Razer keyboards, mice, and other peripherals are very popular with gamers. However, the company has never provided an official control UI / driver for managing their devices under Linux while various open-source projects have filled the void…
Source: Phoronix – Polychromatic Provides A Nice UI To Razer Keyboards/Mice On Linux
Monthly Archives: August 2016
Pinterest Acquires Instapaper
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Instapaper, a pioneering app for saving articles to read later, has been acquired — again. The app, which was created by developer Marco Arment and sold to Betaworks in 2013, has found a new home at Pinterest. The goal is “to accelerate discovering and saving articles on Pinterest,” the company said in a statement. It will continue to operate as a standalone app, and the Instapaper team will work on both that app and on Pinterest generally. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. As a visual search engine, Pinterest isn’t often thought of as a place to bookmark written content. But in 2013 the company introduced article pins, a format that creates rich bookmarks complete with a photo and a preview of the text. The acquisition of Instapaper suggests the company believes there is more to be done there — although it’s not certain how valuable that will be for Pinterest. Instapaper can be used for free or in a $30-a-year premium version; the company has never said how many subscribers it has.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Pinterest Acquires Instapaper
Fossil evidence of supernovae found on the sea floor
Astrophysicist Shawn Bishop of the Technical University in Munich looked for evidence of supernovae in an unlikely place: on the sea floor. Now, according to a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Bishop confirmed that there is a…
Source: Engadget – Fossil evidence of supernovae found on the sea floor
Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: SnackTAYku: The BK Whopperino Is T

Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: SnackTAYku: The BK Whopperino Is The More Convenient And Less Messy Way To Eat A Whopper
• Berserk (2016) Discussion – Ep 8: “Reunion in the Den of Evil” • Discussion – Are Mobile Games The Future?
Source: Kotaku – Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: SnackTAYku: The BK Whopperino Is T
NVIDIA 367.44 Stable Linux Driver Released
While the NVIDIA 370 Linux driver series is currently in beta, the 367 driver series has been updated as the latest long-lived branch release…
Source: Phoronix – NVIDIA 367.44 Stable Linux Driver Released
KDE Plasma 5.7.4 Released
Today marks the latest monthly bug-fix release of KDE Plasma 5.7…
Source: Phoronix – KDE Plasma 5.7.4 Released
Sony Tries To Remove News Articles About PlayStation 4 Slim Leak From The Internet
Sony is expected to announce two new PlayStation 4 consoles at a scheduled event on September 7th in New York City, but as that date nears more leaks of the consoles have emerged. The most recent leak appears to show the upcoming PlayStation 4 Slim, which Sony is trying to remove from the internet by taking down news articles from social media accounts about the leak. Erik Kain via @erikkain on Twitter tweeted (Tweet no longer exists): “Sony issued a takedown and had this post removed from my Facebook page: https://t.co/fIjP0buTdY (Warning: may be paywalled).” Techdirt reports: “[The Forbes post] references the work Eurogamer did in visiting the leaker of the image to confirm the console is for real (it is), as well as generating its own image and even video of the console working for its story on the leak. But if you go today to the Eurogamer post about the leak, the video has been replaced by the following update. UPDATE, 7.30pm: Upon taking legal advice, we have removed the video previously referenced in this article. Left unsaid is whether or not any contact had been made by Sony with Eurogamer, thus prompting this ‘legal advice,’ but one can imagine that being the case, particularly given Sony’s threats to social media users sharing images and reporting of Sony leaks and, more to the point, threats against any media that might report on those leaks.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Sony Tries To Remove News Articles About PlayStation 4 Slim Leak From The Internet
AMD Zen Microarchiture Part 2: Extracting Instruction-Level Parallelism
Hot Chips is an annual conference that allows semiconductor companies to present their latest and greatest ideas or forthcoming products in an academic-style environment, and is predominantly aimed as the professional semiconductor engineer. This year has a number of talks about power management, upcoming IBM CPUs, upcoming Intel CPUs, upcoming NVIDIA SoCs and the final talk of the final day is from AMD, discussing Zen in even more depth than the previous week. While we were unable to attend the event in person, we managed to get some hands-on time with information and put questions to Mike Clark, AMD Senior Fellow and Chief Design Engineer on Zen.
Source: AnandTech – AMD Zen Microarchiture Part 2: Extracting Instruction-Level Parallelism
Track: Andrew’s Song | Artist: I The Mighty | Album: Oil In Water EP

