Amazon Will Offer Prime Video At Half-Price In All Markets For Six More Months

An anonymous reader writes: Amazon is leaving no stones unturned with its Prime Video, which it expanded to over 200 international markets last December. For the last six months, the company has been offering Prime Video, the sticker price of which is $5.99 or 5.99 Euro a month, at $2.99 or 2.99 Euro as part of its “introductory offer”. That introductory offer will now be valid till the end of the year, the company said. In comparison, Netflix charges over $9 every month. According to estimates from last year, Amazon Prime Video has four times as many films available for streaming.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Amazon Will Offer Prime Video At Half-Price In All Markets For Six More Months

Microsoft Windows 10 Fall Creators Update To Feature Built-In AI Powered Malware Protection

Microsoft Windows 10 Fall Creators Update To Feature Built-In AI Powered Malware Protection
Recent ransomware scares such as the WannaCry outbreak have collectively put a spotlight on PC security. It has even prompted Microsoft to release patches for unsupported operating systems, including Windows XP and Windows Vista. However, it is Windows 10 that receives the lion’s share of Microsoft’s security efforts, and we will see that

Source: Hot Hardware – Microsoft Windows 10 Fall Creators Update To Feature Built-In AI Powered Malware Protection

Blue Origin To Build Its BE-4 Rocket Engine In Alabama, Creating Hundreds of Jobs

Blue Origin has recently announced its plans to manufacture the company’s new rocket engine, the BE-4, at a state-of-the-art facility in Huntsville, Alabama. According to The Verge, the benefits for Blue Origin are both practical and political. From the report: On the surface, it’s a seemingly innocuous decision meant to capitalize on Huntsville’s decades-long history of rocket development. The city is home to NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, where the Saturn V rocket was developed and where NASA’s future massive deep-space rocket, the Space Launch System, will also be worked on. Plus, many private space contractors are based in Huntsville, making spaceflight a key part of the city’s economy and a huge jobs creator. It’s why Huntsville has been nicknamed Rocket City. But the move is most likely motivated by politics as well, given Blue Origin’s plans for the BE-4. The company ultimately hopes to use seven BE-4 engines to power its future massive rocket called the New Glenn, which is supposed to launch sometime before 2020. But that’s not the only rocket that the BE-4 could fly on. The United Launch Alliance — a company responsible for launching most of the satellites for the U.S. military — is developing a new rocket called Vulcan, and it needs new U.S.-made engines for the vehicle. Blue Origin’s move to Huntsville will supposedly generate 342 jobs at the new facility, with salaries averaging $75,000, reports The Verge. Given the city’s history, the company should have no problem finding aerospace experts in the area. The only problem that could arise would be if ULA doesn’t select the BE-4 as the Vulcan’s main engine. “ULA is also considering a second option in case the BE-4 doesn’t work out: an engine being developed by longtime manufacturer Aerojet Rocketdyne called the AR-1,” reports The Verge. “Aerojet is only meant to be Plan B for ULA. But it has one advantage that Blue Origin didn’t have until now: it’s building its engine in Huntsville, Alabama — and that comes with some very key political protection.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Blue Origin To Build Its BE-4 Rocket Engine In Alabama, Creating Hundreds of Jobs

Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon Wear 1200 SoC: LTE Categories M1 & NB1 for Wearables & Smart Trackers

Back around this time last year, Qualcomm introduced their Snapdragon Wear 1100, the company’s first SoC specifically designed for budget, low-power wearable devices. The humble SoC featured just a single Cortex-A7 CPU core and LTE Cat 1 support, but for the market Qualcomm had designed it for, this was more than sufficient. Now at MWC Shanghai 2017, the company is launching an even more low power successor to the Snapdragon Wear 1100, the aptly named Snapdragon Wear 1200.


The Snapdragon Wear 1200 is an interesting development from Qualcomm, as while the name can be a bit deceiving, it’s the first in a new generation of products for the company. Taking the basic principles of the 1100, Qualcomm has integrated a new modem that supports new, ultra-low-power communication modes for LTE standardized in the last year: LTE Category M1 and Category NB1. In fact this is Qualcomm’s first SoC to support the 3GPP’s Low Power WAN technologies.










