How Facebook Keeps Messenger From Crashing On New Year's Eve

Wave723 quotes IEEE Spectrum: On New Year’s Eve, millions of people will use Facebook’s Messenger app to wish friends and family a ‘Happy New Year!’ If everything goes smoothly, those messages will reach recipients in fewer than 100 milliseconds, and life will go on. But if the service stalls or fails, a small team of software engineers based in the company’s New York City office will have to answer for it.

The article says the team “tested and tweaked the app throughout the year and will soon face their biggest annual performance exam,” since Messenger’s 1.3 billion monthly active users send more messages on New Year’s Eve than any other day of the year. Many of them hit “send” at the exact moment when their clock strikes midnight, “and people often try to resend messages that don’t appear to make it through right away, which piles on more requests.”

The solution appears to be load testing, re-directing traffic, message batching, and discarding “read receipts” and temporarily disabling other minor Facebook functions — or, more generally, what their engineering manager describes as “graceful degradation.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – How Facebook Keeps Messenger From Crashing On New Year’s Eve

Bangladesh Shuts Down 3G, 4G Access Across Entire Country Ahead of Elections

The Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission, the nation’s top telecommunications regulator, has ordered mobile providers to shut down all 3G and 4G services until midnight on Dec. 30, effective immediately, Al Jazeera reported on Saturday.

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Source: Gizmodo – Bangladesh Shuts Down 3G, 4G Access Across Entire Country Ahead of Elections

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Pricing and Performance Leaked

VideoCardz has returned with some key information on the RTX 2060: the card, which will cost $349 and perform similarly to the GTX 1070 Ti, can supposedly provide a “playable experience” in Battlefield V with ray-tracing enabled…in 1080p, at least. (Battlefield V: RT Off: 90 FPS, Battlefield V: RT On + DLSS Off: 65 FPS, Battlefield V: RT On + DLSS On: 88 FPS.)



We can now confirm that GeForce RTX 2060 features 1920 CUDA cores, 240 Tensor cores, 30 RT Cores, 120 TMUs and 48 ROPs. The boost clock of 1680 MHz will be the same for reference and Founders Edition cards. Board partners will offer stock and factory-overclocked models. The RTX 2060 is a mid-range model replacing GTX 1060 from Pascal architecture. Throughout Reviewers Guide, NVIDIA claims it will offer comparable performance to GeForce GTX 1070 Ti.

Discusion

Source: [H]ardOCP – NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Pricing and Performance Leaked

'My Airbnb Guests Threw a New Year's Party For 300 People'

“What’s the worst that can happen?” thought Nicko Feinberg last December when he listed his house on Airbnb.
The listing explicitly said no parties. Then a request came through to book the house for one night on New Year’s Day. It was from a young man, probably in his early 20s. He had one review but it was terrific…. I picked up my boys and we stayed down the road at my mother’s apartment… When I got back [the next day] I saw three or four cars in the driveway. I threw my food down and knew I was screwed. Inside there were about 12 young adults, all trying to clean.
The floors looked like someone had poured Jagermeister and champagne everywhere and then danced on them. Everything seemed wrong: my artwork was not on the walls; there was furniture missing; the glass panel on my staircase was shattered; even the floor didn’t seem level any more. Then I noticed they were using my best sheets and towels as mops….I told them no one was leaving and I called the police and Airbnb. When a police officer turned up, he said it was a civil matter, before adding: “We were here last night….”
Ultimately, it was just stuff and I knew it would be OK. But I felt a massive disappointment in humanity. That night, it wasn’t hard for me and my boys to find Instagram pictures and videos of the party. It was horrifying to see so many people in the house, jumping up and down on the furniture and windowsills. They broke my hot tub and tiles in the bathroom; when I looked in the rubbish bags, I saw all my drinks bottles empty, as well as broken glasses and towels. I found an image online of the invite that said, “Mansion Party” with my address. There had been 300 people there. Boys were charged to enter; girls got in free.

