That mystery Go player crushing the world’s best online? It was AlphaGo again

After 50 straight wins, DeepMind’s AlphaGo earned a draw—because its connection timed out.

Enlarge / It's easy to know you're playing an AI in-person, but what about online? (credit: Getty Images)

DeepMind's AlphaGo is back, and it's been secretly crushing the world's best Go players over the past couple of weeks. The new version of the AI has played 51 games online and won 50 of them, including a victory against Ke Jie, currently the world's best human Go player. Amusingly, the 51st game wasn't even a loss; it was drawn after the Internet connection dropped out.

Developed by London-based DeepMind, AlphaGo was thrust into the limelight in March 2016 when it beat Lee Sedol, one of the world's top Go players, in a real-world match in South Korea. Before the match, Lee was confident that he could beat the artificial intelligence. But after losing four out of five games, Lee said, "I've never been congratulated so much just because I won one game."

Following its single game loss, DeepMind has been hard at work on a new and improved version of AlphaGo—and it appears the AI is back bigger, better, and more undefeated than ever. DeepMind's co-founder Demis Hassabis announced on Twitter yesterday that "the new version of AlphaGo" had been playing "some unofficial online games" on the Tygem and FoxGo servers under the names Magister (P) and Master (P). It played 51 games in total against some of the world's best players, including Ke Jie, Gu Li, and Lee Sedol—and didn't lose a single one.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

NIH: Give infants peanuts at 4-6 mos to avoid dangerous allergies

Recommendation follows strong evidence that early exposure promotes tolerance.

(credit: Connie Ma)

In recent years, peanut allergies among kids have soared, creating life-long sensitivities that can be deadly and banishing beloved PB&Js from lunch boxes everywhere. While the cause is still unclear, health experts are confident they’ve found the solution to the plague of peanut allergies: peanuts.

Parents, pediatricians, and other healthcare providers are now firmly advised to start feeding infants peanut-laced foods to head off allergies before they develop. Based on mounting evidence, experts think there’s a “window of time in which the body is more likely to tolerate a food than react to it, and if you can educate the body during that window, you’re at much lower likelihood of developing an allergy to that food,” Matthew Greenhawt, a food allergy expert, told The New York Times.

As such, a National Institutes of Health panel of specialists, including Dr. Greenhawt, released today a new set of guidelines for tossing peanuts into that window.

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Sevenhugs Smart Remote controls any smart device you point it at

$299 touchscreen remote uses motion tracking magic to simplify smart homes.

Enlarge

As useful as smart devices like Philips Hue bulbs or Sonos music streaming systems can be, controlling them using separate apps on a smartphone isn't always the quickest or most convenient way to use them. Enter the Sevenhugs Smart Remote, a universal remote with a compact 3-inch screen that promises to control any smart device in your home just by pointing at it.

Launched as an Indiegogo project in November last year and earning over $1 million in funding, the now-finalised hardware features a touch screen that automatically changes based on the device you point it at. For example, point it at a Philips Hue bulb and you're presented with options for dimming the light or changing the colour via a slider. Point it at a Sonos, and the controls change to play, pause, skip, and volume.

The remote is even clever enough to know when two smart devices are close together—say, a Philips Hue lamp next to a Sonos—giving you the option of flicking between the two sets of controls with a swipe. You can even customise it so that pointing at a door or a window automatically brings up an Uber app for ordering a taxi. Almost any Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or infrared device is compatible, and there's IFTTT support included too.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Razer’s Project Valerie gaming laptop has three 4K displays

Razer’s Project Valerie gaming laptop has three 4K displays

Sometimes it can be hard to fit everything you need to see on a computer on a single display. But typically if you want to use multiple displays with a laptop or desktop PC, you have to buy monitors one at a time.

Razer’s Project Valerie laptop concept is a bit different: it’s a single laptop with three displays built in.

Each screen is a 17.3 inch, 4K IGZO display with support for NVIDIA G-Sync.

Continue reading Razer’s Project Valerie gaming laptop has three 4K displays at Liliputing.

Razer’s Project Valerie gaming laptop has three 4K displays

Sometimes it can be hard to fit everything you need to see on a computer on a single display. But typically if you want to use multiple displays with a laptop or desktop PC, you have to buy monitors one at a time.

