Microsoft and its boosters (media insiders) spread the illusion that Microsoft is “opening up”; the reality, however, is that it’s looking to tighten control over Linux while at the same time profiting from exFAT patents owing to back room deals
Source: LXer – A Closer Look at the ‘Trojan Horse’ That is exFAT Inside Linux
Monthly Archives: August 2019
'Untitled Goose Game' will unleash avian chaos on September 20th
You won’t have to wait much longer to wreak feathered havoc in Untitled Goose Game. House House has revealed that its avian “slaplstick-stealth-sandbox” title will be available on Macs and Windows PCs (both via the Epic Games Store) as well as the Sw…
Source: Engadget – ‘Untitled Goose Game’ will unleash avian chaos on September 20th
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey's account has been compromised, again
Securing accounts online can be difficult, especially when you’ve got a lot of legacy access points laying around. Today’s example is Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, whose Twitter account has suddenly been hijacked to send random messages and racial slurs….
Source: Engadget – Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey’s account has been compromised, again
Jack Dorsey's Twitter Account Was Hacked
Starting around 3:45pm Eastern, the account of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey sent out approximately 20 out-of-character tweets, which included the apparent names of a hacking crew, as well as racial slurs.
Source: Gizmodo – Jack Dorsey’s Twitter Account Was Hacked
17-Year-Old RSS Reader for Mac, NetNewsWire, Releases v5.0
As promised, popular RSS reader NetNewsWire, which changed ownership last year, has released v5.0. From a blog post: NetNewsWire 5.0 is shipping! In case you haven’t been following along until just now: NetNewsWire is an open source RSS reader for Mac. It’s free! You can just download it and use it. No strings. It’s designed to be stable, fast, and free of bugs. It doesn’t have a lot of features yet, and that’s because we prioritized quality over features. We will be adding more features, of course, but not quickly. We’re also working on an iOS app.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – 17-Year-Old RSS Reader for Mac, NetNewsWire, Releases v5.0
Ring reportedly shared video sharing data, detailed maps with police in 2018

Enlarge / A map showing the approximate location of the 405 police departments working with Ring as of August 30, 2019 (credit: Ring)
Ring, Amazon’s home security camera and surveillance company, has since 2018 rapidly expanded its business by partnering with more than 400 police and sheriff departments nationwide. Amid a growing chorus of privacy complaints and media reports about these partnerships, Ring has repeatedly promised explicitly that police have no way of knowing details of who has the cameras installed and what residents are—or aren’t—willing to share their footage. New reports, however, indicate that police departments may be receiving more data about Ring users in their jurisdictions than previously disclosed.
Gizmodo reports today that documents it obtained from a Florida police department included emails from Ring “about the number of times residents had refused police access to their cameras or ignored their requests altogether.”
Owners of Ring devices can connect them to an app called Neighbors, which is also available for the general public to use. The app collects “crime reports” from participants, who can also choose to upload images and video either directly from their Ring devices or uploaded from other sources.
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Source: Ars Technica – Ring reportedly shared video sharing data, detailed maps with police in 2018
Musician Performs Song Created From All The Hateful Comments On Her Youtube Channel
This is a video of talented musician Madilyn Bailey performing a song composed entirely of the hateful comments left on her Youtube videos. She does a fantastic job, and I noticed a common theme among her commenters is struggling to spell ‘offense’ correctly (offence, ofence, offinse, affence, etc.). You know, I’d like to believe that a human being is actually more than just the sum of all their parts, but I’m fairly certain most of these people are the difference, leaving just the asshole.
Keep going for the video.
Source: Geekologie – Musician Performs Song Created From All The Hateful Comments On Her Youtube Channel
NMAP basics Tutorial
Regular Nmap scans are carried out through TCP and SYN scan
Source: Linux Today – NMAP basics Tutorial
Toshiba's Timeline for PCIe 4.0 SSDs
Following up on several announcements from Flash Memory Summit earlier this month, Toshiba has shared more information about their plans for transitioning their NVMe SSDs to PCI Express 4.0. None of their PCIe Gen4 SSDs are particularly close to volume production, so rather than share preliminary performance numbers Toshiba is talking more about which product segments will be migrating first and what other design changes are coming at the same time as the interface speed boost. Toshiba’s perspective on final products and market readiness stands in contrast to the roadmaps from the SSD controller vendors that are racing to be the first ready with a full lineup of PCIe 4.0-capable controllers.
