Why Hoverboards Keep Exploding

THOSE SELF-BALANCING SCOOTERS that everyone’s calling “hoverboards” don’t actually hover. But that’s not the strangest thing about them—that would be the fact that this year’s most popular holiday gift keeps catching on fire.



An exploding two-wheeler burned down a house in Louisiana a few weeks ago; another scooter combusted in the same state in the past week. A gyroboard caused significant damage to a home in New York a few days ago. At a mall in Washington this week, a scooterboard caught fire and shoppers were forced to evacuate. The perceived danger is significant enough that major airlines have banned the little vehicles altogether.

But what is actually causing all these fires? In the New York and Louisiana incidents, the board was plugged in and recharging. In the mall incident, the board wasn’t plugged in at all; there have also been reports of scooters bursting into flames while people were riding them. Plugged in or not, the big problem has to do with the quality of the rechargeable lithium-ion batteries inside these things. They’re almost always tucked in one of the foot rests, and they work the same way as the lithium-ion batteries in our smartphones, tablets, and laptops. They’re just a lot more prone to defects.

Jay Whitacre, Professor of Materials Science & Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, says that the problem doesn’t have to do with these self-balancing scooters themselves, but with the quality of the batteries being used. They’re cheap, and it makes sense: This is a hot (pun not intended) holiday product, the reputable models are pretty expensive, and more-affordable brands are using cheaper components to lure in shoppers that don’t want to spend a grand or more on a hands-free Segway. Predictably, a slew of cut-rate brands are flooding the market with shoddy scooters made from cheapo components.

“There are a lot of factories in China that now make Li-ion batteries, and the reality is that the quality and consistency of these batteries is typically not as good as what is found in top tier producers such as LG or Samsung,” Whitacre says. “These are known as ‘low cost li-ion batteries’ by most in the industry—they are not knockoffs or copies, but are instead just mass-manufactured cells.”

With these cheap batteries, a lot of things can cause fires. For one, the nature of a scooterboard—it can bang into stuff, smash into things at high speeds, and be abused by bros—makes the batteries susceptible to damage. It’s not just the nature of a cheap battery, it’s the nature of any lithium-ion battery. And when one of these batteries punctures, this is what happens:

In a cheaper battery, Whitacre says the separator between each battery’s anode and cathode—which are what the current flows through—may not be aligned correctly. Image it like this: The cathode is at one end of the battery, the anode at the other, and the separator is (surprise!) between them; its job is to keep them apart so nothing short circuits. An issue, in the cheaper batteries, is there could be small holes in the separator thanks to impurities in metal particles that can puncture the anode/cathode separator. In either of those cases, the damage can cause a short circuit.

“If there is an inherent defect in the cell, it will go off at some point,” Whitacre explains. “Small defects in the manufacturing or materials stream lead to the plus/minus sides of the batteries being shorted with each other after a small amount of use. When this happens, especially when the batteries are charged, a lot of heat is generated inside the cells and this leads to electrolyte boiling, the rupture of the cell casing, and then a significant fire.”

That fire can build upon itself and be hard to contain. Whitacre says all lithium-ion batteries contain highly flammable electrolytes that burn “fast and hard” when air hits them. When things get hot, common cathode materials turn into additional oxygen sources, too. “This stokes the fire even more,” Whitacre says.

This is not new at all: Lithium-ion batteries have long led to explosions—in smartphones, laptops, airplanes, cars…the list goes on. Lithium-ion batteries are great because they are small but hold a lot of energy, so electronics manufacturers are obviously going to use them. But packing all that power in comes with its risks—specifically, fire. That’s why our high-powered, long-range electric cars, like those made by Tesla, have highly advanced cooling fans and heat-sink systems. The fan is the key component inside the vehicle that keeps the battery cells operating at a safe temperature.

The batteries in hoverboards may not be the only problem, though. It’s less common, but a defective charger could also cause problems with any electronic device.

“If there is not proper protection to the cells, and if the charger is defective, the cells can be severely overcharged,” Whitacre says. “In cases of severe overcharge, even perfectly made cells will eventually fail, though a fire is not always the outcome in this case. The cell may just pop its gas vent and dry out.”

So what can a consumer do if they really have their heart set on one of these bad boys? Conventional wisdom would say they should just stick with top tier brands, but this is where things get confusing, because this product category is totally new, and no exemplars of quality have emerged. A higher price should be an indicator of better quality, but companies such as IO Hawk and Hovertrax, which make more-expensive devices, aren’t exactly perennial tech powerhouses. This “hoverboard” trend is almost certainly a fad, and it’s hard to know whether any of these companies will be around at this time next year.

