The US military’s experiments shooting lasers from vehicles continue with another important milestone: Laser-equipped attack helicopter fired at targets for the first time. The US Army keeps getting better at nailing UAV targets with ground-based tru…
Source: Engadget – The Army is flight testing helicopter-mounted laser weapons
Monthly Archives: June 2017
Zillow Drops Complaint Against Blogger After Backlash Over Copyright Claim
The blog “McMansion Hell” is back up and running days after Zillow threatened the site’s creator, Kate Wagner, into taking it down. Zillow’s decision to withdraw their complaint came soon after the Electronic Frontier Foundation announced it would defend Wagner pro bono. GeekWire reports: “We have decided not to pursue any legal action against Kate Wagner and McMansion Hell,” a statement from the company said Thursday. “We’ve had a lot of conversations about this, including with attorneys from the EFF, whose advocacy and work we respect. EFF has stated that McMansion Hell won’t use photos from Zillow moving forward. It was never our intent for McMansion Hell to shut down, or for this to appear as an attack on Kate’s freedom of expression. We acted out of an abundance of caution to protect our partners — the agents and brokers who entrust us to display photos of their clients’ homes.” The Zillow response came in the wake of the week’s events and a strongly worded letter to Zillow general counsel Brad Owens on Thursday (PDF here). EFF staff attorney Daniel Nazer said, “Our client has no obligation to, and thus will not, comply with Zillow’s demands. Zillow’s legal threats are not supported and plainly seek to interfere with protected speech.” EFF said McMansion Hell was relaunching and no posts would be deleted, but that “in the interests of compromise, and because Wagner no longer wishes to use Zillow’s website, she will no longer source photographs from Zillow for her blog.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Zillow Drops Complaint Against Blogger After Backlash Over Copyright Claim
NVIDIA 384.47 On Linux Brings Some Vulkan Speed Boosts
Today NVIDIA released their first 384 series Linux driver beta and for the occasion I fired up some fresh OpenCL / Vulkan / OpenGL benchmarks in seeing if there are any performance changes for users to see with this new series that will eventually succeed the 381.22 stable release…
Source: Phoronix – NVIDIA 384.47 On Linux Brings Some Vulkan Speed Boosts
Opinion: Google Unleashes Terrible New Update For Google News Upon the Net
Rei shares their opinion of Google’s redesign of Google News: Google unveiled a “new look” for Google News, describing it as a “clean and uncluttered look.” New design features include a mostly empty “In the News” box for trending-topics, most of which you probably don’t care about; a double-height page header so that they can make the border around the search box inexplicably larger and add a four-option menu bar; large empty grey expanses that take up half the browser; and a new news section that presents half as many news articles per page. If you didn’t think you were having to scroll enough when using Google News, don’t worry — Google’s got your back with this new update. It’s safe to say that Slashdot reader Rei is not so fond of the Google News redesign. Have you had the chance to view it yourself? What do you think of the Google News facelift?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Opinion: Google Unleashes Terrible New Update For Google News Upon the Net
Trump's Election Fraud Commission Asked States to Send Sensitive Voter Information Over Insecure Email

