Wi-Fi EasyMesh standard will let you build a mesh network using routers from different companies

Mesh networking has been all the rage in the WiFi router space over the last few years, with nearly every company that makes consumer networking gear offering a whole-home WiFi solution that lets you use multiple routers to boost your signal in spaces …

Mesh networking has been all the rage in the WiFi router space over the last few years, with nearly every company that makes consumer networking gear offering a whole-home WiFi solution that lets you use multiple routers to boost your signal in spaces that would be tough to reach with a single router. But there’s […]

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Homo naledi’s brain: Like ours, but smaller

Impressions on the inner surface of skull fragments reveal parts of Homo naledi‘s brain.

Enlarge (credit: Hawks et al. 2017)

Homo naledi’s brain may have been small, but it looked surprisingly similar to ours, according to a new study that suggests that structure may have come before size in the evolution of hominin brains.

Measurements of skull fragments indicate that Homo naledi’s brain was about the same size as that of an Australopithecine—the genus of primates that lived in Africa 2 to 4 million years ago and may be among our early ancestors. Yet the diminutive species was present in Africa long after the Homo lineage appeared and may have overlapped with modern humans. So how it fits into our family tree is not clear.

A new study reveals that, despite the size, Homo naledi’s brain looked quite different from Australopithecus’ and much more like ours, at least in some very important areas.

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Deals of the Day (5-14-2018)

Google, Amazon, and Roku all offer dongles you can plug into an HDMI port on your TV to stream 4K video from Netflix, Amazon, YouTube and other sources. And not surprisingly, the Chromecast Ultra, Amazon Fire TV, and Roku Streaming Stick+ all have the …

Google, Amazon, and Roku all offer dongles you can plug into an HDMI port on your TV to stream 4K video from Netflix, Amazon, YouTube and other sources. And not surprisingly, the Chromecast Ultra, Amazon Fire TV, and Roku Streaming Stick+ all have the same $70ish list price. But they all also go on sale […]

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Pirate Site Blocking Threatens Canada’s Net Neutrality, House of Commons Committee Says

The Canadian pirate site blocking proposal threatens net neutrality, the Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics warns. In a report that’s supported across the political spectrum, the committee urges the Government to use its authority to intervene, if required.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Earlier this year several of the largest telcos in Canada teamed up with copyright holders to present their plan to tackle online piracy.

United in the Fairplay Canada coalition, Bell, Rogers, and others urged telecoms regulator CRTC to institute a national website blocking program.

The blocklist should be maintained by a yet to be established non-profit organization called the “Independent Piracy Review Agency” (IPRA) and both IPRA and the CRTC would be overseen by the Federal Court of Appeal, the organizations propose.

Thus far the response to the plan has been mixed. Several large media companies are in favor of blockades, arguing that it’s one of the few options to stop piracy. However, others fear that it will lead to overblocking and other problems.

Last week, the Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics joined the opposition. In a detailed report on the protection of net neutrality in Canada, it signaled the blocking proposal as a serious concern.

The House of Commons committee, which advises Parliament on a variety of matters, notes that the Fairplay coalition hasn’t sufficiently explained why the current process doesn’t work, nor has it supplied sufficient evidence to justify the new measures.

“[T]he Committee is of the view that the proposal could impede the application of net neutrality in Canada, and that in their testimony, the ISPs did not present sufficient explanation as to why the existing process is inadequate or sufficient justification to support to application,” the report reads.

At the same time, the lack of judicial oversight is seen as a problem.

“The Committee also remains skeptical about the absence of judicial oversight in the Fair Play proposal and is of the view that maintaining such oversight is critical,” it adds.

What is clear, however, is that the proposal could impede the application of net neutrality in Canada. As such, the House of Commons committee recommends that the Government asks the CRTC to reconsider its decision, if it decides in favor of the blocking plan.

“That, in the event that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission supports FairPlay Canada’s application, the federal government consider using the authority provided under section 12 of the Telecommunications Act to ask the CRTC to reconsider its decision,” the recommendation reads.

Recommendation

The net neutrality angle has been brought up by several parties in the past, ranging from legal experts, through copyright holders, to the public at large. While many see it as a threat, those in favor of website blocking say it’s a non-issue.

Even Internet providers themselves are divided on the topic. Where Shaw sees no net neutrality concerns, TekSavvy has argued the opposite.

