It’s official: Destiny 2 is coming to the PC

Sequel players will have to abandon progress from the first MMO.

PC-exclusive gamers will have one fewer console-exclusive first-person shooter to be jealous of this year. Destiny 2, the recently announced sequel to Activision and Bungie's nearly three-year-old console MMO shooter, will be coming to the PC as well as the Xbox One and PS4 on September 8 following a beta test this summer.

The move, which has been rumored since September, comes after Activision cut off support for the Xbox 360 and PS3 versions of Destiny last year. That clean break could help Destiny 2 target a higher level of performance on current consoles and high-end PC builds (not to mention the PS4 Pro and upcoming Xbox One "Project Scorpio") without the fear of pushing older console hardware too far.

It's unclear whether PC players will be able to play alongside their console brethren in the upcoming game or whether the platforms will be segregated to their own distinct online networks. Microsoft began pushing for cross-platform play between the PC and Xbox One last year, and the company recently opened up Gears of War 4 to allow for cooperative play regardless of the players' operating systems. Sony has been more reluctant to open up the PlayStation Network to connect widely with other platforms, though some PS4 MMOs have been cross-compatible with their PC versions. We've reached out to Activision for comment.

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Court: Megaupload’s Failing Drives Can Be Fixed, But Not Accessed

The sixteen failing hard drives containing Megaupload data at hosting provider Cogent can be restored and preserved. The court has granted the MPAA and RIAA’s version of the preservation order, meaning that no person will be able to access the data without permission. Megaupload is disappointed that it’s still unable to freely access the evidence and fears that it won’t get a fair trial.

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

After Megaupload was shut down more than five years ago, data from hundreds of the site’s servers were put in storage by several hosting facilities, Cogent included.

While the original machines are no longer intact, the company has backed up all data which it will keep in storage pending the various lawsuits against Megaupload and its former employees.

However, as time has dragged on, the condition of the hard drives has significantly deteriorated. Last year, Cogent first warned that sixteen of them have actually become unreadable.

Over the past months the MPAA, RIAA and Megaupload have worked on a mutual agreement to secure the data. This is important because of the pending civil and criminal lawsuits, where the information could be used as vital evidence.

Earlier this month the MPAA and RIAA submitted nearly identical filings, asking the court for a preservation order. The rightsholder groups informed the court that they had reached an agreement with Megaupload on “nearly all” terms of the restoration and backup process, to be carried out by the independent forensics company DriveSavers.

A few days ago Megaupload replied that they indeed agree to the backup and preservation procedure. However, the order proposed by the rightsholders would also prevent Megaupload from accessing its data afterward, which they see as a violation of their constitutional rights.

Megaupload, therefore, submitted a revised version of the preservation order specifying that it can access the data, but for litigation purposes only. If the MPAA or RIAA disagree, they can then share their concerns with the court on a case by case basis.

After hearing both arguments, District Court Judge Liam O’grady chose to side with the rightsholders, siging their version of the preservation order (pdf).

This means that after months of negotiating the failing drives can finally be repaired and preserved. However, when that process is complete no party will be able to access the files, Megaupload included.

“Once the drives and devices have been returned to Cogent’s custody and stored in Cogent’s facility, no person […] shall have access to those drives and devices, or to the data contained on those drives and devices, absent further order from this Court,” the order reads.

The data, and thus the evidence, can only be accessed with permission from the court. While the MPAA and RIAA will be pleased with the ruling, Megaupload is not.

“We are disappointed that the court is still preventing Megaupload from accessing its own server data to independently preserve and use in its own defense,” Megaupload’s counsel Ira Rothken tells TorrentFreak.

The good news, for Megaupload, is that they don’t have to pay for the data preservation. The MPAA and RIAA both agreed to share the cost associated with it and will pick up the full tab.

“We are pleased that the parties that contributed to the Megaupload data loss, by objecting in 2012 to Megaupload’s efforts to access and preserve its own data, are now paying for its recovery,” Megaupload’s counsel says.

“We are also pleased that the Court approved DriveSavers, a world class data recovery firm, as the vendor to handle data restoration,” Rothken adds.

As things stand now it could take years before a trial gets underway, so this is likely not the last time we hear about the data issue. In this regard, Megaupload is also disappointed in the US Government.

The authorities previously prevented the file-hosting service from accessing the files that are hosted at Carpathia. The US Government made backups of the data it wants to use as evidence, but repeatedly prevented Megaupload from doing the same.

“The US after bringing the largest criminal copyright in history is dead set on making sure that Megaupload and the other defendants cannot have access to the evidence they need to defend themselves,” Rothken tells us.

All in all, Megaupload’s counsel is still concerned that Kim Dotcom and the other defendants will not get a fair trial in the United States.

Rothken worries that other data, including the files stored at Carpathia, could become unreadable as well in the future, noting that this could have been prevented if they were allowed preserve it themselves in 2012.

