Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe with Snapdragon 821 now available (in Taiwan)

Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe with Snapdragon 821 now available (in Taiwan)

Asus was the first company to unveil a smartphone powered by Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 821 processor. In fact, Asus kind of spilled the beans a month before Qualcomm even introduced the chip.

Now Asus is also the first company to start selling a phone powered by the new processor. The Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe is now available for order in Taiwan.

It should begin shipping to customers by September 30th.

Continue reading Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe with Snapdragon 821 now available (in Taiwan) at Liliputing.

Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe with Snapdragon 821 now available (in Taiwan)

Asus was the first company to unveil a smartphone powered by Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 821 processor. In fact, Asus kind of spilled the beans a month before Qualcomm even introduced the chip.

Now Asus is also the first company to start selling a phone powered by the new processor. The Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe is now available for order in Taiwan.

It should begin shipping to customers by September 30th.

Continue reading Asus Zenfone 3 Deluxe with Snapdragon 821 now available (in Taiwan) at Liliputing.

Dealmaster: Dell Inspiron 15 5000 laptop with Skylake CPU for just $529

Plus preorders for the PlayStation 4 Pro, gaming savings, and more.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have a ton of new deals for you. Of note are amazing savings on a high-powered Dell laptop; now you can get a Dell Inspiron 15 5000 with a Skylake Core i7 processor, an AMD GPU, and Windows 7/10 Pro for just $529. That's one of the lowest prices we've seen on a laptop like this, so grab it while you can.

Also, check out the rest of the list for a link to preorder the PlayStation 4 Pro and other deals on smart TVs, desktops, and more.

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Osiris Rex: Asteroid Bennu, wir kommen!

Woraus genau besteht ein Asteroid? Enthält er organische Verbindungen oder wertvolle Rohstoffe? Die Nasa-Sonde Osiris Rex soll das herausfinden. Sie fliegt zu einem erdnahen Asteroiden, um darauf Proben zu sammeln und diese zur Erde zu bringen. (Raumfahrt, Nasa)

Woraus genau besteht ein Asteroid? Enthält er organische Verbindungen oder wertvolle Rohstoffe? Die Nasa-Sonde Osiris Rex soll das herausfinden. Sie fliegt zu einem erdnahen Asteroiden, um darauf Proben zu sammeln und diese zur Erde zu bringen. (Raumfahrt, Nasa)

Blue Origin may destroy its historic New Shepard rocket next month

Escape test should bring New Shepard capsule closer to passenger flights.

Dynamic video of a pad test of Blue Origin's escape system.

In a new e-mail update from company founder Jeff Bezos on Thursday morning, Blue Origin detailed plans for the next flight of its reusable New Shepard propulsion module and capsule—a dramatic, in-flight test of the escape system. Such an escape system is added to the spacecraft so that, in the event of a rocket failure, the capsule can get away quickly to protect the passengers inside.

For the New Shepard system, this escape motor is mounted underneath the capsule and will fire in case of emergency to push the spacecraft away from the rocket. Traditionally, such launch abort systems have been mounted above the capsule in the "stack," meaning they are expended during each flight, whether used or not. But Blue Origin is seeking a fully reusable launch system, so it is embedding the escape motor below the capsule so that it is not thrown off during the flight.

Blue Origin is not the first to try this "beneath" mounting. NASA, for example, experimented with it in the Max Launch Abort System nearly a decade ago, but the space agency ultimately stuck with a more traditional launch abort system for its Orion spacecraft. Blue Origin, therefore, is the first company or space agency to bring such an escape system this far into development and through multiple tests.

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With iPhone 7, Apple breaks tradition, won’t say how many sold at launch

Company officially cites larger distribution network and supply constraints.

Enlarge / The iPhone 7 Plus and its dual-lens camera. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

Every year when it launches a new iPhone, Apple has trumpeted the hardware's first-weekend sales numbers. And every year, those numbers have climbed, painting a picture of an increasingly successful device. This year, Apple will break with that tradition, according to a Reuters report.

Apple says that it won't disclose sales because its distribution network is expanding, and the total number of phones sold will reflect supply rather than demand. "We know before taking the first customer pre-order that we will sell out of iPhone 7,” says Apple, "...and we have decided that [first-weekend sales are] no longer a representative metric for our investors and customers.”

The move comes as iPhone sales have begun to fall year-over-year, a reflection of just how many iPhone 6 and 6 Pluses Apple was able to sell in 2015. The 6S was able to outsell the 6 in part because of a longer pre-order period and availability in China, which had never been on the list of round-one launch countries before. It's probably not a coincidence that Apple won't announce first-weekend sales for the first year in which those numbers might actually be lower than the year before.

