Nintendo announces the end of Wii U production

With the Switch coming, Nintendo’s first tablet console is officially done for.

We know we use this piece of art a lot... but this time it's really appropriate. (credit: Photo by Wired / Manipulated by Aurich Lawson)

The Wii U era is set to come to an end relatively soon, according to statements coming from Nintendo's Japanese headquarters and American subsidiary.

Official word of the coming end of the Wii U first came from Nintendo's own Japanese website (Google Translate), which says that both the base system and a Splatoon bundle will see "production coming to an end soon (in Japan)."

"As recently posted by Nintendo on the Wii U website in Japan, Wii U production will end in the near future for the Japanese domestic market," Nintendo of America told Ars Technica. "We have nothing to announce in terms of exact timing.”

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Bundesregierung: Kritik an Cybersicherheitsstrategie

Die Bundesregierung will die Sicherheit im Internet mit Gütesiegeln verbessern, Opposition und Verbände kritisieren aber, dass die Regelungen unkonkret sind. Außerdem würde das Vertrauen der Bürger in sichere IT geschwächt. (Politik/Recht, Internet)

Die Bundesregierung will die Sicherheit im Internet mit Gütesiegeln verbessern, Opposition und Verbände kritisieren aber, dass die Regelungen unkonkret sind. Außerdem würde das Vertrauen der Bürger in sichere IT geschwächt. (Politik/Recht, Internet)

Cox Files Appeal to Overturn $25 Million Piracy Verdict

Internet provider Cox Communications has filed its appeal to overturn the $25 million damages verdict in its case against music publisher BMG. The ISP argues that the district court made several errors. As a result, millions of people now risk having their Internet access terminated based on one-sided evidence.

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

coxcommsLast December a Virginia federal jury ruled that Internet provider Cox Communications was responsible for the copyright infringements of its subscribers.

The ISP was found guilty of willful contributory copyright infringement and ordered to pay music publisher BMG Rights Management $25 million in damages.

The verdict was a massive victory for the music licensing company and a disaster for Cox.

After the Virginia federal court had denied Cox’s request for a new trial, the Internet provider elevated the case to the Court of Appeals where it hopes to have the verdict reversed.

In a 93-page filing submitted to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals this week, the company warns that the case has brought a lot of uncertainty to the industry, based on a verdict that’s rooted in erroneous conclusions.

“This case involves an unprecedented attempt to impose liability on an Internet service provider (ISP) for its subscribers’ alleged copyright infringement,” Cox begins, nothing that the district court was well aware of the stakes.

“Yet the court sanctioned a novel expansion of contributory liability to ISPs, based not on evidence that the ISP actually knew of specific infringing acts or took affirmative steps to foster infringement, but on the ISP’s constructive knowledge of the existence of infringing activity on its network.”

With the appeal, Cox hopes to reverse the judgment or at least have the opportunity to have a new trial.

The company explains that the case started when the ISP refused to forward infringement notices which contained “extortionate” settlement requests. They asked BMG’s anti-piracy partner Rightscorp to remove the settlement demands if they would like the notices to be forwarded, but they refused to do so.

The dispute over the settlement language eventually led to a guilty verdict by the jury, which according to Cox is based on several reversible errors.

First, Cox argues that the district court misread a binding Supreme Court authority, which prevents contributory copyright liability if a technology has substantial non-infringing uses.

“Cox’s Internet service has endless legal uses, and BMG failed to prove either that Cox actually knew of specific infringing acts by specific subscribers or that it took active steps to promote infringement,” the ISP writes.

In addition, the court took away the Internet provider’s safe harbor protection as it failed to terminate repeat infringers. However, Cox doesn’t believe that subscribers can be seen as such, solely based on one-sided accusations from Rightscorp.

Finally, Cox argued that the jury instructions on the damages aspect were incorrect on several points which led to an inflated $25 million verdict.

With the appeal, the ISP hopes to turn around the negative judgment. If not, the company fears that its subscribers, as well as those of other U.S. Internet providers, risk having their Internet access terminated based on ‘flimsy’ evidence.

“If allowed to stand, that judgment would force ISPs to terminate subscribers’ Internet access—and with it access to critical information, e-commerce, and entertainment—based on the say-so of third parties. This Court should reverse.”

The case will be crucial in determining what obligations ISPs have when it comes to repeat copyright infringers. Up until now, several Internet providers have argued that only a court could determine if a subscriber is a repeat infringer, but this has now become uncertain.

