Showing posts with label SecurityTech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SecurityTech. Show all posts

Saturday, September 14, 2013

How to Make Your PC Restart Automatically After a Power Outage

How to Make Your PC Restart Automatically After a Power Outage

It's a rare office indeed that doesn't suffer power outages from time to time -- w

eather-related or otherwise -- but such events don't have to be as disruptive as they once were. Enter the trusty uninterruptible power supply, which today can not only shut your computers down safely, they can also start them back up again once power has returned. Mother Nature: 0; Tech: 1.

The 2013 Atlantic hurricane season is quietly underway. Kit is available, however, that can help mitigate potential office disruption as weather ramps up.
Uninterruptible power supplies are sophisticated battery-containing devices that supply backup power to desktop PCs during grid electricity outages, like in storms. You can pick up a UPS at office supply retailers, among other places. They're great to have because the battery lets you keep working during short outages, and they let you shut down a desktop computer normally in the event of a longer outage without losing data.

Huawei Blasts US for Illegal NSA Spying

Huawei Blasts US for Illegal NSA Spying

Today in international tech news: Huawei is disturbed about reports that the NSA spied on it; a notorious online critic is arrested in China; a hacker nabs personal details for 2 million Vodafone Germany users; and NASA confirms that the Voyager 1 has reached interstellar space.

Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei is taking a PR victory lap following reports suggesting that the National Security Agency spied on the company.
Earlier this week, Brazilian TV network Globo revealed a raft of documents that purportedly came from Edward Snowden. The files implicate the NSA, along with its British snooping ally, GCHQ, in spying on numerous targets, including a Saudi bank, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Huawei -- the same Huawei that was vilified last year by Congress and deemed a security threat because it might do something sinister like spy.
Huawei released a statement saying that it was "very disturbed" that the NSA attempted to worm its way into its networks and information. Huawei added that it "utterly object[s] to such illegal practices."

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

More research stations planned for Antarctica

More research stations planned for Antarctica

China plans to increase its presence in Antarctica with two more research stations, an official in charge of the country's scientific programs in the polar regions said on Tuesday.

The two new facilities are expected to join the existing three Chinese stations on Antarctica — Changcheng (Great Wall), Zhongshan, and Kunlun — by 2015, said Xu Shijie, an official with the China Arctic and Antarctic Administration.
Tang Jingdong, a member of the expedition team sent to Antarctica, kisses his daughter upon his return in Shanghai on Tuesday. Pei Xin / Xinhua 
He unveiled the plan the day that the Chinese research vessel Xuelong (Snow Dragon) returned from its 29th expedition to the South Pole and anchored at a Shanghai port.
The five-month expedition completed missions that include selecting the site for one of the new facilities, he said.
The new summer station will be built on Princess Elizabeth Land, which is on the east side of the continent.

 The site is 520 km from Zhongshan Station, another of China's research facilities.
"China has had a considerable advantage in the eastern part of Antarctica, and the new station will optimize the layout and strengthen our future development," Xu said.
The new facility, which will be started in the second half of this year and completed next year, will provide support for the operations of inland station Kunlun, and facilitate China's expedition on the Grove Mountains, which consists of glacier mapping and studies on climate change, he said.
The expedition team also made an eight-day exploration on Victoria Land, to select a site for another station, he added.
Xuelong set out from Guangzhou, Guangdong province, with 239 people on board on Nov 5. The expedition took 156 days, covering more than 29,000 nautical miles.
The ship sailed to a position 75 degrees south, farther south than it ever had before. This signified Xuelong's new breakthrough in ice-breaking capability, said Sun Bo, deputy leader of the 29th expedition team.
One of the accomplishments for the 29th expedition is the ice drill from Dome A, the highest ice feature in Antarctica, Sun told the media on Xuelong on Tuesday.
Three tubes of ice, 8.3 meters long altogether, were drilled from more than 130 meters under the ice cap.
Scientists from China, who have worked on the project for years, acquired the longest piece from the core of Antarctica the South Pole, which is a major breakthrough, Sun said.
The ice will provide valuable information concerning climate change in the area over thousands of years, he said.
Meanwhile, a system to observe water flow under the ice cap was put in use during the expedition this year, he said.
Developed solely by Chinese, the system has produced 3-D radar images that proved ice caps grow rapidly from the bottom. The observation disproved previous theories that ice caps are formed from above, he said. "It's an amazing phenomenon, water deep under the ice running rapidly upward, from a lower to higher point," he said.
Changes in the sea level have significant consequence to the climate but scientists know little about what causes the changes, he said. The new observation has provided information for the study of ice caps and sea level changes, he added.
Because the Antarctic is a great place for astronomical observations, China has built a large optical telescope there, and obtained its first data from it this year.
This will provide valuable information in the studies of supernovas and cosmology, Sun said.
China also plans to build another polar expedition vessel. It will be designed jointly by Chinese and Finnish companies and be built in China. The new ship will launch in 2014, according to the China Arctic and Antarctic Administration.

The U.S. Navy plans to deploy a solid-state laser weapon

 

#Sometime in fiscal year 2014, a U.S. Navy vessel will be able to add a touch of sci-fi imagination to its already formidable weapons array. A laser weapon will head to the Persian Gulf, and although it's not quite operational, the mere deployment should send a loud message to any troublemakers in the region. Drones have been shot down by prototype lasers, but weather and other conditions have to be optimal.

  

For the first time, the U.S. Navy plans to deploy a solid-state laser weapon on board one of its vessels, with the laser's debut scheduled for the Persian Gulf during fiscal year 2014. In a press release, the Navy said development and testing have resulted in a weapon that can "perform actions ranging from non-lethal disabling and deterrence all the way up to destruction."
The U.S. Navy's Laser Weapons System (LaWS)
The U.S. Navy's Laser Weapons System (LaWS)
The laser will be deployed on board the USS Ponce, an Austin-class amphibious transport dock that was retrofitted in 2012 as a staging base for helicopters and vessels that take countermeasures against mines.
The Ponce is now in the Persian Gulf. It will serve as a testbed platform for the Laser Weapon System (LaWS) when a prototype weapon system is installed on it sometime after October. However, some reports state the LaWS weapon is undergoing field tests on the Ponce.
The Navy did not respond to our request to comment for this story.
Inside the LaWS
The LaWS weapon was temporarily installed in 2012 on the guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey for tests against various targets.
LaWS is built from commercial fiber solid-state lasers strung together, controlled and directed onto targets by an MK 15 Phalanx Close-In Weapon System (CIWS), according to the U.S. Naval Institute.

The Phalanx CIWS was designed and manufactured by defense contractor General Dynamics. It consists of a radar-guided 20mm Gatling gun mounted on a swiveling base, and is used on every class of surface combat ship by the Navy, as well as on some U.S. Coast Guard vessels. Phalanx CIWS units are nicknamed "R2-D2" because of their shape, which resembles the robot character in the Star Wars movies.
The LaWS prototype reportedly cost US$32 million to build, but the Navy claims the weapon is cost-effective because each shot of directed energy costs less than $1, compared to the hundreds of thousands of dollars it costs to fire a missile.

CPXcenter