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18 Jan 07:17

SpaceX Launch Successful, But Drone Ship Landing Fails

by Sarah Fecht

SpaceX

The Falcon 9 rocket booster nearly landed successfully, but toppled over due to a landing leg that didn't lock

"Well, at least the pieces were bigger this time!" Space CEO Elon Musk tweeted along with this picture. "Won't be last RUD, but am optimistic about upcoming ship landing."

Update, 3:23pm

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk confirmed that the rocket was on target for a perfect landing, but a landing leg failed to lock and the thing toppled over. So close!

Update, 2:41pm

After a second burn of the rocket's second stage, the Jason-3 satellite is now in the correct orbit and SpaceX is calling it a mission success.

Update, 2:10pm

Preliminary data suggests the Falcon 9 rocket stage came down on target, but one of the landing legs collapsed when it reached the drone ship, so the rocket booster is not standing upright, according to the SpaceX webcast. Engineers are still analyzing the data, and we hope to see some video later today.

Update, 2:02pm

SpaceX says its webcast will return in about 40 minutes. Hopefully by then we'll know how the landing attempt went. The Jason3 satellite appears to be safely on its way to orbit 800 miles over the Earth.

Update, 1:58pm

Ack! A lost satellite signal is leaving everyone in the dark about whether or not the rocket landing was successful.

Update, 1:42 pm:

We have liftoff! The Jason-3 satellite is on its way to orbit.

About 10 minutes after liftoff, SpaceX will attempt a landing on its drone ship. It's not clear how much we'll be able to see of the landing attempt with all this fog. The autonomous barge is experiencing waves as high as 12 to 15 feet high, which could make it difficult for the Falcon 9 to stick the landing.

Update, January 17, 1:07 pm:

Despite fog at Vandenberg Air Force Base, where the Falcon 9 sits ready to launch the Jason-3 satellite, NASA says the weather shouldn't be a problem.

Original Post, January 16 at 9:30pm Eastern

SpaceX

Falcon 9 awaits the launch of the Jason-3 satellite

The weather looks good for Sunday's SpaceX launch. The company's Falcon 9 rocket will will carry an ocean-monitoring satellite into orbit, then attempt to land on a drone ship in the Pacific ocean.

Earlier this week, the company successfully test-fired the Falcon 9, so it looks like it's all systems go for the January 17 launch—so far at least.

The launch is scheduled for Sunday at 1:42pm Eastern, but coverage will begin at 12:45.

About three minutes after liftoff, the main stage rocket booster will separate from the spacecraft and return to Earth, hopefully landing safely on SpaceX's autonomous barge. Meanwhile, second stage boosters will continue to carry the Jason-3 satellite up to an orbit 840 miles above the Earth.

About 56 minutes after launch, Jason-3 will deploy its solar panels to prepare for operations. The satellite will help the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration track sea level heights, which could improve forecasting for El Nino weather patterns and predict hurricane intensity.

SpaceX's plan to land the rocket's first stage on a drone ship, if successful, will be historic. The company recently managed to land their rocket on solid ground—a feat that could usher in an era of reusable rockets and cheaper spaceflight. But landing on a moving vessel adds an extra challenge.

SpaceX

The autonomous spaceport is about the size of an American football field

Spaceflight Now reports that being able to land on the barge will come in handy when SpaceX needs to launch heavy payloads that use up all of its fuel. Without fuel reserves, the rocket could come down hard, which is a good reason to steer it out into the ocean for its landing attempt. The Sunday landing attempt, however, will be made using fuel reserves left over after the Jason-3 launch.

SpaceX came close to landing its rocket on the "autonomous spaceport" twice before, but both attempts ended in fiery failure. Will the third time be the charm? Only one way to find out.

We'll add updates here as the launch progresses.

16 Jan 07:59

Has the 'Bitcoin experiment' failed?

by Daniel Cooper
A prominent voice in the Bitcoin community has announced that he is abandoning the cryptocurrency that he helped to popularize. Mike Hearn has revealed that deep divisions within the platform's "leadership" and a looming technical apocalypse threaten...
16 Jan 07:50

Microsoft Will Not Support Upcoming Processors Except On Windows 10

by Brett Howse

Microsoft has long been the bastion of long term support for older platforms, so today’s support news out of Redmond is particularly surprising. Intel launched its 6th generation Skylake cores back in August, and support on Windows 7 has been not as strong as Windows 10 right out of the gate. It’s not terribly strange that new features like Intel’s Speed Shift will not be coming to Windows 7, but today Microsoft announced that going forward, new processors will only be supported on Windows 10. Skylake will only be supported through devices on a supported list, and even those will only have support until July 2017.

