Google Chrome (and Chrome OS) hit version 50

Google Chrome (and Chrome OS) hit version 50

Google’s Chrome web browser and Chrome OS operating system are turning 50. And by that, I mean, the browser is less than 8 years old, but after months of testing, Google is pushing the 50th major release of Chrome to the public.

Among other things, the update brings improvements for push notifications and media playback to Chrome Windows, Mac, Linux, and Chrome OS. But some of the biggest changes are specific to Chrome OS.

Continue reading Google Chrome (and Chrome OS) hit version 50 at Liliputing.

Google Chrome (and Chrome OS) hit version 50

Google’s Chrome web browser and Chrome OS operating system are turning 50. And by that, I mean, the browser is less than 8 years old, but after months of testing, Google is pushing the 50th major release of Chrome to the public.

Among other things, the update brings improvements for push notifications and media playback to Chrome Windows, Mac, Linux, and Chrome OS. But some of the biggest changes are specific to Chrome OS.

Continue reading Google Chrome (and Chrome OS) hit version 50 at Liliputing.

Chrome OS gets Material Design makeover in version 50

Chrome OS gets overhauled to match mobile. Windows and Mac redesigns coming soon.

Chrome 50 is starting to roll out to all of Chrome's platforms, but it's Chrome OS that will see the biggest change. With version 50, Chrome OS gets a Material Design makeover. Sebastien Gabriel, a senior designer at Google, detailed the changes on his webpage.

"Material Design" is the name for Google's company-wide interface guidelines that started on Android with version 5.0 Lollipop. The Chrome revamp keeps the same basic Chrome layout but makes a lot of little design tweaks. The whole app is flatter—the gradient in the tab bar is removed, along with shadows around the active tab. The menu button now looks like something from Android—a vertical column of three dots. Bookmark folders and fonts are different, most of the buttons and pop-ups have been overhauled, and Incognito mode now has a sneaky, all-dark UI.

There are under-the-hood improvements, too. The Material Design interface is now "rendered fully programmatically," allowing Google to nix the 1,200 image files it was using for icons and other UI bits. The move to vectors allows Chrome to better support a wide range of screen resolutions. There's also a new "Hybrid" UI for touchscreen devices that spaces things out a bit.

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Deals of the Day (4-20-2016)

Deals of the Day (4-20-2016)

The Dell XPS 13 line of laptops feature thin designs, super-slim screen bezels, and awkward camera placement. The lowest price for a model with a Core i5 Skylake processor at Dell.com is $910 (with the use of coupon code 10OFFAWXPS).

But right now you can pick up a Dell XPS 13 with a Core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage for $776 from Amazon.

Looking for something a little cheaper?

Continue reading Deals of the Day (4-20-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (4-20-2016)

The Dell XPS 13 line of laptops feature thin designs, super-slim screen bezels, and awkward camera placement. The lowest price for a model with a Core i5 Skylake processor at Dell.com is $910 (with the use of coupon code 10OFFAWXPS).

But right now you can pick up a Dell XPS 13 with a Core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage for $776 from Amazon.

Looking for something a little cheaper?

Continue reading Deals of the Day (4-20-2016) at Liliputing.

Achievement locked: Microsoft ceases Xbox 360 production

Ars remembers the endlessly revised system after nearly 11 years of production.

We imagine this is the way the Xbox 360 would say goodbye to us if it could talk. (credit: Tomasland)

Xbox chief Phil Spencer took to the company's primary blog to make a hardware announcement on Wednesday, but it had nothing to do with recent rumblings about the future of the gaming console. Instead, Spencer came to bury its past.

"While we’ve had an amazing run, the realities of manufacturing a product over a decade old are starting to creep up on us," Spencer wrote in his announcement that Xbox 360 system production has officially ceased. Remaining 360 consoles will continue to be sold in stores, and Xbox Live-related services and connectivity for current 360 users will continue to function, but if you're looking to buy a brand-spanking-new 360 system, your time is limited.

Spencer's announcement didn't go so far as to announce how many 360 systems have sold in its nearly 11 years of life—which is probably because recent Xbox-related announcements from Microsoft have lumped in sales figures for both the 360 and the One to make the latter sound better. Still, we know the platform has at least surpassed the 84 million sales mark announced in 2014.

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Riversimple Rasa review: Is this hydrogen car the future—or just a gimmick?

Rasa does 300 miles on 1.5kg of fuel. But do you want to drive 10 miles to fill up?