The White House on Wednesday requested that every state surrender a laundry list of voter data, including partial social security numbers, using an insecure email address that isn’t protected by even basic encryption technology.
Source: Gizmodo – Trump’s Election Fraud Commission Asked States to Send Sensitive Voter Information Over Insecure Email
Trump talks increasing fossil fuel exports, relaxing offshore drilling rules
The Sequoyah Nuclear Plant. (credit: Nuclear Regulatory Commission)
President Trump gave a speech about energy in the US today, highlighting six policy issues that will direct his administration’s energy policy for the time being.
The initiatives Trump talked about today were a hodgepodge of new announcements and old policy, focusing on nuclear energy and fossil fuel exports. Despite calling for energy independence, Trump’s speech steered clear of renewable energy like wind or solar. Trump has falsely stated that climate change is a “hoax” and has appointed officials with close ties to the fossil fuel industry to top energy posts.
The new initiatives Trump did talk about included reviving and expanding the nuclear energy sector, reducing barriers to financing coal plants in foreign countries, opening up a new petroleum pipeline to Mexico, pushing more exports of natural gas, opening a natural gas export terminal in Louisiana, and relaxing restrictions on offshore oil and gas drilling.
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Source: Ars Technica – Trump talks increasing fossil fuel exports, relaxing offshore drilling rules
Micro Machines World Series Debuts With Linux Support
Micro Machines World Series rolled out today and it’s greeted by same-day Linux support…
Source: Phoronix – Micro Machines World Series Debuts With Linux Support
System76 Unveils Its Own Ubuntu-Based Linux Distribution Called 'Pop!_OS'
BrianFagioli writes: Not content with simply following Canonical and embracing vanilla GNOME, System76 has decided to take its future into its own hands. Today, the company releases the first alpha of an all-new Linux-based operating system called “Pop!_OS,” which will eventually be the only OS pre-loaded on its computers. While it will still be based on Ubuntu and GNOME, System76 is tweaking it with its own style and included drivers. In other words, the company is better controlling the user experience, and that is smart. “The Pop!_OS community is in its infancy. This is a fantastic time to engage with and help develop the processes and practices that will govern the future development of the operating system and its community. The team is currently opening up planning for the development roadmap, code of conduct, discussion forums, and the processes surrounding code contribution. Progress made on Pop!_OS has established an inviting, modern, and minimalist look and has improved the first-use experience including streamlining installation and user setup. Work on the first release, scheduled for October 19th, centers on appearance, stability, and overall tightness of the user experience followed by adding new features and greater customization ability,” says System76. You can check out the project on GitHub here and download the alpha ISO here. For more information, the company has set up a subreddi.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – System76 Unveils Its Own Ubuntu-Based Linux Distribution Called ‘Pop!_OS’
IBM’s Watson will analyze Wimbledon to suggest the best matches
IBM’s Watson can apparently do everything. From manufacturing and medical treatment planning to portrait drawing and filing your taxes, there seems to be no limit to what the Jeopardy-winning AI can do. And next week, Watson will be offering its serv…
Source: Engadget – IBM’s Watson will analyze Wimbledon to suggest the best matches
Who's Allowed Into the US Under the Revised Travel Ban

On Monday, the Supreme Court ruled that parts of Donald Trump’s travel ban were acceptable, leading the State Department to create a set of new guidelines on the ban, which applies to nationals from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen, with a few exceptions. To travel to the US from those six Muslim-majority…
Source: LifeHacker – Who’s Allowed Into the US Under the Revised Travel Ban
Elon Musk's Boring Machine Completes the First Section of An LA Tunnel
New submitter simkel shares a report from The Verge: Serial entrepreneur Elon Musk says his ambitious tunnel-boring endeavor, aptly named The Boring Company, has officially started digging underneath Los Angeles. Musk announced the news on Twitter, where he said “Godot,” the Samuel Beckett-inspired name of the company’s tunnel boring machine, had completed the the first segment of a tunnel in the Southern California metropolis. Prior to today, it was unclear how long it would take Musk to convince the city to allow him to move the experimental effort beyond the SpaceX parking lot in Hawthorne. We don’t have details on what Musk hammered out with the city of LA. But he did tweet earlier this month about a meeting with L.A Mayor Eric Garcetti to lay the groundwork for the necessary permits and regulatory approvals he’d need to start digging with Godot, which weighs about 1,200 tons and runs about 400 feet long. Musk said last month that the first tunnel would run from LAX to Culver City, Santa Monica, Westwood, and Sherman Oaks, with later tunnels covering more of the greater LA area. Now, it looks like the LAX to Culver City route appears underway.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Elon Musk’s Boring Machine Completes the First Section of An LA Tunnel
Sure, Why Not?: Road Built On Roof Of Five-Story Apartment Building In China