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First impression: No, PS4 Pro graphics aren’t as revolutionary as SD-to-HD shift

HDR and higher resolutions are nice, but they seem more like marginal upgrades.

Enlarge / Depending on your display, this Sony-provided image might not do the added graphical effects of the PS4 justice.

In introducing the PS4 Pro yesterday, Sony compared the addition of 4K resolution and high dynamic range (HDR) to the jump from standard definition to high definition that took place in consoles a decade ago. After seeing the Pro demonstrated in person after Sony's announcement event last night, however, I can't say the jump in graphical fidelity is really comparable to that SD-to-HD leap.

At its base, the PS4 Pro is just a more graphically powerful version of the standard PS4. The new unit's AMD GPU is capable of 4.2 teraflops, Sony says, compared to 1.84 teraflops on the standard model. That would seem to put the Pro somewhere between AMD's recently launched Radeon RX 470 and 480 PC graphics cards in terms of raw graphical processing power (though differences in PC and console architecture make that something of an apples-to-oranges comparison). The PS4 Pro also sports unspecified improvements to the CPU clockspeed and memory bandwidth over the standard model.

To be clear, there's no single set of standard improvements that you'll always see in a PS4 game running in "Pro mode." Developers have a lot of freedom in how they take advantage of the improved hardware specs to alter the look of their games. As long as Pro Mode looks better than standard mode (while not running at a worse frame rate), it's fine by Sony.

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Apple drops prices, increases storage for most iPad models

Apple drops prices, increases storage for most iPad models

Apple didn’t talk about iPads at all during this week’s iPhone 7 and Apple Watch Series 2 launch event. But the company did make some changes to its iPad lineup.

Thanks to a series of price drops and storage bumps, the cheapest new iPad you can buy is a $269 iPad mini 2 with 32GB of storage. There’s no such thing as a new iPad with less than 32GB of storage anymore.

Here’s an overview of the new iPad pricing:

iPad mini

  • iPad mini 2 with 32GB for $269
  • iPad mini 4 with 32GB for $399
  • iPad mini 4 with 128GB for $499

iPad Air

  • iPad Air 2 with 32GB for $399
  • iPad Air 2 with 128GB for $499

iPad Pro

  • 9.7 inch iPad Pro with 32GB for $599
  • 9.7 inch iPad Pro with 128GB for $699
  • 9.7 inch iPad Pro with 256GB for $799
  • 12.9 inch iPad Pro with 32GB for $799
  • 12.9 inch iPad Pro with 128GB for $899
  • 12.9 inch iPad Pro with 256GB for $999

Note that these prices are for the WiFi-only models.

Continue reading Apple drops prices, increases storage for most iPad models at Liliputing.

Apple drops prices, increases storage for most iPad models

Apple didn’t talk about iPads at all during this week’s iPhone 7 and Apple Watch Series 2 launch event. But the company did make some changes to its iPad lineup.

Thanks to a series of price drops and storage bumps, the cheapest new iPad you can buy is a $269 iPad mini 2 with 32GB of storage. There’s no such thing as a new iPad with less than 32GB of storage anymore.

Here’s an overview of the new iPad pricing:

iPad mini

  • iPad mini 2 with 32GB for $269
  • iPad mini 4 with 32GB for $399
  • iPad mini 4 with 128GB for $499

iPad Air

  • iPad Air 2 with 32GB for $399
  • iPad Air 2 with 128GB for $499

iPad Pro

  • 9.7 inch iPad Pro with 32GB for $599
  • 9.7 inch iPad Pro with 128GB for $699
  • 9.7 inch iPad Pro with 256GB for $799
  • 12.9 inch iPad Pro with 32GB for $799
  • 12.9 inch iPad Pro with 128GB for $899
  • 12.9 inch iPad Pro with 256GB for $999

Note that these prices are for the WiFi-only models.

Continue reading Apple drops prices, increases storage for most iPad models at Liliputing.

“Cool shirt!”: Nanoporous polyethylene fabric acts as reverse greenhouse

With the right fabric, your clothes can help beat the heat.

Enlarge (credit: Joe Murphy)

Most of us are accustomed to the comfort of an air-conditioned or heated shelter, providing temporary relief from an outdoor climate that's often less than desirable. Such heating and cooling actually dominates residential and commercial energy consumption, accounting for a whopping 12.3 percent of total US energy use. As a result, emissions from maintaining our indoor environment affect the global climate outdoors.

But what if we heated or cooled people rather than spaces? Researchers exploring “personal thermal management” focus on providing heating or cooling directly to the human body. This approach reduces energy consumption that is largely wasted when providing climate control for an entire building, resulting in higher energy efficiency. Recently, scientists have developed a cost-effective textile that, when made into clothes, could provide a personal thermal management system.

