Pine64 SOQuartz compute module with RK3566 now available for $35 and up

Pine64’s SOQuartz is a computer-on-a-module featuring a Rockchip RK3566 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor with Mali-G52 graphics. First announced in June, Pine64 has announced that the SOQuartz Compute Module W is now available for purchase for $35 and up. There are three prices/configurations available: 2GB RAM for $35 4GB RAM for $50 8GB RAM for $75 […]

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Pine64’s SOQuartz is a computer-on-a-module featuring a Rockchip RK3566 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor with Mali-G52 graphics.

First announced in June, Pine64 has announced that the SOQuartz Compute Module W is now available for purchase for $35 and up.

There are three prices/configurations available:

  • 2GB RAM for $35
  • 4GB RAM for $50
  • 8GB RAM for $75

Each model features LPDDR4 memory, support for WiFi 5 and Bluetooth 5.0, and multiple interfaces for displays, cameras, Ethernet, USB 2.0, and PCIe hardware as well as 28 GPIO pins.

Pine64 says there will also be a cheaper version available in the future that lacks the WiFi and Bluetooth capabilities. And if you want to add storage, Pine64 says you can purchase an eMMC module separately and solder it to the board yourself.

Measuring 55 x 40mm, the SOQuartz Compute Module W is the same size as a Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 or Radxa Compute Module 3 and it’s pin-to-pin compatible with those devices, which means that a carrier board designed for one should work with the others. Pine64 also plans to offer its own carrier boards soon.

The company notes that while the SOQuartz hardware is available for purchase immediately, software for the compute module is still in its early stages, and while you can boot Linux on the system it “will be months before end-users and industry partners can reliably deploy it.” So if you’re looking for something that’s already compatible with a robust software ecosystem, you may be better off with a Raspberry Pi module for now.

But eventually the SOQuartz board, like Radxa’s CM3 may offer an alternative for folks that want a device capable of on-device AI acceleration, since both boards have a Rockchip RK3566 processor with a 2 GHz ARM Cortex-A55 CPU, Mali-G52 graphics, and 0.8 TOPS neural acceleration engine.

This article was originally published October 29, 2021 and last updated November 8, 2021. 

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2021 MacBook Pro review: Yep, it’s what you’ve been waiting for

It’s remarkable what this portable machine can do.

The 2021 14-inch MacBook Pro stacked on top of the 2021 16-inch MacBook Pro.

Enlarge / The 2021 14-inch MacBook Pro stacked on top of the 2021 16-inch MacBook Pro. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple has long offered an application called Time Machine that lets you revert the software on your computer to the state it was in before something went seriously wrong. In many ways, the new MacBook Pro is a hardware Time Machine of its own; you could say it makes it seem like the past five years never happened.

The 2021 MacBook Pro is notably bulkier, more flexible, and more powerful than its predecessor. It clicks "revert" on a whole bunch of changes that have been generally unpopular, like the inclusion of the Touch Bar in place of physical function keys and the singular focus on Thunderbolt as the port of choice.

The new laptop also has the most advanced CPU,  GPU, and NPU ever included in a consumer laptop and display technology that has never been seen in mainstream consumer products. So maybe it's not so much like the past five years never happened; it's more like we've slipstreamed into an alternate timeline where Apple never changed course at a critical juncture when a lot of people felt it shouldn't have.

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Fitlet3 small, fanless PC with Intel Elkhart Lake coming soon

Compulab’s new fitlet3 is a compact computer with a fanless design for silent operation and support for Intel Elkhart Lake low-power processor options. Designed for use as an IoT gateway or fanless industrial computer, the fitlet3 is basically a small form-factor computer that measures 5.2″ x 3.9″ x 3.4″ that’s available now for $234 and […]

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Compulab’s new fitlet3 is a compact computer with a fanless design for silent operation and support for Intel Elkhart Lake low-power processor options.

Designed for use as an IoT gateway or fanless industrial computer, the fitlet3 is basically a small form-factor computer that measures 5.2″ x 3.9″ x 3.4″ that’s available now for $234 and up.

Measuring 5.2″ x 3.9″ x 3.4″, the fitlet3 is a little larger than the company’s previous-gen fitlet2, which is just 4.4″ x 3.3″ x 1″. But that model was released four years ago and packs an older (and slower) Intel Apollo Lake processor.

Compulab’s new fitlet 3 is available with 3 processor options:

These are all 10nm chips with Intel UHD graphics, support for up to 32GB of DDR4-3200 RAM, and no support for hyperthreading.

