The Hayloft Boutique features dresses and tops in bright, saturated colors and peaceful neutrals are some of the items featured in the store. DN PHOTO SAMANTHA BRAMMER

Southern hospitality hits downtown Muncie in new boutique

Upon entering the tucked­ away downtown store, The Hayloft Boutique, it’s hard not to instantly feel at home. The cozy lighting, the smell of the wood cabinets drifting through the air and various sized jars of honey for sale on antique ­looking shelves make the place nothing less than inviting.





Sharks, whether they do actually do it or not, bring fears of attacks among humans, in part due to images in popular culture. (MCT illustration)
NEWS

Sharks, skateboards, survival debut on Discovery VR network

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Discovery is unleashing the first videos for its virtual reality network, Discovery VR, a fledgling service that is testing the limits and capabilities of the immersive format. The videos debuting Thursday on DiscoveryVR.com, YouTube and on Android and iPhone apps, reveal some of the promise of the medium, which covers every angle you could possibly look and is navigable by moving a smartphone around you or even clicking and dragging the viewing angle around with a mouse. In the short video, "Shark Shipwreck," sharks swim around and above you — one even bumps the camera rig — as a narrator explains that the scent of food is being released by a diver nearby.


NEWS

Report links hacking scheme to Iran

NEW YORK (AP) — Researchers have linked a sophisticated hacking scheme targeting Iranian dissidents back to Iran. A report released Thursday by the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs describes how the hackers used text message and phone-based phishing to try to get around the security of Google's Gmail and access the accounts of their targets. The attacks studied by the Citizen Lab were very similar to others connected to Iranian hackers, the report says. According to the report, some of the attacks began when the targets received text messages that appeared to be from Google saying that there had been an unauthorized attempt to access their Gmail accounts. The hackers would then follow up with a carefully crafted email notification containing personal details and stating that the login attempt had been from "The Iran," boosting the fears of people already worried about Iranian hackers. The emails contained links directing the target to a page where they could reset their password.