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Source: LXer – How to Install Google Chrome on Debian 12 (Bookworm)
Monthly Archives: June 2023
Marvel Studios Won't Present in Hall H at Comic-Con 2023
This year’s San Diego Comic-Con was just dealt a major blow, as it seems Marvel Studios will not be presenting its upcoming slate in Hall H this year.
Source: Gizmodo – Marvel Studios Won’t Present in Hall H at Comic-Con 2023
Get in Line for Marvel Studios' Rogers: The Musical at Disney Parks
Steve Rogers will really find out if he could “do this all daaaaaay” in Rogers: The Musical, the previously announced special one-act show coming to Disney California Adventure. Its limited run will be June 30-August 31.
Source: Gizmodo – Get in Line for Marvel Studios’ Rogers: The Musical at Disney Parks
Texas Power Use To Break Records In Heat Wave, Prices Soar To $2,500 Per Megawatt Hour
The Texas power grid operator, ERCOT, has urged residents and businesses to conserve electricity as the first heat wave of the summer increases air conditioner usage, causing power reserves to potentially fall short. Power prices in the state’s day-ahead market reached over $2,500 per MWh, and ERCOT issued a warning about a projected reserve capacity shortage, although controlled outages are not currently necessary. Reuters reports: ERCOT operates the grid for more than 26 million customers representing about 90% of the state’s power load. The grid operator issued a “Watch” for what it called a “projected reserve capacity shortage with no market solution available for Tuesday” from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. local time, which could push ERCOT to take more actions to maintain reliability. Although controlled outages are one of the most extreme actions a grid operator could take to maintain reliability, ERCOT said “controlled outages are not needed at this time.”
ERCOT forecast power use would reach 81,348 megawatts (MW) on Tuesday before slipping to 80,991 MW on Wednesday. Tuesday’s high, which is a little below a forecast earlier in the day, would still top the grid’s current record peak of 80,148 MW on July 20, 2022. Day-ahead power prices for Tuesday settled around $2,500 per MWh at 5 p.m. local time in several zones, including Houston and Dallas, according to the ERCOT website. That compares with next-day prices at the ERCOT North Hub , which includes Dallas, that traded for $37 per MWh for the peak hours during the day on Monday, the U.S. Juneteenth holiday.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Texas Power Use To Break Records In Heat Wave, Prices Soar To ,500 Per Megawatt Hour
Wednesday Becomes Netflix's Most-Watched Show Thanks to Murky Math
For a long while, Netflix has decided the popularity of its most-watched TV series and movies should be determined by how many hours the streaming service’s customers watched it. So, for instance, if you rewatched a season of Stranger Things, you’d be boosting its ratings just even though you’d already seen it. Now…
Source: Gizmodo – Wednesday Becomes Netflix’s Most-Watched Show Thanks to Murky Math
Nitrux Devs Make It Easier to Upgrade Nitrux OS Installations
Nitrux devs announce the Nitrux Update Tool System (NUTS), which will enable users to more easily upgrade their Nitrux installation.
The post Nitrux Devs Make It Easier to Upgrade Nitrux OS Installations appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – Nitrux Devs Make It Easier to Upgrade Nitrux OS Installations
Christopher Nolan Says AI Dangers Have Been 'Apparent For Years'
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Variety: Christopher Nolan got honest about artificial intelligence in a new interview with Wired magazine. The Oscar-nominated filmmaker says the writing has been on the wall about AI dangers for quite some time, but now the media is more focused on the technology because it poses a threat to their jobs. “The growth of AI in terms of weapons systems and the problems that it is going to create have been very apparent for a lot of years,” Nolan said. “Few journalists bothered to write about it. Now that there’s a chatbot that can write an article for a local newspaper, suddenly it’s a crisis.” Nolan said the main issue with AI is “a very simple one” and relates to the technology being used by companies to “evade responsibility for their actions.”
