Injustice 2 Is Surprisingly at Its Best When It Forgets It's an Injustice Sequel

The first Injustice game—and the fantastic tie-in comic that accompanied it—told a story that pitted Batman and Superman against each other in a battle between heroism and villainy, and how good people can be driven to do horrible things. Injustice 2 isn’t really about that, and that’s both interesting and at times…

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Source: Gizmodo – Injustice 2 Is Surprisingly at Its Best When It Forgets It’s an Injustice Sequel

Asus Goes Big On Slim Laptops at Computex

At Computex, Asus announced a range of new laptops. From a report: The new ZenBook Pro takes center stage, featuring powerful hardware in a slim form factor — an Intel Core i7-7700HQ as well as a Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti, while the world’s thinnest convertible ZenBook Flip S lets you play around with its 4K display. But it’s not all just flagship products, Asus also announced new VivoBooks meant for the mainstream market. The new VivoBook Pro packs Intel’s seventh-generation processors and comes loaded with discrete graphics in the form of Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 1050. The VivoBook S15 features more modest specs but still packs Nvidia GeForce GTX 940 discrete graphics. You can real the full-specifications of aforementioned laptops here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Asus Goes Big On Slim Laptops at Computex

E.T.'s Climactic Bike Ride Is Like an Arthouse Film Without John Williams's Score

The films of Steven Spielberg feel inseparable from the music of John Williams. But for some cinephiles, Williams represents Spielberg’s most manipulative and sentimental instincts. Well, here’s your chance to see one of the most iconic moments in the two artists career without the famous score that makes the scene…

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Source: Gizmodo – E.T.’s Climactic Bike Ride Is Like an Arthouse Film Without John Williams’s Score

Doctor Who Just Pulled Off a Barnstorming Cliffhanger

There’s a lot of comparisons to be drawn between this weekend’s “The Pyramid at the End of the World” and its preceding episode, “Extremis”—mainly in that they’re both setup for a story that’s really yet to shift into high gear. But, they’re also both examples of how Doctor Who can transform a humdrum episode into…

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Source: Gizmodo – Doctor Who Just Pulled Off a Barnstorming Cliffhanger

British Airways CEO Won't Resign, Says Outsourcing Not To Blame For IT Failure

British Airways CEO Alex Cruz insisted he would not resign on Monday as he sought to draw a line under three days of chaos at the UK flag carrier after IT problems left tens of thousands of passenger stranded. In an interview — the first since a global computer outage all but shut the airline down — Cruz said he doesn’t think “it would make much of use for me to resign.” Separately, he also denied an outsourcing deal was to blame for the IT problems that hit on Saturday, causing the airline to cancel almost all its services over the weekend. From a report: A leaked staff email revealed Mr Cruz had told staff not to comment on the system failure. When asked about the email he told the BBC the tone was clear: “Stop moaning and come and help us.” The airline is now close to full operational capacity after the problems resulted in mass flight cancellations at Heathrow and Gatwick over the bank holiday weekend. Questions remain about how a power problem could have had such impact, said the BBC’s technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones. One theory was that returning systems were unusable as the data had become unsynchronised. […] Cruz told the BBC a power surge, had “only lasted a few minutes,” but the back-up system had not worked properly. He said the IT failure was not due to technical staff being outsourced from the UK to India.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – British Airways CEO Won’t Resign, Says Outsourcing Not To Blame For IT Failure

Asus Announces VivoBook Pro 15 N580: Intel Kaby Lake CPU, up to 4K Display & GeForce GTX 1050

With Computex now in full swing, earlier today Asus took the wraps off of their latest VivoBook laptop, the VivoBook Pro 15 N580. Starting at $799, the 15-inch brushed aluminum laptop comes with an Intel quad-core processor, and NVIDIA GTX 1050 graphics, with an optional 4K display.


