Links between brain ‘communities’ affect how we do stuff

The connections within and between regions in our brain may affect our performance of both complex and simple tasks, a new study suggests.

“Think of your brain as you would think of a university… Individuals organize themselves into densely interconnected communities…”

The brain is organized into different subnetworks, or “modules,” that support distinct functions for different tasks, such as speaking, memorizing, and expressing emotion. The researchers examined how high or low brain modularity—the degree to which the modules communicate with one another—impacts performance of simple and complex tasks.

“Think of your brain as you would think of a university,” says Simon Fischer-Baum, an assistant professor of psychology in Rice University’s School of Social Sciences and one of the study’s authors. “Individuals organize themselves into densely interconnected communities, like the dormitories and sports teams, though individuals within these groups also have connections with people outside of those groups.

“Brains are the same way: Brain regions are organized into communities with lots of connections between regions in the community and fewer connections to regions outside of the community. But people’s brains are different. Some people have brains that are better described as having rigid community structure—or higher modularity—while other people have brains without such rigid community structure—or lower modularity,” Fischer-Baum explains.

Throughout the course of the study, modularity was measured on a scale from zero to one. Zero represented low modularity—brains in which every region of the brain is just as likely to communicate with any other region; one represented high modularity—brains that can be divided into communities of brain regions whose members only communicate with each other.

In the study, the researchers had 52 participants (16 men, 36 women) between the ages of 18 and 26 undergo functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), a process that measures brain neural activity by detecting changes associated with blood oxygen levels. The neural activity of each participant was studied by fMRI for 21 minutes while they were at rest.

If neural activity increased and decreased in two areas at the same time over the course of the scan, it was an indicator that the two areas were connected. Using these data to measure which brain areas were connected to each other, the researchers determined the extent to which participants’ brains could be described as having communities of brain regions that communicate only with each other.

The researchers then took the participants through a series of behavioral tasks, including complex tasks that tested their memory while simultaneously doing simple arithmetic and simple tasks such as indicating the direction an arrow was pointing when their attention had been already drawn to the location the arrow would appear.

The researchers found that participants with high-modularity brains were more successful at performing simple tasks than individuals with low-modularity brains. In the experiment measuring reaction time to the arrows, individuals with high modularity performed nearly twice as successfully (a reaction time advantage of 58 milliseconds for knowing where the target would appear) as individuals with low modularity (34 milliseconds advantage).

Brains of people with dyslexia don’t adapt to new stuff

However, participants with low-modularity brains had greater success with complex tasks than participants with high-modularity brains. For example, those with low modularity correctly recalled 86 percent of the items in the memory task, while individuals with high modularity correctly recalled only 76 percent.

Fischer-Baum says that this effect can be considered relative to the decline in working memory with age, which is a hallmark of the cognitive effects of aging. Based on previous research, this difference in memory recall between the high- and low-modularity subgroups of highly educated, healthy young adults is roughly equivalent to the difference between memory recall at age 20 and at age 70.

Randi Martin, a professor of psychology in the university’s School of Social Sciences and the lead faculty author on the study, says that one of the major strengths of the study is that the relationship between simple and complex tasks and high and low modularity was predicted by a very general theory of biology proposed by coauthor Michael Deem, a professor of biochemical and genetic engineering and a professor of physics and astronomy at the university.

According to this theory, high-modular systems in general should perform better on simpler tasks that take less time to perform, while low-modular systems in general should perform better on more complex tasks that take more time to perform. This study demonstrates that this general principle of biology applies to cognitive neuroscience.

The authors say the research has important implications for understanding the brain as a network.

“There is an increasing focus in cognitive neuroscience on thinking of cognitive function as emerging from interconnected regions of the brain, rather than existing in a single brain region,” Fischer-Baum says. “While other groups have found correlations between brain network properties and performance on different tasks, our study is the first to show that these relationships can be understood by a more fundamental theory of modularity in biological systems.”

Bird brains suggest how ours got so big

The researchers will report their work in the journal Cognitive Neuroscience.

The T.L.L. Temple Foundation and the Center for Theoretical Biological Physics under a National Science Foundation grant supported the research.

