Buy an Xbox Series S and Amazon will give you $40 credit on Cyber Monday

If you’ve been waiting for the best possible deal on an Xbox Series S console, today is the day. For Cyber Monday, Amazon is offering a $60 discount (20 percent) plus a $40 coupon that can be applied to future purchases. That effectively gives you a $100 discount (33 percent) off the regular $300 price for today only — a great deal on a very good console. 

Buy Xbox Series S at Amazon – $240 (with $40 credit)

When the Series S came out, we called it the “next-gen starter pack” and gave it a solid 85 score. Even though it doesn’t support gameplay in 4K, it plays incredibly smoothly and has a svelte look that will fit into any decor. Thanks to the FPS boost technology added to the Series S and X, older games, including many made for Xbox One, will look and perform better with faster frame rates.

Unlike the Series X, the Series S only plays digital titles, with no slot to insert physical game media. It’s a great option if you have an Xbox Game Pass membership, though, which costs $10 per month for the Console tier, and $15 per month for the Ultimate tier. Either level unlocks a library with hundreds of game to download and play, while also granting discounts to many titles you might want to buy outright.

Another caveat is that the Series S has less SSD storage, with 512GB on-board compared to the 1TB for the Series X. If you like to keep plenty of titles on hand, you’ll either need to shuffle them between the main disk and USB-C storage, or purchase Seagate’s $200 expansion card. All told, though, it’s a great option for casual console gamers, particularly considering all the backward-compatible Game Pass games — just keep in mind that the sale ends today. 



Source: Engadget – Buy an Xbox Series S and Amazon will give you credit on Cyber Monday

OneXPlayer Sensor/Fan Support Extended To More Models With Its Linux 6.2 Introduction

One of the new hardware drivers set to be introduced in the upcoming Linux 6.2 kernel cycle is the OneXPlayer sensor driver for supporting hardware monitoring on the x86_64-based handheld gaming devices. While OneXPlayer devices ship with Windows by default, Linux is becoming an increasingly sought after target particularly with prospects for running SteamOS…

Source: Phoronix – OneXPlayer Sensor/Fan Support Extended To More Models With Its Linux 6.2 Introduction

OpenRGB 0.8 Comes As Big Update To This Open-Source, Cross-Vendor RGB Lighting Software

OpenRGB 0.8 was released on Sunday night as this project’s largest release ever and coming after nearly one year in development. OpenRGB as a reminder is the open-source, cross-vendor and cross-platform software for RGB lighting control across many different devices from GPUs and motherboards to keyboards and other lighted peripherals…

Source: Phoronix – OpenRGB 0.8 Comes As Big Update To This Open-Source, Cross-Vendor RGB Lighting Software

AMD "Mayan Morgana" Reference Motherboard Added To Coreboot

Back in October the open-source Coreboot firmware project began seeing patches for new AMD SoCs codenamed “Morgana” and “Glinda”. That work has continued and over the weekend the “Mayan Morgana” was merged as the reference motherboard for the Morgana SoC…

Source: Phoronix – AMD “Mayan Morgana” Reference Motherboard Added To Coreboot

Twitter data leak exposes over 5.4 million accounts

Earlier this year, Twitter confirmed that the private user data for 5.4 million users was stolen due to an API vulnerability, but the company said it had “no evidence” that it was exploited. Now, all of those accounts have been exposed on a hacker form, BleepingComputer has reported. On top of that, an additional 1.4 million Twitter profiles for suspended users was reportedly shared privately, and an even larger data dump with the data of “tens of millions” of other users may have come from the same vulnerability.

The owner of hacking forum called Breached told BleepingComputer that it was responsible for exploiting the weakness (originally obtained from another hacker called “Devil”) and dumping the user records. It said that it also obtained 1.4 million Twitter profiles for suspended accounts, obtained via another API, but only shared those privately among a few individuals.

On top of all that, security expert Chad Loder has revealed that tens of millions more Twitter records may have been collected using the same API. Once again, data collected may include private phone numbers along with public information. Loder posted a redacted sample on Mastodon, as he was banned on Twitter several days ago for unknown reasons. It could contain over 17 million records, BleepingComputer was told.

