AT&T Wins Fight With US Over Purchase of Time Warner

An appeals court has approved AT&T’s purchase of Time Warner, despite the Trump administration’s drawn-out attempts to block the $85.4 billion acquisition. The U.S. Justice Department said it would not fight the decision. Reuters reports: The three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled unanimously in favor of the deal earlier on Tuesday, saying that the government’s case that the merger would result in higher consumer prices was “unpersuasive.” The decision ended a 15-month effort by the Justice Department to block it. It was AT&T’s second major court victory against the Justice Department, setting the stage for the No. 2 wireless carrier to integrate its WarnerMedia business as well as its new Xandr advertising unit.

The deal has been seen as a turning point for a media industry that has been upended by companies like Netflix and Alphabet’s Google which put content online with no need for a cable subscription. The merger, which was announced in October 2016, closed on June 14 shortly after Judge Richard Leon ruled the deal was legal under antitrust law. AT&T agreed it would have no role in setting Turner’s prices to distributors and the number of Turner employees would remain largely unchanged.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – AT&T Wins Fight With US Over Purchase of Time Warner

Ahahahahaha: Cat Stomps In Owner's Just Opened Chocolate-Filled Bun

This is a short video (with multiple playbacks and slow motion) of a woman opening a chocolate-filled bun when her cat comes along and reverse stomps right in the chocolate. That sucks. I mean, you know where those paws have been (SPOILER: covering turds in the litter box), so that chocolate bun is pretty much just trash now unless you’re cool getting worms. Me? I’ve had worms twice in my life. “When you were a kid?” Once when I was a kid, once currently.

Keep going for the whole video, the replays just makes it better and better.

Source: Geekologie – Ahahahahaha: Cat Stomps In Owner’s Just Opened Chocolate-Filled Bun

Trials Rising Switch eShop Screenshots Look Way Better Than The Real Thing

Video games rarely look as beautifully composed as promotional screenshots, but the Switch version of Trials Rising does not look anything like the screenshots on its Nintendo store page. In fact, it seems like those screens are from another version of the game entirely.

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Source: Kotaku – Trials Rising Switch eShop Screenshots Look Way Better Than The Real Thing

Proposed California Privacy Bill Seeks To Silence Alexa And Google Assistant Eavesdropping

Proposed California Privacy Bill Seeks To Silence Alexa And Google Assistant Eavesdropping
Smart speakers like the Amazon Echo and Google Home are growing rapidly in popularity — especially in the United States — as more people are using them for everyday inquiries ranging from turning on/off lights, starting complicated smart routines, to getting traffic and weather updates, to playing back some upbeat tunes while you’re cooking

Source: Hot Hardware – Proposed California Privacy Bill Seeks To Silence Alexa And Google Assistant Eavesdropping

New Study Shows Windows 10 Home Edition Users Are Baffled By Updates

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: Since the initial release of Windows 10 nearly four years ago, Microsoft has been tweaking its approach to automatic updates, adding Active Hours settings to ensure that mandatory restarts are less likely to be intrusive. Recent feature updates have also made notifications of pending updates more obvious. Are those changes enough to ease the pain? A new study from a group of UK-based researchers suggests Microsoft has more work to do. The study, titled “In Control with No Control: Perceptions and Reality of Windows 10 Home Edition Update Features,” was presented this week at the Workshop on Usable Security (USEC) 2019 in San Diego, California. Researchers Jason Morris, Ingolf Becker, and Simon Parkin of University College London, built a detailed model of Microsoft’s update process as of Windows 10 version 1803 and then surveyed a group of 93 Windows 10 Home users.

The overall conclusions were a mixed bag. In general, the survey respondents think that the Windows 10 update approach is an improvement over that found in previous Windows versions. Among participants who had experience with earlier Windows versions 53 percent reported they felt updating Windows 10 is easier, versus only 8 percent who found the process more difficult. Similarly, a majority of respondents agreed that the Windows 10 update process causes fewer interruptions than in previous versions (43 percent agreed, 21 percent disagreed). Where Microsoft has fallen down, the researchers argue, is in building an update system that is “dependent on a complex range of user and system properties.” That system, illustrated by the flowchart shown here, is simply too complicated for the average home user to understand.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – New Study Shows Windows 10 Home Edition Users Are Baffled By Updates

San Francisco Uses Computer Algorithm to Dismiss 9,362 Marijuana Convictions

San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon has teamed up with nonprofit Code For America to use a computer algorithm based on its “Clear My Record” technology to overturn 9,362 marijuana convictions dating back to 1975. The algorithm automated the scanning of many thousands of court records to find cases that were eligible for expungement. California legalized recreational marijuana in 2016 and Proposition 64 allowed for old cases to be overturned. But individuals had to petition the court and the process was confusing, costly and time-consuming. Only 23 cases had been processed in the court system before the computer algorithm was able to perform the task in just minutes. “The cleared records will help people gain employment and be approved for housing and other opportunities they might have been denied because of their criminal records.” Code For America says it is hopeful that it can bring the technology to other cities and counties.



