Basking shark families go on road trips in search of fine dining

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Source: Ars Technica – Basking shark families go on road trips in search of fine dining

The Morning After: Intel, AMD and Apple made 2020 a big year for CPUs

Very, very soon, 2020 will be over. Did it take an eternity to get here, or did the year fly past for you? We’ve commissioned a run of end-of-year stories that touch on what happened in tech over the last 12 months, how we’re on the brink of a proces…

Source: Engadget – The Morning After: Intel, AMD and Apple made 2020 a big year for CPUs

Ars Technica’s 2021 Deathwatch—2020 was just the beginning

Ars Technica’s 2021 Deathwatch—2020 was just the beginning

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Here at Ars Technica, we would like to formally congratulate you for surviving the year that was 2020. COVID-19 may have changed everything about normal life in the last 12 months, but things are looking up for 2021. A vaccine is currently rolling out, a more science-friendly US administration will take office in January, and maybe we can even look forward to a return to normal public gatherings sometime this year. We’re going to be fine. [Editor’s note: We’re trying to be optimistic here.]

Unfortunately, you probably can’t say the same for some of the companies we write about as we head into 2021. The pandemic year has taken a toll on the tech industry, too, delaying some things we thought were happening in 2020 (like a conclusion to Oracle v. Google) and accelerating other changes we all saw coming (like record streaming numbers). So to walk you through the companies staring down a rough new year, welcome back to the annual Ars Technica Deathwatch, 2021 edition.

If you haven’t previously visited the Deathwatch during Ars Editor Emeritus Sean Gallagher’s tenure, please know: As usual, we’re being a bit dramatic with the name “Deathwatch.” This list is not predicting that the following companies will drop dead precisely within the next calendar year. Bankruptcy laws, acquisitions, and other accounting shenanigans make exact corporate death dates either very unpredictable or agonizingly slow, but we can at least make some educated guesses about the companies, products, and services that are facing down a terrible 2021.

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Source: Ars Technica – Ars Technica’s 2021 Deathwatch—2020 was just the beginning

Fedora Had A Super Year From Lenovo Preloads To Btrfs To Many Other New Features

The Fedora project had a pretty terrific and exciting year especially with everything happening in the world this year. Fedora began appearing on more Lenovo device pre-loads, many features landed like Btrfs by default in Fedora Workstation, they continue to be leading the Wayland charge, and a lot of great engineering work by the folks from Red Hat…

Source: Phoronix – Fedora Had A Super Year From Lenovo Preloads To Btrfs To Many Other New Features

Adobe Now Shows Alerts in Windows 10 To Uninstall Flash Player

With the Flash Player officially reaching the end of life tomorrow, Adobe has started to display alerts on Windows computers recommending that users uninstall Flash Player. From a report: When Flash Player is installed, it creates a scheduled task named ‘Adobe Flash Player PPAPI Notifier’ that executes the following command: “C:WindowsSysWOW64MacromedFlashFlashUtil32_32_0_0_465_pepper.exe” -update pepperplugin. When this command is executed, it is now displaying an alert thanking users for using Adobe Flash Player and then recommending that they uninstall the program due to its looming end of life. Further reading: Adobe Flash is about to die, but classic Flash games will live on.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Adobe Now Shows Alerts in Windows 10 To Uninstall Flash Player

Ticketmaster pays $10 million fine after hacking a startup rival

Ticketmaster has agreed to pay a $10 million criminal fine to avoid prosecution over charges that it illegally accessed a rival’s computer system, Reuters has reported. “Ticketmaster employees repeatedly — and illegally — accessed a competitor’s comp…

Source: Engadget – Ticketmaster pays million fine after hacking a startup rival

Most-Played Song of 2020? For Many It's White Noise

An anonymous reader shares a report: In an average year, Spotify Wrapped is a sharing-optimized novelty hinging on nostalgia for a time that’s barely passed. But in 2020, this data mirror instead presented many users with unexpected empirical evidence of their pandemic coping mechanisms: a strange hit parade of ambient music, background noise and calming sound effects that soothed them through an unusually anxious and sleepless time. While thousands of users posted in disbelief about their stress-inflected results, the situation made sense to Liz Pelly, a cultural critic who has written extensively about how Spotify and its competitors work to shape our listening habits. “It says a lot about the ways that corporate streaming services have ingrained themselves into our lives and facilitated music listening becoming more of a background experience,” she said.