The breaches leaked users’ private phone numbers and email addresses, which could be used for phishing and other scams. That information could also be exploited to uncover identities from private Twitter accounts. As usual, be very wary of any suspicious emails or texts claiming to come from Twitter — and if you’re thinking about using two-factor authentication, now would be a good time.  



Source: Engadget – Twitter data leak exposes over 5.4 million accounts

Cheeky New Book Identifies 26 Lines of Code That Changed the World

Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland writes: A new book identifies “26 Lines of Code That Changed the World.” But its cheeky title also incorporates a comment from Unix’s source code — “You are Not Expected to Understand This”. From a new interview with the book’s editor:

With chapter titles like “Wear this code, go to jail” and “the code that launched a million cat videos,” each chapter offers appreciations for programmers, gathering up stories about not just their famous lives but their sometimes infamous works. (In Chapter 10 — “The Accidental Felon” — journalist Katie Hafner reveals whatever happened to that Harvard undergraduate who inadvertently created one of the first malware programs in 1988…) The book quickly jumps from milestones like the Jacquard Loom and the invention of COBOL to bitcoin and our thought-provoking present, acknowledging both the code that guided the Apollo 11 moon landing and the code behind the 1962 videogame Spacewar. The Smithsonian Institution’s director for their Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation writes in Chapter 4 that the game “symbolized a shift from computing being in the hands of priest-like technicians operating massive computers to enthusiasts programming and hacking, sometimes for the sheer joy of it.”

I contributed chapter 9, about a 1975 comment in some Unix code that became “an accidental icon” commemorating a “momentary glow of humanity in a world of unforgiving logic.” This chapter provided the book with its title. (And I’m also responsible for the book’s index entry for “Linux, expletives in source code of”.) In a preface, the book’s editor describes the book’s 29 different authors as “technologists, historians, journalists, academics, and sometimes the coders themselves,” explaining “how code works — or how, sometimes, it doesn’t work — owing in no small way to the people behind it.”

“I’ve been really interested over the past several years to watch the power of the tech activists and tech labor movements,” the editor says in this interview. “I think they’ve shown really immense power to affect change, and power to say, ‘I’m not going to work on something that doesn’t align with what I want for the future.’ That’s really something to admire.
“But of course, people are up against really big forces….”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Cheeky New Book Identifies 26 Lines of Code That Changed the World

‘Slow Horses’ settles into a familiar, but welcome, groove

Slow Horses was something of a slow-burning surprise when its first season launched back in April. It was yet another Apple TV hit whose marketing hadn’t done well enough to connect with audiences, relying instead on word of mouth. What viewers found, however, was a low-stakes spy drama with the sort of pulpy, throwback thrills that you rarely see in our more self-serious age. Mixed with a shot or two of black comedy, and it made for a surprisingly gripping package I felt compelled to rave about back in April.

The show’s second season, which returns to Apple TV+ on December 2nd, carries on in that vein, albeit with less of the show’s trademark humor. It focuses, once again, on the staff members of Slough House, the closest thing MI5 has to purgatory for disgraced intelligence officers. Led by the “colorful” Jackson Lamb, the Slow Horses are often left doing administrative donkeywork nobody else thinks is worth doing. Of course, you wouldn’t have a series if the misfits weren’t frequently embroiled in the grander machinations of the intelligence community.

Season Two is based on Dead Lions, the second in Herron’s series of Slough House novels, and focuses on Lamb’s investigation of the death of a former officer. Apple’s usual ban on spoilers means that, of the plot, I can only say that it features “long-buried Cold War secrets” which “threaten to bring carnage to the streets of London.” Oh, and that “when a liaison with Russian villains takes a fatal turn, our hapless heroes must overcome their individual failings and raise their spy game in a race to prevent a catastrophic incident.”

We pick up shortly after the first season, with the Horses frustrated that their heroics haven’t led to better things. Instead, the team has been bolstered with Shirley Dander (Aimee-Ffion Edwards) and Marcus Longridge (Kadiff Kirwan) and put back on regular duties. That has, understandably, left River Cartwright (Jack Lowden) in something of a funk. But when a former agent is found dead on a bus, it suddenly piques Jackson Lamb’s (Gary Oldman) interest enough to return to work in the field.

