Elden Ring Update Hints At Sweet Ray Tracing Effects And New DLC Maps

Elden Ring Update Hints At Sweet Ray Tracing Effects And New DLC Maps
In February 2022, the spiritual successor to Dark Souls, Elden Ring, was released. With George R. R. Martin as one of the writers and producers, and the game’s development legend Hidetaka Miyazaki at the helm, it was almost sure to be a smash success. And good news for fans, few days ago it was discovered within a recent patch, there are string

Source: Hot Hardware – Elden Ring Update Hints At Sweet Ray Tracing Effects And New DLC Maps

US Officials are Discussing How to Regulate Cryptocurrencies and Stablecoins

America’s Securities and Exchanges Commission received a letter Thursday from Colorado Senator John Hickenlooper urging clearer regulations of digital assets:

The lawmaker asked the agency to clarify what types of digital assets are securities, address how to issue and list digital securities, establish a registration service for digital asset security trading platforms, set regulations on how trading and custody of digital assets should be carried out, and determine what disclosures are required for potential investors to be informed about. “Given the complexity of these issues, and recognizing that some digital assets are securities, others may be commodities, and others may be subject to a completely different regulatory regime, a formal regulatory process is needed now,” Hickenlooper wrote in his letter.

“This will significantly improve policy development and allow the SEC to collect views and understand concerns. Furthermore, it will create clear rules that will benefit investors who currently may not be fully aware of the risks associated with digital asset investments….”

Hickenlooper also wrote that applying old market regulations to cryptocurrency would lead to financial services being more expensive and less accessible; leading to the agency’s disclosure regime being less useful to U.S. residents. “I recognize these questions are complicated, but it is time for the SEC to engage. Empowering innovators, fostering financial innovation, protecting investors, and ensuring market integrity are consistent principles,” the lawmaker concluded in his letter. “I look forward to working with you to build prudent rules as this powerful technology continues to develop.”

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission wants some changes of its own, reports Reuters:

The U.S. Congress should give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission more powers to police cryptocurrency stablecoins to reduce risks to the financial system, Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said on Friday…. With around $150 billion in market capitalization, stablecoins have many similarities to money market funds, and need to be regulated accordingly, Gensler said at a conference held by Georgetown University’s Psaros Center for Financial Markets and Policy in Washington…. “I think the CFTC could have greater authorities. They currently do not have direct regulatory authorities over the underlying non-security tokens,” he said….

The Financial Stability Oversight Council, a U.S. regulatory panel comprising top financial regulators, earlier this month recommended that Congress pass legislation addressing the risks digital assets pose to the financial system, including bills to bolster oversight of crypto spot markets and stablecoins. It remains unclear when Congress might pass crypto-related legislation, although several bills have been introduced to address stablecoins and digital commodities regulation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – US Officials are Discussing How to Regulate Cryptocurrencies and Stablecoins

Open Channel: What'd You Think of Halloween Ends?

This weekend marks the conclusion of a long-running horror franchise in the form of Halloween Ends. Directed by David Gordon Green, the third film in the reboot trilogy that began with 2018’s Halloween jumps ahead to our present day and sees Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) once again trying to move on with her life …

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Source: Gizmodo – Open Channel: What’d You Think of Halloween Ends?

Google launches KataOS

Google has announced
the existence of yet another new operating system, called KataOS, aimed at
the creation of secure embedded systems.

As the foundation for this new operating system, we chose seL4 as
the microkernel because it puts security front and center; it is
mathematically proven secure, with guaranteed confidentiality,
integrity, and availability. Through the seL4 CAmkES framework,
we’re also able to provide statically-defined and analyzable system
components. KataOS provides a verifiably-secure platform that
protects the user’s privacy because it is logically impossible for
applications to breach the kernel’s hardware security protections
and the system components are verifiably secure. KataOS is also
implemented almost entirely in Rust, which provides a strong
starting point for software security, since it eliminates entire
classes of bugs, such as off-by-one errors and buffer overflows.



