UK To Overhaul Privacy Rules in Post-Brexit Departure From GDPR

Britain will attempt to move away from European data protection regulations as it overhauls its privacy rules after Brexit, the government has announced. From a report: The freedom to chart its own course could lead to an end to irritating cookie popups and consent requests online, said the culture secretary, Oliver Dowden, as he called for rules based on “common sense, not box-ticking.” But any changes will be constrained by the need to offer a new regime that the EU deems adequate, otherwise data transfers between the UK and EU could be frozen. A new information commissioner will be put in charge of overseeing the transformation. John Edwards, currently the privacy commissioner of New Zealand, has been named as the government’s preferred candidate to replace Elizabeth Denham, whose term in office will end on 31 October after a three-month extension.

Dowden said: “Now that we have left the EU I’m determined to seize the opportunity by developing a world-leading data policy that will deliver a Brexit dividend for individuals and businesses across the UK. It means reforming our own data laws so that they’re based on common sense, not box-ticking. And it means having the leadership in place at the Information Commissioner’s Office to pursue a new era of data-driven growth and innovation. John Edwards’ vast experience makes him the ideal candidate to ensure data is used responsibly to achieve those goals.” The GDPR data protection rules introduced by the EU in May 2018 are part of UK law even after Brexit, under the Data Protection Act.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – UK To Overhaul Privacy Rules in Post-Brexit Departure From GDPR

Headless XFX AMD Navi 21 RDNA 2 Card Spied For Potential Ethereum Cryptomining Assault

Headless XFX AMD Navi 21 RDNA 2 Card Spied For Potential Ethereum Cryptomining Assault
NVIDIA addressed the Ethereum market earlier this year with the launch of Crypto Mining Processor (CMP) HX Series cards. The company also locked down its latest mainline GeForce RTX 30 cards with a Light Hash Rate (LHR) mining limiter. Now, it’s alleged that AMD is looking to get in on the dedicated Ethereum mining market with headless versions

Source: Hot Hardware – Headless XFX AMD Navi 21 RDNA 2 Card Spied For Potential Ethereum Cryptomining Assault

Amazon Prime Gaming's free titles for September include 'Knockout City'

Amazon is adding more titles to the list Prime Gaming subscribers can claim for free starting on September 1st. One of the latest additions is Knockout City, a recent release from Velan and EA. It’s a cross-platform dodgeball brawler launched in May that’s already available through Xbox Games Pass Ultimate and EA Play. The game is also free to play until level 25, but Prime Gaming users who want to keep playing until after they reach it will now be able to grab the title at no additional cost. 

In addition, subscribers can still claim Lucasfilm Games’ Sam & Max: Hit The Road beyond September 1st. The game has been free for subscribers since July, but like the studio’s Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, it was supposed to be removed from the list after that date. Sam & Max: Hit The Road is based on a comic featuring an anthropomorphic detective dog and a rabbit-like creature. Completing the list games that will available for free starting on September 1st are Candleman The Complete Journey, Puzzle Agent, Secret Files 2: Puritas Cordis, Tools Up! and Unmemory.

Subscribers will also get access to new loot for popular open-world RPG Genshin Impact. Namely: 60x Primogems, 8x Hero’s Wit and 5x Calla Lily Seafood Soup. New loot also awaits Madden NFL 22, Fall Guys, Red Dead Online, Brawlhalla, Apex Legends, Grand Theft Auto Online and Rogue Company players. These freebies will be available at different dates throughout the month and will be up for a limited time only. Subscribers can check the official Amazon Prime Gaming website for the offers’ start and end dates.



Source: Engadget – Amazon Prime Gaming’s free titles for September include ‘Knockout City’

How to Slow Your Car's Depreciation So You Can Sell It for More

New cars lose value relative to their purchase price the minute you drive them off the lot. While the exact amount varies with the year, make, and model, Kelley Blue Book estimates vehicles will lose 20% or more of their value in the first year, and around 60% in the first five years.