For the average consumer buying a new PC, this is not a huge issue. Generally, consumers buy a PC and use the operating system that it comes with. That is going to be Windows 10. But the enterprise schedule is often much more drawn out when it comes to desktop operating system support. Windows XP was the most famous example of this, with businesses clinging to it well past its best before date, because Windows Vista and newer versions of the operating system significantly changed the system rights and driver models, rendering older programs incompatible.

The move to Windows 7 was very drawn out, so perhaps Microsoft is trying to avoid this again in the future, but moving an enterprise to a new desktop OS can bring a lot of testing requirements, training, and back-end infrastructure updates which are all non-trivial. Microsoft has made its name in the enterprise by being generous with support lifetimes, and I think what is most troubling about today’s news is that Windows 7 has long-term support until January 14, 2020, and Windows 8.1 until January 10, 2023. News like this is going to catch a lot of companies off-guard, since they would have been expecting to have at least until 2020 to migrate off of Windows 7, and many of these companies have just finally moved to Windows 7 after a decade or more on XP.

To give just 18 months with these support policies is likely not what companies want to hear. This doesn’t mean that Windows 7 will be end of life in July 2017, but if you can’t run it on new hardware, this is going to put a dent in device sales too. If companies are not ready to move to Windows 10, they may have to stick with older hardware.

This does not just affect Intel based machines either. According to the blog post by Terry Myerson, Windows 10 will be the only supported Windows platform for Kaby Lake (Intel’s next gen 14 nm processors), Snapdragon 820 (Qualcomm), and Carrizo (AMD).

Going forward, as new silicon generations are introduced, they will require the latest Windows platform at that time for support. This enables us to focus on deep integration between Windows and the silicon, while maintaining maximum reliability and compatibility with previous generations of platform and silicon. For example, Windows 10 will be the only supported Windows platform on Intel’s upcoming “Kaby Lake” silicon, Qualcomm’s upcoming “8996” silicon, and AMD’s upcoming “Bristol Ridge” silicon.

After July 2017, computers on the supported list that are still running Windows 7 will still get security updates, but any updates specific to that platform will not be released if it risks the reliability of other Windows 7 or 8.1 platforms.

To me, the oddest part of the announcement is who it is coming from. When Intel releases a new CPU, it is generally the motherboard makers working with Intel who provide the correct BIOS emulation modes and drivers for older versions of Windows. It’s somewhat odd that Microsoft is the one announcing this news rather than a company like Intel or AMD stating they won’t be supporting the older platform.

For those in the business world, this blog post may force you to reconsider your upgrade plans, or at least your hardware evergreen cycle. A full list of supported PCs for the 18-month period is supposed to be released next week.

Source: Windows Blog

15 Jan 13:05

Vader Resurrection Rumored for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

by Alex Osborn

Darth Vader will reportedly be returning to the big screen in Disney's upcoming anthology film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.

According to Making Star Wars, Vader's iconic costume has been faithfully recreated by helmet sculptor Brian Muir and his team, and "perfectly" matches Vader's look in A New Hope.

Warning: Potential spoilers below.

The outlet also claims that original voice actor James Earl Jones will be returning to voice Vader in Rogue One. Whether or not his lines have already been recorded is unknown, as they may be added in post-production.

Reports also claim Vader will be played by a completely new actor, and there's no word on exactly how large a part the character will have in the film. That said, rumblings suggest he'll be a "prominent player in a few scenes and something to fear for the heroes."

Continue reading…

15 Jan 13:04

The Magicians: Series Premiere Review

by Terri Schwartz
Roumen.ganeff

Harry Potter for semi-grownups?

Coming on the heels of the premieres of MTV's The Shannara Chronicles and Freeform's Shadowhunters, Syfy's The Magicians might seem like just another fantasy adaptation making its way to the small screen. But this adaptation of Lev Grossman's hit urban fantasy novel sets itself apart from others of its kind from the start, with well-cast leads, an engaging premise and an ending that is a great hook for getting people on board for the journey ahead.