(credit: Alun Taylor)

Specs at a glance: Riversimple Rasa
Body type 2-seat, 3-door hatchback
Power source 8.5kW Hydrogenics hydrogen fuel cell
Transmission Four wheel-mounted electric motors
Power 16kW continuous (55kW peak)
Torque 4x 60Nm continuous (170Nm peak)
Chassis Carbon composite monocoque with aluminium crash structure
Bodywork Self-coloured thermoplastic panels
Steering Unassisted rack and pinion
Suspension Double wishbone (front)
Semi-trailing arm (rear)
Tyres Michelin 115/80R15
Top speed 60mph (97km/h)
0-60mph Under 10 seconds
Fuel tank capacity 1.5kg (hydrogen)
Extra power storage 1.9MJ (lithium-ion hybrid capacitors)
Rated max range 300 miles (485km)
Weight 580kg (1278lbs)
Wheelbase 2272mm (89.4in)
Dimensions 3673mm (144.6in) x 1630mm (64.1in) x 1332 (52.4in) (LWH)
Base price TBA

An industrial estate on the outskirts of a sleepy spa town in deepest Powys, Wales, may not strike you as the obvious place to find an ambitious little hydrogen vehicle maker with plans to revolutionise the way we power, drive, and own our cars. But it shouldn’t come as that much of a surprise.

Why not? Well, if you drive seventy-five miles to the south-west from Riversimple’s HQ in Llandrindod Wells, you end up in Swansea, once the home of William Robert Grove who in 1842 pretty much invented the hydrogen fuel cell. And it’s a hydrogen fuel cell that part-powers the Rasa, Riversimple’s funky little two-seater prototype.

"Part-powers?" I hear you ask. While the majority of electric and hydrogen cars currently on the market are essentially conventional designs with battery or fuel-cell-and-battery power sources, the Rasa—the name comes from tabula rasa, the Latin for blank or clean slate—is the result of altogether more clever thinking. I’m inclined to use a word I usually avoid like the plague—holistic—to describe Riversimple’s view of automotive design.

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Itching for a 4K smart TV? Ars is giving one away—enter now!

Don’t pass up this opportunity to win a $1,399 TV.

If you've been dying to get your hands on a 4K smart TV, now's your chance to win one for free. Ars is giving away an LG Super UHD 4K Smart LED TV to one lucky reader!

This 55-inch LG TV has a 3840×2160 resolution, HDR with Dolby Vision, and the webOS 3.0 smart interface for connecting to browsers and apps. It's an ideal choice for anyone looking to upgrade their living room with a 4K-capable TV to stream all the new 4K content coming from providers like Netflix and Amazon Prime. The TV typically costs a hefty $1,399.

All you have to do is enter here with your name and e-mail address. The giveaway ends on April 30, 2016 at 11:59pm EST. Only US Ars readers are eligible for this giveaway. Enter now before it's too late!

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Man fired after posting violent Lego videos featuring his coworkers

Says videos on Facebook were of celebrities and fictional characters, not colleagues.

(credit: pengrin)

A New York nursing home food-service worker who lost his job after posting allegedly violent videos depicting his coworkers to Facebook is ineligible for unemployment benefits, a state appeals court is ruling.

The dispute concerns Shawn Roy, who worked at the Albany County Nursing Home for 16 years. Among other things leading to his 2013 discharge, coworkers complained that Facebook videos he posted depicted them in violent and sexual ways. A New York court said that the videos made him ineligible for unemployment benefits.

"Substantial evidence supports the Unemployment Insurance Board's determination that claimant was discharged from his position as a food service worker in a nursing home due to disqualifying misconduct. Claimant was obligated 'even during his off-duty hours, to honor the standards of behavior which his employer has a right to expect of him and...he may be denied unemployment benefits as a result of misconduct in connection with his work if he fails to live up to this obligation,'" the three-member court ruled last week. (PDF)

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LeEco’s new phones feature USB-C, lack headphone jacks, and have up to 6GB of RAM

LeEco’s new phones feature USB-C, lack headphone jacks, and have up to 6GB of RAM

Chinese company LeEco showed off one of the first smartphones with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor at CES in January (before the company changed its name from LeTV).

Now LeEco is launching three new phones: the Le 2, the Le 2 Pro, and the Le 2 Max. All three are among the first Android phones to lack headphone jacks (you can use Bluetooth headphones or connect a USB-C to 3.5mm audio adapter). And the most powerful model has 6GB of RAM, which makes it one of a small, but growing, number of phones with that much memory.

Continue reading LeEco’s new phones feature USB-C, lack headphone jacks, and have up to 6GB of RAM at Liliputing.

LeEco’s new phones feature USB-C, lack headphone jacks, and have up to 6GB of RAM

Chinese company LeEco showed off one of the first smartphones with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor at CES in January (before the company changed its name from LeTV).

Now LeEco is launching three new phones: the Le 2, the Le 2 Pro, and the Le 2 Max. All three are among the first Android phones to lack headphone jacks (you can use Bluetooth headphones or connect a USB-C to 3.5mm audio adapter). And the most powerful model has 6GB of RAM, which makes it one of a small, but growing, number of phones with that much memory.

Continue reading LeEco’s new phones feature USB-C, lack headphone jacks, and have up to 6GB of RAM at Liliputing.

