After mothballing Comma One, George Hotz releases free autonomous car software

Enlarge / A sketch of the Comma Neo. (credit: Comma.ai)

In Silicon Valley, hacker George Hotz gained fast fame after being the first to unlock an iPhone. He recently capitalized on his reputation and turned to hacking cars, raising millions in funding to build a third-party device that would give average, everyday cars autonomous functionality. He called this device the Comma One and the company making it Comma.ai.

But the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) sent Hotz a letter in October asking him to detail how the product works, as well as how the safety features built into the Comma One work, or face an ever-growing fine. Hotz abruptly canceled the product, tweeting, “The comma one is cancelled. comma.ai will be exploring other products and markets.” Then on Tuesday night this week, Hotz started tweeting hints that the Comma One could be revived, at least partially. He also posted a video of what appeared to be a Comma One-type device driving on the 280 highway.

On Wednesday morning, Hotz held a press conference in a San Francisco home to announce that instead of reviving the Comma One as a market-ready device, Comma.ai would be giving away its self-driving software—called Open Pilot—as well as plans for compatible hardware, called Comma Neo—for free, according to The Verge.

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Source: Ars Technica – After mothballing Comma One, George Hotz releases free autonomous car software

This Is Why I'm Fat: A Hot Glue Gun For Cheese

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Meet the Fondoodler (a combination of fondue, a melted cheese dip, and doodler, a penis), a $25 electric hot glue style gun for use with cheese. It can melt string, shredded, block and sliced cheese and extrude it from the heated tip for drawing, decorating, or being the cement that holds your cracker castle together. Alternatively, just squirt it straight into your mouth like a can of warm spray cheese. I can’t even believe they’re trying to pretend like that’s not what this is for. Now, are you thinking what I’m thinking? “Cheese body shots?” *winks, takes off shirt to reveal bear costume*

Keep going for several more shots and a video of somebody showing off their alphabet writing skills on Ritz crackers.

Source: Geekologie – This Is Why I’m Fat: A Hot Glue Gun For Cheese

Top YouTubers Say They're Being Screwed Yet Again By The Platform

Recently, top YouTubers are saying that, yet again, the behemoth video sharing network is fucking them over. This time, it’s about an alleged issue with subscribers—suddenly, they’re disappearing. And, no, it’s not because they unsubscribed. YouTube, for their part, denies that there’s a glitch.

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Source: Kotaku – Top YouTubers Say They’re Being Screwed Yet Again By The Platform

Incredible discovery of 40,000-year-old tools for art and engineering

Evidence from a cave in eastern Ethiopia has revealed something extraordinary about the origins of symbolic thought among humans. Forty thousand years ago, Porc-Epic Cave was surrounded by lush grassland full of lakes and rivers. It was home to a thriving community of people who devoted considerable time to processing ochre, a reddish powder used for a variety of things including paint. Writing in PLoS One, anthropologists Daniela Eugenia Rosso, Africa Pitarch Martí, and Francesco d’Errico describe how they worked with the National Museum of Ethiopia to analyze these Middle Stone Age people’s ochre-making tools. What they found was that this workshop’s artisans produced a far more complicated array of substances than anyone had understood before. Some were used for art and decoration, and others were used for engineering better weapons.

Anthropologists often use ochre processing as a proxy for the origins of human symbolic thought. That’s partly because ochre is relatively difficult to make, requiring a few steps and at least two kinds of tools. As the researchers write, ochre comes from “rocks containing a high proportion of iron oxides, often mixed with silicates and other mineral substances, which are red or yellow in color, or are streaked with such shades.” Ochre itself is made by pulverizing the rock with one kind of tool and then reducing it to a powder between two grindstones.

There are many aesthetic uses for ochre, including as fabric dye, paint for cave walls, or a stain for rocks and other materials. All these artistic or cosmetic uses imply symbolic thought. But early humans used ochre for utilitarian purposes, too. The powder was mixed with other adhesives to keep weapons snugly attached to their hafts. Put simply, ochre was a key ingredient in glue.

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Source: Ars Technica – Incredible discovery of 40,000-year-old tools for art and engineering

No Man's Sky's Steam Page Didn't Mislead Gamers, Rules UK Ad Watchdog

Shortly after it officially launched in August on PlayStation and Windows, No Man’s Sky — the game that sees the protagonist explore space and experience uncertain places — was accused of false advertising. Players felt that the pictures and videos used to promote the game on its Steam page didn’t represent the sort of things players might expect to encounter in the game. Today, a UK advertising regulator has ruled the opposite — the game didn’t mislead gamers. Ars Technica reports: The complainants — who had been part of a semi-organized campaign upset with the state of the game at release — insisted that the screenshots on the storefront had seemed to promise various features that turned out to be absent from the final game. These included things like the appearance and behavior of animals, large in-game buildings, large-scale space combat, loading screens, a promised system wherein the different factions contested galactic territory, and general graphical polish. Hello Games’ defense rested on the fact that No Man’s Sky is procedurally generated, and that while players would not enjoy the exact experience shown in promotional images, they could reasonably expect to see similar things. The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) agreed, saying: “The summary description of the game made clear that it was procedurally generated, that the game universe was essentially infinite, and that the core premise was exploration. As such, we considered consumers would understand the images and videos to be representative of the type of content they would encounter during gameplay, but would not generally expect to see those specific creatures, landscapes, battles, and structures.” It also ruled that the developers hadn’t misled customers over graphics: “We understood the graphical output of the game would be affected by the specifications of each player’s computer, and considered that consumers would generally be aware of this limitation.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – No Man’s Sky’s Steam Page Didn’t Mislead Gamers, Rules UK Ad Watchdog

