In a strategic shift, Roku plans to make its own TV sets

Two sources say Roku is exploring the idea seriously.

A Roku streaming box.

Enlarge / A Roku streaming box. (credit: Ars Technica)

TV-streaming platform Roku is looking to expand beyond dongles and software deals to make its own TV hardware, according to a report in Insider.

The story appears to be based on two sources with different levels of familiarity with Roku's plans. The first is someone who participated in a Roku focus group. "They showed different models, feature sets, and names, sizes, price points," the participant said.

Second, the article cites an executive who says that making TVs has been on Roku's roadmap for over a year. The executive is quoted briefly and provides a little more detail, saying, "The analysis has been done. They recognized that owning the last bit of branding made a lot of sense, particularly if you are going into content."

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Moskau marschiert (ein)

Russland erkennt “Volksrepubliken” in Ost-Ukraine an und will Truppen entsenden. Nato-Staaten kündigen Sanktionen an. OSZE bestätigt Angriffe auf Zivilisten

Russland erkennt "Volksrepubliken" in Ost-Ukraine an und will Truppen entsenden. Nato-Staaten kündigen Sanktionen an. OSZE bestätigt Angriffe auf Zivilisten

Nato und Russland: Blick in den Abgrund

Die Meinungsschlacht um den Ukraine-Konflikt lässt die Nähe einer Eskalation steht, wie sie die Welt lange nicht mehr gesehen hat

Die Meinungsschlacht um den Ukraine-Konflikt lässt die Nähe einer Eskalation steht, wie sie die Welt lange nicht mehr gesehen hat

IRS says you can now create account without submitting to facial recognition

IRS still uses ID.me but says users can choose interview instead of a selfie scan.

Illustration of a man taking a selfie with a phone and having his face scanned.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Spencer Whalen/EyeEm)

The Internal Revenue Service today said that selfies collected from taxpayers will be deleted and that it has deployed a new verification option as an alternative to its controversial facial recognition system. The IRS's use of the ID.me facial recognition service has been criticized by privacy and civil rights advocates as well as lawmakers from both the Democratic and Republican parties.

Two weeks ago, the IRS responded to the bipartisan backlash by saying it "will transition away from using a third-party service for facial recognition to help authenticate people creating new online accounts" and "quickly develop and bring online an additional authentication process that does not involve facial recognition." Today, the IRS announced that a new option for creating accounts without facial recognition is "now available for taxpayers."

Instead of providing a selfie, "taxpayers will have the option of verifying their identity during a live, virtual interview with agents; no biometric data—including facial recognition—will be required if taxpayers choose to authenticate their identity through a virtual interview," the IRS said.

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Study finds 90 percent of medieval chivalric and heroic manuscripts have been lost

Researchers used ecological “unseen species” model to estimate size of medieval European lit.

An ecological model has been applied to estimate the number of lost medieval manuscripts in Europe.

Those who study human culture must grapple with what amounts to an incomplete data set, since researchers are limited to poring over the books, manuscripts, paintings, sculptures, and other artifacts that have survived to learn about a given period. We call this predicament "survivorship bias," and it can lead to underestimations of just how diverse a society might have been in terms of the cultural materials produced. Teasing out how much of a cultural domain may have been lost is a considerable challenge.

The field of ecology might be able to help. According to a new paper published in the journal Science, an international team of researchers has adapted an ecological "unseen species" model to estimate how many medieval European stories in the chivalric romance or heroic tradition survived and how much has been lost. The authors also presented their findings last week at a virtual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAA).

The team looked at medieval works in Dutch, English, French, German, Icelandic, and Irish and concluded that only about 9 percent of medieval manuscripts survived. However, losses were significantly lower in Icelandic and Irish literature, suggesting that island ecosystems might help preserve culture. In fact, the team's results ended up being very similar to the estimates made by scholars using other data, such as references to lost works that appear in surviving manuscripts.