Regardless of how much you’re paying, it’s almost impossible to tell what kind of fire hazard lurks (or doesn’t lurk) inside any scooter. The scariest part is that you may not find out until it’s far too late.

“There is no way to tell when buying, since the catastrophic failure likely will not manifest until the battery is fully charged and discharged several times,” Whitacre explains. “This charging/discharging mechanically exercises the guts of the cell and typically provides the ultimate trigger for the failure.”

If all of this hasn’t diffused (that pun was intended) your excitement for a board, then at the very least, you should know how to put out a lithium-ion battery fire—because it’s not with water. Keep that fire extinguisher handy, friends.

MOZILLA AXES FIREFOX OS FOR SMARTPHONES

As the mobile operating system market continues to be dominated by Android and iOS, and with Windows Phone dropping to a measly 1.7 percent market share, there doesn’t seem to be much room for competing smartphone operating systems to grow.



As such, the short-lived Firefox smartphone OS is coming to an end.

Mozilla has announced an end to its mobile operating system, and stated that it would stop developing and selling FireFox OS smartphones. Mozilla made the announcement at its developer event, “Mozlando” in Orlando on December 8, according to TechCrunch. Ari Jaaksi, Mozilla’s senior vice president of connected devices, told Digital Trends that the company is still working on new experiments with other connected devices.

“We are proud of the benefits Firefox OS added to the Web platform and will continue to experiment with the user experience across connected devices,” Jaaksi told us. “We will build everything we do as a genuine open source project, focused on user experience first and build tools to enable the ecosystem to grow.”

“Firefox OS proved the flexibility of the Web, scaling from low-end smartphones all the way up to HD TVs. However, we weren’t able to offer the best user experience possible and so we will stop offering Firefox OS smartphones through carrier channels. We’ll share more on our work and new experiments across connected devices soon.”
Mozilla launched Firefox OS in 2013, which was unique as it was designed to move away from native apps and used the HTML5 open Web standard to provide web apps. But the operating system barely picked up any steam, even after the company announced a slew of new devices running Firefox OS at Mobile World Congress earlier this year.

Shutting down Firefox OS isn’t the only news that has been spilling out from the company. Recently, Mozilla pulled ads from Firefox’s new tab page, saying that advertising “isn’t the right business for us at this time.” Ads will continue showing up for a few months to honor previous contracts, but then will come to an end. The feature began appearing to users in May of this year, when the new tab page began offering “Suggested” sites.

Mozilla is also considering dropping support for its email client, Thunderbird. While the service may not shut down completely, the company is looking to put more effort into developing its Firefox browser. Mozilla also announced a new ad blocker for iOS 9 called Focus by Firefox, aimed at stopping trackers.

GOOGLE WALLET NOW LETS YOU TEXT MONEY TO YOUR CONTACTS

After Wallet was replaced by Android Pay as Google’s mobile payment framework, it remained as the company’s platform to send money to people.



Up until now, Google Wallet required an email address to send money to a contact, but now an update lets you do it through text message. Anyone in your contact list with a phone number can receive a text message with a secure link. All the recipient has to do is enter their debit card to claim the money and they’ll see it added to their bank account almost instantly.

Peer-to-peer mobile payments is already a crowded market, with the likes of Venmo, Snapcash, Paypal.Me, and even Facebook Messenger offering similar services. Google Wallet has been around for a while, and the new text integration will certainly make it easier for people to send money to their contacts.

It’s unclear how secure the link is and for how long the link will remain active. We’ve reached out to Google for comment and will update this post when we hear back.

Recently, Google Wallet added improved contact suggestions, showing you contacts you often send money to first; a feature that lets you lock the app with a tap of a button; and the option to add a second bank account. The company brought its peer-to-peer mobile payments service to iOS in September.

Hopefully the company’s branding change doesn’t confuse too many people with Android Pay, and perhaps the ability to send money through texts may push more people to favor Google Wallet over other services.

The update is only available in the U.S., and is rolling out on Google Play and in the App Store in the next few days.

