How $100 And Knowledge Of Wireless Protocols Could Bring Cities To A Standstill

Cesar Cerrudo is Chief Technology Officer for IOActive Labs, a security consultancy with a global presence and deep expertise in hardware, software, and wetware assessments. He leads the team in producing ongoing, cutting-edge research in areas including Industrial Control Systems/SCADA, Smart Cities, the Internet of Things, and software and mobile device security. Also, he has hacked into the devices used by traffic systems in Washington, DC, New York, Seattle, and San Francisco, and found profound vulnerabilities in each. He surmises that the ease with which a sophisticated hacker who, unlike him, has malevolent intentions could bring major world cities to a stand-still as traffic lights could go off of their timers.

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DOOGEE F5, el económico phablet Android de gama media que te hará olvidar la gama alta

DOOGEE F5

Hace unos años, conseguir un dispositivo Android con buen rendimiento requería pagar un buen dinero por él, dado que la gama alta era la única que no disponía de lo que conocemos como lag. Los tiempos han cambiado, la gama media cada vez está más fuerte y para muestra un botón: el nuevo terminal Android DOOGEE F5.

Este terminal es una versión mejorada y con un diseño más cuidado del DOOGEE F3 Pro, un terminal que podemos llamarlo gama media-alta, o bien gama media premium, según de la forma que se mire.

DOOGEE F5: excelente relación calidad/precio

Para hacernos una idea de la interesante y económica propuesta que nos presenta la firma china hacemos un resumen a sus especificaciones. Comenzamos con su panel IPS de 5,5 pulgadas con resolución 1920 x 1080 FullHD, procesador MediaTek MT6753 de ocho núcleos, GPU Mali-T720, 3 GB de RAM LPDDR3, 16 GB de almacenamiento interno ampliables con tarjetas microSD de hasta 64 GB, cámara frontal de 5 megapíxeles y trasera de 13 megapíxeles, batería de 3.000 mAh y sistema operativo Android 5.1 Lollipop.

La hoja de especificaciones no termina aquí, ni mucho menos, porque cuenta con conectividad 4G LTE, Dual SIM, lector de huellas dactilares en la parte trasera y carga rápida. Además, su cuerpo es metálico, para ofrecernos la mayor resistencia ante cualquier golpe no deseado.

A diferencia de otros, este sí cuenta con la banda 800 MHz que usamos en España, por lo que permitirá exprimir nuestra tarifa de datos con 4G a la mayor velocidad posible. Lo único que se echa en falta es el chip NFC, pero no olvidemos todo lo que nos ofrece por un ridículo precio.

En resumen, un terminal con prácticamente todo lo de un gama alta como el rendimiento, almacenamiento, calidad de materiales y a un precio menor que otros terminales con hardware más modesto como el Motorola Moto G 2015.

¡Lo quiero! ¿Dónde lo puedo comprar?

Puedes hacerte con el DOOGEE F5 en la tienda online GearBest por sólo 139 dólares, que al cambio resultan 125 euros en color gris, gris oscuro y champagne. Eso si, aún es una reserva, pues estará disponible el 30 de septiembre que comenzarán a realizarse los envíos.

GearBest | DOOGEE F5 4G Phablet (139 dólares / 125 euros)

DOOGEE F5 frontal DOOGEE F5 horizontal DOOGEE F5 botonera DOOGEE F5 lateral DOOGEE F5 trasera

¿Y tú que piensas? Pásate por DOOGEE F5, el económico phablet Android de gama media que te hará olvidar la gama alta para dejar tu huella.

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Publicado recientemente en Andro4all

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Un vistazo a Rolly, el curioso teclado enrollable de LG

Uno de los cacharrillos más simpáticos que han pasado por portada en las últimas semanas ha sido Rolly, el teclado enrollable de LG. El accesorio ha estado en IFA mostrándose para deleite de los asistentes, haciendo gala de un cuerpo compacto que se …

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Live photos offer the first real look at the Nokia C1 Android phone

The Finnish gods of rebirth have sent an omen – live photos of the Android-powered Nokia C1. To be clear, that’s Nokia Nokia, not the Microsoft sub-division. The handset looks pretty much just like the renders we saw earlier.

