Bundesnetzagentur: 30 Messungen an drei unterschiedlichen Kalendertagen
Die Bundesnetzagentur hat festgelegt, wann der Netzbetreiber/Provider den Vertrag nicht erfüllt. Es muss viel gemessen werden. (Bundesnetzagentur, Telekom)
Just another news site
Die Bundesnetzagentur hat festgelegt, wann der Netzbetreiber/Provider den Vertrag nicht erfüllt. Es muss viel gemessen werden. (Bundesnetzagentur, Telekom)
It’s hard to find a good pair of true wireless earbuds with active noise cancellation for less than $100. But a halfway decent pair? There are some options. Last year I picked up a pair of Mpow X3 noise cancelling earbuds for $50, which seemed like a good price at the time. Today Newegg is […]
The post Daily Deals (12-08-2021) appeared first on Liliputing.
It’s hard to find a good pair of true wireless earbuds with active noise cancellation for less than $100. But a halfway decent pair? There are some options.
Last year I picked up a pair of Mpow X3 noise cancelling earbuds for $50, which seemed like a good price at the time. Today Newegg is selling them for just $19.
The earbuds sound pretty good and offer basic noise cancellation. They won’t drown out all of the ambient sounds in a space, but I sometimes use them while vacuuming and they allow me to listen to podcasts without cranking the volume up to ear-damaging levels.
While they won’t replace a high-end pair of earbuds from Apple or Sony, they’re a heck of a lot cheaper… especially today.
Here are some of the day’s best deals.
Wireless audio
eReaders
Chromebooks
Other
The post Daily Deals (12-08-2021) appeared first on Liliputing.
Omicron is “a tractable problem with the tools we have.”
The first batch of preliminary laboratory data on the omicron coronavirus variant has come out, and the results are largely what health experts have anticipated: protective antibodies from two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine are considerably less effective at thwarting the new variant than older versions of the virus. However, antibody potency appears to rebound to fight omicron after a booster dose.
The results suggest that people who have only two doses of the mRNA vaccine may not be protected from infection but would likely remain protected from severe disease. The findings also suggest that maintaining high levels of protection against omicron will require a booster dose of the current vaccines—or even an omicron-specific shot in the future.
The top-line findings and conclusions come from three separate sets of laboratory experiments—all of which are extremely preliminary, involve small sample numbers, and have not been peer-reviewed or published in scientific journals.
Golem.de wollte von den Mobilfunkbetreibern Telekom und Vodafone wissen, was sie von einer Vollversorgung abhält. (Mobilfunk, Telekom)
Golem.de wollte von den Mobilfunkbetreibern Telekom und Vodafone wissen, was sie von einer Vollversorgung abhält. (Mobilfunk, Telekom)
The two companies have feuded about the future of their relationship for months.
Roku and Google have arrived at a multi-year deal that will keep the YouTube and YouTube TV apps available on Roku's devices, Roku announced on Twitter this morning. The agreement comes months after the YouTube TV app was pulled from the Roku Channel Store and just one day before the regular YouTube app would have been removed from the store.
Specific terms of the deal haven't been announced, including how many years "multi-year" means and whether Roku will begin adding decoding support for the AV1 video codec to its hardware. We also don't know whether the $65-per-month YouTube TV service will return to the Roku store as its own dedicated app or if it will continue to be rolled into the main YouTube app, as it has been since Google added it there to sidestep Roku's restrictions in May.
Support for the AV1 codec has been one of the major sticking points between the two companies. The YouTube and YouTube TV apps use AV1 (which is backed by Google, among other companies) to deliver compressed 4K and 8K video streams. But because streaming devices tend to use slower, cheaper processors, they rely on dedicated video decoding hardware to be able to actually decompress and display those video files, and while most of these devices support the commonly used H.265/HEVC codec for high-resolution video streams, fewer support the royalty-free AV1 codec.
Dylan Taylor, a former real estate executive, wants to make Gerry O’Neill’s vision reality.
Editor's Note: This is the first in an occasional series of profiles of people helping to lead the commercial space industry, which NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy has called "the envy of the world." Everyone knows who Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are. But there are many other people working to usher in a future in which spaceflight is sustainable and economic activity in space is profitable. These are some of their stories.
Dylan Taylor seemed almost in shock when we spoke by telephone in late October.
"This," he said, his voice breaking, "has been a dream of mine for almost my entire life."
ECS is updating its Liva line of small form-factor desktop computers with two new models powered by Intel’s low-power Jasper Lake processors. The new ECS Liva Z3 is a 5″ x 4.6″ x 1.4″ computer with support for up to an Intel Pentium Silver N600 processor, while the new Liva Z3E is a slightly taller model […]
The post ECS launches Liva Z3 mini PCs with Intel Jasper Lake processors appeared first on Liliputing.
ECS is updating its Liva line of small form-factor desktop computers with two new models powered by Intel’s low-power Jasper Lake processors.
The new ECS Liva Z3 is a 5″ x 4.6″ x 1.4″ computer with support for up to an Intel Pentium Silver N600 processor, while the new Liva Z3E is a slightly taller model at 2.1″ with two RS232 COM ports and room for an optional 2.5″ hard drive or SSD.
Both systems support up to 16GB of DDR4-2933 RAM, up to 128GB of eMMC 5.1 storage, both have an M.2 2280 PCIe slot for a solid state drive.
Other common features include:
ECS says the mini PCs each support up to two 4K displays and WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.0, and the little computers should offer up to 35% better performance than previous-generation models thanks to the move to Intel’s latest Atom-based processors.