Jason Ralph and Stella Maeve in The Magicians Jason Ralph and Stella Maeve in The Magicians

Continue reading…

15 Jan 13:03

Mr. Robot Gears Up for Season 2

by Matt Fowler

Warning: Major spoilers for Mr. Robot: Season 1 below.

Given the sheer amount of scripted shows on the air today, it seems harder than ever to truly stand out from the pack. But that's exactly what USA's Mr. Robot did this past summer, giving us an awesomely off-kilter story about a drug-addled, paranoid hacker who gets recruited to help take down one of the world's biggest, and greediest, corporations.

Mr. Robot creator Sam Esmail, along with stars Rami Malek and Christian Slater (who just won a Golden Globe for his performance this past weekend), appeared at the TCA Winter Press Tour to answer questions about Season 1 - and to tease the upcoming Season 2!

Continue reading…

15 Jan 13:03

Practical Effects for Rey's Instant Bread Took 3 Months to Develop

by Nicole Carpenter

The Star Wars: The Force Awakens special effects team spent months developing the instantly-rising bread that Rey eats while on Jakku. Special effects supervisor Chris Corbould told MTV News that it wasn't CGI; it was entirely real.

Corbould said it took around three months to get the bread just right – a long time for a prop that's on screen for just a few seconds.

"It started off with the mechanics of getting the bread to rise and the liquid to disappear, but then there was the ongoing problem of what color should the bread be? What consistency should it be?" Corbould asked. "Should it have cracks in it? Should it not have cracks in it?"

Continue reading…

14 Jan 14:38

Trying to get out of a parking ticket? There's a robot for that

by Laura Thomson
Roumen.ganeff

AI put to good use

A clever 19-year-old has invented the world's first robot lawyer for consumers, which can perform tasks as diverse as challenging car parking tickets, seeking compensation for delayed flights...
14 Jan 07:40

Does it make sense for Apple to buy Time Warner?

by Daniel Cooper
Roumen.ganeff

Hope not, Apple is annoying enough as it is

The New York Post believes that Apple could target Time Warner, the parent company of Warner Bros. and HBO, for acquisition. It seems unlikely, but the paper reports its poorly-valued stock and simple share structure makes it an easy target for a buy...
14 Jan 07:22

Microsoft Releases Its JavaScript Engine As Open Source 'ChakraCore'

Microsoft open sourced its JavaScript engine under the name "ChakraCore" and urged developers to contribute to it so we can can all use a faster web.
13 Jan 18:01

AVANTASIA Among Ten Finalists To Represent Germany In 2016 EUROVISION SONG CONTEST

EDGUY frontman Tobias Sammet's AVANTASIA project is one of ten artists who will take part in the preliminary TV casting show to choose the candidate to represent Germany at the 2016 Eurovision Song Contest in Stockholm this May. AVANTASIA will compete with its current single, "Mystery Of A Blood Red Rose". Sammet explained his reasons for getting involved in the Eurovision Song Contest: "It seemed like a quite unusual idea to compete with anyone in art, to play music against someone. It's still weird anyhow, to play music against each other like in the Olympic Games. Anyway, who am I to get in the way of a great promotional opportunity?! Three minutes to show millions that we exist?" "Unser Lied für Stockholm" will be broadcast live on February 25 at 20:15 CET, both online and on public TV channel Das Erste. The TV public will solely decide on the winner by means of televoting, SMS voting and the Eurovision app, and the voting will be organised in two rounds. The presenter of the show will again be Barbara Schöneberger. The following ten acts will battle to represent Germany: * AVANTASIA - "Mystery Of A Blood Red Rose" * ALEX DIEHL - "Nur ein Lied" * ELLA ENDLICH - "Adrenalin * GREGORIAN - "Masters Of Chant" * JAMIE-LEE KRIEWITZ - "Ghost" * JOCO - "Full Moon" * KEØMA - "Protected" * LAURA PINSKI - "Under The Sun We Are One" * LUXUSLÄRM - "Solange Liebe in mir wohnt" * WOODS OF BIRNAM - "Lift Me Up (From The Underground) " Around 150 suggestions were submitted to broadcaster NDR from radio broadcasters, producers, record labels and artists. The final 10 were chosen by NDR, two youth radio shows, music labels, and the TV production company Brainpool. "Mystery Of A Blood Red Rose" is taken from AVANTASIA's seventh studio album, "Ghostlights", which will be released on January 29 via Nuclear Blast. The twelve-song CD was produced by Tobias and Sascha Paeth at Gatestudio in Wolfsburg, Germany. Paeth engineered and mixed "Ghostlights", while the mastering was done by Michael Rodenberg.
avantasiamysterysingle avantasiaghostlightsd
13 Jan 14:27

