The first motorcycle to use Apple CarPlay has been announced

It will require you to pair a Bluetooth headset for it to work, though.

Enlarge (credit: Honda)

Apple CarPlay is moving beyond the car and into the motorcycle.

Honda this week announced its new 2018 Gold Wing, the first bike to come equipped with Apple’s infotainment system. It will arrive next February and start at $23,500.

As noted by CNET’s Road Show blog, CarPlay’s implementation on the Gold Wing is a bit different from what it looks like on a four-wheeled automobile. The bike includes a 7-inch LCD display that shows the usual iOS-style interface, but it’s not touch-enabled. Instead, you can use a four-way joystick on the left grip or a rotary controller on the tank to get around. The latter could be tricky to manage when you’re actually on the move, but from there, you can access the usual Apple Maps, personal music libraries, iMessages, and the like.

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Ajit Pai submits plan to allow more media consolidation

Rules that preserve media diversity in local markets will be eliminated.

Enlarge / FCC Chairman Ajit Pai at The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research on May 5, 2017 in Washington, DC. (credit: Getty Images | Chip Somodevilla)

The Federal Communications Commission will vote next month on ending a rule that prevents joint ownership of newspapers and TV or radio stations in the same geographical market.

The change is part of a larger overhaul of media ownership rules announced yesterday by FCC Chairman Ajit Pai. Currently, the FCC says its newspaper/broadcast station cross-ownership rule "prohibit[s] common ownership of a daily newspaper and a full-power broadcast station (AM, FM, or TV) if the station's service contour encompasses the newspaper's city of publication."

Pai is proposing to eliminate that rule and others. He announced the move during an FCC oversight hearing in Congress yesterday, saying he wants to "pull the government once and for all out of the newsroom."

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Deals of the Day (10-26-2017)

Computers with Intel’s Kaby Lake Refresh chips are starting to hit the market, and notebooks with AMD Ryzen Mobile chips should be available soon. But while the new chips offer a significant performance boost over last year’s models, you ha…

Computers with Intel’s Kaby Lake Refresh chips are starting to hit the market, and notebooks with AMD Ryzen Mobile chips should be available soon. But while the new chips offer a significant performance boost over last year’s models, you have to pay new laptop prices to get machines with the new processors. If you’re looking […]

Deals of the Day (10-26-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

In shift to content distribution, Roku may stream to third-party devices

Roku’s mobile app could become a new hub for ad-supported channels.

Enlarge / Roku Express main menu. Just like in other Roku units.

A report from Variety suggests Roku's shift from hardware to software is moving quickly. While Roku isn't looking to abandon hardware entirely, the report claims the company is looking to stream content to third-party devices as well. The first phase of this plan will likely take place on mobile devices, possibly through Roku's existing app.

Currently, the Roku mobile app for Android and iOS acts as a remote for existing Roku devices. You can't use the app fully unless you have a Roku device connected to the same Wi-Fi network as your mobile device. However, the company could expand the features of the mobile app to include streaming TV and movie content from its ad-supported channels. Roku recently launched The Roku Channel, a cultivated channel full of movies provided by studios Roku has existing deals with. Currently, movies from Lionsgate, MGM, Paramount, Sony Pictures Entertainment, and Warner Brothers are free to watch on The Roku Channel with advertisements playing throughout.

Roku will likely launch more channels like this in the future, most featuring ad-supported content. At the company's recent IPO, it stated it would focus more on selling advertisements and distributing content in the future. Getting that content into more devices, those that aren't made by Roku, seems to be the next big step in that plan.

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Who needs a CPU? Phase change memory acts as an analog computer

Phase change memory works in a way that makes it amenable to doing math.

Enlarge (credit: IBM Research)

Historically, one of the larger bottlenecks to computing performance hasn't been processor speed; it's been getting data and instructions to and from the processor. Working with memory isn't only a performance bottleneck, as the multiple layers of caches and high speed memory add significantly to a computer's power budget. Other systems, like the extremely power-efficient neuron, mix processing and memory in individual cells.

That's inspired some computer scientists to try to figure out if we could do the same. Resistance-based memory, like memristors and phase-change memory, operate based on physics that make them amenable to performing calculations, and a few proof-of-concept demonstrations have been done using them. But a team from IBM Zurich has now gone beyond proof of concept, and they've used an array of a million phase change memory bits as an analog computer, performing tests for temporal correlations on real-world weather data.

Memory as an analog computer

Phase change memory is based on materials that can take two different forms as a solid. When cooled slowly from a liquid state, they'll form a crystalline material that's a decent conductor of electricity. Cooled quickly, and they form a glassy, disordered structure that's an insulator. Once set, the states remain stable, allowing it to provide long-term memory storage even in the absence of power.

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Saudi Arabia invests $1 billion in Richard Branson’s space plane and rocket

Company says Saudi funding commitments are consistent with “Virgin brand values.”

Saudi Press Agency

On Thursday, the government of Saudi Arabia made a big splash in the aerospace community by announcing its intentions to invest $1 billion in Virgin Galactic and that company's efforts to develop a commercial tourism space plane and a small-satellite launcher. In addition, the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al-Saud also discussed creating a space-centric entertainment industry.

"The future of Saudi Arabia is one of innovation, as showcased at this week’s Future Investment Initiative, and it’s through partnerships with organizations like Virgin Group that we will make active contributions to those sectors and technologies that are driving progress on a global scale," the crown prince said in a statement.

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Google Pixelbook review roundup: An expensive Chromebook worth buying?