Given that the first two six-episode seasons were shot in a single run, it’s no surprise that the show expects you to recall much of what happened in the first run. But, despite the continuous production, there’s a big tonal shift here, with the show getting darker and dropping some of its trademark wit and humor. And, I’ll be honest, the running gag about Jackson Lamb’s lack of personal hygiene and non-stop farting starts to get a bit thin by the end.

Fans of the books will already know why the series takes a darker turn, although I found some of the twists were initially a bit lightweight. Maybe years of watching series where nothing we see can be believed meant I was always waiting for a non-existent second shoe to drop. None exist here in the Slow Horses universe, and when you see some beloved characters go, uh, to places you might not expect, be mindful that none of it is for show.

It’s not a show that you can watch with one eye on your phone, but it’s so briskly paced that if you blink, you might lose your place. I’d consider myself a close watcher of things, but even I found myself having to pause to work out which sinister Russian emigre was which. It doesn’t help that while you can see where all of the various plotlines are heading, their collision is a little predictable. But I’m nitpicking, and this isn’t the sort of show you need to unpick for hours on end on Reddit – just repeat to yourself it’s just a show, and you should really just relax.

And Slow Horses’ second season really belongs to Rosalind Eleazar (Guy) and Saskia Reeves (Standish), who are both given time and space to grow their characters. The former carries much of the major narrative this time around, while the latter again shows how much steel is buried underneath Standish’s downtrodden personae. But the show is democratic enough to give every character a grace note or two during the explosive, and gripping, finale.

Slow Horses season two will launch on Apple TV+ on Friday, December 2nd, with two new episodes, with subsequent episodes appearing every Friday through December 30th. A third and fourth season has already been greenlit.



Source: Engadget – ‘Slow Horses’ settles into a familiar, but welcome, groove

Houston Issues Boil Water Notice and Cancels School on Monday

Houston, Texas issued a boil water notice on Sunday night for over 2.2 million people after a power outage occurred at three water treatment facilities on Sunday morning. Residents of Houston should boil all water used for drinking, bathing, or even just brushing teeth, for at least three minutes, according to a tweet

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Houston Issues Boil Water Notice and Cancels School on Monday

Apple Hobbled Protesters' Tool in China Weeks Before Widespread Protests

“China’s control of the internet has become so strong that dissidents must cling to any crack in the so-called Great Firewall,” writes Qz.

But as anti-government protests sprung up on campuses and cities in China over the weekend, Qz reminds us that “the country’s most widespread show of public dissent in decades will have to manage without a crucial communication tool, because Apple restricted its use in China earlier this month.”

AirDrop, the file-sharing feature on iPhones and other Apple devices, has helped protestors in many authoritarian countries evade censorship. That’s because AirDrop relies on direct connections between phones, forming a local network of devices that don’t need the internet to communicate. People can opt into receiving AirDrops from anyone else with an iPhone nearby.

That changed on Nov. 9, when Apple released a new version of its mobile operating system, iOS 16.1.1, to customers worldwide. Rather than listing new features, as it often does, the company simply said, “This update includes bug fixes and security updates and is recommended for all users.” Hidden in the update was a change that only applies to iPhones sold in mainland China: AirDrop can only be set to receive messages from everyone for 10 minutes, before switching off. There’s no longer a way to keep the “everyone” setting on permanently on Chinese iPhones.

The change, first noticed by Chinese readers of 9to5Mac, doesn’t apply anywhere else.

Apple didn’t respond to questions about the AirDrop change. It plans to make the “Everyone for 10 Minutes” feature a global standard next year, according to Bloomberg.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Apple Hobbled Protesters’ Tool in China Weeks Before Widespread Protests

My comprehensive guide to the best Black Friday & Cyber Monday Linux deals

Deals season is here, and it’s an opportunity for Linux users (I’m certainly one of them) to power up their Linux experience by purchasing new Linux hardware or services at discounted prices. What I am trying to do in this article is to build a comprehensive guide to the best Linux deals for Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

Source: LXer – My comprehensive guide to the best Black Friday & Cyber Monday Linux deals

US Goverment Investigating Real-Estate Tech Company Accused of Helping Landlords Collude

The anti-trust division of America’s Department of Justice “has reportedly opened up an investigation into RealPage, the real estate technology company accused of contributing to higher-than-normal rent prices,” reports the Verge.