Toshiba expects the server market to be the first segment to embrace PCIe 4.0. AMD has just launched their second-generation EPYC platform with a comparative wealth of PCIe 4.0 lanes, and companies like Broadcom and Microsemi are offering PCIe 4.0 switches and HBAs. The ecosystem is just about ready to support a large-scale transition from PCIe Gen3 to Gen4, and Toshiba is expecting mainstream adoption to begin next year. They are timing their first two Gen4 SSDs for 2020. The Toshiba CM6 enterprise NVMe SSD and the CD6 datacenter NVMe SSD are successors to the existing CM5 and CD5 respectively, with the CM6 offering some more advanced enterprise features like PCIe dual-port support. Both drives will be using Toshiba’s BiCS4 96-layer 3D TLC NAND flash memory, and they’re currently expecting peak speeds of 6.7GB/s.
Toshiba is fully on board with the new EDSFF family of form factors, but they aren’t expecting them to be going mainstream in time for the first wave of PCIe Gen4 datacenter SSDs. Instead, Toshiba is choosing the U.3 standard for the near term. This is mechanically identical to the familiar 2.5″ U.2 form factor, but U.3 changes up the pin assignments. U.2 and U.3 SSDs both use the same mechanical connector as SAS drives, but where U.2 puts PCIe pins in positions not used by SAS drives, U.3 drives are capable of operating with a PCIe link on the same pins that SAS drives use for their data link. The motivation behind this change is to simplify cabling and backplanes for tri-mode ports that can accept SATA, SAS or NVMe SSDs. Broadcom in particular has been selling tri-mode HBAs and RAID cards that support all three protocols, and the use of U.3 instead of U.2 makes it much easier to make full use of the flexibility of those host interfaces. U.2 drives won’t work in U.3 drive bays, but U.3 drives are required to work with U.2 ports. Toshiba has enabled this by adding an extra set of PCIe PHYs to their SSD controllers rather than put switches on the SSD between the controller and connector. This avoids any potential damage to signal integrity that such switches might impose.
The Toshiba CM5 is available in both 2.5″ U.2 and PCIe add-in card form factors, but the latter is being dropped by the CM6 due to a perceived lack of demand or compelling use cases. The add-in card form factor was already a very small slice of the SSD market, and PCIe 4.0 allows products that were using a PCIe 3.0 x8 interface to drop back down the a four-lane connection as provided by U.2/U.3 ports. For products that were using the AIC form factor more for the sake of enabling higher SSD capacity than for the sake of a wider PCIe link, the EDSFF 1U Long “Ruler” form factor will be taking over eventually, but that may not happen for another product generation or two.
Toshiba is currently working with their partners for testing and validation of the CM6 and CD6, with volume availability planned for 2020. Further down the road, Toshiba is also working on an XD6 replacement for their XD5. These are their more hyperscaler-oriented datacenter drives, with more of a focus on low power and latency compared to the CD and CM series focus on higher performance and more advanced features. The XD5 uses the M.2 22110 form factor. The XD6 will retain that option and may also be Toshiba’s first SSD to use the EDSFF E1.S (1U Short) form factor. Datacenter M.2 drives need the advantages of EDSFF form factors a lot more than other existing form factors do, and across the industry as a whole it looks like the E1.S form factor will be the first EDSFF variant to go mainstream. Officially, the XD6 is being targeted for shipment “after 2020”.
Even though there are a few PCIe Gen4 SSDs already available in the consumer segment, Toshiba is predicting that PCIe Gen4 will remain a niche enthusiast feature for a while longer. Since Toshiba’s client SSD sales are almost exclusively to OEMs rather than direct to consumers in the form of retail products, they aren’t under much pressure yet to switch these products over to PCIe Gen4 and haven’t made any official statements about upcoming products for this segment. We probably won’t see a successor to the XG6 and XG6-P until Toshiba’s 1xx-layer 3D NAND is ready. If Toshiba decides to continue their pattern of using that product line as the first shipping SSDs with a new generation of NAND, then the hypothetical XG7 might show up before they’re ready to move their client SSDs to PCIe Gen4. M.2 will continue to be the mainstream form factor for client NVMe SSDs, but Toshiba is already planning for smaller form factors to become more commonplace. They’ve announced the new XFMEXPRESS card for small portable and embedded systems, and they are expecting the M.2 2230 card size to gain popularity as M.2 2280 transitions to more of a niche role for enthusiast drives and multi-TB capacities.