The State of the Nation: A Dictatorship Without Tears

by John Whitehead
Roumen.ganeff

Most of this is true for any country today

“There will be, in the next generation or so, a pharmacological method of making people love their servitude, and producing dictatorship without tears, so to speak, producing a kind of painless concentration camp for entire societies, so that people will in fact have their liberties taken away from them, but will rather enjoy it, because they will be distracted from any desire to rebel by propaganda or brainwashing, or brainwashing enhanced by pharmacological methods. And this seems to be the final revolution.”
-Aldous Huxley

There’s a man who contacts me several times a week to disagree with my assessments of the American police state. According to this self-avowed Pollyanna who is tired of hearing “bad news,” the country is doing just fine, the government’s intentions are honorable, anyone in authority should be blindly obeyed, those individuals who are being arrested, shot and imprisoned must have done something to deserve such treatment, and if you have nothing to hide, you shouldn’t care whether the government is spying on you.

In other words, this man trusts the government with his life, his loved ones and his property, and anyone who doesn’t feel the same should move elsewhere.

It’s tempting to write this man off as dangerously deluded, treacherously naïve, and clueless to the point of civic incompetence. However, he is not alone in his goose-stepping, comfort-loving, TV-watching, insulated-from-reality devotion to the alternate universe constructed for us by the Corporate State with its government propaganda, pseudo-patriotism and contrived political divisions.

While only 1 in 5 Americans claim to trust the government to do what is right, the majority of the people are not quite ready to ditch the American experiment in liberty. Or at least they’re not quite ready to ditch the government with which they have been saddled.

As The Washington Post concludes, “Americans hate government, but they like what it does.” Indeed, kvetching aside, Americans want the government to keep providing institutionalized comforts such as Social Security, public schools, and unemployment benefits, fighting alleged terrorists and illegal immigrants, defending the nation from domestic and foreign threats, and maintaining the national infrastructure. And it doesn’t matter that the government has shown itself to be corrupt, abusive, hostile to citizens who disagree, wasteful and unconcerned about the plight of the average American.

For the moment, Americans are continuing to play by the government’s rules. Indeed, Americans may not approve the jobs being done by their elected leaders, and they may have little to no access to those same representatives, but they remain committed to the political process, so much so that they are working themselves into a frenzy over the upcoming presidential election, with contributions to the various candidates nearing $500 million.

Yet as Barack Obama’s tenure in the White House shows, no matter how much hope and change were promised, what we’ve ended up with is not only more of the same, but something worse: an invasive, authoritarian surveillance state armed and ready to eliminate any opposition.

The state of our nation under Obama has become more bureaucratic, more debt-ridden, more violent, more militarized, more fascist, more lawless, more invasive, more corrupt, more untrustworthy, more mired in war, and more unresponsive to the wishes and needs of the electorate. Most of all, the government, already diabolical and manipulative to the nth degree, has mastered the art of “do what I say and not what I do” hypocrisy.

For example, the government’s arsenal is growing. While the Obama administration is working to limit the public’s access to guns by pushing for greater gun control, it’s doing little to scale back on the federal government’s growing arsenal of firepower and militarized equipment.

In fact, it’s not just the Department of Defense that’s in the business of waging war. Government agencies focused largely on domestic matters continue to spend tens of millions of taxpayer dollars to purchase SWAT and military-style equipment such as body armor, riot helmets and shields, cannon launchers and police firearms and ammunition. The Department of Veterans Affairs spent nearly $2 million on riot helmets, defender shields, body armor, a “milo return fire cannon system,” armored mobile shields, Kevlar blankets, tactical gear and equipment for crowd control. The Food and Drug Administration purchased “ballistic vests and carriers.” The Environmental Protection Agency shelled out $200,000 for body armor. And the Smithsonian Institution procured $28,000 worth of body armor for its “zoo police and security officers.”

The national debt is growing. In fact, it’s almost doubled during Obama’s time in office to nearly $20 trillion. Much of this debt is owed to foreign countries such as China, which have come to exert an undue degree of influence on various aspects of the American economy.

