Apple wasn’t shy about its augmented reality plans at WWDC this year, and it’s backing up those goals with yet another acquisition. MacRumors has learned that Apple recently bought SensoMotoric Instruments, a German company that makes eye-tracking g…
Source: Engadget – Apple buys a company making eye-tracking glasses
Monthly Archives: June 2017
ProDG For PlayStation 3 v470.1.0 PS3 SDK Leak for Developers
If you’re a PlayStation 3 developer with a PS3 Debug Test (DECH) / Reference Tool (DECR) unit or just a Sony PS3 SDK file collector like…
ProDG For PlayStation 3 v470.1.0 PS3 SDK Leak for Developers
Source: PS4 News – ProDG For PlayStation 3 v470.1.0 PS3 SDK Leak for Developers
Top EPA Official 'Bullied' Scientist to Change Testimony About Dismissed Scientists

According to emails obtained by the New York Times, the top scientist on the Environmental Protection Agency’s scientific review board was instructed to downplay the mass dismissal of advisors when she testified before Congress. “I felt bullied,” she says now.
Source: Gizmodo – Top EPA Official ‘Bullied’ Scientist to Change Testimony About Dismissed Scientists
New Study Explains Why Trump's 'Sad' Tweets Are So Effective
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: During his campaign and presidency, Donald Trump has used Twitter to circumvent traditional media broadcasters and speak directly to the masses. He is particularly known for one specific tweet construction: he sets up a situation that he feels should inspire anger or outrage, then punctuates it with “Sad!” New research from New York University suggests a reason why this style is so effective: a tweet containing moral and emotional language spreads farther among people with similar political persuasion. The study offered up “duty” as an example of a purely moral word, “fear” as a purely emotional one, and “hate” as word that combined the two categories. The research found that the use of purely moral or purely emotional language had a limited impact on the spread of a tweet, but the “presence of moral-emotional words in messages increased their diffusion by a factor of 20% for each additional word.” The impact of this language cut both ways. Tweets with moral-emotional words spread further among those with a similar political outlook, and they spread less with those who held opposing views, according to the research published in the journal PNAS. The study looked at 563,312 tweets on the topics of gun control, same-sex marriage, and climate change, and rated their impact by the number of retweets each one received.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – New Study Explains Why Trump’s ‘Sad’ Tweets Are So Effective
Report: Valve’s former augmented reality system is no more
CastAR’s first prototype. Subsequent revisions brought the glasses’ size down and fidelity up, so that its mounted projectors would better convey the feeling that virtual objects appeared on a mat (also known as “augmented reality” or “mixed reality”). However, the project’s future is now in doubt. (credit: CastAR)
The future of CastAR, an ambitious augmented reality system that began life in Valve’s hardware labs five years ago, is now in serious doubt. A bleak Monday Tweet from a former CastAR staffer was followed by Polygon’s Brian Crecente reporting a full company shutdown.
Citing unnamed “former employees,” Polygon reported that the hardware maker’s primary finance group pulled all funding last week. This was allegedly followed by a full staff layoff and an announcement that the company’s remaining assets would be liquidated.
As of press time, neither CastAR nor its affiliated developer, Eat Sleep Play, have posted any confirmation of shut downs or liquidation. Ars Technica has reached out to CastAR co-founders Jeri Ellsworth and Rick Johnson. We will update this report with any response.
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Source: Ars Technica – Report: Valve’s former augmented reality system is no more
Volvo's Driverless Cars Can't Figure Out Kangaroos

The Swedes, geniuses that they are, have long led the world in conquering the moose test. But here’s one thing they don’t seem prepared for: the kangaroo test.
Source: Gizmodo – Volvo’s Driverless Cars Can’t Figure Out Kangaroos
T-Mobile launches speedy LTE-U service in six cities
The war over speedier LTE data is heating up in a big, big way. T-Mobile has launched LTE-U (that is, LTE riding on unlicensed frequencies) in parts of a handful of cities, including T-Mobile’s home turf in Bellevue as well as Brooklyn, Dearborn, La…
Source: Engadget – T-Mobile launches speedy LTE-U service in six cities
Anybody know how to decrypt and encrypt a PS4 PKG ?
Anybody know how to decrypt and encrypt a PS4 PKG ?
Source: PS4 News – Anybody know how to decrypt and encrypt a PS4 PKG ?