Source: Rice University

The post Links between brain ‘communities’ affect how we do stuff appeared first on Futurity.

via Futurity.org
Links between brain ‘communities’ affect how we do stuff

This woman publicly calls outs catcallers by taking selfies with them

This woman publicly calls outs catcallers by taking selfies with them

Being catcalled is very uncomfortable and women often don’t know how to face the men who do it. But a young student from Amsterdam, Noa Jansma, found a way to deal with them. For a month, she was taking selfies with men who catcalled her and shared the photos on her Instagram account. For the captions, she used the sentence these men had told her. This may sound odd, but by doing this, Noa faces the catcallers and publicly shames them. And most of all, she sends an important message – catcalling is not a compliment.

As Noa tells Het Parool, she had the idea in her mind for a while, but she didn’t dare to take the first step. But when she finally asked the first catcaller to take a selfie with him, he replied “with enthusiasm.” And so, her project began.

Noa set up an Instagram profile named Dear Catcaller, with a goal to create awareness about the objectification of women in everyday life. Over the course of one month, she took selfies with the men who catcalled her and posted them on Instagram. As she writes, “many people still don’t know how often and in whatever context the ‘catcalling’ happens,” which is why she decided to take this step.

Noa says she is amazed that no man has refused to have his photo taken. Over the course of one month, only one man asked her why she wanted to take the selfie. All the others gladly accepted it and grinned behind her, as she stood in front of them flat-faced.  As Noa points out, and I agree – this shows that catcallers are completely unaware that they did something wrong. If they knew their actions were wrong or punishable, I assume they wouldn’t want to have their photo taken.

Although the photos on Instagram show catcallers she faced over one month, they are not all there. As Independent writes, sometimes Noa didn’t feel safe enough to ask for the selfie, or the catcaller had already gone away.

After one month, Noa stopped posting photos. As she tells Het Parool, she could go like this indefinitely, but she doesn’t want to. She considers she has addressed the problem, and she doesn’t want any more attention from the catcallers. Her idea now is to pass the account to different girls around the world to share their stories, but as she writes, it’s a process that will take some time.

Just as Noa writes, catcalling is not a compliment. It’s uncomfortable and often frightening. Personally, I found it frustrating, annoying, and I often even feel scared and unsafe when it happens. As a matter of fact, it’s a form of harassment, and as Independent writes, it will be punishable in Amsterdam from January 1, 2018.

As for Noa’s project, I sort of have mixed feelings about it. I support it, of course, but I’m concerned about her safety. I admire her for having the guts to approach these men creeps, take photos, and publicly call out on them. I believe she sends a message that needs to be heard. But on the other hand, I hope she won’t get into any unpleasant or dangerous situation for doing it. Either way, I support her and agree that catcalling is harassment, not a compliment. And I hope the catcallers will get to realize it.

[via Independent]

via DIYPhotography.net – Photography and Studio Lighting – Do It Yourself
This woman publicly calls outs catcallers by taking selfies with them

How Research Flipped One Writer’s Opinion On Gun Control

Opinions can change over time. People often change their opinions over time and for a variety of reasons. It’s often productive to look at how these ideas shifted because they may give some guidance on how to get others to change their minds.

At the Washington Post, of all places, there’s a story of one writer’s journey away from being pro-gun control.

Before I started researching gun deaths, gun-control policy used to frustrate me. I wished the National Rifle Association would stop blocking common-sense gun-control reforms such as banning assault weapons, restricting silencers, shrinking magazine sizes and all the other measures that could make guns less deadly.
Then, my colleagues and I at FiveThirtyEight spent three months analyzing all 33,000 lives ended by guns each year in the United States, and I wound up frustrated in a whole new way. We looked at what interventions might have saved those people, and the case for the policies I’d lobbied for crumbled when I examined the evidence. The best ideas left standing were narrowly tailored interventions to protect subtypes of potential victims, not broad attempts to limit the lethality of guns.
researched the strictly tightened gun laws in Britain and Australia and concluded that they didn’t prove much about what America’s policy should be. Neither nation experienced drops in mass shootings or other gun related-crime that could be attributed to their buybacks and bans. Mass shootings were too rare in Australia for their absence after the buyback program to be clear evidence of progress. And in both Australia and Britain, the gun restrictions had an ambiguous effect on other gun-related crimes or deaths.
By the time we published our project, I didn’t believe in many of the interventions I’d heard politicians tout. I was still anti-gun, at least from the point of view of most gun owners, and I don’t want a gun in my home, as I think the risk outweighs the benefits. But I can’t endorse policies whose only selling point is that gun owners hate them. Policies that often seem as if they were drafted by people who have encountered guns only as a figure in a briefing book or an image on the news.
Instead, I found the most hope in more narrowly tailored interventions. Potential suicide victims, women menaced by their abusive partners and kids swept up in street vendettas are all in danger from guns, but they each require different protections.

