
Great books, better posture, and the best rechargeable batteries headline today’s best deals.
Source: LifeHacker – Sunday’s Best Deals: Great Kindle Singles, Balance Ball Chairs, Eneloops

Great books, better posture, and the best rechargeable batteries headline today’s best deals.
Source: LifeHacker – Sunday’s Best Deals: Great Kindle Singles, Balance Ball Chairs, Eneloops

We’ve never seen Jupiter quite like this. NASA’s Juno spacecraft flew closer to the giant planet than any spacecraft ever, revealing stunning images and gathering detailed information about the planet for NASA scientists.
Source: Gizmodo – NASA Just Flew a Spacecraft Closer To Jupiter Than Ever Before

A 28-year-old Hungarian construction worker was killed on the set of the untitled Blade Runner sequel, after the set he was taking apart collapsed.
Source: Gizmodo – Set Worker Dies in Blade Runner 2 Accident
Enlarge (credit: New York State Department of Motor Vehicles)
In January, the New York State DMV enhanced its facial recognition technology by doubling the number of measurement points on a driver’s photograph, a move the state’s governor says has led to the arrest of 100 suspected identity thieves and opened 900 unsolved cases. In all, since New York implemented facial recognition technology in 2010, more than 14,000 people have been hampered trying to get multiple licenses.
The newly upgraded system increases the measurement points of a driver’s license picture from 64 to 128. The DMV said this vastly improves its chances of matching new photographs with one already in a database of 16 million photos. As many as 8,000 new pictures are added each day.
“Facial recognition plays a critical role in keeping our communities safer by cracking down on individuals who break the law,” Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said in a statement. “New York is leading the nation with this technology, and the results from our use of this enhanced technology are proof positive that its use is vital in making our roads safer and holding fraudsters accountable.”
Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments
Source: Ars Technica – Enhanced DMV facial recognition technology helps NY nab 100 ID thieves
As I wrote about a few days ago, I’m in the process of my first Broadwell-EP Linux build and for it I had purchased the Xeon E5-2609 v4, a CPU that costs just $300 USD and has eight physical cores while a combined TDP of just 85 Watts, but it lacks Turbo Boost and clocks up to just 1.7GHz. But how does it perform?..
Source: Phoronix – See How Your Linux System Compares To A 0 Broadwell-EP CPU That Lacks Turbo Boost
AMD just broke a record with Lenovo’s Y27f, which happens to be the 101st display released that supports their FreeSync technology. As you probably already know, these monitors provide a stutter- and tear-free experience.
AMD’s game-smoothing FreeSync monitors launched a full year after Nvidia’s rival G-Sync displays, but they’ve been coming fast and furious ever since. Late Thursday, the company revealed that its technology surpassed not one, but two major milestones with the launch of the 27-inch Y27f ($400 on Amazon) earlier this month. This curved, 144Hz 1080p display is both Lenovo’s first-ever FreeSync display, as well as the 101st FreeSync display released overall. FreeSync and G-Sync monitors synchronize the refresh rate of your graphics card with your display. That eliminates stutter and tearing, resulting in gameplay so buttery smooth that you’ll never be able to use a traditional non-variable refresh rate monitor again.
Comments
Source: [H]ardOCP – AMD Rockets Past 100 FreeSync Displays
And the bad publicity for No Man’s Sky continues. It seems that even Steam and Sony have accepted the belief that the developer misled players and are letting people, some of which have already accumulated plenty of hours, get full refunds.
While the refund request isn’t being processed for everyone, some of the users who were eligible for the refund have actually played the game for a while including one on PSN, who claims to have played more than 40 hours of No Man’s Sky yet he was granted a refund by Sony on PSN. There is currently a huge outcry for No Man’s Sky developer Hello Games for misleading marketing. There was never any clear cut answer about the lack of multiplayer but it was implied that there would be some interaction between the players at launch, which never turned out to be the case.
Comments
Source: [H]ardOCP – No Man’s Sky Players Are Getting Refunds From PSN And Steam
It was a pretty kick-ass week in terms of interplanetary exploration — and not even just in NMS. Astronomers found a potentially habitable planet just 4.2 light years from us! This could be our first stop beyond Mars but it’s going to take a while t…
Source: Engadget – After Math: Only the essentials

It’s not uncommon for home and handheld consoles to get a drastic makeover in the years after their launch. Sometimes even after they’ve begun playing second fiddle to a new more powerful sibling.
Source: Kotaku – The Best (And Worst) Console Redesigns