Zillow Threatens To Sue Blogger For Using Its Photos For Parody
Kate Wagner is facing potential legal charges by real estate Zillow for allegedly violating the site’s terms of service by reproducing images from their site on her blog. Wagner’s blog is called McMansion Hell — a Tumblr blog that “highlights the absurdity of giant real estate properties and the ridiculous staging and photography that are omnipresent in their sales listings,” writes Natt Garun via The Verge. From the report: A typical McMansion Hell blog post will have a professional photo of a home and / or its interior, along with captions scattered throughout by Wagner. She also adds information about the history and characteristics of various architecture styles, and uses photos from the likes of Zillow and Redfin to illustrate how so many real estate listings inaccurately use the terms. Under each post, Wagner adds a disclaimer that credits the original source of the images and cites Fair Use for the parody, which allows for use of copyrighted material for “criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.” In a cease and desist letter to Wagner, Zillow claims Wagner’s reproduction of these images do not apply under the Copyright Act. Additionally, the company claims McMansion Hell may “[interfere] with Zillow’s business expectations and interests.” As a result of the potential lawsuit, Wagner has temporarily taken McMansionHell.com down. In a statement to The Verge, Zillow said: “Zillow has a legal obligation to honor the agreements we make with our listing providers about how photos can be used. We are asking this blogger to take down the photos that are protected by copyright rules, but we did not demand she shut down her blog and hope she can find a way to continue her work.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Zillow Threatens To Sue Blogger For Using Its Photos For Parody
Investor Jitters and 4Chan Hoax Knock $4 Billion Off the Value of Ethereum Cryptocurrency

Following a flash crash last Wednesday, the company that runs GDAX, an exchange for the ethereum digital currency, announced that it would pay back investors who lost money. If Monday’s market performance for the cryptocurrency is any indication, that move didn’t reassure investors.
Source: Gizmodo – Investor Jitters and 4Chan Hoax Knock Billion Off the Value of Ethereum Cryptocurrency
Astronomers capture best picture yet of the star in Orion’s armpit
Betelgeuse isn’t just an etymological inspiration for Michael Keaton’s best role, it’s a colossal star forming the right shoulder in the well-known constellation Orion. Astronomers used the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) in Northern Chile to p…
Source: Engadget – Astronomers capture best picture yet of the star in Orion’s armpit
China, Canada Vow Not To Conduct Cyberattacks On Private Sector
New submitter tychoS writes from a report via Reuters: China and Canada have signed an agreement vowing not to conduct state-sponsored cyberattacks against each other aimed at stealing trade secrets or other confidential business information. The new agreement was reached during talks between Canada’s national security and intelligence adviser, Daniel Jean, and senior communist party official Wang Yongqing, a statement dated June 22 on the Canadian government’s website showed. “This is something that three or four years ago (Beijing) would not even have entertained in the conversation,” an unnamed Canadian government official told the Globe and Mail, which first reported the agreement. The new agreement only covers economic cyber-espionage, which includes hacking corporate secrets and proprietary technology, but does not deal with state-sponsored cyber spying for intelligence gathering.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – China, Canada Vow Not To Conduct Cyberattacks On Private Sector
I need EBOOT GTA5 for Mod Menu to Work Online on OFW
Hello
I Test GTA 5 MOD MENU ON OFW But work offline
i need help to get eboot work offline and online
please help me
Source: PS4 News – I need EBOOT GTA5 for Mod Menu to Work Online on OFW
“McMansion Hell” used Zillow photos to mock bad design—Zillow may sue
(credit: McMansionHell)
An architecture blogger has temporarily disabled her website, McMansionHell.com, after receiving a demand letter from Zillow and posting it on Twitter.
On Monday, Zillow threatened to sue Kate Wagner, saying that that she was violating its terms of use, copyright law, and possibly the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act because she took images from the company’s website without permission. However, on each of her posts, she acknowledged that the images came from Zillow and were posted under the fair use doctrine, as she was providing (often humorous) commentary on various architectural styles. Her website was featured on the design podcast 99% Invisible in October 2016.
Confusingly, Zillow does not even own the images in question. Instead, Zillow licenses them from the rights holders. As such, it remains unclear why the company would have standing to bring a lawsuit against Wagner.
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Source: Ars Technica – “McMansion Hell” used Zillow photos to mock bad design—Zillow may sue
Zillow Sends Cease and Desist Letter To McMansion Hell, the Architectural Criticism Blog We Need Right Now

Real estate aggregator site Zillow has sent a cease and desist letter to the creator of McMansion Hell, the most popular lampooner of suburban ticky-tacky monstrosities. Zillow claims that by using photos from their site, the architectural criticism blog violates their terms of service.
