Firm planning 100,000 satellites claims it will “clean space” by capturing debris

E-Space claims its satellites will “capture debris… to prevent further collisions.”

Satellite company founder Greg Wyler talking in OneWeb's offices in 2019.

Enlarge / Greg Wyler in February 2019 when he was at OneWeb. (credit: Getty Images | Washington Post)

A company led by satellite-industry veteran Greg Wyler says it plans to launch about 100,000 small communication satellites into low Earth orbit. The company, E-Space, yesterday announced that it received a $50 million investment and that it will launch its first test satellites next month, with "mass production... slated for 2023."

E-Space said it has "filings in hand for potentially over 100,000 secure communication satellites," but there are suggestions that the company wants to launch over 300,000 satellites. Prime Movers Lab, which led the $50 million investment round, said that E-Space's network will have "up to hundreds of thousands of secure communication satellites" and described the devices as "micro-satellites."

E-Space said its platform will "help governments and large companies build space-based applications in a capital-light manner" for uses "ranging from secure communications to managing remote infrastructure." E-Space says its satellites will use a peer-to-peer communication model, and the company's website describes the plan as a "multi-application cloud server in space... powered by E-Space's rapidly scalable optical 5G mesh network."

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Coming soon to Windows 11: More reminders that your PC doesn’t meet the requirements

It’s one of a few features Microsoft is testing internally.

Windows 11 is going to keep reminding you if your hardware isn't supported, even if it's already installed and running fine.

Enlarge / Windows 11 is going to keep reminding you if your hardware isn't supported, even if it's already installed and running fine. (credit: @thebookisclosed on Twitter)

If you're running Windows 11 on one of the many PCs that don't meet its stringent system requirements, your experience so far probably hasn't been all that different from someone running it on an "officially" supported system. Despite multiple warnings that Microsoft might withhold basic security updates from these devices, so far, they've gotten the same updates at the same time as "supported" PCs.

But that doesn't mean these PCs will receive updates in perpetuity, and Microsoft does still want you to know that your PC is unsupported when it doesn't meet the system requirements. To that end, Twitter user Albacore has discovered a message at the top of the Settings app that will remind you when your PC doesn't meet Windows 11's requirements. To date, these kinds of reminders and warning messages have happened before and during the Windows 11 install process, not after.

This new message is one of a few new experimental features lurking below the surface of Microsoft's current Windows 11 testing builds. Others, which as the company has recently noted may or may not ever see the light of day, include customizable "stickers" for the desktop, a sustainability rating to measure and improve your PC's power efficiency (shades of the Windows Experience Index), a possible return of some Tablet Mode features that were removed in the migration from Windows 10 to Windows 11, and a better overflow mode for your taskbar when it has too many icons in it.

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Kia and Hyundai warn 485,000 SUV owners to park outside due to fire risk

The problem is caused by contamination in an antilock brake controller module.

Kia and Hyundai warn 485,000 SUV owners to park outside due to fire risk

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Hyundai and Kia have issued a recall for nearly 485,000 SUVs (and a handful of sedans) due to the risk of engine bay fires, warning owners to park the vehicles outside until the repair work has been completed.

The problem affects 126,747 Kias—certain K900 sedans from model years 2016–2018 and all Sportage SUVs from model years 2014–2016.

Hyundai has a bigger task, as it's recalling 357,830 vehicles split between the Santa Fe (model years 2016–2018, not equipped with smart cruise control), the Santa Fe Sport (model years 2017-2018, not equipped with smart cruise control), the Santa Fe XL (model-year 2019, not equipped with smart cruise control), and the Tucson (model years 2014–2015).

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Acer Revo Box RN96 is a compact desktop with Intel Tiger Lake

The Acer Revo Box RN96 is small desktop computer that measures about 1.3 inches thick and weighs less than 2 pounds. Powered by an Tiger Lake-U processor with support for up to 32GB of RAM, it’s basically a little desktop with the beating heart of a laptop, which should be good enough for most basic computing […]

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The Acer Revo Box RN96 is small desktop computer that measures about 1.3 inches thick and weighs less than 2 pounds. Powered by an Tiger Lake-U processor with support for up to 32GB of RAM, it’s basically a little desktop with the beating heart of a laptop, which should be good enough for most basic computing tasks.

The only catch? The Revo Box RN96 is only available in select markets including the UK, Japan, and Germany. It does not yet appear to be available in the US.