World of Warcraft’s latest expansion Legion drops this Tuesday. The game set the standard for MMORPGs in 2004 and set the stage for the modern MMO. Its subscriber numbers have faltered, but most games still wish they had a fraction of WoW’s success.. Today, we’re taking a look at how the game has evolved over time and how it stacks up to the shadow of its former self.
Source: LifeHacker – World of Warcraft Showdown: Then vs. Now
There’s an active proposal to incorporate a back-end into LLVM for AAP, a processor ISA for deeply-embedded Harvard architectures…
Source: Phoronix – LLVM Might Get An AAP Back-End (Altruistic Processor)
John Ellenby managed the development of the Alto II before starting the company that built the world’s first successful “clamshell” laptop. Slashdot reader fragMasterFlash quotes the New York Times: Ellenby, a British-born computer engineer who played a critical role in paving the way for the laptop computer, died on August 17 in San Francisco. He was 75… Mr. Ellenby’s pioneering work came to fruition in the early 1980s, after he founded Grid Systems, a company in Mountain View, California. As chief executive, he assembled an engineering and design team that included the noted British-born industrial designer William Moggridge. The team produced a clamshell computer with an orange electroluminescent flat-panel display that was introduced as the Compass. It went to market in 1982. The Compass is now widely acknowledged to have been far ahead of its time.
Back in the 1980s, NASA used them as backup navigational devices on the space shuttle — one was recovered from the wreckage of the Space Shuttle Challenger — and John Poindexter, America’s national security advisor during the Reagan administration, described them as “built like an armored tank”. Data storage cost $8,150 — equivalent to $20,325 today.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – RIP John Ellenby, Godfather of the Modern Laptop

Oh, I’m afraid it’s true. My name is Ben Bertoli and you’ll be stuck with me all day. May as well make the most of it, right? I promise we’ll have some fun.
Source: Kotaku – Good News, Kotaku! I’m Your Sunday Guest Editor

An executive producer for The Walking Dead revealed that if NBC picked up the series instead of AMC, it might have become a procedural zombie crime drama, possibly without any actual zombies.
Source: io9 – Producer Says NBC Wanted The Walking Dead as a Zombie Crime Drama

Welcome to Kotaku’s Sunday Comics, your weekly roundup of the best webcomics. The images enlarge if you click on the magnifying glass icon.
Source: Kotaku – Sunday Comics: Rocks

The numbers at the end of a runway aren’t just there to help pilots see where they’re supposed to land. They actually mean something important: the runway’s degree from magnetic north. This video from Atlas Obscura explains.
Source: LifeHacker – What the Numbers at the End of Runways Actually Mean
Tesla makes the world’s best electric cars – but they’re not content to rest on their laurels. The company just launched a powerful new battery that makes the Model S the fastest production car you can actually buy. Meanwhile, autonomous vehicle star…
Source: Engadget – Tesla’s powerful new battery, and more in the week that was

It doesn’t take long to learn the swipes and taps you need to get around your iPhone
. Its intuitiveness is a major selling point, but there are some lesser-known gestures that aren’t immediately obvious that can be useful too. Here are 14 gestures you can use on your iPhone that you might not know about.
Source: Gizmodo – 14 iPhone Gestures You Might Not Know About
Slashdot reader MojoKid quotes an article from Hot Hardware: A security researcher for AVG has discovered a new piece of ransomware called Fantom that masquerades as a critical Windows update. Victims who fall for the ruse will see a Windows screen acting like it’s installing the update, but what’s really happening is that the user’s documents and files are being encrypted in the background…
The scam starts with a pop-up labeled as a critical update from Microsoft. Once a user decides to apply the fake update, it extracts files and executes an embedded program called WindowsUpdate.exe… As with other EDA2 ransomware, Fantom generates a random AES-128 key, encrypts it using RSA, and then uploads it to the culprit. From there, Fantom targets specific file extensions and encrypts those files using AES-128 encryption… Users affected by this are instructed to email the culprit for payment instructions.
While the ransomware is busy encrypting your files, it displays Microsoft’s standard warning about not turning off the computer while the “update” is in progress. Pressing Ctrl+F4 closes that window, according to the article, “but that doesn’t stop the ransomware from encrypting files in the background.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – New Ransomware Poses As A Windows Update
Early on LLVM’s Clang compiler offered much better debugging / error messages than GCC but in the past few years the GNU Compiler Collection developers have been working on generating more helpful messages too. With GCC 7 there will will be more improvements in this space and more…
Source: Phoronix – GCC 7 To Continue Improving Debug Messages, More Helpful Assembly Output