Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Xbox One and Microsoft websites marred by problems on launch day

Microsoft's Xbox One launch was marred by problems with its online services early on Friday which took down the official website Xbox.com, as well as microsoft.com and Office 365, Microsoft's cloud-based software service.
Users were shown error messages referencing a DNS failure.
A spokesman said services are now fully restored and said it would update customers once the cause was found, though previously component failure and a certification issue have caused outages for Azure, Microsoft's cloud platform.
The Register speculated that an internal DNS issue may be to blame but was told by Microsoft that it was still investigating.
"We can confirm that these issues were not caused by Windows Azure. We will keep our customers updated as information becomes available. The service interruption that affected Windows Azure Storage was a separate issue and has been resolved. All Windows Azure services are running as normal."
Mervyn Kelly, marketing director at infrastructure firm Ciena, said that particularly in the US, the success of internet-connected, data-hungry games consoles would depend on the underlying network.
"Without realising it, average households are beginning to slide into domestic data usage patterns that would mark them out as power users," said Kelly.
 Emanuel Jumatate hugs his new Xbox One
"The growth in demand for data-heavy networked and multiplayer games, online television and rich content sourced from the internet, all over a computer console, will undoubtedly make an impact on networks and data centres."
 Separately, Xbox vice president Phil Harrison appeared to admit that the company would struggle to meet consumer demand for the console, telling the site MCV that "there will be difficulty getting stock through until Christmas but we will do everything we can to accelerate that".
"Our job on a tactical level is to ensure we get enough supply to retailers and customers as we possibly can to meet demand, and that will be a struggle but we are doing our best," said Harrison.
A spokesman said: “We have been blown away with the demand for Xbox One by our fans. Pre-orders are over double the amount when we launched Xbox 360. We are doing everything we can to make sure Xbox fans have an Xbox One under the tree this Christmas but they should definitely shop early this year.”
He pointed to an interview with Harvey Eagle, Xbox marketing head, which explained that any short supply would be determined by whether individual retailers chose to hold back stock or not.
"We have been clear with retailers in telling them their day one allocation," Eagle told MCV in an interview earlier this week.
"It’s the retailer’s decision whether they hold back any stock for on-shelves. Currently pre-orders are in excess of supply, but ultimately we leave those kind of decisions to retailers."

More than a million Xbox One consoles sold

Microsoft on Friday crowed that more than a million Xbox One consoles were snapped up within 24 hours in 13 countries after hitting shelves for the first time in the morning.


The US-based technology titan described it as the biggest launch in Xbox history, setting a new sales record at the company.
Xbox One consoles were sold out at most retail shops, according to Microsoft.
"We are humbled and grateful for the excitement of Xbox fans around the world," said Xbox corporate vice president of marketing Yusuf Mehdi.
"Seeing thousands of excited fans lined up to get their Xbox One and their love for gaming was truly a special moment for everyone on the Xbox team," he continued.
"We are working hard to create more Xbox One consoles."
Sale of the keenly-awaited system began in more than a dozen countries including New Zealand, Australia, France, Britain, Brazil and the United States as day dawned in respective time zones.
Xbox fans queued at consumer electronics shops to be among the first to get their hands on Microsoft's beefed-up console that extends beyond gaming to online films, music, social networking and more.
"It's a big upgrade, a big change," said 23-year-old Jonathan Guerrero, who staked out a spot at the front of the line at a Best Buy electronics shop in Northern California 13 hours before the consoles went on sale a minute into Friday.
"You are jumping from okay to super great."
Hassan Ali, 34, said he queued to get an Xbox One because he has an ideal television for the rich graphics it pumps out. He described his set as a 3-D, high-definition, smart television with a 65-inch screen.
"It's kind of amazing that you can look at the game and it looks like real life," said Ali, who spoke of loving video games since his first Sega device in 1985.
Sony last week unleashed the PlayStation 4, its new champion in the long-running console war.
The Xbox One, successor to the Xbox 360, the top-selling console in North America, debuted at $500 while Sony's PS4 is priced at $400.
Sony said it sold more than a million PS4 consoles in the 24 hours after its release on November 15 in only North America.

Saying Goodbye to Winamp with One Last Spin Read more: Saying Goodbye to Winamp with One Last Spin

Effective December 20, Winamp will officially pass away. AOL is giving up on the media player it acquired in 1999, and will no longer host the software on Winamp.com.


winamp4
Perhaps you heard the news, shed a tear of nostalgia, made an off-hand llama-whipping joke and moved on. Winamp deserves more than that. This is a legendary piece of software whose responsibility for the digital music revolution goes hand-in-hand with Napster. Illegal file sharing services merely provided the tunes. Winamp let us play them.
As AOL has been gracious enough to give us a month’s notice before yanking Winamp from its servers, it’s only appropriate to give the 16 year-old MP3 software another listen.

Xbox One: A $499 PC for your living room

The Xbox One is Microsoft's first new gaming console in eight years. It's a quality piece of hardware but it's also noteworthy because Microsoft is using it to make a statement.
 First look at the new Xbox One
Video game consoles are no longer just gaming consoles. They're computers for your living room.
So how does the Xbox One, which goes on sale for $499 on Friday, fare with that in mind?
Hardware: The Xbox hardware is big ... even by next-generation console standards. It's bigger than a cable box and Blu-ray player, but thankfully smaller than an AV Receiver.
That said, the Xbox One is tastefully designed, which makes its size less of an issue. The combination of finishes, textures and angles make the all-black box fun, but not loud. You won't have to hide this away from public sight.
On the inside, the Xbox is now powered by the same developer-friendly 8-core processor as Sony's PlayStation 4. It also has 8 gigabytes of RAM, but its approach to using these components is very different from its competitor.

