The team behind Half-Life’s fan-made third instalment, Project Borealis, have been busy. In an update posted to Reddit, the developers revealed some of the progress they’ve made in their first few months of real pre-production, sharing screenshots of…
Source: Engadget – ‘Half-Life 3’ fan venture ‘Project Borealis’ is taking shape
Monthly Archives: December 2017
People who know how the news is made resist conspiratorial thinking
Enlarge (credit: Flickr user Jon S.)
Conspiracy theories, like the world being flat or the Moon landings faked, have proven notoriously difficult to stomp out. Add a partisan twist to the issue, and the challenge becomes even harder. Even near the end of his second term, barely a quarter of Republicans were willing to state that President Obama was born in the US.
If we’re seeking to have an informed electorate, then this poses a bit of a problem. But a recent study suggests a very simple solution helps limit the appeal of conspiracy theories: news media literacy. This isn’t knowledge of the news, per se, but knowledge of the companies and processes that help create the news. While the study doesn’t identify how the two are connected, its authors suggest that an understanding of the media landscape helps foster a healthy skepticism.
Literate
News media literacy is the catch-all term for understanding how bias, unconscious or otherwise, influences the creation and consumption of news. This includes an awareness of the priorities of news organizations as businesses and the influence that ownership can have on the slant of news articles. But it also comes down to issues like recognizing that we bring our own biases in to the news we consume, allowing two people to come away from the same article with very different information.
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Source: Ars Technica – People who know how the news is made resist conspiratorial thinking
This $29 Kettle Has Six Different Temperature Settings

Electric kettles are hands-down the most efficient way to boil water. This normally-$40 Aicok electric kettle is selling for $29 today with code PRYSU8YB. It has 6 different temperature settings for various beverages from green tea to hot cocoa and noodles.
Source: LifeHacker – This Kettle Has Six Different Temperature Settings
Mark Zuckerberg's Real Campaign: Save Facebook
From an Axios report: Mark Zuckerberg started 2017 scoffing at the idea of Russia election manipulation on Facebook, and looked like he was contemplating his own possible run for the presidency. Facebook’s CEO ends 2017 a very changed man: scrambling to curtail (some of) the manipulation he now acknowledges exists, and to save the most powerful platform in human history. A Facebook exec tells us: “This is the year people will see we get that there’s real work to do. We have to change.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Mark Zuckerberg’s Real Campaign: Save Facebook
Nintendo Expects To Sell 20 Million Switch Game Consoles During FY 2018
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Nintendo had a big 2017 thanks to the Switch game console, and the company has a much bigger 2018 planned. The company has announced that it plans to sell over 20 million Switch consoles in the next fiscal year. That might sound like a lofty number, considering that Nintendo sold 10 million consoles in the first 9 months it was available.
Source: Hot Hardware – Nintendo Expects To Sell 20 Million Switch Game Consoles During FY 2018
HTC And Motorola Say They Won't Throttle Phones, Meanwhile Apple Faces Criminal Suit In France

If you’ve been following the tech world over the past two weeks, Apple hasn’t had this much negative attention aimed at its products since the MacBook Pro battery life fiasco stirred by Consumer Reports, or perhaps the iPhone 4 “Antennagate”. Apple’s decision to throttle older iPhones with degraded batteries — while not informing customers
Source: Hot Hardware – HTC And Motorola Say They Won’t Throttle Phones, Meanwhile Apple Faces Criminal Suit In France
New Technology We're Actually Excited About for 2018

Yes, 2017’s biggest tech story was probably about the ways in which social media forced us to rehash old culture wars and question who was guiding our political discourse. Rather than seeing technology facilitate greater communication, economic opportunity, and leisure, it seemed that it was exacerbating our…
Source: Gizmodo – New Technology We’re Actually Excited About for 2018
PS Vita jailbreak / cfw question
Hello friends,
First of all, my name is Ömer, i am new on this forum.
I have been in the jailbreak community on the PS3 for a long time, used to downgrade and unbrick with the e3 flasher. Also on the PSP1000 i have a CFW running.
So i am open…
PS Vita jailbreak / cfw question
Source: PS4 News – PS Vita jailbreak / cfw question
Nordstrom's Half-Yearly Sale Means Up to 50% Off A Crazy Amount of Things

