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  • TOKYO, JAPAN - JUNE 05: In this photo illustration visual representations of the digital currency Bitcoin are seen on June 5, 2019 in Tokyo, Japan. Former Mt. Gox Chief Executive Officer Mark Karpeles held a press conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan today. Mt. Gox, once the world largest cryptocurrency exchange, collapsed in 2014 after the hacking of 650,000 bitcoins. Karpeles was arrested in 2015 and held for 11 months without bail on three criminal charges. (Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images)

    Mt. Gox exchange users may finally get to recover some of their lost Bitcoin

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    01.18.2021

    An agreement between Mt. Gox’s bankruptcy trustee and another group might allow creditors to recover as much as 90 percent of the remaining Bitcoins.

  • Loren Elliott via Getty Images

    SpaceX asks permission to take Starship on a high-altitude test flight

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    02.04.2020

    One of the next major steps in SpaceX's plans for true spaceflight will be a 12-mile-high test flight. Sometime between March and September, the company plans to launch its Starship suborbital test vehicle from Boca Chica, Texas. The Starship will travel to an altitude of 12.4 miles, or 20 kilometers. SpaceX will then attempt to land and recover the vehicle.

  • SpaceX's rocket landing test was a big success, despite the fiery explosion (update: video)

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    01.16.2015

    Elon Musk has just tweeted the first photos of the Falcon 9's "close but no cigar" hard barge landing to fellow rocket enthusiast and Oculus VR evangelist John Carmack. After saying the frames were "kinda begging to be released," he tweeted out four of them, amusingly recounting the progress of the doomed 14-story-tall ship. The problems started when the rocket section's fins "lost power and (went) hardover," which the engine couldn't counter, resulting in a 45 degree angle crash into the deck. All hell broke loose after that, as "residual fuel and oxygen combine(d)," followed by a "Full RUD (rapid unscheduled disassembly) event," aka a fiery explosion. Update: SpaceX has provided us with a Vine showing the entire crash landing, which shows how fast it went from "looking good" to "oh crap." We promise it does not disappoint -- check it out below.

  • Koush's Droid X Recovery paves the way for ROMs to come

    by 
    Tim Stevens
    Tim Stevens
    08.19.2010

    The Droid X got rooted just about a month ago, but still users are unable to run their own custom ROMs -- something seen as a basic right amongst the Android community. Now those chaps are a good bit closer to getting there thanks to a new recovery mechanism posted by Koush. What's taking so long? The security mechanisms on the Droid X are said to be "a real bitch" and, to circumvent them, Koush had to hijack a logging process that runs at boot-up. This process runs in place of that, allowing a user to restore their phone to a previous backup generated before trying to do something wild and crazy. What does this mean? ROM runners now have a means of safely retreating if they find themselves cornered (or bricked), allowing them to try more daring assaults more often, and meaning we could be only days away from Droid X users being allowed to fully express themselves.

  • CardRaider: Undelete for Memory Cards

    by 
    Mat Lu
    Mat Lu
    01.03.2007

    If you've ever accidentally deleted digital photos from a memory card before downloading them you'll probably be interested in CardRaider from ecamm. Just mount the card on your Mac with an external card reader (or even in the camera itself if it is a USB mass storage device), and CardRaider may be able to find and recover the images and even send them to iPhoto. Keep in mind that this only works because the memory locations of the files are not immediately written over when you delete a photo on your camera, so it probably won't work if you have refilled the card with more photos (or reformatted the card). Nonetheless, I can image this little utility could be a life-saver if you accidentally hit the delete key too quickly when scanning through snapshots on your camera.CardRaider is $19.95 and a demo is available.[Via MacVolPlace][Edit: as usual TUAW readers are the best. We got several recommendations for free alternatives below in the comments including: Exif Untrasher and Photorec. Thanks, guys!]