Air Force sending 29 satellites into space at once

Look to the heavens along the East Coast on Tuesday night, and you might be able to see the Air Force blast 29 satellites into orbit at once.
 A Minotaur rocket similar to the rocket pictured is set to launch from Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on Tuesday.
The 29 satellites, the most ever launched at one time, will be aboard a single Minotaur I rocket scheduled to lift off from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia at 7:30 p.m. They include the main payload, the Air Force's Space Test Program Satellite-3, and 28 tiny satellites called CubeSats.
The CubeSats are aptly named. Also called nanosatellites, they are small cubes, about 4 inches on each side, weighing about 3 pounds and with a volume of about a quart.
Among the CubeSats is the TJ3Sat, built by the students of Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Alexandria, Virginia. It will be the first satellite made by high-schoolers to go into space.
Once in orbit, the "TJ3Sat will allow students and amateur radio users the opportunity to send and receive data from the satellite. Students and other users from around the world will be able to submit text strings to be uploaded to the TJ3Sat website," according to Orbital Sciences Corp, the developer and manufacturer of the Minotaur rocket.
The students have been working on the TJ3Sat for seven years, according to Orbital.
Lost world -- what happened to Mars?
The Air Force satellite that is the main payload will conduct a variety of experiments during its expected 13-month mission.
The launch will also be evaluated as part of a certification process of the Minotaur rocket for commercial use. That process is being conducted by the Federal Aviation Administration, NASA says.
Falling satellite burns up upon re-entry
Orbital says the 29 satellites should achieve orbit in a little less than 12½ minutes after the rocket ignites.
NASA says the launch may be visible from northern Florida to southern Canada and as far west as Indiana.

Google to remove image of dead teenager from Maps

Search engines has decided to eliminate from its Charts support a satellite tv picture that shows a deceased youngster.Kevin Barrera was taken during 2009. His whole body was found near a train line in Richmond, Florida.

Jose Barrera told KTVU-TV he had asked Search engines to eliminate the picture, which appears to show a cops car and authorities around a whole body, out of regard for his son.It said changing the picture could take eight days.Mr Barrera said: "When I see this picture, that's still like that occurred last night. And that brings me back to a lot of remembrances."Google Charts vice-president Mark McClendon said: "Since the media first approached us about the picture, we've been looking at different technological solutions."Google has never multiplied the alternative of modified satellite tv visuals from our maps before, but given the situation we wanted to make an exemption in this case."


Google Charts uses a selection of images gathered by satellite tv and at road level by digital cameras installed on automobiles.The satellite tv images tend to be between one and three years old.Unlike for the images in its StreetView support, there is no service to report satellite tv images.

The search massive takes a number of steps to secure comfort of individuals when gathering images for StreetView, such as clouding encounters and permit dishes.

"Selfie' named by Oxford Dictionaries as word of 2013

"Selfie" has been known as as phrase of the season by Oxford Dictionaries.The phrase has progressed from a market public networking tag into a popular phrase for a self-portrait picture, the publishers said.Research recommended its regularity in the British terminology had improved by 17,000% in the last season, they included.

Other elevated to your shortlist terms involved "twerk" - a smutty dancing move conducted by Miley cyrus Cyrus - and "binge-watch" - significance viewing lots of TV."Schmeat", significance a form of various meats artificially created from scientific cells, was also a competitor.The phrase of the season prize enjoys the innovation of British sound system when encountered with public, governmental or technical change.
In 2004, the phrase of the season was "chav", in 2008 it was depression and last season it was "omnishambles".To are eligible, a phrase need not have been created within the last 12 several weeks, but it does need to have become popular or significant in that period.
Selfie is determined by Oxford Dictionaries as "a picture that one has taken of yourself, generally with a smart phone or web camera and submitted to a public networking website"In 2004, the phrase of the season was "chav", in 2008 it was depression and last season it was "omnishambles".To are eligible, a phrase need not have been created within the last 12 several weeks, but it does need to have become popular or significant in that period.

Nasa's Maven Mars mission launches

 The orbiter was published on an Atlas V bomb from Florida's Cpe Canaveral Air Force Place at 13:28 local time (18:28 GMT).Assuming the $671m (£416m) objective remains on track, the sensor / probe will have a 10-month vacation to the Red World.

Maven is going to study Mars' high environment, to try to understand the procedures that have scammed out the world of most of its air.Evidence indicates the globe was once surrounded in a dense cover of fumes that reinforced the use of fluid h2o at its area. Today, the air stress is so low that free h2o would immediately steam away.

Maven was published from the Atlas V's upper-stage some 53 minutes after leaving the Cpe Canaveral pad. The sensor / probe then had to open its residential solar sections and orientate itself into a vacation settings.

"Everything looks good. The alerts are coming in fine, and so far the systems that are on are confirming back great. We're heading out to the Red World," verified Bob Mitchell, Nasa's Expert project manager.

During the course of the long vacation, Expert will perform four velocity improvements, with the first planned to occur on 3 Dec.
These manoeuvres will ensure the orbiter comes at the right place and a chance to go into orbit around Mars on 22 Sept, 2014. The present-day environment of Mars, consisting mostly of co2, is extremely slim, with environmental stress at the outer lining area just 0.6% of the Planet's area stress.The Martian scenery, though, maintains programs that were surprisingly cut by numerous, h2o - proof that the globe had a much more dense environment in the past.