The open-source game engine developers behind the huge Godot 3.0 update out before the end of January as planned…
Source: Phoronix – Godot 3.0 Open-Source Game Engine Released
Monthly Archives: January 2018
Pentagon reviews policy after fitness app reveals military locations
Yesterday, reports surfaced that a heat map released by fitness app company Strava showed the locations of US and other countries’ military. While most of the locations spotted, including Afghanistan and Syria, are known to host US military bases, it…
Source: Engadget – Pentagon reviews policy after fitness app reveals military locations
There May Not Be An iPhone SE 2 After All
KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo issued a research note today that casts doubt on rumors about a second-generation iPhone SE launching in the second quarter of 2018. If there is a successor, customers can expect a minor update that amounts to a run-of-the-mill spec boost and no new features like wireless charging or Face ID. The Verge reports: According to Kuo, between the three phones Apple released last year (iPhone 8, 8 Plus, and X) and the three phones rumored to be released this fall, the company may not have enough development resources for an SE follow up as a fourth phone for 2018. That said, Kuo also does acknowledge that a basic processor update could still happen, but it seems that SE fans should keep expectations low. The iPhone SE still fills an interesting place in Apple’s lineup. It uses the same design as the iPhone 5, which was released in 2012, with the 2015 internals of an iPhone 6s. This means the current model would get a boost in processor speed — something that will likely continue to get worse with the presumed release of iOS 12 this fall. But SE is still popular for its low price and smaller size among consumers. Compared to the giant 6-inch-plus phones Apple is rumored to be releasing this year, it could make sense to keep an updated version of the smaller SE around.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – There May Not Be An iPhone SE 2 After All
Bigger Streaming Royalties Sound Like Trouble for Spotify

The review panel in charge of setting rates for songwriter’s royalties reportedly issued the biggest rate increase for artists in its history over the weekend—a 4o percent hike. For the music streaming industry, which runs on thin margins, this could be an issue. For Spotify, a price increase for users could be…
Source: Gizmodo – Bigger Streaming Royalties Sound Like Trouble for Spotify
“Heatmap” for social athlete’s app reveals secret bases, secret places
Enlarge / A heatmap of Strava “workout” data revealed sensitive locations around the world, including some mysterious places in Syria. (credit: Strava)
On January 27, Nathan Ruser, a founder of the Institute for United Conflict Analysts, started looking at a rich source of geospatial data for locating military operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and other conflict zones: a newly published “activity hotmap” for the fitness tracking application Strava. Others, including Tobias Schneider, started plumbing the depths of the Strava data store, based on data pulled from app users’ mobile devices. The heatmap was meant as a demonstration of the mass of activity over 2017 by Strava users.
But it, along with the other data available through Strava’s website and APIs, also may be exposing sensitive “patterns of life” of military and contractor personnel in conflict zones and even information about individuals in some of those places.
There’s nothing in the heatmap that specifically identifies who is connected with the data for a very confined path of movement in a compound northeast of Raqqa, for example, or the long tracks of what is most likely a vehicle route from Iraq to northern Syria. But those traces on the heatmap, along with others in areas around the world linked to military operations, have highlighted sometimes covert locations from Niger to Ukraine to Taiwan. And with a little work, it is in some cases possible to connect those activities to individuals—and track them back to their homes.
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Source: Ars Technica – “Heatmap” for social athlete’s app reveals secret bases, secret places
Ten Minutes Of A Hydraulic Press Cutting Things With Giant Blades

Seen here solving a math word problem about how you can slice five pizzas with only one cut so everybody gets the same amount but a quarter of them have to eat their pieces off the floor, this is a ten minute video from the Hydraulic Press Channel of their press crushing/cutting (crusting) things with a giant 8-blade attachment. The crustings in order include this stack of pizzas, a Barbie doll, a tablet computer, a head of lettuce, a bike helmet with watermelon head inside, a stack of ceramic plates, a ream of printer paper, and a skillet. Sadly missing was the hand of one of my enemies. Come on, how hard would that have been? There’s so many of them. “You hate everyone.” Everyone except you. You are THE CHOSEN ONE. “So you’re saying you wouldn’t want to see my hand under there.” Stop putting words in my mouth.
Keep going for the video, but feel free to skip around.
Source: Geekologie – Ten Minutes Of A Hydraulic Press Cutting Things With Giant Blades
Razer Phone now streams Netflix in all its HDR glory
Looks like Razer’s latest update for its first smartphone should be worth installing. The new software enables support for Netflix HDR videos as well as Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound, so you can better immerse yourself in your favorite fictional u…
Source: Engadget – Razer Phone now streams Netflix in all its HDR glory
Washington Governor Shuts Down Gigantic Fossil Fuel Project

Washington state Governor Jay Inslee scored a major win for environmentalists on Monday when he rejected a permit to build what would have been the nation’s largest oil-by-rail terminal.
Source: Gizmodo – Washington Governor Shuts Down Gigantic Fossil Fuel Project
The 10 Best Deals of January 29, 2018