Basic system requirements

Personal thermal management systems require careful control of the process of heat dissipation from the human body. At normal skin temperatures (typically 34 degrees Celsius), the human body emits infrared radiation (IR) with a peak emission at a 9.5µm wavelength. Dissipation of this radiative heat accounts for more than 50 percent of total body heat loss indoors.

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EU Court: Not-For-Profit Hyperlinking Usually Not Copyright Infringement

A ruling from the European Court of Justice has clarified when the posting of hyperlinks to infringing works is to be considered a ‘communication to the public’. Those who post links to content they do not know is infringing in a non-commercial environment can relax, but for those doing so during the course of business the rules are much tighter.

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

http-link-hyperlinkIn 2011, Dutch blog GeenStijl.nl published an article linking to leaked Playboy photos which were stored on file-hosting site FileFactory.

After filing a request with Filefactory, Playboy publisher Sanoma managed to have the photos removed from the platform. However, GeenStijl continued to find other sources for the photographs and linked to them instead. Sanoma said that this was an infringing act.

The case went to trial and was later referred to the European Court of Justice. The ECJ was asked to rule on whether the links posted by GeenStijl amounted to a ‘communication to the public’ under Article 3(1) of the EU Copyright Directive and therefore infringement.

After deliberating for months, the ECJ has just handed down its decision and it’s bad news for GeenStijl operator GS Media and others operating in a commercial environment. On the other hand, it may give a little more flexibility to the general public.

“In accordance with the directive concerned, Member States are to provide authors with the exclusive right to authorize or prohibit any communication to the public of their works,” a statement from the Court reads.

“At the same time, that directive seeks to maintain a fair balance between, on the one hand, the interests of copyright holders and related rights and, on the other, the protection of the interests and fundamental rights of users of protected objects, in particular their freedom of expression and of information, as well as the general interest.”

The Court says that when determining a ‘communication to the public’ several criteria need to be addressed, including any deliberate posting of links to protected works and whether the communication had any profit-making component.

In its ruling, the Court recognizes the importance of freedom of expression and notes the importance of hyperlinks when exchanging both opinions and information. It also accepts that determining whether a linked work is infringing could be a troublesome task.

Given the above, the Court found that knowledge of the potentially infringing status of a work plus commercial motivation play a pivotal role in determining whether a ‘communication to the public’ has taken place.

“For the purposes of the individualised assessment of the existence of a ‘communication to the public’, it is necessary, when the posting of a hyperlink to a work freely available on another website is carried out by a person who, in so doing, does not pursue a profit, to take account of the fact that that person does not know and cannot reasonably know that that work had been published on the internet without the consent of the copyright holder,” the Court’s statement reads.

“Indeed, such a person, does not, as a general rule, intervene in full knowledge of the consequences of his conduct in order to give customers access to a work illegally posted on the internet.”

The situation changes entirely when a person already has knowledge of potential infringement and is motivated by profit.

“In contrast, where it is established that such a person knew or ought to have known that the hyperlink he posted provides access to a work illegally published, for example owing to the fact that he was notified thereof by the copyright holders, the provision of that link constitutes a ‘communication to the public’,” the Court said.

When posting links for profit, the ECJ said that it expects people to carry out the “checks necessary” to ensure that work concerned has not been illegally published.

“When hyperlinks are posted for profit, it may be expected that the person who posted such a link should carry out the checks necessary to ensure that the work concerned is not illegally published. Therefore, it must be presumed that that posting has been done with the full knowledge of the protected nature of the work and of the possible lack of the copyright holder’s consent to publication on the internet.

“In such circumstances, and in so far as that presumption is not rebutted, the act of posting a clickable link to a work illegally published on the internet constitutes a ‘communication to the public’.”

The ruling is bad news for GS Media, who posted the links in the course of business even after being informed by Playboy that the content in question was infringing. The company says the decision is bad for the freedom of the press.

“The struggle for the survival of the free Internet including hyperlinks has today received a hefty blow,” a statement on Geenstijl reads.

“When commercial media companies – like GeenStijl – are no longer free and fearless to hyperlink, it becomes difficult to report on newsworthy new questions about leaking information, internal struggles, and unsecured networks within large companies.

“But we will not give up: for that press freedom we will fight on, in this case and beyond. Until then: careful when hyperlinking people, as today a minefield has been laid on the free internet.”

A landmark piracy trial in Sweden against the operators of streaming portal Swefilmer was suspended in June pending the ECJ’s decision. It appears that much will now hinge on whether the operators knew the content they linked was illegal and if a profit motive was involved.

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