Nordstrom has three large sales each year: The Anniversary Sale and two Half-Yearly Sales. Well, this week marks the end of the second half of the year, so Nordstrom is taking up to 50% off a boatload of styles. It’ll take time to look through all the stuff, so maybe pencil it in as a meeting at work or pretend you’re…
Source: LifeHacker – Nordstrom’s Half-Yearly Sale Means Up to 50% Off A Crazy Amount of Things
License expired: The Ars Technica 2018 Deathwatch
Enlarge (credit: Fursov Aleksey?Getty Images)
Wow. That’s 2017, though. Quite a year. Let’s grab a Juicero and take a moment to reflect on the utter dumpster fires that we’ve witnessed over the past 12 months. No, we’re not talking about the political scene, though that certainly factors in here somewhere. But even in times with a somewhat upward economic trajectory, there are those in the tech industry that seemed to have existed solely to be a cautionary tale to others.
Some of the companies previously on our Deathwatch radar didn’t survive long enough to even make our final 2018 list. Pour out one for Radio Shack, which died even faster the second time around after what looked like a brave reboot. Others have been circling the drain for some time and are by this time old friends of the ‘Watch, comforting in their continual plummet despite all other forces of nature. And some… well, some just halted and caught fire this year in a way that promises to provide years of Schadenfreude to come.
Now, before we introduce our candidates, it’s time for the patented Deathwatch disclaimer.
Read 62 remaining paragraphs | Comments
Source: Ars Technica – License expired: The Ars Technica 2018 Deathwatch
Subsidy-free offshore wind farm will move ahead in the Netherlands

That’s a pretty stunning milestone for renewable energy.
Source: TreeHugger – Subsidy-free offshore wind farm will move ahead in the Netherlands
PS4 4.05: Permanent Internet Web Browser Payload by 2much4u
We’ve seen both a PS4 1.76 Permanent Internet Browser and a…
PS4 4.05: Permanent Internet Web Browser Payload by 2much4u
Source: PS4 News – PS4 4.05: Permanent Internet Web Browser Payload by 2much4u
Photo: Milky Way puts on a show

Our stellar photo of the day comes from Mono Lake, California.
Source: TreeHugger – Photo: Milky Way puts on a show
Keep An Extra Eye On the Road With Anker's $48 Dash Cam

In just over half a year, Anker’s first foray into the dash cam market has spawned an entire line of products, and the newest model just got its first discount ever.
Source: LifeHacker – Keep An Extra Eye On the Road With Anker’s Dash Cam
Scientists made a virtual supernova you can walk around
At 11,000 light-years away, it’s safe to say you won’t be able to visit Cassiopeia A even if private space corporations start selling seats to amateur spacefarers. Thanks to a team of scientists, though, you might be able to see the 300-year-old supe…
Source: Engadget – Scientists made a virtual supernova you can walk around
Carlsberg Turns To AI To Help Develop Beers
From a report: One of the reasons it takes so long to develop new beers is because brewers have to rely on actual humans — and techniques like chromatography and spectrometry — to test liquids and detect flavors and aromas. Carlsberg thinks it’s found a better way. With help from researchers at Aarhus University, the Danish beer-maker has developed sensors that are able to detect differences between beer flavors, the Financial Times reports. Now, the company is teaming up with Microsoft to help interpret that data via artificial intelligence and streamline the lengthy beer-making process.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Carlsberg Turns To AI To Help Develop Beers
Save Big on TurboTax, and Get a Bonus Amazon Gift Card, Today Only

Sure, it’s a little early to be thinking about filing your taxes, but if you plan ahead and purchase your TurboTax software today from Amazon, you’ll score a nice discount, plus a $10 Amazon gift card to boot.
Source: LifeHacker – Save Big on TurboTax, and Get a Bonus Amazon Gift Card, Today Only
Syzbot: Google Continuously Fuzzing The Linux Kernel
On the Linux kernel mailing list over the past week has been a discussion about Syzbot, an effort by Google for continuously fuzzing the mainline Linux kernel and its branches with automatic bug reporting…
Source: Phoronix – Syzbot: Google Continuously Fuzzing The Linux Kernel
Microsoft Surface Laptop Review: Plush, Premium Design In A Competitive Category
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When Microsoft released the original Surface Pro five years ago, the mobile market was completely different – Windows tablets were an afterthought and weren’t the svelte and snappy performers you can buy today. The first-generation Surface Pro wasn’t perfect, but it was a huge step in the right direction for Windows 2-in-1’s…
Source: Hot Hardware – Microsoft Surface Laptop Review: Plush, Premium Design In A Competitive Category
A Proposal To Update Ubuntu's Kernel/Mesa/GNOME Components On A Monthly Basis
It’s not quite the Ubuntu rolling-release process that some have proposed over the years, but a new proposal is being formulated for shipping updates to key Ubuntu system components on a monthly basis rather than having to wait six months for updates to the Linux kernel, Mesa, etc…
Source: Phoronix – A Proposal To Update Ubuntu’s Kernel/Mesa/GNOME Components On A Monthly Basis

