Intel Arc Alchemist A770 LE And A750 Release Dates And Pricing Revealed

Intel Arc Alchemist A770 LE And A750 Release Dates And Pricing Revealed
Intel finally confirmed the release date and pricing of the long-awaited Arc Alchemist A770 GPU at its Innovation 2022 event earlier this week, but we were left waiting for concrete details about the Limited Edition version of the card and its little sibling, the Arc A750. Well, Intel has just released another batch of details, so let’s dive

Source: Hot Hardware – Intel Arc Alchemist A770 LE And A750 Release Dates And Pricing Revealed

Google’s Stadia Cloud Gaming Will Evaporate But It Isn't Hanging Customers Out To Dry

Google’s Stadia Cloud Gaming Will Evaporate But It Isn't Hanging Customers Out To Dry
Cloud gaming isn’t dead, but it certainly hasn’t taken off the way some folks wish it would. Case in point: Google’s Stadia service, one of the first big players in the space, is shutting its doors less than three years after they opened.

If you’re not familiar with it by name, Stadia is the name of Google’s cloud gaming service. Stadia

Source: Hot Hardware – Google’s Stadia Cloud Gaming Will Evaporate But It Isn’t Hanging Customers Out To Dry

Physician Burnout Has Reached Distressing Levels, New Research Finds

Ten years of data from a nationwide survey of physicians confirm another trend that’s worsened through the pandemic: Burnout rates among doctors in the United States, which were already high a decade ago, have risen to alarming levels. From a report: Results released this month and published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings, a peer-reviewed journal, show that 63 percent of physicians surveyed reported at least one symptom of burnout at the end of 2021 and the beginning of 2022, an increase from 44 percent in 2017 and 46 percent in 2011. Only 30 percent felt satisfied with their work-life balance, compared with 43 percent five years earlier. “This is the biggest increase of emotional exhaustion that I’ve ever seen, anywhere in the literature,” said Bryan Sexton, the director of Duke University’s Center for Healthcare Safety and Quality, who was not involved in the survey efforts. The most recent numbers also compare starkly with data from 2020, when the survey was run during the early stages of the pandemic. Then, 38 percent of doctors surveyed reported one or more symptoms of burnout while 46 percent were satisfied with their work-life balance.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Physician Burnout Has Reached Distressing Levels, New Research Finds

Are Android-based game-streaming handhelds a fad, or are they the future?

Let's see: Xbox Cloud Gaming, Nvidia Geforce Now, Xbox again, and Steam Link. That's all the cloud streaming services, right? Nothing's missing.

Enlarge / Let’s see: Xbox Cloud Gaming, Nvidia Geforce Now, Xbox again, and Steam Link. That’s all the cloud streaming services, right? Nothing’s missing. (credit: Logitech)

It’s not every day that you see the attempted birth of an entirely new category of video game hardware. But it feels like that’s what we’re seeing this month with the announcement of the Logitech G Cloud and the Razer Edge 5G handheld gaming systems.

While these devices (and somewhat similar emulation-focused handhelds like the AYN Odin) have their differences, they share Qualcomm SnapDragon internals, an Android-based OS, and vaguely Switch-like hardware designs. And while these devices can natively run games designed for Android phones (for whatever that’s worth), the main focus seems to be streaming portable versions of high-end console and PC games through various cloud-gaming providers or in-home streaming options.

It’s too early to know how well these handhelds will serve their stated purpose, or how much actual market demand there is for dedicated portable devices that primarily play games hosted on remote servers or platforms. Still, we can’t help but compare and contrast this new hardware design trend with the last major (failed) attempt to create a new category of gaming hardware: the microconsole.

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Source: Ars Technica – Are Android-based game-streaming handhelds a fad, or are they the future?

Terraria Team Releases Hotfix For The 'Labor Of Love' Update's Pile Of New Features

Terraria Team Releases Hotfix For The 'Labor Of Love' Update's Pile Of New Features
The mega-popular exploration, platforming, gathering, combat, mining, base building, all that and the kitchen sink-containing, 2D side-scroller Terraria turned 11 this year. The Labor of Love update arrived last month to celebrate the communities that have developed around it. It represented one of the largest updates the game has seen with

Source: Hot Hardware – Terraria Team Releases Hotfix For The ‘Labor Of Love’ Update’s Pile Of New Features

Weston 11.0: what's new, what's next (Collabora blog)

Over on the Collabora blog, Marius Vlad writes about the recent
Weston 11.0.0 release. Weston is the reference compositor for the Wayland display server protocol. Vlad looks at features of the release, including some things that are being deprecated and removed, as well as features coming in Weston 12.

Color management infrastructure code has landed that allows HDR [high dynamic range] characteristics to be delivered to an HDR-capable monitor by setting-up HDR metadata in a weston.ini configuration file and delivering that to KMS [kernel mode setting]. Once Weston gains the ability to produce HDR content in a future version, it will come naturally supported.

This new version brings in multiple RDP [remote desktop protocol] improvements, like clipboard pasting, various keyboard language support, bumped support for a newer version of FreeRDP library, and many more other improvements and fixes.



Source: LWN.net – Weston 11.0: what’s new, what’s next (Collabora blog)

Room-temperature superconducting claim is retracted

Illustration of magnetic levitation using a high-temperature ceramic superconductor.

Enlarge / Illustration of magnetic levitation using a high-temperature ceramic superconductor.

