AMD Releases Ryzen PRO Processors Worldwide, 8-Core Ryzen Threadripper 1900X

Today, AMD announced the global release and broad adoption of AMD Ryzen Pro desktop processors. At its launch event in New York City, the company touted three main pillars that define these chipsets: reliability, security, and performance. They support features like Trusted Platform Module 2.0, which integrates secure microcontrollers into devices, GuardMI technology, which enables silicon-level security to help protect against threats, and SenseMI technology, which consists of a collection of smart features that aims to fine-tune performance for most responsive applications. For the first time, AMD has partnered with the top three PC OEMs: HP, Dell and Lenovo. Brad Chacos for PCWorld provides a “rundown of the commercial-focused Ryzen Pro systems that are coming down the pipeline, straight from AMD”:
-Dell Optiplex 5055 desktop PCs are expected to ship in the coming weeks.
-HP EliteDesk 705 desktop PCs are expected to ship in the coming weeks.
-Lenovo ThinkCentre M715 desktop PCs are expected to ship in the coming weeks.
-Lenovo ThinkPad A475 and A275 notebook PCs are expected in Q4 2017.
-Ryzen PRO mobile processors are scheduled for launch in the first half of 2018.

The global launch of the Ryzen Pro processors is not the only bit of news AMD announced. The company also announced the release of a new budget Threadripper 1900X model. From a report via TechRadar: AMD has released its 8-core Ryzen Threadripper 1900X processor, offering people who were put off by high price of the flagship 16-core Threadripper 1950X a chance to build a PC with all of the advanced Threadripper features for almost half the cash. As we expected, the Threadripper 1900X will come with eight cores clocked at 3.8GHz, with a turbo that reaches 4.0GHz (and an XFR boost to 4.2GHz), and will cost $549 — almost half the Threadripper 1950X’s $999 asking price, and a fair bit cheaper than the mid-range Threadripper 1920X, which costs $799. In fact, the price is within touching distance of the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X, which comes with eight cores and 16 threads, and costs $499.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – AMD Releases Ryzen PRO Processors Worldwide, 8-Core Ryzen Threadripper 1900X

At Least One Star Will Have a Very Close Encounter With Our Sun

The Sun is good. Without our hot, gas ball of a friend, we’d all be dead. More accurately, we would have never been born! So it’s a good thing that our Sun has escaped some very close encounters with other stars throughout its lifetime. But the danger isn’t over yet.

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Source: Gizmodo – At Least One Star Will Have a Very Close Encounter With Our Sun

Bang & Olufsen and LG Team Up for BeoVision Eclipse 4K OLED TV

Audio company Bang & Olufsen is jumping into the OLED game with its BeoVision Eclipse TV. The set features a novel design, where the screen extends past a soundbar, and it also happens to be a remote-controlled robot of sorts: the stand is on motorized wheels so you can rotate it and bring the screen out from the wall, then turn the supporting leg to angle it for the best picture wherever you’re sitting.



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Source: [H]ardOCP – Bang & Olufsen and LG Team Up for BeoVision Eclipse 4K OLED TV

Lawsuit: Amazon sold eclipse glasses that cause “permanent blindness”

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A South Carolina couple claims in a proposed federal class-action lawsuit that Amazon sold defective eclipse-watching glasses that partially blinded them during the historic coast-to-coast solar eclipse on August 21.

Corey Payne and fiancée Kayla Harris say in their lawsuit that because of the eyewear Payne purchased from Amazon, the couple is now suffering from “blurriness, a central blind spot, increased sensitivity, changes in perception of color, and distorted vision.”

Amazon issued a recall of defective and perhaps counterfeit eclipse eyewear in an e-mail sent out to customers before the event. Payne said he did not receive the message. His suit seeks to represent others who were injured or may be injured from the eyewear purchased on Amazon. The alleged Tennessee-based maker of the glasses, American Paper Optics, is not named in the suit.

