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27 May 13:22

The Backyard Barbecue Playlist

by Eric Ravenscraft
The Backyard Barbecue Playlist

Memorial Day is coming up! If you’re one of the lucky folks who get a long weekend, you’re probably ready to fire up the grill to celebrate. Today’s playlist can help.

This playlist, from Spotify user Asa Holt, combines some of the best classic rock and golden oldies for the perfect holiday weekend playlist. It features artists like Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Rolling Stones, Pearl Jam, Creedence Clearwater Revival, and the Eagles. Hit play, fire up the grill, and enjoy your weekend.

Welcome to our Featured Playlist series. Each week, we’ll share a new themed playlist, embedded for your convenience! You can copy the track list to your service of choice, or listen right here. Have a sweet playlist of your own? Share it with us in the comments below!

Background photo by slgckgc.

27 May 13:13

Acer announces two cheap 2-in-1 notebooks

by Sam Byford

Just ahead of Computex Taipei, which kicks off next week, Acer has announced a pair of inexpensive 2-in-1 notebooks. The Switch V 10 and Switch One 10 both feature detachable 10-inch IPS displays and quad-core Intel Atom processors; the main differences are that the V 10 is available in more colours and has a fingerprint reader, plus a USB-C port for charging, data transfer, and video output.

The Switch V 10 will be out in the US in the third quarter of the year for $249, while the One 10 will be available in July from $199. We'll be at Computex next week to find out what those pretty low prices will get you.


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27 May 13:12

Facebook begins tracking non-users around the internet

by Amar Toor

Facebook will now display ads to web users who are not members of its social network, the company announced Thursday, in a bid to significantly expand its online ad network. As The Wall Street Journal reports, Facebook will use cookies, "like" buttons, and other plug-ins embedded on third-party sites to track members and non-members alike. The company says it will be able to better target non-Facebook users and serve relevant ads to them, though its practices have come under criticism from regulators in Europe over privacy concerns. Facebook began displaying a banner notification at the top of its News Feed for users in Europe today, alerting them to its use of cookies as mandated under an EU directive.

"Publishers and app developers...

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26 May 22:15

Twitter tunes into Spotify to soundtrack its audio cards

by Josh Constine
Spotify Twitter Whistle while you tweet with the new partnership between Twitter and Spotify. Now you can listen to 30-second previews of songs in your timeline and Moments thanks to Twitter’s audio cards that now support Spotify. Twitter first launched audio cards in 2014 with iTunes previews and later worked with SoundCloud. Now the most popular on-demand subscription streaming service will lend your… Read More
26 May 20:47

The World's Weirdest Skyscrapers

by noreply@blogger.com (Karl Robinson)

The world's weirdest skyscrapers – in pictures: From the Elephant Building to the ‘Death Star’, architects and developers are going to ever stranger lengths in their efforts to stand out from the crowd. Where will this ridiculousness end? Click all pictures to enlarge.

Above - Elephant Building, Bangkok: Designed in 1997 by one of Thailand’s most celebrated architects, Sumet Jumasi, this triple-towered oddity pays homage to his country’s national animal. Boasting 32 storeys of offices, shops and luxury apartments, the building’s ‘ears’ are multi-storey balconies while the tusks are home to its management company.

                            
Porsche Design Tower, Miami: Amazingly, America’s ‘cars in towers’ narrative is not done yet. Porsche – better known as manufacturers of flashy sports cars – is building a 60-storey skyscraper in Miami. But rather than regular ground-level or subterranean parking, the pièce de résistance of this $560m building is its three drive-in elevators. When the building is completed next year, its drive-in lifts will allow residents to bring their beloved vehicles right up to their apartments. Apparently there’s space for up to four cars in some units.

Umeda Sky Building, Osaka: Osaka’s 19th-tallest building consists of two 40-storey towers connected by a ‘floating garden observatory’ on the top two floors. But just for a bit of added fun, the empty space between the buildings is criss-crossed by the world’s highest glass escalator. Those suffering from vertigo may wish to look away now.