“If we endorse the view that AI is all-powerful, we are endorsing the view that it can alleviate people of responsibility for their actions — militarily, socioeconomically, whatever,” Nolan continued. “The biggest danger of AI is that we attribute these godlike characteristics to it and therefore let ourselves off the hook. I don’t know what the mythological underpinnings of this are, but throughout history there’s this tendency of human beings to create false idols, to mold something in our own image and then say we’ve got godlike powers because we did that.” Nolan added that he feels there is “a real danger” with AI, saying, “I identify the danger as the abdication of responsibility.” “I feel that AI can still be a very powerful tool for us. I’m optimistic about that. I really am,” he said. “But we have to view it as a tool. The person who wields it still has to maintain responsibility for wielding that tool. If we accord AI the status of a human being, the way at some point legally we did with corporations, then yes, we’re going to have huge problems.”
“The whole machine learning as applied to deepfake technology, that’s an extraordinary step forward in visual effects and in what you could do with audio,” Nolan told Wired. “There will be wonderful things that will come out, longer term, in terms of environments, in terms of building a doorway or a window, in terms of pooling the massive data of what things look like, and how light reacts to materials. Those things are going to be enormously powerful tools.” Will Nolan be using AI technology on his films? “I’m, you know, very much the old analog fusty filmmaker,” he said. “I shoot on film. And I try to give the actors a complete reality around it. My position on technology as far as it relates to my work is that I want to use technology for what it’s best for. Like if we do a stunt, a hazardous stunt. You could do it with much more visible wires, and then you just paint out the wires. Things like that.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Christopher Nolan Says AI Dangers Have Been ‘Apparent For Years’
Doctor who sold bogus COVID vaccination waiver to dog loses medical license
Enlarge / A black Labrador retriever. (credit: Getty | ullstein bild)
A doctor in Tennessee has lost his medical license after a local news investigation revealed he was selling bogus COVID-19 vaccination waivers to essentially anyone—including patients he had never met, patients in far-flung states, and one black Labrador retriever named Charlie.
In a consent order signed May 16, the Tennessee Board of Medical Examiners determined Robert Coble had violated state statutes on the grounds of “unprofessional, dishonorable, or unethical conduct,” and “making false statements or representations, being guilty of fraud or deceit … in the practice of medicine.”
Coble voluntarily surrendered his medical license, effective that day, which is equivalent to a revocation. Coble also agreed to refrain from reapplying for a medical license for at least a year and to pay a $1,000 fine and the costs of the board’s investigation of his case, up to $2,000.
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Source: Ars Technica – Doctor who sold bogus COVID vaccination waiver to dog loses medical license
Finding the Right Story and Tone for Indiana Jones 5 | io9 Interview
Popular Former Fortnite Pro Tfue Retires From Twitch At 25
Turner “Tfue” Tenney, a former Fortnite pro and ex-Faze Clan member who courted controversy after controversy during his time creating content online, announced his decision to retire from livestreaming at the age of 25.
Source: Kotaku – Popular Former Fortnite Pro Tfue Retires From Twitch At 25
Prisons Consider Java Coding Books More Dangerous Than Mein Kampf
Incarcerated people in Ohio have an easier time getting their hands on the book that founded Nazism than computer coding literature due to a series of bizarre, unequally enforced policies restricting access to certain reading materials. Nonprofits and authors speaking with The Marshall Project say the state’s…
Source: Gizmodo – Prisons Consider Java Coding Books More Dangerous Than Mein Kampf
Google’s $200 metal Pixel Watch band is very premium, very expensive
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It’s finally here, the metal Pixel Watch band. [credit:
Ron Amadeo ]
When the Pixel Watch came out in October, it seemed like a decent-but-first-generation swing at a smartwatch (even though Android Wear came out about nine years ago). Part of what gives off the first-generation vibe is the Pixel Watch’s lack of watch band variety. Eight months after the watch’s release, Google is taking a big step toward fixing that problem by introducing metal watch bands. The “Google Pixel Watch Metal Links Band” was briefly for sale on the Google Store Friday before being sold out.