Razer’s Project Valerie laptop concept is a bit different: it’s a single laptop with three displays built in.

Each screen is a 17.3 inch, 4K IGZO display with support for NVIDIA G-Sync.

Continue reading Razer’s Project Valerie gaming laptop has three 4K displays at Liliputing.

Unlikely ‘Pirate’ Kodi Users Will Get in Trouble, Experts Suggest

In recent weeks, the legality or otherwise of so-called fully-loaded Kodi boxes has become a big topic. The devices are massively popular in the UK but are people going to get busted for using them? Almost certainly not, an intellectual property lawyer told the BBC this morning.

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

kodiWhile Popcorn Time was the hot news of 2014 and 2015, 2016 was taken by storm by an old kid on the block with a new lick of paint.

For TF readers, Kodi needs little introduction. It’s an open source media player that can, given select tweaks, be augmented with third-party addons that grant access to an Aladdin’s cave of pirate content.

Unlike most other kinds of unauthorized online sharing, the way content is delivered through Kodi has exposed a whole new legal gray area. While it’s definitely illegal in Europe and the US to share copyrighted content without permission using BitTorrent, no one is really clear whether streaming content via Kodi has the same status.

In recent weeks, this has led to the publication of dozens of articles which claim to answer that question. Upon review, none of them actually do, so the topic remains hot in the UK.

To that end, BBC Radio Five ran a pretty long feature this morning which had host Adrian Chiles discussing the topic with FACT chief Kieron Sharp, intellectual property lawyer Steve (whose surname wasn’t clear from the broadcast) and technical guy Tom Cheesewright who really knew what he was talking about.

The start of the interview was marked by Chiles noting that when he found out what a Kodi device could do, he immediately wanted one.

“I’d never heard of them,” he said. “I heard what they were and then I wanted one. And then someone told me that they’re probably illegal, so I better not get one.”

Chiles’ reaction is probably held in common with millions of others who’ve learned about what Kodi devices can do. There’s a clear and totally understandable attraction, and it was helpful for the broadcaster to acknowledge that.

After a brief technological description from Cheesewright, Chiles turned to IP lawyer Steve, who was asked where the law stands. His response was fairly lengthy but clearly focused on the people supplying the devices.

“You’ve got big content producers like HBO that are used to producing premium content that people pay for,” Steve said.

“Where they are directing their attention is on the people who sell these boxes loaded with software that lets you get around paying a subscription.”

The lawyer acknowledged that there are some ongoing cases in the UK which involve suppliers of devices which effectively allow users to get around copyright protection.

“That’s been the focus of the strategy and it’s a big, big, big issue,” he said.

But for those who know Chiles’ down-to-earth style, it was always obvious that he would want to know how the law views the man in the street.

“From the punter’s point of view, if you’re watching something made by HBO that Netflix would hope that you’d be paying them to watch, but you’re watching it for free via your Kodi stick, then are you going to get a knock on the door?” Chiles asked.

Chiles didn’t get a straight answer about the law, but after a breath, Steve offered the reality.

“In all likelihood, no,” the lawyer responded.

Noting that there have been cases against file-sharers, the IP expert said that there is a difference – a legal gray area – when it comes to streaming versus file-sharing.

“What tends to happen is that the content providers go after the ISPs, they go after platforms [offering pirate content], not the individual people,” he said, adding that getting a knock on the door at home would be fairly unlikely.

Interestingly, Chiles’ then admitted that in the past he also tried to get Premier League football on his laptop for free, but was unsuccessful in getting any content. The suggestion was that Chiles’ failure could be put down to anti-piracy crackdowns against sites, including site-blocking, a point on which the lawyer agreed.

“[Rightsholders] have been choking off access [to free content] rather than going to war with their own fans, which is never going to be good for publicity, which is only going to cause them a bigger problem,” the lawyer said.

At this point, FACT chief Keiron Sharp entered the conversation and immediately acknowledged that piracy is an ongoing problem that isn’t going to be solved overnight. However, he also revealed a little about their Kodi strategy.

“This will still keep coming up no matter which actions we take, but there is still a deterrent effect on people when they see that sellers and providers and distributors of these boxes are going to prison. Which they will do,” Sharp said.

