Meet some of the species we’ve found in 2016

One of a set of three new mouse lemur species described this year. Microbus ganzhorni hails from Madagascar—as do all lemurs. (credit: Giuseppe Donati.)

Read any estimate of the number of species present on Earth, and you’ll notice two things: the numbers vary wildly, and they’re always well above the number of species we actually know about. It’s tempting to think we’ve exhausted the exploration of the Earth, that there’s nothing new to see. But one area that we’ve barely scratched the surface of is the biological diversity that we’re a part of.

There are several reasons for this. One is that some habitats, like the deep ocean, are both vast and hard to get to. Others, like caves and islands, isolate populations and generate species at a phenomenal rate. Finally, there’s just a tendency to view, say, all ants as being roughly the same. That can allow species to hide in plain sight, with nobody taking the time to look for the details that distinguish them from their close relatives. DNA sequencing is also telling us that some populations that look identical to us haven’t actually interbred in a very long time, and may be separate species.

As researchers gradually look more closely, the results are a steady stream of new discoveries. We thought we’d share some with you. We set a few simple guidelines for inclusion. The first is that the species had to be discovered this year. The second is that it has to be still living—paleontologists find new species almost as often as biologists do. The final thing is that we had to be able to come up with a decent photo of it.

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Source: Ars Technica – Meet some of the species we’ve found in 2016

Google Hires Former Airbnb Exec Shaun Stewart To Bring Self-Driving Cars To The Masses

Google Hires Former Airbnb Exec Shaun Stewart To Bring Self-Driving Cars To The Masses
Google is really trying to get the ball — or should we say tire — rolling on its self-driving car project. The company just hired one of Airbnb’s top executives, Shaun Stewart. Stewart’s job will be to aid in the commercialization of Google’s self-driving car technology.

Stewart’s specialty lies in building and scaling businesses. He

Source: Hot Hardware – Google Hires Former Airbnb Exec Shaun Stewart To Bring Self-Driving Cars To The Masses

RadeonSI OpenGL Performance Has Evolved A Lot Since Early 2015

Yesterday I posted some benchmarks showing how the AMDGPU / R9 Fury performance has jumped up in the past few months just since the April release of Ubuntu 16.04 LTS. For those wondering how the open-source AMD OpenGL performance has evolved over the longer term, I took a Radeon R9 270X graphics card and re-did tests going back to Ubuntu 15.04 for looking at the RadeonSI Gallium3D performance for the past year and a half.

Source: Phoronix – RadeonSI OpenGL Performance Has Evolved A Lot Since Early 2015

Kindle crashes and broken PowerShell: Something isn’t right with Windows 10 testing

(credit: Amazon)

Last week, we learned that the Windows 10 Anniversary Update caused trouble for many webcam users. Today, it’s the turn of Kindle owners to cry foul, with numerous reports that plugging a Kindle into a Windows 10 machine with the update will make the PC crash with a Blue Screen of Death.

This problem has more than a hint of the same feeling as the webcam issue: it’s the kind of thing that shows up quickly when using Windows 10 on a primary system but is going to be much more obscure if you only tested the Windows Insider previews in a virtual machine or secondary system—such systems are much less likely to be plugged in to all the many peripherals and gadgets that primary machines are. Microsoft’s own advice is that the Insider previews should not be installed on your “everyday computer.” That’s good advice; the quality of the builds released to the Insider program is far too inconsistent to make it a good option for a machine that you depend on. But that has consequences: the Insider program is going to consistently miss this kind of hardware interaction.

Investigation of the issue and development of a fix is apparently underway.

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Source: Ars Technica – Kindle crashes and broken PowerShell: Something isn’t right with Windows 10 testing

Angry Desert Rain Frog Squeaks Like A Dog Toy

desert-rain-frog-warcry.jpg

Seen here looking more like concept art for an alien movie than something that actually exists on earth, a desert rain frog lets photographer Dean Boshoff know that its not happy with his presence. And can you blame it? That frog didn’t asked to be filmed or photographed. You film or photograph me without my permission and I’d do the same thing. I mean, if that frog was swinging a broomstick with a handsaw taped to the end. I know the Battletoads!