Facebook is joining Google in open-sourcing its AI hardware

Facebook is the latest in a line of tech giants that are giving away the designs of their computers servers dedicated to AI.
Built with the aid of Nvidia, the social network’s state-of-the-art server, codenamed Big Sur, can run the latest AI algorithms, and comes wielding a huge number of GPUs — built with the aid of Nvidia. At Facebook, the “deep learning” technology helps identify faces in user photos, curates the news feed, and even powers parts of the company’s upcoming “M” personal assistant, reports Wired.
But why are the likes of Google, Microsoft, and now Facebook so keen for the tech industry to get their hands on their hardware? It’s mainly due to the fact that all three companies currently don’t have the manpower to grow the technology at the pace they would like. It also doesn’t help that the entire field of deep learning researchers is still fairly small.


Facebook is hoping that by submitting its AI hardware to the Open Compute Project — a group through which it shares the designs of its computer infrastructure with other tech giants including Microsoft and Apple — it can attract more industry talent into its fold.

Yann LeCun, the man in charge of Facebook’s AI research group, believes that opening up Big Sur can help unlock design ideas for the newly created server, reports MIT Technology Review. “Companies like us actually thrive on fast progress; the faster the progress can be made, the better it is for us,” says LeCun.

In the increasingly competitive field of AI research, the recruitment process is the new battlefront for companies such as Facebook and Google. Although Google beat it to the punch by sharing its AI hardware last month, Facebook’s inception of the Open Commute Project established it as the frontrunner in open-sourcing technology. Facebook claims that this approach helps drive down costs and accelerate the growth of technology.

THE U.S. NAVY'S $700 MILLION MINE-DETECTING TECHNOLOGY FAILS AT ITS ONLY JOB

After spending a whopping $700 million on what it believes to be an advanced mine-detection system, the Pentagon announced this week its uber-expensive defense project miserably fails at the one thing it’s designed to do. Called the Remote Minehunting System (or RMS for short), the system theoretically possesses the capacity to detect underwater explosives with an advanced sonar system. However, after running a series of extensive tests on the RMS, it was concluded its high rate of failure falls significantly short of the project’s design requirements.
Developed and researched over the course of the last 16 years by the defense tech gurus over at Lockheed Martin, the RMS figured to become a staple of the U.S. Navy’s vessel fleet. Ideally, a fully operation RMS drone would launch from one of the Navy’s littoral combat ships armed with sonar it would use to search for explosives. As the drone operates through potentially mine-filled waters, it would communicate locations of detected mines to nearby ships allowing them to navigate the waters accordingly. Emphasis squarely on ideally, however.
In reality, the RMS is nothing more than an expensive piece of technology which could be more accurately described as a lemon. Over the course of its development, consistent testing revealed a notable lack of improvement regarding the system’s reliability. Tests done during September of 2014 showed a regular inability to identify and destroy underwater explosives, a conclusion which was corroborated with testing done this past August.
“Recent development testing provides no statistical evidence that the system is demonstrating improved reliability, and instead indicates that reliability plateaued nearly a decade ago,” said the director of Operational Test and Evaluation, Michael Gilmore in an August 3 memo. “[The drone] cannot be reliably controlled by the ship or communicate when it is operating out of the line-of-sight of the ship, and the towed sonar cannot detect mines consistently.”
Furthermore, additional information in the memo showed the RMS to only have the ability to operate reliably for roughly 25 hours before it began to falter — falling drastically short of the required 75-hour threshold. Despite the inherent controversy of continued failure (and harsh criticism from lawmakers), Lockheed Martin says it’s still confident in its system and trusts its effectiveness.

“Lockheed Martin continues to work closely with the U.S. Navy on the Remote Minehunting System mission package, which remains the most advanced method of mine-hunting available in the U.S. fleet,” said Lockheed Martin spokesperson Joe Dougherty. “We remain confident the RMS is the most mature system to identify and destroy mines in challenging conditions without putting sailors or high-value capital ships at risk in a minefield.”
The RMS’ next round of testing is already scheduled for early 2016 as the Pentagon’s undersecretary of defense for acquisition Frank Kendall plans to give the tech a comprehensive review. Though unless it begins to show marked improvement in reliability and accuracy, it’s safe to assume the system won’t be making much of a splash for the U.S. Navy anytime soon.

XIAOMI MI 5 RUMORS AND NEWS LEAKS

Rumors of a follow up to the Xiaomi Mi 4 smartphone have been gathering for a while, and although an early 2015 launch looked likely, the company revealed the Mi Note and the Mi Note Pro instead. Does this mean the Mi 5 will never arrive? According to rumors, it’s still in the works. Here’s everything we think we know about the Mi 5.