Read more…



Source: LifeHacker – How to Slow Your Car’s Depreciation So You Can Sell It for More

How Huawei’s Partnership To Save The Rainforest Could Help Prevent West Coast Fires

forest fire burn flame fire

One of the issues concerning forest fires is knowing about them soon enough to be easily contained.  Fires spread quickly, but a relatively small team or single airdrop of water or fire retardant could put it out if you can catch it early.  Currently, the most common ways to identify forest fires are observation towers and citizen reports.  But the observation towers often don’t catch fire soon enough because, when the fire becomes visible to them, it has often already started to spread rapidly, and citizens can’t report a fire if they have no Cell service, and forests often have no cell service.  

But what if we instrumented forests so that the forest itself could report a fire.  The solution would need to be very dense because you want to identify the fire before it spreads, and that means it needs to use inexpensive sensors that network with each other to keep the individual cost down and cover-up.

There is already this kind of solution in place in the Rain Forest to catch the people who are killing it, and, I think, it could be modified to address the West Coast and European forest fire problems.  It is one of the more interesting uses of AI, and The Rainforest Connection did it. This non-profit organization upcycles old Huawei cell phones into tree sensors to successfully catch illegal loggers and poachers.  

Let’s talk about keeping the West Coast from burning this week. 

Rainforest Connection

The Rainforest Connection solution modifies old smartphones, which would otherwise likely end up in landfills so that they will be alert if they hear a chainsaw or a spider monkey in distress.  Spider Monkeys assist the Rain Forest by spreading seeds, and they are an integral part of keeping the Rain Forest viable, but listening for sounds can be problematic because mosquitos, up close, sound a lot like chainsaws and can result in false positives.  

To solve these problems, Huawei worked with expert animal translators to develop an AI model and trained an AI to differentiate between the sounds and only alert when there was a real problem.  Not only did they significantly improve the accuracy of detection, but they were able to reduce significantly the amount of time it took to make that detection from 1 second to 500 milliseconds.  

Applied To Fires

Fires make a sound as they cook the liquids out of trees and plants; they also generate heat and light, which might require additional sensors or a creative way to use the cell phones’ built-in cameras and internal heat sensors.  In addition, a sensor to suddenly show a heat-based failure might also rapidly determine if there was a fire present.  Launching a high-speed drone could then confirm the fire, and you could also use if the fire remained small enough, drones like those being developed for refueling to carry flame retardant to put the small fire out.  Larger fires could be addressed by multiple drones or even drone swarms that could respond far more quickly than existing human-crewed aircraft and be kept much nearer to where fires are likely to emerge.  

Typical aircraft-based solutions require airfields to launch and store the aircraft, adding hours to the response time.  This extra time allows the fires to grow pretty much ensuring they are too large for the aircraft to put out by the time they arrive.  A combination of these cell phone-based sensors and a drone response, potentially, could make most large forest fires a thing of the past. 

Though fires during high winds might require a specialized solution that would allow more rapid delivery of an immense amount of retardant.  But it is using a type of drone that can still perform in high winds.  

Wrapping Up:

The Rainforest solution that Huawei helped create could be modified to address the critical forest fire problem in the US and EU.  It not only is a low-cost solution to a high-cost problem, but it keeps those cell phones out of landfills and reduces the amount of eWaste that is slowly contaminating the planet. Today’s tools to fight forest fires are inadequate for the size and frequency of fires we have today, and we need an innovative solution.  We got innovative with the Rain Forests; let’s take what we learned, and address the spreading wildfire threat before losing another town or city. 



Source: TG Daily – How Huawei’s Partnership To Save The Rainforest Could Help Prevent West Coast Fires

Western Digital And Kioxia Reportedly Poised To Form $20 Billion NAND Flash Goliath

Western Digital And Kioxia Reportedly Poised To Form $20 Billion NAND Flash Goliath
Western Digital and Kioxia might combine forces to give Samsung a serious run in the NAND flash memory sector. While nothing has been announced, it’s said the two firms are in “advanced” discussions about a stock merger valued at $20 billion. A deal could potentially be reached within the next several weeks (before October).

