Biden administration expects J&J boosters in the next few weeks

The FDA has schedule an advisory meeting over the booster ahead of receiving an application.

Boxes of Johnson & Johnson's Janssen COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination site in Florida.

Enlarge / Boxes of Johnson & Johnson's Janssen COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination site in Florida. (credit: Getty | Paul Hennessy)

Johnson & Johnson plans to seek authorization for a booster dose for its one-shot COVID-19 vaccine early this week, according to a report by The New York Times.

J&J is the last to apply for booster authorization among the makers of the three COVID-19 vaccines used in the US. Yet, it is the booster that many health officials are most eager to see. The vaccine, which uses a viral vector strategy rather than an mRNA-based design, is the only available COVID-19 vaccine given as just one shot. Its efficacy has lagged behind the other vaccines throughout the pandemic.

Still, Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech, both mRNA-based vaccine, have already submitted booster applications to US regulators. On September 22, the Food and Drug Administration granted authorization for a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for certain groups of people. The decision was tense, with experts torn over whether a booster for the highly effective vaccine was widely needed.

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Ex-Sony exec opens up about efforts to bring PlayStation hits to PC

“There’s no losing in this transaction,” says former PlayStation Studios head Shawn Layden.

Ex-Sony exec opens up about efforts to bring PlayStation hits to PC

Enlarge (credit: Collage by Aurich Lawson)

Sony has a long history of keeping its first-party games behind the walled garden of console exclusivity.

So the company's choice to bring its PS4 hit Horizon Zero Dawn to PC in August 2020 felt like a precedent-changing move away from that barrier to entry. It represented a seismic shift for a publisher protective of its wide array of console exclusives.

But as former CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment Shawn Layden tells it, adopting a more open strategy for porting first-party titles to PC was actually an easy decision.

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Nobel in Medicine: Sensing heat, cold, and touch

Discoveries triggered a wave of findings about how we sense our environments.

The protein that allows us to sense touch is big and complicated.

Enlarge / The protein that allows us to sense touch is big and complicated. (credit: PDB)

Today's Nobel Prize is in Physiology or Medicine, which often means biology these days. And 2021 is not an exception, as two researchers have won for their discoveries regarding how humans detect their immediate environment through the sense of touch. David Julius won half the prize for identifying the protein that allows us to sense painful heat, or its chemical mimic from chili peppers, and Ardem Patapoutian gets the other half by figuring out how we sense physical touch.

The key discovery made by both researchers involved a clever scheme that allowed them to identify the critical gene involved in a fairly specific process. But that discovery turned out to open the door to a lot of follow-on work. In the case of temperature, it enabled the discovery of a small family of related proteins that all sense different aspects of heat or cold. And, in the case of touch, the discovery reveals that the same protein manages to track all sorts of stresses and strains inside the body.

Feel the burn

People who enjoy a good chili pepper will often talk about the heat generated by the chemicals it contains. That turns out not to be a metaphor; over the years, researchers figured out that the key chemical from hot peppers, called capsaicin, activates the same nerve cells that are activated by unpleasant heat.

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Windows 11 is now available (on some devices)

When Microsoft first launched Windows 10 in 2015 the company said it would be the “last version of Windows,” since the goal was to continually push out incremental updates rather than revolutionary new version of the operating system. Today Microsoft has released Windows 11. There’s no word on whether this will be the last version of […]

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When Microsoft first launched Windows 10 in 2015 the company said it would be the “last version of Windows,” since the goal was to continually push out incremental updates rather than revolutionary new version of the operating system.

Today Microsoft has released Windows 11. There’s no word on whether this will be the last version of Windows, but the update does bring significant changes to Start Menu, Taskbar, Microsoft Store, and a number of other areas. So I guess it’s not surprising that Microsoft decided it was time for a new name… although there’s some debate over whether we really needed some of the new things Microsoft is bringing to Windows.

Among other things, Windows 11 brings:

  • There’s a new Start Menu with access to apps, search, files, and other data. It’s centered by default, but can be moved to the side of the screen.
  • Windows Taskbar now features icons in the center rather than the left side. When using a tablet without a keyboard, the UI will also adjust with larger touch targets and more space between icons.
  • Widgets are back, but this time they’re not called Gadgets and they’re not on the desktop, but rather in a card-style feed that you can access by swiping from the edge of the screen.
  • Snap Layouts give you more ways to organize application windows on your screen. And Snap Groups let you maximize and minimize a whole set of apps together.
  • Microsoft Teams Chat is integrated in the operating system, whether you want it or not.
  • The new Microsoft Store has a streamlined design and now supports Win32 apps as well as Universal Windows Platform apps and Progressive Web Apps. There’s even support for third-party web browsers in the store now, and for third-party app stores like the Epic Games Store and Amazon Appstore.
  • Microsoft is bringing support for Android apps to Windows 11, but it won’t be available on day one. Eventually you’ll be able to download Android apps and games from the Amazon Appstore or sideload them, and run them alongside native Windows apps.
  • Auto HDR bring high dynamic range even to games that don’t natively support it when you’re using an HDR compatible display.
  • DirectStorage brings faster load times to games on systems with NVme storage and DirectX 12 graphics cards.