Of the information Asus has released so far, the company has released the base price, but not the prices of the higher-end configurations. At the $799 base model will include an Intel Core-i5 7300HQ CPU, 500 GB HDD, and a 1080p display. Meanwhile the high-end model will have a Core-i7 7700HQ, 4K full sRGB screen, NVIDIA GTX 1050 graphics, 16GB of RAM, and both a 512GB PCIe SSD and a 2TB hard drive. Asus will also be including Intel’s Optane Memory for faster storage performance (though it’s not clear if this is just for HDD models or all models).
















Asus VivoBook 15 N580
Processor Intel Core i5-7300HQ (4C/4T, 2.5-3.5GHz, 6MB L3, 14nm, 45w)

Intel Core i7-7700HQ (4C/8T, 2.8-3.8GHz, 6MB L3, 14nm, 45w)

Memory Up To 16 GB (2x SO-DIMM)
Graphics Intel Core

Intel HD Graphics 630 (24 EUs)
(Optional) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050

(640 CUDA Cores)
Displays 15.6″ 1080p

(Optional) 15.6″ 1080p, 178° Viewing Angle

(Optional) 15.6″ 1080p, 100% sRGB, 178° Viewing Angle

(Optional) 15.6″ 4K, 100% sRGB, 178° Viewing Angle
Storage HDD: 500 GB, 1 TB, 2TB

SSD (SATA): 128 GB, 256 GB, 512 GB
Networking 802.11ac, 2×2:2, 866Mpbs Max, 2.4 and 5GHz

Bluetooth 4.2
Audio Stereo Speakers (Harman Kardon Certified)
Battery 47 Whr
Right Side 2x USB 2.0 Type-A

Headset Jack

SD Card Reader

Kensington Lock
Left Side USB 3.0 Type-A

USB 3.0 Type-C (w/DP Support)

RJ45 Slim Port

HDM
Dimensions 380 x 256 x 19.2 mm
Weight Non-Touch: 1.99kg

Touch: 2.29kg
Pricing $799 USD and up

Considering its plethora of high-end components, the VivoBook Pro’s 4.85-pound weight and 0.75-inch thickness are quite reasonable. The VivoBook Pro uses a dual-fan system to keep its powerful components from getting too hot. During a brief hands-on, the laptop felt solid and sturdy in my hands and its metal deck was pleasantly cool to the touch.


The VivoBook’s backlight keyboard felt sturdy snappy under my fingers and didn’t even have a hint of flex. Its buttonless touchpad had just the right amount of friction and resistance for each click.


Asus claims that the optional 4K screen on the VivoBook covers an impressive 100 percent of the sRGB color gamut. In my brief time with the laptop, it was difficult to tell how vibrant the colors were as the background and icons the company displayed were rather bland.



The VivoBook Pro doesn’t skimp on ports. Its left side contains an Ethernet port, a USB 3.0 connector, HDMI out and a USB Type-C port. The right side houses two more USB 3.0 ports, an SD card reader and a 3.5mm audio jack. It’s a shame that Asus didn’t put a Thunderbolt 3 port on this laptop, but that would have likely added to the cost.


Asus hasn’t announced a release date for the VivoBook Pro. However, depending on just what the base configuration is like and how much the higher-end models cost, this laptop could be a great buy for design students or anyone that needs to do creative work, without breaking the bank.


Avram Piltch Contributed to this Report



Source: AnandTech – Asus Announces VivoBook Pro 15 N580: Intel Kaby Lake CPU, up to 4K Display & GeForce GTX 1050

How to Build a Smart Home Where Everything Might Actually Work

The smart home future is here… sort of. But really how smart are a bunch of different devices all speaking different languages? Unfortunately, the smart home can be very stupid and often takes longer to set up than breathless advertisements imply. We’re here to tell you how you can build a smart home where…

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Source: Gizmodo – How to Build a Smart Home Where Everything Might Actually Work

Noctua Exhibit at Computex Has AMD ThreadRipper Heat Sinks and More [Rumor]

Noctua has shown off some new interesting AMD heat sinks at Computex 2017. eTeknix was on the prowl at the show and has posted a video of the upcoming Noctua product line that is presumed to be for the AMD ThreadRipper CPU lineup. They are huge! I hope that Kyle does another CPU cooler installation video with the AMD ThreadRipper processor. I bet the amount of paste necessary for installation will be legendary!



Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Noctua Exhibit at Computex Has AMD ThreadRipper Heat Sinks and More [Rumor]

US Might Ban Laptops On All Flights Into And Out of the Country

The United States might ban laptops from aircraft cabins on all flights into and out of the country as part of a ramped-up effort to protect against potential security threats, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said on Sunday. From a report:In an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” Kelly said the United States planned to “raise the bar” on airline security, including tightening screening of carry-on items. “That’s the thing that they are obsessed with, the terrorists, the idea of knocking down an airplane in flight, particularly if it’s a U.S. carrier, particularly if it’s full of U.S. people.” In March, the government imposed restrictions on large electronic devices in aircraft cabins on flights from 10 airports, including the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Turkey. Kelly said the move would be part of a broader airline security effort to combat what he called “a real sophisticated threat.” He said no decision had been made as to the timing of any ban. “We are still following the intelligence,” he said, “and are in the process of defining this, but we’re going to raise the bar generally speaking for aviation much higher than it is now.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – US Might Ban Laptops On All Flights Into And Out of the Country

Is “I forget” a valid defense when court orders demand a smartphone password?

Enlarge (credit: Aurich / Thinkstock)

On May 30, two suspects accused of extorting the so-called “Queen of Snapchat” as part of a sex-tape scandal are scheduled to appear in a Florida court. But as wild as the premise sounds, primarily the accused need only to answer a simple question on this visit. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Charles Johnson wants an explanation as to why Hencha Voigt and her then boyfriend, Wesley Victor, can’t remember the passcodes to their mobile phones.

if he doesn’t believe them or if they remain silent, the two suspects face possible contempt charges and indefinite jail time for refusing a court order to unlock their phones so prosecutors can examine text messages. Their defense to that order, however, rests on an unsettled area of law. Voigt and Victor maintain that a court order requiring them to unlock an encrypted device is a breach of the Fifth Amendment right to be free from compelled self-incrimination.

If things don’t go their way in court Tuesday, the duo certainly wouldn’t be the first ones ordered to prison for failing to abide by a judge’s decryption order. They likely won’t be the last ones, either.

Read 32 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Is “I forget” a valid defense when court orders demand a smartphone password?

Our Best Look Yet at the Major Villain of the Wonder Woman Movie

Get a look at a new alien world from Thor: Ragnarok. Finn gets a shiny new weapon in The Last Jedi. The Defenders showrunner teases some big action for Sigourney Weaver’s villain. The best candidate for Doctor Who’s next Doctor drops out of the race. Plus, new Transformers: The Last Knight footage. Great Hera, the…

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Source: Gizmodo – Our Best Look Yet at the Major Villain of the Wonder Woman Movie

ARM Announces Mali-G72: Bifrost Refined for the High-End SoC

While the bulk of the focus in today’s ARM announcements is on major launch of the first CPU cores to support ARM’s DynamIQ topology – the Cortex-A55 and Cortex-A75 – ARM’s GPU division isn’t sitting by idly. Rather, today the company is giving their GPU IP a timely refresh for the year with the announcement of the Mali-G72. ARM’s new high-end, high-performance GPU design, the Mali-G72 supplants the Mali-G71, undergoing a design revision and optimization against Mali-G71 to further improve performance and power efficiency for high-performance SoCs.


Coming off of last year’s launch of the Mali-G71 and its underlying Bifrost GPU architecture, ARM isn’t doing anything quite as wild this year. The company is now invested into Bifrost for the long haul, so like the Midgard architecture before it, the company will be continuing to optimize, tweak, revise, and otherwise refresh the architecture to meet the needs of their customers a year or two down the line. Mali-G72 in turn is the first such revision of the architecture, taking advantage of what ARM learned when designing the G71 in order to improve on their high-performance GPU design.