When Google launched the first Chromebook Pixel in 2013, a lot of people scratched their heads. It was a laptop with some pretty phenomenal hardware (albeit not enough built-in storage space) that ran an operating system most people associated with dir…

When Google launched the first Chromebook Pixel in 2013, a lot of people scratched their heads. It was a laptop with some pretty phenomenal hardware (albeit not enough built-in storage space) that ran an operating system most people associated with dirt cheap netbook-like laptops. I quite liked it, but acknowledged that the $1299 price tag […]

Google Pixelbook review roundup: An expensive Chromebook worth buying? is a post from: Liliputing

Twitter drops hammer and sickle on RT, Sputnik ad buys over election shenanigans

No more sponsored Tweets, but Russia-funded media sites can still post “organic” Tweets.

Enlarge / "They will love this promoted tweet, da?" (credit: Kremlin official photo)

In a blog post published today, a spokesperson for Twitter announced that the company has decided to block paid advertisement posts by Russian media outlets RT and Sputnik. "Twitter has made the policy decision to off-board advertising from all accounts owned by Russia Today (RT) and Sputnik, effective immediately," the post stated.

The bans are the result of "retrospective work" done by Twitter's global public policy team to investigate the use of the service during the 2016 presidential elections to conduct state-sponsored influence campaigns. The US intelligence community found "that both RT and Sputnik attempted to interfere with the election on behalf of the Russian government," the Twitter spokesperson wrote.

"We did not come to this decision lightly and are taking this step now as part of our ongoing commitment to help protect the integrity of the user experience on Twitter," the post states. "Early this year, the US intelligence community named RT and Sputnik as implementing state-sponsored Russian efforts to interfere with and disrupt the 2016 Presidential election, which is not something we want on Twitter."

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Artists Highlight YouTube Piracy and Poor Payments in New Ad Campaign

A new advertising campaign run by the Content Creators Coalition paints YouTube as an artist-unfriendly platform. The video spots, which run on YouTube itself, highlight ‘poor’ payouts and ridicule the streaming service’s DMCA takedown process.

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

YouTube is the world’s leading video and music service and has partnerships with thousands of artists and other publishers around the globe.

While many are happy with the revenue they’re generating from the Google-owned platform, there has been a lot of negative commentary as well.

Several major record labels are complaining about the so-called ‘value gap‘ and the low payouts per streaming view, for example. This view is shared by the Content Creators Coalition (c3), an artist-run advocacy organization for musicians.

The group has just released two new ads calling on the streaming service to give artists more options to prevent piracy while calling on Congress to update the DMCA.

Rehashing the old Apple vs. Microsoft ad theme, the first video depicts an artist who is trying to get pirated content removed from the site. In the ad, YouTube is not particularly helpful, suggesting that pirated content is quickly re-uploaded after it’s removed.

Interestingly, there is no mention of the Content-ID program which many creators successfully use to prevent pirated content from reappearing. The vast majority (98%) of all copyright complaints are currently handled automatically through the Content-ID system.

Takedown Whack-a-Mole?

The second ad complains about poor payments. In this video, the artist gets paid more from all smaller streaming services, even though these generated only a fraction of the views compared to YouTube.

This complaint is not new either. Over the past several years, YouTube has been called out repeatedly for not paying enough. Not only that, the streaming service has also been accused of running a DMCA protection racket, profiting from pirated streams while hiding behind the DMCA’s safe harbor protections.

Pennies?

The Content Creators Coalition says that the advertisements will run on YouTube and other digital platforms as part of a significant new ad buy.

“Google’s YouTube has shortchanged artists while earning billions of dollars of our music. Artists know YouTube can do better,” c3 President and award-winning bassist Melvin Gibbs says.

“So, rather than hiding behind outdated laws, YouTube and Google should work to give artists more control over our music and pay music creators fairly when our songs are played on their platform.”

While these complaints are nothing new for YouTube, they are also intended to rally support from the public and lawmakers.

“Our ads send a message to the executives in Mountain View that artists are fighting back and mobilizing fans to push Congress to update the DMCA and end the legal neglect that has given Big Tech too much power over our work and society,” Gibbs adds.

YouTube itself paints an entirely different picture. The company previously stated that it goes above and beyond what it’s required to do by law, while paying billions to copyright holders.

“Content ID goes beyond a simple ‘notice-and-takedown’ system to provide a set of automated tools that empowers rightsholders to automatically claim their content and choose whether to track, block or monetize it on YouTube,” senior policy counsel Katherine Oyama noted.

“YouTube has paid out over $2 billion to rightsholders who have monetized their content through Content ID since it first launched. In fact, today well over 90% of all Content ID claims across the platform result in monetization.”

This music industry vs YouTube battle is far from over.

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

Reddit conducts wide-ranging purge of offensive subreddits

Gone: /r/Nazi and /r/PicsOfDeadKids. Still around: /r/WatchPeopleDie/.

Enlarge / Instead of thinking about horrible subreddits, look at this adorable kitten instead. (credit: Joaquim Gaspar )

Reddit has long been the most permissive of the major social media sites. Whereas Facebook tries to ensure that all content on the site is suitable for a general audience, Reddit willingly hosts content that is sexually explicit, violent, or disturbing in a variety of other ways.

But even Reddit has limits. On Wednesday, the site announced a new policy clarifying its rules against content that incites violence. "We will take action against any content that encourages, glorifies, incites, or calls for violence or physical harm against an individual or a group of people," Reddit administrator landoflobsters wrote. Promoting harm to animals is also against the rules.

Within minutes, moderators started to ban a long list of controversial subreddits, including /r/Nazi, /r/DylannRoofInnocent, /r/SexWithDogs, and /r/PicsOfDeadKids.

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