Microsoft first announced it was working on Windows 11 earlier this year, and for the past few months the company has been rolling out pre-release builds to members of the Windows Insider program. Eventually the company announced Windows 11 would arrive on October 5th.

But surprise, it’s already October 5th in New Zealand, so Microsoft has begun the rollout a little earlier than some folks had anticipated.

That means new PCs will begin shipping with Windows 11 just about immediately, and if you have a Windows 10 PC that you purchased recently, you may be able to update to the latest version of Windows through Windows Update starting today or very soon. Folks with older computers may have to wait a little longer – Microsoft is doing a phased rollout and says could be as late as mid-2022 before it makes the update available to all eligible PCs.

And eligible is an important word there – Microsoft is enforcing pretty strict minimum system requirements. So while you can run Windows 11 on a computer with as little as a 1 GHz dual-core processor, 4GB of RAM, and 64GB of storage, you need a PC with UEFI, Secure Boot capability, and TPM 2.0 security.

Most computers released in the past few years should qualify, but not all computers. And you’ll need a PC with an AMD Zen 2 or newer processor, an Intel 8th-gen or newer chip (or one of a handful of 7th-gen chips), or Qualcomm Snapdragon processor.

Have a qualifying PC, but not sure you want to leave Windows 10 behind? The good news is that Microsoft will continue supporting Windows 10 until at least 2025, so you don’t really need to upgrade anytime soon. And at least one Windows 11 feature is coming to Windows 10 anyway – the new Microsoft Store will debut with Microsoft’s new operating system, but it’ll make its way to Windows 10 in the coming months.

Alternately, you can install Windows 11, try it out for a few days, and then roll back if you’re not happy. Microsoft will give you 10 days to change your mind, but keep in mind that this is always a slightly risky proposition, since there’s always a chance that something could go wrong and bork your backup files.

Latest Windows 11 news:

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‘Hacker Used Victim’s Email Address to Sign Up with Pirate Site YTS’

A group of independent movie companies continues its quest to hold VPNs and their hosting partners responsible for piracy. The latest target is Datacamp, also known as CDN77 and DataPacket. As part of this lawsuit, the film companies note that one alleged pirate used a “hacked” email address to steal money and register a YTS account.

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

yts.mx logoYTS.mx is one one of the most-used torrent sites on the internet, serving millions of visitors every day.

The site can be used without registering an account. However, those who sign up get some extra features, such as an option to bookmark titles.

These added benefits can be handy but registering an account with a pirate site is not without risk. Early last year the operators of YTS signed a settlement agreement with several movies studios, which put many of the site’s users at risk.

YTS User Database

The settlement ensured that YTS could continue to operate. However, the operator agreed to share details from the YTS userbase, including IP-addresses, email addresses, and download histories. This provided the movie companies with evidence for follow-up lawsuits against these users.

The film companies, including the makers of “London Has Fallen”, “Rambo V”, and “Dallas Buyers Club”, didn’t stop there. Over the past months, they went after VPN providers and hosting companies as well.

These third-party services are directly or indirectly liable for piracy, the filmmakers argue, because their networks and infrastructure are used by people to pirate movies. And despite sending many copyright infringement notices, these services failed to take meaningful action in response.

Movie Companies Sue Datacamp

A few days ago the movie companies filed a new lawsuit at a federal court in Virginia, accusing UK-based company Datacamp Limited of copyright infringement. Datacamp operated under the CDN77 and DataPacket brands, and reportedly offers its services to several VPN providers.

The complaint lists ten unnamed VPN services and “Doe” defendants and the movie companies hope to find out their names through this lawsuit.

“DOE 1-10 promote their VPN service as a tool that can be used to pirate copyright protected content without getting caught,” the complaint reads, adding that the VPNs “partner with notorious movie piracy websites to promote their VPN service as an essential tool for movie piracy.”

Meanwhile, Datacamp is accused of contributory copyright infringement, as it failed to terminate the accounts of these VPN services after repeated warnings. These allegations are similar to the ones we have seen in cases against Leaseweb, Sharktech, and other hosting companies.

YTS Account with “Hacked’ Email

The YTS database also shows up as evidence again. And in this case, that leads to a noteworthy finding we haven’t seen before.

The movie companies previously sued Indiana resident Mr. Byranski after they found his email address in the YTS user database. The YTS database linked this user to an IP-address that’s registered to Datacamp, presumably through one of the company’s VPN customers.

Mr. Byranski, however, denied any wrongdoing and testified that he didn’t use a VPN service, nor did he download the pirated movies.

Apparently, Mr. Byranski’s email address was “hacked” around the same time and $12,000 was stolen from his PayPal account. This leads the movie studios to suggest that the hacker could have used the same email to sign up with YTS too.

“Some of these YTS users [use] the VPN service of DataCamp’s subscribers to unlawfully access ‘hack’ into the accounts of third parties, use their email addresses to register for an account with the YTS website and pirate movies, and unlawfully access bank accounts of the third parties,” the complaint reads.

