Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Scant Brain Power Behind Massive DDoS Attack


It may be the most disturbing thing about last week's historic denial of service attack on a Dutch anti-spam organization -- the fact that the technology involved wasn't that complicated. That's one of the findings of security professionals studying the attack methods used on Spamhaus, along with the knowledge that the hackers used the Internet's own structure to extend their assaults on the group.
One of the largest denial of service attacks in the history of the Internet didn't take rocket science to execute. The offensive was conducted over several days last week after the anti-spam group Spamhaus placed a Dutch hosting service, located in a former NATO bunker, on a blacklist reserved for spammers.
A group calling itself STOPhaus is claiming responsibility for the series of attacks which, at their height, reached bandwidths of 300 Gbps. A 10 Gbps attack will bring most websites down.
To reach those bandwidth levels, the attackers exploited the Internet's architecture and the Domain Naming System to expand the scope of their assaults. They essentially used open servers used to resolve DNS addresses on the Internet like megaphones to amplify their attacks.
The technique was used earlier this year in a series of attacks on U.S. financial websites.

Perl Used By Swine?

Despite the magnitude of the onslaughts, security experts said they can be launched with a relatively low level of technical knowledge. "The technique isn't particularly difficult," said Matthew Prince, co-founder and CEO of Cloudflare. Prince's company came to Spamhaus's aid when the attacks threatened to overwhelm its website.
"The amount of code you'd need to write to launch this attack can almost be done in a line of Perl," Prince told TechNewsWorld. The most difficult part of the campaign is finding open resolvers to use in your attack because it requires scanning billions of IP addresses.
"It takes a lot of reconnaissance, but not a whole lot of technology itself," Henry Stern, a threat researcher with Cisco told TechNewsWorld. That reconnaisance may have gotten easier. A group calling itself the Open DNS Resolver Project has published a list of 27 million open or semi-open resolvers on the Net. The group's intentions are good ones; it wants server operators to check their IP addresses at the site and restrict access to any of their servers they find on the list.

Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Android Powered $99 Ouya Games Console Shipped To First Supporters



A new games console which industry experts say could disrupt the industry has begun shipping to kickstarter backers who helped the Android-based project get going last year. For the rest of us, there’s an official retail release date: June 4.
Games on the system will be a fraction of the cost of traditional console games, more comparable to those found on mobiles and tablets. However, it may struggle to muscle in on a market dominated by big players such as PlayStation and Xbox, one analyst predicted.
The Ouya was financed using crowdfunding website Kickstarter, where it attracted over $8m (£5.3m) in funding from 63,416 backers.

The company has begun sending out consoles to the first supporters of the project – while other interested gamers can pre-order the device.
About 55 games will be available with today’s release, according to [Ouya founder Julie] Uhrman. The cube-shaped player uses a version of Android that requires developers to create applications and games just for the device. Games must be free, offer a free trial or have free add-ons, the company said. … Ouya plans to keep 30 percent of game sales, with developers getting the rest.

Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Fact for the day: 2.4.2013


Can openers invented 48 years after cans

Cans were opened with a hammer and chisel before the advent of can openers. The tin canister, or can, was invented in 1810 by a Londoner, Peter Durand.

Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R

Monday, April 1, 2013

How top Techies celebrated April Fool's Day


April 1st is celebrated as April Fool’s Day or All Fools Day in many countries. People usually play prank on others and celebrate it. Tech companies also have celebrated April fools Day and, here is a list how the have done it this year.
bmw-royal-baby-carriage
BMW: ROYAL BABY CARRIAGE
BMW said today that “we are proud to announce the launch of our limited edition BMW P.R.A.M. (Postnatal Royal Auto Mobile)” to coincide with the birth of Prince William and Kate Middleton’s first child
guardian-goggles
THE GUARDIAN: GUARDIAN GOGGLES
Playing on Google Goggles, The Guardian newspaper released its own set of smart frames.
google-maps-treasure-map
Google: Closing of YouTube, Treasure layer in Google Maps, Google Nose, Gmail Blue, Add emotions to Google+ pictures, Levity algorithm
Google is the master of humorous tech pranks for April Fools’ Day. We clearly don’t believe anything Google tells us on March 31 and April 1, but here’s a roundup of Google’s pranks:
Closing of YouTube
Treasure layer in Google Maps
Google Nose
Gmail Blue
Levity algorithm
Google+ emotions
Finally, the Google+ team added the ability to add “emotions” to pictures.
ikea-grassax
IKEA: FLAT-PACK LAWNMOWER
IKEA launched a “brand new, fully flat-pack GRÄSSAX lawnmower.”
nokia_microwave
NOKIA: TOUCHSCREEN LUMIA MICROWAVES
If you can’t win the people with Lumia Windows Phones, maybe it’s time to try pitching them onsmart microwaves?
RUNKEEPER FOR IPAD
Runkeeper brings its iPhone app for tracking your exercise to the iPad.
SPHERO: PEACEKEEPER EDITION
The Sphero robotic ball that can be controlled from your phone has been modified to help crush objects and trip runners. It costs $10,000.
SONY: PET TECHNOLOGY INCLUDING CAT HEADPHONES AND TVS FOR DOGS
Sony launched a set of technology for pets including Cat Cansspeakers for your hamster, andTVs for dogs.
sony-pet-tech
THINKGEEK: PLAY-DOH 3D PRINTER AND EYE OF SAURON DESK LAMP
3D printing is super hot. Why not a 3D printer that works with Play-Doh? Oh, and how about a sweet “Eye of Sauron Desk Lamp” while you’re already ordering?
play-doh-3d-printer
TWITTER: CHARGING TO USE VOWELS
It’s now going to cost to use vowels on Twitter, no more “LOL” for you freeloaders. You’ll just have to use smiley faces.
VIRGIN ATLANTIC: GLASS-BOTTOMED PLANE
Maybe the most scary sounding prank we’ve heard today is Virgin Atlantic’s proposed glass-bottom plane.
virgin-atlantic-glass-bottom-plane
LET US KNOW WHAT WE MISSED
Other companies will surely have their own April Fools’ pranks today. Let us know in the comments what we missed or what you found particularly funny.

Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R

Google celebrates April fool's day


google-maps-treasure-map
Google Celebrates April Fool’s day with some amazing features such as ‘Treasure Layer’ in Google Maps and a video suggesting YouTube will close tomorrow.
First up, as you can see in the photo above, a Google Maps look at San Francisco has a much different look that hearkens to old pirate tales. To see the Treasure Map layer, go into Google Maps and tap the Treasure option in the top right corner.
Google also released a three-and-a-half-minute April Fools’ video from the YouTube team (watch it below) saying that YouTube will close tomorrow and has actually been a massive contest to find the best video in the world. The company says it will review every video that has ever been uploaded and will delete everything else but the winner.
The search giant has also pushed out another practical joke called Google Nose, a program that lets you search by scent. This year Google’s flagship fake product is Google Nose. Nose purports to let you search for scents in Google search and use Android devices to smell objects and tell you what they are. Google says Nose can help you identify the smell of “a new car”, “the inside of an Egyptian tomb,” or “a ghost.”
google-nose-prank




“Our task as designers is to get our users the information they are looking for as quickly and beautifully as possible,” a Google user experience designer says in the video. “But until now we couldn’t give users what they are looking for — because sometimes they’re not looking at all.”

Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Fact for the Day: 4.1.2013


The first known cell phone virus, Cabir.A, appeared in 2004.

Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R. Courtesy: Wikipedia

Wish to have Android apps On Windows or Mac

“Android is not just for Android devices any more. Thanks to the BlueStacks App Player, you can run your favorite Android apps on PCs running Windows XP, Vista or 7. You can run them on a PC or even a tablet running Windows 8. If you've got a Mac, BlueStacks will let you run Android apps on it as well. This nifty player won Best of CES last year -- and it's free.”
Have you got some favorite smartphone apps? Not convinced by Microsoft's new Windows app selection? Itching to see some Android action on your MacBook Pro? Don't worry, just install an Android emulator on your Windows or Mac machine and run all of the Android apps that you've grown to love.
A version is even available for Windows 8 Surface tablets. Load up to 750,000 Android apps, including games, SMS text messaging, and media apps.
The free product that lets you do this is BlueStacks App Player, and it claims more than 5 million downloads.
Here's how to go about loading and running the BlueStacks emulator:
Installation and Use
Step 1: Browse to the BlueStacks Web page on a desktop computer or laptop and click on the download button for your operating system. Choose between XP, Vista and Windows 7; Windows 8; or Mac.
Follow the usual steps for installing software, opening the .exe file. Follow the prompts to allow installation and then accept the terms of the license agreement by clicking on the Welcome to BlueStacks' Continue button.
Step 2: Verify that App Store Access and App Notification check boxes are enabled on the following screen and then click Install. Allow the BlueStacks application to load.
Step 3: Click on the My Apps tile and then on the App Search button.
Search for an app that you use regularly on your smartphone or tablet. For example, I searched for Falcon Pro, a robust, paid-for Twitter client I like. Allow the in-Bluestacks search to complete and then click on the Install button adjacent to the search result.

Tip: The app doesn't install from this search. This search just tells you which store has the app you want.
Step 4: Choose an app store from the selection. I chose the Google native Play store, but there will be others listed, including Amazon.
Tip: Choose the store that you normally use on your device. It will be cheaper to migrate an app that you've already paid for.
Step 5: Add your account details if prompted. If you already have a Google account, add it here. Allow any sync to take place and then select Finish Setup. Click on any terms and conditions check boxes and then press Continue.
Step 6: Perform a second search for the app that you want to install. Allow the search to take place and then choose Accept and Download. Allow the app to install and then open the app. This search is from within the store that you may be familiar with, like Play.
Tip: Use the on-screen keyboard that pops up rather than the PC's physical keyboard if you run into keyboard mapping issues when communicating with the app.

Blowfish12@2013 Blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

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Sunday, March 31, 2013

Planning to buy a cell Phone? why not Build it!

David Mellis is a graduate student in the High-Low Tech lab, a group of engineering has built a custom cell phone himself. In 2005, he helped found Arduino, a company that makes easy-to-program microprocessors and sells them on simple circuit boards. The idea is to help people make electronic products without needing a degree in computer science.


custombuiltcellphone


They're popular among hobbyists, hackers and the sort of people who end up working at the Media Lab but they're hardly mainstream. Mellis wondered if he could take the idea further  and build a cell phone. "The tricky thing is getting it beyond the people who are already doing electronics stuff," he says. So he decided to see if he could design consumer electronics that you can make yourself and actually use. He started with radios, speakers and computer mice before making the leap to the ultimate consumer device: cell phone.


I'm nervous at first – I've never soldered anything in my life. That makes me a good test subject, Mellis says. "I'm interested in trying to open up the process to people who haven't really done this stuff before," he says.


Soldering felt a little like doing a colour-by-numbers painting – I was filling in spaces on the circuit board, but my understanding of how the parts fit together was pretty sparse. And a lot of components were still out of my control. I used Mellis's software, for instance, which gives the phone capabilities similar to that of a 10-year-old Nokia phone: it can make and receive calls and texts, store up to 255 phone numbers, and has a clock.


The whole thing costs about $100 in parts, excluding the SIM card. Nearly all of the components came from online electronics or hobbyist shops, he says, and the instructions and source code are available on his website. However, the GSM module, which connects the phone to the cellular network and translates audio signals to the speaker and microphone, came from a Chinese e-commerce website.


The back of the phone has spaces for working parts: the GSM module; a microcontroller, which brings signals from the GSM module to the buttons and screen; a matchstick-sized antenna; and a SIM card holder. I bought the SIM card, with its month-to-month data-free plan, from the T Mobile store – connecting to the network is one thing I can't do myself.


