If You Type 1+2+3 Into Your iPhone's Calculator on iOS 11, You Probably Won't Get 6

A reader shares a report: If you’ve upgraded your iPhone’s operating system to iOS 11, try this: Go to the calculator app and quickly type 1+2+3. You likely won’t get 6. You might get 23, or 24, or 16, or 32, or something else, depending on what buttons you tap and in what order, and, obviously, none of which is the right answer. It seems to be because of a new animation in the calculator app, where a button briefly fades to white when you press it. The result is that if you press an operator button (i.e., the plus sign) before the short animation finishes, the app ignores it. So, 1 + 2 + 3 accidentally gets read as 1 + 23.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – If You Type 1+2+3 Into Your iPhone’s Calculator on iOS 11, You Probably Won’t Get 6

Windows 10 Fall Creators Update is off to a quicker start than its predecessor

Enlarge / The Creators Update never ramped as fast as the Anniversary Update did. (credit: AdDuplex)

A week after its release, the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update is already on five percent of Windows 10 machines, according to numbers provided by AdDuplex.

The previous Windows 10 update, the Creators Update, was given a very slow rollout as Microsoft sought to avoid problems faced in last year’s Anniversary Update. Five months after its release, it was only on two thirds of Windows 10 machines, and now, at what is likely to be its peak, it’s on three quarters of Windows 10 systems. The Anniversary Update itself is still installed on 17 percent of machines. In contrast, the Anniversary Update was on some 92 percent of Windows 10 devices when the Creators Update shipped.

Microsoft’s phased rollout approach distributes the update to systems using hardware and software configurations known to work, incrementally adding new configurations as more real-world data about hardware and software compatibility issues is collected and addressed. The company is believed to have a larger body of tested, known configurations to enable a faster deployment.

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Source: Ars Technica – Windows 10 Fall Creators Update is off to a quicker start than its predecessor

Halloween Decorations: Demon Child Hanging From Tractor Trailer

tractor-trailer-demon-child.jpg

This is a short video of the demon child spotted hanging from a tractor trailer’s air supply brake hoses (aka Suzies) by another motorist in Sumpter, South Carolina. In their own words while I finish decorating the office for Halloween. “Is that a bucket of fake blood?” I have another one in my trunk.

“I passed a truck and saw a demon baby swinging on it. It startled me at first, but I had to take a video of it! It was probably the best prank I’ve ever seen on a vehicle. When I passed the truck, the driver was still laughing at my reaction!”

You know what would be even better than a demon baby Halloween decoration? A lifesize version of that hairy sewer monster on the back of Jack Burton’s truck at the end of ‘Big Trouble In Little China.’ Plus if you put a Pork-Chop Express decal on the side of your cab you’d be the total package. Actually, you know what? “You’re gonna try to get your trucker’s license before next Halloween.” How hard can it be, you just pound energy drinks and honk your horn for kids on school buses. I do that now.

Keep going for the demon child video as well as the last scene from Big Trouble In Little China for reference.

Source: Geekologie – Halloween Decorations: Demon Child Hanging From Tractor Trailer

Sous-Vide Buffalo Wings Are Crispy on the Outside and Tender on the Inside

Hello friends, and welcome back to Will It Sous Vide?, the column where I usually make whatever you want me to with my immersion circulator. Today we’re sous vide-ing an iconic, spicy and saucy little number: the famed chicken wing.

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Source: LifeHacker – Sous-Vide Buffalo Wings Are Crispy on the Outside and Tender on the Inside

Intel Announces Q3 2017 Results

As another quarterly earnings period continues, Intel has announced its earnings for the third quarter of their 2017 fiscal year. Due the slowing of the PC market, Intel has begun its transition to a “Data-Centric Business” which will embrace more than just CPUs. The results have already begun to pay off, which isn’t surprising since they unofficially began this transformation before it was ever announced. At their heart, they are still a chip fab company, but with more reach on what chips the fab. Let’s dig into the results.



Revenues for the quarter were $16.1 billion, up 2% from a year ago. Gross margin was down 1% to 62.3%, but despite the lower margins, operating income was up 15% for the quarter to $5.1 billion. Net income was $4.5 billion, which was up 34% year-over-year. This resulted in earnings per share of $0.94, up 36%.














