Bundesverkehrsminister: Rund 1000 Mobilfunkstandorte hängen in Genehmigungsverfahren

Bundesverkehrsminister Scheuer gibt Ländern und Kommunen die Schuld an den Mobilfunklöchern. Er gab am Sonntagabend Angaben des Bitkom heraus, die erst kommende Woche veröffentlicht werden sollen. (Long Term Evolution, Mobilfunk)

Bundesverkehrsminister Scheuer gibt Ländern und Kommunen die Schuld an den Mobilfunklöchern. Er gab am Sonntagabend Angaben des Bitkom heraus, die erst kommende Woche veröffentlicht werden sollen. (Long Term Evolution, Mobilfunk)

Gegen Youtube: ARD und ZDF verbinden ihre Mediatheken

ARD und ZDF machen Schritte um ihre Mediatheken enger zu verbinden. Die ersten Maßnahmen wie eine Weiterleitung bei der Suche und ein gemeinsames Login sind nur der Anfang. (Fernsehen, Video-Community)

ARD und ZDF machen Schritte um ihre Mediatheken enger zu verbinden. Die ersten Maßnahmen wie eine Weiterleitung bei der Suche und ein gemeinsames Login sind nur der Anfang. (Fernsehen, Video-Community)

BlitzWolf BW-PCM1 is a portable 11.6 inch display for $105

Some portable monitors stand out due to their ultra-thin designs, high refresh rates, or versatility. The BlitzWolf BW-PC1 isn’t the thinnest or lightest portable display. It doesn’t have a battery, so it needs to be plugged into a power so…

Some portable monitors stand out due to their ultra-thin designs, high refresh rates, or versatility. The BlitzWolf BW-PC1 isn’t the thinnest or lightest portable display. It doesn’t have a battery, so it needs to be plugged into a power source. But here’s what the BW-PC1 has going for it: the 11.6 inch full HD display […]

The post BlitzWolf BW-PCM1 is a portable 11.6 inch display for $105 appeared first on Liliputing.

Gigafactory: Tesla soll 4 Milliarden Euro in Brandenburg investieren

Die Investition in die brandenburgische Gigafactory von Tesla soll rund 4 Milliarden Euro umfassen. Die staatlichen Zuschüsse würden sich, wenn die EU zustimmt, auf lediglich 300 Millionen Euro belaufen. (Tesla, Technologie)

Die Investition in die brandenburgische Gigafactory von Tesla soll rund 4 Milliarden Euro umfassen. Die staatlichen Zuschüsse würden sich, wenn die EU zustimmt, auf lediglich 300 Millionen Euro belaufen. (Tesla, Technologie)

Windows 10 on ARM: Microsoft soll an x86-64-Bit-Emulation arbeiten

Bisher können die Snapdragon-Chips unter Windows 10 on ARM nur native ARM64/ARM32-Apps ausführen und x86-Code mit 32 Bit, aber nicht mit 64 Bit emulieren. Das will Microsoft nun offenbar doch ändern. (Windows 10 on ARM, Microsoft)

Bisher können die Snapdragon-Chips unter Windows 10 on ARM nur native ARM64/ARM32-Apps ausführen und x86-Code mit 32 Bit, aber nicht mit 64 Bit emulieren. Das will Microsoft nun offenbar doch ändern. (Windows 10 on ARM, Microsoft)

California’s methane super-emitters

In the Golden State, landfills are the worst, then dairies and the oil/gas sector.

Seagulls attack a garbage heap.

Enlarge (credit: Oregon Metro)

Methane is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, trapping much more heat. Point-source methane emitters are typically small—usually less than 10 meters in diameter—but they emit plumes of highly concentrated methane. So if we want to reduce the amount of methane we’re spouting into the air (which we obviously should, although we’re not), they’d be great potential targets. If only we could identify them.

To map such point emissions, scientists in California flew over the state with an airborne imaging spectrometer, using it to measure methane emissions. They focused on a long list of potential sources: oil and gas production, processing, transmission, storage, and distribution equipment; refineries; dairy-manure management sites; landfills and composting facilities; wastewater-treatment plants; gas-fired power plants; and liquified and compressed natural gas facilities.

Most facilities, especially the dairies and the oil fields, were in the San Joaquin Valley. The researchers ended up measuring emissions from 564 distinct sources at 250 different facilities. These point emitters had not really been examined before, because they often only belch out their methane intermittently or in a somewhat sporadic manner. To catch them in the act, the researchers repeated the flyovers five times between August 2016 and October 2018.

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Google Pixel 4 review—Overpriced, uncompetitive, and out of touch

It’s the fourth generation now, yet we’ve got to ask—what’s the point of the Pixel line?

The Pixel 4 arrived on the market as one of the most leaked, most talked about smartphones of 2019. This year, Google seems like it is really trying to find something unique to offer, with new features like the Google-developed "Motion Sense" radar gesture system, face unlock, a 90Hz display, the next-gen Google Assistant, and a new astrophotography mode.

At the prices Google is asking, though, the Pixel 4 is hard to recommend. The company saddled the phone with an ultra-premium price tag, but the Pixel 4 can't compete with ultra-premium phones. The phone falls down on a lot of the basics, like battery life, storage speed, design, and more. The new additions like face unlock and Motion Sense just don't work well. It seems like Google just cut too many corners this year.

The strongest feature of the Pixel line—the camera—hasn't really gotten better, either. The camera sensor is the same as last year, and the big new software feature, astrophotography mode, is also available on older Pixel devices and the much cheaper Pixel 3a.

