Guidemaster: The best Windows ultrabooks you can buy right now

Ars tests out the biggest flagship laptops to see which are worth your money.

Guidemaster: The best Windows ultrabooks you can buy right now

Enlarge (credit: Valentina Palladino)

Buyers looking for premium Windows laptops today have plenty of choices; every few months sees some splashy launch of a new high-end PC. Ultrabooks have become the standard design for most premium Windows laptops, and they represent the best of what companies like Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and Microsoft have to offer in terms of design, power, and innovation.

If you're looking for a thin-and-light laptop that's still powerful enough to handle work and play with ease—and doesn't run macOS—a Windows ultrabook is what you want. But not all ultrabooks are created equal. That's why Ars has tested some of the most popular Windows laptops to see which are worthy for consideration as your next high-end notebook.

Note: Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

Read 54 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Privacy-Focused Search Engine Wants Copyright Directive to Pass

Rising privacy-focused search engine Qwant is calling for the Copyright Directive to be passed by the EU Parliament. Founder Eric Léandri says his platform is ready to pay creators for use of their works but is calling for an external database of copyrighted works as a reference point. Last year, however, the company said that Article 13 presented a “risk for fundamental rights and freedoms.”

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

Launched in 2013, French-based search engine Qwant markets itself as a privacy-friendly service.

Currently one of the top 50 most-visited sites in France, the service claims not track its users, unlike competitors such as Google.

It also differs from the world’s leading search engine in other ways too, most notably in its support of one of Europe’s most controversial legislative proposals in recent times.

In an interview published in French publication Les Echos (paywall), Qwant founder and boss Éric Leandri says his company is actually in favor of the EU’s Copyright Directive passing next week.

On Article 11 (which opponents refer to as the ‘link tax’), Leandri told the publication that the current text is “the only chance” for press publishers to receive remuneration from US giants, including Google, who use such content without paying publishers “a cent”.

On Article 13 (‘censorship machines’ / ‘upload filters’), Leandri acknowledges that the text “is not perfect” but still wants it to pass, since he believes there is a way to make it compatible with the values of an open Internet.

“We consider, that besides the editors of press and journalists, the world of culture and creation must be justly paid,” Leandri says.

“But this article scares the advocates of a free Internet, which we are, because it requires all platforms, except the very small, to identify protected content that would be indexed illegally, which they have always refused so far, believing that it is unmanageable.”

Leandri also highlights problems with not only the expense of creating a system similar to YouTube’s Content ID, but also the fear that smaller platforms will be driven to companies like Google and Facebook for their filtering solutions. This would allow the giants to collect even more data on Internet users and monitor the business activities of rivals.

So why the surprising support for the Copyright Directive?

“The modalities of application of this article are to be discussed and transposed in each country. We propose, at this stage, to condition the directive with the setting up of a free and open public platform in which the authors, the photographers, in short all the players, would deposit their photographs, videos and texts,” Leandri explains.

“The idea would be that companies on the Web can [query this database] to see if the content they use is free of copyrights, or not. Clearly, you send the photo that you want to use and [the database] answers you, yes, or no, depending on the footprint that has been associated with it. It’s much simpler technically than you think. And more right.”

While this kind of system could perhaps go some way to calming fears over the creation of an “upload filter oligopoly” as described recently by Germany’s Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information, Leandri’s plan doesn’t appear to address a key and fundamental issue.

A database of content – whether it’s stored within YouTube’s systems or elsewhere – does not have the ability to differentiate when copyrighted content is used legally, for “parody, satire, reporting or criticism purposes”, for example.

And the quote above is indeed just that – and it came from Qwant itself – dug up by TF on the company’s blog.

In a commentary published last year warning against Article 13 and titled “Putting our freedom of speech into the hands of robots”, the piece warns that automated systems can indeed hinder freedom of expression.

“We believe that when they rely on platforms to express themselves, citizens should be free to use content that they feel is needed to support their point of view, provided that this use is proportionate,” the article reads.

“This puts a heavy burden on robots that can’t determine when a human being is making a proportionate and legal use of a third-party content, for instance for parody, satire, reporting or criticism purposes.

“Putting our freedom of speech into the hands of robots that will look into what human beings share and assess the legality of what they say is not the Internet we want for our children. So while we understand the need for efficient protection of copyright, we believe the proposed path is not one to follow,” the company added.

While the idea of an external database is novel, Leandri’s solution doesn’t address the company’s own fears over Article 13, let alone those of the public. TF asked Qwant how these seemingly opposing views can be consolidated but at the time of publication, we were yet to hear back.

However, Leandri is also proposing something else. He says his company will lead the way by committing right now to paying creators a fair price for any works utilized by his company, whether the Directive passes or not.

“[T]o prove to you how much I support this directive, I announce to you that, without even waiting for its vote, Qwant will start to pay the editors of content, so the newspapers for the texts, the photographers for the photos, and the video and music publishers that our search engine indexes,” Leandri concludes.

Proponents of Article 13 are already praising Qwant on social media for its support of the Copyright Directive but the apparent conflict may yet prove an irritant to users of its service, who value its stated open Internet stance.

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

People brought food from all over Britain to feast near Stonehenge

People brought their own pigs for the feasts from as far away as Scotland.

Prehistoric stone circle in the English countryside.

Enlarge / Feasts at nearby Durrington Walls drew attendees from all over Britain. (credit: Stefan Kühn / Wikimedia)

The remnants of prehistoric monuments still dot the modern British landscape. Around 4,500 years ago, people gathered at these sites or in nearby communities for annual winter feasts where the main delicacy on the menu was pork. Chemical analysis of the pig bones left behind after feasts at four major henge sites in southern Britain reveals a surprisingly far-flung network of Neolithic travel.

This little piggy went to Stonehenge...

