How dye-sensitized solar cells, which are lightweight, bendable, and manufactured cheaply, can capture light indoors to charge small gadgets like headphones
Well, a lot of your gadgets, anyway. And also, internet of things devices everywhere. — Indoor solar cells — doing real work with just the light from your lamps — are here, and they're finally good...
A look at WireGuard, a lightweight and simple open source VPN tool and protocol that will soon be part of the Linux kernel
compared with tens of thousands of lines in other VPNs. That doesn't make it more secure, but it does make it easier to find and fix problems. https://www.wired.com/... @z3rotrust : “...adding WireGua...
Vast Data emerges from stealth, raising $40M Series B, for “exabyte-scale” enterprise storage
Smartphones, tablets, laptops, PCs, and internet of things devices generate more data today than at any time in history — close to 2.5 quintillion bytes, some say.
Samsung Electronics says its has begun mass production of Exynos i T200, its first processor optimized for Internet of Things devices
Cho Mu-Hyun / ZDNet :
Samsung Electronics says its has begun mass production of Exynos i T200, its first processor optimized for Internet of Things devices
Samsung Electronics has begun production for its first Internet of Things-optimised Exynos processor. — Samsung Electronics has launched the Exynos i T200 …
A profile of Sigfox, the French startup building a global communications network for Internet of Things devices
Chris O'Brien / VentureBeat :
Intel launches Atom E3900 processors targeting powerful Internet of Things devices in automotive, industrial, and video markets
Ryan Smith / AnandTech :
Internet of things devices, which are often impossible to patch, will remain insecure unless government steps in to regulate the industry
Bruce Schneier / Motherboard :
Internet of things devices, which are often impossible to patch, will remain insecure unless government steps in to regulate the industry
Brian Krebs is a popular reporter on the cybersecurity beat. He regularly exposes cybercriminals and their tactics, and consequently is regularly a target of their ire.
Internet of things devices, which are often impossible to patch, will remain unsecure unless government steps in to regulate the industry
Brian Krebs is a popular reporter on the cybersecurity beat. He regularly exposes cybercriminals and their tactics, and consequently is regularly a target of their ire.