When it was time to laser cut the case, I used Mellis's designs. That means my phone is identical to his prototype, which he has been using as his mobile phone for the past three months. The end result is a little coarse and chunky, but ends up about the size and thickness of my Android smartphone. I'm already thinking of ways to make it my own. I could knit it a case. I could paint it. I could design a new cover and have it laser cut myself.


I'm also thinking of ways I could use it. One of Mellis's labmates wants to make a phone with a single button for his grandma to call him. Another says that if she ever has kids, she'll give them a phone that only calls her.


I'm not ready to throw away my smartphone just yet. But I might start taking this phone on holiday, so I can escape Facebook and email but still make calls. And because I built it, I'm starting to grow quite attached to it.







Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Facebook hacked, Java disabled

Facebook has been hacked and has disabled Java environment.



Facebook announced that it was hacked in its blog post after some of its employees visited an infected mobile developer website in January. It assures that user data hasn’t been compramised after its security breach.


“They gained limited visibility into our systems,” Fred Wolens, a spokesperson for Facebook, told in an interview, “We’ve accelerated our program to disable Java in our environment.”


“The company explained in the blog post that the laptops that were infected were “fully patched” and ran the most up-to-date antivirus software prior to the infection. It is currently working with law enforcement to dig into the hack’s details. The malware came through another issue with Java, the programming language that Oracle recently patched to fix a number of other issues. The Department of Homeland Security even recommended that people uninstall Java since hackers were finding new holes often.”


“After analyzing the compromised website where the attack originated, we found it was using a ‘zero-day,’ previously unseen exploit to bypass the Java sandbox (built-in protections) to install the malware,” said Facebook in the blog post. “We immediately reported the exploit to Oracle, and they confirmed our findings and provided a patch on February 1, 2013, that addresses this vulnerability.”


Facebook has not specified who the attackers are, and it very well may not know. The company does, however, say that it was “not alone in this attack” and that it wanted to tell the world about this hack quickly so that others can start their own remediation.






Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Ubuntu Phone OS Preview releasing on Feb. 21

Developers (and plenty of brave geeks) will soon be able to get a taste of Ubuntu’s smartphone version on their Galaxy Nexus or Nexus 4.



Ubuntu developer Canonical announced today that it will release a Developer Preview image, along with the necessary tools to install it, for the two Nexus devices on Feb. 21.


“Canonical says the image will be of the latest developmental milestone for the touch-based Ubuntu (which really needs a catchier name). Developers will be able to build apps using the developer preview, as well as port them to Ubuntu on other devices.”


“Our platform supports a wide range of screen sizes and resolutions,” said Canonical’s Pat McGowan, who’s heading up the release of the touch-based Ubuntu image, in a statement today. “Developers who have experience bringing up phone environments will find it relatively easy to port Ubuntu to current handsets.”


Check back next week for our full impressions of Ubuntu on the Nexus 4.






Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R. Courtesy: Canonical




Thursday, February 14, 2013

Yet another movie like ‘The social network’

Fox released the trailer for its comedy The Internship Movie following two “salesmen whose careers have been topped by the digital world. Played by Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson, the two set off to Silicon Valley to prove that they are still relevant by landing internships at Google.



It goes to show how mainstream Silicon Valley is becoming. It started with The Social Network, which took brought Mark Zuckerberg’s creation of Facebook straight into the heart of Hollywood. Now, we’ve got a focus on Google and its famed working culture of slides, great food, nap rooms, and more.

The trailer shows scenes from Google’s “campus,” including a clear dry-erase wall (that Vaughn writes on with Sharpie), a self-driving car, a Rubik’s cube competition, and a bunch of smart twentysomethings who have it out for the two “old guys.”

It’s a tale of old-timey institutions being overrun by the newer, younger, digital revolution. At one point, those crazy Google youngsters send Vaughn and Wilson off on an adventure to find “Charles Xavier,” a Stanford professor who is balding and in a wheelchair. It doesn’t end well for the pair.