Google’s metal watch band is $200, which might seem expensive for a $350 watch, but that is on par with what Samsung charges, and Apple’s metal link band is $350. We have one of these bands in person now, and it’s worth every bit of the $200 price tag. Google’s watch band feels just as premium as a band from a luxury watchmaker, with an incredible amount of weight and a solid-feeling clasp section. With the default amount of metal links (you get six extra in the box), the Pixel Watch plus a metal band weighs 145 g, which is mid-weight luxury watch territory.
The band links have an interesting attachment mechanism. I’m used to bands that either have a long screw running through each link or a pin you slide in from the side, but the links on the Pixel each connect with an internal spring bar system. Fold one of the links in half, and you’ll reveal a set of openings to insert a special pair of included tweezers. Squeeze the tweezers, and you’ll compress the spring bar, retracting the two pins and disconnecting the link from the watch band.
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Source: Ars Technica – Google’s 0 metal Pixel Watch band is very premium, very expensive
Hulu's Solar Opposites Has Replaced Justin Roiland With Dan Stevens
Dan Stevens has joined the cast of Solar Opposites, replacing the embattled Justin Roiland—and the Hulu series, which has announced an August return, already has the voice-change plotline worked out. Check out the first clip from season four below to hear for yourself!
Source: Gizmodo – Hulu’s Solar Opposites Has Replaced Justin Roiland With Dan Stevens
Hands-On With Bandai Namco's Beautiful Anime MMORPG
I wasn’t sure what I was getting into during my Blue Protocol hands-on, but it certainly didn’t play out like I expected. I found myself riding a fantastically large, colorful horse up a narrow cliff path swarming with what looks like giant dragonfly hornets, then I careened too close to the edge and accidentally…
Source: Kotaku – Hands-On With Bandai Namco’s Beautiful Anime MMORPG
Spotify Plans New Premium Tier, Expected To Include HiFi Audio
Spotify is planning a more expensive subscription option that’s expected to include high-fidelity audio in an effort to drive more revenue and placate investors who’ve been saying the company should raise its prices. From a report: Dubbed “Supremium” internally, according to people familiar with the strategy, the new tier will be Spotify’s most expensive plan and likely offer a HiFi feature the company first announced it was working on in 2021. Spotify delayed that product’s rollout after two of its competitors, Apple Music and Amazon Music, began offering the feature for free as part of their standard plans. The new tier will launch this year in non-US markets first.
To augment its current “Premium” tier, Spotify will give subscribers expanded access to audiobooks, either through a specific number of hours free per month or a specific number of titles. There will be an option to purchase more. Currently, the company only sells audiobooks a la carte through its app. Spotify plans to introduce that feature in the US in October, after first launching in markets abroad.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Spotify Plans New Premium Tier, Expected To Include HiFi Audio
AI-generated music won’t win a Grammy anytime soon
It looks like Fake Drake won’t be taking home a Grammy. Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. said this week that although the organization will consider music with limited AI-generated voices or instrumentation for award recognition, it will only honor songs written and performed “mostly by a human.”
“At this point, we are going to allow AI music and content to be submitted, but the Grammys will only be allowed to go to human creators who have contributed creatively in the appropriate categories,” Mason said in an interview with Grammy.com. “If there’s an AI voice singing the song or AI instrumentation, we’ll consider it. But in a songwriting-based category, it has to have been written mostly by a human. Same goes for performance categories – only a human performer can be considered for a Grammy. If AI did the songwriting or created the music, that’s a different consideration. But the Grammy will go to human creators at this point.”
The CEO’s comments mean the fake Drake / The Weeknd song “Heart on My Sleeve,” which went viral earlier this year before getting wiped from streaming platforms over copyright takedowns, wouldn’t be eligible. Another AI-generated scammer sold fake Frank Ocean tracks in April for a reported CAD 13,000 ($9,722 in US dollars), while Spotify has been busy purging tens of thousands of AI-made songs from its library.