Meanwhile, almost half of Americans are struggling to save for emergencies and retirement, 43% can’t afford to go more than one month without a paycheck, and 24% have less than $250 in their bank accounts preceding payday.

On any given night, over half a million people in the U.S. are homeless, and half of them are elderly. In fact, studies indicate that the homeless are aging faster than the general population in the U.S.

While the U.S. spends more on education than almost any other country, American schools rank 28th in the world, below much poorer countries such as the Czech Republic and Vietnam.

The American police state’s payroll is expanding. Despite the fact that violent crime is at a 40-year-low, there are more than 1.1 million persons employed on a full-time basis by state and local law enforcement in this country. That doesn’t include the more than 120,000 full-time officers on the federal payroll.

While crime is falling, the number of laws creating new crimes is growing at an alarming rate. Congress creates, on average, more than 50 new criminal laws each year. This adds up to more than 4,500 federal criminal laws and an even greater number of state laws.

The prison population is growing at an alarming rate. Owing largely to overcriminalization, the nation’s prison population has quadrupled since 1980 to 2.4 million, which breaks down to more than one out of every 100 American adults behind bars. According to The Washington Post, it costs $21,000 a year to keep someone in a minimum-security federal prison and $33,000 a year for a maximum-security federal prison. Those costs are expected to increase 30 percent by 2020. Translation: while the American taxpayer will be forced to shell out more money for its growing prison population, the private prison industry will be making a hefty profit.

The nation’s infrastructure—railroads, water pipelines, ports, dams, bridges, airports and roads—is rapidly deteriorating. An estimated $1.7 trillion will be needed by 2020 to improve surface transportation, but with vital funds being siphoned off by the military industrial complex, there’s little relief in sight.

The expense of those endless wars in Afghanistan and Iraq will cost taxpayers $4 trillion to $6 trillion. That does not include the cost of military occupations and exercises elsewhere around the globe. Unfortunately, that’s money that is not being invested in America, nor is it being used to improve the lives of Americans.

Government incompetence, corruption and lack of accountability continue to result in the loss of vast amounts of money and weapons. A Reuters investigation revealed $8.5 trillion in “taxpayer money doled out by Congress to the Pentagon since 1996 that has never been accounted for.” Then there was the $500 million in Pentagon weapons, aircraft and equipment (small arms, ammunition, night-vision goggles, patrol boats, vehicles and other supplies) that the U.S. military somehow lost track of.

Rounding out the bad news, many Americans know little to nothing about their rights and the government. Only 31% can name all three branches of the U.S. government, while one in three says that the Bill of Rights guarantees the right to own your own home, while one in four thinks that it guarantees “equal pay for equal work.” One in 10 Americans (12%) says the Bill of Rights includes the right to own a pet.

If this brief catalogue of our national woes proves anything at all, it is that the American experiment in liberty has failed, and as political economist Lawrence Hunter warns, it is only a matter of time before people realize it. Writing for Forbes, Hunter notes:

The greatest fear of America’s Founding Fathers has been realized: The U.S. Constitution has been unable to thwart the corrosive dynamics of majority-rule democracy, which in turn has mangled the Constitution beyond recognition. The real conclusion of the American Experiment is that democracy ultimately undermines liberty and leads to tyranny and oppression by elected leaders and judges, their cronies and unelected bureaucrats.  All of this is done in the name of “the people” and the “general welfare,” of course.  But in fact, democracy oppresses the very demos in whose name it operates, benefiting string-pullers within the Establishment and rewarding the political constituencies they manage by paying off special interests with everyone else’s money forcibly extracted through taxation. The Founding Fathers (especially Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Adams, Madison, and James Monroe), as well as outside observers of the American Experiment such as Alexis de Tocqueville all feared democracy and dreaded this outcome.  But, they let hope and faith in their ingenious constitutional engineering overcome their fear of the democratic state, only to discover they had replaced one tyranny with another.

So are there any real, workable solutions to the emerging American police state?

A second American Revolution will not work. In the first revolution, the colonists were able to dispatch the military occupation and take over the running of the country. However, the Orwellian state is here and it is so pervasive that government agents are watching, curtailing and putting down any resistance before it can get started.

A violent overthrow of the government will not work. Government agents are armed to the teeth and will easily blow away any insurgency when and if necessary.

