The complete history of the IBM PC, part two: The DOS empire strikes

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Source: Ars Technica – The complete history of the IBM PC, part two: The DOS empire strikes

Amazon's Blowing Out The Last Of Their Fire HD 10s For $120, While Supplies Last

Amazon appears to have killed off the Fire HD 10, which is a shame, because it was a really solid full-sized tablet for the money. Luckily, you still have a chance to get one as Amazon is clearing out refurbs for just $120 today. That’s $80 less than the usual refurb price, and $110 less than what Amazon used to…

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Source: Gizmodo – Amazon’s Blowing Out The Last Of Their Fire HD 10s For 0, While Supplies Last

RX Vega 64 and RX Vega 56: AMD will “trade blows” with GTX 1080 for $499

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RX Vega—AMD’s long awaited follow up to the two-year-old Fury and Fury X high-performance graphics cards—launches on August 14 in two core versions: the $499 Radeon RX Vega 64, and the $399 Radeon RX Vega 56 (UK prices TBC).

A limited edition version of RX Vega 64, which features a slick aluminium shroud, costs $599 as part of a bundle that includes discounts on a Freesync monitor, X370 motherboard, and free games. A watercooled version of RX Vega 64, dubbed Radeon RX Vega 64 Liquid Cooled Edition, also comes in a similar bundle pack priced at $699.

According to those in attendance at Siggraph, where AMD made its RX Vega announcements, much of the focus was on the value proposition of RX Vega bundles and features like Freesync, rather than all out performance. Anandtech has been told Vega 64 will “trade blows” with Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 1080, which launched way back in May of 2016. The launch of Vega Frontier Edition (a production-focused graphics card) in June hinted at such levels of performance—RX Vega 64 and RX Vega 56 are based on the same Vega 10 GPU and architecture.

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Source: Ars Technica – RX Vega 64 and RX Vega 56: AMD will “trade blows” with GTX 1080 for 9

Break a world record with Moonhack 2017

The team at Code Club Australia set a world record last year by gathering 10,207 Australian kids together to participate in their coding event Moonhack. But they are not going to rest on their laurels: this year, they’ve set their sights even higher with their event on 15 August.

Moonhack Code Club Australia

What is Moonhack?

In honour of the Apollo 11 landing, Code Club Australia created a series of space-themed coding activities for their Moonhack event in July 2016. Their aim? To bring together as many kids as possible from all over Australia, to get them to code and have fun, and to hopefully establish a world record along the way.

Code Club Australia #MoonHack

Watch the Sunrise coverage of Code Club Australia World Record ‪#‎Moonhack‬ event – Launching Wed 20th July 2016 18:00 AEST – Register Now: www.moonhack.com.au

And they did exactly that! 10,207 kids completed Moonhack projects, which constitutes the largest number of children coding on one day ever recorded.

Moonhack 2017

With the success of the 2016 event spurring them on, the Code Club Australia team have scaled up their efforts this year. By opening Moonhack to kids across the globe, they want to spread enthusiasm for coding everywhere. And why not break their own world record in the process? Every kid in the world can take part in the event, as the website explains:

“Moonhack is for everyone. Moonhack is inclusive, not exclusive, because coding is for everyone, no matter their skill level or age – kids new to code, coding whizz kids, and anyone who wants to try out coding for the first time, or coding pros who want to get creative.”

Participants between the ages of 8 and 18 are invited to form teams and create their own space-themed project – or use one of the provided examples in Scratch, ScratchJr, or Python. If you’re outside the age range, don’t worry – you can still take part, but your project won’t be counted toward the world record attempt.

Moonhack Code Club Australia

The sky is no longer the limit…

Participating teams submit their complete project to the Moonhack website as a link, screenshot, or file upload. All successful participants will receive a certificate to print and hang proudly on their wall. Woohoo!

How do we take part?

Teams will need to be registered on the website by a facilitator. Registering will give the facilitator access to a whole host of helpful tips for how to help their team out. Then, on Moonhack day, 15 August, the facilitator can upload the team’s completed project. If you can’t host an event for your team on 15 August, don’t worry – simply get the kids to complete the project beforehand. For more information go to the Moonhack website, where you can also find coding projects in several human and programming languages.

So what are you waiting for? Get together with the code-loving young people in your life, put your thinking hats on, get programming, and have the chance to set a new world record!

The post Break a world record with Moonhack 2017 appeared first on Raspberry Pi.



Source: Raspberry Pi – Break a world record with Moonhack 2017

AMD Releases Fury of RX Vega Videos

AMD has posted a handful of new videos around it new RX Vega card lineup. And one specific to VR future-proofing. Yea!



Radeon RX Vega: Future-Proofed for VR


Radeon RX Vega: Why Radeon Freesync Technology?


Radeon RX Vega: Great Partnerships, Great Games


Radeon RX Vega: What is High Bandwidth Memory 2?


AMD Invents, and Our Offering is More Than the Sum of its Parts


Radeon RX Vega: What is Rapid Packed Math?


Radeon RX Vega. Defy Convention.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – AMD Releases Fury of RX Vega Videos

LinkedIn: It’s illegal to scrape our website without permission

LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner (left) and Chairman Reid Hoffman (right) with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella (center). Microsoft bought LinkedIn last year. (credit: Microsoft)

A small company called hiQ is locked in a high-stakes battle over Web scraping with LinkedIn. It’s a fight that could determine whether an anti-hacking law can be used to curtail the use of scraping tools across the Web.

HiQ scrapes data about thousands of employees from public LinkedIn profiles, then packages the data for sale to employers worried about their employees quitting. LinkedIn, which was acquired by Microsoft last year, sent hiQ a cease-and-desist letter warning that this scraping violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, the controversial 1986 law that makes computer hacking a crime. HiQ sued, asking courts to rule that its activities did not, in fact, violate the CFAA.