Sources who

Source: Hot Hardware – Western Digital And Kioxia Reportedly Poised To Form Billion NAND Flash Goliath

How to Get In-Game Events Early by Changing the Date on Your Nintendo Switch

There are many reasons to change your Nintendo Switch’s system clock. Maybe you play with friends in another timezone and don’t want to do the mental math when scheduling multiplayer sessions, or you take the handheld console with you while traveling and need to adjust the clock as you globetrot.

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Get In-Game Events Early by Changing the Date on Your Nintendo Switch

Updates From Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, American Horror Story, and More

American Horror Story reveals its latest cryptic cast of characters. Lakeith Stanfield will help bring Victor LaValle’s Changeling to life. Game of Thrones’ Jacob Anderson joins AMC’s Interview With the Vampire. Plus, what’s coming on Riverdale and Chapelwaite. Spoilers, away!

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Updates From Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, American Horror Story, and More

The Apple Watch SE (44mm with cellular) is down to $300 at Amazon

The Apple Watch may be the best smartwatch for iPhone lovers, but it’s a pretty expensive accessory. With the Series 6 setting users back $400, Apple brought the more affordable Watch SE into its lineup so those with tighter budgets could get the same, core Apple Watch experience. Now you can pick up a Watch SE for even less at Amazon while a couple of models are on sale. Key among them is the 44mm, GPS + Cellular Apple Watch SE in silver for $300 — that’s $59 off its normal price and a record low. The same Watch in space gray is as low as $319 right now as well, depending on the style of band you pick.

Buy Apple Watch SE (44mm, Cellular) at Amazon – $299

The Apple Watch SE doesn’t look all that different from the Series 6, and it has a feature set that will be more than enough for those new to the smartwatch experience. The Watch SE performed well in our testing, despite running on an older processor than the one found in the Series 6, and it has all of the core features of watchOS 7 including heart rate monitoring with high and low alerts, noise monitoring, fall detection, Emergency SOS and more. The fitness features are almost identical to that of the Series 6 — the only things you don’t get on the SE are blood oxygen and ECG measurements.

You also don’t get the always-on display that the Series 6 has, but the Watch SE has the same size display, which is noticeably larger than that of the old Series 3. And with these models on sale, you’re getting cellular connectivity — that means you can make and receive calls, send text messages and more even when your iPhone isn’t around. The Apple Watch is still very much an iPhone accessory, but those with LTE will get the most untethered experience.

Even though you have to give up a few features with the Apple Watch SE, you’re still getting one of the best smartwatches available today. But we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention that Apple may be coming out with new models soon. We typically see new Apple Watches announced along with the latest iPhones in September, but there’s no guarantee a new Watch SE will make the lineup this year.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.



Source: Engadget – The Apple Watch SE (44mm with cellular) is down to 0 at Amazon

The Rock's new Under Armor over-ear headphones pack ANC and a 45-hour battery life

Fans of celeb-endorsed gadgets rejoice. Hollywood’s busiest man Dwayne Johnson has found time to release another pair of workout headphones under the Project Rock line he created with Under Armor. The cans are essentially an updated version of the durable over-ears released in 2018. But, this is more of a trio than a tag team. Built by JBL, the new headphones’ standout upgrades include adaptive noise cancelling and a promised 45-hour battery life. With speed charging, you can get a purported two hours of playback time in just five minutes. 

Like their predecessors, the over-ears are designed to be the ultimate gym buddy. The IPX4 rating means they can withstand your sweaty workouts. While UA provided the extra grip on the headband and supervent materials on the fast-drying cushions, which you can remove and hand wash. 