Qualcomm Snapdragon Wear SoCs
  Snapdragon Wear 1200 Snapdragon Wear 1100 Snapdragon Wear 2100
SoC Cortex-A7 @ 1.3GHz

Fixed-function GPU
Cortex-A7 @ 1.2GHz

Fixed-function GPU
4x Cortex-A7 @ 1.2GHz

Adreno 304
Process Node 28nm LP 28nm LP 28nm LP
RAM LPDDR2 LPDDR2 LPDDR3-800 MT/s
Display Simple 2D UI Simple 2D UI Up to 640×480 @ 60fps
Modem Qualcomm (Integrated)

2G (E-GPRS) / LTE

(Cat M1 & Cat NB1)
Qualcomm (Integrated)

2G / 3G / LTE (Category 1 10/5 Mbps)
Qualcomm X5 (Integrated)

2G / 3G / LTE (Category 4 150/50 Mbps)
Connected version only
Connectivity 802.11b/g/n/ac, BT 4.2 LE, GPS/GLONASS/Galileo/BeiDou 802.11b/g/n/ac, BT 4.1 LE, GPS/GLONASS/Galileo/BeiDou
(Wi-Fi and BT optional)
802.11b/g/n (2.4GHz),

BT 4.1 LE, NFC, GPS/GLONASS/Galileo/BeiDou, USB 2.0
Connected and Tethered versions

Briefly touching on the specs of the Wear 1200, the core processor is almost unchanged from the Wear 1100. The SoC is still powered by a single Cortex-A7 CPU core and paired with a simple display controller that is just barely a fixed function GPU. It is meant to be a low-power (and low cost) SoC, through and through.


The big change here for Qualcomm is on the modem side. Whereas the Wear 1100 shipped with a multi-mode 2G /3G / LTE Cat 1 modem – as low a power a design as one could get at the time – the Wear 1200 incorporates a much more power-efficient and very much forward-looking modem. One that supports only basic 2G (E-GPRS) functionality, along with the aforementioned LTE Cat M1 and NB1 standards.


This is the first product announcement to cross our desk supporting these new standards, and ultimately the Snapdragon Wear 1200 will be the first of many devices/chips that we see to do so. Part of the 3GPP’s Release 13, the standards body has been focusing on reducing power consumption, complexity, and costs for radios for IoT devices, wearables, and other simple devices as part of their LPWAN initiative.


At a high level, LTE Cat M1 is designed to be a relatively straightforward, further power-optimized form of LTE. The max data rate is just 1Mbps up and down – and the Wear 1200 doesn’t even reach those speeds – using tricks like a minimum-width 1.08Mhz channel and half-duplex communication to cut power consumption, all the while still being compatible with existing LTE networks. LTE Cat NB1 takes this a step further, going with a stand-alone LTE-derived narrowband implementation that uses just a 180KHz channel, which combined with other technologies offers the lowest amount of bandwidth (max 250Kbps) but also the lowest power consumption and improved range.








3GPP Low Power WAN LTE Standards
  LTE Cat M1 LTE Cat NB1
Network Type LTE-Compatible Seperate Band
Bandwidth 1.08MHz 180KHz
Peak Download 1 Mbps 250 Kbps
Peak Upload 1 Mbps 250 Kbps / 20 Kbps

For Qualcomm and other wearable/IoT device manufacturers, these new standards will be a significant part of making the Internet of Things live up to its name, by allowing even the lowest-power, lowest-cost devices to have LTE network functionality. Unsurprisingly then, one of the first places we’re going to see it deployed is in low-cost wearables, where Internet access is beneficial, but battery life concerns are significant.


As for the Wear 1200 in particular, Qualcomm’s wearable-class SoC keeps a low profile even for M1/NB1 devices. The SoC can support 300Kbps down and 375Kbps up for Cat M1, and just 20Kbps down and 60Kbps up for Cat NB1. And no, the latter isn’t a typo: NB1 devices are expected to send data as much (if not more than) they receive it, so the Wear 1200’s data rates vary accordingly. Meanwhile, despite the limited bandwidth these standards offer, the Wear 1200 supports 15 RF bands along with some notable LTE features, particularly VoLTE. Interestingly however, while Qualcomm supports the latest low-power IoT standards, they don’t support the equivalent low-power 2G standard, EC-GSM. The Wear 1200 does support 2G in the form of E-GPRS, so there is GSM backwards compatibility for when LTE isn’t available, but the future Qualcomm is planning for is very much one where LTE is everywhere and 2G won’t be needed.


Modems aside, the Wear 1200 is otherwise a function-optimized design. Like its predecessor, the SoC supports WiFi and Bluetooth for various connectivity options, along with augmenting the standard GPS/GLONASS/Beidou/Galileo geo positioning systems. The new SoC retains the same small size of its predecessor, with the chip measuring 79mm2. Overall, Qualcomm is touting a 10 day standby battery life for the SoC, which would be a significant improvement over the 7 day standby of the Wear 1100.