A paper that claimed to provide the first evidence of superconductivity at room temperatures has been retracted by the journal Nature, even as the paper’s authors say they still have confidence in the results. The decision appears to come down to an issue of the experiment’s questionable controls.

High-temperature superconductivity has made a lot of progress due to the use of hydrogen-rich chemicals at extreme pressures, which can force the hydrogen into chemical structures that would otherwise have empty space. Several papers have gotten hydrogen-rich chemicals to superconduct at temperatures that could be reached using dry ice.

The room-temperature report followed a similar path, using intense pressure to force hydrogen to combine with a new mix of chemicals and reach record temperatures—in this case, above the freezing point of water, a major milestone. The pressures involved mean the material wouldn’t be useful for real-world applications but could potentially point the way toward other chemicals that could.

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Source: Ars Technica – Room-temperature superconducting claim is retracted

Elon Says Tesla's Cybertruck Will Be 'Waterproof Enough.' Just Like It Was Steel-Ball-Proof Enough?

Tesla CEO Elon Musk wrote on Twitter Thursday that his long-promised Cybertruck would be “waterproof enough” to operate as a boat, the day before Tesla will give a demonstration of its artificial intelligence capabilities.

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Source: Gizmodo – Elon Says Tesla’s Cybertruck Will Be ‘Waterproof Enough.’ Just Like It Was Steel-Ball-Proof Enough?

The CIA Just Invested in Woolly Mammoth Resurrection Technology

As a rapidly advancing climate emergency turns the planet ever hotter, the Dallas-based biotechnology company Colossal Biosciences has a vision: “To see the Woolly Mammoth thunder upon the tundra once again.” Founders George Church and Ben Lamm have already racked up an impressive list of high-profile funders and investors, including Peter Thiel, Tony Robbins, Paris Hilton, Winklevoss Capital — and, according to the public portfolio its venture capital arm released this month, the CIA. From a report: Colossal says it hopes to use advanced genetic sequencing to resurrect two extinct mammals — not just the giant, ice age mammoth, but also a mid-sized marsupial known as the thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, that died out less than a century ago. On its website, the company vows: “Combining the science of genetics with the business of discovery, we endeavor to jumpstart nature’s ancestral heartbeat.” In-Q-Tel, its new investor, is registered as a nonprofit venture capital firm funded by the CIA. On its surface, the group funds technology startups with the potential to safeguard national security. In addition to its long-standing pursuit of intelligence and weapons technologies, the CIA outfit has lately displayed an increased interest in biotechnology and particularly DNA sequencing.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – The CIA Just Invested in Woolly Mammoth Resurrection Technology

10 New Horror, Sci-Fi, and Fantasy Films to Put on Your Radar

The annual, all-genre film festival Fantastic Fest is wrapping up its latest event this week and, as expected, it was jam-packed with incredible genre movies. io9 was there for five of the eight days and saw 15 films in total, almost all of which we really enjoyed. Some of them are big studio films with release dates

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Source: Gizmodo – 10 New Horror, Sci-Fi, and Fantasy Films to Put on Your Radar

FCC OKs satellite de-orbit rule despite possible conflict with NASA guidelines

Illustration of a garbage can floating in orbit around Earth.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | PM Images)

The Federal Communications Commission today unanimously approved a rule that aims to minimize space debris by requiring low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites to be disposed no more than five years after being taken out of service. “The new rules shorten the decades-old 25-year guideline for deorbiting satellites post-mission, taking an important step in a new era for space safety and orbital debris policy,” the FCC said in a press release.

As previously reported, the new five-year rule will be legally binding, unlike the current 25-year standard that’s based on a NASA recommendation proposed in the 1990s. The FCC has said it will apply to “space stations ending their missions in or passing through the low-Earth orbit region below 2,000 kilometers.”

Satellites already in orbit will be exempt from the new requirement. There’s also a grandfathering period of two years for satellites that are already authorized by the FCC but not yet launched.

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Source: Ars Technica – FCC OKs satellite de-orbit rule despite possible conflict with NASA guidelines

Netflix's Autoplay Means You Likely Missed A Cool Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Secret

If you watched Netflix’s new anime, Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, chances are you’re still coping with its emotionally devastating ending and have brought it up to your therapist unprompted on more than one occasion. But the pain doesn’t stop there, friends. There’s a high probability Netflix’s aggressive autoplay feature,…

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Source: Kotaku – Netflix’s Autoplay Means You Likely Missed A Cool Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Secret

Twitter embraces TikTok-style ‘immersive’ video

Videos on Twitter will now look a lot more like TikTok. The company announced that it’s switching to a full-screen “immersive” video player for watching clips. It’s also borrowing the now-familiar “swipe up” gesture that will allow people to endlessly scroll through more videos on the platform.

The update will make watching videos on Twitter feel a lot more like browsing TikTok or Instagram’s Reels, at least in terms of the user interface. The changes are limited to Twitter’s iOS app for now, but the company said a similar update for Android could arrive in the “coming weeks.”

While Twitter has long promoted video, especially live video, in different parts of its app, the change is one of the company’s most aggressive moves to push video on its users. It could also prove controversial, as some users could find the new full-screen videos disruptive. The company notes that users can navigate back to the original tweet using the back arrow in the top left corner of a clip.

Separately, Twitter is also testing out a change to drive more people to video content across its platform. The company is experimenting with a new section for video recommendations in Twitter’s Explore page. Those suggestions will be “available to people in select countries using Twitter in English on iOS and Android.”



Source: Engadget – Twitter embraces TikTok-style ‘immersive’ video