While he won’t disclose what Airbnb paid him for the damage, “a year later repairs are continuing. The floor is still uneven.” But he told one local news channel that the damage was over $100,000, adding “There’s footprints on my bathroom walls.”
At one point more than 100 cars had been parked outside, according to a police report, and the 23-year-old was ultimately charged with “disorderly conduct”. He also was banned permanently from Airbnb — which said in a statement that “negative incidents are incredibly rare.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – ‘My Airbnb Guests Threw a New Year’s Party For 300 People’

Google Has Lawsuit in Illinois Over Facial Recognition Scanning in Google Photos Dismissed

Google has had a lawsuit in Illinois over its facial-recognition software thrown out, with a judge dismissing the case on the grounds that the plaintiff in the case did not suffer “concrete injuries,” Bloomberg reported on Saturday. The ruling puts to rest one of three lawsuits against major tech companies for alleged…

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Source: Gizmodo – Google Has Lawsuit in Illinois Over Facial Recognition Scanning in Google Photos Dismissed

NVIDIA Faces Class Action Lawsuit over Losses after Diminished Mining GPU Demand

The Schall Law Firm has filed a class action lawsuit against NVIDIA for allegedly making false and misleading statements regarding the cryptocurrency market. Investors claim they were essentially tricked by the company, as NVIDIA claimed to be “masters at managing the channel” and was confident “drop off in demand for its GPUs amongst cryptocurrency miners would not negatively impact the company’s business because of strong demand for GPUs from the gaming market.” The reality turned out to be a little different.



As Cointelegraph recently reported, after the cryptocurrency mining crash, NVIDIA was the worst reported performer in S&P 500. After a massive sell-off of its shares, the stock price of the company fell by 54 percent. In mid-November, an analysis by Susquehanna — a United States -based global trading and technology firm — observed that mining Ethereum (ETH) using graphics processing units was no longer profitable. In the Susquehanna analysis, the profit per month for GPU Ethereum miners hit $0 by Nov. 1, down from nearly $150 in July 2017.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – NVIDIA Faces Class Action Lawsuit over Losses after Diminished Mining GPU Demand

The Epic Games Store is giving away Super Meat Boy from now until January 10.

The Epic Games Store is giving away Super Meat Boy from now until January 10. You simply create a store account (if you don’t have one), click the Meat Boy image at the top of the page, and get the game. After that, you’re free to jump and slide and plop to your heart’s content. 

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Source: Kotaku – The Epic Games Store is giving away Super Meat Boy from now until January 10.

Could You Live Without Your Smartphone?

Three-quarters of Canadians own smartphones– and 94% of 15- to 34-year-olds. But this week the Globe and Mail profiled “digital refuseniks” who are “deliberately logging off — and they say it’s done wonders for their imaginations and peace of mind.”

They are hidden among us, neither jobless nor friendless, and living quite happily. Cut off from Uber, yet somehow thriving. For example, Tony North does not live for his smartphone, because he’s never had one. “I just didn’t want to get into the habit of distraction,” he says simply, in an interview conducted over landline from his home in Paris, Ontario. The high-school teacher spends about 20 minutes a day [on his laptop] on his one social-media platform, Facebook, which he uses to keep in touch with family back home in Australia. In fact, you could blame Australia for Mr. North’s desire to be digitally unleashed: He remembers leaving home to travel overseas, and the wonderful feeling of being uncontactable that came with it. “It was such a feeling of freedom, and I guess I wanted to keep a bit of that.”
As a teacher of English and drama, Mr. North, 53, is worried about the consequences of teenagers’ near-constant devotion to their online lives (his own two children, 12 and 13 years old, do not have phones). In drama class, he makes his students put away their phones and engage in face-to-face exercises: “I’m basically forcing them to interact,” he says. “When I ask for evaluations at the end of the semester, it’s one of the things they most seem to appreciate….” Canadians between the ages of 18 and 34 spend nearly five hours a day online, according to a 2017 survey from Media Technology Monitor… “Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?” the Atlantic magazine asked last year in a cover story designed to keep parents up at night, frozen in the blue light of further bad news.
North says in the extra time “he reads many novels and enjoys quiet moments of reflection and watching the world go by.” And 18-year-old Bethany March is also severely limiting her phone use. ”I saw the way that people got so invested, not just in their phones, but in social media, and I didn’t want to be that person,” she says. “So many times people would be zeroed in on their phones. It was just rude, to be honest. I’d think, ‘I’m here with you, talk to me.'”
71-year-old John Moir insists that living without a smartphone makes him really experience new locations, “rather than trying to be in two places at once,” adding that “Whenever I tell people I don’t have a phone, they say, ‘Oh, that’s so great. I wish I didn’t have to have one.'” That’s “one thing digital refuseniks never have to worry about,” the article concludes: “Who is the servant in their digital relationship, and who is the master.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Could You Live Without Your Smartphone?