Politics will not help things along. As history has made clear, the new boss is invariably the same as or worse than the old boss—all controlled by a monied, oligarchic elite.

As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, there is only one feasible solution left to us short of fleeing the country for parts unknown: grassroots activism that strives to reform the government locally and trickles up.

Unfortunately, such a solution requires activism, engagement, vigilance, sacrifice, individualism, community-building, nullification and a communal willingness to reject the federal government’s handouts and, when needed, respond with what Martin Luther King Jr. referred to as “militant nonviolent resistance.”

That means forgoing Monday night football in order to actively voice your concerns at city council meetings, turning off the television and spending an hour reading your local newspaper (if you still have one that reports local news) from front to back, showing your displeasure by picketing in front of government offices, risking your reputation by speaking up and disagreeing with the majority when necessary, refusing to meekly accept whatever the government dictates, reminding government officials—including law enforcement—that they work for you, and working together with your neighbors to present a united front against an overreaching government.

Unfortunately, we now live in a ubiquitous Orwellian society with all the trappings of Huxley’s A Brave New World. We have become a society of watchers rather than activists who are distracted by even the clumsiest government attempts at sleight-of-hand.

There are too many Americans who are reasonably content with the status quo and too few Americans willing to tolerate the discomfort of a smaller, more manageable government and a way of life that is less convenient, less entertaining, and less comfortable.

It well may be that Huxley was right, and that the final revolution is behind us. Certainly, most Americans seem to have learned to love their prison walls and take comfort in a dictatorship without tears.

13 Jan 12:45

JJ Abrams: Person of Interest is Likely Over with Season 5

by Eric Goldman
Roumen.ganeff

not like

Person of Interest fans have been frustrated by the uncertainty around the show of late, which still doesn’t have a premiere date for its truncated 13-episode fifth season, while rumors swirl that this will also be the end for the series.

One of Person of Interest’s executive producers, J.J. Abrams, was at the TCA (Television Critics Association) press tour today to promote his upcoming Hulu series, 11.22.63, and I asked him what he knew both about the show’s scheduling and if this was indeed the final season.

Said Abrams, “My guess is this is the final season. The only heartbreak there is how much good story there was to come if it were to have continued. But Jonah

and Greg Plageman I think have done such an amazing job on that show and I know what these episodes are that they've done wrapping it up. We don't yet have a schedule, but they will see the light of day. People will get to see these episodes and I know the power of that story.”

Continue reading…

13 Jan 12:45

Tom Hiddleston & Hugh Laurie Face Off in The Night Manager

by Matt Fowler
Roumen.ganeff

Loki AND Dr. House in a spy series? Oh, yeah!

For the first time in over 20 years, one of John le Carré's spy novels (author of The Constant Gardener, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, etc) has been adapted for television. Starring Tom Hiddleston, Hugh Laurie, and Olivia Colman, AMC's upcoming miniseries - The Night Manager - brings us into the sinister world of arms dealing, intelligence, Third World militias, and widespread corruption at the highest levels of corporations and governments.

A six episode co-production with Ink Factory and BBC, The Night Manager is set to premiere on April 19th and features Hiddleston as a British spy involved in a dangerous cat and mouse game with a nefarious arms dealer played by Laurie.

Hiddleston and Laurie both appeared at the TCA Winter Press Tour to further discuss their roles and answer questions from the critics on hand. Hiddleston delved into what he found so fascinating about his character, Jonathan Pine. "There is a tension between a very calm exterior and a turbulent and chaotic interior," he said, "that he’s someone who actually has a great amount of vulnerability and a huge amount of doubt. Le Carré describes him as a self exiled creature of the night and a sailor without a destination."

Continue reading…

13 Jan 12:42

New Trailer for JJ Abrams and Stephen King's 11.22.63

by Eric Goldman

Check out the new trailer for Hulu's upcoming miniseries 11.22.63. Based on the novel by Stephen King and executive produced by J.J. Abrams, the series stars James Franco as a man who travels back in time to try and stop the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

Continue reading…

13 Jan 09:52

NASA forms planetary task force against asteroid threats

by Mariella Moon
Roumen.ganeff

Is Bruce Willis on it?

