Fired SpaceX Employees Made a List of Elon Musk's 25 Worst Tweets

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s tweets are once again being used in as evidence in a case filed with federal regulators. This time, the parties citing his tweets are former SpaceX employees, who are claiming that the company fired them in retaliation for circulating an open letter criticizing Musk’s behavior and his tweets.

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Source: Gizmodo – Fired SpaceX Employees Made a List of Elon Musk’s 25 Worst Tweets

21 Things I Wish I Knew Before Playing Warzone 2.0

Call of Duty’s battle royale mode, Warzone, is back. Whether you’re a battle royale vet or not, there are a number of things that make this mode unique, even compared to CoD’s last go at the genre. Here are a good chunk of tips to keep yourself and your crew alive out there in Al Mazrah, the latest CoD battle royale…

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Source: Kotaku – 21 Things I Wish I Knew Before Playing Warzone 2.0

Samsung's 2022 Frame TVs are cheaper than ever for Black Friday

It’s a good time to buy a TV that doubles as an art installation. Amazon is selling Samsung’s 2022 Frame TVs at their best prices to date for Black Friday. All models are on sale, but the highlights are a 55-inch model for $998 (normally $1,498) and a 65-inch variant for $1,533 (regularly $1,998). Samsung is matching these prices if you’d prefer to buy directly. You’ll need to pay extra if you want a fancier bezel, but the savings could make that easier to justify.

The 2022 version of the Frame is, in some ways, the set you were expecting when Samsung introduced the lineup. Thanks to a matte screen finish, the always-on art mode is more convincing than with previous models — it almost looks like a canvas painting that just happens to be a TV. This is also a fully up-to-date device with 4K, HDR and creature comforts like voice assistant support (both Alexa and Google Assistant) and a game mode. You won’t sacrifice much just to have a conversation piece in your living room.

There are a few considerations. You won’t get Samsung’s absolute best image quality, so you may want to look to high-end conventional TVs like the mini LED-based QN85B if you don’t need the artwork. Also, you’ll typically need to pay for either an Art Store subscription or individual works if you want masterpieces from the likes of Da Vinci, Van Gogh and Vermeer. The Frame is a strong value at these prices, though, and makes plenty of sense if you were already planning to wall-mount your screen.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.



Source: Engadget – Samsung’s 2022 Frame TVs are cheaper than ever for Black Friday

How a #MeToo Facebook Post Is Testing the Limits of SCOTUS’ 60-Year-Old Defamation Decision

Defamation, an umbrella term encompassing both libel and slander, is a legal doctrine that allows a plaintiff to recover damages if the defendant makes a false statement about them to others, harming their reputation and esteem in the community. However, different rules apply when the statements involve public figures…

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Source: Gizmodo – How a #MeToo Facebook Post Is Testing the Limits of SCOTUS’ 60-Year-Old Defamation Decision

A Broken Twitter Means Broken Disaster Response

As Twitter goes through an upheaval and rumors of its potential demise—or likely malfunction—spread, millions of people are starting to imagine a world without Twitter. While many folks may think the platform has nothing to do with them, there are countless systems that have drastically changed in the 16 years since…

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Source: Gizmodo – A Broken Twitter Means Broken Disaster Response

Don't Miss These USPS Holiday Shipping Deadlines

With the 2022 holiday season kicking off next week with Thanksgiving, time is running out to send any packages, cards, and other mail that you want to arrive by Christmas (December 25), the end of Hanukkah (which runs from December 18—26), or the beginning of Kwanzaa (December 26—January 1).

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Source: LifeHacker – Don’t Miss These USPS Holiday Shipping Deadlines

Binance has a plan to save crypto—if it’s not too late

Binance has a plan to save crypto—if it’s not too late

Enlarge (credit: da kuk/Getty Images)

Few were prepared for the dramatic collapse of crypto exchange FTX on November 11. The incident has left hundreds of thousands of customers without access to their funds, and the ripple effects have wiped billions of dollars from the market, as well as casting doubt over the integrity of other crypto companies.