In other words, writer Leah Lebresco found that the best way to curb gun violence is to focus on the noun (“violence”) rather than the adjective (“gun”). She’s completely correct.

As noted earlier today here at Bearing Arms, mass shootings are terrible but rare. Most violence takes place at a smaller, more personal level, and any sound policies intending to reduce violence need to focus on those crimes, not the horrific events of Las Vegas.

Lebresco states that she’s not actually pro-gun as many might think of it. She has no interest in owning a firearm and she believes the risks of doing so outweigh the benefits. However, she also is pretty plain about no longer buying the anti-gun rhetoric parroted by people like Michael Bloomberg and Shannon Watts.

To be honest, that’s enough.

Lebresco is taking the approach I wish more people who hate guns would take: If you don’t want guns, don’t buy guns. That’s an approach I think we can all get behind.

 

The post How Research Flipped One Writer’s Opinion On Gun Control appeared first on Bearing Arms.

via Bearing Arms
How Research Flipped One Writer’s Opinion On Gun Control

Swimming Pool Epoxy Putty

I’ve used Epoxybond Epoxy Putty for everything from its intended purpose – fixing leaks in swimming pools – to fixing a crack in the case of a garbage disposal under the sink. It’s a two part epoxy, just cut off equal amounts of both sides, mix by folding between your hands for a few minutes, and then apply. You have five to ten minutes to get in place. It’s thick, not runny, sticks to anything and works underwater! Like a rigid plastic when set. It’s relatively cheap for the amount you get, doesn’t need to be sealed up tight between uses (but it doesn’t hurt), and is available at any pool supply place or on Amazon.

— John Wolf

Epoxybond Epoxy Putty For Swimming Pool Spa Cracks, Leaks, Tile, Plaster Repair ($15)

Available from Amazon

via Cool Tools
Swimming Pool Epoxy Putty

Webinar October 4, 2017: Databases in the Hosted Cloud

Databases in the Hosted Cloud 1

Join Percona’s Chief Evangelist, Colin Charles as he presents Databases in the Hosted Cloud on Wednesday, October 4, 2017, at 7:00 am PDT / 10:00 am EDT (UTC-7).Databases in the Hosted Cloud 1


Today you can use hosted MySQL/MariaDB/Percona Server for MySQL/PostgreSQL in several “cloud providers” as a database as a service (DBaaS). Learn the differences, the access methods and the level of control you have for the various public databases in the hosted cloud offerings:

  • Amazon RDS including Aurora
  • Google Cloud SQL
  • Rackspace OpenStack DBaaS
  • Oracle Cloud’s MySQL Service

The administration tools and ideologies behind each are completely different, and you are in a “locked-down” environment. Some considerations include:

  • Different backup strategies
  • Planning for multiple data centers for availability
  • Where do you host your application?
  • How do you get the most performance out of the solution?
  • What does this all cost?
  • Monitoring

Growth topics include:

  • How do you move from one DBaaS to another?
  • How do you move from a DBaaS to your own hosted platform?

Register for the webinar here.

Securing Your MySQLColin Charles, Chief Evangelist

Colin Charles is the Chief Evangelist at Percona. He was previously on the founding team for MariaDB Server in 2009, worked in MySQL since 2005 and been a MySQL user since 2000. Before joining MySQL, he worked actively on the Fedora and OpenOffice.org projects. He’s well known within many open source communities and has spoken on the conference circuit.

 

via Planet MySQL
Webinar October 4, 2017: Databases in the Hosted Cloud

The Netgear ReadyNAS 524X is a data hoarder’s delight

As a member of the Data Generation, I’ve found that my photos, videos, and documents quickly expand to fill their containers. A standard USB drive is quickly replaced by another, larger one while home network file servers fall by the wayside as they get full, old, and dangerously lossy. In short, it’s time for the big guns.

That’s why I was pleased to try out the Netgear ReadyNAS 524X, part of Netgear’s new network attached storage series aimed at small businesses and home users. The diskless version costs about $800 and can hold up to 40TB.