Intel Q3 2017 Financial Results (GAAP)
  Q3’2017 Q2’2017 Q3’2016
Revenue $16.1B $14.8B $15.8B
Operating Income $5.1B $3.8B $4.5B
Net Income $4.5B $2.8B $3.4B
Gross Margin 62.3% 61.6% 63.3%
Client Computing Group Revenue $8.86B +7.9% -0.3%
Data Center Group Revenue $4.88B +11.6% +7.4%
Internet of Things Revenue $849M +17.9% +23.2%
Non-Volatile Memory Solutions Group $891M +1.9% +37.3%
Programmable Solutions Group $469M +6.6% +10.3%
All Other Revenue $202M +40.3% -65.2%

The new “Data-Centric Business” happens to include everything Intel does, outside of the Client Computing Group (CCG), however they’ve not quite shaken the shackles of the legacy PC business quite yet. The CCG had revenues this quarter of $8.9 billion, which is flat compared to Q3 2016. That sounds like it’s not a good thing, but considering the decline of the PC market, Intel has managed to grow this business over the last several years. That’s mostly been driven by demand for their more expensive products, because the only areas where the PC market is doing ok in is gaming, and convertible devices. Operating margins for the CCG were up three points, and the flat revenues were driven by average selling price going up 7%, but unit volumes were down 7%. Operating income for the segment grew 8% though, thanks to improvements in the 14-nanometer process (read: costs continue to drop for this node). Intel has also confirmed that 10-nanometer will be shipping in low volumes by the end of 2017, but higher volume products will be available starting in 2018. Using this as a benchmark, we should expect 10-nanometer to officially launch at CES, but that’s speculation.



The Data Center Group (DCG) had revenue growth of 7% to $4.9 billion, compared to the same quarter a year ago. Operating income for the DCG was $2.3 billion for the quarter, which was also up 7%. Unit volumes were up 4%, and ASP was up 2%. Intel should continue to see growth here as they transition away from the older 22-nanometer parts.


Internet of Things group had revenues go up 23% to $849 million. Intel attributes the growth to strength in industrial and video. Operating profit was $146 million, which is down 24% year-over-year, as they continue to invest in automotive, which many companies are seeing as a strong growth target.


Non-Volatile Memory Solutions Group (NVMSG) had revenues of $891 million, which is up 37% year-over-year. Intel has seen strong demand for data center SSD solutions, and demand is outpacing supply. With the launch of 3D XPoint, they’ve created some new segments, but new products don’t come for free, and this segment had an operating loss of $52 million year-over-year, although that’s $82 million better than a year ago. Intel is predicting this unit to be profitable ahead of schedule, in 2018.


The Programmable Solutions Group, which is Intel’s FPGA business, had revenues up 10% to $469 million. FPGAs have seen a number of new markets, and Intel has found a firm foothold in data center, automotive, and military. Operating profit for this segment was $113 million, which is up 45% year-over-year.


Finally, the All Other group had revenues of $202 million, which is down significantly from a year ago when it was $581 million. Intel has recently acquired Mobileye, and has reported that Mobileye’s results will be in the All Other category going forward.


Looking forward, Intel is expecting revenues around $16.3 billion for Q4, plus or minus $500 million, with gross margin around 61%, plus or minus a couple of points.


Source: Intel Investor Relations



Source: AnandTech – Intel Announces Q3 2017 Results

iPhone X Got Sold Out Within Minutes, New Orders Won't Ship Before End Of Year

The Apple iPhone X was on pre-order today…..for 2 to 3 minutes. Selling out that fast does make it seem some of the rumors about low stock availability might be true. If there were 2-3 million units available today then Apple just raked in approximately $2 billion in revenue. Wow, talk about printing money.



Apple’s stunning new iPhone X is now available for pre-order for delivery on launch day. Sorry, that should actually read Apple’s iPhone X was available for pre-order for launch day delivery for a period of approximately 2-3 minutes before the initial stock was depleted.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – iPhone X Got Sold Out Within Minutes, New Orders Won’t Ship Before End Of Year

San Francisco, Seattle Tire of Comcast, Mull Building Citywide Fiber Networks

San Francisco and Seattle are contemplating building citywide fiber networks to connect all home and businesses in their cities. Overall the plan is to have a dark network of fiber that the city owns and then allows it to be used by multiple commercial ISPs to bring competition to the residents of the city and lower prices. I’m not sure if I’m on board with the idea because I’m not sure the city government is really going to do what they say since they are the ones that negotiated competition away in the first place. Also, is it really even worth it when the tax payers are going to have to pay billions in new taxes to just build this network so they can save a few bucks a month in the long run on their internet bill? Not sure of the ROI for the taxpayer.



