HHKB celebrates 25 years with arrow-less $350 wireless keyboard 

HHKB’s birthday gift is a white colorway and special keycap for one of its Bluetooth keyboards.

HHKB Professional Hybrid Type-S in white on white background.

Enlarge / Can you spot the anniversary keycap? (credit: HHKB)

Happy Hacking Keyboard (HKKB) has made a name for itself among keyboard enthusiasts since launching in 1996. Today, the brand is synonymous with arrow-less 60 percent designs, the use of luxurious Topre switches, and premium price tags. Its 25-year anniversary keyboard is no different.

The HHKB layout drops the numpad and navigation keys, including, boldly, the arrows. It targets programmers, engineers, and writers with its symmetrical, shrunken form factor that's supposed to make it easier for your fingers to reach the keys.

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Daily Deals (11-16-2021)

Ahead of Black Friday, the Microsoft Store is offering discounts on dozens of Windows PCs including laptops, tablets, and desktops. You can pick up a Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7i 14″ thin and light laptop with an Intel Core i7-1165G7 processor, 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage for $1000, for example, which is $170 off […]

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Ahead of Black Friday, the Microsoft Store is offering discounts on dozens of Windows PCs including laptops, tablets, and desktops. You can pick up a Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7i 14″ thin and light laptop with an Intel Core i7-1165G7 processor, 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage for $1000, for example, which is $170 off the list price.

Lenovo Slim 7i

Looking for something a little cheaper? Walmart’s got you covered. For half that price you can grab an Acer Swift 3 laptop with a 14 inch full HD display, a Core i5-1135G7 processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 512GB SSD.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Laptops

Tablets

PC & mobile accessories

Media Streamers

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Meet this unique, compact Android phone from a Japanese toaster company

A compact phone designed for human hands, rather than rectangular components.

The Balmuda Phone. It's designed to be held.

Enlarge / The Balmuda Phone. It's designed to be held. (credit: Balmuda)

It's not every day you see a smartphone launch that truly looks like something new and different, but say hello to the "Balmuda Phone." This is a unique, compact little Android phone, totally out of left field, from a luxury Japanese toaster maker. You can't make this stuff up.

Usually, these "random company made a smartphone" stories are all the same and involve calling up a turnkey smartphone manufacturer and getting a generic phone made. These turnkey smartphone operations have brought us wonderful products, like the KFC phone or the Pepsi P1, but that's not what Balmuda is doing here. The company made a phone because it has a new idea for a phone, with a focus on a compact, rounded-over design rather than the huge slab rectangles that dominate smartphone design. It's a phone designed around human hands and not the rectangle-shaped components that make up a phone.

To quote the website (through Google Translate) the company says: "The Balmuda Phone was designed for a shape that fits naturally in your hand. To achieve this, not only is the back curved, but the shape when viewed from the front is actually wrapped in a gentle curve—even the display. In other words, the Balmuda Phone is the only smartphone whose proportions do not include any straight lines."

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GTA Modders to Court: Our Game Fixes & Enhancements Are Fair Use, Not Piracy

In response to a lawsuit filed by Take-Two Interactive, four men behind the popular re3 and reVC Grand Theft Auto fan projects claim their work is protected under fair use. Among other things they fixed bugs, something the plaintiff stopped doing years ago. They also improved the games which, if anything, enhanced the market for the original games, which are required for the mods to run.

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

gtaEarlier this year a group of programmers and Grand Theft Auto enthusiasts released ‘re3’ and ‘reVC’, a pair of reverse engineered modifications for GTA 3 and Vice City.

The projects allowed fans to enjoy these dated games with significant enhancements and were a hit with fans.

However, Take-Two and Rockstar Games took exception and responded with a DMCA takedown filed at Github to have the repositories removed. The team fired back using the DMCA counternotice system and ‘re3’ and ‘reVC’ were restored.

Early September, Take-Two filed a lawsuit against the team, arguing that the aim of the projects was to create and distribute pirated versions GTA 3 and Vice City. The company demanded damages under copyright law claiming that the team “willfully and maliciously” copied, adapted and distributed its source code and other content without permission.

