The long road toward quality is filled with diversions, false starts, and detours. The enemy of quality is waste, because waste is never desirable. No one pays anyone to deliver waste. We sometimes tolerate waste as part of the process of making something useful and desirable, but the more we can reduce waste while making something, the better.
Source: LXer – How to avoid waste when writing code
Monthly Archives: July 2021
Fired Covid-19 Data Manager is Now Running for Congress
Florida’s fired Department of Health data manager Rebekah Jones lost access to her 400,000 followers on Twitter last month — which she’d been using to criticize Florida governor Ron DeSantis for downplaying the severity of the state’s Covid-19 crisis. Then Jones announced she’d be running for Congress. “This also means, under Desantis’ recently signed social media law, I get to fine Twitter $250K per day until my account is restored starting July 1.”
Orlando Weekly reports:
After a media frenzy, Jones deleted the post. She said she was attempting to point out Gov. Ron DeSantis’s “hypocrisy” in writing a law that allowed political candidates to sue media companies that ban them, while still celebrating her Twitter suspension…
The bit became real when she filed to run as an Independent in Florida’s 1st congressional district on June 25…
On her campaign website, she lists eight issues on her platform: protecting Florida’s environmental systems, promoting government transparency, fighting for media accountability in disinformation, giving access to representatives, ensuring the district’s veterans are taken care of, scrutinizing restrictive voting laws, funding science and research, and boosting support for all levels of education. Jones says there’s still room for other issues on her platform, after she talks to more residents.
Jones’ GoFundMe account (“DefendScience”) now directs visitors to her official campaign site if they want to make campaign contributions. (And the GoFundMe page also notes that her campaign has been endorsed by 90-year-old Daniel Ellsberg, the famous whistleblower who in 1971 leaked the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret government study on the Vietnam War.)
But the last six weeks have been a wild ride for the data scientist:
Last month Florida’s Inspector General granted official whistleblower status to Jones.Six days later Twitter told Slashdot they’d “permanently suspended” Jones’ account “for violations of the Twitter Rules on spam and platform manipulation.”When Jones then created a new Twitter account for her campaign, “it was suspended within a day of its creation,” Orlando Weekly reports.Jones created a new account on Instagram named “insubordinatescientist”. Yet since June 16th Instagram has also marked it as “unavailable,” saying the link “may be broken, or the page may have been removed.” (Since June 16th Instagram has not responded to Slashdot’s request for an explanation.)Jones’ GoFundMe page now refers visitors to an entirely different Instagram page.
Yesterday the official coronavirus coordinator for the U.S. White House reported that one in five of America’s Covid-19 cases this week have come from Florida.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Fired Covid-19 Data Manager is Now Running for Congress
Squeezing More Performance Out Of Intel Tiger Lake Xe Graphics By Using Mesa Git
For those that may have upgraded to an Intel Tiger Lake notebook and making use of the Gen12 Xe Graphics while running a distribution like Ubuntu 21.04, if you are wondering whether upgrading the kernel or Mesa are worthwhile here are some benchmarks…
Source: Phoronix – Squeezing More Performance Out Of Intel Tiger Lake Xe Graphics By Using Mesa Git
Coreboot Starts Seeing Bits For AMD Barcelo
Early work is underway on Coreboot for AMD’s Barcelo as the successor to Lucienne…
Source: Phoronix – Coreboot Starts Seeing Bits For AMD Barcelo
Linux 5.15 To Bring More Scalable + Reliable Open vSwitch
Linux 5.15 later this year will bring improvements to the kernel side of Open vSwitch, the open-source virtual multi-layer switch implementation that is commonly used in large virtualized environments…
Source: Phoronix – Linux 5.15 To Bring More Scalable + Reliable Open vSwitch
How To Print QR Code Card For Connecting To Your WiFi
WiFi Card is a web service that provides an ingenious way to print QR code card for connecting to your WiFi networks.
Source: LXer – How To Print QR Code Card For Connecting To Your WiFi
What Ever Happened to IBM's Watson?
