
CMOS: Neuer Panasonic-Chip sieht im Dunkeln
Hell oder dunkel: Ein neuartiger CMOS-Chip von Panasonic erfasst sichtbares und infrarotes Licht. Er ist allerdings nicht für Digitalkameras gedacht. (Panasonic, Technologie)

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Hell oder dunkel: Ein neuartiger CMOS-Chip von Panasonic erfasst sichtbares und infrarotes Licht. Er ist allerdings nicht für Digitalkameras gedacht. (Panasonic, Technologie)
Seit Wochen ist es nicht verfügbar. Wer Googles Pixel-Smartphone mit 128 GByte kaufen möchte, muss warten. Ein Grund für diese extremen Verzögerungen ist nicht bekannt. Eine Änderung der Situation ist nicht absehbar. (Google Pixel, Smartphone)
The feature in beta for months is now available for all users.
WhatsApp is rolling out two-step verification to all its users on Android, iOS, and Windows after testing the feature since last November. It's an optional feature meant to boost security of your messaging account—it's disabled by default, so you must enable it yourself to reap the benefits. When enabled, you'll be required to input a six-digit code of your choice when you're asked to verify your phone number.
Enabling two-step verification is easy: just navigate to the Account page under Settings in WhatsApp and choose Two-Step Verification. After you make your six-digital authentication code, you'll be asked for it every seven days as well as whenever you need to verify your phone number (for example, when you register your account on a new phone). You can also add an e-mail when you enable two-step verification which WhatsApp will use to e-mail you a link to disable the feature if you ever forget your code.
But let's say you forget your code but didn't enter a recovery e0mail in WhatsApp. In this case, you'll be able to log back into WhatsApp only after seven days of your last use of the app. According to WhatsApp, however, there will be consequences for your messages and account in this case: "After these seven days, your number will be permitted to reverify on WhatsApp without your passcode, but you will lose all pending messages upon reverifying—they will be deleted" WhatsApp's FAQ page states. "If your number is reverified on WhatsApp after 30 days of last using WhatsApp, and without your passcode, your account will be deleted and a new one will be created upon successfully reverifying."
Review: Chrome/Android integration is on the right track.
Video shot/edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)
The market is about to be flooded with a new wave of Chromebooks, all focused on Android apps. Chrome OS and Android were always meant for different devices, but now OEMs are making Chromebooks that can deliver the best of both worlds. Google's Play Store has already come to some older Chromebooks, but Samsung's new Chromebook Plus and Pro models are the first that explicitly play up their Android compatibility.
These devices follow in the footsteps of the Asus Chromebook Flip, which was the first Chrome OS two-in-one back when the operating system didn't really lend itself to that type of hardware design. Now a convertible design is apt to run Chrome OS and Android apps on the same system, but this union of operating systems isn't perfect yet.
Jolla may be pretty much done launching its own hardware, but the Finnish company continues to released updates to the Linux-base Sailfish operating system that powers its phones and tablets, as well as some third-party devices. The latest update is Sailfish OS 2.1 “Iijoki.” It includes a number of bug fixes, some architectural changes, and […]
Jolla releases Sailfish OS 2.1 with camera, browser, keyboard improvements is a post from: Liliputing
Jolla may be pretty much done launching its own hardware, but the Finnish company continues to released updates to the Linux-base Sailfish operating system that powers its phones and tablets, as well as some third-party devices. The latest update is Sailfish OS 2.1 “Iijoki.” It includes a number of bug fixes, some architectural changes, and […]
Jolla releases Sailfish OS 2.1 with camera, browser, keyboard improvements is a post from: Liliputing
The words “half,” “life,” and “three” were not mentioned. Please stop asking.
Setting aside Valve's VR mini-game collection The Lab, it's been over three years since the once mighty games developer released its last full-fat video game—the e-sports MOBA Dota 2. Its last single-player, story-driven game, Portal 2, was released in 2011. So expectations have been low for the announcement of any new Valve games, with even the fabled Half-Life 3 relegated to mere Internet meme.
It comes as something of a surprise, then, to hear Valve confirm it isn't just working on one new game—it's working on three. Moreover, while all three games are being developed specifically for VR, they won't be short, throwaway experiences like those in The Lab. They are, according to Valve founder and padre to PC gaming Gabe Newell, "full games."
"Right now we're building three VR games," Newell told reporters at a roundtable discussion at its offices in Seattle. "When I say we're building three games, we're building three full games, not experiments."
In the latest episode of The Expanse we see the fallout from the attack on Thoth Station.
Enlarge (credit: Rafy/Syfy)
Things are getting complicated in The Expanse. On Earth, political intrigue is afoot. Mars is getting ready for war. Fred Johnson's Outer Planets Alliance is trying to prevent one. And we finally know a bit more about the mysterious protomolecule and the evil scientists responsible. On this week's Decrypted, we're joined by Naren Shankar, The Expanse's showrunner. Naren talks to us about his journey to the show, which started with a PhD in engineering.
