
This image is the first high-resolution shot from the 4-meter Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawai’i.
Source: Gizmodo – Highest-Resolution Solar Telescope Ever Releases Incredible First Images of the Sun

This image is the first high-resolution shot from the 4-meter Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawai’i.
Source: Gizmodo – Highest-Resolution Solar Telescope Ever Releases Incredible First Images of the Sun

Microsoft’s November update for Windows 10 (version 1909) added a new quick-search bar to File Explorer that was meant to help users find files on their PC. The only issue is that it didn’t work very well at launch. Numerous bugs made using the search bar much more difficult than it needed to be.
Source: LifeHacker – Grab Windows 10’s Latest Update to Fix This File Explorer Bug
Apache Spark is a free and open-source cluster-computing framework used for analytics, machine learning and graph processing on large volumes of data. In this tutorial, we will show you how to install Apache Spark on Debian 10 server.
Source: LXer – How to Install Apache Spark Cluster Computing Framework on Debian 10
Waymo is expanding its foray into self-driving delivery vehicles. The Alphabet brand is teaming with UPS on a pilot that will have autonomous Chrysler Pacifica vans carry packages in the metro Phoenix area. They’ll be shuttling cargo from UPS Store…
Source: Engadget – Waymo’s self-driving vans will carry UPS packages in Phoenix

Birds of Prey doesn’t open for another week and a half, but critics who got an early peek at the much-anticipated adventures of the fantabulous Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie) and company are taking to social media to share their first impressions. We’ve rounded up a batch of them up for your convenience!
Source: io9 – The First Reactions to Birds of Prey Praise Its High-Energy Action and Fun Characters

When I take a photo these days, I don’t think much about it. I know it will be automatically saved to the cloud; I know it will have a timestamp automatically saved with it. It’s not like the old days when the point of taking a photo was to get it printed and then slip the prints into sleeves in albums.
Source: LifeHacker – To Improve Memory Recall, Curate Your Photos
If you’ve been paying close attention to Microsoft’s quarterly earnings, you’ve probably noticed they’ve started to sound like a broken record. The company’s cloud business typically grows steadily (it’s up 27 percent this quarter), and for the past…
Source: Engadget – Xbox is the only weak point for Microsoft’s strong quarter

We all know that Apple’s definitely gonna put out a new iPhone (or four) this year, and probably a fresh iPad and Apple Watch, too. But the company is also rumored to have a few unexpected accessories in the works, one of them being an attempt at a wireless charging mat. Again.
Source: Gizmodo – Apple Is Never Gonna Give Up On Its AirPower Dreams
Fedora currently uses Pagure to host
many of its Git repositories and to handle things like documentation and
bug tracking. But Pagure is maintained by the Red Hat Community Platform
Engineering (CPE) team, which is currently straining under the load of
managing the infrastructure and tools for Fedora and CentOS, while also maintaining
the tools used by the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) team. That has led
to a discussion about identifying the requirements for a “Git forge” and
possibly moving away from Pagure.
Source: LWN.net – [$] Fedora gathering requirements for a Git forge
Matt Warman, the minister for digital and broadband in the UK, writes: From washing machines and children’s toys to personal assistants, we are increasingly seeing more of our daily lives connected to the internet. In fact, research suggests by 2025 there will be 75 billion internet connected devices in homes around the world. However, the current security standards of many of these devices are low and the security and privacy risks are too great. Last week, for example, the usernames and for more 500,000 devices including Internet of Things (IoT) products were made available online.
Our aim is to make the UK the world’s leading digital economy. But if we are to achieve this ambition we need to make sure people trust technology. I believe we can do this through pro-innovation regulation. So today I’ve announced we are developing new legislation to hold firms manufacturing and stocking internet-connected devices to account to stop hackers threatening people’s privacy and safety. These new laws will mean consumers are protected from devices which do not adhere to the three rigorous security requirements we’ve developed alongside a code of conduct. These measures will mean all the passwords pre-programmed in internet-connected devices must be unique and not resettable to any universal factory setting.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Why the UK is Banning Default Passwords in IoT Devices

