
Amazon just gave the slip to yet another city.
Source: Gizmodo – Amazon Is Now Ditching on Seattle Plans, Too

Amazon just gave the slip to yet another city.
Source: Gizmodo – Amazon Is Now Ditching on Seattle Plans, Too

There is irony to the U.S. fascination with eggs in ramen. Don’t get me wrong. Few things in life are more delicious than a marinated, aromatic egg encapsulating a jiggly yolk.
Source: Kotaku – Cooking a perfect ramen egg is no magic trick
If you have fond memories of playing with a View-Master as a kid, Mattel is hoping to cash in on your nostalgia. The toy maker is teaming up with media company MGM to produce a live-action film based on the classic stereoscope toy. Details on the fil…
Source: Engadget – MGM is somehow making a live-action movie about the View-Master
Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from CNN: A team of 12 geologists and archaeologists from across the United Kingdom unveiled research this month that traces some of the prehistoric monument’s smaller stones to two quarries in western Wales. The team also found evidence of prehistoric tools, stone wedges and digging activity in those quarries, tracing them to around 3000 BC, the era when Stonehenge’s first stage was constructed. It’s rock-solid evidence that humans were involved in moving these “bluestones” to where they sit today, a full 150 miles away, the researchers say. “It finally puts to rest long-standing arguments over whether the bluestones were moved by human agency or by glacial action,” University of Southampton Archeology Professor Joshua Pollard said in an email. Slashdot reader schwit1 adds: “This leaves the question of how…”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Geologists Find Where Some Stonehenge Rocks Came From, Debunking Old Research

Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: Revisiting Pikmin 3: A Series Best With Room For Improvement • Spacemon: A Pokemon TRPG: Frontier – Chapter 43: Spelunking For Salandits • TAY Retro: Atari 2600 – “Morecambe and Wise Party” [TV Commercial, UK]
Source: Kotaku – Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: Revisiting Pikmin 3: A Series Best

Now that Metro Exodus is out, we can take a look behind the scenes at some of the art that went into the game’s production.
Source: Kotaku – The Art Of Metro Exodus

If Thanos came to Earth and only wanted to turn robocallers into dust, the Avengers would let him. And given how bad spam calls have gotten, surely most if not every adult with a cellphone in the U.S., and certainly everyone in the half of U.S. households that still have landlines, would throw Thanos a parade.
Source: Gizmodo – There’s No End in Sight to Our Robocall Hell
Enlarge / Now that’s some shiny chrome. (credit: Marc Ellis / Flickr)
Google is developing a new cache for Chrome (via CNET)that should make some page loads extremely fast. The only catch? They’ll have to be pages you’ve already seen and are revisiting after hitting the browser’s back button.
Chrome already caches the files that make up a page, so revisiting a page in most circumstances shouldn’t force the browser to retrieve the images, JavaScripts, and CSS that are used to build the page. But currently, the browser has to re-parse the HTML and re-build the page’s programmatic representation, uncompress the images, re-execute all the JavaScript, reapply all the stylesheets, and so on. It’s just the networking step that gets skipped.
The new bfcache (for “back/forward cache”) changes that: it lets the browser capture the entire state of a running page—including scripts that are in the middle of execution, the rendered images, and even the scroll position—and reload that state later. With bfcache, rather than having to reload the page from scratch, the page will look as if it was paused when you click a link to a new page and subsequently resumed when you hit back.
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Source: Ars Technica – Google turbo-charging the back button with Chrome’s new “back/forward cache”
Most of us have accepted one-click shopping as the new norm. But what we tend to forget is how much CO2 is generated by that one click. In the US, 55,000 metric tons of CO2 are produced daily as a result of online shopping package delivery, and onlin…
Source: Engadget – Etsy will offset its sellers’ carbon emissions free of charge
For those interested in using graphics drawing tablets on Linux, a number of devices will now be supported with the upcoming Linux 5.1 kernel cycle…
Source: Phoronix – A Number Of Additional Graphics Drawing Tablets To Be Supported By Linux 5.1

It’s not hard to pick out all the visual effects shots in movies like Avengers: Infinity War or Ready Player One, but First Man was shot more like a documentary, so the extensive visual effects had to be seamless and invisible. To help accomplish this, visual effects studio DNEG built one of the most amazing TVs…
Source: io9 – How the Biggest TV You’ve Ever Seen Helped First Man’s Oscar-Winning Visual Effects Look So Authentic
TikTok, formerly Musical.ly, has agreed to pay a record $5.7 million fine to settle FTC allegations that it violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). The company’s app illegally collected personal information from children by failing to seek parental consent before allowing users to register with the service. Registration required users to provide their email address, phone number, username, first and last name, a short biography, and a profile picture. The company was well aware that many children were using the Musical.ly app. This is the largest civil penalty ever obtained by the Commission in a children’s privacy case.
The app allowed users to create and share videos lip-syncing to music. Users viewed, commented, and direct messaged other users about their videos. User accounts were public by default, which meant that a child’s profile bio, username, picture, and videos could be seen by other users. Even if users set their account to private, users’ profile pictures and bios remained public, and users could still send them direct messages. Not only did adults attempt to contact children, the app included a feature that allowed users to view other users within a 50-mile radius of their location. Thousands of parents complained to the company that their children under the age of 13 made accounts, but the company failed to delete content; even when parents requested that it be removed. Commissioner Rohit Chopra and Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter issued a separate statement.
“The operators of Musical.ly–now known as TikTok–knew many children were using the app but they still failed to seek parental consent before collecting names, email addresses, and other personal information from users under the age of 13,” said FTC Chairman Joe Simons. “This record penalty should be a reminder to all online services and websites that target children: We take enforcement of COPPA very seriously, and we will not tolerate companies that flagrantly ignore the law.” In addition to the monetary payment, the settlement also requires the app’s operators to comply with COPPA going forward and to take offline all videos made by children under the age of 13.
Discussion
Source: [H]ardOCP – TikTok Settles with FTC for .7 Million After Violating Child Protection Laws