FTX was so deeply embedded in the cryptosphere that many firms (including crypto lenders Genesis and BlockFi) have spent the last week hurriedly calculating their own financial exposure to the collapse, in fear they may be dragged down in the swell. Others, however, have sensed opportunity in the crisis and are readying plans to prevent further contagion. “We actually think this is a very good cleansing period,” said Changpeng Zhao, CEO of Binance, during a Twitter Spaces Q&A earlier this week. “The weak projects are gone, and the industry is much healthier.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Binance has a plan to save crypto—if it’s not too late

Competition Between Respiratory Viruses May Hold Off a 'Tripledemic' This Winter

sciencehabit shares a report from Science Magazine: Triple threat. Tripledemic. A viral perfect storm. These frightening phrases have dominated recent headlines as some health officials, clinicians, and scientists forecast that SARS-CoV-2, influenza, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) could surge at the same time in Northern Hemisphere locales that have relaxed masking, social distancing, and other COVID-19 precautions. But a growing body of epidemiological and laboratory evidence offers some reassurance: SARS-CoV-2 and other respiratory viruses often “interfere” with each other. Although waves of each virus may stress emergency rooms and intensive care units, the small clique of researchers who study these viral collisions say there is little chance the trio will peak together and collectively crash hospital systems the way COVID-19 did at the pandemic’s start.

“Flu and other respiratory viruses and SARS-CoV-2 just don’t get along very well together,” says virologist Richard Webby, an influenza researcher at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. “It’s unlikely that they will circulate widely at the same time.” “One virus tends to bully the others,” adds epidemiologist Ben Cowling at the University of Hong Kong School of Public Health. During the surge of the highly transmissible Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 in Hong Kong in March, Cowling found that other respiratory viruses “disappeared … and they came back again in April.” When a respiratory virus sweeps through a community, interferons can broadly raise the body’s defenses and temporarily erect a populationwide immune barrier against subsequent viruses that target the respiratory system. “Basically, every virus triggers the interferon response to some extent, and every virus is susceptible to it,” says immunologist Ellen Foxman at Yale University, who has been exploring interference between SARS-CoV-2 and other viruses in a laboratory model of the human airway. Rhinoviruses, which cause common colds, can trip up influenza A (the most prevalent flu virus). RSV can bump rhinoviruses and human metapneumoviruses. Influenza A can thwart its distant cousin influenza B. “There are a lot of major health implications from viral interference,” says Guy Boivin, a virologist at Laval University who co-authored a review (PDF) on viral interference earlier this year.

Now, viral interference researchers are closely watching the newest respiratory virus to circle the globe. “What interactions could SARS-CoV-2 have with other viruses?” Murcia asks. “To this day, there are no robust epidemiological data.” For one thing, the widespread social distancing and mask wearing in many countries meant there was little chance to see interference in action. “There was almost no circulation of other respiratory viruses during the first 3 years of the pandemic,” Boivin says. Also, SARS-CoV-2 has many defenses against interferons, including preventing their production, which might affect its interactions with other viruses. Still, Foxman has published evidence that, in her organoid model, rhinovirus can interfere with SARS-CoV-2. And Boivin’s team has reported (PDF) that influenza A and SARS-CoV-2 each can block the other in cell studies.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Competition Between Respiratory Viruses May Hold Off a ‘Tripledemic’ This Winter

Linux 6.2 Will No Longer Treat Intel Arc Graphics As Experimental

A final batch of drm-intel-next feature patches were submitted on Friday to complement the drm-intel-gt-next patches. Most exciting with this last minute PR for Linux 6.2 is the DG2/Alchemist discrete GPU support no longer being treated as experimental…

Source: Phoronix – Linux 6.2 Will No Longer Treat Intel Arc Graphics As Experimental

The road to low-carbon concrete

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Source: Ars Technica – The road to low-carbon concrete