Source: LWN.net – Google launches KataOS

How to Declutter Your Home When Downsizing

When we talk about “downsizing,” it’s usually referring to the size a person’s home. For example, people may decide to sell their larger family home after their children have grown up and moved out, because they simply no longer need that much living space anymore. Others buy or rent a home that initially seemed like…

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Declutter Your Home When Downsizing

Linux Kernel 6.0 Released for the AmigaOne X1000/X5000 PowerPC-Based AmigaOS Computers

Mike Bouma (Slashdot reader #85,252) writes: Hyperion Entertainment is pleased to announce the immediate availability of a very substantial and comprehensive update of the Software Development Kit (SDK) for AmigaOS 4.1 54.16.

Also Linux: Kernel 6.0 for AmigaOne X1000/X5000 has been released and the biggest Amiga event of the year will be held upcoming weekend in Mönchengladbach, Germany: the Amiga37 event.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Linux Kernel 6.0 Released for the AmigaOne X1000/X5000 PowerPC-Based AmigaOS Computers

NASA Performs Dangerous Vacuum Gun Test To Research Space Rock Impact Protection

NASA Performs Dangerous Vacuum Gun Test To Research Space Rock Impact Protection
In order to test for possible micrometeorites impacting a spacecraft, NASA is utilizing a 2-stage light gas gun to simulate potential hazards for future space missions. The test fires a bullet with a speed that is equal to 25 times the velocity of a 44 magnum, or like flying from New York to San Francisco in five minutes.

NASA is currently

Source: Hot Hardware – NASA Performs Dangerous Vacuum Gun Test To Research Space Rock Impact Protection

Also Joining a Silicon Valley Union: Waymo's Food Service Employees

“Food service employees at the autonomous driving company Waymo are forming a union,” reports NBC News, calling it “the latest push by support workers to organize at Silicon Valley’s most prominent companies.”

The cafeteria workers at the Mountain View-based company cite the high cost of living in the Bay Area and the lack of strong benefits while working for one of the world’s most valuable companies. Waymo is owned by Google parent company, Alphabet.

The workers are employed by Sodexo, which contracts service work for Google and other companies. Organizers say they have a majority of union cards signed from the roughly two dozen-person bargaining unit….

Workers say the $24 an hour they make from the company is not enough to live adequately in the Bay Area. They also cite the prohibitive cost of the company’s health plan, which has a $5,000 deductible. The living wage in the San Jose-Sunnyvale area is $27.74 for a single adult, and $52.74 for a single adult with a child, according to MIT’s living wage calculator…. The workers are part of Silicon Valley’s ranks of contractors who support and supplement the work at tech companies. Union campaigns have coursed through the industry as tech company profits — and the cost of living in the Bay Area — have escalated steeply in recent years.

At Google, more than 4,000 of these workers have joined unions since 2018, including 2,300 cafeteria workers at its headquarters and satellite offices in the Bay Area in 2019, according to Unite Here…. “[Workers] see all the money around tech,” said D. Taylor, the president of Unite Here. “And that’s great. But they want to have a piece of the American dream.”
Ironically, one of the workers said they were inspired by Hasan Piker, who NBC News describes as “a leftist Twitch streamer and political commentator” with large followings on Twitter — and on Google-owned YouTube.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Also Joining a Silicon Valley Union: Waymo’s Food Service Employees

She-Hulk's Jessica Gao Explains The Finale's Most Surprising Cameo

Of the many guest appearances that graced the first season of Marvel’s She-Hulk, the ones featuring Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk were among the most consequential. Banner showed up in much of the premiere, and also the second episode briefly to take a call from Jen, where it was revealed he had been calling her while going

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Source: Gizmodo – She-Hulk’s Jessica Gao Explains The Finale’s Most Surprising Cameo

How to Stop Stewing About Something

Everyone has their own proverbial buttons that, when pushed, really set them off: So-called “sore spots” that trigger particularly strong reactions. People close to us typically are aware of these buttons, but it’s often strangers or others who don’t know us as well who unknowingly push them.