Other features of the fitlet3 include an M.2 2280 slot for PCIe Gen 3 x4 NVMe or SATA storage, an M.2 2260 slot for an optional SATA SSD or cellular modem (4G LTE or 5G), as well as an M.2 2230 slot for an optional WiFi & Bluetooth module.

Ports include two Gigabit Ethernet ports, HDMI 1.4b and mini DisplayPort 1.2, two USB 3.1 Type-A, and four USB 2.0 Type-A. There’s also optional support for dual 3.5mm audio jacks.

Weighing just about 15 ounces, the fitlet3 can be mounted to a wall, rail, or display.

The $234 starting price is for an entry-level barebones model with an Intel Atom x6211E processor, but you can configure the system with up to 32GB of RAM, up to 1TB of NVMe storage, and choose other optional features including a cellular modem, TPM, or terminal block with serial and GPIO ports.

One optional add-on that you’ll probably want to take advantage of if you’re planning to use this thing at home rather than an industrial site? The base configuration doesn’t have any audio input or output support. You have to pay $16 extra for that functionality.

You can find more details at Compulab’s fit-iot website.

via FanlessTech (1)(2)

This article was originally published October 29, 2021 and last updated February 8, 2022. 

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There are ominous portents of the end of days in The Witcher S2 trailer

“None of us will have any peace until there are no monsters left in the world.”

The second season of Netflix's hugely popular sci-fi/fantasy series, The Witcher, returns on December 17.

It's been two long years for fans of The Witcher, eager for a second season, but that long wait is nearly over. Netflix dropped a new trailer for its hugely popular sci-fi/fantasy series, starring Henry Cavill as a solitary monster hunter with magical powers.

(Some spoilers for S1 below.)

As I've written previously, The Witcher is based on the popular books by Andrzej Sapkowski. The series was one of the streaming platform's top ten shows of 2019, despite boasting a fairly complicated narrative structure: three separate timelines spanning 100 years. It played a little fast and loose with the source material, but that turned out to work quite well.

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Children poisoned by birthday cake decorations loaded with lead, copper

Some cake “luster dusts” are safe to eat—others are definitely not.

Children poisoned by birthday cake decorations loaded with lead, copper

Enlarge (credit: Getty )

A recent baking trend of using "luster dusts" to give cake frostings and decorations a shimmery look has poisoned young children with heavy metals in at least two states, health researchers warn in a new report published Friday.

A toxic birthday cake for a 1-year-old left six children (ages 1 to 11) severely ill with vomiting and diarrhea after an October 2018 birthday party in Rhode Island. One child needed to be taken to the emergency room.

Investigators from the Rhode Island Department of Health traced the illnesses to the cake's thick layer of frosting laced with a rose gold "luster dust." The cake was produced in a commercial bakery, and the health investigators identified three possible sources of the bakery's luster dust. One was an importer who identified the dust as "fine copper powder" that was initially sold as "metallic pigment for consumer goods such as floor coverings." Though the dust was labeled "nontoxic," it was also labeled "nonedible."

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Congress fails to pin down oil company execs on their bad-faith arguments

Spin, lobbying, and obfuscation still rule the day.

Image of an oil refinery.

Enlarge / At some point, this must stop. A recent congressional hearing left us no closer to figuring out when that point will be reached. (credit: Getty Images)

Thursday, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform held hearings on the role of oil companies in fostering our present climate crisis. The companies led by these executives have a long history of playing down the risks of climate change, leading a number of House Democrats to suggest that this hearing could be the equivalent of the 1994 hearings with tobacco executives, in which the executives denied well-established scientific data on the addictiveness of nicotine.

But that expectation was doomed to disappointment. Oil companies, after all, had already demonstrated that they are happy to accept the science of climate change when under oath; they just tend to spin the details of their own role in influencing public perceptions of that science. Congress was treated to a repeat performance of that sort that neatly avoided the kind of catastrophic failure in public perception that the tobacco company executives produced.

However, the hearing did manage to highlight the gap between what many companies are saying now and the reality of what society has determined it needs to accomplish. What follows is less a recap of the testimony and more of an analysis of how the companies' spin brought them to their current circumstances—and where they'll go from here.

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Feds Indict ‘Pirate’ Sports Streams Operator Who Settled with Hollywood

Sports streaming service HeHeStreams shut down earlier this year after reaching a settlement with the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment. While saddened by his site’s demise, the operator felt that things could’ve been worse. They now are. The Department of Justice says that following a separate investigation, HeHeStreams’ founder has been charged with several crimes, including one under a brand new law.