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Sci-Hub Blocking: Court Denies Researchers’ Application to Intervene

Three researchers who sought to intervene in a court case that will determine whether Sci-Hub will be blocked by ISPs in India have had their application rejected. They argued that blocking access to copyrighted research papers would affect their work and harm the public interest. The judge found that an intervention could not be made on that basis.

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

Sci-HubBy providing a massive library of scientific and academic publications for free, Sci-Hub and Libgen have achieved a somewhat unique status in the ‘pirate’ market.

On the one hand, the platforms freely spread knowledge and education, two of the most valuable commodities for those seeking a more enlightened and progressive global community.

On the other, the platforms do so by leveraging copyrighted content that is owned and monetized by massive corporations who insist that their business models are being illegally undermined.

The belief that all information should be free is certainly not new but having scientific and academic knowledge as a subject matter has lit a fire under people who would normally shy away from promoting infringement. After balancing the greater good of the many against the profits of the few, some scientists and researchers are even prepared to go to court to fight for Sci-Hub’s existence.

Blocking Case in India

Given their size and reach, Sci-Hub and Libgen are regularly targeted by academic publishers Elsevier, Wiley, and American Chemical Society. In late 2020 they filed an application for an ISP blocking injunction at the High Court in Delhi, which in other piracy cases has proven a relatively straightforward matter.

Very quickly, however, large groups of scientists, academics, teachers and students protested the legal action. A judge then agreed that dissenting voices should be heard, declaring the case and a matter of public importance.

All of that said, applications to intervene in such matters aren’t always a success, as one group of researchers has just discovered.

Court Rejects Intervention Application

Researcher and scientist Subbiah Arunachalam (sometimes referred to as Mr. Open Access) is well known for his campaigns in favor of open access for academic journals in developing countries. Biochemist Padmanabhan Balaram is a former director of the Indian Institute of Science and himself the author of more than 400 research papers.

Together with colleague and open access advocate Madhan Muthu, the academics filed an application to intervene in the Sci-Hub case alongside a call for a government investigation into the “monopolistic and unfair pricing” in the scientific publishing sector.

The application was based on a straightforward premise. If Sci-Hub and Libgen are blocked by ISPs in India, researchers’ access to scientific papers distributed by Sci-Hub would be denied, something that would have a “deleterious impact on public interest.”

That reasoning alone proved insufficient in the eyes of Justice C Hari Shankar.

“That, by itself, in my view, cannot constitute a basis to allow a third party to intervene in the proceedings in such a fashion,” his ruling reads.

“If the material in question is infringing, it would have to be taken off and if the consequence is that it becomes unavailable to persons who were making use of such material, that is but a consequence which follows in law, and cannot be a basis for such persons to intervene in the litigation which is in the nature of a lis in personam.”

Justice Shankar Has Other Concerns

As far as the injunction application is concerned, the researchers are not connected to Sci-Hub, the publishers, or the allegations of copyright infringement. For the purposes of their intervention, they identify as consumers of potentially infringing content with sincere concerns for the public interest.

On this basis, however, they represent a small subset of a potentially massive pool of Sci-Hub users who may also feel that the site should stay open for the greater good. This raises concerns for the Court in respect of its power to allow a party to present an opinion or participate in a case.

“In my view, such intervention cannot be permitted under Order I Rule 8A of the CPC. If such intervention is permitted, it would be a carte blanche for persons, who claim to be beneficiaries of material which is alleged to be infringing in nature, to start intervening in the infringement proceedings, which would seriously impact the prosecution of the proceedings in the Court,” the order reads.

“In view thereof, I am of the opinion that no case for permitting intervention, by the applicants in the present lis is made out. The application is, accordingly, rejected.”

Other Applications for Intervention

As reported last November, additional intervention applications have also been filed with the High Court by other researchers. These are still pending but are being challenged by the academic publisher plaintiffs.

It is not currently clear whether these applications will be similarly rejected. In at least one of the applications there are claims that since India’s Copyright Act provides exceptions for “fair dealing”, making available and consuming copyrighted research material would not constitute infringement under Section 52(1)(a)(i) of the Copyright Act.