Finally, looking at the broader picture, the wearables market is still trying to figure out what it wants to be – and what consumers will actually buy – and for the Wear 1200 Qualcomm is particularly interested in courting the “kid watch” market. A segment of the larger smart tracker market, Qualcomm is looking to tap into what is already a significant market in Asia – and especially China – where it’s not uncommon to give your kid a limited functionality watch that allows you to contact them, while the watch works in conjunction with geofencing applications to keep tabs on their whereabouts. Driven in part by demographics and in part by technology, Qualcomm expects the market for kid tracking watches to further grow, with SoCs like the Wear 1200 further improving the utility of these devices and bringing their cost down. These improvements would also filter down to other parts of the smart tracker market, such as pet tracking and elderly tracking devices.


In fact the company is hitting the ground running: along with the launch of today’s SoC, they are also partnering with Borqs and Quanta to develop smart tracker/kid watch reference designs, so that hardware manufacturers can get a jump on developing Wear 1200-based trackers. And like the Snapdragon Wear 1200 itself, these reference designs are available and shipping today. So while Qualcomm isn’t specifically commenting on when their customers’ consumer devices will be ready, it will almost certainly be before the end of the year.



Source: AnandTech – Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon Wear 1200 SoC: LTE Categories M1 & NB1 for Wearables & Smart Trackers

Qualcomm’s New Advanced Under Display Fingerprint Sensor Also Detects Heart Rate And Blood Flow

Qualcomm’s New Advanced Under Display Fingerprint Sensor Also Detects Heart Rate And Blood Flow
When it comes to flagship smartphones, the new trend seems to be near bezel-less edge-to-edge displays. The Samsung Galaxy S8 is probably the best example of this, and the upcoming Galaxy Note 8 is expected to feature a similar design.

Since there is little room on the front of the display to house a dedicated home button with an integrated

Source: Hot Hardware – Qualcomm’s New Advanced Under Display Fingerprint Sensor Also Detects Heart Rate And Blood Flow

Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 Brings More Muscle And Efficiency To Mid Range Smartphones

Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 Brings More Muscle And Efficiency To Mid Range Smartphones
We might be reaching a point where mid-range smartphones are good enough for most people. That may seem like a double-edged sword for Qualcomm, which just announced its new Snapdragon 450 processor for such devices, but there is still room at the high-end for things like virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), mixed reality (MR), artificial

Source: Hot Hardware – Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 Brings More Muscle And Efficiency To Mid Range Smartphones

August Solar Eclipse Could Disrupt Roads and Cellular Networks

GeoGreg writes: On August 21, 2017, the contiguous United States will experience its first total solar eclipse since 1979. According to GreatAmericanEclipse.com’s Michael Zeiler, approximately 200 million people live within one day’s drive of the eclipse. Zeiler projects that between 1.85 to 7.4 million people will attempt to visit the path of totality. As the eclipse approaches, articles are appearing predicting the possibility of automobile traffic jamming rural roads. There is also concern about the ability of rural cellular networks to handle such a large influx. AT&T is bringing in Cell On Wheel (COW) systems to rural locations in Kentucky, Idaho, and Oregon, while Verizon is building a temporary tower in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The disruption could be frustrating to those trying to get to the eclipse or share their photos via social networking. If cellular networks can’t handle the data, apps like Waze won’t be much help in avoiding the traffic. If communication is essential near the eclipse path, Astronomy Magazine recommends renting a satellite phone.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – August Solar Eclipse Could Disrupt Roads and Cellular Networks

Infarm Wants to Put a Farm in Every Grocery Store

Getting closer to resembling what a post-apocalyptic future would look like post humanity, TechCrunch has a story about vertical farming start-up, Infarm. The company of 40-plus workers was the first to have a vertical farming system in a supermarket, one located in Berlin. Nested inside a series of trays, the farming system allocates plants based on size and growth, distributing the plants from the center to the outer area. A concept that has already taken off in Japan, the idea of farming as a service on-demand is still relatively new for most. Each of Infarm’s units can be configured to grow different crops to the vendors own-choosing from a simple herb garden to one with bell peppers or even fruit. I’m awaiting a meat tree that provides its own beef, but the food dehydrator will do for now.

Check out the video.



“When we presented our idea three or four years ago, people looked at us as though we [had] lost our mind,” says Infarm co-founder Erez Galonska. “We are the first company in the world that has put vertical farming in a supermarket. We did it last year with Metro Group, which is one of the biggest wholesalers in Europe, and now we are facing very big demand from other supermarkets that want to do the same.”

