SpaceX Eyes 19 Launches In 2017

SpaceX has managed to launch fifteen rockets this year as a result of its more efficient production flow over last year, a maturing Falcon 9 rocket, and an experienced workforce. On Monday, the company will go for its 16th launch of the year, doubling its previous record. It plans to launch its 19th rocket before year’s end. Ars Technica reports: This year has seen a number of firsts for the company — first reflight of a Falcon 9 booster, first reuse of a Dragon cargo spacecraft, first national security payload, and a remarkable dozen landings. But probably the biggest achievement has been finally delivering on the promise of a high flight rate. For years, competitors in the global launch industry have noted, with skepticism, that SpaceX has been unable to achieve higher flight rates and fly out its lengthy manifest. Those concerns appeared to have some merit, especially after SpaceX endured difficult financial years in 2015 and 2016, when the company lost two Falcon 9 rockets (one during launch and the other during a ground test) along with a payload. However, competitors worried, if SpaceX did ever figure things out, the company could become a “steamroller” with its lower cost flight opportunities. On Monday, weather permitting, SpaceX will attempt to launch the Koreasat 5A communications satellite for a South Korean company. The launch window for the Kennedy Space Center-based liftoff opens at 3:34pm ET. After this, it’s likely that SpaceX will launch two or three (possibly more) missions in 2017, bringing the company’s tally for the year to 19 missions. (That would be one shy of the company’s total for 2014, 2015, and 2016 combined).

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – SpaceX Eyes 19 Launches In 2017

Wall Street's Research Jobs Are the Most Likely To Be Upended By AI

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Quartz: Research analysts are the most likely employees on Wall Street to find themselves working with — or being replaced by — robots, according to a survey by Greenwich Associates. By next year, some 75% of banks and financial firms will either explore or implement artificial intelligence technologies, harnessing a variety of digital services to extract insights from mountains of data. While AI is probably near the peak of its hype cycle, several factors have helped it gain traction in recent years, according to Greenwich. Billions of images and documents are now available online for training computers to spot patterns and other high-level tasks. Advances in graphical processing units, which are adept at the kind of data crunching required by AI, are making sifting through daunting datasets much easier. The cloud has also made it cheaper for researchers and startups to boost their computing power to service sophisticated AI-enabled systems. AI makes sense for financial research, as machines can crunch reams of data more quickly than human analysts and, with the right data, identify obscure correlations and patterns.

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Source: Slashdot – Wall Street’s Research Jobs Are the Most Likely To Be Upended By AI

YouTube Is Fighting the 'Adpocalypse' With a Less Trigger-Happy Flagging System

YouTube has rolled out a new algorithm that the company says will more accurately reflect YouTube’s guidelines for ad-friendly material and result in fewer videos being flagged as advertiser-friendly. “It will supposedly reduce the number of demonetized listings by 30 percent, so ‘millions more videos’ will be able to make money off the full range of advertisements,” reports The Verge. From the report: A YouTube manager writes that the new algorithm was trained by nearly three months’ worth of human reviews, starting after YouTube added a manual appeals process for creators in August. Theoretically, this should narrow the range of false positives — videos that were incorrectly flagged for promoting drug use, using excessive profanity, highlighting gratuitous violence, or otherwise featuring content that advertisers might find objectionable. It’s being applied retroactively, so creators who didn’t appeal could still get some old videos remonetized. Google also encourages people to keep appealing potentially incorrect flags, because “this updated system is an improvement, but it’s not perfect.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – YouTube Is Fighting the ‘Adpocalypse’ With a Less Trigger-Happy Flagging System

Comcast Tries To Derail Fort Collins Community Broadband

Karl Bode reports of Comcast’s efforts to “derail Fort Collins community broadband”: Colorado is one of more than twenty states where incumbent broadband ISPs have quite literally written and purchased state protectionist laws prohibiting towns and cities from getting into the broadband business, even in instances where the private sector has failed to deliver. But Colorado is unique in that town and cities in the state have been able to vote locally on whether to overturn this ISP-lobbying-for- law, SB 152. And guess what? They keep voting to exempt themselves from the law, usually overwhelmingly. Dozens of cities and towns continue to opt out of the restrictive state measure during local elections. More than 100 have done it so far, which should tell you plenty about how locals feel about their local broadband options. Fort Collins, Colorado will be the latest to try and table a petition on November 7 simply exploring the idea of opting out of this state provision and considering a city-run broadband network. But Motherboard highlights how incumbent ISPs like Comcast have already spent more than $200,000 to prevent this conversation from even happening. To be clear Fort Collins isn’t certain to proceed with such a network, but incumbent ISPs are terrified they’ve even begun to have the conversation, and have been running ads like this one to try and derail it.