This NAS is essentially a small computer. It can run apps including tools for BitTorrent downloads and remote backups and it uses XRAID to ensure hot-swapability on each drive. This feature, enabled by RAID6, allows for the catastrophic failure of up to two of the drives but causes a deep hit in storage capacity. This also means you can literally pull a disk out of this thing randomly and have the entire setup still run. If you want to know your real-world sizing with RAID6 enabled this calculator can help. I tested the performance by pulling two disks and everything worked perfectly although the reindexing process lasted over 24 hours each time the device was hit.

Setup

Setting up the drive is quite simple. To add a drive you simply pull out a carriage and snap the drive into place without tools. When you boot up for the first time you can begin a formatting process that brings all the drives online simultaneously. Then, when you need to swap one out, you can shut down the system manually and replace the drive offline. All you have to do is connect an Ethernet cable – this doesn’t support Wi-Fi, and fire it up.

Once the NAS is up and running the system appears as a Windows and MacOS share. The drive can also support DLNA and UPnP and you can even SSH into the box where you’ll find a standard Debian installation. This also means you can run cron jobs and even side load apps, a feature quite useful if you want to manage files with a little more granularity. Further, the NAS supports ReadyCloud, Netgear’s own remote access protocol that lets you see files remotely. Further, you can connect the drive to Amazon S3, Google Drive, and Dropbox and sync folders back and forth. This makes it perfect for backing up live projects and maintaining a record of your remote files.

Home users will be happy with the Plex support – Plex will scan any folder on the drive and serve it up piping hot to your TV – along with BitTorrent and NZB clients which are useful, obviously, for downloading public domain video from public servers.

Finally if you stuff a load of music on here you’ll also be able to access iTunes shares by clicking a button in the admin system. In short, this thing does it all.

Latest Crunch Report

Apps

If you dig deeper in the ReadyNAS app store you’ll find a number of useful tools including a solution for recording surveillance video as well as systems for managing syncing across servers. The app store, in fact, is the coolest part of this NAS, turning it from a simple storage server into something immensely useful.

For example, you can install Drupal, an HTML5 based SSH terminal, and a Docker management tool right from the main admin screen. Many of the tools are fairly functional and aimed mostly at programmers who want to simulate remote storage conditions in their non-production code.

Because this NAS runs a Intel D1508 Dual Core 2.2GHz processor with 4GB of memory I haven’t yet been able to max this thing out although Netgear recommends a maximum of 80 users. I personally tried many of the streaming apps and found them to be far more efficient than anything I’ve used before, including a Plex server running on a 2014 iMac. Because this is essentially a Debian server it’s quite capable and quite compact.

Performance

In terms of performance this kit is obviously as good as your LAN network but I did a bit of testing using my home network and saw nothing untoward. If you’re looking for solid benchmarks StorageReview posted a nice rundown but I’ll show you what I found.

I used a tool called Helios LanTest to read and write files to the drive.

The results showed real-world performance in my home network and modeling the same tests on the device itself took far less time – a few seconds. An 8GB library of music took about an hour to transfer over that same network – on par with anything else I’ve seen in the space.

Bottom Line

The 524X is a beast. I’m used to using smaller devices with single drives and adding this to my network opened up a whole new world of, well, data hoarding. It’s a file server, a testbed, a media streamer, and more and it’s also a Debian machine and a great way to back up your computers. While the price is a little high – about $800 for a diskless unit – you’re essentially getting a mini-PC with some definite RAID6 smarts. While it might be overkill for folks with a few baby pictures to back up, it’s definitely worth a look if you keep lots of stuff on lots of servers. You will have so much more room for activities.




via TechCrunch
The Netgear ReadyNAS 524X is a data hoarder’s delight

This Discounted Standing Desk Mat Is Basically a Fidget Toy For Your Feet

TerraMat, $80

With the advent of affordable monitor risers, it’s never been easier to become a part-time or full-time standing desk user, but it’s important not to skimp on the anti-fatigue mat when you decide to make the transition.

Most of these mats are flat slabs of foam, and that’s better than nothing. But what if you could do more with your feet than just balance on them? That’s the idea behind TerraMat, which is essentially a fidget toy for your feet. In the middle, you can stand on it like a normal mat. But off to the sides, you’ll find massage mounds. On the front, a balance bar and “pressure peaks.” On the back, there’s a power wedge to stretch your calves. Surrounding it all is a support track to help you stretch your hip flexors. Basically, it gives your feet things to do while the rest of your body is busy filling out spreadsheets or whatever.