Mount Pleasant Henge is a stone circle about 70km (44 miles) southwest of Stonehenge, near the coast of the English Channel. West Kennet Palisaded Enclosures is a set of circular ditches and palisades near the famous stone circle at Avebury, about 39km (24 miles) north of Stonehenge, while Marden Henge, between Avebury and Stonehenge, is a 14-hectare site surrounded by ditches and embankments that once held its own circle of standing stones. Durrington Walls, a large settlement (which eventually built its own stone circle) just 3km (1.86 miles) northeast of Stonehenge, was closely linked with the iconic monument itself.

"Stonehenge is for the dead, Durrington Walls for the living: the place of the builders of Stonehenge and the places of Stonehenge's feasts," archaeologist Richard Madgwick of Cardiff University told Ars Technica. Archaeologists have unearthed the remains of ancient feasting at all four sites: broken ceramics, discarded stone tools, and the bones of butchered pigs. Those 4,500-year-old leftovers suggest that these sites were hubs linking a Neolithic social network that connected far-flung communities from Scotland to Wales.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

NUC8 (Crimson Canyon) im Test: AMD rettet Intels 10-nm-Minirechner

Der NUC8 alias Crimson Canyon ist ein technisch interessanter Mini-PC: Abseits der Radeon-Grafikeinheit enttäuscht aber Intels Cannon-Lake-Chip samt verlötetem Speicher, und die vorinstallierte Festplatte macht das System nervig träge. Mit SSD wird es …

Der NUC8 alias Crimson Canyon ist ein technisch interessanter Mini-PC: Abseits der Radeon-Grafikeinheit enttäuscht aber Intels Cannon-Lake-Chip samt verlötetem Speicher, und die vorinstallierte Festplatte macht das System nervig träge. Mit SSD wird es besser - und noch teurer. Ein Test von Marc Sauter und Sebastian Grüner (Intel NUC, Prozessor)

Android: Google fragt Nutzer künftig nach bevorzugtem Browser

Die Strafen der EU-Kommission wirken sich weiter auf Googles Android-Geschäft aus: Künftig will das Unternehmen seine europäischen Nutzer fragen, welchen Browser und welche Suchmaschine sie auf ihrem Android-Smartphone verwenden wollen. (Google, Browse…

Die Strafen der EU-Kommission wirken sich weiter auf Googles Android-Geschäft aus: Künftig will das Unternehmen seine europäischen Nutzer fragen, welchen Browser und welche Suchmaschine sie auf ihrem Android-Smartphone verwenden wollen. (Google, Browser)

Textworld: Microsofts Text-RPG trainiert KI-Software

Microsofts Textworld ist ein textbasiertes Rollenspiel, das KI-Systeme trainieren soll. Darüber lassen sich viele zufallsgenerierte Szenarien erstellen. Die können die Entwickler auch selbst einmal ausprobieren. (Rollenspiel, Microsoft)

Microsofts Textworld ist ein textbasiertes Rollenspiel, das KI-Systeme trainieren soll. Darüber lassen sich viele zufallsgenerierte Szenarien erstellen. Die können die Entwickler auch selbst einmal ausprobieren. (Rollenspiel, Microsoft)

Osiris Rex: Asteroid Bennu wirft Material ab

Asteroid bewirft Sonde: Die Nasa-Sonde Osiris Rex hat festgestellt, dass der Asteroid Bennu größere und kleinere Partikel ausstößt. Die Forscher sind überrascht und zugleich ratlos. (Raumfahrt, Nasa)

Asteroid bewirft Sonde: Die Nasa-Sonde Osiris Rex hat festgestellt, dass der Asteroid Bennu größere und kleinere Partikel ausstößt. Die Forscher sind überrascht und zugleich ratlos. (Raumfahrt, Nasa)

Ars Technica is hiring an experienced reporter

Have 3+ years experience? Join our team!

Ars Technica is hiring an experienced reporter

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty Images)

Ars Technica is looking for an experienced reporter—a true journalistic hustler who will work the (literal and metaphorical) phones to bring our readers fresh, hot news about the interaction between technology and society.

What do we mean by "technology and society"? We mean stories about the growing political and cultural "Big Tech backlash," copyright clashes, the culture of Silicon Valley firms, tech-policy battles, and important tech-related court cases—not a review of the science in the latest sci-fi blockbuster.

We're looking for someone "experienced to senior" (at least 3 years of quality reporting experience) who already knows what we mean by an "Ars story."

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

US-Air-Base Ramstein: Bund muss US-Drohnenkrieg auf Völkerrecht prüfen

Im NSA-Untersuchungsausschuss des Bundestages war die Rolle der Air Base Ramstein im US-Drohnenkrieg ein wichtiges Thema. Nun muss sich die Regierung genauer anschauen, wen die USA mit ihren Drohnen wirklich töten. (NSA-Ausschuss, Internet)

Im NSA-Untersuchungsausschuss des Bundestages war die Rolle der Air Base Ramstein im US-Drohnenkrieg ein wichtiges Thema. Nun muss sich die Regierung genauer anschauen, wen die USA mit ihren Drohnen wirklich töten. (NSA-Ausschuss, Internet)

Browser: Opera für Android kommt mit kostenlosem VPN

Die neue Version von Operas Android-Browser hat einen kostenlosen, unlimitierten VPN-Dienst integriert. Für diesen müssen Nutzer nicht einmal ein Benutzerkonto anlegen, er lässt sich einfach in den Einstellungen aktivieren. (Opera, Browser)

Die neue Version von Operas Android-Browser hat einen kostenlosen, unlimitierten VPN-Dienst integriert. Für diesen müssen Nutzer nicht einmal ein Benutzerkonto anlegen, er lässt sich einfach in den Einstellungen aktivieren. (Opera, Browser)