Micron Releases HSE 3.0 Open-Source Storage Engine

In early 2020 the software engineers at Micron announced an open-source storage engine designed for SSDs and persistent memory. The storage engine prided itself on being a speedy key-value store database and there was also a MongoDB-based implementation. Last year HSE 2.0 debuted and the updated storage engine no longer relied on modifications to the Linux kernel and now strictly a user-space based solution. This week the Micron engineers are celebrating HSE 3.0 as their latest work on this open-source storage engine…

Source: Phoronix – Micron Releases HSE 3.0 Open-Source Storage Engine

Make the most of your time with the world’s best value robot vacuum

robot vacuum

Life is busy for today’s solo professionals, couples and families – and it’s getting busier. Economic changes and the increasing pace of life leave us little time for ourselves, and we don’t want to spend that precious time on household chores. This is why people are increasingly turning towards home automation or smart homes.

When we think of home automation, we think of lights, air conditioning, and security. But now it’s possible to automate the cleaning of your home, with the L11 Pro from Verefa. So your house can not only look beautiful at all hours but also smell and feel wonderful.

For 20 years, we’ve been able to switch on a smart vacuum to simply clean our floor, but the L11 Pro takes house-cleaning automation to a whole new level. The name Verefa comes from the Latin “fovere familia”, or “comfortable home”. And through its products, Verefa aims to make comfortable, automated homes a reality.

The L11 Pro cleans your house all by itself – including self-emptying – for up to 70 days (11 weeks). It uses Artificial Intelligence (AI) and LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) to know exactly where it is in your home and to recognize objects and surfaces in the environment around it.

The technology, called Spatial AI+, models your room in real-time. Most high-end automated vacuums use vision navigation to help navigate, but most homeowners don’t realise this poses a security and privacy risk. Instead, the L11 Pro protects your privacy with the use of LIDAR. LIDAR SLAM uses light detection and ranging to help navigate around your home to millimeter level accuracy, enabling more precise mapping and maximum coverage.

Who knows … the L11 Pro might end up knowing your floor space better than you do.

Once the cleaning is done, your L11 Pro returns to its home base unit, which also serves as a station for the cleaner to automatically empty dust and dirt collected during vacuuming. The L11 Pro’s disposable dust bags pull out easily for quick disposal, with no need to get your hands dirty. 

The L11 Pro also boasts stronger suction (2700Pa) than any competitor, and a robust 4 liters of capacity, outdoing most competitors. The L11 Pro lasts longer between charges – 160 hours – compared with most competitors.

Most times, the Artificial Intelligence will take control when it’s time to vacuum, but you can also manually control your L11 Pro using the Verefa Life App on your smartphone, or via voice assistants like Alexa or Google Assistant. The L11 Pro is one of the few vacuums available on both voice assistant smart home platforms. L11 Pro is designed for carpet cleaning, and it just loves pet hair – a common bugbear of pet-owning homeowners.

You might think that such a superior set of features would warrant a much higher price, but L11 Pro beats competitors such as Roomba and Shark.

Don’t just settle for automated lighting and security; make your living space continuously clean without lifting a finger (for up to 70 days, anyway). Automate your comfortable home with the Verefa L11 Pro.

Order the Verefa L11 Pro on Verefa Official Store



Source: TG Daily – Make the most of your time with the world’s best value robot vacuum

How to rebase to Fedora Linux 37 on Silverblue

Fedora Silverblue is an operating system for your desktop built on Fedora Linux. It’s excellent for daily use, development, and container-based workflows. It offers numerous advantages such as being able to roll back in case of any problems. If you want to update or rebase to Fedora Linux 37 on your Fedora Silverblue system (these instructions are similar for […]

Source: LXer – How to rebase to Fedora Linux 37 on Silverblue

Serpent OS Infrastructure & Tooling Almost Completed

Back during the summer was news that Ikey Doherty was going to work full-time on Serpent OS, a new Linux distribution he started. Ikey Doherty as a reminder previously created the Solus Linux distribution, worked for Intel on Clear Linux, and has other software accomplishments to his name. It’s been a quiet few months for Serpent OS but it turns out they’ve been busy establishing their build infrastructure and tooling…

Source: Phoronix – Serpent OS Infrastructure & Tooling Almost Completed