Apple’s New Chicago Retail Store Has A Big MacBook Laptop For A Roof

Apple’s New Chicago Retail Store Has A Big MacBook Laptop For A Roof
Regardless of how you feel about the company, there is no denying Apple excels at industrial design. The iPhone, Macbook Air, and even its retail stores have all spurred copycats the world over. Apple’s latest retail store, which is currently under construction, however, won’t be copied anytime soon. Why? Because it’s got a giant Macbook for

Source: Hot Hardware – Apple’s New Chicago Retail Store Has A Big MacBook Laptop For A Roof

Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered Standalone Release Comes With A DLC Tax

Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered Standalone Release Comes With A DLC Tax
Would you pay full price—or close to full price—for a game that is nearly a decade old? Activision is banking on Call of Duty fans doing exactly that when the standalone version of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered ships later this month. If you want the full experience, you’ll have to cough up $40 for the core game, plus another $15

Source: Hot Hardware – Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered Standalone Release Comes With A DLC Tax

SpaceX Relaunches Used Rocket

CBS news reports the previously used Falcon 9 rocket has successfully launched the first stage rocket on its second flight, sending BulgariaSat-1, the first Bulgarian satellite into orbit from Kennedy Space Center. The rocket landed on a offshore droneship a few hundred miles east of Cape Canaveral. That same rocket was first used in January to help send Iridium satellites into space and landed on a different droneship. With this current launch it brings the companies success rate to eight rockets in a row since last June, but who’s keeping score.



A second test flight for a new Falcon 9 is scheduled for Sunday from Vandenberg Air Force Base, so make sure you’re awake to witness it at 4:25 p.m. EDT.

“Rocket is extra toasty and hit the deck hard (used almost all of the emergency crush core), but otherwise good,” Musk tweeted.

The rapid-fire launch schedule over the past two months reflects SpaceX’s drive to work off a backlog of satellites delayed by earlier problems, including a Sept. 1 launch pad explosion that destroyed a Falcon 9 and its satellite payload at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – SpaceX Relaunches Used Rocket

Massive Windows 10 Core Source Code Leak Puts Redstone And ARM OneCore Builds At Risk

Massive Windows 10 Core Source Code Leak Puts Redstone And ARM OneCore Builds At Risk
Well, this is not good. Chunks of source code related to internal Windows builds that have not yet been released to the general public were leaked online. According to The Register, a “massive treasure trove” totaling 32TB of official and non-public installation images and software blueprints was compressed down to 8TB and uploaded to BetaArchive.com,

Source: Hot Hardware – Massive Windows 10 Core Source Code Leak Puts Redstone And ARM OneCore Builds At Risk

Sci-Hub Ordered To Pay $15 Million In Piracy Damages

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: Two years ago, academic publisher Elsevier filed a complaint (PDF) against Sci-Hub and several related “pirate” sites. It accused the websites of making academic papers widely available to the public, without permission. While Sci-Hub is nothing like the average pirate site, it is just as illegal according to Elsevier’s legal team, who obtained a preliminary injunction from a New York District Court last fall. The injunction ordered Sci-Hub’s founder Alexandra Elbakyan to quit offering access to any Elsevier content. However, this didn’t happen. Instead of taking Sci-Hub down, the lawsuit achieved the opposite. Sci-Hub grew bigger and bigger up to a point where its users were downloading hundreds of thousands of papers per day. Although Elbakyan sent a letter to the court earlier, she opted not engage in the U.S. lawsuit any further. The same is true for her fellow defendants, associated with Libgen. As a result, Elsevier asked the court for a default judgment and a permanent injunction which were issued this week. Following a hearing on Wednesday, the Court awarded Elsevier $15,000,000 in damages, the maximum statutory amount for the 100 copyrighted works that were listed in the complaint. In addition, the injunction, through which Sci-Hub and LibGen lost several domain names, was made permanent.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Sci-Hub Ordered To Pay Million In Piracy Damages

Tesla Looking To Build Factory in China

The Verge mentioned that Elon Musk paid a visit to China two months ago and now Tesla has confirmed that the company pursuing the possibility of opening a factory in the Shanghai region. Although you would figure it is to build more cars in that region of the world, but the company hasn’t discussed exact plans as the company produces electric vehicles and energy storage. Who knows for sure, but even the potential of a Gigafactory is astonishing with that land mass. The current factory set to open in Nevada is pretty massive.



Tesla produces all of its cars in the US. However, if the company hopes to increase its production to 500,000 vehicles a year – that’s a six-fold increase over 2016 numbers – and reach more consumers in Europe and Asia, it will have to open factories closer to those customers.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Tesla Looking To Build Factory in China

Nextflix Launches Kids Interactive Adventure

In the vain of Choose Your Own Adventure books, Netfflix recently launched the new feature for children’s programming, which allows the viewer to decide their own story paths. While not a novel idea, the new generation of eager kids will be able to interact with on-screen characters and help in the “replay value” of shows. But this is not a solution to your kid watching the same thing for the nth time.

Currently, only one show is available, Puss in Book has the feature. Two more interactive shows are scheduled to release overtime, Buddy Thunderstruck (something I haven’t a clue of) and Stretch Armstrong, a toy I vaguely remember. Hopefully, there will be a version of this for adults so I can have Neo take the red pill and end up in federal prison.

Check out the preview.