James Grimmelmann, a professor at Cornell Law School, told Ars that the stakes here go well beyond the fate of one little-known company.

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Source: Ars Technica – LinkedIn: It’s illegal to scrape our website without permission

The Dell XPS 15 9560 Review: Infinity Edge Part Two

Near the end of 2015, Dell rolled out their new XPS styling queues, that were so successful on the XPS 13, to its larger sibling, the XPS 15. Thanks to the Infinity Edge display, Dell’s new XPS 15 packed a full 15.6-inch display into a notebook closer to the size of a 14-inch model. Perhaps the size reduction is not quite as dramatic as the XPS 13 when it first launched with the thin-bezel design, but Dell also kept the performance heart of the XPS 15 intact with the change, keeping a quad-core 45-Watt CPU, and NVIDIA GTX 960M graphics.

Dell has since done a revision from that XPS 15 9550 model to the latest 9560 version. The small model number change might signify that this is a small revision. On the exterior that is certainly the case, with the overall XPS 15 design remaining relatively unchanged, but under the hood there are some more impressive changes awaiting.



Source: AnandTech – The Dell XPS 15 9560 Review: Infinity Edge Part Two

What Fitbit needs to do to make a great smartwatch in 2017

(credit: Valentina Palladino)

It’s no secret that Fitbit is making a smartwatch. The company signaled its serious plans with the purchase of Pebble at 2016’s end and the purchase of the lesser-known Vector shortly after. Fitbit was supposed to release a smartwatch this spring, but product issues delayed those plans. Rumors suggest we won’t have to wait much longer, though, as the company may release an entirely new product this fall: a smartwatch that many want to rival the Apple Watch as well as Android Wear devices.

Fitbit has plenty of reasons why it would want to confront Apple in the wearable space: Apple overtook the company as the top wearable shipper, owning 14.6 percent of the wearable market (tied with Xiaomi) in Q1 2017. But Fitbit shouldn’t make an Apple Watch clone—and one could argue that it can’t do so anyway. There’s hope for Fitbit’s smartwatch if the company takes a different approach, focusing on its roots as a fitness company while also adopting the most useful aspects of the smartwatches we have today. Here’s what we know about the device so far—and what we don’t know—as well as some things Fitbit should consider including in the new device.

What we know

Back in May, leaked images of the rumored Fitbit smartwatch popped up online and painted an all-too-familiar picture of what the new product could look like. The design of the wristband mimics the company’s Blaze tracker (as well as the old-school Surge) with a square face accompanied by a couple buttons on the edges. It’s not the sleekest-looking device, but neither the Blaze nor the Apple Watch were perceived as stylish when they first debuted. Since then, sales for both of those devices have proved users have either warmed up to the square-watch design or simply don’t care enough to be deterred by it.

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Source: Ars Technica – What Fitbit needs to do to make a great smartwatch in 2017

AMD Radeon RX Vega 64 Looks To Be About 25 – 35 Percent Faster Than R9 Fury X In BF1

AMD Radeon RX Vega 64 Looks To Be About 25 - 35 Percent Faster Than R9 Fury X In BF1
Unless you’ve been living under a rock for the past twelve hours, then you know that AMD officially unveiled its Radeon RX Vega architecture. With a starting price of $399 (Radeon RX Vega 54), AMD is looking to bring some incredibly potent graphics muscle to compete with the GeForce GTX 10 Series.

Up until this point, AMD has given us just

Source: Hot Hardware – AMD Radeon RX Vega 64 Looks To Be About 25 – 35 Percent Faster Than R9 Fury X In BF1

Former Google SVP Praises iPhone 7 Camera, Claims Android Phones Are Years Behind

Former Google SVP Praises iPhone 7 Camera, Claims Android Phones Are Years Behind
An unlikely source posted a glowing recommendation of the iPhone 7, and specifically the phone’s camera performance. Vic Gundotra, the former senior vice president of social for Google, posted some snapshots of his two young children that were taken while out at dinner. In the accompanying text, Gundotra gushes about the photo quality, which

Source: Hot Hardware – Former Google SVP Praises iPhone 7 Camera, Claims Android Phones Are Years Behind

Football-Playing Robots Compete At RoboCup 2017

An anonymous reader quotes Phys.org:
With steely focus, player number 3 scored a stunning opening goal in the first few minutes of the high-stakes football match between a dominant Bordeaux and their plucky Chinese opponents. But as the crowds cheered, the pint-sized player, known as Arya, showed none of the customary swagger of triumphant strikers. In fact, robot number 3 and its teammates showed no emotion at all as they continued to exterminate their rivals’ hopes of victory at RoboCup 2017 in Japan. The game, which Bordeaux won 4-0, was one of the gripping final matches in a four-day event that saw about 3,000 researchers and engineering students from 40 countries displaying the prowess of their latest robotic inventions on the football pitch.
Ranging in design from humanoids with human faces to more skeletal contraptions, the robots were programmed to be self-directed and played strategically without being given instructions. The robots “see” using a camera installed in their heads, while installed with artificial intelligence to recognise the spacing and objects in the sight… [A]bility to play as a team was the “winning factor” in Bordeaux University’s triumph, according to associate professor Olivier Ly, who acted as coach and positioned his team’s players. “We developed lots of features on the team play… The robots play together, try to do some passes,” he said.
Robot teamwork “was a completely unresearched area for computer engineers” when the competition started 20 years ago, according to the president of the RoboCup Federation.

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Source: Slashdot – Football-Playing Robots Compete At RoboCup 2017