Monday, August 20, 2012

XBMC for Android available in nightly builds for that risky media fix

XBMC 11 interface

We only just learned in earnest that XBMC was coming to Android last month, and yet we're already looking at workable builds. Kermonine96 at the XDA-Developers forum has started offering his own, unofficial nightly versions of the media center front end, both for regularly supported devices with Neon processor code (most often HTC and Samsung devices) as well as Neon-free hardware, like phones and tablets carrying Tegra 2 chips. Needless to say, the alpha-grade code shouldn't be used as the heart of a mobile media center: hardware decoding isn't functional, battery life is low and even a stable picture isn't guaranteed. That said, anyone who's willing to risk a skip-heavy movie or miss out on plugins now doesn't have to receive the XBMC crew's blessing to get a preview of its Android efforts.

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XBMC for Android available in nightly builds for that risky media fix originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 18 Aug 2012 14:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/18/xbmc-for-android-available-in-nightly-builds/

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Friday, August 17, 2012

Dark Matter Exposed? Gamma-Ray Find Excites Scientists

Energetic light seen radiating from the center of the Milky Way may be the best evidence yet of dark matter, the invisible stuff thought to be hiding throughout the universe.

A new study has found a strong signal of gamma-rays ? light of a very short wavelength ? coming from the middle of our galaxy, which may be the result of exploding dark matter.

Scientists think dark matter, which seemingly makes up the majority of matter in the universe, is made of particles called WIMPs ("weakly interacting massive particles"). And WIMPs, when they get very close to other WIMPs, should annihilate each other, because these particles are thought to be their own antiparticles. (When particles of matter and their antimatter counterparts meet, they destroy each other.)

In the dense center of the Milky Way, enough WIMPs should exist that many bump into each other, exploding into pure energy that gives rise to other particles and, eventually, gamma-rays.

An abundance of gamma-rays is exactly what scientists see when looking toward the center of our galaxy with the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. In the new study, researchers found a definitive signal of gamma-rays that couldn't be traced to any known object in this region. [No WIMPS in Space? - NASA Scans For Dark Matter | Video]

'Something new'

"It's definitely something new and shining in the gamma-ray there, and it's not attributable to the existing sources in the catalog," said University of California, Irvine astrophysicist Kevork Abazajian, co-author of a paper reporting the findings submitted to the journal Physical Review D.

Abazajian, with his UC Irvine colleague Manoj Kaplinghat, searched for this light using Fermi data taken between 2008 and 2012. Previous studies by Dan Hooper, a scientist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) and the University of Chicago, also found evidence for this gamma-ray radiation, but other follow-up searches came up empty.

Abazajian said his study used the most complete data set yet and analyzed it with a comprehensive analysis specially tuned for investigating gamma-ray light in a crowded region.

"Definitely, definitely, there is a source," Abazajian told SPACE.com. "This is definitely not just a fluctuation."

However, whether this source was created by annihilating dark matter particles is somewhat less certain. It's also possible, Abazajian said, that a large group of dense, spinning stars called pulsars could be releasing the light.

However, he said, three characteristics of the detected gamma-ray radiation ? its rate of emission, the variety of particular wavelengths of the light (its spectrum), and the overall shape of the emission ? are all consistent with predictions for dark matter annihilation.

"I think it could be a very big finding," Abazajian said. "When I came across this, I was like, 'Holy cow, this is so consistent with the dark matter interpretation in many ways.' But until you can rule out the astrophysical potential sources for something similar, it's not going to be a smoking gun."

Ruling out alternatives

Fermilab's Hooper, for his part, is even more confident that scientists finally are seeing the elusive signature of dark matter.

"If you make a comparison to what they found and what we've been talking about ? we're looking at the same source," Hooper said. "I still think dark mater annihilation is the easiest way to explain the signal. I think the signal is too spatially concentrated to be coming from pulsars."

Hooper acknowledged that many astrophysicists are skeptical. "There's vigorous debate going on about the astrophysical alternatives to explain this signal," he said. "I'm of the opinion that those are difficult to make work."

Many experts are waiting for scientists in the official Fermi telescope collaboration to weigh in with their own analysis of the radiation at the center of the galaxy.