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Source: Slashdot – Comcast Tries To Derail Fort Collins Community Broadband

PS4 Personal Linux Loader Without PS4 Webkit WIP by RoBotoX64

Posted: 10-27-2017 08:33 PM
Source: https://www.psxhax.com/threads/ps4-p…obotox64.2988/
Summary:

Here’s what claims to be a PS4 Personal Linux Loader work-in-progress without utilizing the PlayStation 4 Webkit from RoBotoX64 on Github.

This will be the forum discussion topic so if someone makes any…

PS4 Personal Linux Loader Without PS4 Webkit WIP by RoBotoX64



Source: PS4 News – PS4 Personal Linux Loader Without PS4 Webkit WIP by RoBotoX64

New PlayStation Media Showcase at Paris Games Week 2017

Posted: 10-27-2017 07:30 PM
Source: https://www.psxhax.com/threads/new-p…eek-2017.2986/
Summary:

Today Sony confirmed that this coming Monday at Paris Games Week 2017 they will unveil a new PlayStation media showcase kicking off…

New PlayStation Media Showcase at Paris Games Week 2017



Source: PS4 News – New PlayStation Media Showcase at Paris Games Week 2017

Call of Duty: WWII PS4 Joins New PlayStation Games Next Week

Posted: 10-27-2017 07:49 PM
Source: https://www.psxhax.com/threads/call-…ext-week.2987/
Summary:

Next week on November 3rd Call of Duty: WWII officially releases on both PS4 digital and in retail shops allowing fans of the series…

Call of Duty: WWII PS4 Joins New PlayStation Games Next Week



Source: PS4 News – Call of Duty: WWII PS4 Joins New PlayStation Games Next Week

The New York Times Launches Tor Onion Service To Overcome Censorship, Ensure Privacy

Mark Wilson quotes a report from BetaNews: The New York Times has announced that it is launching a Tor Onion Service version of its website. The new, more secure way to access the site will open it up to people around the world whose internet connections are blocked or monitored. It also caters to a growing breed of people who are concerned about what their web browsing habit might reveal and who have turned to Tor to protect their privacy. The new service is described as “experimental and under development,” and some features of the website — such as the ability to comment — do not work. The NYT warns that fine-tuning of performance and features may mean there are periods of downtime, but the long-term aim is to completely replicate the main website as an Onion Service.

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Source: Slashdot – The New York Times Launches Tor Onion Service To Overcome Censorship, Ensure Privacy

Assessing the threat the Reaper botnet poses to the Internet—what we know now

(credit: Johnny Ashburn)

Eight days have passed since researchers first warned of a new, potentially Internet-paralyzing botnet made up of cameras, routers, and other so-called Internet-of-things devices. There are good reasons for concern that Reaper, as the botnet has been dubbed, could pose as big a threat as Mirai, the mass IoT infection that last year caused chaos with record-setting distributed denial-of-service attacks.

The more nuanced reality is that Reaper exhibits some unusual behavior that makes it impossible to assess the real danger the botnet presents. Some facts that have come to light over the past few days strongly suggest its developers are amateurs and don’t pose the existential Internet threat initially thought, particularly when comparing Reaper to another established IoT botnet that has gone largely ignored for more than a year. Then again, Reaper exhibits other attributes that give it an advantage over other botnets. Chief among them is an infection mechanism unlike any seen before in an IoT botnet. Another advantage is that Reaper’s development platform is flexible enough to wage a suite of attacks that go well beyond mere DDoSes. With a few improvements and a few lucky breaks, Reaper could prove to be a real menace.

Sizing it up

The most important fact to emerge is Reaper’s true size. Researchers from security firm Check Point, who were the first to publicly report the botnet stunned their peers when they said it had infected an estimated 1 million organizations. That would dwarf just about every botnet—IoT or otherwise—seen to date, including Mirai, which was estimated to have infected anywhere from 145,000 to 230,000 devices.