NASA wants to be ready for asteroids that could destroy our planet so it doesn't have to find a crew of deep-sea oil drillers to rescue us at the last minute. As such, it has officially named its current team tasked with the detection and tracking of...
12 Jan 16:04

Skylake Bugs Aren't Odd, They're Prime

Roumen.ganeff

Not again with the CPU bug

Intel discovered that its latest 6th Gen (Skylake) Core processors have a bug that can cause the system to freeze or crash when calculating prime numbers.
12 Jan 07:14

Audi's hydrogen concept car fuels up in four minutes

by Nick Summers
CES was a hotbed of car announcements this year, but luckily some surprises have been saved for the North American International Auto Show in Detroit. Take Audi's h-tron quattro, a hydrogen-powered concept car with a Tesla-beating range of 372 miles....
12 Jan 07:05

Photo





11 Jan 08:17

Map Shows Squirrels Are Winning The Cyber War

by Kelsey D. Atherton
Red Squirrel

Klaus-Martin Hansche, via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 2.5

Red Squirrel

Look at this squirrel plotting something. Probably cyber terrorism.

On January 2nd, the power went out on the Lloyd Expressway, near Evansville, Indiana. The outage lasted 45 minutes, with a transformer damaged and stop lights turned off. The culprit? A squirrel.

The attack is just one of the latest tracked by the semi-satirical Cyber Squirrel 1 map. “This map”, according to its About section, “lists all unclassified Cyber Squirrel Operations that have been released to the public that we have been able to confirm. There are many more executed ops than displayed on this map however, those ops remain classified.” Based on data from a Twitter account dating back to at least March 2014, the map has been around since at least September 2015. It tracks power outages caused by squirrels, birds, raccoons, snakes, rats, beavers, and monkeys, as well as nations like China, Russia, and the United States. If there is a cyber war happening, it’s one fought between humanity and nature, not nations against each other.

Squirrel Power Outages

Screenshot by author, from Cyber Squirrel

Squirrel Power Outages

Every squirrel-caused power outage in the United States in December 2015

This is hardly the first attempt to use squirrels as a metaphor for exaggerated fears about cyber war. Before he was comparing the risk to planes from drones relative to turtles, Eli Dourado, an economist and technologist at the libertarian Mercatus Center, made a similar point about squirrels and power outages.

Like the Cyber Squirrel map, the argument reveals itself merely by the data points selected. Natural causes get in the way of technology a lot. Even successful cyber attacks, like the one that took out power in part of Ukraine last month, can so far only replicate damage that animals might do anyway.

11 Jan 08:04

Tesla's Model S now drives up to meet you

by Jon Fingas
When Tesla first unveiled its semi-autonomous driving upgrades for the Model S, it made much ado over the ability to summon your car -- you wouldn't have to go into the garage (or walk across a large parking space) just to get moving. Well, that opt...
11 Jan 08:03

Panasonic's smart mirrors gave me a makeover

by Nicole Lee
We've seen Panasonic's smart mirrors before a couple of years ago, when they made over Engadget Managing Editor Dana Wollman into a 1970s space princess. Now the company is at CES 2016 showing off their smart mirror tech yet again, but this time with...
09 Jan 08:21

You can order groceries from the door of Samsung's new fridge

by Billy Steele
When Samsung announced its latest smart refrigerator earlier this week, we were intrigued. After the company demoed the appliance during its CES press conference, we had to stop and take a look. If you missed the initial news, the new Family Hub frid...
08 Jan 16:21

CSS Puns

08 Jan 16:21

Sometimes I like to leave 'constructive criticism' when I come across other people's code

08 Jan 15:22

Dronemaker Parrot Debuts Flower Pot At CES For Some Reason

by Kelsey D. Atherton
Roumen.ganeff

Could be useful

Parrot POT

Parrot

Parrot POT

French company Parrot is best known for its small, nimble flying machines. Seen on shelves at Apple stores or stuck in neighborhood parks, the parrot family of drones offer better quality than many toy quadcopters, without the higher cost of being a professional tool. It’s a good niche to carve out in the drone world, but not the only thing Parrot does. Today at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Parrot unveiled something entirely different: a flowerpot.

Here is a list of things the Parrot POT doesn’t do:

  • Fly
  • Move
  • Locomote
  • Travel
  • Soar
  • Levitate

Instead, this non-moving flowerpot is an invitation for gardeners to move even less. Available in slate gray, porcelain, or brick, the pot is almost 12 inches tall, 8 inches in diameter, and weighs a little over 3 pounds. It also holds up to 9 cups of water in its tank, and it can monitor the soil and moisture of the plant inside. Yes, the Parrot POT brings robotic autonomy to tasks like watering a plant.