Castalia, The Hague: In the Netherlands, this pair of towers is desperate to blend in with its nation’s architectural heritage – not easy when you’re 104 metres tall. Constructed in 1998 using the core of an older building, the renovation added a 35m Dutch gabled roof on each tower – purely for decoration. Home to the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport, Castalia is more fondly known as ‘the tits’ of Den Haag, thanks to those perky rooftops.

Abraj Al-Bait Towers, Mecca: Rising over the holy mosque of Mecca in western Saudi Arabia, this 600m Big Ben copy (also known as the Makkah Royal Clock Tower Hotel) is the third tallest building in the world – with the world’s largest clock face, naturally. The tower looms over what was once a desert but is now home to luxury apartments, shopping malls and hotels for all the pilgrims who travel to this holiest of sites at this time every year.

Aqua, Chicago: Designed by American architect Jeanne Gang in the city that invented the skyscraper, Chicago’s 82-storey Aqua tower happens to be the tallest building in the world designed by a woman – but that’s not why we’re including it. To capture the urban views, balconies jut out into the sky giving the tower its undulating figure, resisting the angular typologies of Chicago’s traditional tower design.

Tianzi Hotel, Langfang: This bizarre 10-storey creation made it into the Guiness Book of Records for being the world’s ‘biggest image building’. Perhaps not a skyscraper in the traditional sense, the beaming depictions of Fu, Lu and Shou (Chinese gods of fortune, prosperity and longevity) certainly stand out against the skyline. Enter the hotel through the white bearded fellow’s right foot, and take a nap in the hotel’s most luxurious suite – located in his giant peach.

Robot Building, Bangkok: Just down the road from the Elephant Building, architect Sumet Jumasi designed the HQ of the United Overseas Bank as a 20-storey robot representing the computerisation of banking and friendly face of modern technology. Every feature of this android has a practical use: the eyelids are sunshades, the eyes are meeting rooms, and the antennae are lightning rods. Jumasi said his robot was a protest against ‘bland international style in architecture’.

AlDar Headquarters, Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates boasts the world’s tallest skyscraper, the 830m Burj Khalifa in Dubai, and now is also home to the world’s first circular skyscraper. No longer restricted to using steel-frame technology to create tall, straight towers, the UAE-based MZ Architects have built a revolutionary ‘stacked dinner plate’ prototype – at a cost of around £1bn.

Antilia building, Mumbai: The 27-storey private residence of Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest man, was named after a mythical island in the Atlantic, and is said to have more floor space than the Palace of Versailles. The building boasts three helicopter pads, underground parking for 160 cars, and requires some 600 staff to run it – all for a family of five.

Fake Hills, Beihai : Is your overly flat city in need of some rolling hills? Why not just build them, as the Chinese coastal town of Beihai did. This ‘does what it says on the tin’ residential development, designed by MAD Architects, combines high-rise and groundscraper typology to emulate mother nature’s contours in what is otherwise a very low-level city.

Lippo Centre, Hong Kong: Nicknamed the Koala Buildings for the way their extrusions cling to the glass towers, American architect Paul Rudolph – best known for his brutalist concrete structures – hoped to make this skyscraper a little less ominous by adding the C-shaped extensions to Lippo’s exterior. Instead he made it look like something straight our of Transformers.

Sutyagin House, Arkhangelsk: Wooden skyscrapers could be the future of flat-pack cities, but one man in Russia set the precedent almost 25 years ago. Nikolai Sutyagin (a former gangster) spent more than 15 years piecing together this wooden house on the outskirts of Arkhangelsk, continuously adding new levels until it grew to 13 storeys. Without a permit for his precariously balanced structure, the building’s tower was demolished a few years ago, and the remaining four storeys burned to the ground shortly afterwards.

‘Cell Phone Building’, Kunming: Despite appearances, this 11-storey building in China’s southern Yunnan province is actually quite functional. The screen is the upper-storey window for the penthouse office, while the buttons let light into the lower offices. But we can’t help thinking this old-school handset is due an upgrade by now.

Marina City, Chicago: In the 1960s, when the US’s obsession for the automobile was in full swing, architect Bertrand Goldberg designed these two, 65-storey residential towers with no fewer than 896 parking spaces inside each one. Incredibly, the lower 19 floors of the skyscrapers still house nothing more than a spiral parking ramp. With Chicago now facing an affordable housing crisis, maybe it’s time to put the cars outside?