The resulting combination of IoT, Big Data and cloud analytics is akin to “Farming-as-a-Service,” whilst, space permitting, Infarm’s modular approach affords the ability to keep adding more farming capacity in a not entirely dissimilar way to how cloud computing can be ramped up at the push of a button.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Infarm Wants to Put a Farm in Every Grocery Store

Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon 450 Midrange SoC

Kicking off today is second Mobile World Congress of the year, MWC Shanghai. As the de facto home of smartphone manufacturing, and home for an increasing number of major mobile device vendors, the tradeshow has taken on increased importance in recent years. This year is no exception, with several different announcements of note coming out of the show.


Starting things off for everyone is Qualcomm, who is at the show to announce their latest mainstream Snapdragon 400 series SoC: the Snapdragon 450. The successor to Qualcomm’s 2016 Snapdragon 435, the Snapdragon 450’s biggest claim to fame is also its smallest: it will be the first Snapdragon 400 series SoC to be fabbed at 14nm, finally moving Qualcomm’s mainstream SoC lineup off of 28nm LP and on to a more recent and more power efficient manufacturing node.













Qualcomm Midrange Snadpragon Family
SoC Snapdragon 450 Snapdragon 435 Snapdragon 625
CPU 4x A53 @ 1.8GHz


4x A53 @ 1.8GHz

4x A53 @ 1.4GHz


4x A53 @ 1.4GHz

4x A53 @ 2.0GHz


4x A53 @ ? GHz

Memory 1x 32-bit LPDDR3 1x 32-bit @ 800MHz

LPDDR3


6.4GB/s b/w

1x 32-bit @ 933MHz

LPDDR3


7.45GB/s b/w

GPU Adreno 506 Adreno 505 Adreno 506
Encode/

Decode
1080p

H.264 & HEVC (Decode)
1080p

H.264 & HEVC (Decode)
2160p

H.264 & HEVC (Decode)
Camera/ISP Dual ISP

13MP + 13 MP (Dual)

21MP (Single)
Dual ISP

8MP + 8MP (Dual)

21MP (Single)
Dual ISP

24MP
Integrated

Modem
“X9 LTE” Cat. 7

300Mbps DL 150Mbps UL


2x20MHz C.A. 

(DL & UL)

“X9 LTE” Cat. 7

300Mbps DL 100Mbps UL


2x20MHz C.A. 

(DL & UL)

“X9 LTE” Cat. 7

300Mbps DL 150Mbps UL


2x20MHz C.A. 

(DL & UL)

USB 3.0

w/QuickCharge 3.0
2.0

w/QuickCharge 3.0
3.0

w/QuickCharge 3.0
Mfc. Process 14nm 28nm LP 14nm

At a high level, the Snapdragon 450 is a very straightforward successor to the 435. Qualcomm has taken most of the 435’s design principles and brought them forward for the smaller Snapdragon 450. For example, we’re still looking at an octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 implementation, however thanks to the 14nm process Qualcomm has been able to bump up the maximum clockspeed from 1.4GHz to 1.8GHz. Similarly, Qualcomm has updated the GPU from an Adreno 505 on the Snapdragon 435 to an Adreno 506 on the Snapdragon 450, with the more powerful GPU said to offer 25% better performance.



Meanwhile more significant upgrades have been made to the ISPs and USB controller. Similar to the Snapdragon 435, the 450 supports a single camera at up to 21MP. However if it’s used in a dual camera configuration – as is increasingly popular these days for artificial Bokeh and telephoto modes – then it can handle a pair of 13MP sensors, up from 8MP on the Snapdragon 435, and a notable improvement as 13MP seems to increasingly be the baseline for midrange phones. Qualcomm’s video processor blocks have also been improved, in part to keep up with the improved sensor, and as a result the 450 can now capture video at up to 1080p60, doubling the maximum framerate over the Snapdragon 435’s 1080p30 limit. Meanwhile the USB controller has been upgraded from USB 2.0 to USB 3.0, allowing for much faster transfers from Snapdragon 450 devices. And, like its predecessor, the 450 also supports QualComm’s QuickCharge 3.0 tech over said USB port.