After Watson triumphed on the gameshow Jeopardy in 2011, its star scientist had to convince IBM that it wasn’t a magic answer box, and “explained that Watson was engineered to identify word patterns and predict correct answers for the trivia game.”
The New York Times looks at what’s happened in the decade since:
Watson has not remade any industries. And it hasn’t lifted IBM’s fortunes. The company trails rivals that emerged as the leaders in cloud computing and A.I. — Amazon, Microsoft and Google. While the shares of those three have multiplied in value many times, IBM’s stock price is down more than 10 percent since Watson’s “Jeopardy!” triumph in 2011…. The company’s missteps with Watson began with its early emphasis on big and difficult initiatives intended to generate both acclaim and sizable revenue for the company, according to many of the more than a dozen current and former IBM managers and scientists interviewed for this article… The company’s top management, current and former IBM insiders noted, was dominated until recently by executives with backgrounds in services and sales rather than technology product experts. Product people, they say, might have better understood that Watson had been custom-built for a quiz show, a powerful but limited technology…
IBM insists that its revised A.I. strategy — a pared-down, less world-changing ambition — is working… But the grand visions of the past are gone. Today, instead of being a shorthand for technological prowess, Watson stands out as a sobering example of the pitfalls of technological hype and hubris around A.I. The march of artificial intelligence through the mainstream economy, it turns out, will be more step-by-step evolution than cataclysmic revolution.
One example: IBM technologists approached cancer medical centers, but “were frustrated by the complexity, messiness and gaps in the genetic data at the cancer center… At the end of last year, IBM discontinued Watson for Genomics, which grew out of the joint research with the University of North Carolina. It also shelved another cancer offering, Watson for Oncology, developed with another early collaborator, the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center…”
IBM continued to invest in the health industry, including billions on Watson Health, which was created as a separate business in 2015. That includes more than $4 billion to acquire companies with medical data, billing records and diagnostic images on hundreds of millions of patients. Much of that money, it seems clear, they are never going to get back. Now IBM is paring back Watson Health and reviewing the future of the business. One option being explored, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal, is to sell off Watson Health…
Many outside researchers long dismissed Watson as mainly a branding campaign. But recently, some of them say, the technology has made major strides… The business side of Watson also shows signs of life. Now, Watson is a collection of software tools that companies use to build A.I.-based applications — ones that mainly streamline and automate basic tasks in areas like accounting, payments, technology operations, marketing and customer service. It is workhorse artificial intelligence, and that is true of most A.I. in business today. A core Watson capability is natural language processing — the same ability that helped power the “Jeopardy!” win. That technology powers IBM’s popular Watson Assistant, used by businesses to automate customer service inquiries…
IBM says it has 40,000 Watson customers across 20 industries worldwide, more than double the number four years ago. Watson products and services are being used 140 million times a month, compared with a monthly rate of about 10 million two years ago, IBM says. Some of the big customers are in health, like Anthem, a large insurer, which uses Watson Assistant to automate customer inquiries.
“Adoption is accelerating,” Mr. Thomas said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – What Ever Happened to IBM’s Watson?
How to Install Nginx PageSpeed Module on Ubuntu 20.04
In the following tutorial, you will learn how to install both stable and pre-release version of nginx ngx pagespeed module with complete steps and configurations.The Google PageSpeed module, also known as mod_PageSpeed, is an open-source Apache HTTP or Nginx server-level package with modules that helps optimize your site using various filters to pages that optimize server stylesheets, JavaScript, and HTML files and images through caching and rewriting among the top features.
Source: LXer – How to Install Nginx PageSpeed Module on Ubuntu 20.04
Steam Deck by Valve: Portable Gaming Console That Runs Arch Linux
Valve has taken Linux seriously for years now, and it looks like the Steam Deck is the company’s next big move. The company just announced the upcoming Steam Deck handheld gaming PC.