“If you are the mom or dad who wants to participate in the kids’ school activities and they’re being told you can’t go to that field trip because you have a felony conviction because you sold a nickel bag in the Tenderloin 10 years ago, that’s the people that we care about,” said Gascon. “Contact with the criminal justice system should not be a life sentence, so we’ve been working to reimagine the record clearance process,” Jennifer Pahlka, Code for America founder and executive director, said in a statement.”This new approach, which is both innovative and common sense, changes the scale and speed of justice and has the potential to ignite change across the country.”

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – San Francisco Uses Computer Algorithm to Dismiss 9,362 Marijuana Convictions

Video Game Publisher Apologizes After Hosting AMA On 8Chan

Edgy marketing decisions have a way of blowing up in companies’ faces, but rarely do they so immediately and spectacularly detonate like this: THQ Nordic, publisher of games like Darksiders III, decided to host an AMA on 8chan, an image board notorious for everything from Gamergate ties to stalking and harassment to…

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Source: Kotaku – Video Game Publisher Apologizes After Hosting AMA On 8Chan

A Final Look At The OpenGL vs. Vulkan Performance For Talos Principle

The Talos Principle was the launch title for Vulkan 1.0 when the graphics API debuted three years ago as an alternative to Croteam’s OpenGL renderer. Since then Croteam has rolled out its Vulkan support to their other games and now they are in the process of finally phasing out the OpenGL renderer with The Talos Principle. Here’s a last look at how the OpenGL and Vulkan performance compares for this multi-platform game.

Source: Phoronix – A Final Look At The OpenGL vs. Vulkan Performance For Talos Principle

USB-IF Confusingly Merges USB 3.0 and USB 3.1 Under New USB 3.2 Branding

The USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF), this week announced a rebranding of the USB 3.0 and USB 3.1 specifications, under the USB 3.2 specification. USB 3.0 and USB 3.1 will now be considered previous generations of the USB 3.2 specification. From a report: Going forward, USB 3.1 Gen 1 (transfer speeds up to 5Gb/s), which used to be USB 3.0 prior to a separate rebranding, will be called USB 3.2 Gen 1, while USB 3.1 Gen 2 (transfer speeds up to 10Gb/s) will now be known as USB 3.2 Gen 2. What used to be considered USB 3.2 will now be USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 because if offers twice the throughput speeds of USB 3.1 Gen 2, now USB 3.2 Gen 2. If the swap between USB 3.1 Gen 1 and Gen 2 to USB 3.2 wasn’t confusing enough, each of these specifications also has a marketing term. The new USB 3.2 Gen 1 with transfer speeds up to 5Gb/s is SuperSpeed USB, while USB 3.2 Gen 2 with transfer speeds up to 10Gb/s is known as SuperSpeed USB 10Gbps. The USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 specification with transfer speeds up to 20Gb/s is known as SuperSpeed USB 20Gbps.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – USB-IF Confusingly Merges USB 3.0 and USB 3.1 Under New USB 3.2 Branding

Winter Sports: Video Of A Snowblower Race (SPOILER: It's As Exciting As It Sounds)

snowblower-race.jpg

Because what the hell else is there to do in the middle of winter in whatever barren arctic wasteland this is from, this is an entirely too long video (4 minutes!) of the competitors in a Winter Carnival snowblower race. That does not look like it’s very much fun. Snowblowing is a chore, not a sport. The same goes for running. “Says the guy who thinks getting up off the couch counts as a sit-up.” It does, and I try to do as few as possible. I want to keep my meat nice and doughy for whatever giant eventually eats me.

Keep going for the video.

Source: Geekologie – Winter Sports: Video Of A Snowblower Race (SPOILER: It’s As Exciting As It Sounds)

During Childbirth, Push Like You're Pooping 

Hello, Offspring! I am back from maternity leave. We had our second child, a boy named Max. It has been the best! It has been the worst! My brain constantly teeters between thoughts of “How did I ever live in a world without this baby?” and “Who thought this would be a good idea again?!” (It’s mostly the former,…

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Source: LifeHacker – During Childbirth, Push Like You’re Pooping 

USB 3.2 is going to make the current USB branding even worse

USB Type-C cable and port.

Enlarge / USB Type-C cable and port. (credit: USB-IF)

USB 3.2, which doubles the maximum speed of a USB connection to 20Gb/s, is likely to materialize in systems later this year. In preparation for this, the USB-IF—the industry group that together develops the various USB specifications—has announced the branding and naming that the new revision is going to use, and… it’s awful.

USB 3.0 was straightforward enough. A USB 3.0 connection ran at 5Gb/s, and slower connections were USB 2 or even USB 1.1. The new 5Gb/s data rate was branded “SuperSpeed USB,” following USB 2’s 480Mb/s “High Speed” and USB 1.1’s 12Mb/s “Full Speed.”

But then USB 3.1 came along and muddied the waters. Its big new feature was doubling the data rate to 10Gb/s. The logical thing would have been to identify existing 5Gb/s devices as “USB 3.0” and new 10Gb/s devices as “USB 3.1.” But that’s not what the USB-IF did. For reasons that remain hard to understand, the decision was made to retroactively rebrand USB 3.0: 5Gb/s 3.0 connections became “USB 3.1 Gen 1,” with the 10Gb/s connections being “USB 3.1 Gen 2.” The consumer branding is “SuperSpeed USB 10Gbps.”

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Source: Ars Technica – USB 3.2 is going to make the current USB branding even worse