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare’s first “season” of content has been a solid offering of maps and modes, but it was held back by lackluster rewards and bugs.
Source: Kotaku – Call Of Duty’s New Seasonal DLC Approach Needs Some Work

Whenever you start using a new product, you’re often presented with the terms of service, an often exceptionally lengthy document filled with language that even if you did try to read it all (we know you don’t) you probably wouldn’t understand what rights you were actually passing over. Terms of Service; Didn’t Read…
Source: LifeHacker – Get the ‘Terms of Service’ Bullet Points You Need With This Site

Netflix and Tomorrow Studios already have a Cowboy Bebop series on the way, and now they’ve got another project based on a much-loved manga: One Piece, to be created in conjunction with Japanese publisher Shueisha.
Source: io9 – Netflix Will Expand Its Manga-Inspired Offerings With a Live-Action One Piece Series

Researchers find an intriguing link between foods + drinks rich in flavonol and staving off dementia.
Source: TreeHugger – 11 foods linked to lower risk of Alzheimer’s dementia
While Quibi is remaking the once-popular Nickelodeon show Legends of the Hidden Temple, Disney+ is planning two of its own mazes-based, puzzle-solving shows that could be Legends of the Hidden Temple-esque with a reality TV spin. Today, the streaming…
Source: Engadget – Disney+ announces two adventure competition shows for teens
Delivery giant UPS has ordered 10,000 electric trucks from Arrival, a technology company based in the UK. Some of the vehicles will be trialed in London and Paris later this year, building on a similar experiment that was run by the two companies in…
Source: Engadget – UPS will use Arrival’s electric trucks in the US and Europe

This is a video from Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia of a guy who passed out and got a big block Jenga tower built on his head and shoulder. Is that better than a Sharpie penis on the forehead? Depends on who you ask. Some more details while I commend his tan:
“My mate had been out in the sun all day decided to have a snooze so the other lads stacked the giant Jenga on his head and he didn’t wake up he sat there for at least half an hour with the game perched upon his noggin.”
Damn, a half hour and he didn’t move enough to knock it over? That’s impressive. Me? I’m a thrasher when I pass out. Even when my mind is gone my body is still trying to party. Honestly, it’s really one of the very few things I admire about myself.
Keep going for the video.
Source: Geekologie – Well That’s Not Very Nice: Guy Manages To Stack Big Block Jenga Set On Passed Out Friends Head

Journey to the Savage Planet is the first-ever game from Typhoon Studios, out now for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. It ain’t perfect, but it’s got heart. It’s a succinct and loving throwback to the Metroid Prime series that fills a pretty specific niche in a sea full of service games that want to become your…
Source: Kotaku – Journey To The Savage Planet Is Fun, But Please Stop Using That Word

Now that tax season is officially underway, you may think you’re ready to sit down and get the task done. But the odds are high that you’ll find out you’re missing a crucial piece of information, which will leave you scrambling around the house to find that one form that you’re pretty sure came in the mail.
Source: LifeHacker – Get Ready to File Your 2019 Taxes With This Checklist
Enlarge (credit: Omar Marques/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
The Maze ransomware ring has taken extortion to new heights by publicly posting breached data on the Internet—and threatening full dumps of stolen data if the ring’s “customers” don’t pay for their files to be unencrypted. But the group appears to be making one exception: the City of Pensacola, which was hit by Maze ransomware in December.
On the group’s website, the administrator of Maze’s ransomware operations posted:
We are going to make a gift to City of Pensacola: we will not publish leaked private data, but we publish the list of leak data and hosts to proof [sic], that we did it, we really hacked City of Pensacola.
Just before Christmas, the Maze operators had posted 2GB of data from the city’s systems, claiming it was only 10 percent of what had been stolen from systems before the attackers launched their ransomware attack. But the files were then removed, with only directory data, computer names, and IP addresses left on the site as proof of compromise. Based on the Maze site, 28 servers were hit by the attack.
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Source: Ars Technica – Dozens of companies have data dumped online by ransomware ring seeking leverage