We see a lot of deals around the web over on Kinja Deals, but these were our ten favorites today.
Source: LifeHacker – The 10 Best Deals of January 29, 2018
Inside Amazon's Mini Rainforest Work Space Spheres
Amazon’s indoor rainforest-like office space opened today after being in development for seven years. CNBC reports of what can be found inside the Spheres: The Spheres’ three glass domes house some 40,000 plants of 400 species. Amazon, famous for its demanding work culture, hopes the Spheres’ lush environs will let employees reflect and have chance encounters, spawning new products or plans. The space is more like a greenhouse than a typical office. Instead of enclosed conference rooms or desks, there are walkways and unconventional meeting spaces with chairs. Amazon has invested $3.7 billion on buildings and infrastructure in Seattle from 2010 to summer 2017, a figure that has public officials competing for its “HQ2” salivating. Amazon has said it expects to invest more than $5 billion in construction of HQ2 and to create as many as 50,000 jobs. The Spheres, designed by architecture firm NBBJ, will become part of Amazon’s guided campus tours. Members of the public can also visit an exhibit at the Spheres by appointment starting Tuesday.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Inside Amazon’s Mini Rainforest Work Space Spheres
Americans are using less energy by staying at home
Americans are using less energy — paradoxically, by spending more time indoors, according to a new study in the journal Joule. But researchers point out that keeping more lights on was offset by lifestyle changes that kept people inside instead of r…
Source: Engadget – Americans are using less energy by staying at home
Serve Shishito Peppers at Your Super Bowl Party

When serving food to a large amount of drunk people, it is important to have a few high-impact crowd pleasers you can make quickly and easily. The blistered shishito pepper is just that, and it is made for dipping. (I, for one, am of the opinion that at least half of your Big Game spread should consist of dippable…
Source: LifeHacker – Serve Shishito Peppers at Your Super Bowl Party
Splinter Make This Amazon Charade Illegal | Very Smart Brothas Beyoncé With Snacks on Deck for Blue
Splinter Make This Amazon Charade Illegal | Very Smart Brothas Beyoncé With Snacks on Deck for Blue Ivy Is Proof That Parenting Is the Same No Matter Who You Are | Deadspin Report: Britt McHenry Is Fake News | Jezebel I Exhausted Myself Relaxing at the ‘In Goop Health’ Summit | Earther Hey, Trump Nominated a Science…
Source: LifeHacker – Splinter Make This Amazon Charade Illegal | Very Smart Brothas Beyoncé With Snacks on Deck for Blue
Frog Species Breaks Record for Most Sex Chromosomes in a Vertebrate

You may have learned in school that humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes: 22 “autosomes” and their partners, which contain pretty much the same genes and in the same order, plus one pair of sex chromosomes that lead to the differentiation in sexual traits. But enough about us. The Amazonian Leptodactylus pentadactylus…
Source: Gizmodo – Frog Species Breaks Record for Most Sex Chromosomes in a Vertebrate
Microsoft's Slack rival helps you find and use apps
Microsoft is determined to make Teams a strong alternative to collaborative chat apps like Slack, and it’s now targeting one of Slack’s strong points: apps. The company is rolling out a major update whose centerpiece is a new app store that lets you…
Source: Engadget – Microsoft’s Slack rival helps you find and use apps
Woman Walking Dog In Woods Stumbles Across Atlas Humanoid Robot Being Taken For A Walk

This is a short horizontal video (what are the odds?!) captured by Redditor crazyperson15’s mom while walking her dog through the woods of Lincoln, Massachusetts. What does she stumble upon? “Bigfoot!” Guess again. “A dead body!” Just read the article title. “An Atlas humanoid robot.” Very good! Here, take this pill. “What is it?” A smart pill, you might need it. “It says ‘4 SICK BONERZ’ on the side.” Wrong pill, I’m gonna need that one back.
Keep going for the video.
Source: Geekologie – Woman Walking Dog In Woods Stumbles Across Atlas Humanoid Robot Being Taken For A Walk
There's Something Incredibly Creepy About An Abandoned High-Speed Train

This is not a movie set. This isn’t from some post-apocalyptic new film starring Will Smith. This is a real, honest-to-God high-speed train that’s been abandoned and left to die. And it looks like something out of our dystopian future.
Source: Gizmodo – There’s Something Incredibly Creepy About An Abandoned High-Speed Train
Pentagon Reviews GPS Policies After Fitness Trackers Reveal Locations
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: Locations and activity of U.S. military bases; jogging and patrol routes of American soldiers — experts say those details are among the GPS data shared by the exercise tracking company Strava, whose Heat Map reflects more than a billion exercise activities globally. The Pentagon says it’s looking at adding new training and policies to address security concerns. “Recent data releases emphasize the need for situational awareness when members of the military share personal information,” Pentagon spokesman Major Adrian J.T. Rankine-Galloway of the U.S. Marine Corps said in a statement about the implications of the Strava data that has made international headlines. Strava — which includes an option for keeping users’ workout data private — published the updated Heat Map late last year. The California-based company calls itself “the social network for athletes,” saying that its mobile apps and website connect millions of people every day. Using data from fitness trackers such as the Fitbit, Strava’s map shows millions of users’ runs, walks, and bike trips from 2015 to September of 2017 — and in some countries, the activities of military and aid personnel are seen in stark contrast, as their outposts shine brightly among the comparative darkness of their surroundings.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Pentagon Reviews GPS Policies After Fitness Trackers Reveal Locations
What's the Speed of Dark Matter?

Based on physicists’ measurements, most of the mass in the universe is actually taken up by dark matter. Whatever this stuff is, we can see its effects on the behavior of distant galaxies, though no experiment has detected it here on Earth. Doing so probably requires knowing how fast it moves.
Source: Gizmodo – What’s the Speed of Dark Matter?
Soderbergh's iPhone-shot thriller 'Unsane' looks appropriately lo-fi
Director Steven Soderbergh has been pushing the limits of filmmaking in different ways lately. Be it independently releasing his last feature, working with HBO on its interactive Mosaic series, or, now, shooting a suspense movie entirely on an iPhone…
Source: Engadget – Soderbergh’s iPhone-shot thriller ‘Unsane’ looks appropriately lo-fi