Take-Two also demanded damages for alleged misrepresentations in the defendants’ DMCA counternotices.

Team Behind ‘re3’ and ‘reVC’ Fights Back

Through their attorneys, Angelo Papenhoff (aap), Theo Morra, Eray Orçunus, and Adrian Graber have now responded to the complaint. They address each of the plaintiff’s allegations, largely denying them but in some cases stating insufficient knowledge to form a response.

Broadly, however, they insist that they did not commit any type of copyright infringement, something they expand upon in a shortlist of affirmative defenses, i.e defenses based on facts other than those that support the plaintiff’s claim.

Affirmative Defense – Fair Use

Right off the bat, the defendants assert that anything they did in connection with their GTA 3 and Vice City projects were actions protected by fair use under the Copyright Act. If any copying of copyright-protected material did occur, that was undertaken to allow for interoperability of software and fixing bugs present in the original titles.

As a result, any alleged ‘reverse engineering’ of original code represents a transformative use of that content, i.e it added something new, with a further purpose or different character, and did not substitute for the original use of the work.

To the extent that copying of copyrighted material did occur, if any, this was necessary to allow for the interoperability of software and was kept to the minimally required amount.

The answer further points out that the original games were released over 15 years ago and the plaintiff stopped releasing patches and bug fixes several years before any of the alleged actions of the defendants took place.

Another important fact highlighted in the answer to the complaint is that the defendants’ modifications are useless in their own right. In fact, anyone who wished to make use of ‘re3’ and ‘reVC’ could not do so without already possessing copies of GTA 3 and Vice City, games that Take-Two stopped making available for purchase on its online stores.

This leads to the question of whether the alleged conduct of the defendants affected the market for those games and if so, in what way. According to the answer, the mods did not affect the market but to the extent they did, any shift would’ve been positive since people needed to purchase the games to use the mods.

“Any complained of copying of copyright protected material that did occur, if any, was not undertaken for profit or commercial purposes. The doctrine of fair use bars the relief sought by Plaintiff,” the response adds.

Plaintiff Actually Encouraged Game Mods

Despite now aggressively suing the creators of ‘re3’ and ‘reVC’, Take-Two has previously allowed third parties to develop mods of its software (including for GTA 3 and Vice City) without any adverse action in response. That’s according to the answer which states that Take-Two (or its “subsidiaries or predecessors interest”) have “showcased” mods and even released portions of its software to the Multi Theft Auto (MTA) mod project.

“These supported, encouraged, or allowed ‘mod’ projects, upon information and belief, required the reverse engineering of software just as Defendants are alleged to have undertaken. Upon information and belief, Defendants had an implied license to undertake any complained of actions or Plaintiff abandoned is copyright,” the answer reads.

Extraterritorial Application of US Law

Take-Two’s complaint alleges that Angelo Papenhoff is a resident of Germany and the response admits that. However, the claim that Theo Morra is an individual located in New Zealand is denied. Similarly, it is denied that Eray Orçunus is located in Turkey and Adrian Graber is located in Germany.

While these factors aren’t expressly cited in the defendants’ third affirmative defense (the extraterritorial application of US law), the complaint alleges that the copying of copyrighted material was undertaken outside the United States. As such, US copyright law lacks reach, the defendants say.

“The United States Copyright Act should not be applied outside the United States and its territories. To the extent Plaintiff seeks to extend the application of the United States Copyright Act to cover activities outside the United States, its claims should be barred,” the answer concludes.

“Bug Fixes and Enhancements” Come At a Bad Time For Take-Two

For months there has been speculation that the real reason behind Take-Two’s legal action against the ‘re3’ and ‘reVC’ developers is that they were planning to officially release enhanced versions of their old games. The latter component was confirmed with the release of Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy, which includes remastered versions of GTA III, GTA Vice City, and GTA San Andreas.

Unfortunately, that has been nothing short of a disaster. As reported by Eurogamer, the Definitive Edition was unplayable due to software problems and is only now available again for purchase after three days of downtime. Refund requests have been coming in thick and fast and the title has been review bombed down to an aggregate score of 0.5 on Metacritic.

