s innovative chemical process is availablehere from the experts at Science.

Tuesday 14 June 2016

Microsoft to buy LinkedIn for $26.2B in cash, makes big move into enterprise social media





Huge news today in the world of M&A in enterprise and social networking services:Microsoft has announced that it is acquiring LinkedIn, the social network for professionals with some 433 million users, for $26.2 billion, or $196 per share, in cash. The transaction has already been approved by both boards, but it must still get regulatory and other approvals.

If for some reason the deal does not go through, LinkedIn will have to pay Microsoft a $725 million termination fee, according to Microsoft’s SEC filing detailing the merger.

The $196 per share offer is a big hike on its closing price from Friday, $131.08. (And in pre-market trading, unsurprisingly, LinkedIn’s stock has nearly crept up 64 percent to reach the share price Microsoft is paying. Microsoft’s price is down 4 percent to $49.66 in pre-market trading.)

LinkedIn is keeping its branding and product, and it will become a part of Microsoft’s productivity and business processes segment. LinkedIn’s CEO Jeff Weiner will report to Satya Nadella.
How Microsoft plans to use LinkedIn

The acquisition is a big one for both sides.

For Microsoft, it’s bringing a key, missing piece into the

Thursday 2 June 2016

Federal Reserve under attack by hacker spies





The Federal Reserve has been under constant attack by hackers since at least 2011, including four attempts it labels as "espionage."


But it is unclear if hackers have penetrated the Fed's security system.

Records obtained on Wednesday list more than 50 incidents that were labeled as either "unauthorized access" or "information disclosure."

But the Federal Reserve insists that the internal documents only acknowledge that hackers attempted to break into its computer systems -- not that they were successful.

In a statement to CNNMoney, a Federal Reserve representative said the central bank is facing a barrage of cyberattacks.

"As with other government agencies, the Federal Reserve is a target for cyberattacks," the statement said. "However, our security program and processes for detecting and countering attacks are robust and our critical operations have never been affected."

The central bank released the

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