Tour Triangle, Paris: While many major cities have witnessed a high-rise boom, Paris has remained relatively low-rise thanks to restrictive building regulations. But the ban was finally lifted in 2010, and this 42-storey glass pyramid is due to land, UFO-like, in the 15th arrondissement in 2020. As the first modern tower to be built in central Paris for more than 40 years, it’s going to stick out like a sore thumb.

Cross Towers, Seoul: Danish studio BIG (architects of the New York Dry Line) has proposed the godfather of all clickbait architecture for South Korea’s Yongsan Business District development: ‘the Hashtag’ skyscraper. Designed to get around height regulations while maximising density, the two high-rises are connected by horizontal towers, forming a hash. Although still waiting for the green light, it seems only a matter of time before this #bigdream becomes a #bigreality.

                           
Tower Infinity, Seoul: Also coming soon in Seoul, the 450m Tower Infinity was dubbed the world’s first ‘invisible tower’ by its designers, GDS Architects. Projectors and cameras on the façade will capture the view around the skyscraper before stitching them together in a real-time display, giving an illusion of invisibility – perhaps not the best idea given the tower’s location, right next to Seoul’s Incheon Airport.

Full Moon Tower, Baku: With AlDar’s headquarters having set the precedent for disk-shaped skyscrapers, the Azerbaijani capital will soon be home to not one but two new massive rotund buildings – known as the Full Moon and Crescent Moon hotels. Designed by South Korean firm Heerim Architects, some are suggesting the Full Moon Hotel – with its indented hole and slick facade – took inspiration from the Death Star in Star Wars.

Phoenix Towers, Wuhan: The British architects Chetwoods has unveiled plans for this pair of skyscrapers in the Chinese city of Wuhan. When completed, the taller of these colourful towers should top the Burj Khalifa by 172m, and is intended to beat Saudi Arabia’s impending Kingdom Tower to the title of world’s tallest building when it opens in 2017/18. As if that’s not enough, the smaller tower promises to house the world’s tallest garden.
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26 May 20:45

How a pharma company made billions off mass murder by faking the science on Oxycontin

by Cory Doctorow

OxyContin_setup

When Purdue Pharma's patent on the MS Contin was close to expiry, the Sackler family who owned the company spent millions trying to find a product that could replace the profits they'd lose from generic competition on MS Contin: the result was Oxycontin, a drug that went on to kill Americans at epidemic scale. (more…)

26 May 20:45

Prestigious Pets of Dallas sues woman for 1-star review on Yelp

by Mark Frauenfelder
dog-walker

Michelle Duchouquette gave Prestigious Pets of Dallas a 1-star review on Yelp. She was unhappy about being charged an extra $5 for dog care and the way the water in her fish bowl became cloudy. Now the pet daycare company is suing her for up to $1 million because she unwittingly signed a non-disparagement clause buried in the fine print of the agreement she signed.

From CBS Dallas Fort Worth:

“This is an outrage and they need a lawyer,” said Paul Levy with Public Citizen in Washington D.C. The consumer advocates are representing the Plano couple pro-bono along with their Texas counsel, Nicole Williams. Williams in an anti-trust and trade regulation attorney at Thompson & Knight.

CBS11’s Cristin Severance traveled to their office to D.C. to talk with Levy about the newest lawsuit. “The non-disparagement clause says that you shouldn’t do anything to damage the reputation of the company. You’d think that what really damaged the reputation of the company was bringing the suit in the first place,” said Levy.

[caption id="attachment_463791" align="alignnone" width="628"]Yelp's page for Prestigious Pets now has this warning Yelp's page for Prestigious Pets now has this warning[/caption]
26 May 20:44

Fold-flat furniture looks like isomorphic illustrations when it's collapsed

by Cory Doctorow
animation (2)

https://vimeo.com/157414762

Jongha Choi's Master's thesis for Design Academy Eindhoven involved the creation of "De-dimension" furniture, which collapses into a flat, easily stored form when it's not in use -- but when it's in its flat form, it looks like a perspective drawing of its expanded shape. (more…)

26 May 20:43

Arcade cabinet enthusiasts discover trove of 50+ games in ship, derelict for 30 years

by Cory Doctorow

duke_of_lancaster_rt_79-min

In 1979, the Duke of Lancaster -- a cruise liner turned car ferry -- was retired from service and moored at Llanerch-y-Mor, North Wales, where it was made over as a "Fun Ship," whose car-deck was refitted as a coin-op arcade. (more…)

26 May 20:41

Manage your spare change with the Magic Coin Pouch

by Drew Kozub

Coins suck. The Magic Coin Pouch makes them suck less.