Source: LXer – Steam Deck by Valve: Portable Gaming Console That Runs Arch Linux
California Approves a Targeted State-Funded Guaranteed Income Program
Thursday’s California’s lawmakers approved America’s first state-funded guaranteed income program for both qualifying young adults who have recently left foster care and for pregnant women, reports CNBC.
The votes — 36-0 in the Senate and 64-0 in the Assembly — showed bipartisan support for an idea that is gaining momentum across the country. Dozens of local programs have sprung up in recent years, including some that have been privately funded, making it easier for elected officials to sell the public on the idea. California’s plan is taxpayer-funded, and could spur other states to follow its lead.
“If you look at the stats for our foster youth, they are devastating,” Senate Republican Leader Scott Wilk said. “We should be doing all we can to lift these young people up.”
Local governments and organizations will apply for the money and run their programs. The state Department of Social Services will decide who gets funding. California lawmakers left it up to local officials to determine the size of the monthly payments, which generally range from $500 to $1,000 in existing programs around the country. The vote came on the same day millions of parents began receiving their first monthly payments under a temporary expansion of the federal child tax credit many view as a form of guaranteed income. “Now there is momentum, things are moving quickly,” said Michael Tubbs, an advisor to California governor Gavin Newsom, who was a trailblazer when he instituted a guaranteed income program as mayor of Stockton. “The next stop is the federal government.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – California Approves a Targeted State-Funded Guaranteed Income Program
What does the Open-Closed Principle mean for refactoring?
In his 1988 book, Object-Oriented Software Construction, professor Bertrand Meyer defined the Open-Closed Principle as:read more
Source: LXer – What does the Open-Closed Principle mean for refactoring?
1.4 Million Cubans Bypass Censorship Using US Government-Funded Software Psiphon
“Cuban officials rallied tens of thousands of supporters in the streets on Saturday — nearly a week after they were stunned by the most widespread protests in decades,” the Associated Press reports.
President Miguel Díaz-Canel — accompanied by 90-year-old former President Raul Castro — “made an impassioned speech blaming unrest on the U.S. and its economic embargo, ‘the blockade, aggression and terror… The enemy has returned to throw all it has at destroying the sacred unity and tranquility of the citizens.'”
“I think the government is just trying to signal to people that it understands their desperation and that it’s going to try to alleviate some of the misery that they’re experiencing. The problem is that the government just doesn’t have much in the way of resources that it can devote to doing that,” said William LeoGrande, an expert on Cuba at the American University in the United States.
Meanwhile, Reuters reports:
Psiphon Inc’s freely available internet censorship circumvention tool has helped nearly 1.4 million Cubans this week gain access to websites, the company said on Friday, after Cuba’s government curbed access to popular social media and messaging platforms… Thousands of Cubans joined nationwide protests over shortages of basic goods, limits on civil liberties and the government’s handling of a surge in COVID-19 infections on Sunday, the most significant unrest in decades in the communist-run country.
Psiphon said 1.389 million users accessed the open web from Cuba through its network on Thursday, as well as 1.238 million as noon EDT (1600 GMT) on Friday.
“Internet is ON; circumvention tools ARE working,” Psiphon said in a statement.
Psiphon said the roughly 1.4 million represents about 20% of Cuban internet users. Its open source circumvention tool can be downloaded from app stores like Google Play or Apple to “maximize your chances of bypassing censorship,” according to the company. Canadian university researchers developed the software in 2007 to let users evade governmental internet firewalls.
The censorship-circumvention tool — which combines VPN, SSH, and HTTP Proxy tools — has also been used in Iran, China, Belarus, Myanmar, according to recent news reports. Bloomberg notes that the Toronto-based nonprofit Psiphon “has received funding from the Open Technology Fund, a U.S. government nonprofit that aims to support global internet freedom technologies…
“On Thursday, President Biden said the U.S. is examining whether it’s able to restore internet access shut down by the Cuban government.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – 1.4 Million Cubans Bypass Censorship Using US Government-Funded Software Psiphon
How to Install Rocky Linux 8.4 Step by Step with Screenshots
In the following tutorial, you will know how to install Rocky Linux 8.4 operating system.Rocky Linux is the direct answer to the debacle of the CentOS operating system coming to EOL (End of Life) by the end of 2021 this year which left many with their jaws dropped. Rocky Linux is the lead contender among some other alternatives but given the history of the same creator behind CentOS and now is behind Rocky Linux, it’s the number one go-to in the wider community. Rocky Linux has released its first stable release code-named (Green Obsidian) which is available to install and use and promises to be everything CentOS was but better.