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“Absolutely relentless” “ad blocker” plasters users with—you guessed it—ads

Ads Blocker uses several tricks to covertly and constantly bombard users with ads.

“Absolutely relentless” “ad blocker” plasters users with—you guessed it—ads

Enlarge (credit: captcreate / Flickr)

A fake ad blocker available outside of Google Play is bombarding Android users with ads, many of them vulgar, and to make matters worse, the cleverly hidden adware is hard to uninstall.

As documented by antimalware provider Malwarebytes, Ads Blocker, as the app is called, employs several tricks to surreptitiously and constantly bombard users with ads. The first is to simply ask for usage rights to display over other apps. Next, it makes a connection request to "set up a VPN connection that allows it to monitor network traffic." Finally, it seeks permission to add a widget to the homescreen.

In fact, approving the the VPN connection—a standard requirement for some legitimate ad blockers—allows Ads Blocker to run in the background at all times. Combined with the permission to display over other apps, the app is free to plaster ads in a variety of aggressive and annoying ways. It displays full-page ads across the screen. It delivers ads in the default browser. It includes ads in notifications. And it places ads in the homescreen widget.

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KodiUKTV Considers its Future Following FACT Cease & Desist

This week, the Federation Against Copyright Theft confirmed that it had sent cease-and-desist notices to at least two players in the Kodi add-on community. Amid the uncertainty, both took a quick decision to close down. The founder of one of them, KodiUKTV, has been sharing his thoughts with TorrentFreak, reflecting on the past and looking forward to the future.

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

This week, news began to filter through that the shutdown of a pair of Kodi add-on related resources had taken place under serious legal pressure.

KodiUKTV and OneNation weren’t specific in their announcements but TorrentFreak was able to confirm that the Federation Against Copyright Theft was behind both actions. Indeed, the anti-piracy group told us that other groups were targeted too but at this stage, we haven’t been able to identify them.

What we do know is at the end of October, FACT sent out cease and desist notices titled ‘Unauthorized Distribution of Film, Television and Sport Subject to Copyright’.

The letters stated that FACT investigators had established that the platforms were “providing or facilitating access without authorization, to broadcasts or premium pay channels” containing content belonging to Sky, BT Sport, and The Premier League.

Demanding an immediate end to “unlawful activity”, the notices added that “all infringing links, listings and information from webpages, social media and any other medium” should be permanently removed. If not, a criminal investigation might get underway.

A recipient of one of the cease-and-desist letters, Matt – founder of KodiUKTV – told us that if he’d have received a simple takedown notice at any point in the past, he would’ve been happy to investigate and take action if any add-on breached copyright. Instead, it appears that FACT went for straight for the jugular.

Part of the problem for Matt, at least from our discussions, is that he doesn’t believe he was doing anything wrong. His platform didn’t develop or host any add-ons but offered a tool so that Kodi users could download and install them from elsewhere.

“Ultimately it was at the risk of the add-on designers and end-users, should such add-ons contain possibly infringing content that we had absolutely no control over,” he explains.

Matt says that he contacted FACT within an hour of receiving their cease-and-desist notice with a request for more information. He also gave FACT a commitment that the site will not deal with add-ons or builds in the future. At the time of writing, he is yet to receive a response.

As a result and at least for now, his entire site remains down, which Matt feels is both disproportionate and frustrating since much of the content the site offered (guides etc) had nothing to do with any of the companies mentioned by FACT.

“We didn’t actually host anything for the add-on guys and we don’t make any add-ons ourselves. We just offered a place for people to put their add-ons to be installed by the end-user, which is very common for many repos,” Matt explains.

“This means we were just a hub for the community for help and guides. This was always my key focus for KODIUKTV – creating guides & voicing our opinion on issues within the community to help others.

“We do not want to kiss goodbye to the website and the community we have been so involved in over the past five years. We are hoping we can continue the website on a publication standpoint and move forward.”

The site was founded by Matt in 2014 after he found himself “tinkering” with XBMC (as Kodi was formerly known) on a Raspberry Pi, installing add-ons, and eventually coming up with a ‘build’

“I’ve always been interested in publications & running a media site. So once the community started to rise we needed a home for our guides and tutorials, our news, and even the odd giveaway over the years,” he explains.

“We grew at a rapid rate which gave me and the team a huge learning curve of what it took to manage and maintain a website/project of this size. We became the go-to for people looking for help.”

At KodiUKTV’s peak last year, Matt says it was receiving around eight million users per month, a figure that’s dropped a little this year to a still-impressive six million.

But with this growth has come problems, not only in respect of FACT and its clients, but with various claims against the site’s social media accounts, and even strikes against Matt’s personal pages that had nothing to do with the project. Now, however, he is hopeful that things can move forward.

Matt says he’s just a hobbyist doing what he loves, one that also cares about freedom on the Internet. He has no desire to get into a fight with big media companies and hopes this dispute with FACT can be dealt with quickly while keeping the community intact.

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

Microsoft sends a new kind of AI processor into the cloud

Innovative chip from Graphcore could push AI applications to greater heights.

Microsoft rose to dominance during the '80s and '90s thanks to the success of its Windows operating system running on Intel’s processors, a cosy relationship nicknamed “Wintel”.

Now Microsoft hopes that another another hardware–software combo will help it recapture that success—and catch rivals Amazon and Google in the race to provide cutting-edge artificial intelligence through the cloud.

Microsoft hopes to extend the popularity of its Azure cloud platform with a new kind of computer chip designed for the age of AI. Starting today, Microsoft is providing Azure customers with access to chips made by the British startup Graphcore.

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