Cellular connectivity is once again provided by Qualcomm’s Integrated X9 modem, which supports LTE Category 7 down and Category 13 up, for a maximum of 300Mbps down and 150Mbps up respectively. Interestingly, on the Snapdragon 435, Qualcomm limited that SoC for just 100Mbps up despite the fact that Category 13 allows for 150Mbps; so this is the first X9-equipped Snapdragon 400 SoC to actually be able to hit 150Mbps up, going by Qualcomm’s specifications. The 450 also retains the 435’s Hexagon DSP, however like so many other parts of the SoC, the 450’s DSP has been further enhanced to reduce power consumption.


Last but not least, Qualcomm is promising some solid battery life improvements with the Snapdragon 450 over its 435 predecessor. While the company has invested some of their 14nm gains in improving clockspeeds throughout the chip, they’ve also retained a lot of those gains for reducing overall power consumption, a philosophy similar to what they did with the Snapdragon 835 this year as well. To that end the company is promoting that Snapdragon 450 phones will be able to deliver 4 hours more battery life relative to 435 phones.



Overall it’s interesting to note just how much the Snapdragon 450 sounds a lot like Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 625, their 14nm SoC from 2016. Both chips use a octa-A53 CPU configuration, X9 LTE modem, and Adreno 506 GPU. In fact the Snapdragon 450 is even pin compatible with the Snapdragon 625, which means that handset manufacturers can immediately begin working with the new SoC in existing designs. However given this close similarity, I’m also left to wonder whether the Snapdragon 450 is a new die, or a cut-down 625. In any case, the two chips still have some differences between them: particularly that the Snapdragon 625 clocks higher and features a more powerful ISP and video decode block.


Wrapping things up, as is often the case with Qualcomm’s SoC reveals, today’s announcement comes ahead of vendor sampling and wide release. The company will begin commercial sampling in Q3 of this year, and the chip should show up in retail devices by the end of the year.




Source: AnandTech – Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon 450 Midrange SoC

EA's Anthem is Science Fantasy not Science Fiction

In a radio interview with BioWare’s general manager, Aaryn FLynn explains why the game is a science fantasy title instead of a science fiction type of story. The Edmonton based company is responsible for bringing the new videogame for its parent company, Electronic Arts after finishing Mass Effect 3, a game that still is very divisive. Anthem has garnered quite a bit of industry praise, but lukewarm reception for its generic design by non insiders. Flynn passingly mentioned Star Wars as an example, which I assumed was in the space opera genre versus Star Trek’s hard sci-fi that some consider soft.



“It’s in a genre we call science fantasy, very much like Star Wars, very much like the Marvel Universe. You see a lot of amazing things happening but we don’t worry too much about why they are happening or how they are happening; the science of it.”

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – EA’s Anthem is Science Fantasy not Science Fiction

Vegan Mayonnaise Company Starts Growing Its Own Meat In Labs, Says It Will Get To Stores First

Chase Purdy reports via Quartz: The maker of vegan mayonnaise has been working on getting lab-made meat onto dinner tables everywhere. It’s just that nobody knew about it. Hampton Creek — a company that built its name on plant-based condiments and vegan-friendly cookie doughs — today revealed that, for the last year, it has been secretly developing the technology necessary for producing lab-made meat and seafood, or as the industry likes to call it, “clean meat.” Perhaps even more surprising is that Hampton Creek expects to beat its closest competitor to market by more than two years. Since it was founded in 2015, Memphis Meats has raised at least $3 million from five investors for the development of its meat products, according to Crunchbase. By contrast, Hampton Creek — just a 20-mile drive from its Silicon Valley rival — has raised more than $120 million since 2011. It’s one of Silicon Valley’s unicorns — a company that has a valuation that exceeds $1 billion.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Vegan Mayonnaise Company Starts Growing Its Own Meat In Labs, Says It Will Get To Stores First

SpaceX Plans Expansion of Rocket Refurbishing Facilities in Florida

According to Reuters, Elon Musk’s own personal rocket company, SpaceX is planning to expand the facilities used for its refurbishment and storage of rockets in a 2.2 acre lot of land next to the building it currrently occupies. Formerly the building was used for Nasa’s Spacehab modules, the facility has since been taken over by SpaceX in March. Besides saving mucho dollars, the company will consolidate its production and work more efficiently.

So far, two of its refurbished rockets have been relaunched this past weekend with 12 successful landings all together since the first Falcon rocket’s launch in December 2015. Nothing beats napalm in the morning or a new car smell, but I’d wager one of those things smell like a rocket fuel.



The company is preparing for its 10th flight of the year, and third launch in nine days, on Sunday. SpaceX has a backlog of more than 70 missions, worth more than $10 billion, spokesman Taylor said.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – SpaceX Plans Expansion of Rocket Refurbishing Facilities in Florida