[…] The findings of some forthcoming research about pandemic coping mechanisms suggest ambient listening may be part of a larger pattern. Pablo Ripolles, a professor at New York University who studies music and the brain, was part of an international team of researchers that surveyed lockdown habits in Italy, Spain and the United States. Of 43 activities mentioned in a survey the team conducted, like cooking, prayer, exercise and sex, listening to or playing music had one of the biggest increases in engagement during lockdown, as well as the highest number of respondents who said it was the activity that helped them the most.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Most-Played Song of 2020? For Many It’s White Noise

Google's Pixel phones only use adaptive charging if there's an alarm to guide it

Adaptive Charging is one of the most useful features Google rolled out this month for Pixel phones. It makes sure the device’s battery gets filled slower than usual if you leave it plugged in overnight, which is something that can help maintain the b…

Source: Engadget – Google’s Pixel phones only use adaptive charging if there’s an alarm to guide it

GNU Had A Busy 2020 With The GCC Toolchain Still Rocking, Finally Converted To Git

The GNU Project had a very active year with the GNU toolchain in particular continuing to make major strides in punctually supporting new C/C++ features, continuing to enhance device offloading / accelerator support, support new CPU features, and more. GCC also saw its conversion this year finally over to Git among other accomplishments by the large number of GNU software projects…

Source: Phoronix – GNU Had A Busy 2020 With The GCC Toolchain Still Rocking, Finally Converted To Git

Brave's privacy-focused browser rolls out a version for Apple's M1 Macs

If you have a new M1-powered Mac and you’re looking for a non-Apple, non-Google, non-Mozilla browser, then good news, Brave has updated the release channel of its privacy-focused browser with native Apple Silicon support. At the moment, the Microsoft…

Source: Engadget – Brave’s privacy-focused browser rolls out a version for Apple’s M1 Macs

Ticketmaster Pays $10 Million Criminal Fine for Invading Rival's Computers

Ticketmaster will pay a $10 million criminal fine to avoid prosecution on U.S. charges it repeatedly accessed the computer systems of a rival whose assets its parent Live Nation Entertainment Inc later purchased. From a report: The fine is part of a three-year deferred prosecution agreement between Ticketmaster and the U.S. Department of Justice, which was disclosed at a Wednesday hearing before U.S. District Judge Margo Brodie in Brooklyn federal court. Ticketmaster’s agreement resolves five criminal counts including wire fraud, conspiracy and computer intrusion. It also requires the Beverly Hills, California-based company to maintain compliance and ethics procedures designed to detect and prevent computer-related theft. Ticketmaster primarily sells and distributes tickets to concerts and other events. Prosecutors said that from August 2013 to December 2015, Ticketmaster employees used stolen passwords to repeatedly access computers belonging to its rival to obtain confidential business information. The rival, Songkick, specialized in artist presales, in which some tickets — often around 8% — are set aside for fans before general ticket sales begin, in part to foil scalpers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Ticketmaster Pays Million Criminal Fine for Invading Rival’s Computers

Mesa 21.0 Has Finally Killed The Classic "SWRAST" Software Rasterizer

For years LLVMpipe has been around as a superior software-based OpenGL implementation for those without a working GPU / hardware driver support or needing to test a bit of GL code along a vendor-neutral path. LLVMpipe thanks to leveraging LLVM is more performant than the traditional Mesa software rasterizer or similar avenues like Softpipe. Finally as we hit 2021, SWRAST has been removed from the Mesa code-base…

Source: Phoronix – Mesa 21.0 Has Finally Killed The Classic “SWRAST” Software Rasterizer

GM's CES keynote will reportedly show off an electric Chevrolet pickup

Last month, GM announced that it was ramping up its electrification efforts and aiming to have 30 EVs on the market by the end of 2025. Turns out we might see some of those vehicles very, very soon: according to Bloomberg, the automaker will give us…

Source: Engadget – GM’s CES keynote will reportedly show off an electric Chevrolet pickup