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

FBIBack in July we reported that the Alliance for Creativity (ACE) and the Motion Picture Association (MPA) had obtained a DMCA subpoena compelling Cloudflare to hand over the personal details of sports streaming service HeHeStreams.

Soon after, the site – which in the main facilitated access to MLB, NBA, NFL, and NHL content – disappeared and began redirecting to ACE. We can confirm that a settlement was reached but since both sides are honoring their agreement, no further details are available.

For HeHeStreams’ operator, who founded the site in 2016/17, felt the shutdown marked the end of an era from which he could move on but that wasn’t to be the case. A separate criminal investigation representing a different set of rightsholders was already underway, one that doesn’t come with the option of a civil settlement.

HeHeStreams Operator Charged With Numerous Crimes

Joshua Streit, better known online as Josh Brody, was named yesterday as the operator of HeHeStreams. According to the Department of Justice, Streit has been charged with numerous crimes including computer systems intrusions at Major League Baseball and the illegally streaming of content from MLB, NBA, NFL and NHL to the public, for profit. He was also charged with attempting to extort $150,000 from MLB.

Before diving into those details, an explanation of HeHeStreams’ operations is in order.

HeHeStreams Was a Special Type of IPTV Service

The majority of traditional IPTV suppliers facilitate access to pirated streams by offering them from their own servers. This is a model that burns through lots of bandwidth and is seen as a necessary cost of doing business. What HeHeStreams managed to do is eliminate these costs almost completely by not utilizing pirated streams at all.

Instead, it found a way to connect HeHeStreams users to genuine streams offered by the sports broadcasters. This had obvious upsides – no more massive streaming server bills and since official streams rarely break down or buffer, a bunch of happy customers.

“Streit obtained the copyrighted content by gaining unauthorized access to the websites for those sports leagues via misappropriated login credentials from legitimate users of those websites. One of the victim sports leagues sustained losses of approximately $3 million due to Streit’s conduct,” the DoJ notes.

This method of using official streams to supply ‘pirate’ customers was alluded to in our interview with Akamai earlier this year. A pair of DISH lawsuits against SportsBay and Nitro IPTV also illustrate the same problem, one that broadcasters need to fix.

Quite why these gaping loopholes aren’t being closed isn’t clear but what we do know is that disclosing such vulnerabilities can go horribly wrong.

Bug Bounty Or Criminal Extortion?

Back in the summer, TorrentFreak sought comment from Joshua Streit on the ACE/MPA settlement deal. After he declined, the discussion shifted to the apparent loopholes at DISH-owned Sling TV referenced in their lawsuits, ones that fail to prevent non-customers from piggybacking onto legal streams.

How these are exploited went unexplained but without mentioning any services in particular, Streit indicated that he had been trying to share knowledge of serious vulnerabilities with one (or more) providers. He expressed some frustration at their apparent reluctance to work together. We later got the impression that things had improved but that was clearly not the case.

According to the criminal complaint filed by the US Government, around March 2021 Streit emailed an MLB employee noting that he’d previously disclosed a network vulnerability but was disappointed by the company’s response. “The lack of gratitude is frankly shocking,” he reportedly wrote.

Streit later sent another email noting that he’d reported yet more vulnerabilities to the company over a particular weekend and he had two reporters who cover MLB matters interested in the story. An unnamed MLB executive then contacted Streit by phone and reportedly found him “upset” by MLB’s failure to acknowledge his efforts.

Streit allegedly informed the MLB executive that he expected to be financially compensated for the work he’d done but was told that while MLB has no bug bounty program, the company “appreciated” his disclosures. Streit responded that bug bounty programs are useful for cooperation and according to the complaint, added that it would be bad for MLB if the media found out about the vulnerability.

After a gap of several months, Streit allegedly emailed MLB again in the hope that the earlier discussions could be continued. The MLB executive replied, informing Streit that “people here are concerned about this as unauthorized access to our systems” but then went on to ask Streit what kind of money he was expecting. $150,000, apparently.

streit-bug bounty

Serious vulnerabilities can return big bug bounties and there is no question this vulnerability is serious. The complaint against Streit says that an analysis conducted by just one of the sports leagues reveals losses of almost $3m to the HeHeStreams operation alone. And herein lies the problem.