On the other hand, it raises questions about artists like Holly Herndon, who used an AI version of her voice for a cover of Dolly Parton’s “Jolene.” (The AI-generated performance would suggest not, but would the fact that it’s her own voice make a difference?) Or, for that matter, there’s the upcoming “final” Beatles track that Paul McCartney says will use AI to isolate a garbled recording of John Lennon’s voice. And would Taryn Southern, who (also transparently) used AI to co-produce her 2018 debut album, be eligible? We reached out to the Recording Academy for clarification about these examples and will update this article if they respond.
Awards or not, Mason acknowledged that AI would upend the music industry. “AI is going to absolutely, unequivocally have a hand in shaping the future of our industry,” Mason said. “So, we have to start planning around that and thinking about what that means for us. How can we adapt to accommodate? How can we set guardrails and standards? There are a lot of things that need to be addressed around AI as it relates to our industry.” The CEO added that the Recording Academy recently held a summit “with industry leaders, tech entrepreneurs, streaming platforms, and people from the artist community” to discuss AI’s future. “We talked about the subject and discussed how the Recording Academy can be helpful: how we can play a role and the future of AI in music.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai-generated-music-wont-win-a-grammy-anytime-soon-211855194.html?src=rss
Source: Engadget – AI-generated music won’t win a Grammy anytime soon
Purely AI-generated songs declared ineligible for Grammy Awards

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)
Amid increasing use of generative AI in music, the Recording Academy has updated its rules for the 66th annual Grammy Awards regarding the role of AI in considered works, Reuters reports. To be eligible for an award, a song must have meaningful human authorship. Purely algorithmically generated music cannot win a Grammy.
According to the 66th Grammy Awards Rules & Guidelines booklet, works generated solely by AI are not eligible for the awards. However, the Academy does not completely exclude AI’s potential role in the creation process. Works that incorporate elements of “AI-generated material” are eligible if they meet two key criteria, and we’ll quote the booklet itself:
- “The human-authored components of the work must be meaningful and more than ‘de minimis.'” (The booklet defines “de minimis” as “lacking significance or importance, or so minor as to merit disregard.”)
- “These human-authored components must be relevant to the category in which the work is entered. For instance, if the work is submitted in a songwriting category, there should be significant human authorship involved in the music and/or lyrics. Similarly, for a performance category, the human performance element should be significant.”
The rules also state that if a piece of work incorporates material generated by AI, the individuals or teams who programmed or operated the AI to generate that material cannot be considered for a Grammy award based on that contribution. In other words, if a song uses AI to generate a melody, lyrics, or any other element, the people who created or utilized the AI do not get credit for Grammy consideration for that specific AI-generated part. The credit and potential for nomination or award receipt go to the human elements that significantly contribute to the song.
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Source: Ars Technica – Purely AI-generated songs declared ineligible for Grammy Awards
Should You Play Cyberpunk 2077 Now Or Wait For Phantom Liberty?
If you’ve been on the internet between December of 2020 to right now, you’ve probably heard something about the supposed Cyberpunk 2077 renaissance. That redemption arc seems to be finally coming to fruition with the upcoming Phantom Liberty expansion, which promises a complete overhaul of the RPG’s systems, to the…
Source: Kotaku – Should You Play Cyberpunk 2077 Now Or Wait For Phantom Liberty?
How to Install PrestaShop on Almalinux 9
Prestashop is a flexible and scalable eCommerce platform. Prestashop is one of the best open-source eCommerce CMS with out-of-the-box features. The platform itself is written in PHP and released under Open Software License (OSL).
Source: LXer – How to Install PrestaShop on Almalinux 9
Patrick Stewart Wouldn't Mind if He Got One More Star Trek Movie
Although Picard’s third and final season was touted explicitly as the last hurrah of not just Patrick Stewart’s iconic tenure as Captain Jean-Luc Picard, but the whole of the Next Generation cast, ever since it ended—hell, even before that—Stewart and his colleagues have repeatedly expressed a desire for a little more…
Source: Gizmodo – Patrick Stewart Wouldn’t Mind if He Got One More Star Trek Movie