At the architectural level then, Mali-G72 doesn’t make any radical alterations to the Bifrost architecture. The SIMT quad based execution model stands firm, and the ratios of the various functional blocks have not changed. So clock-for-clock, Mali-G72’s fundamental, throughput on-paper is unchanged from Mali-G71.



That said, the devil is in the details. And the details on Mali-G72 are all about optimizing. While ARM hasn’t made any high-level changes, the company has made a number of smaller, low-level changes that add up to a more significant impact for elevating Mali-G72 over Mali-G72. As a result the company is promoting the newer GPU design as offering 25% greater energy efficiency and 20% better performance density than Mali-G71, leading to a 40% performance improvement. Area and power efficiency are of course the lifeblood for mobile GPUs, and while the high-performance designs like the Mali-G71/G72 aren’t designed to push the envelope on area efficiency quite as much – favoring high performance instead – SoC vendors are all for trimming precious mm to reduce costs.



ARM isn’t offering a great deal of information on where all of these optimizations come from – it’s very much the sum of a large number of small changes – but at have provided us some key pieces of information. In particular, ARM has actually removed some complex instructions from their architecture, instead executing them over multiple clocks as other, simpler instructions. Excising instructions one big way to save on die space, allowing ARM to throw out the transistors that would be needed to execute those instructions. Obviously this is a double-edged sword – the emulated instructions are slower – but instructions that aren’t used very often likely aren’t worth the silicon. In this case I suspect we’d be looking at some especially esoteric things, such as atomic floating points.


ARM has also been doing some tinkering under the hood to improve the throughput of other desirable complex operations. This includes things such as the reciprocal square root and other reciprocal functions, which can now complete faster, but only for graphics (an interesting distinction, since the IEEE 754-compliant operation for compute remains unchanged). This goes hand-in-hand with a more broad set of tweaks to the internal datapaths for the ALUs, though besides further optimizing how data moves between the FMA and ADD/SF units, ARM hasn’t said much more.


However when it comes to overall performance efficiency, the big changes on Mali-G72 aren’t at the instruction level, but rather the cache level. All-told, ARM has tweaked buffers and caches at pretty much every step of the way. This includes making the L1 cache, the writeback cache, and the tiler buffer all larger. Meanwhile the instruction cache is unchanged in size, but ARM has tweaked the logic of it (presumably the algorithm used) to improve utilization by reducing misses.


All of this cache-related tweaks are geared towards the common goal of reducing memory bandwidth usage. Not only is this important for scaling performance with larger GPUs – GPUs get more powerful faster than memory bandwidth increases – but it improves power efficiency as well, as memory operations are relatively expensive. The overall performance improvement from the larger caches reducing misses certainly doesn’t hurt, either.



ARM in turn is particularly pitching the benefits of the cache changes for both graphics and machine learning tasks. In the case of graphics, their case study of choice found a 42% reduction in how much off-chip memory bandwidth was used in G-buffer writes, primarily due to the larger write buffer. Bear in mind this is likely a case of cherry-picking, but ARM isn’t off-base in that more complex scenes push the limits of smaller buffers (finally justifying the area cost of larger buffers). Meanwhile on the machine learning front, ARM is reporting a 13% improvement in SGEMM benchmark energy efficiency (and 17% for HGEMM thanks to the combination of cache changes and the earlier mentioned instruction changes. One of ARM’s big pushes for their entire lineup of SoC IP is for inference at the edge, so even small improvements help their standings overall.



Wrapping things up, we should see ARM’s new Mali-G72 design show up in devices in another year or so. While ARM isn’t responsible for the actual silicon their IP goes into – and as such, this is ultimately in the hands of SoC vendors – the Mali-G71 did show up on the HiSilicon Kirin 960 only about 8 months after its launch. So if a partner wants to push it, they could do Mali-G72 in a similar amount of time. Though something closer to Samsung’s roughly 1 year cadence is likely to be more par for the course.




Source: AnandTech – ARM Announces Mali-G72: Bifrost Refined for the High-End SoC