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Stop Stewing About Something

Can DNA Help Us Store Data for 1,000 Years?

“You know you’re a nerd when you store DNA in your fridge,” says Dina Zielinski, a senior scientist in human genomics at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research tells the BBC — holding up a tiny vial with a light film at the bottom:

But this DNA is special. It does not store the code from a human genome, nor does it come from any animal or virus. Instead, it stores a digital representation of a museum. “That will last easily tens of years, maybe hundreds,” says Zielinski.

Research into how we could store digital data inside strands of DNA has exploded over the past decade, in the wake of efforts to sequence the human genome, synthesise DNA and develop gene therapies. Scientists have already encoded films, books and computer operating systems into DNA. Netflix has even used it to store an episode of its 2020 thriller series Biohackers.

The information stored in DNA defines what it is to be human (or any other species for that matter). But many experts argue it offers an incredibly compact, durable and long-lasting form of storage that could replace the many forms of unreliable digital media available, which regularly become defunct and require huge amounts of energy to store. Meanwhile, some researchers are exploring other ways we could store data effectively forever, such as etching information onto incredibly durable glass beads, a modern take on cave drawings.

Even before the issue of the energy required to power (and cool) data centers, Zielinski points out that data stored on hard drives “lasts on average maybe 10 to 20 years, maybe 50 if you’re lucky and the conditions are perfect.” And yet we’ve already been able to recover DNA from million-year-old wooly mammoths…

Olgica Milenkovic, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, acknowledges that DNA can be damaged by things like humidity, acids, and radiation — “But if it’s kept cold and dry, it’s good for hundreds of years.” And if it’s stored in an ice vault, “it can last forever, pretty much.” (And unlike floppy disks — DNA-formatted data will never become obsolete.)

It’s not the only option. Peter Kazansky, a professor in optoelectronics at the University of Southampton, has created an optical storage technology that etches nano-structures onto glass disks. But Latchesar Ionkov, a computer scientist working on DNA storage at Los Alamos National Laboratory, believes we’re just decades away from being able to store the estimated 33 zettabytes of data that humans will have produced by 2025 in a space the size of a ping-pong ball.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Can DNA Help Us Store Data for 1,000 Years?

Hitting the Books: The women who made ENIAC more than a weapon

After Mary Sears and her team had revolutionized the field of oceanography, but before Katherine G. Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson helped put John Glenn into orbit, a cadre of women programmers working for the US government faced an impossible task: train ENIAC, the world’s first modern computer, to do more than quickly calculate artillery trajectories. Though successful — and without the aid of a guide or manual no less — their names and deeds were lost to the annals of history, until author Kathy Kleiman, through a Herculean research effort of her own, brought their stories to light in Proving Ground: The Untold Story of the Six Women Who Programmed the World’s First Modern Computer.

Proving Grounds Cover
Grand Central Publishing

Excerpted from the book Proving Ground: The Untold Story of the Six Women Who Programmed the World’s First Modern Computer by Kathy Kleiman. Copyright © 2022 by First Byte Productions, LLC. Reprinted with permission of Grand Central Publishing. All rights reserved.


Demonstration Day, February 15, 1946

The Moore School stood ready as people began to arrive by train and trolley. John and Pres, as well as the engineers and deans and professors of the university, wore their best suits and Army officers were in dress uniform with their medals gleaming. The six women wore their best professional skirt suits and dresses.

Kay and Fran manned the front door of the Moore School. As the scientists and technologists arrived, some from as far as Boston, the two women welcomed them warmly. They asked everyone to hang up their heavy winter coats on the portable coat racks that Moore School staff had left nearby. Then they directed them down the hall and around the corner to the ENIAC room.