ProPublica writes that the investigation explores “whether rent-setting software made by a Texas-based real estate tech company is facilitating collusion among landlords, according to a source with knowledge of the matter.”
*The inquiry is being launched as questions have arisen about a 2017 merger between RealPage and its largest pricing competitor…. Congressional leaders have pushed for an investigation into RealPage in three letters to the DOJ and the Federal Trade Commission, which were sent after a ProPublica report on the software’s use in mid-October.

The letters raised concerns that RealPage’s pricing software could be pushing rents above competitive levels and allowing big landlords to coordinate their pricing in violation of federal antitrust laws. “We are concerned that the use of this rate setting software essentially amounts to a cartel to artificially inflate rental rates in multifamily residential buildings,” three senators said in a letter in early November. They included Sen. Amy Klobuchar, the Minnesota Democrat who chairs the Senate Subcommittee on Competition Policy, Antitrust and Consumer Rights….

In addition to the letters from congressional lawmakers, renters have filed three lawsuits in federal court in Seattle and San Diego since mid-October, alleging RealPage and a slew of large landlords are engaging in anticompetitive behavior through the company’s software.
They note Capital Forum’s report with additional details — but the Verge nicely summarizes the issue:
ProPublica’s report states that the algorithm’s design has “raised questions among real estate and legal experts about whether RealPage has birthed a new kind of cartel that allows the nation’s largest landlords to indirectly coordinate pricing, potentially in violation of federal law.” These experts have also raised concerns with the RealPage user group, an online forum that lets apartment managers who use the service communicate — and potentially coordinate — with one another.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – US Goverment Investigating Real-Estate Tech Company Accused of Helping Landlords Collude

IoT Gateway equipped with i.MX8M Plus processor and dual GbE ports

Earlier this month, AAEON released an IoT Gateway targeting industrial edge gateway applications, Industry 4.0 and machine learning applications. The SRG-IMX8P is equipped with two GbE ports, 2x CAN-FD, 2x RS232/422/485 and support for wireless connectivity. The product page lists the i.MX8M Plus from NXP as the RISC processor of the SRG-IMX8P IoT Gateway. NXP […]

Source: LXer – IoT Gateway equipped with i.MX8M Plus processor and dual GbE ports

Amouranth Streamed 'More Overwatch Than Hot Tub' Last Month, Says 'Life Is Better'

Over a month after announcing that she was splitting from her husband following accusations of an abusive relationship, streamer Kaitlyn “Amouranth” Siragusa has taken to Twitter to reveal some news (and statistics) about how things have been going in the weeks since.

Read more…



Source: Kotaku – Amouranth Streamed ‘More Overwatch Than Hot Tub’ Last Month, Says ‘Life Is Better’

Is Everyone Still Getting Remote Work Wrong?

ZDNet asks: why is everyone getting remote working wrong?

Researchers at tech analyst Gartner believe a rigid requirement to return to offices is a mistake. But the researchers also believe so-called “hybrid” schedules often are also flawed:

“Most of those work models delivered below-average outcomes,” the research found, and the common factor was some kind of rigid on-site requirement. Much more successful was a “hybrid-flexible” set-up offering leaders and employees the opportunity to choose where they work from. But most successful by far were workplaces that offered this flexibility and also included elements of “intentional collaboration and empathy-based management”, where bosses don’t force staff to come to the office just to keep an eye on them.

How the working week is organized matters: get it right, and staff are more likely to want to stay, and more likely to perform well. Autonomy also reduces fatigue, which in turn means workers are likely to sustain good performance over time.
ZDNet also tested virtual reality meetings — concluding they’re “still undeniably somewhat clunky and can make you feel a bit awkward.”

But at the same time, “I was also surprised by how much benefit they could potentially deliver.”

Sure, a meeting with avatars that only look a bit like your colleagues, in a fantasy meeting room that wouldn’t look out of place in a Bond villain’s lair does feel a bit ridiculous. But it also — and this was the revelation to me — adds a level of engagement that you just don’t get from a video meeting of colleagues occupying flat tiles on a screen. It provides a sense of being there (wherever ‘there’ was) that adds meaning beyond what you get from staring into a monitor.