The same application also raises concerns that a broad blocking injunction would not only cover the plaintiffs’ copyrighted works but all other content on Sci-Hub on a permanent basis.

The High Court order denying intervention can be found here (pdf)

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

Members of our species were in Western Europe around 54,000 years ago

At least one child left behind a baby tooth to prove it.

Members of our species were in Western Europe around 54,000 years ago

Enlarge (credit: Slimak et al. 2022)

According to a recent study, a child’s tooth unearthed from an old layer of a cave floor in Southern France belonged to a member of our species. If so, the tooth is now the oldest evidence of Homo sapiens living in Europe, and its presence means that our species shared Europe (or parts of it) with Neanderthals for at least 10,000 years. But other fossils from the site suggest that the Pleistocene tale of two species was more complex than we’ve realized.

Finding the first Homo sapiens in Europe

People lived at Grotte Mandrin, a rock shelter in Southern France’s Rhone Valley, for tens of thousands of years. Until roughly 54,000 years ago, those people were Neanderthals. In the oldest layers of cave floor sediment, archaeologists unearthed a child’s molar. Based on its shape and dimensions, the tooth once belonged to a Neanderthal child, which was exactly what paleoanthropologists would expect in a layer of sediment between 79,000 and 62,000 years old.

An adult Neanderthal molar from the next layer up, dated to between 69,000 and 56,000 years old, was also not startling to anthropologist Ludovic Slimak, of Université de Toulouse Jean Jaurès, and his colleagues. But a child’s molar unearthed from the next layer—somewhere between 56,800 and 51,700 years old—was a real surprise. The tooth’s size and shape was clearly not Neanderthal; when Slimak and his colleagues compared it to other upper second molars, they found that it fit best with very early members of our own species.

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Lilbits: Steam for Chromebooks minimum specs revealed, Galaxy Book Pro 2 360 leaked, and handheld gaming PCs benchmarked

Google’s been working to bring Valve’s Steam game client to Chromebooks for the past few years, and it looks like the effort is, umm… picking up steam. A recent code commit suggested we could see Chromebooks with the RGB keyboards often found in gaming laptops. And now the folks at 9to5Google have spotted a list […]

The post Lilbits: Steam for Chromebooks minimum specs revealed, Galaxy Book Pro 2 360 leaked, and handheld gaming PCs benchmarked appeared first on Liliputing.

Google’s been working to bring Valve’s Steam game client to Chromebooks for the past few years, and it looks like the effort is, umm… picking up steam. A recent code commit suggested we could see Chromebooks with the RGB keyboards often found in gaming laptops. And now the folks at 9to5Google have spotted a list of supported Chromebooks and minimum specs.

Suffice it to say that you’re not going to be running Steam games on $109 Chromebooks anytime soon.

Asus Chromebook CX9 (CX9400)

In other recent tech news, GOG has confirmed that its GOG Galaxy game client won’t officially support the upcoming Steam Deck handheld gaming PC’s Linux-based Steam OS operating system, but that doesn’t necessarily mean you can’t run games from GOG on a Steam Deck. Amazon has rolled out an update for Fire TV devices that stops users from installing third-party home screens. And Apple is said to be preparing to launch a bunch of new hardware powered by Apple Silicon chips this year, perhaps starting with new entry-level MacBook Pro and Mac Mini models.

Here’s a roundup of tech news from around the web.

Steam for Chrome OS is coming, here are which Chromebooks will be supported at first [9to5Google]

Valve’s Steam game client is coming to Chromebooks, but not all Chromebooks. Code commits hint you’ll need a recent model with an 11th-gen Intel Core i5 or better processor and 7+ GB of RAM including some recent models from Acer, Asus, HP, and Lenovo.

Don’t expect GOG to support the Steam Deck [GamingOnLinux]

GOG won’t officially support the Steam Deck, which ships with Linux. But since it’s a full-blown PC, users who want to run games from their library that rely on the GOG Galaxy client can install Windows or use Wine or third-party apps.