Just before 11:00 a.m., Fran and Kay ran back to be in the ENIAC room when the demonstration began.

As they slid into the back of the room, everything was at the ready. At the front of the great ENIAC U, there was space for some speakers, a few rows of chairs, and plenty of standing room for invited guests and ENIAC team members. Across the room, Marlyn, Betty, and Jean stood in the back and the women smiled to each other. Their big moment was about to begin. Ruth stayed outside, pointing late arrivals in the right direction.

The room was packed and was filled with an air of anticipation and wonder as people saw ENIAC for the first time.

Demonstration Day started with a few introductions. Major General Barnes started with the BRL officers and Moore School deans and then presented John and Pres as the co-inventors. Then Arthur came to the front of the room and introduced himself as the master of ceremonies for the ENIAC events. He would run five programs, all using the remote control box he held in his hand.

The first program was an addition. Arthur hit one of the but-tons and the ENIAC whirled to life. Then he ran a multiplication. His expert audience knew that ENIAC was calculating it many times faster than any other machine in the world. Then he ran the table of squares and cubes, and then sines and cosines. So far, Demonstration Day was the same as the one two weeks earlier, and for this sophisticated audience, the presentation was pretty boring.

But Arthur was just getting started and the drama was about to begin. He told them that now he would run a ballistics trajectory three times on ENIAC.

He pushed the button and ran it once. The trajectory “ran beautifully,” Betty remembered. Then Arthur ran it again, a version of the trajectory without the punched cards printing, and it ran much faster. Punched cards actually slowed things down a little bit.

Then Arthur pointed everyone to the grids of tiny lights at the top of the accumulators and urged his attendees to look closely at them in the moments to come. He nodded to Pres, who stood against the wall, and suddenly Pres turned off the lights. In the black room, only a few small status lights were lit on the units of ENIAC. Everything else was in darkness.

With a click of the button, Arthur brought the ENIAC to life. For a dazzling twenty seconds, the ENIAC lit up. Those watching the accumulators closely saw the 100 tiny lights twinkle as they moved in a flash, first going up as the missile ascended to the sky, and then going down as it sped back to earth, the lights forever changing and twinkling. Those twenty seconds seemed at once an eternity and instantaneous.

Then the ENIAC finished, and darkness filled the room again. Arthur and Pres waited a moment, and then Pres turned on the lights and Arthur announced dramatically that ENIAC had just completed a trajectory faster than it would take a missile to leave the muzzle of artillery and hit its target. “Everybody gasped.”

Less than twenty seconds. This audience of scientists, technologists, engineers, and mathematicians knew how many hours it took to calculate a differential calculus equation by hand. They knew that ENIAC had calculated the work of a week in fewer than two dozen seconds. They knew the world had changed.

Climax complete, everyone in the room was beaming. The Army officers knew their risk had paid off. The ENIAC engineers knew their hardware was a success. The Moore School deans knew they no longer had to be worried about being embarrassed. And the ENIAC Programmers knew that their trajectory had worked perfectly. Years of work, effort, ingenuity, and creativity had come together in twenty seconds of pure innovation.

Some would later call this moment the birth of the “Electronic Computing Revolution.” Others would soon call it the birth of the Information Age. After those precious twenty seconds, no one would give a second look to the great Mark I electromechanical computer or the differential analyzer. After Demonstration Day, the country was on a clear path to general- purpose, programmable, all- electronic computing. There was no other direction. There was no other future. John, Pres, Herman, and some of the engineers fielded questions from the guests, and then the formal session finished. But no one wanted to leave. Attendees surrounded John and Pres, Arthur and Harold.

The women circulated. They had taken turns running punched cards through the tabulator and had stacks of trajectory printouts to share. They divided up the sheets and moved around the room to hand them out. Attendees were happy to receive a trajectory, a souvenir of the great moment they had just witnessed.