I’m not saying I want to have every meeting in VR from now on: far from it. But we have to see the present state of hybrid and remote working as just the current state of the art, and to keep experimenting, and thinking, about the way we work.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Is Everyone Still Getting Remote Work Wrong?

Kernel prepatch 6.1-rc7

The 6.1-rc7 kernel prepatch has been
released for testing.

There is really nothing here that makes me at all worried, except
that it’s just a bit more than I’m comfortable with. It should just
have slowed down more by now.

As a result, I’m now pretty sure that this is going to be one of
those “we’ll have an extra week and I’ll make an rc8”
releases. Which then in turn means that now the next merge window
will be solidly in the holiday season.



Source: LWN.net – Kernel prepatch 6.1-rc7

Ferrari’s Vision hybrid race car arrives in ‘Gran Turismo 7’ on December 23rd

Since 2013, Gran Turismo’s Vision project has seen some of the world’s largest automakers, including Jaguar and Mercedes-Benz, imagine what their cars could look like without real-world constraints. Over the weekend, GT series developer Polyphony Digital announced the latest addition to the Vision stable, an entry from Ferrari, would arrive in Gran Turismo 7 on December 23rd.

Like its predecessors, the Ferrari Vision Gran Turismo features capabilities that would put any production vehicle to shame. Ferrari outfitted the concept car with “a more extreme version” of the V6 engine found on the 499P hypercar the automaker plans to field at next year’s Le Mans endurance race. In-game, the single-seat hybrid will produce more than 1,000 horsepower, with three electric motors providing additional power.

“We wanted to create a vision of the future designed without constraint, but born from Ferrari’s unrivalled understanding of engineering, aerodynamics and future technologies, and deliver it into the digital world for a whole new audience to experience,” said Ferrari Design Director Flavio Manzoni. Ferrari fans should keep their eyes out for an in-game quiz. Completing it before anyone else will grant early access to the Ferrari Vision Gran Turismo.



Source: Engadget – Ferrari’s Vision hybrid race car arrives in ‘Gran Turismo 7’ on December 23rd

Workers at Amazon's Largest Air Hub in the World Push for a Union

“Amazon workers at the air hub outside the Cincinnati Northern Kentucky international airport, Amazon’s largest air hub in the world, are pushing to organize a union,” reports the Guardian, “in the latest effort to mobilize workers at the tech company.”

Workers say they are dissatisfied with annual wage increases this year. About 400 of them have signed a petition to reinstate a premium hourly pay for Amazon’s peak season that hasn’t been enacted at the site yet. Their main demands also include a $30 an hour starting wage, 180 hours of paid time off and union representation at disciplinary hearings….

About 4,500 workers are employed at the expanding air hub in Kentucky. Those organizing have already filed two unfair labor practice charges over Amazon’s response to the unionization effort, which has included anti-union talking points on televisions and its communications system for employees that characterize the effort as a third-party scheme….

Organizing efforts at Amazon have spread beyond the JFK8 Staten Island, New York, warehouse, where workers won the first union election at an Amazon site in the US in April 2022. But they have yet to repeat the success…. Employees at an Amazon warehouse outside Raleigh, North Carolina, are now collecting union authorization signatures in hopes of filing for an election by this summer…. At other Amazon warehouses in Georgia, Minnesota, Illinois and California, workers have organized strikes and petitions to push the company to increase wages and improve working conditions.

Steven Kelley, a learning ambassador at the Kentucky air hub, explained that most workers were paid less than $20 an hour. He said the pay wasn’t commensurate with the dangerous work the workers perform, in a location where employee turnover was about 150%, with a constant training of workers who wind up quitting. He also said the disciplinary procedures at Amazon weren’t transparent or communicated well enough…. He explained that workers weren’t paid enough to live without roommates and made less than other workers in transportation and logistics because they were classified as retail employees.
One worker at the Kentucy air hub complained to the Guardian, “We’re the lifeblood of the company, not corporate, not upper management. We’re actually the ones who are sorting the freight, and loading the freight.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Workers at Amazon’s Largest Air Hub in the World Push for a Union