Parrot POT comes with an app and four modes for fine-tuning how much plant control a user wants. At “perfect drop”, the pot takes care of the plant itself. On “Plant Sitter,” the pot holds up to a month of water and rations it out. With “Expert” a person can adjust the settings in fine detail, and on “Manual” the user presses a button to water the plant and are only alerted if the water tank is empty.

Visions of the future are full of dynamic, dramatic changes, like pocket-sized computers or flying robots. The future is every bit as much about the gradual easing of mundane domestic tasks, from adjusting thermostats to water plants. In that, at least, Parrot POT gives us a vision of tomorrow: One where our plants are taken care of, and our robots aren’t.

08 Jan 15:20

Petition: Put Motörhead's Lemmy On The Periodic Table

by Matt Giles

Harald Tittel/Deutsche Presse-Agentur, via European Pressphoto Agency

Lemmy Kilmister

Ian 'Lemmy' Kilmister, who helped found the heavy metal band Motörhead in the mid-1970s, passed away last week reportedly from an aggressive cancer that he was only recently diagnosed with.

Kilmister had for years lived the lifestyle synonymous with rock 'n roll musicians of his era — sex with thousands of women, disregard for authority, etc. — and thanks to a petition circulating on Change.org, the memorialization of the hoarse-throated singer and bassist might soon have a scientific bent.

Four super-heavy chemical elements were recently added to the periodic table, completing the seventh row of what is an elementary school hallmark, and the 25,000-plus supporters of the petition hope the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry names one of those elements 'lemmium' in support. According to the petition's organizers:

Lemmy was a force of nature and the very essence of heavy metal.

The four elements currently have temporary names, and it could be years before a more lasting title is bestowed upon the chemical quartet, so there is a chance lemmium actually joins the other 117 elements. Hopefully the Gods of Rock abide.

08 Jan 15:16

Withings Thermo Is A Thermometer That Doesn’t Enter Your Body

Roumen.ganeff

Nice idea, but $100...

Michael Nunez / Popular Science

Withings Thermo

This smart thermometer costs $100 and ships in March.

Thermometers can be pretty invasive: You stick them in your ears, your mouth, and occasionally in other places. Not this one. The Withings Thermos reads your temperature when you place one end on your forehead—that's it.

The Withings Thermo takes about two seconds to read your temperature once it's pressed against your forehead. Your body temperature reads out in a dotted LED display. A small light on the front will blink green if your temp is registered as a healthy rate. If you have a fever, a red light flashes notifying that you’re in poor health.

The companion app keeps track of your temperature over time, which can come in handy especially when you’re sick. You can also keep a log of any medication that you’re taking in a chronological view, so you know whether your temperature is cooling after taking any health products. The app stores profiles of several people, lasts on 2 AAA batteries for about two years. The Termo retails for $100 and will be available in March.

Withings Thermo App

Michael Nunez / Popular Science

Withings Thermo

This is the companion app to the Withings Thermo.

08 Jan 14:58

HBO in Talks to Renew Game of Thrones Through Season 8

by Matt Porter

On the heels of the announcement that Game of Thrones Season 6 will be starting up on April 24, HBO is negotiating a renewal for the hit series for both Season 7 and Season 8.

According to Deadline, HBO president Michael Lombardo confirmed at the TCA (Television Critics Association) press tour that the company are currently in renewal discussions with creators David Benioff and Dan Weiss for the two-season renewal.

Back in July of 2015, Lombardo said that "there's probably two more years after

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08 Jan 10:49

The Official Story of the Stormtrooper Fans Call TR-8R

by Steven Strom

The official Star Wars website has put a name to the Star Wars: The Force Awakens Stormtrooper-turned-meme known to most as TR-8R.

"His name is FN-2199," says a post on the site. "But his friends call him 'Nines.'”

Fans who have seen the film will recognize the character as the seemingly well-trained Stormtrooper who entered into melee combat with Finn after shouting the "Traitor!" to his former comrade (hence his nickname TR-8R). His combat skills and one spoken line have helped turn Nines into a minor online sensation, though until now he was only known by his fan-given moniker.

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