Track: Andrew’s Song | Artist: I The Mighty | Album: Oil In Water EP
Source: Kotaku – Track: Andrew’s Song | Artist: I The Mighty | Album: Oil In Water EP
LSD Can Mess With the Language Centers in Your Brain

The stereotype of late 1960s authors and musicians is that certain drugs can help to expand the mind and make the user more creative. As someone who has never taken psychedelics, I can’t know this for sure, but a recent study seems to be the first step in displaying scientific evidence in support of that claim.
Source: Gizmodo – LSD Can Mess With the Language Centers in Your Brain
Even Dark Souls Cosplay Is Hard

This is Russian cosplayer niamash (whose Witcher work
we’ve featured before
) as Dark Souls 3’s Fire Keeper.
Source: Kotaku – Even Dark Souls Cosplay Is Hard
AMD Zen Performance Preview
Last week AMD held a private Zen performance preview for a handful of press outlets at the St. Regis Hotel in San Francisco. Well, today AMD has released the complete slide deck containing all the info the company shared at that meeting. So, without further ado, lets get into the slides, shall we?
Comments
Source: [H]ardOCP – AMD Zen Performance Preview
US Trade Judge Clears Fitbit of Stealing Jawbone's Trade Secrets
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Fitbit did not steal rival Jawbone’s trade secrets, a U.S. International Trade Commission judge ruled on Tuesday, dashing Jawbone’s hopes of securing an import ban against Fitbit’s wearable fitness tracking devices. The judge, Dee Lord, said that there had been no violation of the Tariff Act, which gives the commission the power to block products that infringe U.S. intellectual property, because “no party has been shown to have misappropriated any trade secret.” The ruling means Jawbone comes away with nothing from a complaint it filed with the trade agency in July 2015, accusing Fitbit of infringing six patents and poaching employees who took with them confidential data about Jawbone’s business, such as plans, supply chains and technical details. Jawbone first sued Fitbit last year over trade secret violations in California state court, where the case is still pending. The companies, both based in San Francisco, are also litigating over patents in federal court.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – US Trade Judge Clears Fitbit of Stealing Jawbone’s Trade Secrets
The Small-Space, Big Screen Workspace

Jason shared this bang-for-your-buck workspace with us over in our Workspace Show and Tell Pool on Flickr, complete with a sharp-looking IKEA desk and a good bit of gear in a compact but cozy working and gaming space. Here are some more photos of his setup.
Source: LifeHacker – The Small-Space, Big Screen Workspace
Amazon is rebooting Scorsese's 'The Departed' into a TV series
Streaming services continue to gobble up popular titles to adapt and reimagine for their content-craving audiences. But unlike Netflix’s recent decision to adapt the timeless children’s novel Anne of Green Gables, Amazon Studios has shown that it’s w…
Source: Engadget – Amazon is rebooting Scorsese’s ‘The Departed’ into a TV series
Nuclear waste accident 2 years ago may cost more than $2 billion to clean up
According to the Department of Energy, this is an exploded waste drum in the dump. “Damage can be seen to the slip sheet on top of the waste container and there are remnants of a magnesium oxide bag also visible.” (credit: Department of Energy )
The Los Angeles Times is estimating that an explosion that occurred at a New Mexico nuclear waste dumping facility in 2014 could cost upwards of $2 billion to clean up.
Construction began on the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) in New Mexico’s Carlsbad desert in the 1980s (PDF). The site was built to handle transuranic waste from the US’ nuclear weapons program. The WIPP had been eyed to receive nuclear waste from commercial, power-generating plants as well.
According to the LA Times, the 2014 explosion at the WIPP was downplayed by the federal government, with the Department of Energy (DoE) putting out statements indicating that cleanup was progressing quickly. Indeed, a 2015 Recovery Plan insisted that “limited waste disposal operations” would resume in the first quarter of 2016. Instead, two years have passed since the incident without any indication that smaller nuclear waste cleanup programs around the US will be able to deliver their waste to the New Mexico facility any time soon.
Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments
Source: Ars Technica – Nuclear waste accident 2 years ago may cost more than billion to clean up
Seeing New York City in Ridiculous 8K Is Pretty Sweet