Get your change out of your pockets and car's cupholder and put them in something that makes it convenient to carry coins with you: the Magic Coin Pouch.

Change your world, keep your coins.

In a world of tap and pay, what exactly are you supposed to do with coins? Ideally you never want to use or receive them; however, for tips and parking meters sometimes you have to. Fortunately a Kickstarter product has come up with a good solution to manage your spare change.

The Magic Coin Pouch

$11.00

The Magic Coin Pouch holds all of your coins and is thin enough to fit into the skinny pocket on the front of your pants.

Visit website

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Drop your coins into the Magic Coin Pouch. Give them a flick. Your coins transfer into a locked compartment in the coin pouch. Slide the pouch into that skinny little pocket at the top of your pants that's too small to hold anything else, and you're set. You'll have coins with you, they won't take up any extra room in your actual pockets, and they'll be easy to pull out when you need them.

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26 May 20:34

Google wins Oracle copyright fight over Android code

by Russell Brandom

Today, a jury in California's Northern District federal court declared that Google's use of copyright-protected code in Android was fair use, freeing it of any liability. Oracle, which controls the copyright on the code, had been seeking $9 billion for the use of the code.

The case centers around an API developed by Java and owned by Oracle, which allows outside programs to easily interact with Java programs. Android uses the same API, and in 2014 a federal appeals court ruled that Oracle has a valid copyright claim on the API code, potentially putting Google on the hook for billions of dollars in damages. (The Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal.) In the latest round, Google argued that Android's reimplementation of the API...

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26 May 20:33

Jake Gyllenhaal as a furious ferret enthusiast is the best thing I will ever see in my miserable life

by Kaitlyn Tiffany

I don't really like to explain jokes — because as you may know, explaining jokes is a federal offense under the Insufferable Boy at a Party statute — but during my 12.5 months working at The Verge, I have been very invested in a running joke called "Kaitlyn references Jake Gyllenhaal for no reason in one article per week because she loves him so much it sometimes pains her physically."

I guess I've been busy or an oblivious jerk lately because Jake Gyllenhaal's name hasn't appeared on this website in a WHOPPING 43 DAYS. Presumably that is why he filmed an incredible segment for Inside Amy Schumer, which has made me so happy that I now have a stomach ache.

this is as good as life gets for any of us

In it, he plays Jake Gyllenhaal, a...

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26 May 20:32

Can an unknown Chinese startup build the world's first bendable screen bracelet phone?

by Paul Miller

Okay so first of all, disregard that render above. Moxi Group, a little-known company in Chongqing China, passed these images of a magical, flexible bracelet smartphone around to the financial news press a couple days ago. But here's the fine print: Moxi actually claims to be working on a black-and-white version of this concept, with a color version "by 2018."

Flexible or curved screens are regular stars at trade shows, but haven't made much of a splash in the actual-shipping-product world. Another unknown company, Polyera, claims to be working on a similar bracelet product called Wove, based on its own internally developed "Flexible TFT" technology. It's supposed to come out in 2016. We'll see.

Moxi claims its own secret sauce is its...

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26 May 20:29

Paperlike is an E Ink monitor for your PC

by Ashley Carman

We all like reading on a Kindle because of its E Ink screen. We can read for hours without feeling like our eyes are burning off from a harsh backlight. Chinese company Dasung wants to bring that same experience to computer monitors. The company showed off its Paperlike E Ink monitor at CES this year and just put the 13.3" monitor on Indigogo this week. It's already more than doubled its $10,000 crowdfunding goal.

The monitor doesn't require a power connection to work and instead mirrors or extends a PC's display through a micro USB. E Ink can be slow to load, so users can choose how images are displayed by either opting for more details at slower speeds or fast speeds and less detailed images. I'm so ready to never look at anything in...