For now, the interactive content is available on most Smart TVs, streaming media players, game consoles and iOS devices, but the company says it doesn’t work yet on Android devices, Chromecast, Apple TV or the Netflix website.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Nextflix Launches Kids Interactive Adventure

FCC Grants OneWeb Approval To Launch Over 700 Satellites For 'Space Internet'

OneWeb has been granted approval from the FCC to launch a network of internet-beaming satellites into orbit. FCC chairman Ajit Pai said in a statement: “Humans have long sought inspiration from the stars, from the ancient Egyptians orienting the
pyramids toward certain stars to the Greeks using constellations to write their mythology. In modern
times, we’ve done the same, with over 1,000 active satellites currently in orbit. Today, the FCC harnesses
that inspiration as we seek to make the promise of high-speed internet access a reality for more Americans, partly through the skies…” The Verge reports: OneWeb plans to launch a constellation of 720 low-Earth orbit satellites using non-geostationary satellite orbit (NGSO) technology in order to provide global, high-speed broadband. The company’s goal has far-reaching implications, and would provide internet to rural and hard-to-reach areas that currently have little access to internet connectivity. Additionally, OneWeb has a targets of “connecting every unconnected school” by 2022, and “bridging the digital divide” by 2027. According to OneWeb, the company plans to launch an initial 10 production satellites in early 2018, which, pending tests, will then be followed by a full launch as early as 2019.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – FCC Grants OneWeb Approval To Launch Over 700 Satellites For ‘Space Internet’

New PlayStation Games for the Week of June 27th, 2017

Fans of the classic Crash Bandicoot platforming series will be pleased to know Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy returns to PS4 on June 30 featuring gorgeous new visuals. :lovexf2:

Here’s a summary of what else is heading to PlayStation…

New PlayStation Games for the Week of June 27th, 2017

Source: PS4 News – New PlayStation Games for the Week of June 27th, 2017

Obama Authorized a Secret Cyber Operation Against Russia, Says Report

Jessica Conditt reports via Engadget: President Barack Obama learned of Russia’s attempts to hack U.S. election systems in early August 2016, and as intelligence mounted over the following months, the White House deployed secrecy protocols it hadn’t used since the 2011 raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, according to a report by The Washington Post. Apparently, one of the covert programs Obama, the CIA, NSA and other intelligence groups eventually put together was a new kind of cyber operation that places remotely triggered “implants” in critical Russian networks, ready for the U.S. to deploy in the event of a pre-emptive attack. The downed Russian networks “would cause them pain and discomfort,” a former U.S. official told The Post. The report says CIA director John Brennan, Obama and other officials had at least four “blunt” conversations with Russian officials about its cyber intrusions beginning August 4th. Obama confronted Vladimir Putin in person during a meeting of world leaders in China this past September, the report says, and his administration even sent Russia a warning through a secure channel originally designed to help the two countries avoid a nuclear strike. Moscow apparently responded one week later — after the U.S. election — denying the accusation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Obama Authorized a Secret Cyber Operation Against Russia, Says Report

PSN Co-op Flash Sale Offers Savings to 90% on Play Together Games

Sony’s latest PSN flash sale offers savings up to 90% off on co-op games and movies including Resident Evil 5, 7 Days to Die, The Jackbox Trilogy and more featuring over 100 multiplayer titles at PlayStation Store….

PSN Co-op Flash Sale Offers Savings to 90% on Play Together Games

Source: PS4 News – PSN Co-op Flash Sale Offers Savings to 90% on Play Together Games

Does US have right to data on overseas servers? We’re about to find out

Enlarge / Microsoft in Dublin, Ireland. (credit: Red Agenda)

The Justice Department on Friday petitioned the US Supreme Court to step into an international legal thicket, one that asks whether US search warrants extend to data stored on foreign servers. The US government says it has the legal right, with a valid court warrant, to reach into the world’s servers with the assistance of the tech sector, no matter where the data is stored.

The request for Supreme Court intervention concerns a 4-year-old legal battle between Microsoft and the US government over data stored on Dublin, Ireland servers. The US government has a valid warrant for the e-mail as part of a drug investigation. Microsoft balked at the warrant, and convinced a federal appeals court that US law does not apply to foreign data.

The government on Friday told the justices that US law allows it to get overseas data, and national security was at risk.

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Source: Ars Technica – Does US have right to data on overseas servers? We’re about to find out

32TB of Windows 10 Internal Builds, Core Source Code Leak Online

According to an exclusive report via The Register, “a massive trove of Microsoft’s internal Windows operating system builds and chunks of its core source code have leaked online.” From the report: The data — some 32TB of installation images and software blueprints that compress down to 8TB — were uploaded to betaarchive.com, the latest load of files provided just earlier this week. It is believed the data has been exfiltrated from Microsoft’s in-house systems since around March. The leaked code is Microsoft’s Shared Source Kit: according to people who have seen its contents, it includes the source to the base Windows 10 hardware drivers plus Redmond’s PnP code, its USB and Wi-Fi stacks, its storage drivers, and ARM-specific OneCore kernel code. Anyone who has this information can scour it for security vulnerabilities, which could be exploited to hack Windows systems worldwide. The code runs at the heart of the operating system, at some of its most trusted levels. In addition to this, hundreds of top-secret builds of Windows 10 and Windows Server 2016, none of which have been released to the public, have been leaked along with copies of officially released versions.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – 32TB of Windows 10 Internal Builds, Core Source Code Leak Online