Starliner undergoing three independent investigations as flight slips to 2024

“The design changes were, I would say, minimal.”

The Boeing CST-100 Starliner spacecraft is seen landing in this 30-second exposure in 2019.

Enlarge / The Boeing CST-100 Starliner spacecraft is seen landing in this 30-second exposure in 2019. (credit: NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)

A Boeing official said Monday that the company has delayed a crewed flight test of its Starliner spacecraft until at least March 2024.

The manager for the company's Commercial Crew Program, Mark Nappi, said the spacecraft should be ready for flight by early March, or seven months from now. However, Nappi said that date is conditional on availability of an Atlas V rocket, provided by United Launch Alliance, and an opening in NASA's visiting vehicles schedule.

According to NASA's internal schedule, there is a docking port available from early April to late June 2024 on the International Space Station. So barring a schedule change to delay a cargo mission, the likely no-earlier-than launch date for Starliner's crewed test flight is April 2024.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Zoom has “Zoom fatigue,” requires workers to return to the office

Zoom surprisingly decides its teams are more effective working in-office.

A woman using Zoom to teleconference.

Enlarge (credit: Morsa Images | DigitalVision)

A video-conferencing company might be the last business anyone would expect to force employees to return to the office. That's why a series of shocked reports followed Zoom's announcement that any employees living "within 50 miles of a Zoom office" must now work in the office "at least two days a week."

Starting this month and continuing through September, Zoom's decision to bring employees back to offices could impact many of the company's 7,400 employees, The New York Times reported.

In a statement, a Zoom spokesperson said that the company believes "a structured hybrid approach" is "most effective for Zoom" because it provides an opportunity for workers "to interact with their teams."

Read 16 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Report: Apple buys every 3 nm chip that TSMC can make for next-gen iPhones and Macs

TSMC is said to eat the cost of defective chips so it can keep Apple’s business.

Silicon wafers from a TSMC factory.

Enlarge / Silicon wafers from a TSMC factory. (credit: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd.)

It's been rumored for several months now that Apple will be using a new 3 nm manufacturing process from Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC) for its next-generation chips, including M3 series processors for Macs and the A17 Bionic for some next-gen iPhones. But new reporting from The Information illuminates some of the favorable terms that Apple has secured to keep its costs down: Apple places huge chip orders worth billions of dollars, and in return, TSMC eats the cost of defective processor dies.

At a very high level, chip companies use large silicon wafers to create multiple chips at once, and the wafer is then sliced into many individual processor dies. It's normal, especially early in the life of an all-new manufacturing process, for many of those dies to end up with defects—either they don't work at all, or they don't perform to the specifications of the company that ordered them.

Normally, chip designers would have to pay for each individual die whether it worked or not; that's a major reason why companies sell cut-down or "binned" chips that run at lower clock speeds or have parts switched off. That way, they can recover some money from a defective die instead of none. Apple's orders with TSMC are apparently large enough that TSMC can afford not to charge Apple for defective dies.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Dealmaster: Save on Apple gear, Lenovo laptops, PlayStation 5, and more

Get ready for dorm move-in day with savings on great tech!

MacBook Pro back

Enlarge / A MacBook laptop. (credit: Samuel Axon)

If you or your kids plan to move into a new dorm room or college apartment, we have the gear for you. From storage boxes and shelves to keep things organized, a new Windows laptop or Apple gear to stay productive, noise-cancelling headphones to tune out the world and get things done, or a discount on a Sony PlayStation 5 console, there is plenty to choose from to help make for a successful academic year.

Laptops

Microsoft's Surface Pro 9.