Gran Turismo's Developers Are Working on Their Own Real-Time Ray-Tracing Tech

At this month’s SIGGRAPH Asia 2018, Gran Turismo developers Polyphony Digital introduced a new, real-time ray-tracing tech that was created entirely in-house. The most recent title in the franchise, Gran Turismo Sport, teased the benefits of ray tracing with vehicle reflections, but Polyphony’s latest undertaking is expected to do that better, and in real time. Some say this alludes to the potential power of the PlayStation 5.



Polyphony hasn’t confirmed what they plan to use this tech for, simply saying they’re “still exploring […] the possibilities” but it seems fair to assume real-time ray tracing will be included in the next iteration of Gran Turismo. If that’s the case, what might that say about the makeup of the PS5? The PS4 is powered by AMD tech and most have assumed the PS5 will be, too. Of course, AMD have indicated they’re planning to go head to head with NVIDIA on ray tracing in 2019, so let’s not jump to any wild “RTX-powered PS5!” conclusions.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Gran Turismo’s Developers Are Working on Their Own Real-Time Ray-Tracing Tech

Clear Linux Ending Out 2018 With Even More Performance Optimizations

With the Windows Server 2019 vs. Linux benchmarks this week on a dual socket Intel Xeon Scalable server and testing six different Linux distributions and three Windows Server configurations, Intel’s open-source Clear Linux was the winner in nearly half of the dozens of benchmarks carried out across these Linux and Windows operating system tests. But the results did yield some areas they could improve upon for better performance and as a result have already landed some more performance optimizations.

Source: Phoronix – Clear Linux Ending Out 2018 With Even More Performance Optimizations

FTC Warns Against Netflix Phishing Scam That Could Potentially Steal Your Identity

FTC Warns Against Netflix Phishing Scam That Could Potentially Steal Your Identity
Phishing attacks have become one of the most common methods of scamming unsuspecting people out of something – usually money. We may all think we have our guards up to all forms of attacks, but when they can hit us through every form of communication, it’s bound to happen to someone.

In a recent series of phishing attacks, Netflix and its

Source: Hot Hardware – FTC Warns Against Netflix Phishing Scam That Could Potentially Steal Your Identity

YouTube Apologizes For Tweeting Somebody Else's Video

YouTube’s controversial year-end “Rewind” video has become “the most-loathed video in the entire history of YouTube,” reports Inc., adding that with 14 million down votes, it now “might just be the most-hated video anybody ever posted anywhere.”
“But then came Christmas Day, and YouTube apparently managed to top its own blunder.”
How? By uploading a promo video wishing viewers a Merry Christmas on Twitter. The problem: YouTube allegedly didn’t own the video. Instead, it copied a YouTube user’s video and reposted it as its own, without so much as offering credit….The only real difference between the version of video that YouTuber Lily Hevesh created and uploaded to YouTube, and the one that YouTube reportedly passed off as its own work in a post on Twitter is that YouTube’s version on Twitter skipped the opening 20 seconds. That would be the part in which Hevesh, who describes herself as a “domino artist,” shared her logo and a short clip of herself setting up the dominoes.
Hevesh caught what YouTube had apparently done about 14 hours after the post, and tweeted a response: “Very glad to see that my Christmas domino e-card is getting good use. However, I’m a bit disappointed that YouTube would take my video and re-upload it with absolutely no credit. People rip off my work everyday and it’s honestly saddening to see this happen by YouTube itself….” Even if money weren’t involved, YouTube’s own terms of service and copyright page seem to ban exactly what it looks like was done here. It’s a mess.
In the end, YouTube owned up to its mistake — well, partway anyway. It tweeted a follow-up on the day after Christmas, acknowledging that they “forgot to credit @Hevesh5 for this video!” and linking to Hevesh’s YouTube page.

The Verge points out that YouTube “does own a limited license to people’s videos, so legally, the company can take Hevesh’s content and upload it to its Twitter account. The problem is ethical….
“Reuploading video while stripping credit is a practice that YouTube explicitly condemns. YouTube’s community guidelines and policy page specifically states that creators should only ‘upload videos that you made or that you’re authorized to use.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – YouTube Apologizes For Tweeting Somebody Else’s Video