The FACT chief said that people will make a connection between people being locked up for selling boxes and the use of these boxes at home, something which he hopes will result in less uptake.

“There will be a deterrent effect [from cases going through the court now] and I think your average punter, as you put it, are the ones who will see that deterrent effect and we will be able to move some people away,” he said.

Interestingly, Sharp then referred to pirates as “fans” who want access to a product and that content providers were trying to fulfill that demand. Lawyer Steve, who also used the word “fans,” added that people who pirate aren’t necessarily cheapskates either.

“The biggest problem the industry has is that it’s always been behind on design and user experience,” he said.

“People buy these boxes not necessarily because they’re cheapskates or want to break the law, but probably because it’s the only place they can get access to all the content they want in one place, in a good user experience, without buying separate subscriptions for Sky, for Netflix, for Amazon, for Hulu, for all of these different services,” he said.

This conclusion is an important one. While at some point the courts may decide (there’s a case in Europe) that knowingly watching pirate streams is indeed illegal, there is no way that a user that ONLY STREAMS content can be monitored by groups that would like to prosecute them.

So, to answer the million dollar question. Watching pirate Kodi streams may be deemed illegal sometime in the future but right now, no one is 100% sure. In any event, it’s impossible in any sensible scenario for anyone to get caught doing so.

With that in mind, content providers need to keep upping their game, or the Kodi content free-for-all (or whatever else comes along next) will continue.

A replay of the show might be made available by the BBC on the iPlayer at a later point.

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

Intuos Pro: Wacom verbindet Zeichentablet mit echtem Papier

Digital arbeiten und trotzdem nicht auf Stift und Papier verzichten: Wacom hat seine Zeichentablets aktualisiert und dabei eine neue Technik umgesetzt. Einen verbesserten Stift gibt es auch. (Eingabegerät, Zeichentablet)

Digital arbeiten und trotzdem nicht auf Stift und Papier verzichten: Wacom hat seine Zeichentablets aktualisiert und dabei eine neue Technik umgesetzt. Einen verbesserten Stift gibt es auch. (Eingabegerät, Zeichentablet)

For NASA’s human spaceflight programs a difficult year lies ahead

New leadership must confront Soyuz problems, commercial crew delays, and SLS costs.

Enlarge / The Soyuz MS-03 spacecraft launches from the Baikonur Cosmodrome with NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy of Roscosmos, and ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet on board in November. (credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls)

The new year finds NASA beset by uncertainty, especially with regard to its human spaceflight programs. Soon, the agency will be without its current leadership. Administrator Charlie Bolden has told his team he will leave office at noon on January 20, along with his boss, President Barack Obama. And as yet there is no clear direction for what comes next from the Trump administration and its space transition team, which remain locked in a struggle over the future direction of the agency.

It's not a good time for uncertain leadership, as many of NASA's human spaceflight initiatives face serious questions. As 2017 begins, recurring issues with the Russian Soyuz launch vehicle have left the agency unable to say when its next astronaut will go into space. Its much-anticipated private space taxis remain more than a year from flight. And questions remain about the viability of its big-ticket programs, the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft.

One should never count the space agency out, of course, as it works with a large number of aerospace contractors and has thousands of talented engineers and scientists at field centers. But as one former astronaut told Ars, "Human space flight has created the situation that it is waiting for leadership to make progress in significant ways. The big question is who will lead them out of this hole?"

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Tomtom Sports: Tomtom stellt neue App für seine Wearables vor

Die Sportuhren und Fitnesstracker von Tomtom genießen einen guten Ruf, nur die App war vielen Nutzern zu spartanisch. Jetzt kündigt das Unternehmen eine von Grund auf neu gestaltete Anwendung an. (Tomtom, Fitness)

Die Sportuhren und Fitnesstracker von Tomtom genießen einen guten Ruf, nur die App war vielen Nutzern zu spartanisch. Jetzt kündigt das Unternehmen eine von Grund auf neu gestaltete Anwendung an. (Tomtom, Fitness)

Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017

Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017

The Asus Zenbook 3 Deluxe may be an eye-catching addition to the Asus line of premium ultraportable notebooks. But it’s not the only new Zenbook launching at the Consumer Electronics Show.