Pirate Bay Founder: Streaming Model Could Ignite New Piracy War

As streaming services such as Netflix and Spotify gain even greater traction, so does the centralization of online content that consumers no longer own. According to Pirate Bay founder Peter Sunde this business model holds subscribers to ransom, with the threat of content being suddenly taken away now a constant threat.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

peter-sundeAfter signing up to Spotify several years ago one of my first tasks was to begin hand-crafting playlists of the thousands of 1980s and 1990s dance tracks I had previously bought on vinyl.

Once lovingly stacked and indexed in a spare room, these much-loved relics of a bygone era are now gathering dust in the attic, probably never to be played again. Or at least that’s what I thought.

Slowly but surely, tracks have been disappearing from my Spotify playlists with no explanation, including a rare Prodigy remix of a Praga Khan track that finally triggered me to sign up to Spotify in the first place. If Spotify had that they must have everything, I assured myself at the time.

While the disappearance of some music from the service is to be expected, it doesn’t make it any less of a disappointment when it happens. It also undermines confidence in the product. After all, if one had bought the track instead of streaming it, it would still be here today. It’s a situation that’s familiar to The Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde who in a new interview with Germany’s FutureZone recalls similar experiences.

“I stopped using Spotify when suddenly overnight several titles disappeared from my playlist because the licenses for them were revoked. Someone else had decided which music I could listen to and which I could not. I had no backup, so I lost the music. I do not want that,” Sunde says.

To hear that Peter Sunde (by all accounts one of the world’s most infamous pirates) had placed his trust and his money with a legitimate content provider indicates that at its core Spotify had something good to offer. After all, it’s hardly an argument that Sunde was unable to obtain the music from elsewhere.

But what is perhaps most remarkable is that Sunde actually patronized a service which at its very core is the complete opposite of what The Pirate Bay stood for. Forget for a moment the notion of paying or not paying for media, that’s a distraction.

What the Pirate Bay did was empower its users to participate in a somewhat decentralized communications infrastructure which allowed them to build archives of music, movies, TV shows and software in their own homes. Not only did they ‘own’ that content but much more importantly they exercised complete, physical control over it. Licenses getting revoked? Not a chance.

For all their great qualities (and they have them by the bucket load), Spotify and other streaming services such as Netflix offer something quite different – total centralization and a complete lack of user control over the content they’re buying renting.

“When we look at the development of Netflix it is exactly the same as a Spotify for movies,” Sunde says. “What streaming has done is centralize the ownership of culture.”

And of course Sunde is absolutely right. At any point Spotify, Netflix and any other streaming service has the power to remove content, modify it, restrict access to it geographically or – heaven forbid – go bankrupt, shut down, and deny access to it altogether.

However unlikely, it is possible that people invested in these services could be blasted back to a world without music and movies in an instant, should economic (or Internet disaster) circumstances dictate it. Unless people have physical access to that content they are done. Sunde wonders whether people will continue to put up with this scenario in the future.

“Maybe in five years time we’ll have a new file-sharing fight because anyone who uses these services will consider that while having access to the content is good, it is not so great having no control and actually owning none of it,” Sunde says.

So the big question remains: what can be done about it?

In keeping with Sunde’s previous assertion that he believes that torrent technology has stagnated, the Pirate Bay co-founder doesn’t really offer much hope for those inclined to obtain their content from unofficial sources.

“I have more interesting things to do. One can not eat indefinitely a cake. It may be the best cake in the world, but at some point you have to throw up,” he says.

“I do not know how to fight it. Perhaps with better streaming piracy.”

With that an unlikely prospect, at least in music, legitimate streaming consumption will continue to grow, and with it the pitfalls of borrowing rather than buying music.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Prescription meds get trapped in disturbing pee-to-food-to-pee loop

New irrigation methods mean veggies and fruits serve up used pharmaceuticals.

(credit: Carsten Schertzer)

If you love something, set it free… so the old adage goes. Well, if the things you love are pharmaceuticals, then you're in luck. Through vegetables and fruits, the drugs that we flush down the drain are returning to us—though we’ll ultimately pee them out again. (Love is complicated, after all)

In a randomized, single-blind pilot study, researchers found that anticonvulsive epilepsy drug carbamazepine, which is released in urine, can accumulate in crops irrigated with recycled water—treated sewage—and end up in the urine of produce-eaters not on the drugs. The study, published Tuesday in Environmental Science & Technology, is the first to validate the long-held suspicion that pharmaceuticals may get trapped in infinite pee-to-food-to-pee loops, exposing consumers to drug doses with unknown health effects.

While the amounts of the drug in produce-eater’s pee were four orders of magnitude lower than what is seen in the pee of patients purposefully taking the drugs, researchers speculate that the trace amounts could still have health effects in some people, such as those with a genetic sensitivity to the drugs, pregnant women, children, and those who eat a lot of produce, such as vegetarians. And with the growing practice of reclaiming wastewater for crop irrigation—particularly in places that face water shortages such as California, Israel, and Spain—the produce contamination could become more common and more potent, the authors argue.

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