Amazon blocks custom Home Launchers with latest Fire TV software update [AFTVNews]

After rolling out software update that blocks Amazon Fire tablet users from using third-party launchers as their default home screens, Amazon is taking the same approach with Fire TV devices.

Samsung Galaxy Book Pro 2 360 Full Renders Leaked [GizNext]

This is allegedly Samsung’s next-gen Galaxy Book Pro 360 convertible notebook with three USB-C ports, a 3.5mm audio jack, a microSD card reader, a 15 inch 16:9 display and a convertible tablet-style design.

Apple Readies New MacBooks and iMacs for Part Three of Overhaul [Bloomberg]

Apple will likely unveil an iPhone SE 5G and a new iPad Air on March 8th, but there could also be at least one new Mac powered by Apple Silicon, possibly a new 13″ MacBook Pro with an M2 chip or a new Mac Mini with M1 Pro.

AYA NEO vs ONEXPLAYER vs GxPD Benchmarks Comparison [DroiX / YouTube]

UK-based mini PC and handheld shop DroiX has put together one of the most comprehensive benchmark comparisons to date between current-gen handheld gaming PCs from AYA, GPD, and One Netbook. Notably absent? The Valve Steam Deck.

Keep up on the latest headlines by following Liliputing on Twitter and Facebook and follow @LinuxSmartphone on Twitter and Facebook for the latest news on open source mobile phones.

The post Lilbits: Steam for Chromebooks minimum specs revealed, Galaxy Book Pro 2 360 leaked, and handheld gaming PCs benchmarked appeared first on Liliputing.

Report: Qualcomm will support AV1 video codec in 2023

The open source, royalty-free codec should hit most flagship Android phones next year.

Stylized promotional image of a Qualcomm computer chip.

Enlarge (credit: Qualcomm)

Protocol reports that Qualcomm will finally jump on the AV1 video codec bandwagon next year. AV1 is the web's next open, royalty-free video codec, and widespread adoption will require hardware support from the world's chip vendors.

Qualcomm's 2022 flagship SoC, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip, doesn't support AV1. Samsung's Exynos 2200 managed to ship the video codec this year in international versions of the Galaxy S22, while the MediaTek Dimensity 1000 SoC has been shipping in phones for over a year now with AV1 support. Apple is a founding member of the AV1 Alliance, but its devices also don't support the codec yet.

The report says Qualcomm's "upcoming flagship Snapdragon mobile processor"—model number "SM8550"—will support AV1. That would probably be called the "Snapdragon 8 Gen 2" SoC, due out in 2023.

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GM seeks US approval to put driverless Cruise Origin into commercial service

NHTSA to review safety of driverless Cruise Origin before possible 2023 deployment.

The Cruise Origin driverless car has a boxy, rectangular shape.

Enlarge / The Cruise Origin. (credit: Cruise)

GM's Cruise subsidiary has petitioned the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) for permission to put the driverless Cruise Origin into commercial service. Cruise announced the filing of its petition for approval on Friday, saying the car is "a zero-emission, shared, electric vehicle that has been purposefully designed from the ground up to operate without a human driver. This means it does not rely on certain human-centered features, like a steering wheel or a sun visor, to operate safely."

Cruise said its petition, filed together with parent company GM, "demonstrates how the Origin achieves safety objectives of existing standards and helps enable future AV [autonomous vehicle] regulations." The vehicles will be manufactured at GM's "Factory ZERO" in Michigan, Cruise's announcement said. "Production is expected to begin in late 2022 in Detroit at a GM factory with vehicles delivered in 2023, Cruise said Friday," according to Reuters.

The Cruise Origin interior.

The Cruise Origin interior. (credit: Cruise)

US law allows companies to seek temporary exemptions from safety rules to deploy up to 2,500 vehicles. GM previously sought an exemption for an earlier design based on the Chevy Bolt; the NHTSA took public comment on the request for an exemption in early 2019, and GM withdrew the petition in 2020.

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