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Source: Ars Technica – Lawsuit: Amazon sold eclipse glasses that cause “permanent blindness”

Wells Fargo Has Found 1.4 Million More Phony Accounts, Somehow Still Has Customers

The Wells Fargo bogus account problem is about 70 percent worse than the bank originally declared in 2016. Last September, federal regulators revealed that Wells Fargo had created about 2 million unauthorized bank and credit card accounts that customers weren’t even aware of. The findings came from a consulting firm…

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Source: Gizmodo – Wells Fargo Has Found 1.4 Million More Phony Accounts, Somehow Still Has Customers

ASUS Details HC102 Mixed Reality Headset for Windows

ASUS has revealed new details about its upcoming Windows Mixed Reality headset, including specifications and price–essentially everything except for timing.


Microsoft is gearing up for the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, which will introduce the company’s virtual reality platform: Windows Mixed Reality. Leading up to IFA in Berlin, Microsoft invited journalists to test out the Windows MR motion controllers, which may have kick-started a chain reaction of announcements from Windows MR hardware partners. On Monday, Dell revealed its aptly named Visor HMD. Tuesday, Acer spoke briefly of its Windows Mixed Reality HMD, though it didn’t reveal anything we didn’t already know about the bright blue headset. And now today, ASUS played its mixed reality hand.












ASUS HC102 Windows Mixed Reality Headset Specifications
Display 2x LCD
Resolution 2880×1200 (combined)

1440×1440 (per eye)
Refresh Rate 90 Hz
FOV 95°
Sensors Gyroscope: 6 degrees of freedom tracking

Accelerometer

Magnetometer

Proximity
Position Tracking Inside-Out Camera (x2)
Audio 3.5mm Audio Jack
Controls Microsoft Motion Controllers
Launch Price €449 (w/ Motion Controllers)

Unlike Dell, ASUS didn’t give its HMD a fancy name. It’s simply the ASUS Windows Mixed Reality Headset. It offers dual 1440 x 1440 pixel displays (for a total of 2880 x 1440) that operate at up to 90Hz. The HMD also includes the typical sensors you would expect, such as a gyroscope, accelerometer, and magnetometer. Microsoft’s Windows MR platform offers inside-out tracking (6DoF) systems that don’t require external cameras, and each Windows MR HMD features two front-facing cameras that provide spatial tracking for the unit. The ASUS headset also includes a proximity sensor. We’re not yet sure if that’s standard equipment for Windows MR headsets or a unique feature of the ASUS HMD.



ASUS said it focused on designing a headset that would offer good hygiene. Room-scale VR games get you up and moving, and it’s not uncommon to break a sweat while playing an active game. ASUS said that the face cushion on its Windows MR headset is made of a fast-drying material with an anti-bacterial coating on the surface.


The Windows MR platform is billed as a productivity platform as much as it is an entertainment platform. Microsoft sees a future where you’ll do your work within VR and then play games in VR with the same hardware. ASUS made sure that its headset is comfortable to wear for long periods of time. It features a “balanced crown” design, which takes the pressure off of your cheeks and nose and distributes the weight between your forehead and the back of your head. Also, the headset weighs less than 400g, so it should put minimal stress on your neck.


ASUS didn’t say when it would release the ASUS Windows Mixed Reality Headset, though it said the hardware would sell with Microsoft’s motion controllers for €449. The company didn’t reveal the US price. Dell’s Visor headset is scheduled for an October release, and we imagine that ASUS would shoot for a similar launch window.


Kevin Carbotte contributed to this report



Source: AnandTech – ASUS Details HC102 Mixed Reality Headset for Windows

Apple calls for 'strong' open internet protection in FCC comments

Apple has historically kept quiet on the subject of net neutrality, but not anymore. The company recently filed a comment with the FCC calling for “strong, enforceable open internet protections” centered around the principles of consumer choice, tran…

Source: Engadget – Apple calls for ‘strong’ open internet protection in FCC comments