Back in 2009, an FCC study found that such open access models result in more competition and lower rates (pdf). But, overly-influenced by large ISPs terrified of competition, the FCC promptly put the study in a drawer and forgot about it. Isolated municipal broadband deployments still sometimes embrace the idea, however. Like in Ammon, Idaho, where the municipal network there lets consumers switch between multiple ISPs in a matter of seconds if they’re dissatisfied with their carrier. Open access was the model Google Fiber originally promised it would pursue with its own gigabit fiber build before promptly backpedaling.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – San Francisco, Seattle Tire of Comcast, Mull Building Citywide Fiber Networks

Now we know what the writers of Star Wars: Rogue One were really thinking

This episode of Ars Technica Live was filmed by Chris Schodt and produced by Justin Wolfson. (video link)

Rarely do you get to sit down with one of the writers of a blockbuster movie and ask, “So, what were you guys thinking when you wrote this?” But that’s what Ars editor Cyrus Farivar and I (and a bunch of Ars readers) got to do last week at Ars Technica Live with our guest Gary Whitta. He’s best known as the co-author of Star Wars: Rogue One, but that’s just one part of a fascinating career full of highs and lows.

Whitta told us how he got started by writing about video games for a living, eventually becoming the editor-in-chief of PC Gamer magazine. He moved from the UK to the US to expand his writing portfolio just when the tech industry went bust in the early ’00s, killing the company he worked for. So he decided to try a different path. He’d saved up enough money to take some time to work on screenplays, and he figured it was time to take the plunge. It took about a year of writing better and better screenplays before he was able to get a manager, but then he started selling his work. Of course, as he told us in hilarious detail, just because you sell something doesn’t mean it will get made.

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Source: Ars Technica – Now we know what the writers of Star Wars: Rogue One were really thinking

Facebook Exec: 'Just Not True' That We Listen To Your Phone's Mic

Adrianne Jeffries, writing for The Outline: Facebook executive stepped outside of official channels of communication last night by tweeting about a negative rumor that seems to keep resurfacing no matter how many times the company denies it. “I run ads product at Facebook. We don’t – and have never – used your microphone for ads. Just not true,” tweeted Rob Goldman, vice president of ads products at Facebook. That includes Facebook-owned Instagram, he said. Goldman was responding to a tweet from PJ Vogt, one of the co-hosts of the tech podcast Reply All, which is producing a segment about the persistent belief that Facebook spies on users through the microphone. Vogt had asked people to call in to share their stories of why they think Facebook may be using the microphone to collect information for advertisers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Facebook Exec: ‘Just Not True’ That We Listen To Your Phone’s Mic

Seawater desalination will quench the thirst of a parched planet

Humanity has sought to make the Earth’s oceans potable for thousands of years. The Norse tale of Utgarda-Loki tells of Odin being tricked into drinking from a horn connected to the sea, while Exodus 15:22–26 of the Bible likely describes Moses…

Source: Engadget – Seawater desalination will quench the thirst of a parched planet

Days Ahead of Senate Hearing, Facebook Vows to Create Archive of Federal Election Ads

Under fire for failing to detect and stop Russian-funded political ads during the 2016 election, Facebook announced new rules on Friday for advertising on its platform. The measures are aimed at increasing transparency about who pays for ads on its platform and who views them—including federal election ads from the…

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Source: Gizmodo – Days Ahead of Senate Hearing, Facebook Vows to Create Archive of Federal Election Ads

Facebook will require political advertisers to disclose their identities

Facebook has had a rough few months since the election. At least 10 million people saw Russian-placed political ads on the platform, which may have helped widen the rift between political sides during the 2016 US presidential election. In reaction, t…

Source: Engadget – Facebook will require political advertisers to disclose their identities

Google Shrugs Off Pixel 2 Issues, But Adds an Extra Year to Its Warranty Anyways

Google’s brand new flagship phones are off to a rocky start. From reports of faint clicking sounds coming from the Pixel 2’s earpiece to a number of issues with the Pixel 2 XL’s POLED display, it seems Google still has some room for improvement as a hardware manufacturer, even after two years.

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Source: Gizmodo – Google Shrugs Off Pixel 2 Issues, But Adds an Extra Year to Its Warranty Anyways

Here's Marvel's Canceled Promo Comic for Defense Contractor Northrop Grumman

It’s difficult to imagine what sort of response Marvel expected when it announced a partnership with Northrop Grumman, the fifth largest defense contractor in the world. But the publisher’s decision to axe the deal following a swift wave of backlash suggests that it didn’t anticipate people being turned off.

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Source: Gizmodo – Here’s Marvel’s Canceled Promo Comic for Defense Contractor Northrop Grumman

Star’s magnetic field could turn habitable-zone planets into magma soup

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Source: Ars Technica – Star’s magnetic field could turn habitable-zone planets into magma soup