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26 May 15:23

New Images Of Upcoming Motorola Droid Phone And MotoMod Accessories Leak

by Ryan Whitwam

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The new (and thoroughly leaked) Motorola devices are expected to be announced at Lenovo Tech World in just a few days, but there's still time for leaking. Evan "@evleaks" Blass has posted images of the Verizon-bound Droid variants of the new Moto flagship, as well as the modular back plates previously rumored as Amps and now known as "MotoMods."

All we get in the new leaked pic is a better look at the back of the phone.

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New Images Of Upcoming Motorola Droid Phone And MotoMod Accessories Leak was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

26 May 15:20

Revealed: the amazing cover for Walkaway, my first adult novel since 2009

by Cory Doctorow

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Next April, Tor Books will publish Walkaway, the first novel I've written specifically for adults since 2009; it's scheduled to be their lead title for the season and they've hired the brilliant designer Will Staehle (Yiddish Policeman's Union, Darker Shade of Magic) for the cover, which Tor has just revealed. (more…)

26 May 15:20

Pentagon's nuclear missile system is run on 1970s floppy disk tech

by David Pescovitz

bigflop

In a new report, the U.S. Government Accountability Office reveals that the "Department of Defense uses 8- inch floppy disks in a legacy system that coordinates the operational functions of the nation’s nuclear forces." That floppy format was developed in the late 1960s and was obsolete by the 1980s. I wonder if the DoD saves a few bucks by using a hole punch to make them double sided.

According to the GAO report, "The agency plans to update its data storage solutions, port expansion processors, portable terminals, and desktop terminals by the end of fiscal year 2017."

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: Federal Agencies Need to Address Aging Legacy Systems (PDF)

26 May 15:20

The best thing you will read about the revelation that Captain America was a Nazi spy

by Cory Doctorow

background

This week, Marvel Comics published the first issue of Captain America: Steve Rogers in which it's revealed that since his earliest days, Captain America has been a double agent for Hydra, the thinly veiled allegory for the Nazis; in an epic Twitter rant, Livejournal alumnus and Dreamwidth cofounder Denise Paolucci explains the way that perpetual copyright and business concentration has neutralized the ancient custom of collective storytelling of epic narratives, magnifying the harm from bad corporate decisions. (more…)

26 May 15:17

The ASPCA’s Index Tells You If a Plant Is Safe for Pets Before You Buy

by Heather Yamada-Hosley
The ASPCA’s Index Tells You If a Plant Is Safe for Pets Before You Buy

You may already know common plants, like oleander or holly, that are harmful to dogs and cats, but if you’re thinking of buying a plant and aren’t sure if it is safe for your pet, the ASPCA’s searchable index can help.

You can search the index for specific plants or filter the list by pet types (dog, cat, etc). Click through to the plant’s profile to learn what qualities make it toxic, which type of pets it is toxic to, and reactions your pet may have to the plant. For this index, toxic doesn’t necessarily mean fatal, the plant could just cause problems in their digestive system, or cause them pain or some other distress. A quick search before you buy means you won’t buy plants for your home or yard only to find out later that they may be harmful to your pets.

Toxic and Non-Toxic Plants | ASPCA

26 May 15:17

U.K. carrier Three says it will start trialling ad blocking next month with a 24-hour opt-in test

by Ingrid Lunden
adblocking Back in February, U.K. mobile carrier Three said it would start to offer on its network opt-in ad blocking technology from Shine, potentially reaching 30 million customers in its network. Now the company is getting down to details: It will start to trial ad blocking in June in the U.K., with a 24-hour test for opted-in customers, the company said today. “We believe the current… Read More
26 May 15:16

Lenovo admits its Motorola business ‘has not met expectations’

by Jon Russell
lenovo Lenovo has admitted that it has failed to build on its acquisition of Motorola. The Chinese firm acquired the phone-maker from Google for $2.91 billion in late 2014 and, in its end-of-year earnings report published today, it said the deal “did not meet expectations.” Read More
26 May 15:16

UK study quantifies Twitter’s misogyny problem

by Natasha Lomas
twitter-analytics Online abuse remains the big hairy monster in the room for platforms powered by user-generated content. Twitter especially has had some very sizable and public problems with problem users. A UK thinktank has just published a new study quantifying the ongoing problem of misogynistic abuse on Twitter. Read More
26 May 15:11

The easiest way to revolutionize your computer’s audio

by Vlad Savov

For most PC and mobile device makers, sound is a binary spec.