"We will have results to report of this soon," said UC Irvine astrophysicist Simona Murgia, a member of the Fermi collaboration galactic center analysis team.

Murgia praised the study by Abazajian and Kaplinghat. "This is good work and the authors have considered a number of plausible interpretations" for the data, she wrote in an email.

"I can only emphasize that it is very difficult to disentangle all the different contributions to the observed data in this region of the sky, and I think more work needs to be done to make a definitive statement," she added.

Dwarf galaxies

For confirmation that dark matter has really been found at the center of the Milky Way, scientists may have to look outside the galaxy to the small dwarf galaxies orbiting it.

Theory predicts that WIMPs, if they exist, should be annihilating each other in the centers of those satellites, too. If the same type of gamma-ray emission can be observed in these galaxies, dark matter would be strongly implicated, Abazajian said. However, studies of such dwarf galaxies have so far turned up essentially no gamma-rays.

"The real smoking gun to show if this is dark matter annihilation or not is to look deeply at these low background sources and see if you see this signal or not," he said. "If you were able to see the same rate, spectrum or morphology in several sources, that would be a real abundance of evidence."

Follow Clara Moskowitz on Twitter?@ClaraMoskowitz?or SPACE.com?@Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook?&?Google+.?

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dark-matter-exposed-gamma-ray-excites-scientists-111402983.html

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Friday, August 3, 2012

Family, Parenting & Life: Sensory Overload

Our house is loud. ?Samuel doesn't have camp the entire month of August, so we are home together or running errands everyday. ?The house is significantly louder with just him around. ?On the days all three kids are home there is no silence. ?Samuel and Joseph are always running around the house, chasing each other, laughing, screaming, fighting. ?You name it. ?Simone is getting her voice too. ?Two days ago she started to say "Uh-Oh". ?So now every time she is in her high chair she drops her food, forks, drink on the floor just so she can say "Uh-Oh." ?She is also getting in on the screaming and yelling. ?She and Joseph fight a lot over toys. ?Joseph is not a sharing type of guy. ?We are always making him share with Samuel and Simone, but he doesn't like it. ?Now if he takes a toy from Simone she starts screaming and tries to grab it back. ?The bad part about her new found voice and temperament is that she is also starting to pinch and trying to bite. ?At first we laughed because we couldn't believe she was getting so feisty, but now we are stepping in because we don't want her to do that when she starts school in September.

Okay, so besides the kids being extremely loud the workers in the basement are making my head pound. ?The framing got finished on Tuesday, then the electricians and plumbers were here yesterday and today. ?It has been constant banging and drilling. ?I am ready for the finished product. ?It will be at least two of three more weeks before it is all done.

Not only are my days filled with noise, but the nights haven't been the greatest either. ?Samuel has been having tons of nightmares. ?He wakes up and comes into our room and wants to get in bed with us. ?Normally his little heart is pounding like crazy and he is totally freaked out. ?Dave and I decided after a few nights of us being lazy and not walking him back to his room right away that we will be creating a bigger problem by letting him come into bed with us. ?So the last few weeks we have been walking him back to his room and then laying with him for a little while to calm him down and then coming back to our bed. ?Samuel never puts up a fight (other then to tell us that he thinks our bed is really comfortable and would rather sleep in our bed), but he is usually fine as soon as he gets over being scared.

He has been asking for bunk beds in his room so that he could sleep on top and Joseph could sleep on the bottom. ?He said he wouldn't come into our room anymore if Joseph was sleeping with him because then he wouldn't be as scared. ?Last night he asked if Joseph could sleep with him. ?So we set up the blow up mattress on the floor and Samuel slept in his bed and Joseph slept on the blow up mattress. ?Well, Samuel stayed in his room all night. ?He did try to wake Joseph up in the morning when he got up, but Joseph ended up sleeping until about 7am, which is better then normal too. ?Dave said we might be seeing a bunk bed in our future.

You would have thought that I would have finally gotten a good night sleep, well you would be wrong. ? Dave decided last night that he was going to snore his head off. ?For about an hour in a half last night I was kicking and punching him to get him to stop snoring. ?It was extremely annoying.

Here's hoping to a restful evening. ?I need some serious sleep.

I'm off to listen to the symphony of sounds.

Source: http://glasserhouse.blogspot.com/2012/08/sensory-overload.html

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