Reddit Vows to Police Its 'Most Toxic Users'

Steve Huffman, Reddit’s co-founder and CEO, has already admitted that he fucked up last week when he decided to “troll the trolls” by editing user comments in the infamous pro-Trump subreddit, The_Donald. Today, in a long Reddit post, Huffman goes on to address the site’s growing problems with toxic communities and…

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Source: Gizmodo – Reddit Vows to Police Its ‘Most Toxic Users’

No Man's Sky Cleared By U.K. Ad Watchdog

The UK’s Advertising Standards Authority has issued a ruling on the complaints against Hello Games for misleading advertising of No Man’s Sky. Head on over to Blue’s for all the news.

They say: “We investigated the ad under CAP Code (Edition 12) rules 3.1 and 3.3 (Misleading advertising), 3.7 (Substantiation) and 3.11 (Exaggeration), but did not find it in breach.” Their entire write-up is lengthy, but repeats the same point, talking about all the things that can be “understood” (the word appears in the statement 14 times) from the game’s advertising.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – No Man’s Sky Cleared By U.K. Ad Watchdog

YouTube Rolling Out 4K Live Streaming

YouTube has just announced that it is rolling out 4K live streaming with both standard and 360º viewing at up to 60 frames per second. Those of you eager to start burning through your bandwidth cap can start by watching the Video Game Awards tomorrow at 6pm PST.

4K video isn’t just a little different from HD video; it’s a giant leap. It shows 8 MILLION pixels total, with an image that has four times more image definition than even 1080p video. What does this mean in real world terms? Live streams look better, show a more detailed, crisper picture, and aren’t as blurry when there’s fast action on screen. Basically, 4K makes everything better to look at. And because we support 4K at up to 60 frames per second, creators can make content that looks silky smooth, and more realistic than ever before.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – YouTube Rolling Out 4K Live Streaming

I'm Richard Wong, Head of Engineering at Coursera, and This Is How I Work

Coursera is an online education platform through which you can take courses from some of top educational institutions in the world, covering topics that range from the humanities and arts to computer science and coding. It takes a lot of work behind the scenes, though, to keep Coursera’s catalog up and running for…

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Source: LifeHacker – I’m Richard Wong, Head of Engineering at Coursera, and This Is How I Work

Seagate Introduces External Hard Drive That Automatically Backs Up To Amazon's Cloud

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Seagate and Amazon have partnered up on a $99 1TB external hard drive that automatically backs up everything stored on it to the cloud. The Seagate Duet drive’s contents are cloned to Amazon Drive, so you can be pretty confident that your important stuff will be safe. Getting set up with the cloud backup process requires plugging in the drive, signing in with your Amazon account — and that’s pretty much it, from the sounds of it. Drag and drop files over, and you’ll be able to access them from the web or Amazon’s Drive app on smartphones and tablets. If you’re new to the Drive service, Seagate claims you’ll get a year of unlimited storage just for buying the hard drive, which normally costs $59.99 annually. Amazon’s listing for the Duet (the only way to buy it right now) confirms as much, but there’s some fine print: Offer is U.S.-only; Not valid for current Amazon Drive Unlimited Storage paid subscription customers; You’ve got to redeem the promo code within two months of buying the hard drive if you want the year’s worth of unlimited cloud storage; If you return the Duet, Amazon says it will likely reduce your 12 months of unlimited Drive storage down to three, which beats taking it away altogether, I guess.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Seagate Introduces External Hard Drive That Automatically Backs Up To Amazon’s Cloud

Matt Damon Vs. Chinese Monsters Movie The Great Wall Gets an Appropriately Epic New Trailer

The new international trailer for Zhang Yimou’s The Great Wall runs nine minutes and has no subtitles, so unless you’re multilingual you will mostly only be able to understand Matt Damon’s dialogue. However, you only need eyeballs to appreciate all the insanely lavish costumes, weapons, and battle scenes.

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Source: io9 – Matt Damon Vs. Chinese Monsters Movie The Great Wall Gets an Appropriately Epic New Trailer

Oh Goody: ATLAS Humanoid Robot Upgraded To Balance On Uneven Footholds

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Because the apocalypse can’t come soon enough, researchers at the Institute for Human & Machine Cognition have upgraded Boston Dynamics’ ATLAS humanoid robot with a new balancing algorithm that allows the robot to walk on surfaces that only part of his foot can make contact with. ATLAS determines how to best balance itself by placing one foot on the new surface and shifting its weight around to determine what parts of the foothold won’t support it. It then makes the step while using its upper body’s angular momentum to help maintain balance. So, in conclusion, if anybody asks where you’re going to run and hide from the humanoid robot that’s coming to kill you, “Just on the other side of that rubble,” is no longer an acceptable answer if you actually intend to live.

Keep going for a video demonstration.

Source: Geekologie – Oh Goody: ATLAS Humanoid Robot Upgraded To Balance On Uneven Footholds