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Intel Silicon Photonics Chip Is World's Fastest (and Prettiest) [Intel]

Intel Silicon Photonics Chip Is World's Fastest (and Prettiest) [Intel]

MIT's Tech Review has the scoop that Intel's wizards have come upwith a new chip entirely made out of silicon that "can encode 200 gigabits of data per second on a beam of light" versus the measly 100 Gbps that the fastest optical networks currently churn at—which aren't made of silicon. Which mea

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Pentax P80 Is Less Than an Inch Thick, but Has 12 Megapixels, Rapid Face Detection and 720p Video Recording

Pentax P80 Is Less Than an Inch Thick, but Has 12 Megapixels, Rapid Face Detection and 720p Video Recording

Pentax's P80 camera doesn't really do anything that original or spectacular for its time—the 12.1 megapixel sensor, 720p, 30 fps video recording, face detection and 0.8-inch thickness are all pedestrian compared to other cams—BUT it is $200. The P80 can even detect faces at an angle and

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Coming Soon: Mind-Reading Cell Phones

Coming Soon: Mind-Reading Cell Phones

What if cellphones knew what sort of moods we were in? What if they could anticipate to whom we'd crave to talk? What if they knew which calls we're waiting for? If Intel has its way, they soon will. The cell phones of 10 years ago look like ancient relics compared to the smartphones of today. Bu

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Why More Megapixels Isn't Always More Better

Why More Megapixels Isn't Always More Better

Between all the new digital cameras pooped out before the upcoming PMA show and the crazy cameras buried inside cellphones at MWC, it's a good time to go over why more megapixels isn't necessarily better. So, the nutshell explanation of how a digital camera works is that light lands on a sens

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DFX Audio Enhancer 9.103 For All + KeyGen

DFX enhances your music listening experience by improving the sound quality of MP3, Windows Media, Internet radio and other music files. With DFX you can transform the sound of your PC into that of an expensive stereo system placed in a perfectly designed listening environment. Renew stereo depth, b

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Mozilla Firefox 3.5.2 Update

Mozilla Firefox 3.5.2 Update

Changelog: Chrome privilege escalation due to incorrectly cached wrapper Crashes with evidence of memory corruption (rv:1.9.1.2/1.9.0.13) Location bar and SSL indicator spoofing via window.open() on invalid URL Heap overflow in certificate regexp parsing Compromise of SSL-protected communica

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Powershot SD780 Is the Puny Point-and-Shoot Canon Employees Wanna Take Home

Powershot SD780 Is the Puny Point-and-Shoot Canon Employees Wanna Take Home

Canon's got a bajillion cameras laying around, but this little guy, the Power SD780, is the one that most of the Canon reps said they want to stick in their pants and take home. That's because it's really teeny and the easiest to stick in your pants, and it pulls off the square form factor really n

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Physicists Devise Warp Drive Plans for Traveling Faster Than Light [Science]

Physicists Devise Warp Drive Plans for Traveling Faster Than Light [Science]

Warp drives, those vague constants of science fiction movies, might actually become real, allowing for travel faster than the speed of light. According to two physicists from Baylor, they've come up with a concept for a warp drive that would shrink space, allowing for a craft to jump ahead vast dist

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Use Linux to Scan Unusable Windows Drives for Viruses

Often, even if we do catch a virus, it’s not so difficult to eradicate it using installed antivirus—but if your system has been crippled, try using Linux to scan the drive for viruses instead.

As any Linux veteran knows, one of Linux’s greatest uses is fixing unbootable drives—recovering files, deleting files, and even killing viruses. For those of you that aren’t quite as well-versed in Linux, technology blog gHacks has a tutorial for doing just that, though we recommend a few tweaks to their process.

If you have another machine already running Linux, as gHacks suggests, then you’ll have a pretty easy time with this—all you need to do is install some antivirus, hook the infected drive into your Linux machine, and go to town. However, we know that not everyone has an extra Linux machine just floating around—so we recommend using a Live CD with antivirus pre-installed, or, even better, a live USB stick on which you can install antivirus yourself (the USB solution is likely easier in the long run, since I have yet to find a Linux Live CD with a GUI-based antivirus program pre-installed). You’ll have to make the live USB yourself, but this is a pretty easy process using previously mentioned Usbuntu Live Creator or UNetbootin. However, these require a working Windows computer, and if your only PC is the infected one, you’ll have to download, burn, and boot from the Ubuntu Live CD (available here), and under System > Administration, use their easy-to-use Live USB creator.

After making the Live USB stick, boot into it (you may have to set your boot priority in your BIOS, directions for which can be found in step 2 of this post), and install antivirus on it—gHacks recommends F-Prot, but if you don’t want to buy a copy of F-Prot just for this, all of our Hive Five antivirus favorites have Linux versions, and open-source favorite ClamAV (pictured above) is available from Synaptic Package Manager (along with the Clamtk GUI for it—just search for clamav and clamtk in Synaptic [available under System > Administration] and install both packages). Start it up from Applications > System Tools, set it to scan your Windows drive and you’re good to go.

Note that if your BIOS does not support booting from USB, you’ll need to make a boot disk that allows it to—which, unfortunately, requires a bit of command-line-fu, and then you’re right back where you started with the command-line-requiring Live CDs. If you know of any Linux Live CDs that contain an Antivirus program with a GUI, let us know in the comments!

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