Microsoft's Surface Pro 9. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

  • HP ENVY 2-in-1 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1355U) for $780 (was $1,080) at Best Buy
  • HP Pavilion  2-in-1 (14-inch, Intel Core i3-1215U) for $350 (was $580) at Best Buy
  • Lenovo Yoga 7i (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $550 (was $800) at Best Buy
  • Dell Inspiron 14 5425 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 5825U) for $495 (was $550) at Amazon
  • Microsoft Surface Pro 9 (Intel Core i5, 256GB) for $1,000 with free keyboard (was $1,100) at Best Buy
  • XPS 13 Laptop (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1230U) for $849 (was $949) at Dell
  • Inspiron 15 Laptop (15-inch, Intel Core i7-1255U) for $580 (was $750) at Dell
  • Inspiron 15 Laptop (15-inch, Intel Core i3-1115G4) for $300 (was $380) at Dell
  • XPS 13 Laptop (13-inch, Intel Core i7-1250U) for $899 (was $999) at Dell
  • Inspiron 15 Laptop (15-inch, Intel Core i7-1165G7) for $500 (was $750) at Dell
  • Inspiron 16 2-in-1 Laptop (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $600 (was $800) at Dell
  • Inspiron 14 Laptop (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 5825U) for $450 (was $700) at Dell
  • Alienware x17 R2 Gaming Laptop (17-inch, Intel Core i9-12900H and RTX 3080 Ti) for $2,000 (was $4,000) at Dell
  • Alienware m16 Gaming Laptop (16-inch, Intel Core i9-13900HX and RTX 4090) for $3,400 (was $3,750) at Dell
  • IdeaPad Flex 5i (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $545 (was $860) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 6 Intel (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1185G7) for $2,007 (was $3,649) at Lenovo
  • Yoga 7i (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1355U) for $1,000 (was $1,350) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 Intel (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1240P) for $1,250 (was $2,909) at Lenovo
  • LOQ (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS and RTX 4060) for $1,100 (was $1,420) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 Intel (15-inch, Intel Core i5-1235U) for $899 (was $1,499) at Lenovo
  • Yoga 7 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7735U) for $750 (was $1,150) at Lenovo
  • Legion Pro 5 Gen 8 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7745HX and RTX 4060) for $1,250 (was $1,600) at Lenovo
  • IdeaPad Flex 5 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $455 (was $750) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch, Intel Core i7-1255U) for $983 (was $1,639) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,870 (was $3,229) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 5625U) for $833 (was $1,389) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X13 Gen 2 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1135G7) for $640 (was $2,159) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 6 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1165G7) for $799 (was $3,529) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad Z16 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 6850H and Radeon RX 6500M) for $1,250 (was $2,799) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $755 (was $1,259) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $845 (was $1,409) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 Mobile Workstation (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13800H and RTX 4080) for $3,199 (was $5,519) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 Mobile Workstation (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX A2000) for $2,599 (was $4,479) at Lenovo
  • LOQ (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7640HS and RTX 4050) for $880 (was $1,130) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $869 (was $1,449) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16s Gen 2 Mobile Workstation (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1340P and RTX A500) for $1,489 (was $2,569) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16v Mobile Workstation (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A1000) for $2,279 (was $3,939) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 Mobile Workstation (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A1000) for $2,029 (was $3,499) at Lenovo

Apple

  • MacBook Air (13-inch, M1) for $750 (was $1,000) at Best Buy | Amazon
  • MacBook Air (13-inch, M2) for $949 (was $1,099) at Best Buy
  • MacBook Air (15-inch, M2) for $1,099 (was $1,299) at Best Buy
  • MacBook Pro (14-inch, M2 Pro) for $1,799 (was $1,999) at Best Buy | $1,750 at Amazon
  • MacBook Pro (13-inch, M2) for $1,099 (was $1,299) at Best Buy | Amazon
  • MacBook Pro (16-inch, M2 Pro) for $2,299 (was $2,499) at Best Buy | $2,249 at Amazon
  • iPad 9th Generation for $270 (was $330) at Best Buy
  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Apple Pencil (2nd Generation) for $89 (was $129) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard: iPad Keyboard case for iPad Pro 11-inch (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th Generation) and iPad Air (4th, 5th Generation) for $249 (was $299) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard: iPad Keyboard and case for iPad Pro 12.9‑inch (3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Generation) for $289 (was $349) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard with Touch ID for $134 (was $149) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Trackpad Black for $135 (was $149) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Trackpad White for $115 (was $129) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Mouse for $69 (was $79) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS 40 mm] for $219 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS 44 mm] for $249 (was $279) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS + Cellular 40 mm] for $269 (was $299) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS + Cellular 44 mm] for $299 (was $329) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS 41 mm] for $329 (was $399) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS 45 mm] for $359 (was $429) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS + Cellular 41 mm] for $429 (was $499) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS + Cellular 45 mm] for $459 (was $529) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS + Cellular 41 mm] Smart Watch w/Silver Stainless Steel Case for $629 (was $699) at Amazon

Gaming consoles and games

  • Sony PlayStation 5 for $450 (was $500) at Best Buy
  • Sony PlayStation 5 Console – Call of Duty Modern Warfare II Bundle for $490 (was $540) at Best Buy
  • Sony PlayStation 5 Console – Final Fantasy XVI Bundle for $510 (was $560) at Best Buy
  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - Nintendo Switch (US Version) for $53 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales Ultimate Edition - PlayStation 5 for $40 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales, PlayStation 5 for $20 (was $50) at Best Buy
  • MLB The Show 23 - PlayStation 5 for $40 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • God of War Ragnarök - PlayStation 5 for $50 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • UNCHARTED: Legacy of Thieves Collection - PlayStation 5 for $20 (was $50) at Best Buy
  • Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart Standard Edition - PlayStation 5 for $30 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Gran Turismo 7 - PlayStation 5 for $50 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut - PlayStation 5 for $30 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut - PlayStation 4 for $20 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Sackboy: A Big Adventure Standard - PlayStation 5 for $20 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • The Last of Us Part I – PlayStation 5 for $50 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • The Last of Us Part II Standard Edition - PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5 for $20 (was $40) at Best Buy
  • Death Stranding Director’s Cut - PlayStation 5 for $20 (was $50) at Best Buy
  • Demon's Souls Standard Edition - PlayStation 5 for $30 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Horizon Forbidden West Launch Edition - PlayStation 5 for $40 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • God of War Ragnarök - PlayStation 4 for $40 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Returnal Standard Edition - PlayStation 5 for $30 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • God of War Ragnarök Launch Edition - PlayStation 5 for $50 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Horizon Forbidden West Launch Edition - PlayStation 4 for $30 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Death Stranding Standard Edition - PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5 for $10 (was $40) at Best Buy