Acer’s latest little computer measures 181 x 178 x 33.5mm (7.1″ x 7.1″ x 1.3″) and weighs about 900 grams (2 pounds). It supports WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.1 and features a set of ports that includes:

  • 1 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C
  • 1 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A
  • 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A
  • 2 x USB 2.0 Type-A
  • 1 x HDMI
  • 1-2 x DisplayPort
  • 1 x 3.5mm audio jacks
  • 1 x Gigabit Ethernet
  • 1 x DC power input

There do appear to be some regional variation in the port arrangement – in Germany there are separate mic and headphone jacks on the front of the system and a blue USB port, for example, while the Acer Revo Box RN96 models sold in Japan and the UK have just one audio jack on the front, along with a red USB port and a different looking power button.

Under the hood of each model there’s an M.2 2280 slot for a PCIe NVMe SSD, a 2.5 inch drive bay for a hard drive or solid state storage, and two SODIMM slots for DDR4-3200 memory.

In markets where the Revo Box RN96 is available, Acer offers models with Intel Core i3-1115G4 or Core i5-1135G7 processor options and most of those systems come pre-configured with either 8GB or 16GB RAM and 256GB or 512GB of solid state storage.

via PC Watch

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Alfa Romeo’s first plug-in hybrid crossover comes with an NFT

Can the compact Tonale help reverse the brand’s sales decline?

the front of an Alfa Romeo Tonale

Enlarge / The Tonale proudly wears Alfa Romeo's signature trefoil grille. And the triple headlamps are a visual reference to the SZ sports car. (credit: Alfa Romeo)

On Tuesday, Alfa Romeo revealed its next model, called the Tonale. This attractive new crossover will come to the US in a couple of different powertrain options, with one of them being the brand's first-ever plug-in hybrid. But most of the news you'll read about the Tonale will probably focus on the vehicle's included non-fungible token, which will apparently use the blockchain to keep track of servicing records and accident history.

The Tonale is a smaller car than the Stelvio SUV, but it's clearly part of the same family, thanks to the characteristic Alfa "trefoil" grille. Alfa namechecks the diminutive Giulia GT Junior as an inspiration for the line that runs down the side of the car, although I'm not sure I see it. I do get the reference to the SZ, a composite-bodied sports car that Alfa Romeo built from 1989 to 1991, in the triple headlights.

The plug-in hybrid Tonale combines a gasoline engine that drives the front wheels (via a six-speed automatic transmission) with an electric motor that drives the rear wheels. The engine is a 1.3 L turbocharged MultiAir four-cylinder that generates 180 hp (134 kW), with the electric motor contributing another 120 hp (90 kW) to la festa. Total power output is 272 hp (203 kW), and the 15.5 kWh lithium-ion traction battery has an electric-only range of 30 miles (48 km), Alfa says.

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NVIDIA removes Arm from its shopping cart, Arm will go public instead

NVIDIA’s plan to acquire chip designer Arm Holdings is dead. The companies announced the deal a year and a half ago, but since then it’s come under heavy scrutiny from antitrust regulators around the globe, and now NVIDIA and Arm’s parent company Softbank say they’ve terminated the agreement. At the same time, Softbank is unveiling […]

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NVIDIA’s plan to acquire chip designer Arm Holdings is dead. The companies announced the deal a year and a half ago, but since then it’s come under heavy scrutiny from antitrust regulators around the globe, and now NVIDIA and Arm’s parent company Softbank say they’ve terminated the agreement.

At the same time, Softbank is unveiling new plans for Arm. It’s appointed a new CEO for Arm and announced plans to take the company public by March 31, 2023.

Arm doesn’t make its own processors, but the company designs chip architecture that’s licensed by makers of virtually every smartphone on the market today as well as many other devices including consumer electronics, servers, and even recent laptop and desktop computers like Apple’s latest Macs with Apple Silicon chips (which are based on Arm technology).

Not surprisingly, many chip makers were immediately skeptical when a rival chip maker (NVIDIA) announced it wanted to buy Arm, but would not give its own chips preferential treatment in any way. And it seems like antitrust regulators in the US, Europe, China, and other regions were also concerned.

With the chances that the deal would survive that level of scrutiny looking slim to none, Softbank and NVIDIA decided to go another route. NVIDIA will continue to hold a 20-year license for Arm designs and Softbank will get to hold onto $1.25 billion that was pre-paid by NVIDIA.

Japanese company Softbank acquired the UK-based Arm Holdings in 2016 for $32 billion with an announcement that it would pump money into the company to grow Arm’s global business. According to Reuters, Softbank would have received around $12 billion in cash and up to $50 billion worth of NVIDIA stock if the sale had gone through as proposed… but with the deal falling apart, Softbank will have to look for other ways to raise money. And it looks like the company is hoping a public offering will do that.

Arm’s new CEO who will help lead that initiative is Renee Haas, who’s been working in the chip industry for more than three decades, including 7 years as a vice president at NVIDIA and, most recently, 8 years on Arm’s executive team.

via Reuters, The New York Times, AnandTech, NVIDIA, and Arm

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