No Hacking Skills Needed

In reality, there are no hacking skills required to use a third-party email address to sign up with YTS. Everyone can use a random email to register an account, as the YTS website doesn’t require users to verify their addresses.

The movie companies eventually dismissed their copyright infringement claims against Mr. Byranski, but not before securing a formal declaration that puts pressure on Datacamp.

Similar to the film companies, Mr. Byranski stated that it would have been better if Datacamp had taken action after receiving multiple copyright infringement notices.

“I wish Datacamp Limited had taken action against the subscriber at this IP address in response to those notices so that possibly the damages I have suffered from this hacking, including being accused of copyright infringement could have been prevented,” the declaration reads.

Mr. Byranski received a full refund from Paypal and the copyright infringement claims were dropped as well. Instead, the filmmakers now use his declaration as ammunition in the Datacamp lawsuit.

Damages, Blocking, and More

Datacamp has yet to respond to the allegations. The company stands accused of contributory and vicarious copyright infringement, among other things, and faces over a million dollars in potential damages.

Similar to the other lawsuits against VPN services and hosting providers, the film companies also ask for far-reaching measures in the form of an injunction.

Among other things, they ask the court to issue an order requiring the hosting company to block ports 6881-6889, which are commonly used for BitTorrent traffic. In addition, the company should block its customers from accessing pirate sites such as YTS, The Pirate Bay, Rarbg, and 1337x.

A copy of the complaint the film companies filed against Datacamp Limited at the Eastern District of Virginia is available here (pdf).

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

Lilbits: AYA Neo, YouTube Music, and a keyboard with 3 keys

Every now and again, an April Fools’ Day joke has the nugget of a good idea. I’m not sure Stack Overflow’s The Key qualifies, but if you were ever hoping for a keyboard with three keys, now you can actually buy one for $29. In other recent tech news from around the web, YouTube Music […]

The post Lilbits: AYA Neo, YouTube Music, and a keyboard with 3 keys appeared first on Liliputing.

Every now and again, an April Fools’ Day joke has the nugget of a good idea. I’m not sure Stack Overflow’s The Key qualifies, but if you were ever hoping for a keyboard with three keys, now you can actually buy one for $29.

In other recent tech news from around the web, YouTube Music now supports background streaming without a Premium subscription (for users in Canada anyway), the Amazon Shopping app now lets you send a gift even if you don’t know the shipping address of the intended recipient, the developers of the Pop!_OS Linux distribution appear to be adding support for computers with ARM-based chips, including the Raspberry Pi 400, and the AYA Neo handheld gaming PC is now shipping with updated hardware.

You can now buy a keyboard that only copies and pastes [The Verge]

An April Fools’ Day Joke about a keyboard that developers could use to just copy and paste code from Stack Overflow is now a real thing called The Key. You can pre-order for $29. It ships in December.

Free background playback coming to YouTube Music (Canada first) [Google Canada Blog]

YouTube Music is bringing background listening to everyone, which means you won’t need a YouTube Premium subscription to keep the tunes playing while your screen is off or when you’re running a different app in the foreground. It rolls out first in Canada starting November 3rd, but Google says it’s eventually coming to “listeners around the world.”

Amazon shopping apps gets new gift-giving features [Amazon]

Amazon’s mobile app now lets you send gifts even if you don’t know the shipping address for the recipient. Just pick an item, choose to let recipient enter address, and enter an email or phone number. They can accept or exchange for a gift card instead. 

Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 22471 [Windows Blog]

Windows 11 launches tomorrow, but a new Windows 11 Dev Channel preview build is out today, with a bunch of bug fixes.

DacBerry 400 S: A high-quality audio add-on for the Raspberry Pi 400 [MiniMachines]

The DacBerry 400 S is a small, inexpensive DAC (digital to analog converter for audio) designed for the Raspberry Pi 400 computer-in-a-keyboard. It attaches to the 40-pin connector to give you 96 KHz/32-bit audio and sells for about €20 ($23).

The Apple A15 SoC Performance Review [AnandTech]

The folks at Anandtech take a close look at the Apple A15 processor powering the iPhone 13. It’s more efficient than the A14, but also brings a 23-28% CPU performance boost, and even better gains with graphics.

Pop!_OS 21.10 may support Raspberry Pi and other ARM-based PCs [DebugPoint]

System76 engineer Jeremy Soller has hinted that the company’s Pop!_OS Linux distribution is adding support for ARM chips, which means you’ll be able to run it on Raspberry Pi devices and other ARM-based PCs in the future.

AYA Neo handheld gaming PC now shipping with updated hardware [Indiegogo]

The AYA Neo handheld gaming PC with a Ryzen 5 4500U processor and updated hardware is now shipping to crowdfunding backers. The AYA Neo Pro with Ryzen 7 4800U could ship later this month. The company also introduced a new user interface for gaming on handheld Windows PCs, called AYA Space, which is launching in beta.

 

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