Europe officially sets its sights on a giant LHC successor

An enormous ring under Lake Geneva will host two colliders in succession.

Image of metal wires and equipment.

Enlarge / CERN makes its own superconducting wiring for the successor to the LHC. (credit: CERN)

The Large Hadron Collider, the most powerful particle collider humanity has ever built, resides in an enormous, 27-kilometer-long tunnel that extends under the Swiss and French countrysides. What's often overlooked is that the tunnel was built for an earlier piece of hardware, the Large Electron-Positron collider, or LEP. LEP had been built specifically to provide a clean way to study the Z boson; only later was it converted to a higher-energy proton collider that enabled the discovery of the Higgs boson.

Now, Europe is officially committing to taking a similar approach: building a huge tunnel at the CERN facility that will collide particles to enable a clean study of the Higgs boson. But Europe is leaving the option of using the tunnel for a future collider that could reach energies nearly 10 times higher than the LHC.

Electrons vs. hadrons

Electrons and positrons are fundamental particles; as far as we know, they have no smaller particles that comprise them. That makes their collisions extremely clean. The protons collided by the LHC, in contrast, are composed of a collection of quarks and gluons, making their collisions a complicated collection of sub-collisions that can be challenging to interpret.

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CDC: Here’s the latest on who gets the sickest from COVID-19

Risk increases with age and certain underlying health conditions.

A serious man wears a suit and a face mask.

Enlarge / Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), wears a protective mask during a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, June 23, 2020. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday updated and expanded its list of who is at risk of developing severe illness from COVID-19—emphasizing that it’s not just the elderly who suffer from the disease.

Most noticeably, the CDC removed the specific age threshold of 65 and over for those considered at risk of severe COVID-19—that is, those requiring hospitalization, intensive care, ventilation, or those who die from the disease.

Now, the agency emphasizes that there is a gradient of risk based on age. In other words, there is some risk at any age, but that risk increases with age. A 50-year-old will have more risk than a 40-year-old, and a 60-year-old is at higher risk than someone in their 50s. The greatest risk is seen in those aged 85 and over.

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Afrika: Schuldentilgung oder Schuldenfalle

Debt Service Suspension Initiative: Die Schuldenstopp-Initiative der G20-Länder klingt nur auf dem Papier gut – Teil eins

Debt Service Suspension Initiative: Die Schuldenstopp-Initiative der G20-Länder klingt nur auf dem Papier gut – Teil eins

Herdenimmunität nicht mit 60, sondern schon mit 43 Prozent der Bevölkerung

Studie von schwedischen und britischen Wissenschaftlern will das Konzept mit fragwürdigen Voraussetzungen retten, schließlich ist nicht einmal gesichert, dass eine Infektion Immunität schafft

Studie von schwedischen und britischen Wissenschaftlern will das Konzept mit fragwürdigen Voraussetzungen retten, schließlich ist nicht einmal gesichert, dass eine Infektion Immunität schafft

In trailer for Brave New World, everyone but John the Savage knows their place

“If you’re not happy, you’re nothing at all.”

An adaptation of Aldous Huxley's classic novel Brave New World tops the offerings on NBC's Peacock streaming service, launching next month.

NBC's Peacock streaming service launches next month, and the jewel in the crown of its initial offerings is undoubtedly Brave New World, an ambitious adaptation of Aldous Huxley's classic 1932 dystopian novel. The full trailer for this Peacock original series is finally here, starring Alden Ehrenreich as Huxley's antihero, John the Savage, who finds himself struggling to adapt when he is thrust into a utopian society.

(Some spoilers for the book below.)

As we reported in April, Brave New World is set in the year 2540, in the World State city of London, where people are born in artificial wombs and indoctrinated through "sleep-learning" to fit into their assigned predetermined caste. Citizens regularly consume a drug called soma (part anti-depressant, part hallucinogen) to keep them docile and help them conform to strict social laws. Promiscuity is encouraged, but pregnancy (for women) is a cause for shame. Needless to say, both art and science (albeit to a lesser extent) are viewed with suspicion.

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Apple makes another acquisition: IT startup Fleetsmith

The future of Apple + Jamf is a bit fuzzy now.

The 2020 MacBook Air

Enlarge / The 2020 Retina MacBook Air.

Apple has acquired device-management startup Fleetsmith. The technology and personnel that will join Apple as part of the acquisition could help Apple expand upon device enrollment and introduce better ways to set up new devices like iPads and Macs within organizations.

Fleetsmith's proposition to customers (and Apple) seems perfectly tailored to our times: the company offers a way for organizations to equip remote workers' (or workers otherwise not located in the central office) devices and have those devices automatically registered and set up for enterprise use as soon as they're first turned on. After that, Fleetsmith automatically ensures devices get needed software updates. It also provides IT managers with a dashboard for managing the fleet.

If you've used Jamf, a more widespread competitor, you get the general idea. But Fleetsmith already had a special focus on Apple devices, it has an Apple-like design sensibility, and it was likely a much cheaper option for Apple than Jamf, to boot. Jamf appears to be on a different path, with a $3 billion IPO planned.

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Three cops fired after accidental dashcam activation captures racist rants

Standard, internal review of dashcam recording found “extremely racist” footage.

Members of the Wilmington, North Carolina, police force taking part in the city's annual Azalea Festival parade in April 2019.