The House of Commons committee report clearly sides with the opponents and with backing from all political parties, it sends a strong message. This is music to the ears of law professor Micheal Geist, one of the most vocal critics of the Fairplay proposal.

“With all parties joining in a recommendation against the site blocking plan, the report represents a strong signal that the FairPlay coalition plan led by Bell does not have political support given that it raises freedom of expression, due process, and net neutrality concerns,” Geist notes.

A copy of the report of the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics is available here (pdf).

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Breitbandmessung: Kabelnetzbetreiber kritisieren Messung der Bundesnetzagentur

Die Kabelnetzbetreiber sind mit den Ergebnissen der Breitbandmessung der Bundesnetzagentur nicht einverstanden. Golem.de hat die Kritikpunkte zusammengefasst. (Bundesnetzagentur, Internet)

Die Kabelnetzbetreiber sind mit den Ergebnissen der Breitbandmessung der Bundesnetzagentur nicht einverstanden. Golem.de hat die Kritikpunkte zusammengefasst. (Bundesnetzagentur, Internet)

Download and play these Xbox Games Pass titles while you still can

Bioshock, Borderlands, XCOM will no longer be available after May

Enlarge / While still "over 100 Games," the selection on Xbox Games Pass is set to get a bit smaller next month.

Microsoft's $10 per month Xbox Games Pass subscription service will be seeing the first significant reduction in its game library at the end of May. That's when 21 available titles—primarily backward-compatible Xbox 360 games—will be rotating out of the service.

Microsoft has been adding seven to ten games to Games Pass every month since its launch last June, bringing the total number of Xbox One and Xbox 360 titles subscribers can download to over 170. Only a small handful of previously available titles have been removed during that run, including WWE 2K17, NBA 2K17, and Metal Gear Solid V.

Industry watchers (including yours truly) have been referring to Games Pass as a "Netflix for Games" since before its launch. But this is the first real sign that the service will mimic Netflix's practice of regularly cycling movies and TV shows in and out of its selection month to month. The end of May will represent exactly one year since Games Pass' full launch, suggesting that expiring year-long licensing agreements with third-party publishers could be behind the latest reductions.

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Lenovo hypes up an all-screen (no really) flagship smartphone

Stunning Lenovo design has 95-percent screen-to-bezel ratio, but will they build it?

Lenovo

The smartphone hype train is reaching full speed for a smartphone from—believe it or not—Lenovo, which has been teasing an all-screen, notchless smartphone on Chinese social media. People throw around the term "all-screen" far too often, but here Lenovo truly is promising the ultimate smartphone design. Pictures posted by Lenovo VP Chang Cheng promise a phone that—aside from a minimal ring around the display—is totally screen.

In the posts, which were first spotted by Cnet, Lenovo says the Z5 has a 95 percent screen-to-bezel ratio. Cheng says the design was enabled by "four technological breakthroughs" and "18 patented technologies." What the post doesn't say is what, exactly, happened to the front-facing camera. Unless Lenovo's drawings are deliberately misleading, it would appear the only option for a front camera is some kind of pop-up solution, like on a recent Vivo concept phone, or no front camera at all.

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Kobo Clara HD eReader coming soon

After hitting the FCC in April, it looks like the Kobo Clara HD eBook reader is set to hit the streets in the coming weeks. Kobo still hasn’t made any official announcements yet, but Notebook Italia spotted one of several listings for the new dev…

After hitting the FCC in April, it looks like the Kobo Clara HD eBook reader is set to hit the streets in the coming weeks. Kobo still hasn’t made any official announcements yet, but Notebook Italia spotted one of several listings for the new device at online retail sites, giving us a pretty good idea […]

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HEDT-CPU: AMD bestätigt erste Samples von Threadripper 2

Die ersten Muster von neuen Versionen des Rechenmonsters Threadripper sind bei Hardwareherstellern angekommen. Das hat AMD Golem.de bestätigt. Unklar ist noch, wie viel Mehrleistung die Prozessoren bieten werden. (Prozessor, AMD)

Die ersten Muster von neuen Versionen des Rechenmonsters Threadripper sind bei Hardwareherstellern angekommen. Das hat AMD Golem.de bestätigt. Unklar ist noch, wie viel Mehrleistung die Prozessoren bieten werden. (Prozessor, AMD)