Keep going for the video.

Source: Geekologie – Angry Desert Rain Frog Squeaks Like A Dog Toy

Ask Slashdot: Do You Still Use Optical Media?

The other day at an event, public relation officials were handing out press kit (it usually contains everything the company announced, photos from the event, and contact information of the company) to journalists. When I reached office and opened the kit, I found a CD in it. Which was weird because it’s been two to three years since I had a computer with an optical drive. And all these years I didn’t need one. Which begs a question: Does your work require dealing with CDs and DVDs anymore? An anonymous reader asks the same question: I still use optical discs for various backup purposes, but recently I developed doubts as to the reliability of the media to last a reasonable amount of time. I have read a review on Amazon of the TDK DVDs, in which somebody described losing 8000 (sic!) DVDs of data after 4 years of storage. I promptly canceled my purchase of TDKs. So, do you still use opticals for back-up — Blu-Rays, DVDs, CDs? — and if so, how do you go about it?I do buy Blu-Ray discs of movies, though. So my life isn’t optical disc free yet. What about yours?

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Ask Slashdot: Do You Still Use Optical Media?

Own A Drone? You May Need An FAA Drone Pilot Certificate

After looking at the new rules and requirements for drone operators, something tells me there are going to be a lot of “illegal” drone operators out there.

The new rules do require a commercial operator to get a Remote Pilot Certificate with a Small Unmanned Aircraft Rating — licensed, current pilots have to pass a simple online test; non-pilots have to pass an aeronautical knowledge test which includes the ability to read aeronautical charts, understand and decipher aviation weather reports, in addition to learning the new operational drone rules. It costs approximately $150 to take the test. After taking the test, would-be drone pilots need to be vetted by TSA to determine whether they are a security risk. Only after that vetting is done will the FAA issue an applicant a certificate to fly a drone.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Own A Drone? You May Need An FAA Drone Pilot Certificate

Game cracking scene speeds up efforts against Denuvo protection

It took roughly two years for crackers to put the first dents in Denuvo’s surprisingly robust anti-piracy protection for PC games. Now, a Denuvo-protected game has been cracked just six weeks after its release, seemingly presaging an increased pace of efforts against the DRM scheme.

TorrentFreak reports on the new crack for indie critical darling Inside, which hit the scene earlier this week. The crack comes courtesy of CONSPIR4CY (aka CPY), the same group responsible for a crack of Denuvo-protected Rise of the Tomb Raider earlier this month.

While CPY’s ROTTR crack came nearly seven months after the game was released, Inside‘s protection was broken about six weeks after it launched on the PC. This is an important distinction, since the bulk of a game’s legitimate sales tend to come in the first few months after release (or during sales much later in their lifecycle). If crackers can manage to get the wait time for a Denuvo crack down to a matter of days, the protection’s value to developers and publishers could wither.

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Source: Ars Technica – Game cracking scene speeds up efforts against Denuvo protection

All the Scifi, Horror and Other Great Genre Movies Coming To Theaters This Fall

Hollywood generally considers the fall movie season to be awards season. It’s when studios start rolling out their best films as the end of the year approaches. For genre fans, though, we get that and so much more. There are also horror movies for Halloween, big exciting blockbusters, as well as wondrous fantasy for us to enjoy. Here are all the fantastic films opening this fall you should know.

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Source: io9 – All the Scifi, Horror and Other Great Genre Movies Coming To Theaters This Fall

How to Do the Perfect Plank

Planks are a simple bodyweight exercise that challenges you to hold your body as stiff as a board for as long as you can. It’s sort of become a badge of honor to be able to hold it for 60 seconds or longer. But if you’re holding it for aeons without the shakes, you’re probably not working your core as you should.

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Do the Perfect Plank