It’s not known if MLB would’ve been more responsive to a neutral third-party discloser but at least as far as FBI Special Agent Joshua Williams is concerned, Streit’s overall conduct means that his request for payment amounted to extortion.

“[I] believe that…although the defendant approached MLB in the guise of being helpful to MLB, his simultaneous intrusion into MLB accounts and illegal streaming of MLB content on the illicit streaming website indicates that Streit acted knowingly and with the intent to extort MLB,” Agent Williams writes.

Potentially Serious Prison Time

As per the Department of Justice, 30-year-old Streit from Minnesota is charged with:

One count of knowingly accessing a protected computer in furtherance of a criminal act and for purposes of commercial advantage and private financial gain, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.

One count of knowingly accessing a protected computer in furtherance of fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.

One count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and one count of illicit digital transmission, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison. He also faces one count of sending interstate threats with the intent to extort, which carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison.

Of immediate interest here is the reference to “illicit digital transmission”. This terminology is used in the Protecting Lawful Streaming Act (PLSA), a law that made certain streaming conduct a felony. It was signed into law last December and as far as we’re aware, hasn’t been used until now.

The criminal complaint can be found here (pdf)

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

Daily Deals (10-29-2021)

Monoprice is selling a cheap pair of true wireless earbuds for $12. Need an extra pair in case you lose one or want to share with a friend or family member? You can pick up a 2-pack for $22 when you use the coupon 2FOR22 for $2 in savings. That’s a lot of twos. But […]

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Monoprice is selling a cheap pair of true wireless earbuds for $12. Need an extra pair in case you lose one or want to share with a friend or family member? You can pick up a 2-pack for $22 when you use the coupon 2FOR22 for $2 in savings.

That’s a lot of twos. But you actually get 4 earbuds in a 2-pack. Go figure.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Laptops & Tablets

Storage

Other

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Microsoft reports SIP-bypassing “Shrootless” vulnerability in macOS

Exploit based on SIP entitlement inheritance was patched by Apple on October 26.

The worm says, "I've got root!"

Enlarge / The worm says, "I've got root!" (credit: Andreus / Getty Images)

The Microsoft 365 Defender Research Team released a blog post yesterday describing a newly found macOS vulnerability that can abuse entitlement inheritance in macOS's System Integrity Protection (SIP) to allow execution of arbitrary code with root-level privilege. The vulnerability is listed as CVE-2021-30892 and has been given the nickname "Shrootless."

To explain how Shrootless works, we need to review how SIP functions. Introduced back in 2015 with OS X 10.11 El Capitan (and explained in detail on pages eight and nine of our review), SIP attempts to do away with an entire class of vulnerabilities (or at least neuter their effectiveness) by adding kernel-level protections against changing certain files on disk and certain processes in memory, even with root privilege. These protections are (more or less) inviolable unless one disables SIP, which cannot be done without rebooting into recovery mode and executing a terminal command.

The Shrootless exploit takes advantage of the fact that, while root privilege is no longer sufficient to change important system files, the kernel itself still can—and does—alter protected locations as needed. The most obvious example is when installing an application. Apple-signed application install packages have the ability to do things normally prohibited by SIP, and that's where Shrootless slides in.

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Image in Facebook app may show Meta’s upcoming Apple Watch rival

A Meta smart watch with at least one camera could be on the way.

Image in Facebook app may show Meta’s upcoming Apple Watch rival

Enlarge (credit: Meta)

Facebook just won't stay idle. After announcing on Thursday that Facebook's parent company will be changing its name to Meta, it seems the tech giant may be planning another big move that it hasn't even mentioned yet. An image spotted on one of its apps suggests that the company is working on a smartwatch to compete with the likes of the Apple Watch and Samsung Galaxy watches.

As reported by Bloomberg last night, an app developer named Steve Moser spotted an image of a smartwatch on Facebook View, an app for controlling the Ray-Ban Stories smart glasses. The publication described the picture as showing a smartwatch with rounded corners, a button on the side, and a white band that is reportedly detachable. Meta has not commented on the report.

We've heard rumors of a Facebook smartwatch before.

We've heard rumors of a Facebook smartwatch before. (credit: Facebook via Bloomberg)

On the watch's face is a notch for an integrated camera, which could allow support for video calls. This would be a standout feature, as Apple and Samsung smartwatches don't have cameras. In June, The Verge said we will see a Facebook smartwatch with two cameras—one on the front for video calls and one on the back for taking photos and video.

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