Python is an open-source and object-oriented interpreted programming language. Anaconda is a Python, R, Data Science, and machine learning platform and used as a package manager. It comes with 1,500+ open source packages.
Source: LXer – How to Install Anaconda Python Distribution on Debian 11
Monthly Archives: February 2023
The Only Aldi Quarter Hack You'll Ever Need

Aldi’s coin-hungry shopping carts are iconic. Frequent shoppers often have a designated “Aldi quarter” in their car or in a special pocket, because the store requires a quarter to release each cart from the corral. (You get the quarter back when you return the cart.)
Source: LifeHacker – The Only Aldi Quarter Hack You’ll Ever Need
OnePlus 11 Concept Phone Unveiled With Active CryFlux Cooling To Tackle Gaming Temps
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Mobile World Congress kicks off today and runs through Thursday, which means we can expect a barrage of smartphone reveals and related technologies throughout the week. One of the, *ahem* cooler announcements is the OnePlus 11 Concept with a supposedly game-changing Active CryoFlux liquid cooling scheme to lower temps for various benefits.
The
Source: Hot Hardware – OnePlus 11 Concept Phone Unveiled With Active CryFlux Cooling To Tackle Gaming Temps
Healing Dice From Donate Life America Encourages Real-Life Heroism

Donate Life America, the nonprofit that works to maintain the National Donate Life Registry, has decided to create a set of polyhedral dice that symbolize the eight organs and tissues that can be donated in order to save another person’s life. The dice were produced by Crux Scenica in Richmond, Virginia, who crafted…
Source: Gizmodo – Healing Dice From Donate Life America Encourages Real-Life Heroism
Android Wear OS Is Bringing These Exciting Features To Smartwatches
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Google’s Wear OS is getting a couple of relatively solid improvements this quarter that could bring some much-needed fizz to your Wear OS wearable.
At MWC 2023 in Barcelona, Google is making it presence known by announcing a couple of QOL features to Wear OS (as well as for Android). These improvements should give Pixel Watch and Wear OS
Source: Hot Hardware – Android Wear OS Is Bringing These Exciting Features To Smartwatches
Linux is not exactly “ready to run” on Apple silicon, but give it time
Enlarge / Everything Asahi Linux’s four-person team has done to make Linux work on Apple’s M-series chips is remarkable, but “ready to run” is a stretch. (credit: Apple/Asahi Linux)
It’s an odd thing to see the leaders of an impressive open source project ask the press and their followers to please calm down and stop celebrating their accomplishments.
But that’s the situation the Asahi Linux team finds itself in after many reports last week that the recently issued Linux 6.2 kernel made Linux “ready to run” on Apple’s M-series hardware. It is true that upstream support for Apple’s M1 chips is present in 6.2 and that the 6.2 kernel will gradually make its way into many popular distributions, including Ubuntu and Fedora. Work on Apple’s integrated GPU by the four-person Asahi core team has come remarkably far. And founder Linus Torvalds himself is particularly eager to see Linux running on his favorite portable hardware, going so far as to issue a kernel in August 2022 from an M2 MacBook Air.
But the builders of the one Linux system that runs pretty well on Apple silicon are asking everybody to please just give it a moment.
Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments
Source: Ars Technica – Linux is not exactly “ready to run” on Apple silicon, but give it time
Elon Musk Says Media Is 'Racist Against Whites & Asians' After Dilbert Fallout