Storage array appliances tend to have long product cycles, and this is one of the areas where even SAS SSDs are still relevant. Toshiba is expecting this market segment to be one of the last to migrate to PCIe Gen4 and new form factors, probably reaching a tipping point around 2023. Ultimately, these systems will probably be moving to the EDSFF E1.L or E3 form factors.
Toshiba’s strategy is similar to the partial roadmap that Samsung shared last fall. They are also starting with their high-performance enterprise/datacenter drives. Samsung’s client NVMe drives and their entry-level datacenter drives typically use the same controllers, and while no PCIe 4.0 update to these product lines has been announced, we can expect to see something in 2020 or possibly at the very end of this year.
Source: AnandTech – Toshiba’s Timeline for PCIe 4.0 SSDs
WoW Classic Brings The Community Back To World Of Warcraft
World of Warcraft Classic is teeming with life. Traders shout out their wares, offering much-needed magical items and equipment at reasonable prices. Adventurers form parties for protection against dangerous low-level foes. Earlier today a stranger came up to my mage and asked if I could conjure him water. I can’t…
Source: Kotaku – WoW Classic Brings The Community Back To World Of Warcraft
Fresh images of HMS Terror shipwreck could clear up lingering mysteries
New images from the shipwreck of the HMS Terror could shed new light on what happened to the 1845 Arctic expedition.
Parks Canada has released new images from the first underwater exploration of the shipwreck of the HMS Terror. The ongoing study of the shipwreck and its artifacts should shed more light on Captain Sir John S. Franklin‘s doomed Arctic expedition to cross the Northwest Passage in 1846. Franklin’s two ships, the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, became icebound in the Victoria Strait, and all 129 crew members ultimately died. It’s been an enduring mystery that has captured imaginations ever since. Novelist Dan Simmons immortalized the expedition in his 2007 horror novel, The Terror, which was later adapted into an anthology TV series for AMC in 2018. (Season 2 of the TV show, set in the Japanese internment camps of World War II, is currently airing.)
The Terror was actually a repurposed warship, having survived the War of 1812 among other skirmishes. The expedition set sail on May 19, 1845 and was last seen in July 1845 in Baffin Bay by the captains of two whaling ships. Historians have managed to piece together a reasonably credible rough account of what happened. The crew spent the winter of 1845-1846 on Beechey Island, where the graves of three crew members were found. When the weather cleared, the expedition sailed into the Victoria Strait before getting trapped in the ice off King William Island in September 1846. Franklin himself died on June 11, 1847, per a surviving note dated the following April. It’s believed that everyone else died while encamped for the winter, or while attempting to walk back to civilization.
There have been a number of studies examining the remains recovered from the graves and their vicinity on Beechey Island, as well as from King William Island. The current consensus is that pneumonia, tuberculosis, and a zinc deficiency contributed to the high death toll, along with hypothermia and starvation/malnutrition. There were even hints of cannibalism in the form of cut marks on human bones. Nobody successfully traversed the Northwest Passage until Roald Amundsen’s expedition from 1903 to 1906. Amundsen avoided Franklin’s doomed fate by traveling along the east coast of King William Island, rather than its west side.
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Source: Ars Technica – Fresh images of HMS Terror shipwreck could clear up lingering mysteries
What's the world's safest city?
Much depends on how you define “safe”
Source: TreeHugger – What’s the world’s safest city?
One of This Week's Best Toys Doesn't Get a Mjolnir
Welcome back to Toy Aisle, io9’s regular round-up of the best toys we’ve seen on the internet this week. Today, we’ve got hot bods, dad bods, metal bods, all sorts of bods! And that’s even before we get to Canada’s finest superheroes (some of whom I’m sure also have lovely bods, I’m certain). Check it out!