The company will offer a choice of Intel Celeron N4500, Celeron N5100 and Pentium Silver N6000 processors, all of which are 6-watt chips based on Intel’s 10nm Jasper Lake architecture.
The post ECS launches Liva Z3 mini PCs with Intel Jasper Lake processors appeared first on Liliputing.
On the orders of Russian authorities, ISPs in Russia have blocked TorProject.org, the main domain of the privacy-focused anti-censorship tool Tor. The move comes hot on the heels of moves to block access to the wider Tor network following allegations that the service helps people to access previously blocked sites and facilitates crime, including access to the dark web.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
In an effort to control what its citizens can and cannot access on the internet, Russia continues to develop systems for denying access to websites and services.
From copyright infringing content to terrorist propaganda (and whatever the government deems offensive in between), Russia is determined to implement restrictions on Internet users, regardless of the broader implications.
At least initially, local users confidently utilized tools including VPNs to circumvent censorship but with rising pressure from the authorities, even these have come under threat, despite the consequences.
Of course, when times got really tough there was always the robust, privacy-focused Tor network to fall back on but if the past few days are anything to go by, even this old faithful could find itself severely compromised, at least in Russia.
Since the start of December, efforts have been underway to begin the not-insignificant task of blocking Tor. According to GlobalCheck, a project that studies local blocking and assists users to bypass restrictive measures, the TSPU (technical tools to counter threats) system has been deployed against some Tor nodes.
The same Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) system was used to throttle Twitter earlier this year and to silence the Smart Voting website developed by jailed opposition politician Aleksei Navalny.
Reports of early issues on some ISPs were reported by the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI) on December 1, 2021, with complaints raised on the Tor Project forum shortly after.
The blocking efforts do not currently encompass the whole of Russia but certain regions are reportedly more affected, Moscow in particular. Large ISPs showing “anomalous measurements” include Rostelecom, Beeline, Tele2 and NetByNet, according to OONI tests, but the exact scope is currently unknown.
That being said, at least one Russian official is openly supporting the blocking of Tor.
As spotted by Meduza, On December 6, lawmaker Anton Gorelkin, the chairman of the State Duma’s Information Policy Committee, launched a scathing attack on Tor, describing it as a facilitator of illegal activity.
“I have never been a supporter of blocking, but in the case of Tor, I simply do not see any other options,” Gorelkin said.
“Its developers aimed to fight censorship – but in fact Tor became the backbone of the darknet infrastructure. I am convinced that the majority of Tor users use it exclusively for illegal activities: access to illegal information, purchase or sale of illegal substances, credit card numbers, stolen data, illegal services.
“In general, Tor for me (and, I think, for all sane people) is an absolute evil, which must be fought as hard and uncompromisingly as possible,” he added.
That access to “illegal information” is cited as the first alleged “evil” of Tor is perhaps telling given that the network is widely used as an anti-censorship tool, particularly in Russia where political opposition is not highly tolerated. But the network itself is not the only target on Russia’s list, as became evident this week.
In a post to the Tor Project forums yesterday, it was revealed that Russian telecoms regulator Roscomnadzor had warned that it was about to order the blocking of the project’s main domain.
“A notification is sent on the entry into the ‘Unified Register of Domain Names, Indexes of Pages of Sites on the Internet’ and Network Addresses Allowing to Identify Sites on the ‘Internet’ containing information, the dissemination of which in the Russian Federation is prohibited,” the warning reads, citing the torproject.org domain.
“If the hosting provider and (or) the owner of the site does not take measures to remove prohibited information and (or) restrict access to the site on the Internet, a decision will be made to include a network address in the unified register that allows the site to be identified on the Internet, containing information, the distribution of which is prohibited in the Russian Federation, and access to it will be limited.”
Shortly after on the official Tor blog, the project warned of the incoming censorship, noting that with more than 300K daily users, Russia is the country with the second-largest number of Tor users.
“As it seems this situation could quickly escalate to a country-wide Tor block, it’s urgent that we respond to this censorship! We need your help NOW to keep Russians connected to Tor!” the team wrote.
Russia didn’t wait long to act. Torproject.org has been in Russia’s blacklist since a court ruling in 2017 but late Tuesday the authorities implemented a full block, meaning that the domain is now inaccessible from the country’s main ISPs.
It seems highly unlikely that the Tor team will be caving to Russian demands so countermeasures will need to be taken.
As an interim measure, the Tor Project is directing users to its mirror site, which is hosted by the EFF. There are also calls for users to set up Tor bridges, of which many more will be needed to keep Russians online, and to install the OONI Probe app, to help gauge if and how ISPs are implementing blocking.
“International digital rights and human rights organizations must pressure Russia’s government to immediately revert this censorship,” the Tor team concludes.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
The blockchain adds nothing to this experiment in “unique” cosmetic DLC.
Ubisoft became the first big-name game publisher to jump on the non-fungible token bandwagon Tuesday. After teasing its interest in the space last month, the company is officially rolling out Quartz, a system of in-game cosmetic items powered by a new kind of NFT, called "Digits."
By using a decentralized NFT blockchain, Ubisoft promises its Quartz system will "grant players more control than ever" and "more autonomy and agency" in order to "genuinely make players stakeholders of our games." But as currently described, Ubisoft's Quartz system seems like an overcomplicated repackaging of a run-of-the-mill system of DLC cosmetics—but now with extra buzzwords and artificial scarcity layered on top.
And despite all the bold talk of "decentralization," the Quartz system is still so deeply controlled by Ubisoft that we wonder whether a simple internal database managed directly by the company would be a better fit.
You must be logged in to post a comment.