Does it have sound? Yes? Good.

Great audio is hard to sell because it doesn't lend itself to benchmarking or obvious prettiness like, say, a better graphics card might. To appreciate it, you have to immerse yourself in it, give it time to reveal itself and to reward you. With that being the case, it's no surprise that most of us have grown habituated to so-so Realtek audio chips spliced into motherboards like an unimportant afterthought. Some people think we're used to terrible music because of the compressed MP3 format, but I reckon it has a lot more to do with the sources from which we listen.

Recent times have seen a revival in audio appreciation, however, especially...

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25 May 22:40

Nuheara’s IQbuds are somewhere between wireless headphones and a hearing aid

by Brian Heater
Nuheara I went into the Nuheara demo not knowing what to expect. Not in the sense of, “How good will these be?” so much as, “I’m not exactly sure what these things do.” Like, are they headphones? Are they hearing aids? The answer, interestingly enough, is a little bit of both. The IQbuds are, ostensibly, Bluetooth earbuds. That they’re completely wireless is enough… Read More
25 May 20:12

This seven-minute video shows amazing Hong Kong

by Mark Frauenfelder
hongkong9

When Brandon Li, a 34-year-old American, went to Hong Kong, he was so taken by the city that he made this stunningly beautiful short video about it, which shows the people, both rich and poor, eating, playing, working, competing, and celebrating.

Li told the South China Morning Post, “Hong Kong is a city which feels like it cannot exist. It is this mix of British and Chinese culture – it is filled with an uncontainable energy of beautiful corners that are sometimes hidden.” hongkong10 hongkong11 hongkong5 hongkong6 hongkong7 hongkong8 hongkong9 hongkong1 hongkong2 hongkong3 hongkong4

25 May 20:12

Lightning storm recorded at 7,000 frames per second

by Mark Frauenfelder
OYRnYL

In this video from the Florida Institute of Technology, professor Ningyu Liu at the Geospace Physics Laboratory "caught a beautiful lightning show from a recent storm. It’s recorded at 7000 frames per second and the playback speed is 700 frames per second."

25 May 20:03

Merge VR Goggles are now available at Target

by Micah Singleton

Merge is now selling its ultra-cheap VR Goggles which work with both iOS and Android devices in Target stores. Despite not being the most aesthetically appealing VR headset to wear, Merge does offer the cheapest multi-platform VR headset (outside of Google Cardboard) on the market. This would be a great entry device for people looking to give virtual reality a try. You can pick up the Merge VR Goggles on Target.com and in physical stores today.

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25 May 19:55

Foxconn replaces 60,000 factory workers with robots

by Nick Statt

Foxconn, the largest contract electronics manufacturer in the world, says it has automated away 60,000 jobs in one of its factories, according to the BBC. The cuts are part of an ongoing process to replace humans responsible for "many of the manufacturing tasks associated with our operations" with robots, the company said in a statement. Foxconn helps manufacture Apple's iPhone and iPad, Samsung's Galaxy phone line, and Sony's PlayStation 4, as well as other devices from many of the world's biggest tech brands.

"We are applying robotics engineering and other innovative manufacturing technologies to replace repetitive tasks previously done by employees, and through training, also enable our employees to focus on higher value-added...

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25 May 15:30

More single adults living with parents than on their own for first time since 1880s

by Cory Doctorow

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A new Pew Research report finds that the number of single adults still living with their parents is at historically high levels -- in the US, the number of singles still at home outnumber the cohort of those living out of the house, something last seen in the 1880s. (more…)

25 May 15:25

Europe eyes new rules for online platforms

by Natasha Lomas
European Commission The European Union’s executive body has today set out a series of proposals for new rules that would apply to a broad range of online platforms, from the likes of YouTube to Google to eBay, as part of ongoing efforts to boost competitiveness in the region under its Digital Single Market Strategy. Read More