Blowfish13@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Repairing Surface Pro is gonna be a headache, iFixit

Microsoft”s new Surface Pro tablet PC is a version upgrade with drastic enhancements of its Surface RT, but it is gonna be extremely hard to repair, ifixit.




The repair pros at ifixit had the Surface Pro opened and examined. The Pros found that is it was impractical or impossible to repair the device, and provided a “1 out of 10 reparability score”.


“One huge problem iFixit found is if you do not open the case perfectly, you will almost certainly break one of the four cables surrounding the display. So there’s a good chance you’ll break the damn thing just from trying to peek inside or trying to fix a minor issue.”

“Report Said

  • The battery is not soldered to the motherboard, so at least no soldering is required to replace it.

  • The SSD is removable .

  • More than 90 screws are inside this device.

  • The display assembly (comprising of a fused glass and LCD) is extremely difficult to remove/replace.

  • Tons of adhesive hold everything in place, including the display and battery.

  • Unless you perform the opening procedure 100 precent correctly, chances are you’ll shear one of the four cables surrounding the display perimeter.”






Blowfish13@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

MyTalk network security breached

“Jambox wireless speaker creator Jawbone is singing the blues today. It alerted users early this morning to a hack on its MyTalk network that left names, email addresses, and encrypted passwords compromised.”



The MyTalk network is platform where they can update, find and download apps for Jawbone devices. A customer has voluntarily reported he has received this message on twitter. It reads “Based on our investigation to date, we do not believe there has been any unauthorized use of login information or unauthorized access to information in your account.”


Jawbone says that “because your password was taken was encrypted and none of “the actual letters and numbers in your password” were revealed, hackers have ways to decrypt information”.



Blowfish13@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.




Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Top Techies and their names

Do you wish to know how top technology game players got their names. Here are few interesting ones.


Apple

“According to Steve Jobs , He named Apple so because, he was coming out of an apple farm and thought that the name was “fun, spirited and not intimidating”.

HotMail

HotMail founder Jack Smith wanted to access email via internet and wanted to name it ‘ending with mail’.

“Jack smith got the idea naming his firm as HotMail, from HTML as the name included all the letters of the word”.

Twitter

After their name idea ‘Twitch’ got rejected, co-founder Jack Dorsey says “they skimmed across the dictionary and came across the word twitter and it was just perfect.The definition was 'a short burst of inconsequential”.

Accenture

From "Accent on the future". The name Accenture was proposed by a company employee in Norway as part of an internal name finding process”

Its former name was Andersen Consulting.

Google

Google got its name so, its because co-founders misspelled the word Googol.

Acer

Acer translated its tag line into Latin meaning “Sharp, Acute, Able and Facile”.

Skype

The concept of Skype is Sky-Peer-to-Peer which was morphed to Skyper, later to Skype

Amazon.com

Founder Jeff Bezos renamed the company Amazon (from the earlier name of Cadabra.com) after the world's most voluminous river, the Amazon.

Infosys

Abbreviation of ‘Information Systems’.

Cisco

Abbreviation of ‘San Francisco’.

Epson

Named by Morphing the tag line “Son of Electronic Printer”.

Compaq

Named from the words ‘pack’, ‘Compatibility And Quality’

HTC Corporation

A abbreviation of its original corporate name, High Tech Computer Corporation.

Oracle

Larry Ellison, Ed Oates and Bob Miner were working on a project named Oracle.

Nero

Nero – Nero Burning ROM named after Nero burning Rome ("Rom" is the German spelling of "Rome")




Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Windosify android

Windows apps on Android Wine makes it happen”

Twenty years later Wine is making an new leap on Android platform. The software makes it possible for us to run Windows software on Linux and other Linux Platforms.

While Microsoft making its new leap on metro design UI, Wine is planning it port to Android enabling us to port windows applications on Android, reports Phoronix.

wineandroid




Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R. Photo Courtesy: phoronix

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