Shankar cut his teeth in television working on Star Trek with Ron Moore, whom many will recognize as the man behind the later seasons of Deep Space Nine and Battlestar Galactica. Topics we discuss include the contrast between the utopia of Starfleet and the gritty realism of The Expanse, what drew him to the show, and the ongoing need to balance effective storytelling versus obeying all the laws of physics.
I'll be analyzing, debating, and dissecting The Expanse every week with a different guest, and we'll post the podcast on Fridays throughout the season. New episodes air on Wednesdays in the US, so you have time to watch before we get into major spoilers. Yes, there are spoilers. The Expanse season 2 will air in the UK on Netflix, though an exact premiere date hasn't yet been announced. Listen when you're ready!
Last month it was revealed that UK ISPs were ready to begin sending out piracy warnings to their customers. Today we can reveal what an actual warning looks like and how the GetItRight website dovetails with ISP systems in order to handle and document users’ infringement notices.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
In January it was revealed that UK ISPs and the movie and music industries had finally reached their years-long goal of sending infringment notices to pirating subscribers.
The alerts, which are claimed to be educational in nature, are part of the larger Creative Content UK (CCUK) initiative, which includes PR campaigns targeted at the public and classroom.
Until now, no one has published details of the actual alerts in public but thanks to a cooperative member of the UK public, TorrentFreak has the lowdown. The system we’ll show below relates to Sky, so other ISPs may or may not operate slightly differently.
The email above has been redacted to protect the identity of our tipster. The blacked-out areas contain his name, the date in DD/MM/YY format, an alleged time of infringement in the HH:MM format, and a seven-digit reference code for the shared content, which is the TV show Westworld.
There is also a pair of links, one to sign into the subscriber’s Sky account (presumably this ensures the person signing in is the account holder) and a link to the ‘Get it Right Information Portal’. The first page before hitting that site looks like this.
Once on the GetItRight site, the user is informed that his or her account has been used to breach copyright and that further information is available on the following pages.
Following the links, the alleged infringer is presented with a page which provides a lot more detail. The CIR ID shown below is the same as the seven-digit code on Sky’s website. The date and time are the same, although in different formats.
The all-important IP address is listed alongside details of the software used to share the content. Also included are the filename and filesize of the infringing content and the copyright owner that made the complaint.
Interestingly, the system’s ability to track repeat infringers is evident at the bottom of the screenshot where the “Total Instances Logged This Period” can be seen.
Since the purpose of the campaign is to “educate” infringers, we asked our tipster a little about his habits, his impressions of the system, and how this warning will affect his future behavior.
“I was expecting [a warning] sooner or later as a heavy BitTorrent user. I’m sharing everything from movies, TV shows to games, but this email was about watching a TV show on Popcorn Time,” he revealed.
“This surprised me because I don’t use Popcorn Time very often and yet after approximately 10 minutes of usage I got an email the very next day. Isn’t that funny?”
So in this case, the warning was not only accurate but was also delivered to the correct person, rather than merely the person who pays the bill. We asked our tipster if he was aware of the GetItRight campaign before receiving this warning and whether it would achieve its aims.
“Yes, I have read articles on TorrentFreak. Only what I have read on TorrentFreak,” he said.
“I don’t think [the warnings] will work, at least not on a big scale. Maybe they will educate some people who did it by mistake or did it just once but for someone like me there is no hope. But at least the campaign is not aggressive.”
Interestingly, the education factor in this particular case appears to have somewhat backfired. Our tipster said that thanks to news coverage of the warnings, he knew immediately that there would be no consequences for receiving one. That put his mind at rest.
However, he did indicate that he may change his habits after receiving the warning, particularly given Sky’s claim it will ask subscribers to remove file-sharing software if they’re caught multiple times.
“[The threat to remove software] upsets me as a long-term Sky customer. But I won’t comply, I will either subscribe to another ISP provider or start using VPNs,” he said.
“I might stop using Popcorn Time as I wasn’t using it too often anyway, but I will keep using BitTorrent,” he added. Of course, Popcorn Time has BitTorrent under the hood, so both can trigger warnings.
Received a warning from a UK ISP? Contact TF in complete confidence.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
Seriously, we’ve backed up a Linux system to the land much of the Internet forgot.
Stay with us, but we've got an idea so crazy it just might work(s). (credit: 20th Century Fox)
Cloud backups these days are all the rage—for good reason. Rather than dealing with shuffling physical media offsite, you can simply back up the data offsite, where it can be stored in one of many professionally monitored data centers.
Unfortunately, this kind of service isn’t free, and the cost can be a barrier. However, there is a cost-effective way to store your cloud backups: Usenet. With access to a Usenet news server, you can simply upload your backup there, and it will be stored redundantly in news servers all over the world. Best of all, this approach typically costs considerably less than a cloud backup service.
If you’re not an IT graybeard, you may not be familiar with Usenet. To put it within a frame of reference any Ars reader may recognize, Yahoo once described the Ars Technica forums as "the successor to Usenet and precursor of Reddit." And while that's not a 100 percent accurate, Usenet is kinda, sorta like an ancient Reddit. It's a collection of forums, organized by subject, where anyone can anonymously discuss nearly any topic. Where Usenet differs from Reddit, however, is in many of the technical details.
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