Advertisement

Amazon’s selling the mat for an all-time low $80 right, or $20 less than usual. That price is only available today though, so get yours before this deal takes a seat.



via Lifehacker
This Discounted Standing Desk Mat Is Basically a Fidget Toy For Your Feet

The Best USB-C Adapters, Cables, and Hubs to Connect Old Accessories to Your New Laptop

USB-C–to–USB-A adapter

For nubs, we also tested Nonda’s USB-C to USB 3.0 Mini Adapter and Rankie’s Hi-speed USB-C to USB-A 3.0 Adapter. Both exhibited the proper charge and data speeds. The Nonda has the nicest feeling build quality, but it’s the widest, meaning you can’t use two at a time on a MacBook Pro; it’ll even block wider cables to the second port. The Rankie model just felt cheaper than the rest we tested.

For cables, we also tested Anker’s USB-C to USB 3.1 Adapter, Google’s USB Type-C to USB Standard-A Adapter, iXCC’s USB Type C to USB 3.0 Type A Adapter, and RAVPower’s Type C Adapter. All performed well, and nothing in our tests indicated that they’re structurally inferior, but we prefer the Apple adapter at its current price.

USB-C–to–USB-C cable

Because we relied on USB-IF certification and Nathan K.’s testing, we didn’t independently test any other USB-C–to–USB-C cables. We’ll continue to keep an eye out for noteworthy cords and update as necessary.

Video/USB-A/charging adapters

HooToo’s HT-UC001B Shuttle USB 3.1 Type-C Hub with Power Delivery for Charging, HDMI Output, SD Card Reader and 3 USB 3.0 Ports is identical to our HDMI-less pick, but it costs significantly more. It’s not a bad option if the price drops into the same range as the Satechi and Sanho adapters.

Anker’s USB-C to 2-Port USB 3.0 and 1-Port USB-C Hub with HDMI Port is functionally the same as our two picks, but is physically larger.

Apple’s USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter only has one USB-A port and normally sells for a crazy high price. Even with Apple’s current discounted pricing, it’s expensive for what you get.

Satechi’s Aluminum Multi-Port Adapter worked great in our testing, but it’s larger and more expensive than our picks thanks to the addition of an Ethernet port and SD and microSD slots. It’s worth considering if you need all those features.

Monoprice’s Select Series USB-C HDMI Multiport Adapter is a knock-off of Apple’s HDMI adapter, but the spacing of its ports prevents you from connecting a flash drive and an HDMI plug at the same time.

Aukey’s CB-C26 was promising thanks to four USB-A ports and a low price. Unfortunately, we heard an annoying coil whine during use, so we don’t recommend it.

USB-A hubs

Anker’s Premium USB-C Hub (3 Ports) is more expensive than our HooToo pick and lacks the HooToo’s SD card slot.

Satechi’s Type-C USB 3.0 3 in 1 Combo Hub costs more than the HooToo but has one fewer port; on the other hand, it has SD and microSD slots. We like the design, which allows the adapter to sit flush against the computer’s body, rather than hanging off by a cable. However, we worry about the stress such a design puts on your computer’s USB-C port, and Amazon reviews (30 percent of which include 1-star ratings at the time of publication) frequently mention the hub breaking down or getting dangerously hot.

The design of Monoprice’s Select Series USB-C to 4x USB-A 3.0 & USB-C (F) Adapter makes it difficult to fit USB plugs in adjacent ports simultaneously.

Aukey’s CB-C23 is inexpensive but especially large compared to the competition. Our testing also showed that one of the ports provided more power than the rest, which was strange and a bit concerning.

USB-C–to–DisplayPort cable

Accell’s U188B-006B USB-C to DisplayPort Cable, Plugable’s USB-C to DisplayPort Adapter Cable, and StarTech’s USB-C to DisplayPort Adapter Cable are identical to one another and work as well as our top pick—they just lack the clip that “locks” the DisplayPort plug in place. Don’t hesitate to get one of these if the price is particularly good or if our pick is out of stock.