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

Deals of the Day (3-30-2017)

Deals of the Day (3-30-2017)

My aging HP InkJet 5610 all-in-one printer has served me well for over a decade. But I’m getting tired of aligning ink cartridges and decided that by the time my last cartridge dies out, I’d find a new multi-function laser printer with support for WiFi connections (something my aging printer lacks). As luck would have […]

Deals of the Day (3-30-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (3-30-2017)

My aging HP InkJet 5610 all-in-one printer has served me well for over a decade. But I’m getting tired of aligning ink cartridges and decided that by the time my last cartridge dies out, I’d find a new multi-function laser printer with support for WiFi connections (something my aging printer lacks). As luck would have […]

Deals of the Day (3-30-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Dealmaster: Get one year of TorGuard VPN service for just $29.99

Plus deals on laptops, desktops, e-readers, and more.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we're back with new deals to share with you. Today, you can get one year's worth of TorGuard VPN service for just $29.99. That's 50 percent off its typical price of $60, so grab it now if you're in need of a VPN service. We also have great deals on Dell's Inspiron 15 7000 gaming laptop, complete with a Core i5 processor and GTX 960m graphics, $100 off the Razer Blade Stealth notebook, and a series of deals on Amazon Kindle devices.

Check out the full list of deals below.

Featured

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STEM Workforce is aging, leaving few positions for new scientists

Scientists are getting their PhDs later, retiring at lower rates.

Enlarge (credit: BRICK 101)

The population of people doing science is increasingly older, and fewer young people are establishing careers in the field. A recent paper published in PNAS finds there are two main factors contributing to the aging STEM workforce (science, tech, engineering, and math). The first is that a large majority of current scientists come from the baby boomer generation—now ages 50 to 70. The second main contributor is that in 1994, universities eliminated mandatory retirement, so many older scientists continue to work long past traditional retirement ages.

This trend could have severe consequences, as science may end up lacking the diverse perspectives needed for creative solutions, and there will be fewer qualified individuals to step up when the boomers finally do retire.

An aging cohort

The authors of this PNAS paper use data from the National Science Foundation and the US Survey of Doctorate Recipients to examine age-related demographic trends in STEM PhD recipients. Between 1993 and 2010, the authors saw a decline in scientists ages 35 to 53 and a rise in scientists older than 53. This shift reflects the aging of people currently working in STEM fields rather than a change in the population of researchers.

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iFixit: New $329 iPad is a throwback to the original iPad Air

Tablet has 2GB of RAM, a pretty large battery, and an older design.

iFixit

Apple's $329 iPad, officially dubbed the iPad (5th generation), is a lot like the iPhone SE insofar as Apple is revisiting a design from 2013, putting more modern components in it, and selling it for a relatively low price. We already knew from the size, weight, and other specs that the iPad 5 was going to be a lot like the original iPad Air, and a teardown from iFixit reveals just how similar the tablets are inside and out.

For starters, the glass on the front of the tablet and the LCD panel aren't fused together as they are in the iPad Air 2 or either of the Pros. This makes it possible to replace either the glass or the LCD without having to replace both, which can make some kinds of repairs cheaper to do (laminated screens make for thinner devices, though, and they can also improve contrast and make colors seem more vivid). This is still an iPad, though, and Apple's tablets (for whatever reason) remain more difficult to fix than its phones—the battery is held in with a lot of glue, and opening the tablet up in the first place is going to require a heating pad to soften the glue holding the glass and the aluminum base together.

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Extremistische Inhalte: Google hat weiter Probleme mit Werbeplatzierungen

Noch immer kann das Unternehmen nicht garantieren, dass Werbung nicht in einem Anzeigenumfeld erscheint, das den Anzeigenkunden nicht gefällt. Google nimmt das Thema ernst. Eine konkrete Lösung ist aber noch nicht in Sicht. (Google, Onlinewerbung)

Noch immer kann das Unternehmen nicht garantieren, dass Werbung nicht in einem Anzeigenumfeld erscheint, das den Anzeigenkunden nicht gefällt. Google nimmt das Thema ernst. Eine konkrete Lösung ist aber noch nicht in Sicht. (Google, Onlinewerbung)

Orange Pi 2G-IoT is a $10 single-board PC with a cellular modem

Orange Pi 2G-IoT is a $10 single-board PC with a cellular modem

There’s no shortage of cheap single-board computers that you can use for development projects, media streaming, or even general purpose computing. But up until recently many of the most popular lacked built-in support for for WiFi or Bluetooth. Now that the Raspberry Pi 3 and Raspberry Pi Zero W include those, what’s next? How about […]

Orange Pi 2G-IoT is a $10 single-board PC with a cellular modem is a post from: Liliputing

Orange Pi 2G-IoT is a $10 single-board PC with a cellular modem

There’s no shortage of cheap single-board computers that you can use for development projects, media streaming, or even general purpose computing. But up until recently many of the most popular lacked built-in support for for WiFi or Bluetooth. Now that the Raspberry Pi 3 and Raspberry Pi Zero W include those, what’s next? How about […]

Orange Pi 2G-IoT is a $10 single-board PC with a cellular modem is a post from: Liliputing

Solar cell produces hydrogen to light the night

Ultrathin solar cells use less material, split water, don’t destroy themselves.

Enlarge / Thin gallium photovoltaic cells have been made before, but these are the first to efficiently split water. (credit: John Rodgers)

The clean energy revolution, despite recent policy developments, is upon us. The Netherlands' main train company now runs entirely on wind energy. Electric cars are making inroads, especially in high density urban areas.

But, to be frank, batteries are not a great replacement for hydrocarbons: their energy density is relatively low, and recharging times are rather long. Despite it being irrational for most people, range anxiety is a real thing for some.

This is where solar fuels could provide a solution—a transportable fuel generated using nothing but sunlight. But production of solar fuels is a tediously inefficient process, since the generation of electricity and production of fuel have to be done separately. Avoiding that separation is why a new form of solar cell that performs electrolysis (splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen) directly may be the future.

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