Essential Phone review: Impressive for a new company but not competitive

We have a new contender in the smartphone space. “Essential” is a new OEM that came seemingly out of nowhere, announced by Andy Rubin a mere nine months ago. Rubin is the co-founder and former CEO of Android Inc., a little company that was snatched up by Google in 2005 and went on to build the world’s most popular operating system. Rubin left Google, and Essential is his new startup with ambitions in the smartphone and smart home markets. Amazon, Tencent, and Foxconn have already invested in Essential, and the latest round of funding values the company at more than a billion dollars—and this was before it even shipped a product.

With the launch of the “Essential Phone,” we finally have that first product: a high-end, $700 smartphone running the operating system Rubin helped create. The phone more or less leaves Android alone, and, with the backing of hardware manufacturer Foxconn, most of the innovation here is in the hardware.

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Source: Ars Technica – Essential Phone review: Impressive for a new company but not competitive

Save $500 On This Pioneer Sound Bar, One of the Cheapest and Easiest Ways to Experience Dolby Atmos

While 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound involves placing speakers around your room on a single plane, the concept behind Dolby Atmos audio is to give audio an element of height. If you don’t want to install speakers in your ceiling though, this sound bar is one of the easiest and cheapest ways to pull off the effect.

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Source: LifeHacker – Save 0 On This Pioneer Sound Bar, One of the Cheapest and Easiest Ways to Experience Dolby Atmos

Energy Secretary proposes rule to make grid managers favor coal, nuclear

(credit: Matt Hintsa)

Today, US Energy Secretary Rick Perry directed the nation’s federal grid regulator to create rules favoring coal, hydroelectric, and nuclear generators. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NOPR) (PDF) stated that the Federal Energy Regulatory Council (FERC) must order grid operators to increase how they value “reliability and resilience attributes” in energy generation.

Although no specific electricity sources were mentioned as beneficiaries of the rule, generating units that can hold a 90-day supply of fuel on site would be favored. Coal, nuclear, and hydroelectric power plants fit the bill, and variably-generating renewable resources like wind and solar would be left out of whatever compensation scheme comes out of FERC’s rulemaking process.

Promoting coal has been a primary goal for the new Trump Administration, echoed fervently by Perry, a former Texas governor with ties to the fossil fuel industry. Although burning coal is one of the most polluting sources of electricity used in the US, and the shale boom has made cheap and cleaner-burning natural gas a popular alternative, the shift away from coal has been resisted by political forces. Trump himself has called climate change a “hoax,” and although Perry has been somewhat more deliberate in choosing his words since taking the secretary’s office, he’s also called into question the anthropogenic nature of climate change despite exhaustive evidence to support human-caused warming.

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Source: Ars Technica – Energy Secretary proposes rule to make grid managers favor coal, nuclear

How to Quickly Dry a Dishwasher Full of Dishes

When you’re waiting for a pan to finish washing so you can make dinner, the dry cycle on your dishwasher can seem like it lasts an eternity. The smart man move is to just crack open the door and grab your pan and just manually dry it off with a towel, but CNET notes this week that opening your dishwasher door can…

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Quickly Dry a Dishwasher Full of Dishes

LG V30+ Arrives As Sprint Exclusive October 5 With 128GB Of Internal Storage And QuadPlay Earbuds

LG V30+ Arrives As Sprint Exclusive October 5 With 128GB Of Internal Storage And QuadPlay Earbuds
Sprint has announced something that LG V30 fans who wished for more storage will be pretty pumped about, and it’s known as the the LG V30+. This smartphone will be a Sprint exclusive at launch, and that launch will happen on October 13, which is about a week after the standard LG V30 launches on October 5 at Verizon and AT&T. There’s also

Source: Hot Hardware – LG V30+ Arrives As Sprint Exclusive October 5 With 128GB Of Internal Storage And QuadPlay Earbuds

PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds Development Spun Off To Its Own PUBG Corp. Entity

PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds Development Spun Off To Its Own PUBG Corp. Entity
PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds is a smash hit by any measurement and is doing incredibly well considering it’s only available on Steam for PC right now. It is, however, the number one most played game on Steam currently and that’s pretty huge considering some of the eSports mega-titles hosted on the platform. The game was developed by Bluehole

Source: Hot Hardware – PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds Development Spun Off To Its Own PUBG Corp. Entity

Hawaii Approves Telescope On Volcano Sacred To Indigenous People

A new $1.4 billion telescope will be built atop a Hawaiian volcano indigenous people consider sacred. The team of scientists fighting for the telescope won approval from Hawaiian officials on Thursday after selecting the site and applying to build there in 2009. Reuters reports: The Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources voted 5-2 to allow construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) on the summit of Mauna Kea on Hawaii’s Big Island, state officials said in a statement. Astronomers consider the summit one of the world’s best places to view the cosmos, while Native Hawaiians say the project would disturb holy ground crucial to their connection with ancestors and the heavens. A consortium of scientists initially received construction permits from state officials in 2011. In 2015, the Hawaii Supreme Court voided that decision, saying officials did not follow the proper procedures for a “contested case hearing.” That forced the state board to re-evaluate the proposal with more input from opponents. The project calls for building one of the world’s largest telescopes atop the dormant volcano.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Hawaii Approves Telescope On Volcano Sacred To Indigenous People

Bethesda's Original Fallout Is Now Free Via Steam To Celebrate 20th Anniversary

Bethesda's Original Fallout Is Now Free Via Steam To Celebrate 20th Anniversary
If you haven’t experienced any of the post-nuclear worlds from the popular Fallout series, now is your chance to jump on board, starting at the beginning. Bethesda, which owns the rights to the original Fallout game developed by Interplay, is celebrating the title’s 20th anniversary by giving it away for free on Steam, for a limited time.