UA Project Rock Over-Ear Training headphones
Under Armor

Johnson, meanwhile, finely tuned JBL’s Charged Sound to his liking. Possibly, so he could listen to his workout playlist on Spotify or relive his atrocious gospel rap ditty, Pie. Just so you know who cooked these up, his Brahma Bull insignia his prominently placed on each ear cup. Additional audio tech includes two ambient modes that filter through external chatter and sounds. Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa are also on hand for when you need voice commands mid-workout.

UA Project Rock Over-Ear Training headphones are out now via JBL and Under Armor for $299.95.



Source: Engadget – The Rock’s new Under Armor over-ear headphones pack ANC and a 45-hour battery life

The Taliban, Not the West, Won Afghanistan's Technological War

sandbagger shares an excerpt from a MIT Technology Review article, written by Christopher Ankersen and Mike Martin: Despite their terrible human costs — or perhaps because of them — wars are often times of technological innovation. […] But Afghanistan is different. There has been technological progress — the evolution of drone warfare, for example. But the advances made by the US and its allies have not been as pronounced as those seen before, and they haven’t been as profound as some experts have claimed. In fact, contrary to the typical narrative, the technological advances that have taken place during the 20 years of conflict have actually helped the Taliban more than the West. If wars are fought through innovation, the Taliban won. What do we mean? The West fought the war in much the same way from beginning to end. The first airstrikes in 2001 were conducted by B-52 bombers, the same model that first saw service in 1955; in August, the attacks that marked the end of US presence came from the same venerable model of aircraft. The Taliban, meanwhile, made some huge leaps. They began this war with AK-47s and other simple, conventional weapons, but today they have harnessed mobile telephony and the internet — not just to improve their weapons and their command-and-control systems, but even more crucially, to carry out their strategic communications and their influence operations.

What accounts for this underwhelming and unevenly distributed technological gain? For the Taliban, the war in Afghanistan has been existential. Confronted with hundreds of thousands of foreign troops from NATO countries, and hunted on the ground and from the air, they had to adapt in order to survive. While the bulk of their fighting equipment has remained simple and easy to maintain (often no more than a Kalashnikov, some ammunition, a radio, and a headscarf), they have had to seek out new technology from other insurgent groups or develop their own. One key example: roadside bombs, or IEDs. These simple weapons caused more allied casualties than any other. Originally activated by pressure plates, like mines, they had evolved by the midpoint of the war so that the Taliban could set them off with mobile phones from anywhere with a cell signal. Because the Taliban’s technological baseline was lower, the innovations they have made are all the more significant.

But the real technological advance for the Taliban took place at the strategic level. Acutely aware of their past shortcomings, they have attempted to overcome the weaknesses of their previous stint in government. Between 1996 and 2001, they preferred to be reclusive, and there was only one known photo of their leader, Mullah Omar. Since then, though, the Taliban have developed a sophisticated public affairs team, harnessing social media domestically and abroad. IED attacks would usually be recorded by mobile phone and uploaded to one of the many Taliban Twitter feeds to help with recruitment, fundraising, and morale. Another example is the technique of automatically scraping social media for key phrases like “ISI support” — referring to Pakistan’s security service, which has a relationship with the Taliban — and then unleashing an army of online bots to send messages that attempt to refashion the image of the movement.

For the coalition, things were quite different. Western forces did have access to a wide range of world-class technology, from space-based surveillance to remotely operated systems like robots and drones. But for them, the war in Afghanistan was not a war of survival; it was a war of choice. And because of this, much of the technology was aimed at reducing the risk of casualties rather than achieving outright victory. Western forces invested heavily in weapons that could remove soldiers from harm’s way — air power, drones — or technology that could speed up the delivery of immediate medical treatment. Things that keep the enemy at arm’s length or protect soldiers from harm, such as gunships, body armor, and roadside-bomb detection, have been the focus for the West. The West’s overarching military priority has been elsewhere: in the battle between greater powers. Technologically, that means investing in hypersonic missiles to match those of China or Russia, for instance, or in military artificial intelligence to try outwitting them. In closing, the authors say that technology “is not a driver of conflict, nor a guarantor of victory. Instead, it is an enabler.”