Interestingly, the screen is now reported as 5″ 1080p, rather than 720p, which was the original rumor. Also, it allegedly runs Android 6.0 Marshmallow (pretty vanilla by the looks of it) on an Intel Atom chipset (with 2GB of RAM). From the photos it’s still not clear if the phone is made of metal or plastic.

Of course, the phone won’t come out until next year. That’s when the company is scheduled to make its return to the phone business. However, R&D and manufacturing will be based in China.

Source (in Chinese) |…

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Sony Xperia Z5 Premium 4K display goes under our microscope

Sony stole the show at IFA by introducing the world’s first 4K display in a production smartphone, the Xperia Z5 Premium. The debate is still ongoing as to the practical use of the ridiculous 806ppi density, but there’s also been a fair share of skeptics claiming that the smartphone doesn’t even have an actual 4K panel and has a 1080p one instead.

The doubts have been additionally fueled by the fact that the most obvious way to ascertain the panel’s resolution – taking a screenshoot and checking the details, yields 1,080 x 1,920 pixel images. We did it too. Various apps we downloaded off the Play Store tell the same story – 1,080 x 1,776 pixels is the reported result, with the missing 144 pixels in height taken up by the on-screen buttons.

Out comes the microscope. What the software tried to fool us into believing, optics quickly exposed not to be the truth. Our shot reveals the teeny-tiny subpixels that comprise the Z5 Premium’s display, and there’s so many of them.

Expectedly, the subpixels are arranged in an RGB fashion, but a somewhat unorthodox one. Immediately noticeable is the herringbone pattern which changes direction every fourth row, with adjacent rows offset by a subpixel to either side.

That poses the question what happens to straight vertical lines, and the most obvious answer is some sort of subpixel rendering which employs neighboring pixels. It’s either that, or the resolution is simply so high that the subpixel arrangement doesn’t interfere with what you see with a naked eye.

We’ve also included our microscope shot of the OnePlus 2 here for comparison. It’s a 5.5-inch RGB panel too, but with “only” 1,080 x 1,920 pixels resolution, and its subpixels look huge compared to those of the Xperia Z5 Premium. The herringbone pattern is present too (as is, in fact, on most RGB LCD displays), only here it’s on a smaller scale – each row has its own slant, and the direction alternates with every row.

Which brings us back to the question of reported resolution. It’s entirely possible that Sony has opted to keep the interface rendered at 1080p most of the time for better efficiency, only switching to full-blown 4K when the displayed content requires it. We’re speculating here, but if the intended purpose of the display is indeed some sort of VR use, then the respective app might be able to trigger the screen to go into 2160p.

It’s also worth noting that we’ve been dissecting a pre-production unit with non-final software, so our findings may very well not apply to commercially available devices. For all we know, the retail units may be working in 4K full-time.

Hypotheses aside, the 2,160 x 3,840 pixels display of the Sony Xperia Z5 Premium is very much…

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Hoy jugamos: ‘Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain’

Y es el turno de uno de los títulos que más esperábamos en este 2015. Tras Ground Zeroes, Big Boss vuelve a la carga tras estar 9 años en coma profundo. ¿Quieres disfrutar del increíble prólogo del que todos hablan? Pues acompáñanos en nuestra nuestr…

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How Saudi Arabia’s pop music artists use the web to find a fanbase when they can’t play in public at home


How Saudi Arabia’s pop music artists use the web to find a fanbase when they can’t play in public at home
Most western style pop artists stay underground rather than risk performing in public although there are a handful of private shows at homes and embassies. So the web has become a lifeline for musicians like Homsi who want to share their music — something that would have been next to impossible even fifteen years ago.

September 7, 2015 at 06:54AM
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