Players

Source: Hot Hardware – Bethesda’s Original Fallout Is Now Free Via Steam To Celebrate 20th Anniversary

FCC Silenced Puerto Rico Radio Station's Boosters In March 2017

An dochasac writes: WAPA (680 AM) is a radio station in San Juan, Puerto Rico. After Hurricane Maria took out power, phone lines, cell towers and internet, WAPA was the only Puerto Rican radio station on the air for crucial public emergency communication. But WAPA’s signal coverage was significantly cut in March 2017 when the FCC refused to renew the license for synchronous AM booster stations at Arecibo, Mayaguez and Aguadilla in March due to procedural issues with the petition for renewal. This decision limited the coverage, signal strength and signal quality of this station for remote and mountainous parts of Puerto Rico where the need for emergency communications is greatest. The FCC audio division chief who pulled WAPA’s synchronous booster license decided to retire a few days ago. The position is open but is focused on legal training rather than technical expertise and experience with emergency communications.

FCC audio division’s regulations have done little to stop AM and satellite radio from broadcasting right-wing streams-of-consciousness throughout the lower 48 states. With IoT, cellular, mesh, satellite, social media and cognitive radio, communications technology is changing much faster than the FCC’s legal efforts to regulate it. But its arcane regulations leave Puerto Rico as one of the few islands in the Caribbean without a long distance shortwave broadcast station. With line of sight FM stations offline and WAPA’s AM station neutered, post-Maria Puerto Ricans have a better chance of getting news and emergency information from Havana, Cuba than from anything under the FCC’s increasingly pointless jurisdiction.

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Source: Slashdot – FCC Silenced Puerto Rico Radio Station’s Boosters In March 2017

Sony Super MEME: Introducing the New PlayStation Credit Card

Posted: 09-30-2017 01:31 AM
Source: https://www.psxhax.com/threads/sony-…dit-card.2832/
Summary:

While news of Sony security breaches has been around for years, they are now enticing gamers to get their new PlayStation…

Sony Super MEME: Introducing the New PlayStation Credit Card



Source: PS4 News – Sony Super MEME: Introducing the New PlayStation Credit Card

Dragon's Dogma: Dark Arisen Joins New PlayStation Games Next Week

Posted: 09-30-2017 01:45 AM
Source: https://www.psxhax.com/threads/drago…ext-week.2833/
Summary:

Included in next week’s PlayStation Store update is the critically acclaimed action-RPG Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen on PS4, which combines exhilarating and deep combat with the freedom to explore the huge open world of Gransys in 1080p….

Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen Joins New PlayStation Games Next Week



Source: PS4 News – Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen Joins New PlayStation Games Next Week

Apple is Really Bad At Design

Joshua Topolsky, writing for the Outline: Once upon a time, Apple could do little wrong. As one of the first mainstream computer companies to equally value design and technical simplicity, it upended our expectations about what PCs could be. “Macintosh works the way people work,” read one 1992 ad. Rather than requiring downloads and installations and extra memory to get things right (as often required by Windows machines), Apple made it so you could just plug in a mouse or start up a program and it would just… work. Marrying that functionality with the groundbreaking design the company has embodied since the early Macs, it’s easy to see how Apple became the darling of designers, artists, and the rest of the creative class. The work was downright elegant; unheard of for an electronics company. […] But things changed. In 2013 I wrote about the confusing and visually abrasive turn Apple had made with the introduction of iOS 7, the operating system refresh that would set the stage for almost all of Apple’s recent design. The product, the first piece of software overseen by Jony Ive, was confusing, amateur, and relatively unfinished upon launch. […] It’s almost as if the company is being buried under the weight of its products. Unable to cut ties with past concepts (for instance, the abomination that is iTunes), unable to choose clear paths forward (USB-C or Lightning guys?), compromising core elements to make room for splashy features, and executing haphazardly to solve long-term issues. […] Pundits will respond to these arguments by detailing Apple’s meteoric and sustained market-value gains. Apple fans will shout justifications for a stylus that must be charged by sticking it into the bottom of an iPad, a “back” button jammed weirdly into the status bar, a system of dongles for connecting oft-used devices, a notch that rudely juts into the display of a $1,000 phone. But the reality is that for all the phones Apple sells and for all the people who buy them, the company is stuck in idea-quicksand, like Microsoft in the early 2000s, or Apple in the 90s.

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Source: Slashdot – Apple is Really Bad At Design

Chip Reprograms Cells To Regenerate Damaged Tissue

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Scientific American about a device that delivers infusions of DNA and other molecules to restore injured limbs in mice, and maybe someday, humans: Cells are typically reprogrammed using mixtures of DNA, RNA and proteins. The most popular method uses viruses as a delivery vehicle — although they can infect unintended cells, provoke immune responses and even turn cells cancerous. One alternative, called bulk electroporation, exposes cells to an electric field that pokes holes in their membranes to let in genetic material and proteins. Yet this method can stress or kill them. Tissue nanotransfection, described in a study published in August in Nature Nanotechnology, involves a chip containing an array of tiny channels that apply electric fields to individual cells. “You affect only a small area of the cell surface, compared with the conventional method, which upsets the entire cell,” says study co-author James Lee, a chemical and biomolecular engineer at The Ohio State University. “Essentially we create a tiny hole and inject DNA right into the cell, so we can control the dosage.”

Chandan Sen, a physiologist at Ohio State, and his colleagues developed a genetic cocktail that rapidly converts skin cells into endothelial cells — the main component of blood vessels. They then used their technique on mice whose legs had been damaged by a severed artery that cut off blood supply. New blood vessels formed, blood flow increased, and after three weeks the legs had completely healed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Chip Reprograms Cells To Regenerate Damaged Tissue