“It also tells us that the battlefields of tomorrow might look a lot like Afghanistan,” they add. “[W]e will see fewer purely technological conflicts that are won by the military with the greatest firepower, and more old and new technologies fielded side by side.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – The Taliban, Not the West, Won Afghanistan’s Technological War

Here's How to Recycle All Those Empty Squeeze Pouches (for Free)

If you have young kids, chances are, you’ve got some squeeze pouches in your house. While their mess-free convenience, light weight, and packability make them a parents’ dream, knowing how to responsibly dispose of them is not as dreamy.

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Source: LifeHacker – Here’s How to Recycle All Those Empty Squeeze Pouches (for Free)

LLVM Clang 13 Performance Is In Great Shape For Intel Xeon "Ice Lake"

Earlier this month was a look at the LLVM Clang 13 performance on EPYC 7003 showing this forthcoming compiler update to be in good shape for AMD Zen 3, but how is the performance looking on the Intel side? This round of benchmarking is looking at the LLVM Clang 11 / 12 / 13 compiler performance on Intel’s flagship Xeon Platinum 8380 “Ice Lake” 2P server configuration.

Source: Phoronix – LLVM Clang 13 Performance Is In Great Shape For Intel Xeon “Ice Lake”

Watch Blue Origin's spaceflight carry a NASA payload for lunar landers

Just weeks after Blue Origin’s first manned flight, with founder Jeff Bezos onboard, the space company is preparing to launch its New Shepard spacecraft again. Liftoff is scheduled to take place at at 9:35 AM EDT (6:35 AM PDT) from the company’s launch site in West Texas. The flight’s NS-17 mission title is a reference to its status as New Shepard’s 17th launch. You can watch the proceedings live on the stream below. This time, there won’t be any humans aboard, however. Instead, the reusable rocket and capsule will carry a payload of NASA tech including a LiDAR sensor and computer designed for lunar landers. 

The launch comes amid a brewing lawsuit filed by Blue Origin over the space agency’s handling of the Human Landing System program. For this launch, it’s capsule will also house experiments from academic institutions including the University of Florida.

How to Check All Your Apple Devices' Battery Levels With One Widget

Those of us fully entrenched in the Apple ecosystem have a lot of batteries to think about; you might have a MacBook, iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and AirPods to boot, all of which are consuming precious portable power by just sitting there. Instead of constantly jumping among products to know whether you need them to…

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Check All Your Apple Devices’ Battery Levels With One Widget

ASRock Industrial NUC BOX-1165G7 Mini-PC Review: An Ultra-Compact Tiger Lake Desktop

Intel introduced the Willow Cove micro-architecture with their Tiger Lake processors in the latter part of 2020. These were designed to span a wide range of performance levels and applications, with TDPs ranging from as low as 7W up to 65W.


While mobile systems are the prime market for the 7W – 15W SKUs, higher TDP processors have found themselves in a number of different form-factors ranging from notebooks and UCFF mini-PCs to full-blown gaming desktops. Many ultra-compact mini-PCs based on Tiger Lake have been introduced by different vendors in the last few quarters. Competitively speaking, the Tiger Lake UCFF PCs come in at a time when systems based on AMD’s compelling 7nm Zen 2-based Ryzen 4000U series of processors are already well-established in the market.


Can Tiger Lake shift the value proposition metric back towards Intel? Read on for our review of ASRock Industrial’s flagship ‘NUC’ based on Tiger Lake – the NUC BOX-1165G7.



Source: AnandTech – ASRock Industrial NUC BOX-1165G7 Mini-PC Review: An Ultra-Compact Tiger Lake Desktop