One of the lesser-known achievements of the Cold War-era Space Race is the Soviet successes in landing probes on the incredibly harsh and unforgiving surface of Venus, which has temperatures that can reach a hellish 870 degrees Fahrenheit (465 degrees Celsius) and atmospheric pressures 90 times that of Earth. Despite…
Source: Gizmodo – A Failed Soviet Venus Probe Might Just Crash Back to Earth This Year, So Heads Up

Shortly after Overwatch’s newest hero, Baptiste, was announced, I started seeing Blizzard devs position the Haitian combat medic as a counter to GOATS, the game’s unpopular defense-oriented meta. “Alright,” I said to myself. “This seems promising.” But then I played him, and now I have mixed feelings.
Source: Kotaku – Baptiste Is Fun To Play, But He Probably Won’t Shake Up Overwatch Just Yet
The company behind TikTok, the popular short-form video app that incorporated Musical.ly last year, has agreed to pay $5.7 million to settle Federal Trade Commission allegations that it illegally collected personal info from children. “According to the FTC, it’s the largest civil penalty ever obtained by the agency in a children’s privacy case,” reports Variety. From the report: The FTC’s complaint, filed by the Department of Justice on behalf of the commission, alleges that Musical.ly violated the federal Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), which requires websites and online services aimed at kids to obtain parental consent before collecting personal information from children under 13. Under the terms of the settlement, TikTok is also required to remove all videos from the app posted by children under the age of 13 and also must comply with COPPA going forward.
In the wake of the FTC fine, TikTok announced in a blog post that on Feb. 27 it is launching a new app environment for users under 13 that does not permit the sharing of personal information and “puts extensive limitations on content and user interaction.” Both current and new TikTok users will be directed to the age-appropriate app experience, beginning Wednesday. In the post, TikTok said in part: “While we’ve always seen TikTok as a place for everyone, we understand the concerns that arise around younger users. In working with the FTC and in conjunction with today’s agreement, we’ve now implemented changes to accommodate younger U.S. users in a limited, separate app experience that introduces additional safety and privacy protections designed specifically for this audience.”
FTC Chairman Joe Simons said in a statement: “This record penalty should be a reminder to all online services and websites that target children: We take enforcement of COPPA very seriously, and we will not tolerate companies that flagrantly ignore the law.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – TikTok To Pay Record .7 Million FTC Fine For Alleged Violations of Children’s Privacy Law

WARSAW is an upcoming “turn-based tactical rpg” set during the Second World War. Obviously there’s a big Darkest Dungeon influence here, not just from the genre but the art style as well.
Source: Kotaku – WARSAW Looks To Bring Darkest Dungeon To The Second World War

With The Walking Dead series about to come to a torturous close, fans are getting ready to say their goodbyes to a game that’s been around for nearly seven years. Some are doing it with some very fancy cosplay, cel-shading and all.
Source: Kotaku – Saying Goodbye To The Walking Dead With Cosplay
Square Enix released a VR Kingdom Hearts experience for Japanese gamers in January, so where’s the release for everyone else? Right around the corner, apparently. Sony has confirmed that Kingdom Hearts: VR Experience will be available on February 2…
Source: Engadget – ‘Kingdom Hearts’ PlayStation VR experience launches tomorrow
Enlarge / The titular alien. (credit: 20th Century Fox)
The long wait is over for sci-fi and horror film buffs: the 1979 classic Alien will be released in 4K and HDR for the film’s 40th anniversary. The remaster will be available on an UltraHD Blu-ray disc.
20th Century Fox and partners embarked on an effort to remaster the film in 4K last year, under supervision by Pam Dery and director Ridley Scott. Alien was originally shot on 35mm film, and the remaster was made using the original negative.
Remastering older films for the UltraHD era has sometimes proven challenging for studios. In many cases, original film masters have degraded, and 4K on a 65-inch TV is adept at revealing graininess and other flaws that result from aged or damaged film.
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Source: Ars Technica – Ridley Scott’s Alien will finally be released in 4K HDR for its 40th anniversary
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNET: Reddit is experimenting with tipping users, starting with the shittymorph subreddit, a group dedicated to the man who has memorably bamboozled many a reader with sneaky comments ending in a reference to a famous pro-wrestling match called Hell in a Cell. A Reddit admin with the username “internetmallcop” posted a thread on Tuesday announcing the experiment, calling it a “new feature to support u/shittymorph.” Anyone in the group can now tip shittymorph for content he posts in his own subreddit.
A “tip” option appears below shittymorph’s content. Clicking on it opens a window with suggested $3, $5 or $10 tips, or the choice to select another amount. You can input your credit card number directly into the window. The payments are handled by processor Stripe. Shittymorph responded to the admin post by saying he is “super grateful and honored” to be picked for the launch and beta testing. As of this writing Wednesday morning, the comment shows a $75.00 tip total in green above it. Internetmallcop explained in a comment how the tipping breaks out: “If you were to tip $100, about $78.5 goes to u/shittymorph, $18.5 to Reddit, and $3 to Stripe.” It’s unclear if Reddit plans to expand tipping beyond this experiment, and if it might extend to all users, or just certain content creators. As for why Shittymorph was chosen to test the feature, it “may be due in part to the Hell in a Cell writer’s infamy and extensive fan base on the site,” reports CNET. “Shittymorph’s intriguing backstory to his creative Reddit comment efforts stem from the tragic loss of his father. He’s also known for occasionally posting about his rescue dog Scooby.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Reddit Tests Tipping Users