Asus is also updating its Zenbook UX310, UX410, UX510, UX330, and Zenbook Flip UX360UA with new models sporting 7th-gen Intel Core processors.

Here’s a quick overview of the new models:

  • Zenbook UX310: up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 940MX, 3200 x 1800 pixel display, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX410: 14″ 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, Harman Kardon audio
  • Zenbook UX510: 15.6 inch, 3840 x 2160px display, up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 950, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX330: 13 inch, 2.4 pound laptop with up to COre i7, 3200 x 1800px display, 12 hour battery
  • Zenbook Flip UX360UA: Convertible 13.3 inch, up to 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, 12 hour battery

One of the more interesting models is the 14 inch UX410, which Asus ays is about the size of a typical 13 inch laptop, thanks to the thin bezels around the display, which measure just about 6mm thick.

Continue reading Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017 at Liliputing.

Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017

The Asus Zenbook 3 Deluxe may be an eye-catching addition to the Asus line of premium ultraportable notebooks. But it’s not the only new Zenbook launching at the Consumer Electronics Show.

Asus is also updating its Zenbook UX310, UX410, UX510, UX330, and Zenbook Flip UX360UA with new models sporting 7th-gen Intel Core processors.

Here’s a quick overview of the new models:

  • Zenbook UX310: up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 940MX, 3200 x 1800 pixel display, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX410: 14″ 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, Harman Kardon audio
  • Zenbook UX510: 15.6 inch, 3840 x 2160px display, up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 950, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX330: 13 inch, 2.4 pound laptop with up to COre i7, 3200 x 1800px display, 12 hour battery
  • Zenbook Flip UX360UA: Convertible 13.3 inch, up to 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, 12 hour battery

One of the more interesting models is the 14 inch UX410, which Asus ays is about the size of a typical 13 inch laptop, thanks to the thin bezels around the display, which measure just about 6mm thick.

Continue reading Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017 at Liliputing.

Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017

Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017

The Asus Zenbook 3 Deluxe may be an eye-catching addition to the Asus line of premium ultraportable notebooks. But it’s not the only new Zenbook launching at the Consumer Electronics Show.

Asus is also updating its Zenbook UX310, UX410, UX510, UX330, and Zenbook Flip UX360UA with new models sporting 7th-gen Intel Core processors.

Here’s a quick overview of the new models:

  • Zenbook UX310: up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 940MX, 3200 x 1800 pixel display, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX410: 14″ 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, Harman Kardon audio
  • Zenbook UX510: 15.6 inch, 3840 x 2160px display, up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 950, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX330: 13 inch, 2.4 pound laptop with up to COre i7, 3200 x 1800px display, 12 hour battery
  • Zenbook Flip UX360UA: Convertible 13.3 inch, up to 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, 12 hour battery

One of the more interesting models is the 14 inch UX410, which Asus ays is about the size of a typical 13 inch laptop, thanks to the thin bezels around the display, which measure just about 6mm thick.

Continue reading Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017 at Liliputing.

Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017

The Asus Zenbook 3 Deluxe may be an eye-catching addition to the Asus line of premium ultraportable notebooks. But it’s not the only new Zenbook launching at the Consumer Electronics Show.

Asus is also updating its Zenbook UX310, UX410, UX510, UX330, and Zenbook Flip UX360UA with new models sporting 7th-gen Intel Core processors.

Here’s a quick overview of the new models:

  • Zenbook UX310: up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 940MX, 3200 x 1800 pixel display, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX410: 14″ 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, Harman Kardon audio
  • Zenbook UX510: 15.6 inch, 3840 x 2160px display, up to Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce 950, up to 16GB RAM
  • Zenbook UX330: 13 inch, 2.4 pound laptop with up to COre i7, 3200 x 1800px display, 12 hour battery
  • Zenbook Flip UX360UA: Convertible 13.3 inch, up to 3200 x 1800px display, up to Core i7, up to 16GB RAM, 12 hour battery

One of the more interesting models is the 14 inch UX410, which Asus ays is about the size of a typical 13 inch laptop, thanks to the thin bezels around the display, which measure just about 6mm thick.

Continue reading Asus updates Zenbook laptops for 2017 at Liliputing.