Cox Communication’s full filing is available here (pdf)

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

As Trump takes over, NASA considers alternatives to its Orion spacecraft

In October the space agency quietly solicited ideas from Boeing, SpaceX, and others.

Enlarge / This image shows an Orion parachute test. (credit: NASA)

NASA has initiated a process that raises questions about the future of its Orion spacecraft. So far, this procedural effort has flown largely under the radar, because it came in the form of a subtle Request for Information (RFI) that nominally seeks to extend NASA’s contract to acquire future Orion vehicles after Exploration Mission-2, which likely will fly sometime between 2021 and 2023.

Nevertheless, three sources familiar with the RFI, who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity, told Ars there is more to the request than a simple extension for Orion’s primary contractor, Lockheed Martin. Perhaps most radically, the RFI may even open the way for a competitor, such as Boeing or SpaceX, to substitute its own upgraded capsule for Orion in the mid-2020s.

This RFI process, which originated in the Washington, DC-based office of the manager of NASA’s human spaceflight operations, Bill Gerstenmaier, appears to be an effort to keep the agency’s options open during a presidential transition. “This is NASA taking a breath and looking at alternatives,” one source told Ars. “Part of why they also did it is they are signaling to the next administration that they may be willing to look at alternatives.”

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Limux: München verbastelt das nächste IT-Großprojekt

Eigentlich soll die IT-Verwaltung in München endgültig zentralisiert werden. Doch sowohl der Stadtrat als auch Verwaltungsreferate agieren gegen den Plan und gegeneinander. Dass Gutachter und die CSU eine Totalabkehr von Limux und Libreoffice in Erwägung ziehen, ist dabei vermutlich wenig hilfreich. (Open Source, Office-Suite)

Eigentlich soll die IT-Verwaltung in München endgültig zentralisiert werden. Doch sowohl der Stadtrat als auch Verwaltungsreferate agieren gegen den Plan und gegeneinander. Dass Gutachter und die CSU eine Totalabkehr von Limux und Libreoffice in Erwägung ziehen, ist dabei vermutlich wenig hilfreich. (Open Source, Office-Suite)

Hyperloop One releases “comprehensive concept design” for high-speed rail in Dubai

Controversy-ridden company is pushing forward with stronger ties to the UAE.

The Hyperloop One system.

On Tuesday, startup Hyperloop One announced that it had signed a deal with Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) to conduct a number of feasibility studies on potential Hyperloop routes in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Earlier this year, the company agreed to develop a Hyperloop cargo offloader at the port and later received $50 million from Dubai's port operator, DP World. These new feasibility studies commissioned by RTD seem aimed at transporting humans as well as cargo, however.

The Hyperloop is a concept advanced in recent years by Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk. Musk’s plans suggested using low-friction tubes to send pods through at 700mph, but the CEO declined to put resources toward building a Hyperloop and offered his ideas to any startup that wanted to attempt to bring it to market. Hyperloop One was one of those startups; another group called Hyperloop Transportation Technologies relies on volunteer work from NASA, SpaceX, Boeing, and Tesla engineers. In addition, 29 research and student groups were recently selected out of a larger group of 129 to show off their designs at a Hyperloop contest sponsored by SpaceX next year.

But Hyperloop One seems to be making inroads faster than others, despite an ongoing and very public feud with some former executives and engineers. It demonstrated its propulsion system in the Nevada desert earlier this year, and yesterday it released a video (seen above) of a “comprehensive concept design” of its version of the high-speed magnetic rail tube network.

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MSI VR One gaming PC-in-a-backpack now available for $1999

MSI VR One gaming PC-in-a-backpack now available for $1999

PC makers have been showing off PC-in-a-backpack systems designed for virtual reality gaming for a few months. Now you can buy one.

The MSI VR One is now available for purchase in the US, Europe, Japan, Australia, China, and Taiwan.

Newegg is taking orders for $1999 and up and says the VR One should begin shipping November 30th.

The VR One is basically a high-performance gaming desktop stuffed into a case that you can wear like a backpack, allowing you to connect a virtual reality headset like an Oculus Rift or HTC Vive directly to the computer on your back so that you don’t have to worry about tripping over wires as you play.

Continue reading MSI VR One gaming PC-in-a-backpack now available for $1999 at Liliputing.

MSI VR One gaming PC-in-a-backpack now available for $1999

PC makers have been showing off PC-in-a-backpack systems designed for virtual reality gaming for a few months. Now you can buy one.

The MSI VR One is now available for purchase in the US, Europe, Japan, Australia, China, and Taiwan.

Newegg is taking orders for $1999 and up and says the VR One should begin shipping November 30th.