Source: io9 – One of This Week’s Best Toys Doesn’t Get a Mjolnir
Emerging from the shadow of GamerGate
On August 26th, game developer Nathalie Lawhead published a blog post accusing legendary Skyrim composer Jeremy Soule of rape. It’s a detailed account of the events leading up to and after the alleged assault, which Lawhead says took place in 2008, w…
Source: Engadget – Emerging from the shadow of GamerGate
Oculus CTO Carmack Downplays Consumer AR, Calls Magic Leap Overhyped
An anonymous reader shares a report: In the world of mixed reality hardware and software, few people have the expert-level credibility of Oculus CTO John Carmack, whose pioneering 3D work at id Software broke new ground on personal computers years before he turned his attention to bringing VR hardware to life. While Oculus’ owner, Facebook, recently suggested that the future of its Insight and Guardian motion-tracking technologies is in all-day wearable augmented reality glasses, Carmack is underscoring that this future isn’t immediately on the horizon, and that other companies in the space — particularly Magic Leap — have been underdelivering on their early hype.
The core issue, Carmack said on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast, is that technology still hasn’t advanced to the point where AR glasses can be made small enough for people to wear around all day. Right now, he says, Oculus could make a “sort of a shoebox-sized thing” that people could wear into the world, but it wouldn’t be socially acceptable in most places. Even if Oculus could cut the size down by three quarters into a swim goggle-sized wearable, he doesn’t believe that people would want to wear it for long periods, and “we haven’t built it,” he notes. Carmack also struggled to define realistic consumer applications for the technology, noting that he was “skeptical of the broad utility” of a lot of the “little demos” that initially seem interesting.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Oculus CTO Carmack Downplays Consumer AR, Calls Magic Leap Overhyped
Convert text to voice with eSpeak on Ubuntu
eSpeak is a compact open-source software speech synthesizer for English and other languages, for Linux and Windows. In this article, we will explain how you can install the command like tool eSpeak and its GUI alternative Gespeaker on your Ubuntu.
Source: LXer – Convert text to voice with eSpeak on Ubuntu
Volocopter proves its air taxi can work with air traffic control
In order for air taxis and delivery drones to succeed, they’ll have to play nicely with air traffic control systems. Yesterday, a Volocopter air taxi proved it’s ready to do just that. The Volocopter 2X performed a series of tests at the Helsinki int…
Source: Engadget – Volocopter proves its air taxi can work with air traffic control
Motorola Moto G7 Discounted 50% To Just $149 With This Google Fi Hot Deal
With smartphone pricing getting out of hand (the Galaxy Note 10+ starts at $1,099), it’s nice to know that some manufacturers — like OnePlus — are making flagship smartphones available at more palatable price (the OnePlus 7 Pro is priced from $669). But for some people, even that is a lot to spend on a device that will be mainly used for
Source: Hot Hardware – Motorola Moto G7 Discounted 50% To Just 9 With This Google Fi Hot Deal
'Stranger Things 3: The Game' arrives on iOS and Android
Stranger Things 3: The Game arrived on consoles and PC alongside the third season of Netflix’s hit sci-fi/horror show earlier this summer. Now you can get in on the pixellated fun on iOS and Android too.
Source: Engadget – ‘Stranger Things 3: The Game’ arrives on iOS and Android
Two Girls Recreate Homer Simpson's New Orleans Culinary Binge In Real Life
This is a video of Swiss tourists Janine Wiget and Katrin von Niederhäusern recreating Homer Simpson’s culinary binge across New Orleans from Season 29, Episode 17 ‘Lisa Gets The Blues’ in real life. I’ll be honest — I just ate lunch, and now I’m hungry again. “You’re always hungry.” I’M A GROWING BOY, MOM. “No, you’re a grown man with a sedentary lifestyle.” Whatever *wheezes reaching for Zapp’s potato chips* you’re not my doctor. “But I am quoting him.” I don’t trust Dr. Stevens. One time when he was listening to my heart and said it whispered ‘I’m gonna attack.’
Keep going for the video (as well as a full-res version of the original cartoon), although you can read an in-depth article about the planning and execution of the video (which they shot entirely in seven days, visiting a total of 54 restaurants) HERE.
Source: Geekologie – Two Girls Recreate Homer Simpson’s New Orleans Culinary Binge In Real Life