What will it look like?

In early December, two leaks gave us a look at what the Xiaomi Mi 5’s final design may be. Possibly, anyway. The first came from GizmoChina and a Weibo source, and showed the front of the phone with a black border. The Mi logo and a home button — that’s expected to house a fingerprint sensor — were the only other points of interest.

A few days later, another image was published on the Weibo social network, this time in the shape of a full render. It shows a curved 2.5D glass front panel, and a similar home button design to the first leaked image, plus there is the hint of a USB Type-C charger mounted underneath. The Mi logo is missing from its usual home in the top left of the body.
Neither images are official, and should be considered speculative until the phone is finally made official.

BlackBerry’s still got it: The Priv may have sold out at Walmart

Unlike JNCOs and beanie babies, it seems smartphone maker BlackBerry may have longevity. The embattled Canadian company surprised pundits on Friday when reports emerged that Walmart had exhausted inventory of BlackBerry’s first Android flagship, the Priv, in a single day.

The $699 Priv, which was previously only available through AT&T brick-and-mortar locations and Amazon.com, launched in Walmart earlier this week. The retailer’s website reported the smartphone “out of stock” by midday today, news which sent BlackBerry’s stock soaring 7 percent.

Bloomberg attributed the demand to both appeal and timing. The holiday season no doubt motivated some shoppers to pull the trigger early, according to the report, and the Priv, unlike other recent BlackBerry handsets, runs Android — an arguably more attractive software to potential phone buyers than BlackBerry’s cumbersome, confusing BB10.

But calls for celebration may be a bit premature. The Priv is showing as “in stock” on Walmart.com as of the time of publication, a possible indication that the initial sell out of devices was of a very small batch. Blackberry’s so far declined to comment.

Assuming today’s unprecedented sales weren’t just a quirk of inventory management, though, BlackBerry could be well on its way to meeting the fiscal goals for its smartphone division that it’s publicly outlined. In an interview with The Verge, CEO John Chen pegged the company’s break-even point at 5 million devices a year, and has repeatedly expressed a willingness to cut loose the phone business if it falls short of that benchmark. BlackBerry has its work cut out for it; the company sold a mere 800,000 devices in Q3 of this year.

Perhaps in recognition of that stark fact, Blackberry’s working to expand the Priv’s availability and network. Verizon recently announced that it’d offer the phone “soon.” And T-Mobile told CNET in November that it was “definitely talking with Blackberry” and “may have something to report” in the coming weeks.

In our review of the Priv last month, we called Blackberry’s Android slider relatively high marks for a beautiful display and excellent keyboard, calling it “the first reason to consider a Blackberry in years.”

Mavin star Di'Ja Gets Married


The singer, who is extremely private, got married two days ago December 10th in Kaduna. I've asked but no one is saying who she married...:-). Congrats to her!

Meet the lady who supposedly split Diddy and Cassie up



Cassie declared yesterday that she was single again and numerous idea it was a direct result of Diddy's recharged association with his babymama, Kim Porter, yet as indicated by blogger B. Scott, it's a woman named Gina (left). What they composed beneath... 

Cassie said a final farewell to Diddy the Sunday after his Revolt Music Conference in Miami on the grounds that while he arrived — he had another lady with him! That as well as the same lady was with him the weekend earlier in Atlanta for the BET Hip Hop Awards. 

Her name is Gina Huynh and she's been around for a short time. A year ago, Diddy took Gina and her companions to the All-Star diversion in New Orleans. News apparently found its way back to one of Cassie's homegirls and sh*t hit the fan, yet they could move past it. 

Anyway, after Cassie discovered that the two revived back in October she close things down with Diddy and skipped away to South Africa to film 'Nectar 3.' Since she's been out of the nation, she's declined to accept his calls, answer his writings, and she even ventured to square her administration so they wouldn't reach her for his benefit! 

On the off chance that you were pondering where those a large number of roses originated from that showed up on Cassie's Snapchat — they were from Diddy attempting to connect. 

On the other hand, Cassie's worn out on his sh*t and this Gina young lady truly is the straw that broke the camel's back. There's likewise been some jabber about Diddy getting the chance to near his VP Ericka Pittman. 

Anybody can see that the two have been rough. She was missing from ALL of Diddy's birthday celebrations and the one affirmation of his birthday she gave was a neighborly Instagram yell out that is subsequent to been era