The VR One is basically a high-performance gaming desktop stuffed into a case that you can wear like a backpack, allowing you to connect a virtual reality headset like an Oculus Rift or HTC Vive directly to the computer on your back so that you don’t have to worry about tripping over wires as you play.

Continue reading MSI VR One gaming PC-in-a-backpack now available for $1999 at Liliputing.

Site of GM mosquito trial uncertain after locals vote against being “guinea pigs”

Local authorities say they’ll look for a new location; locals say they’ll protest anywhere.

Enlarge / PIRACABA, BRAZIL: A Biologist releases genetically modified mosquitoes. (credit: Getty | Victor Moriyama / Stringer)

Residents of the Florida Keys headed to the polls on Tuesday to air their thoughts on genetically modified mosquitos—among other things.

On the ballots in Monroe County and the community of Key Haven, an island in the lower Florida Keys, was a question on a long-standing plan to release millions of mosquitos as part of a scientific trial. The mosquitos are genetically engineered to sabotage wild populations, which can transmit dengue, Zika, and other diseases.

The modified mosquitos have already won approval from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency. But local opposition brought the issue to the ballot. On Tuesday, residents of Monroe County solidly voted in favor of the trial—58 percent of the around 40,000 voters. But in the approximately thousand-person community of Key Haven, where the trial is set to take place, 65 percent voted the trial down.

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Microsoft Surface Pro with Performance Base now available (faster graphics, longer battery life)

After unveiling a new Microsoft Surface Book with twice the graphics performance and 30-percent more battery life than the original, Microsoft is now selling the new Surface Book with Performance Base.
Prices start at $2,399, which makes the 2-in-1 lap…

Microsoft Surface Pro with Performance Base now available (faster graphics, longer battery life)

After unveiling a new Microsoft Surface Book with twice the graphics performance and 30-percent more battery life than the original, Microsoft is now selling the new Surface Book with Performance Base.

Prices start at $2,399, which makes the 2-in-1 laptop pretty expensive for a portable Windows computer. But for that price you get a powerful processor, a high-resolution display that can be detached and used as a tablet, and up to 16 hours of battery life, among other things.

Continue reading Microsoft Surface Pro with Performance Base now available (faster graphics, longer battery life) at Liliputing.

PlayStation 4 Pro review: You’re gonna want a 4K TV

Visual upgrade is clear, but limited to a small subset of games.

Enlarge / The club sandwich of game consoles.

Spec Comparison
PS4 PS4 Pro
GPU 18 Radeon GCN compute units @ 800 Mhz 36 improved GCN compute units @ 911 Mhz
CPU 8 Jaguar cores @ 1.6Ghz 8 Jaguar cores @ 2.1Ghz
RAM 8GB GDDR5 @ 176GB/s 8GB GDDR5 @ 218GB/s (plus 1GB DDR3)
Max power consumption (gameplay) 148W (79W for PS4 Slim) 154W (4K gaming)
USB ports 2 USB 3.0 ports 3 USB 3.0 ports
Hard drive 500GB (1TB special editions available) 1TB
Size (widest points) 275 x 53 x 305mm (10.8 x 2.1 x 12") 295 x 55 x 327mm (11.6 x 2.2 x 12.9")
MSRP $300 w/ bundled game ($250 in holiday deals) $400 w/out bundled game

A new video game console is usually a chance to envision an entirely new future for popular gaming. After years of developers and players exploring the old console inside and out, a new console cleanly breaks with the past. Typically, it introduces new features, new exclusive franchises, and a clear, new high-water mark in what's possible as far as graphics and processing power (in a non-PC living room console, at least).

The PlayStation 4 Pro is different. As you might already know from our coverage, the Pro represents more of a split in the current era of the PS4 rather than a clean break from what came before. Sony has taken pains to point out that every console game it creates or licenses for the foreseeable future will run on both the PS4 and the PS4 Pro, making them essentially one "platform" from a software perspective. The promise, according to Sony, is that those games will look and perform better on the Pro hardware—sporting higher resolution, better frame rates, or more detailed in-game character models for instance.

Thus, reviewing the PS4 Pro is more like reviewing a new PC graphics card than reviewing a new console (though, yes, the Pro does also slightly upgrade the RAM and CPU from the standard PS4). Unlike a modular PC, however, upgrading the graphics on the PS4 requires throwing out the entire console that you may have bought just three years ago (or less) and starting from scratch with a new $400 box. It also means dealing with a scattered and inconsistent software update system from Sony and its partners that means performance can vary widely by game.

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