Source: LXer – How to Install Rocky Linux 8.4 Step by Step with Screenshots
Google Maps Provided Users With a ‘Potentially Fatal’ Hiking Trail on This Mountain
A few years ago, instead of leading my best friend and I through a lovely and picturesque Spanish mountain trail, Google Maps took us to an isolated field with some cows. While I learned then not trust the internet when it comes to nature, it appears that an increasing number of visitors to the Scottish mountain Ben…
Source: Gizmodo – Google Maps Provided Users With a ‘Potentially Fatal’ Hiking Trail on This Mountain
Warframe's Next Big Update Will Release Simultaneously On All Platforms Later This Year
Digital Extremes revealed the first real look at Warframe’s next major expansion, The New War during TennoCon 2021. This new free expansion will force Tenno (aka space ninjas) across the Origin System to unite to defeat an evil force known as the Sentients. And for the first time, this update will launch simultaneously…
Source: Kotaku – Warframe’s Next Big Update Will Release Simultaneously On All Platforms Later This Year
Influential Ivermectin Study Accused of 'Totally Faked' Data
“The efficacy of a drug being promoted by rightwing figures worldwide for treating Covid-19 is in serious doubt,” reports the Guardian, “after a major study suggesting the treatment is effective against the virus was withdrawn due to ‘ethical concerns’.”
The preprint study on the efficacy and safety of ivermectin — a drug used against parasites such as worms and headlice — in treating Covid-19, led by Dr Ahmed Elgazzar from Benha University in Egypt, was published on the Research Square website in November. It claimed to be a randomised control trial, a type of study crucial in medicine because it is considered to provide the most reliable evidence on the effectiveness of interventions due to the minimal risk of confounding factors influencing the results…
A medical student in London, Jack Lawrence, was among the first to identify serious concerns about the paper, leading to the retraction… He found the introduction section of the paper appeared to have been almost entirely plagiarised. It appeared that the authors had run entire paragraphs from press releases and websites about ivermectin and Covid-19 through a thesaurus to change key words. “Humorously, this led to them changing ‘severe acute respiratory syndrome’ to ‘extreme intense respiratory syndrome’ on one occasion,” Lawrence said.
The data also looked suspicious to Lawrence… “In their paper, the authors claim that four out of 100 patients died in their standard treatment group for mild and moderate Covid-19,” Lawrence said. “According to the original data, the number was 0, the same as the ivermectin treatment group. In their ivermectin treatment group for severe Covid-19, the authors claim two patients died, but the number in their raw data is four…” Lawrence contacted an Australian chronic disease epidemiologist from the University of Wollongong, Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz, and a data analyst affiliated with Linnaeus University in Sweden who reviews scientific papers for errors, Nick Brown, for help analysing the data and study results more thoroughly… “The main error is that at least 79 of the patient records are obvious clones of other records,” Brown told the Guardian. “It’s certainly the hardest to explain away as innocent error, especially since the clones aren’t even pure copies. There are signs that they have tried to change one or two fields to make them look more natural…”
Meyerowitz-Katz told the Guardian that “this is one of the biggest ivermectin studies out there”, and it appeared to him the data was “just totally faked”.
Meta-analyses relying on the “just totally faked” data were then published in Oxford Academic’s Open Forum Infectious Diseases and in the American Journal of Therapeutics.