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Source: Ars Technica – Assessing the threat the Reaper botnet poses to the Internet—what we know now

NASA and Germany are about to refresh their climate science satellites

Cassini might have gotten a very emotional send-off at the close of its 20-year journey, but it’s not the only long-term space mission being retired this season. Today, the joint NASA-German Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) has ended o…

Source: Engadget – NASA and Germany are about to refresh their climate science satellites

PSA: Apple's iPhone X Screen Repair Will Cost You $279

We already know the iPhone X is expensive: it starts at $999 for the 64GB variant. But what about the cost of a screen replacement? If you don’t have the extended warranty, a screen replacement will cost you $279, which is more than twice the price of an iPhone 6 screen replacement ($129) and about 65 percent higher than a new iPhone 8 screen ($169). MacRumors reports: In the United States, Apple will charge flat rates of $279 for iPhone X screen repairs and $549 for any other damage to the device, unless it is a manufacturing defect covered by Apple’s standard one-year limited warranty. The fees vary in other countries, such as Australia, Canada, Germany, and the United Kingdom.
-Australia: $419 for screen repairs, $819 for other damage
-Canada: $359 for screen repairs, $709 for other damage
-Germany: 321 Euros for screen repairs, and 611 Euros for other damage
-United Kingdom: 286 British Pounds for screen repairs, 556 British Pounds for other damage
-United States: $279 for screen repairs, $549 for other damage

These prices do not apply to customers who purchase AppleCare+ for the iPhone X, which costs $199 upfront in the United States. AppleCare+ is an optional warranty plan that extends an iPhone’s coverage to two years from the original purchase date of the device. The plan adds up to two incidents of accidental damage coverage, each subject to a lower service fee of $29 for screen repairs, or $99 for any other damage.

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Source: Slashdot – PSA: Apple’s iPhone X Screen Repair Will Cost You 9

Monster!: Moth With Terrifying Looking Pheromone-Emitting Tentacles

freaky-moth-alien.jpg

This is a short video of a male specimen of Creatonotos gangis moth posted by Facebook user Gandik from Indonesia. *verifies Indonesia is super far away from my apartment* Oh thank God. In the video, the moth presents its pheromone-emmiting coremata, which may remind you of terrifying looking alien penises if you’ve ever been unfortunate enough to see some of those before. “Have you, GW?” I’ll be honest: I thought I wanted to be abducted, and I was wrong. Apparently actually capturing a Creatonotos gangis’s coremata on video is super rare, presumably because everyone else who’s ever had the opportunity turned and ran like any normal person would.

Keep going for the video while I speculate whether or not this is actually Mothra.

Source: Geekologie – Monster!: Moth With Terrifying Looking Pheromone-Emitting Tentacles

$1,000 Tea Infuser Heavily Discounted as Company Crashes and Burns

Teforia was touted as the only “machine-learning tea infusion device,” on the market, and soon, the market will have a Teforia-shaped hole in it. As recently as last week, the device would run you a cool grand. Today, you can make algorithmically-infused tea for $199. All sales are final because the company is dead.

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Source: Gizmodo – ,000 Tea Infuser Heavily Discounted as Company Crashes and Burns

Everything New In the Android 8.1 Oreo Developer Preview

On Wednesday, Google launched the Android 8.1 Developer Preview. The new version of Android is available for Pixel and Nexus devices, and features a number of under-the-hood changes. The new version tests another change to notifications in which apps can only make a notification sound alert once per second. It also contains an Easter egg: the Android Oreo logo now looks like an actual cookie. The Verge reports that 8.1 is eventually supposed to activate the hidden Pixel Visual Core system-on-a-chip, which aims to make image processing smoother and HDR+ available to third-party developers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Everything New In the Android 8.1 Oreo Developer Preview

Deadspin FW: FW: The Seahawks Are Getting Kicked Out Of The NFL | Jezebel 10 Scary Stories to Fuck Y

Deadspin FW: FW: The Seahawks Are Getting Kicked Out Of The NFL | Jezebel 10 Scary Stories to Fuck You Up at Night | Splinter After I Adopted Two Black Babies, I Realized My Church Was Full Of Racists | Very Smart Brothas Do You Shower at the Gym After Working Out, or Do You Wait Until You Get Home? | Earther What the…

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Source: LifeHacker – Deadspin FW: FW: The Seahawks Are Getting Kicked Out Of The NFL | Jezebel 10 Scary Stories to Fuck Y

Don't Bother Handing Out Full-Sized Snickers Bars, This Guy Already Won Halloween

You know how you were planning to impress trick-or-treaters this Halloween by handing out full-sized Snickers bars? If you live in San Francisco, don’t bother, because nothing you can do on October 31st will ever best Tom BetGeorge’s incomprehensibly over-the-top Halloween light show.

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Source: Gizmodo – Don’t Bother Handing Out Full-Sized Snickers Bars, This Guy Already Won Halloween