Twitter CEO Elon Musk voiced his outspoken support for cartoonist Scott Adams who received criticism for posting a racist rant on YouTube last week. Adams has since been fired from news outlets after calling Black people a “hate group” adding, “I don’t want to have anything to do with them.”
Source: Gizmodo – Elon Musk Says Media Is ‘Racist Against Whites & Asians’ After Dilbert Fallout
Anker Soundcore noise-canceling headphones are up to 33 percent off right now
Apart from making a few of our favorite chargers and power banks, Anker also sells some of the better values among wireless headphones through its Soundcore brand. If you’ve been looking to pick up a competent set of noise-canceling headphones for less than $100, a couple of those standouts are currently on sale, with the Soundcore Life Q30 discounted to $60 and the Soundcore Space Q45 down to $100. For the Life Q30, that’s not quite an all-time low, but it’s still $20 off the pair’s typical going rate. The Space Q45 usually retails for $150; this deal matches the lowest price we’ve seen.
To be clear, neither pair here can match the active noise cancellation (ANC), build quality, call quality, sound and/or overall feature set of the top picks in our best wireless headphones guide, such as the Sony WH-1000XM5 or Bose QuietComfort 45. But if you can’t drop $350 or so on a new set of headphones, they can get you much of the way there at a far lower cost.
Both pairs offer a comfortable fit that doesn’t clamp too tight on the head and offers ample padding. Both have superb battery life, lasting between 40 and 50 hours at moderate volumes. Both can connect to two devices simultaneously, and both come with a 3.5mm cable for wired listening, though only the Space Q45 can still use ANC when while wired. The two sets also include a transparency mode, which is serviceable, though not as clean as what you can get on pricier alternatives. And while the ANC on each pair isn’t top-of-the-line, it’s still good, particularly when it comes to muting bass-range noises like a plane or bus engine.
Sound quality is where the Life Q30 and Space Q45 might require some tweaking. Both headphones offer a strongly v-shaped profile out of the box, so their default sound is particularly boosted in the bass and highest parts of the treble. The Life Q30’s low-end is especially boomy. Some may like this more excited sound, but it’s not exactly natural. With either headphone, you may want to adjust the sound through Anker’s companion app, which offers a graphic EQ tool and a few alternative sound profile presets. Just note that, like many cheaper ANC headphones, the signature will sound slightly different depending on what ambient sound mode you use.
If you can afford the Space Q45, it’s the better headphone of the two. Its design feels a bit less flimsy (though both pairs are mostly plastic), and it has an adaptive ANC mode that can automatically adjust the headphone’s ANC strength based on your surroundings. The Life Q30, on the other hand, just offers three preset ANC levels. For Android users, the Space Q45 also supports the higher-quality LDAC audio codec. That said, finding any good ANC headphones for less than $100 is difficult; at these deal prices, both the Life Q30 and Space Q45 perform well enough to offer good value.
Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.
Source: Engadget – Anker Soundcore noise-canceling headphones are up to 33 percent off right now
How to Install Neofetch on Linux Mint 21 or 20
Learn how to install Neofetch on Linux Mint 21 or 20 to add a unique and customizable display of your system specs. Use the command-line terminal for easy installation.
The post How to Install Neofetch on Linux Mint 21 or 20 appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – How to Install Neofetch on Linux Mint 21 or 20
America's Chip Moonshot Should Take Aim At Its Education System
An anonymous reader shares a report: In the decade following US President John F Kennedy’s 1961 announcement of America’s mission to put a man on the moon, the number of physical science PhDs tripled, and that of engineering PhDs quadrupled. Now, the country is embarking on a moonshot to rebuild the semiconductor fabrication industry. Corporations that want a cut of the $39bn in manufacturing incentives within the Chips and Science Act programme can start filing their applications for subsidies on Tuesday. In order to get them, they’ll have to show that they are contributing to something that may be even more difficult than putting a man in space: building a 21st-century workforce. America has plenty of four-year graduates with crushing debt (the national average for federal loan debts is more than $37,000 a student) and underwhelming job prospects. It also has plenty of college dropouts and young people with high-school degrees who are trying to make ends meet through minimum-wage jobs supplemented by gig work.
What it lacks are the machinists, carpenters, contractors and technicians who will build the new fabrication facilities. It also needs to triple the number of college graduates in semiconductor-related fields, such as engineering, over the next decade, according to commerce secretary Gina Raimondo. Raimondo, who is well on her way to becoming the industrial strategy tsar of the administration, gave a speech to this effect earlier this month. In it, she underscored not only the need to rebuild chip manufacturing in a world in which the US and China will lead separate tech ecosystems, but also to ensure that there are enough domestic workers to do so. “If you talk to the CEOs of companies like TSMC and Samsung [both of which are launching fabs in the US], they are worried about finding these people here,” Raimondo told me. She cites workforce development — alongside scale and transparency — as major hurdles that must be overcome to meet the administration’s goals.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – America’s Chip Moonshot Should Take Aim At Its Education System
How to Start Sexting With Someone

Sexting is a great tool to use when it comes to spicing up your relationship. Whether you’ve been coupled up for a while or just getting to know someone, sexting can be the perfect foreplay. But when is a good time to initiate sexting, and should you ask the other person first if it’s OK to sext? What are some things…
Source: LifeHacker – How to Start Sexting With Someone
AMD Radeon RX 7900 Series Price Cuts Arrive In The US, XT Now Below MSRP
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Chinese tech media headlines were grabbed over the weekend when some very steep double-digit percentage AMD Radeon RX 7000 series graphics card price cuts were observed. Happily, the RDNA 3 price cutting trend has already moved west, with US online tech retail giant Newegg offering a Radeon RX 7900 XT at $829. This updated Newegg price is
Source: Hot Hardware – AMD Radeon RX 7900 Series Price Cuts Arrive In The US, XT Now Below MSRP
A Linux-on-M1 update
The Asahi Linux project has posted an
update and reality check on the status of Linux support for Apple’s M1
hardware.
We are continuously upstreaming kernel features, and 6.2 notably
adds device trees and basic boot support for M1 Pro/Max/Ultra
machines.
However, there is still a long road before upstream kernels are
usable on laptops. There is no trackpad/keyboard support upstream
yet.While you can boot an upstream 6.2 kernel on desktops (M1 Mac Mini,
M1 Max/Ultra Mac Studio) and do useful things with it, that is only
the case for 16K page size kernel builds.No generic ARM64 distro ships 16K kernels today, to our knowledge.
Source: LWN.net – A Linux-on-M1 update
Pokémon Trading Card Game Classic Lets You Have A Holo Charizard Again