I love New York City. I live here, so I’m biased. You might hate New York, and think it sucks, and think it’s dirty, and think people who live in New York talk about New York way too damn much. That’s fine. You’re actually more right than you know. But even you should be able to enjoy this fine video of New York City in glorious 8K. It’s every important landmark, building, bridge, cityscape, and thing you’ve seen a thousand times before in stupid TV shows and movies set in New York, painted with the most beautiful pixels I’ve ever seen.
Source: Gizmodo – Seeing New York City in Ridiculous 8K Is Pretty Sweet
Google Search Removes 'Mobile-Friendly' Label, Will Tackle Interstitials Next
An anonymous reader quotes a report from VentureBeat: Google today announced two updates to mobile search results: an aesthetic one rolling out now and an algorithmic one coming next year. The former consists of removing the “mobile-friendly” label in search results and the latter will punish mobile sites that use interstitials. The goal is to “make finding content easier for users,” though as always, the company didn’t share exactly how much of an impact users and webmasters can expect. The report adds: “If your site is in the 15 percent group, here’s a quick recap. A webpage is considered ‘mobile friendly’ if it meets the following criteria, as detected in real time by Googlebot: Avoids software that is not common on mobile devices, like Flash; Uses text that is readable without zooming; Sizes content to the screen so users don’t have to scroll horizontally or zoom; Places links far enough apart so that the correct one can be easily tapped. The company now wants to tackle ‘intrusive interstitials’ as they ‘provide a poorer experience to users than other pages where content is immediately accessible.’ After January 10, 2017, pages where content is not easily accessible when coming from mobile search results ‘may not rank as highly.’ Interstitials that Google doesn’t like include showing a popup that covers the main content (immediately or delayed), displaying a standalone interstitial that the user has to dismiss before accessing the main content, and using a layout where the above-the-fold portion is similar to a standalone interstitial but the original content is inlined underneath. Interstitials that Google deems OK include legal obligations (cookie usage or for age verification), login dialogs on sites where content is not publicly indexable, and banners that use a reasonable amount of screen space and are easily dismissible.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Google Search Removes ‘Mobile-Friendly’ Label, Will Tackle Interstitials Next
PSN's first Humble Bundle gives you Capcom games at a discount
Humble Bundle is best-known for its PC game offers, but it’s branching out in a big way. It’s partnering with Capcom and Sony to launch PSN’s first-ever Humble Bundle, the appropriately titled Humble Capcom PlayStation Bundle. Pay at least $1 and yo…
Source: Engadget – PSN’s first Humble Bundle gives you Capcom games at a discount
Microsoft sheds some light on its mysterious holographic processing unit
Enlarge / The HPU’s floorplan. (credit: Microsoft)
Since it was first unveiled, we’ve learned bits and pieces about the hardware inside Microsoft’s HoloLens augmented reality headset. But Microsoft’s custom Holographic Processing Unit (HPU) has always posed something of a mystery. At Hot Chips this week, the company finally shed a little light on what its special chip is doing.
Ever since we first used HoloLens, we knew that it had some special hardware. Our first units weren’t the sleek all-in-one devices that are now available to developers and corporations for $3,000. Instead, each of our devices had a bulky chest-mounted unit that contained an FPGA (a kind of chip that can be rewired on-the-fly to change its behavior), fans to keep it cool, and an umbilical cord to provide power.
That FPGA was the precursor to the HPU that the HoloLens headsets now contain. The HPU integrates data from the HoloLens’s sensors (accelerometers to detect motion and a Kinect-like camera system to detect depth). The chip uses those sensors to recognize gestures, maintain a map of the environment, and ensure that virtual 3D objects retain their position in the real world.
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Source: Ars Technica – Microsoft sheds some light on its mysterious holographic processing unit