Enlarge / Members of the Wilmington, North Carolina, police force taking part in the city's annual Azalea Festival parade in April 2019. (credit: Roberto Galan | Getty Images)

Three North Carolina police officers were fired from their jobs this week after investigators found incredibly racist, troubling conversations, and threats of violence accidentally recorded by the cops' own dashboard camera.

The dashboard camera in Officer Kevin Piner's patrol car captured more than 46 minutes of relevant footage from a two-hour recording, Wilmington Police Chief Donny Williams said Wednesday.

According to the department's report (PDF), Piner's camera was recording due to "accidental activation." That activation ended up capturing Piner and two other officers, Jessie Moore and Brian Gilmore—all white—discussing Black members of the force as well as local protesters, using well-known racist slurs. At one point, Moore said a local magistrate, a Black woman, "needed a bullet in her head," before the three discussed their feelings that a civil war was coming, for which all three claimed to be ready. "We are just gonna go out and start slaughtering them fucking n------s," Piner added.

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System76 Oryx Pro Linux laptop update brings an 8-core Intel Comet Lake-H processor

The System76 Oryx Pro is a Linux laptop available with a choice of 15.6 inch or 17.3 inch full HD displays with 144 Hz refresh rates, Pop!_OS or Ubuntu operating systems, and up to NVIDIA GeForce RTX Super graphics. Now it’s also available with a…

The System76 Oryx Pro is a Linux laptop available with a choice of 15.6 inch or 17.3 inch full HD displays with 144 Hz refresh rates, Pop!_OS or Ubuntu operating systems, and up to NVIDIA GeForce RTX Super graphics. Now it’s also available with a 10th-gen Intel Comet Lake-H processor. System76 is now selling updated Oryx […]

Social Media Buzz Boosts TV Piracy, Research Finds

A new paper published in the Journal of Internet Electronic Commerce Research concludes that social media buzz boosts online piracy numbers for TV-shows. The more people talk about them, the more people are downloading. Interestingly, traditional TV-show ratings have no effect on piracy at all.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

old tvKey players in the entertainment industry often see piracy as an existential threat that endangers their livelihoods.

However, piracy can also be framed in a different light. That is, a massive potential of hundreds of millions of engaged consumers who have yet to be ‘monetized.’

This point is also addressed in a new paper published by researchers Kyuhong Park and Dongyeon Kim in a recent edition of the Journal of Internet Electronic Commerce Research. Their article, titled: ‘Can TV Ratings Reflect Hidden Viewers regarding Digital Piracy?’ aims to find a good predictor of this pirate audience.

This is important, according to the researchers, as even pirates can be monetized nowadays through product placement and other means.

“Stakeholders in the media industry need to focus more on the digital piracy market to investigate who their hidden customers are. Especially these days, the indirect advertisement market, such as markets involving product placement, is getting bigger and bigger.”

“Hidden, time-shifted viewers who don’t watch TV commercials before and in the middle of the air time are also important customers for advertisers,” the researchers add.

The Impact of Ratings and ‘Buzz’ on TV Piracy

The paper looks at two possible predictors of pirated downloads, regular Nielsen TV-ratings and social media buzz. They compare these data with the number of torrent seeds on TV-shows, which they gathered from the now-defunct site TorrentProject.se.

The methodology is straightforward. With the data in hand, the researchers use regression analysis to see if TV-ratings and social media buzz can be linked to a higher number of pirated ‘downloads’. Instead of looking at actual downloads, the number of seeders was used as a comparable equivalent.

The findings show, perhaps surprisingly, that there is no link between Nielsen TV ratings and pirate downloads. In other words, traditional TV popularity measurements can’t accurately predict how well a TV-show will do on pirate sites.

For social media buzz there was a clear effect. When more people were talking about a TV-show the number of pirated downloads went up, which implies that this social media attention boosts piracy.

“After each show is broadcast on TV, social media buzz boosts the number of downloads. However, we find that there is no significant corresponding increase related to traditional TV ratings,” the paper’s conclusion reads.

“The most important factors that trigger downloads seem to be social buzz amount and whether the program is an entertainment show or not,” the researchers add.

Future Research

As the study emphasizes, the size of the pirate audience is important for production companies and advertisers to keep in mind. However, as is often the case with piracy, things could be more complex than they seem.

For example, the researchers suggest that social media attention triggers more pirated downloads. And indeed, they found a link between the two. However, is it also possible that the reverse is true, that more pirated download leads to more attention on social media?

The latter is what Game of Thrones director David Petrarca hinted at years ago when he said that piracy helped to create “cultural buzz” around the series, which eventually could boost the number of HBO subscriptions.

It would be interesting to see future research that looks into the causality of the link between social media trends and piracy, which could work both ways.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Lenovo introduces ThinkCentre M75n mini desktops with AMD Ryzen chips

Lenovo’s smallest desktop computers no comes with a choice of Intel or AMD Ryzen processors. The Lenovo ThinkCentre M75n is a 7″ x 3.5″ x 0.9″ PC with support for up to an AMD Ryzen 5 Pro 3500U processor. The new system joins la…

Lenovo’s smallest desktop computers no comes with a choice of Intel or AMD Ryzen processors. The Lenovo ThinkCentre M75n is a 7″ x 3.5″ x 0.9″ PC with support for up to an AMD Ryzen 5 Pro 3500U processor. The new system joins last year’s ThinkCentre M90n, which has a similar design, but which features an […]