Ready to spend potentially a lot of money on a nostalgia-fueled trip down Pokémon Trading Card Game memory lane? A new “Classic” boxset was just announced on Monday that includes pre-made decks featuring Charizard and the rest of the gang in a sleek new table top package. Why? Because I, and probably tons of other old…
Source: Kotaku – Pokémon Trading Card Game Classic Lets You Have A Holo Charizard Again
'Pokémon Sleep' will finally arrive this summer
Almost four years after it was announced, Pokémon Sleep is finally on the way. During today’s Pokémon Presents event, it emerged that the game will arrive sometime this summer. It was originally supposed to debut in 2020.
Pokémon Sleep is a mobile game from Pokémon: Magikarp Jump developer Select Button that can track your sleep. It features Snorlax (of course) and Professor Neroli, a Pokémon sleep researcher. The idea is that you leave your phone next to you when you go to bed.
The app will analyze your sleep and categorize it into one of three types: dozing, snoozing and slumbering. Pokémon that tend to sleep in a similar fashion will gather around Snorlax. The more you play, the more likely you are to unlock rare sleep styles for various Pokémon. Droopy-eared Pikachu in particular looks extremely cute.
The Pokémon Company also provided an update on Pokémon Go Plus +, a physical device that connects to both Pokémon Sleep and Pokémon Go. For the former, you press the button when you go to bed and again when you wake up to track your sleep data, presumably instead of needing to have your phone next to you. There’s a built-in alarm, as well as a Pikachu voice that can sing lullabies.
While you’re out and about, you can use the disc-shaped Pokémon Go Plus + to automatically spin PokéStops and throw Poké Balls in Pokémon Go without even having to press the button on the device. Eventually, there will be a way to use your sleep data in Pokémon Go too.
Pokémon Go Plus + follows the original Pokémon Go Plus, which emerged in 2016, and the Poké Ball Plus. It will be available on July 14th and it costs $55, almost the same as a new mainline Pokémon game on Switch. When you link it to Pokémon Go, you’ll be able to find an adorable version of Snorlax wearing a nightcap when you’re out hunting Pokémon.
Source: Engadget – ‘Pokémon Sleep’ will finally arrive this summer
[$] Red-black trees for BPF programs
Most of the kernel’s code is written in C and intended to be run directly
on the underlying hardware. That situation is changing in a few ways,
though; one of those is the ability to write kernel code for the BPF
virtual machine. The 6.3 kernel release will include a new API making the red-black tree data structure available to BPF
programs. Beyond being an interesting feature in its own right, this new
API shows how BPF is bringing a different approach to kernel programming —
and to the C language in general.
Source: LWN.net – [$] Red-black trees for BPF programs
Stephen Spielberg Wants to Return to Horror

It’s a veritable bucket of horror movie blood, as They Listen, Thanksgiving, and the Exorcist reboot all add to their cast. The second season of The Santa Clauses expands its cast. Plus, what’s to come in The Flash, and a creepy new look at Yellowjackets’ return. Spoilers get!
Source: Gizmodo – Stephen Spielberg Wants to Return to Horror
Maybe You Should Try a Relationship With an Expiration Date

You meet someone while on vacation. Sparks fly. You know you’re not going to date forever, but you want to enjoy the time you have together: This is an example of expiration dating. In theory, it sounds pretty good—you both enter a consensual relationship knowing that it won’t last. But is it always a good idea?
Source: LifeHacker – Maybe You Should Try a Relationship With an Expiration Date
Snapchat Hops on AI Bandwagon

The large language model AI bandwagon is getting awfully full lately. Now Snap, the company that owns Snapchat, announced Monday it’s shoving an AI into its app so that users who are really bored talking with friends and real humans can instead have a friendly conversation with a somewhat unhinged digital tool.
Source: Gizmodo – Snapchat Hops on AI Bandwagon
RIP to the OG as Sony Prepares the Final Nail in the Coffin of its E-Reader Business

Pop quiz: which big company was the first to popularize electronic paper e-readers with consumers by making it easy to find and load ebooks and other digital documents? If you answered Amazon, we’ll see you in summer school, because Sony’s e-readers outdated the Kindle by years. Unfortunately, the company will soon be …
Source: Gizmodo – RIP to the OG as Sony Prepares the Final Nail in the Coffin of its E-Reader Business