USB-C–to–VGA adapter

Accell’s U187B-004B USB-C to VGA Adapter and Aukey’s Aluminum USB-C to VGA Adapter both lack screw holes to hold the attached cable in place. It’s a small fault, but considering that everything else performed just as well, it’s enough to knock these cables out of the running.

Aukey’s USB-C to VGA Adapter, Belkin’s USB-IF Certified USB Type C (USB-C) to VGA Adapter, and Cable Matters’s USB 3.1 Type C to VGA Adapter are all functionally equivalent to our pick, but they cost more and offer no advantages.

CableCreation’s Gold USB 3.1 Type C (USB-C) to VGA Adapter worked well in our testing, but enough customer reviews cite failure over time that we don’t feel comfortable recommending this adapter.

USB-C–to–HDMI adapter

The product listing for Cable Matters’s USB 3.1 Type C to HDMI 4K UHD Adapter says it works with Apple’s 2016 MacBook Pro models, but we can’t recommend it, because too many customer reviews on Amazon say they’ve experienced issues using it with those computers.

Plugable’s USB-C to HDMI 2.0 Adapter has a warning that explicitly says “NOT compatible with late 2016 MacBook Pro.”

Accell’s U187B-002B USB-C to HDMI 2.0 Adapter and StarTech’s USB-C to HDMI Adapter both work well, but are more expensive than our pick and don’t provide any advantages.

USB-C–to–USB-A cable

Nathan K. has verified two other USB 3.1 Gen 1 cables: the Anker USB-C to USB 3.0 Cable and the Anker PowerLine+ USB-C to USB 3.0 Cable. The former is more expensive than our pick with worse build quality, while the latter is about double the price of our pick. The braided cable of the PowerLine+ may be a bit sturdier than our pick’s, but we don’t think most people need to pay extra for the rugged design. The PowerLine+ did work well in our testing, if you happen to prefer its looks or want something that’s overbuilt.

Belkin offers a good alternative to the Google USB 3.1 Gen 2 cable with its Apple-exclusive USB-A to USB-C Cable (USB 3.1). The plug housings are a bit bigger than our pick’s—the only real downside.

USB-C–to–DVI adapter

StarTech’s USB-C to DVI Adapter requires a cable, as most adapters do, but it’s just as expensive as our pick and doesn’t add any value over the other options.

via The Wirecutter
The Best USB-C Adapters, Cables, and Hubs to Connect Old Accessories to Your New Laptop

The Best Online Cloud Backup Service

The four other online backup services that made my cut based on price and must-have features are all reasonably good but lacking in one or more ways that Backblaze and IDrive are not.

Service Acronis True Image 2018 Backblaze ElephantDrive IDrive Online Backup Carbonite Zoolz Cloud Archive for Home
Price for one year $100 $50 $120 $70* $60 $70*
Storage at above price 1 TB Unlimited 1 TB 2 TB Unlimited 1 TB*
Computers covered at above price 1 1 Unlimited Unlimited 1 5*
Cost for 1 TB per month $8 $4 $10 $6 $5 $6
Family/group plan cost $150/year (3 computers) or $160/year (5 computers) N/A See note N/A N/A $250*
Family/group plan storage 1 TB N/A See note N/A N/A 4 TB*
Family/group plan computers covered 3 or 5 N/A See note N/A N/A 5
Versioning 20 versions Unlimited Unlimited 10 versions Windows only Unlimited
Encryption AES-256 AES-128 + public/private key AES-256 AES-256 128-bit Blowfish AES-256
External drive as source Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows HomePlus plan ($80/year) or better only Yes
Network drive/NAS as source Mapped network volumes only No NAS devices only Yes No Yes
External drive as destination Yes No No Yes Windows HomePlus plan ($80/year) or better only Yes*
Personal encryption key Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows Only Yes
Folder syncing Windows only No Yes Yes* Yes No
File sharing No No Yes Yes Yes Yes
Retention of deleted files/old versions Indefinite (user preference) 4 weeks Indefinite (user preference) Indefinite* 30 days Indefinite
Deduplication No Client-side, block-level Client-side, file-level No No Client-side, block-level
Seeding No No No Yes No Yes
In-place restoration Yes No No Manual Yes Yes
Physical restore media No Yes Yes Yes Available only with Prime plan for Windows ($150/year), and costs $120 No
Continuous backups No Sorta Yes Yes, for files under 500 MB No No
Scheduling interval Minimum once per hour Automatic on file change, once per day, or manual Automatic on file change, once per day, once per week, or once per month Automatic on file change or minimum once per day Minimum once per day Minimum once per 12 hours
Throughput (default settings, Mbps) 25.35 19.58 18.87 27.1 4.64 16.83
Throughput (customized settings, Mbps) 19.82* 22.4 18.87 27.1 16.83
Native Mac/Windows apps Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Notes Premium subscription details shown here. One-time purchase, no storage: $50. One-year Advanced subscription, 250 GB: $50.*Default = Optimal setting; customized = Maximum setting. Oddly, Maximum was much slower than Optimal in my tests. Paid accounts permit you to back up an unlimited number of devices and also set up three sub-accounts.ElephantDrive uses a Java app. *Price: Discount offered for first year. IDrive also offers a $100 per year, 5 TB plan.*Sync: Uses separate storage space.*Retention: User-specified pruning is optional. Claims upload speeds of up to 10 Mbps. *Price and storage: $70 per year for Family plan (1 TB); $250 per year for Heavy plan (4 TB). Promotional prices are currently $40 and $100, respectively.*External drive: Local storage can be used only in addition to cloud backup.