The answer to Take-Two’s complaint can be found here (pdf)

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

California says Amazon must stop hiding COVID case counts from workers

Amazon denies breaking any law but agrees to settlement and will revamp policies.

A sign outside an Amazon warehouse displays arrows and instructs visitors and associates to go in one direction and trucks to go in another direction.

Enlarge / Amazon fulfillment center and warehouse in Sacramento on August 23, 2019. (credit: Getty Images | Sundry Photography)

California's attorney general yesterday said that Amazon has been hiding COVID-19 case counts from warehouse workers throughout the pandemic and announced a settlement in which Amazon agreed to keep workers up to date on the number of infections in their workplaces.

Attorney General Rob Bonta alleged in a lawsuit that Amazon violated a COVID-19 notification law enacted by California in September 2020 and violated the state's Unfair Competition Law (UCL). The proposed settlement that Amazon agreed to was filed in Sacramento County Superior Court and is still pending a judge's approval.

The settlement "requir[es] Amazon to end harmful labor practices that concealed COVID-19 case numbers from workers and to provide key information on workplace protections in line with California's 'right-to-know' law," Bonta's announcement yesterday said.

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Running Windows on ARM? Now you’ll need Windows 11 for x64 app emulation

One of the challenges Microsoft faced when bringing Windows to computers with ARM processors was that many Windows applications were designed for x86 chips like the ones Intel and AMD product. So Windows on ARM has an emulation feature that uses software to get x86 apps to run on ARM. When Windows 10 on ARM […]

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One of the challenges Microsoft faced when bringing Windows to computers with ARM processors was that many Windows applications were designed for x86 chips like the ones Intel and AMD product. So Windows on ARM has an emulation feature that uses software to get x86 apps to run on ARM.

When Windows 10 on ARM first launched, emulation was limited to 32-bit x86 apps, but almost a year ago Microsoft began rolling out test builds of Windows 10 on ARM with support for 64-bit emulation. Now the company is announcing that x64 emulation has graduated from beta and it’s generally available for Windows 11 on ARM. But it will no longer be an option at all for Windows 10.

Microsoft Surface Pro X

It’s unclear why Microsoft decided to make x64 emulation a Windows 11-only feature, especially since the company has promised to continue supporting Window 10 through 2025.

But, to be fair, it’s not like Microsoft is removing a feature that had been widely available to Windows 10 users. Up until now x64 emulation was only available to members of the Windows Insider program who were running preview builds of Windows 10 and not to the general public running stable builds of the operating system.

The good news is that almost every Windows 10 laptop, tablet, or desktop computer with a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor released to date should be eligible for a free upgrade to Windows 11. The bad news is that means folks who aren’t happy with some of the changes in Windows 11 (the taskbar, start menu, and right-click context menus seem to have turned off many folks) may not want to upgrade… but may have to if they want to be able to continue running 64-bit apps that weren’t compiled specifically for computers with ARM-based processors.

via The Verge

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Angry Texan who lost $1.2 million Theranos investment lights up Holmes trial

Theranos investor could have made 20x—why didn’t he sell?

Elizabeth Holmes, founder and former CEO of Theranos, arrives for motion hearing on Monday, November 4, 2019, at the US District Courthouse in San Jose, California.

Enlarge / Elizabeth Holmes, founder and former CEO of Theranos, arrives for motion hearing on Monday, November 4, 2019, at the US District Courthouse in San Jose, California. (credit: Getty | Yichuan Cao)

On Monday, at the criminal trial of Elizabeth Holmes, Theranos investor Alan Eisenman walked into the courtroom and held aloft an enveloped stuffed with his personal notes. He hadn’t wanted to hand them over, but the defense had subpoenaed them. Here, take them, he seemed to be saying.

It was just one of many theatrical moments Eisenman would deliver in a brief day of testimony in San Jose, California. Eisenman invested around $1.2 million in the startup only to see his money vanish when the company went belly-up in 2018. His investment is behind one of the counts of wire fraud that Holmes is facing. But as the court heard, Eisenman had plenty of opportunity to cash out.