Source: Gizmodo – Zillow Sends Cease and Desist Letter To McMansion Hell, the Architectural Criticism Blog We Need Right Now
This Windows Defender bug was so gaping its PoC exploit had to be encrypted
(credit: Microsoft)
Microsoft recently patched a critical vulnerability in its ubiquitous built-in antivirus engine. The vulnerability could have allowed attackers to execute malicious code by luring users to a booby-trapped website or attaching a booby-trapped file to an e-mail or instant message.
A targeted user who had real-time protection turned on wasn’t required to click on the booby-trapped file or take any other action other than visit the malicious website or receive the malicious e-mail or instant message. Even when real-time protection was off, malicious files would be executed shortly after a scheduled scan started. The ease was the result of the vulnerable x86 emulator not being protected by a security sandbox and being remotely accessible to attackers by design. That’s according to Tavis Ormandy, the Google Project Zero researcher who discovered the vulnerability and explained it in a report published Friday.
Ormandy said he identified the flaw almost immediately after developing a fuzzer for the Windows Defender component. Fuzzing is a software testing technique that locates bugs by subjecting an application to corrupted data and other types of malformed or otherwise unexpected input.
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Source: Ars Technica – This Windows Defender bug was so gaping its PoC exploit had to be encrypted
Vulkan vs. OpenGL Linux Game CPU Core Scaling
After carrying out the P-State/CPUFreq governor comparison with a focus on OpenGL and Vulkan Linux games, next I ran some fresh numbers seeing how well modern OpenGL/Vulkan Linux games are scaling across multiple CPU cores.
Source: Phoronix – Vulkan vs. OpenGL Linux Game CPU Core Scaling
'Infarm' Startup Wants To Put a Farm In Every Grocery Store
Infarm, a 40-plus person startup based in Berlin, imagines a future where every grocery store has its own farm packed with herbs, vegetables and fruit. “The plants themselves are being monitored by multiple sensors and fed by an internet-controlled irrigation and nutrition system,” reports TechCrunch. “Growing out from the center, the basil is at ascending stages of its life, with the most outer positioned ready for you, the customer, to harvest.” From the report: The concept might not be entirely new — Japan has been an early pioneer in vertical farming, where the lack of space for farming and very high demand from a large population has encouraged innovation — but what potentially sets Infarm apart, including from other startups, is the modular approach and go-to-market strategy it is taking. This means that the company can do vertical farming on a small but infinitely expandable scale, and is seeing Infarm place farms not in offsite warehouses but in customer-facing city locations, such as grocery stores, restaurants, shopping malls, and schools, enabling the end-customer to actually pick the produce themselves. In contrast, the Infarm system is chemical pesticide-free and can prioritize food grown for taste, color and nutritional value rather than shelf life or its ability to sustain mass production. Its indoor nature means it isn’t restricted to seasonality either and by completely eliminating the distance between farmer and consumer, food doesn’t get much fresher. When a new type of herb or plant is introduced, Infarm’s plant experts and engineers create a recipe or algorithm for the produce type, factoring in nutrition, humidity, temperature, light intensity and spectrum, which is different from system to system depending on what is grown. 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.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – ‘Infarm’ Startup Wants To Put a Farm In Every Grocery Store
What's on TV: 'Crash Bandicoot,' 'Modern Warfare' and 'Okja'
This week Netflix is preparing to premiere its next big film, from director Bong Joon Ho (Mother, The Host, Snowpiercer) called Okja. It’s also time for the return of two familiar video games, as Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered is available i…
Source: Engadget – What’s on TV: ‘Crash Bandicoot,’ ‘Modern Warfare’ and ‘Okja’
Google Home Is 6 Times More Likely To Answer Your Question Than Amazon Alexa
According to software developed by New York-based 360i, Google Home is six times more likely to answer your question than Amazon Alexa — its biggest competitor. Adweek reports: It’s relatively surprising, considering that RBC Capital Markets projects Alexa will drive $10 billion of revenue to Amazon by 2020 — not to mention the artificial intelligence-based system currently owns 70 percent of the voice market. 360i’s proprietary software asked both devices 3,000 questions to come to the figure. While Amazon Alexa has shown considerable strength in retail search during the agency’s research, Google won the day thanks to its unmatched search abilities.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Google Home Is 6 Times More Likely To Answer Your Question Than Amazon Alexa