 

Acronis True Image 2018 offers a one-year subscription with 1 TB of storage for $100; you can also choose a less-expensive plan with only 250 GB of storage. True Image selects the whole drive by default, backing up every single file on your disk, so you could restore your entire drive if you wish—but that’s a process I wouldn’t attempt while using a broadband connection with a data cap. (I recommend clicking Change Source to manually choose what to back up.) Oddly, encryption is not enabled by default, but you can easily turn it on before starting a backup. True Image offers a personal encryption key, versioning (up to 20 versions), indefinite retention (user-configurable), delta updates, and in-place restoration, all of which are good things. It also lets you select external drives, including mapped network drives, as either the source or the destination.

In my tests, with True Image’s default network settings, throughput was a speedy 25.35 Mbps—the second-fastest result after IDrive. But when I changed the data-upload speed from Optimal to Maximum, throughput inexplicably dropped to only 19.82 Mbps. I repeated the test several times to confirm this finding, and the Maximum setting was always slower for me.

However, True Image runs only on a schedule, not automatically when files change, with a maximum frequency of once per hour (and a default of once per day). It does not perform deduplication, which means you may waste time and storage space backing up identical or near-identical files. And the service offers no option to seed a backup by sending in a hard drive, or to receive backed-up files on physical media. Folder syncing across devices is an option, but only for Windows users.

The Windows version of Carbonite ranks far ahead of the Mac version. Windows users get versioning and a personal-key option; they can also choose higher-priced Plus and Prime plans with more features, such as the options to back up external hard drives and receive restored files on physical media. But those higher-priced plans make Carbonite considerably more expensive than Backblaze, and Carbonite still provides only 30-day file retention, a maximum backup frequency of once per day, and no seeding option. You must also manually select all the files and folders to back up. And although the company says that it no longer throttles the connection after backups reach a certain total size, and that it offers “upload speeds of up to 10 Mbps” (which is to say, the speed is artificially restricted on the server side), the maximum throughput I saw in my tests was only half that, at 4.64 Mbps.

A screenshot of the Windows version of Carbonite.
The Windows version of Carbonite lets you use a personal encryption key; you can select the option during setup or after the fact (as shown here). Mac users don’t have this option.

ElephantDrive recently increased its storage-space options such that you can now get 1 TB of storage for $10 per month (previously, $10 per month got you only 100 GB), and it offers both versioning and a personal-key option, so I tested the service for the June 2017 update to this guide. ElephantDrive requires Java, so you see a prompt to install Java if it’s not already present on your computer. Unfortunately, like many Java apps, ElephantDrive has an awkward interface, and because ElephantDrive requires a standard Java installation, it subjects your computer to unnecessary security risks. ElephantDrive backs up your Desktop, Music, and Pictures folders by default (not your entire Home folder), but you can make changes to the selection before the backup runs.

Finally, two other issues make this service far less attractive than Backblaze or IDrive. First, ElephantDrive offers deduplication but not delta updates—make even a tiny change to a file, and it uploads the whole thing again, wasting time, bandwidth, and storage space. Second, although the app offers versioning, the interface makes seeing and restoring older file versions unnecessarily cumbersome. On the plus side, in my tests its measured throughput was a healthy 18.87 Mbps, at which rate you could back up about 212 GB per day; the company also has a version of ElephantDrive that runs on many NAS devices, giving you a good way to back them up to the cloud.