Meanwhile, the Guardian also notes a new (and peer-reviewed) paper that was just published last month in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases. Its finding? Iermectin is “not a viable option to treat COVID-19 patients”.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Influential Ivermectin Study Accused of ‘Totally Faked’ Data
Apps for daily needs part 1: web browsers
One of the important apps for daily needs is a web browser. That’s because surfing the internet is an activity most people do in front of the computer. This article will introduce some of the open source web browsers that you can use on Fedora Linux. You need to install the software mentioned. All the […]
Source: LXer – Apps for daily needs part 1: web browsers
Black Widow is a Good Film, but It Has Flaws That Need Addressing
To get an in depth analysis of the film as a whole, read Germain Lussier’s review for Black Widow. Now on with it.
Source: Gizmodo – Black Widow is a Good Film, but It Has Flaws That Need Addressing
WhatsApp is testing secure cloud backups for Android users
WhatsApp chats already have end-to-end encryption, but what about your online backups? They’ll soon be covered, too. As The Vergenotes, WABetaInfo has discovered that the latest WhatsApp beta for Android (2.21.15.5) includes a test for end-to-end encrypted cloud backups. Opt in and you don’t have to worry that hackers or spies will easily read your conversation history.
There are some caveats. You’ll need to create a separate password for restoring your backups, and you can’t get them back if you both lose your phone and forget that password. You can alternately create a 64-digit encryption key, but you’re also in trouble if you lose that key.
It’s not certain that WhatsApp will deploy secure cloud backups with the next stable release, so you might not want to count on it in the near future. It’s also unclear if everyone using the new beta gets the same backup functionality.
The timing is apt, at least. WhatsApp just started testing multi-device syncing that isn’t dependent on a phone connection. These encrypted backups don’t appear to be available across devices, but they could prove reassuring as people depend more and more on WhatsApp for chats on all their gadgets.
Source: Engadget – WhatsApp is testing secure cloud backups for Android users
About 24 US Govt Officials in Vienna, Austria Report 'Havana Syndrome' Symptoms
“Since Joe Biden took office [in January], about two dozen U.S. intelligence officers, diplomats, and other government officials in Vienna have reported experiencing mysterious afflictions similar to the Havana Syndrome,” reports the New Yorker:
U.S. officials say the number of possible new cases in the Austrian capital — long a nexus of U.S. and Russian espionage — is now greater than the number reported by officials in any city except for Havana itself, where the first cases were reported…
The exact cause of the ailments in Vienna, which U.S. government agencies formally refer to as “anomalous health incidents” or “unexplained health incidents,” remains unknown, but in response to the surge the C.I.A., the State Department, and other agencies are redoubling their efforts to determine the cause, and to identify the culprit or culprits…
The Havana Syndrome derives its name from the Cuban capital, where C.I.A. officers and State Department employees first reported experiencing strange sensations of sound and pressure in their heads in 2016 and 2017. Some of the patients said the sensations seemed to follow them around their homes, apartments, and hotel rooms in the Cuban capital. Some of the patients described feeling as though they were standing in an invisible beam of energy. Many of them suffered debilitating symptoms, from headaches and vertigo to vision problems. Specialists at the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Brain Injury and Repair used advanced MRIs to study the brains of forty of the original patients from Havana. They found no signs of physical impact to the patients’ skulls — it was as if they had “a concussion without a concussion,” one specialist told me — and the team detected signs of damage to their brains.
Senior officials in the Trump and Biden Administrations suspect that the Russians are responsible for the syndrome. Their working hypothesis is that operatives working for the G.R.U., the Russian military-intelligence service, have been aiming microwave-radiation devices at U.S. officials, possibly to steal data from their computers or smartphones, which inflicted serious harm on the people they targeted. But American intelligence analysts and operatives have so far been unable to find concrete evidence that would allow them to declare that either microwave radiation or the Russians were to blame.
The article also points out that the CIA’s director has privately called the incidents “attacks” rather than incidents or illnesses.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – About 24 US Govt Officials in Vienna, Austria Report ‘Havana Syndrome’ Symptoms