But no attendee congratulated the women. Because no guest knew what they had done. In the midst of the announcements and the introductions of Army officers, Moore School deans, and ENIAC inventors, the Programmers had been left out. “None of us girls were ever introduced as any part of it” that day, Kay noted later.

Since no one had thought to name the six young women who programmed the ballistics trajectory, the audience did not know of their work: thousands of hours spent learning the units of ENIAC, studying its “direct programming” method, breaking down the ballistics trajectory into discrete steps, writing the detailed pedaling sheets for the trajectory program, setting up their program on ENIAC, and learning ENIAC “down to a vacuum tube.” Later, Jean said, they “did receive a lot of compliments” from the ENIAC team, but at that moment they were unknown to the guests in the room.

And at that moment, it did not matter. They cared about the success of ENIAC and their team, and they knew they had played a role, a critical role, in the success of the day. This was a day that would go down in history, and they had been there and played an invaluable part.



Source: Engadget – Hitting the Books: The women who made ENIAC more than a weapon

Bad DIMM on Linus Torvalds' Desktop System Moves Kernel Merges to His Laptop

When a kernel developer asked Linus Torvalds if he’d missed a Git pull, Torvalds “revealed the request was still in his queue as ‘I’m doing merges (very slowly) on my laptop, while waiting for new ECC memory DIMMs to arrive,'” reports The Register:
Torvalds needs the DIMMs because over the last few days he experienced what he described as “some instability on my main desktop… with random memory corruption in user space resulting in my allmodconfig builds randomly failing with internal compiler errors etc.”

The Linux boss’s first thought was that a new kernel bug had caused the problem — which isn’t good but sometimes happens. His instinct was wrong. “It was literally a DIMM going bad in my machine randomly after 2.5 years of it being perfectly stable,” he wrote. “Go figure. Verified first by booting an old kernel, and then with memtest86+ overnight.”

Torvalds appears to have been tracking delivery of the new DIMMs as he reported replacement memory was “out for delivery” and predicted it should arrive later on Sunday evening….

His post also mentions that his main PC was set up for error correction code memory (ECC memory), but “during the early days of COVID when there wasn’t any ECC memory available at any sane prices. And then I never got around to fixing it, until I had to detect errors the hard way.”

“I absolutely *detest* the crazy industry politics and bad vendors that have made ECC memory so ‘special’,” he added.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Bad DIMM on Linus Torvalds’ Desktop System Moves Kernel Merges to His Laptop

Bad DIMM on Linus Torvalds' Desktop System Move Kernel Merges to His Laptop

When a kernel developer asked Linus Torvalds if he’d missed a Git pull, Torvalds “revealed the request was still in his queue as ‘I’m doing merges (very slowly) on my laptop, while waiting for new ECC memory DIMMs to arrive,'” reports The Register:
Torvalds needs the DIMMs because over the last few days he experienced what he described as “some instability on my main desktop… with random memory corruption in user space resulting in my allmodconfig builds randomly failing with internal compiler errors etc.”

The Linux boss’s first thought was that a new kernel bug had caused the problem — which isn’t good but sometimes happens. His instinct was wrong. “It was literally a DIMM going bad in my machine randomly after 2.5 years of it being perfectly stable,” he wrote. “Go figure. Verified first by booting an old kernel, and then with memtest86+ overnight.”

Torvalds appears to have been tracking delivery of the new DIMMs as he reported replacement memory was “out for delivery” and predicted it should arrive later on Sunday evening….

His post also mentions that his main PC was set up for error correction code memory (ECC memory), but “during the early days of COVID when there wasn’t any ECC memory available at any sane prices. And then I never got around to fixing it, until I had to detect errors the hard way.”

“I absolutely *detest* the crazy industry politics and bad vendors that have made ECC memory so ‘special’,” he added.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Bad DIMM on Linus Torvalds’ Desktop System Move Kernel Merges to His Laptop