UAC

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  • Aaron Josefczyk / Reuters

    Drone hits a commercial plane for the first time in Canada

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    10.16.2017

    A twin-engined commercial prop aircraft has struck a drone for the first time in Canada, says Minister of Transport Marc Garneau. The Skyjet Beech King Air 100 was on approach to Jean Lesage International Airport in Québec City when it hit an unknown type of UAV. Garneau said that the drone was flying at around 1,500 feet, three miles from the airport -- 500 feet above the legal limit. The plane landed safely and sustained only minor damage, but "it could have been a lot more serious," he told the CBC.

  • LG screen software left Windows PCs open to malware

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    04.09.2015

    Taking a shortcut to make your software work properly is a bit like walking across a frozen lake: it saves plenty of time until the ice starts to crack. LG's currently suffering from a similar sort of oh shit moment as it learns that one of its display utilities may have exposed countless PCs to malware. In a piece for Developers Couch, Christopher Bachner has alleged that the Screen Split utility that ships with LG's ultra wide monitors breaks your computer's most basic security provisions.

  • Firefox 12 now available for download, Windows users get silent updates

    by 
    Donald Melanson
    Donald Melanson
    04.24.2012

    It doesn't yet include the opt-in system for plug-ins that Mozilla is working on, but Firefox users can now download an update that adds a few other new features and new tools for developers. If you've lost track, that means were now at version 12.0, and the biggest addition this time around is reserved for Windows users -- they'll now get silent updates that bypass the User Account Control prompt. Apart from that, you'll now get line numbers when you view a page's source code, along with a number of other more minor fixes and performance improvements. You can find the full release notes at the source link below.

  • US Navy Fire Scouts will automatically spot pirates, give 30 seconds to comply

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    04.08.2012

    War. What is it good for? Well, if new use of technology by the US Navy has anything to do with it, finding Pirates for a start. By upgrading its existing Fire Scouts with new 3D laser imaging tech, it's hoped that the drones will be able to recognize the small ships used by these unscrupulous seafarers. The system, known as LIDAR (Light Detection And Ranging, also known as LADAR) uses millions of laser pulses reflected off an object to create the three-dimensional image, which could then referenced against known pirate ships from a database. Ultimately, human operators will make the final call, to avoid any ED-209 style mis-understandings. That said, if you're taking the dingy out past the Californian breakwaters this summer, you might want to keep the stars and stripes in clear view, as that's where the Navy will be running its initial trials.

  • NASA hopes to send ARES rocket-powered robot plane to Mars

    by 
    Joseph L. Flatley
    Joseph L. Flatley
    10.13.2010

    While President Obama signs off on the future of space exploration, NASA is on the move, developing new ways to get a look at the fourth planet from the sun. We've seen our share of rovers (and one sweet hopper) in this space, and now the gang at the Langley Research Center is hard at work on a rocket-powered, robotic Mars-bound airplane. ARES, or Aerial Regional-Scale Environmental Surveyor, is 16.4 feet long, made from a lightweight polymer-carbon composite material, and has a wingspan of 21 feet. "A powered airplane flying a mile above the surface can obtain measurements over inaccessible parts of Mars and collect a whole bunch of data that no rover can collect," according to atmospheric scientist Joel Levine. Perhaps most exciting, the machine would be able to fly over the southern highlands, an area whose mountains, craters, and volcanoes have hindered exploration in the past. Sadly, all good things must come to an end -- and ARES is no exception. Although its flight would last for a mere two hours, it could cover over nine hundred miles of unexplored territory, collecting data on everything from chemicals and signs of water to the magnetic field in this region.

  • MQ-8 Fire Scout UAV resists its human oppressors, joyrides over Washington DC

    by 
    Joseph L. Flatley
    Joseph L. Flatley
    08.27.2010

    A Northrop Grumman MQ-8 Fire Scout UAV strayed into restricted airspace above Washington DC after departing Patuxent River Naval Air Station in Maryland on August 2, the result of a software logic flaw that caused the operator to momentarily lose contact with the drone. Programmed to circle when communications are severed, the chopper failed to follow its failure protocol, instead heading twenty-three miles on a north/northwest trajectory -- which could have had serious consequences had it been equipped with 70mm Hydra rocket pods or Hellfire tankbuster missiles. Although this type of incident is rare, it is not unheard of: last September the Air Force had to take down an MQ-9 Reaper in Afghanistan when it failed to adhere to failure protocols after dropping communications with the ground. At least, that's what we'd like to believe... the alternative scenario is too frightening to consider.

  • UAC's MC88 compact keyboard: fanboys of the world, unite!

    by 
    Thomas Ricker
    Thomas Ricker
    11.16.2006

    Nestled somewhere between a rollable keyboard and 103-key monster on the portability spectrum you'll find this compact, MC88 keyboard from Japan's UAC. It measures in at 337×143×31-mm (13.3×5.6×1.2-inches) and for whatever reason, they say it's for the "MacMini" although they tout its ability to work with Windows too. Who would have thought the Apple Command-key and Microsoft Windows-key could exist so peacefully side-by-side? It features a USB 2.0 "hub" which is actually just a single port out the right-side for your mouse with the whole slab connecting back to your PC or Mac via some kind of freaky USB Y-cable -- plug in the silver-plated cable for USB 1.1 connections or the gold-plated tether for USB 2.0... what the!? Anyway, for ¥9,800 (about $83) you fanboys can play nice and share. Oh it won't be cheap and it'll be confusing but nobody said humility was easy.[Via Impress]