This is a video of the “highway” (it just looks like a road to me) built on top of a five-story apartment building in China (although I only counted four stories). How about that! They build pools on apartment building roofs, why not a road? Of course this really isn’t news to me — my place has had roads built on top of it for decades. “Is this the part where you try to convince us you live with the Ninja Turtles?” Why doesn’t anybody believe me?!
Keep going for the video.
Source: Geekologie – Sure, Why Not?: Road Built On Roof Of Five-Story Apartment Building In China
Mexican court halts sales of Roku devices due to hackability
Roku’s legal battle in Mexico has taken a hit. Last week, a judge ordered importation and sales of Roku devices to cease in the country, but Roku later won a suspension of that ruling. This week, however, a Mexico City tribunal overturned that suspen…
Source: Engadget – Mexican court halts sales of Roku devices due to hackability
Monoprice Deals for 4th of July Weekend!
Some good promo codes for Monoprice this weekend!
Source: [H]ardOCP – Monoprice Deals for 4th of July Weekend!
State-by-state climate analysis shows warming hits some harder than others
Enlarge / For this map, red’s bad. (credit: Hsiang, Kopp, Jina, Rising, et al. (Science, 2017))
One of the challenges of understanding climate change is that both the expected change in temperatures and the effects that will have vary depending on the location. So Oregon’s climate won’t change in the same way Georgia’s will. And, even if it did, the impact of those changes will be different, since the two states start off with different climates and economies. So understanding the regional impact of climate change has been a real challenge.
But it’s a challenge worth tackling since most of the planning for how to deal with climate change will have to occur at the regional level (especially in the US). Now, a group of researchers has built a model that tracks many of the economic outcomes of climate change, and it does so for every single county in the US’ contiguous 48 states. The results show that the overall impact on the country as a whole will happen near the end of this century. But the model also shows that problems won’t be evenly distributed, and the poorest counties are likely to bear the brunt of the damage.
Getting empirical
To generate the future temperatures, the researchers worked with the IPCC’s emissions scenarios. They then used a set of simplified climate models to produce temperature and precipitation estimates for each month at the end of this century. Each day in that month had some weather variability added in order to make 10 different potential scenarios. These provide the raw material for estimating economic impacts, along with a range of possible outcomes.
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Source: Ars Technica – State-by-state climate analysis shows warming hits some harder than others
Why McMansion Hell's Use of Zillow Photos Is Fair Use

As Jezebel reports, architectural criticism blog McMansion Hell, which takes pictures from real estate listings and adds witty and educational commentary, is fighting a legal threat from real estate site Zillow, which demanded that blogger Kate Wagner remove all images sourced from their site. The digital-rights…
Source: LifeHacker – Why McMansion Hell’s Use of Zillow Photos Is Fair Use
Facebook successfully lands its Aquila drone for the first time
Facebook has been testing its solar-powered unmanned aircraft, Aquila, for the past couple of years. The internet-providing drone made its first full flight last June, though it crashed on landing after the 96-minute flight in Yuma, Arizona. The acci…
Source: Engadget – Facebook successfully lands its Aquila drone for the first time
Crime Group Behind 'Petya' Ransomware Resurfaces to Distance Itself From This Week's Global Cyberattacks

Janus Cybercrime Solutions, the author of Petya—the ransomware initially attributed with Tuesday’s global cyberattacks—resurfaced on Twitter late Wednesday, seemingly offering to help those whose files can no longer be recovered.
The altruistic gesture, even if it does prove fruitless, is uncharacteristic of the…
Source: Gizmodo – Crime Group Behind ‘Petya’ Ransomware Resurfaces to Distance Itself From This Week’s Global Cyberattacks
Guy Who Worked on the iPhone Shows Off Some Clunky Prototypes

In case you didn’t see one of the endless internet posts on the subject—it’s the 10th anniversary of the iPhone’s release. Hurray! Amongst the painful wankery about how the iPhone “changed everything” emerged one actually interesting bit: A look at some clumsy early prototypes of the combination iPod, phone, and…
Source: Gizmodo – Guy Who Worked on the iPhone Shows Off Some Clunky Prototypes
Spanish Siesta Culture Lets Entrepreneur Turn Naps Into Gold
An anonymous reader shares a Bloomberg report: There’s little that’s more Spanish than the afternoon siesta. As the mid-day sun goes up, businesses in small-town Spain pull down their shutters for a traditional nap. In big urban centers, modern business trends have ended that habit, leaving many Spaniards who work long hours exhausted. Now, Maria Estrella Jorro de Inza has found a way to bring back the siesta, making money while her countrymen nap. Bankers, lawyers and consultants catch up on their sleep at Siesta and Go — Madrid’s first nap-bar located in Azca, in the heart of the city’s financial district that’s home to firms like HSBC, Google and Deloitte. The concept is simple: for just 14 euros ($16) an hour, you get to unwind and take a power nap in a private bedroom before heading back to work. “It’s funny that we’re known for the siesta, but we haven’t been professional about it,” said De Inza, the nap-bar’s 32-year-old founder. “We get a lot of men in suits who just want to relax and women wanting to take their heels off. Lunch break is the busiest time.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Spanish Siesta Culture Lets Entrepreneur Turn Naps Into Gold