How NASA Kept the ISS Flying While Harvey Hit Mission Control

An anonymous reader shares a report: In the days before Harvey hit Texas, flight controllers at NASA’s Johnson Space Center outside of Houston had a decision to make: should they evacuate or ride out the storm at the agency’s Mission Control Center? The dilemma wasn’t just about the safety of the flight controllers. These personnel are tasked with flying the International Space Station — a round-the-clock job that can’t be done just anywhere. If there’s a gap in ground communication, it could put the astronauts in danger. […] On August 22nd, three days before the storm hit, the mission team was briefed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and decided the best plan was to stay put. They realized that whatever hit Texas would likely hit Round Rock, too, which is located outside of Austin. Plus, Harvey’s real danger looked to be the water rather than the winds. The building containing the Mission Control Center is designed to withstand flooding incredibly well. But the team also knew they had to prepare. “Where you don’t want to find yourself is just a single flight controller in any position who can’t leave because there’s no one to replace them,” says Scoville. So the flight controllers were told to come into work early and to make sure they had a way to both enter and leave the center safely. Many showed up Friday night with “big, monstrous climbing backpacks,” says Scoville. Meanwhile, cots were set up in a nearby room and in a building that serves as an astronaut quarantine facility, where astronauts quarantine before launch to avoid getting sick in space. “We have training rooms that are a mere copy of the flight control room,” says Scoville. “They have the same consoles and same screens, but we turned off the lights and put some cots in there. It was interesting to see these rooms usually lit up with all these screens blacked out for people to sleep.” Throughout the weekend, Mission Control operated with the bare minimum essential personnel needed to keep the ISS working safely. Normally, flight controller teams work in nine-hour shifts, swapping out three times a day. During the storm, only about six flight controllers worked each shift, and some stretched their shifts to 12 hours. Because the flooding made the roads impassable, everyone had to spend a couple of nights at NASA.

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Source: Slashdot – How NASA Kept the ISS Flying While Harvey Hit Mission Control

I Tried a Bunch of DNA Tests and All I Got Was a Bunch of Useless Data

As a young child, every morning at sunrise I would wake up to tap dance on the patio outside my mom’s bedroom door, much to my poor mom’s chagrin. These sunrise salutations became an enduring family story, as did my habit of getting up with the sun. Imagine my surprise, then, when a DNA test recently suggested that I…

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Source: Gizmodo – I Tried a Bunch of DNA Tests and All I Got Was a Bunch of Useless Data

Apple will hold its iPhone event on September 12

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Source: Ars Technica – Apple will hold its iPhone event on September 12

Get Three Remote-Controlled Puck Lights For Just $16

You don’t need to pay hundreds of dollars and fine an electrician to install cool lights over your kitchen sink: You just need $16. These OxyLED lights can stick to anything via adhesive or magnetic plates, and the included remote is also magnetized to stick to your fridge.

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Source: LifeHacker – Get Three Remote-Controlled Puck Lights For Just

Video Of A Secret Rave Entrance In A Porta Potty

This is a brief video of a secret rave entrance hidden in a Porta Potty at the 2017 Sziget Festival in Budapest. That looks like a good time. I like good times. “Don’t do it.” Do what? “Run around jumping into every Porta Potty you see hoping to find a secret rave.” Come on, who on earth would ever — where’s my other shoe?

Keep going for the whole video while I guesstimate just how many people actually went to the bathroom in there.

Source: Geekologie – Video Of A Secret Rave Entrance In A Porta Potty

The NFL's Commitment to Medical Research Costs Less Than a Single Good Quarterback

The NFL announced this week that they will soon award $40 million to scientists for medical research on brain trauma. That’s a lot, in the sense that if I had $40 million I would change it into gold coins and try to swim in it. But is it a lot of money to the NFL?

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Source: LifeHacker – The NFL’s Commitment to Medical Research Costs Less Than a Single Good Quarterback

Comcast sues Vermont to avoid building 550 miles of new cable lines

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Comcast has sued the state of Vermont to try to avoid a requirement to build 550 miles of new cable lines.

Comcast’s lawsuit against the Vermont Public Utility Commission (VPUC) was filed Monday in US District Court in Vermont and challenges several provisions in the cable company’s new 11-year permit to offer services in the state. One of the conditions in the permit says that “Comcast shall construct no less than 550 miles of line extensions into un-cabled areas during the [11-year] term.”

Comcast would rather not do that. The company’s court complaint says that Vermont is exceeding its authority under the federal Cable Act while also violating state law and Comcast’s constitutional rights:

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Source: Ars Technica – Comcast sues Vermont to avoid building 550 miles of new cable lines