His first chance was in 2010, when Holmes offered to pay him at least five times his initial investment to buy back his shares. In 2015, he had two more chances: Eisenman spoke with people at SharesPost, a market for trading shares in private companies, who said he could probably sell for $14.75, which would net him at least $20 million. Also in 2015, he was approached by Chris Boies, the son of Theranos attorney and board director David Boies, who offered to pay $15 per share.

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The Balmuda Phone is a small, expensive, and unique phone from a Japanese company known for toasters

Balmuda is a Japanese design company that makes high-end products for the home including a toaster, kettle, and lantern. Now Balmuda is also a phone maker. The Balmuda Phone is an unusual phone with a unique design by 2021 standards: It has a 4.9 inch display and a curved back that the company says makes the […]

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Balmuda is a Japanese design company that makes high-end products for the home including a toaster, kettle, and lantern. Now Balmuda is also a phone maker.

The Balmuda Phone is an unusual phone with a unique design by 2021 standards: It has a 4.9 inch display and a curved back that the company says makes the compact phone easy to hold in the palm of your hand. It’s also a fairly expensive phone: it goes in sale in Japan this week for ¥ 104,800 (about $914).

Available in black or white color options, the Balmuda Phone has a plastic case that measures 123 x 69 x 13.7 (4.84″ x 2.72″ x 0.54″) and weighs 138 grams (4.9 ounces), making it positively tiny by modern smartphone standards.

With a 4.9 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display though, it should still have enough screen space for most activities, and the phone’s Qualcomm Snapdragon 765 processor, 6GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage are similar to what you’d get from a Google Pixel 5a.

The Balmuda Phone supports 5G networks (in Japan), WiFi 5, Bluetooth 5.2, and NFC and has an IPX4 water-resistance rating.

Other features include a 48MP rear camera and 8MP front-facing camera, a rear fingerprint sensor, a 2,500 mAh battery, a USB Type-C port with support for USB PD 3.0 fast charging.

The phone also supports wireless charging. The phone ships with Android 11 software and a custom user interface.

While you can certainly find phones with similar specs for lower prices, there’s nothing quite like the Balmuda Phone available in terms of screen size and design. Whether that’s worth paying a hefty premium for is something only you can answer… but it’s also something that probably only matters if you happen to be in Japan at the moment, since it’s unclear whether the Balmuda Phone will ever be available anywhere else.

via The Verge and 9to5Google

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$219 mini PC is the best, cheapest way for devs to try Windows on ARM

Low specs (and no return policy) make it bad for users but a good fit for devs.

The ECS LIVA QC710 mini PC.

Enlarge / The ECS LIVA QC710 mini PC. (credit: ECS)

Developers interested in testing out the ARM versions of Windows haven't had much flexibility when it comes to testing hardware. On one end of the spectrum are $1,000-ish tablets like the Surface Pro X, which, especially for indie developers, is a lot of cash to drop just to dabble in a new hardware ecosystem. And while you can technically run Windows 10 and 11 on a Raspberry Pi 4, performance even on a 4 GB or 8 GB Pi leaves a lot to be desired (it's also not actually permitted by Windows' licensing restrictions).

But there's now a solution to this problem in the form of the ECS LIVA QC710, an unassuming Qualcomm Snapdragon-powered Windows mini PC that is currently available in the Microsoft Store for a relatively reasonable $219. The box ships with the ARM version of Windows 10 Home, and at 1.38×4.69×4.59 inches is comparable in size to a set-top box like the Apple TV.

The low price is reflected in the computer's specifications. It includes just 4 GB of RAM and 64 GB of (presumable eMMC) storage, expandable only via a microSD slot on the side. The Snapdragon 7c chip is also a step down from the Snapdragon 8c, 8cx, SQ1, and SQ2 chips that power tablets like the Surface Pro X. The SoC includes a pair of "big" Kryo 468 Gold cores and six "little" Kryo 468 Silver cores, plus an Adreno 618 GPU, 802.11ac Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 5 support. Connectivity is limited to a single 5 Gbps USB Type-A port, one USB 2.0 port, an HDMI port, and a 100 Mbps Ethernet port, plus a USB-C port that's used for power.

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