I had a hard time getting past the awkward and unintuitive interface of Zoolz Cloud Archive for Home. Once I figured it out and manually added the folders I wanted to back up, I tested throughput at a respectable 16.83 Mbps. However, none of the settings I tried that were supposed to improve throughput—including Turbo mode and multi-threaded uploads—improved that figure. Zoolz backs up your files a maximum of once every 12 hours, which is far too infrequent. And the restoration process is by far the most confusing I’ve ever seen: You have to launch a separate app to restore files, and although you can restore them in place, finding the ones you want is unreasonably hard. The display doesn’t even distinguish files from folders except by color, and it doesn’t offer a hierarchical or tree display—you must double-click folders endlessly to drill down to the file you want, and repeat for each additional thing you want to restore. Zoolz offers 1 TB of storage for $10 per month, though multiple computers can share that space.

We also tested SOS Online Backup for a previous update to this guide; at the time, it met our criteria for inclusion. Since then, the company has changed its pricing, and the service no longer comes close to offering at least 1 terabyte of storage for less than $10 per month. We tested it only as a Windows option, as the service has no personal-key option for Mac.

Finally, a few words about some well-known online backup services I didn’t test because they failed to make my cut for one reason or another:

  • Depositit: Prices start at £10 (about $16) per month for 3 GB.
  • DollyDrive: This service starts at $5 per month for 500 GB and offers 1 TB for $10 per month (the company also offers a plan with unlimited storage for a single computer for $6 per month), but it’s Mac-only.
  • IBackup: When I initially researched the field of services, I dismissed IBackup because it offered only 10 GB of storage for $10 per month, well below my requirement of 1 TB; in addition, I came across a good number of terrible customer reviews. The company later increased storage to 1 TB for the same $10 per month, bringing it in line with the other services in my final list, and I made a note to investigate it further. On my most recent examination, however, the company was back to charging $10 per month for only 10 GB, with a “limited-time” promotion of $10 per month for 500 GB or $20 per month for 1,000 GB. With or without the promotion, it didn’t meet my price cutoff.
  • JustCloud: The last service I cut from contention, JustCloud charged almost $260 for two years (just over $10 per month) for 1 TB of storage at the time of my research, but it didn’t offer a personal-key option.
  • Livedrive: Although the price—$8 per month for unlimited backups from one computer—isn’t too bad, neither the site nor its software makes any mention of a personal-key option. And all the servers appear to be located in the UK, which is likely to mean slower performance for people in North America.
  • Memopal: A price of €79 per year (about $90) gets you only 500 GB of storage.
  • MozyHome: Mozy charges $6 per month for just 50 GB of storage from one computer, or $10 per month for 125 GB of storage from up to three computers.
  • Norton Online Backup: A fee of $50 per year gets you 25 GB of storage for up to five computers.
  • Rhinoback: This service offers 20 GB for $50 per month; 1 TB costs an astonishing $1,300 per month.
  • SpiderOak One: Although I like everything about SpiderOak One’s security and privacy offerings—private keys are the only option—this service is just outside my price-range cutoff, at $12 per month for 1 TB. It offers syncing across devices but otherwise has little to recommend it over Backblaze.
  • SugarSync: Just 250 GB of storage costs $10 per month.

via The Wirecutter
The Best Online Cloud Backup Service

Building a Gigantic Blender Is the Best Use For an Unwanted Lawnmower

GIF

What do you do when you move into a house without a lawn and no longer have any need for your electric mower? That’s easy, you strip it down and use its spinning blade to build an over-sized blender that can slice and dice much more than just chunks of ice.

Giaco Whatever’s latest experiment easily makes the list of things you definitely shouldn’t build at home—unless you’ve got a super high-speed camera and can capture fascinating footage of soda cans and ping-pong balls getting shredded to bits. In addition to processing decidedly non-food objects with ease, we bet this monstrous blender could whip up a bathtub full of margaritas faster than you can say Jimmy Buffet.

[YouTube]

via Gizmodo
Building a Gigantic Blender Is the Best Use For an Unwanted Lawnmower