TVs and streaming devices

  • Fire TV Stick 4K Max for $27 (was $55) at Amazon
  • Fire TV Stick 4K for $25 (was $50) at Amazon
  • LG 65-inch Class UQ75 Series LED 4K UHD for $480 (was $500) at Best Buy
  • TCL 55-inch Class Q6 Q-Class 4K QLED HDR for $400 (was $500) at Best Buy
  • Samsung 43-inch Class CU7000 Crystal UHD 4K for $280 (was $300) at Best Buy
  • Sony 50-inch Class X77L 4K HDR LED for $520 (was $530) at Best Buy
  • TCL 40-inch Class S3 S-Class 1080p FHD HDR LED for $150 (was $230) at Best Buy
  • Roku 40-inch Class Select Series Full HD for $170 (was $230) at Best Buy
  • Roku 50-inch Class Select Series 4K for $270 (was $300) at Best Buy
  • Roku 40-inch Class Select Series Full HD Smart RokuTV and 2.0-Channel Wireless Soundbar for $320 (was $380) at Best Buy
  • LG 32-inch Class LED HD for $170 (was $180) at Best Buy

Memory and storage

(credit: SanDisk)

  • WD - BLACK D10 8TB External USB 3.2 Gen 1 Portable Hard Drive for $175 (was $260) at Best Buy
  • Amazon Basics 128GB Ultra Fast USB 3.1 Flash Drive 1 Pack, Black for $10 (was $15) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics 512GB microSDXC Memory Card with Full Size Adapter for $34 (was $67) at Amazon
  • Lexar 128GB JumpDrive Dual Drive D400 USB 3.1 Type-C and Type-A Flash Drive for $15 (was $17) at Amazon
  • SanDisk 2TB Portable SSD for $110 (was $135) at Amazon
  • Samsung Type-C USB Flash Drive 128GB for $16 (was $23) at Amazon
  • SanDisk 64GB Ultra Dual Drive Luxe USB Type-C for $12 (was $16) at Amazon
  • Western Digital 10TB WD Purple Surveillance Internal Hard Drive HDD for $250 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Western Digital 4TB WD Black Performance Internal Hard Drive HDD for $124 (was $190) at Amazon
  • Western Digital 10TB WD Red Pro NAS Internal Hard Drive HDD for $230 (was $350) at Amazon
  • Western Digital 8TB WD Blue PC Internal Hard Drive HDD for $120 (was $170) at Amazon
  • WD 18TB My Book Desktop External Hard Drive, USB 3.0, External HDD for $330 (was $540) at Amazon
  • WD 20TB Elements Desktop External Hard Drive, USB 3.0 external hard drive for $350 (was $506) at Amazon
  • Western Digital WD 4TB My Passport Portable External Hard Drive for $97 (was $120) at Amazon

Eero routers

  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system 2-pack for $190 (was $240) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system 3-pack for $240 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi router for $110 (was $140) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi router for $200 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero mesh Wi-Fi router for $50 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero mesh Wi-Fi system (3-pack) for $130 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi System 2-pack for $320 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi System 3-pack for $440 (was $550) at Amazon

Routers and mesh networks

  • TP-Link AX5400 Wi-Fi 6 Router (Archer AX73) for $160 (was $200) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AX1800 Wi-Fi 6 Router (Archer AX21) for $75 (was $100) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AX3000 Wi-Fi 6 Router (Archer AX55) for $108 (was $130) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1900 Smart Wi-Fi Router (Archer A8) for $60 (was $80) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AXE16000 Quad-Band Wi-Fi 6E Router (Archer AXE300) for $500 (was $600) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AXE5400 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6E Mesh System (Deco XE75) 3-pack for $360 after coupon (was $450) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AXE5400 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6E Mesh System (Deco XE75) 2-pack for $270 (was $300) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AX7800 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6 System (Deco X95) 2-pack for $350 (was $450) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1900 Wi-Fi Extender (RE550) for $70 (was $80) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1200 Wi-Fi Range Extender (RE330) for $36 (was $45) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC2600 Wi-Fi Extender (RE650) for $90 (was $150) at Amazon

Headphones and audio

  • JBL Tune 235NC True Wireless Noise Cancelling In-Ear Earbuds for $70 (was $100) at Best Buy
  • Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II for $249 (was $299) at Amazon
  • Bose QuietComfort 45 Wireless Bluetooth Noise Cancelling Headphones for $279 (was $329) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods (3rd Generation) for $160 (was $169) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation) Wireless Earbuds for $199 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $477 (was $549) at Amazon

Dorm and home essentials, personal care, and kitchen

  • Tide PODS Liquid Laundry Detergent pacs Spring Meadow Scent 112 count for $27 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Crest 3D White Professional Effects Teeth Whitening Kit for $43 (was $46) at Amazon
  • Ameriwood Home Parsons Desk with Drawer, White for $49 (was $80) at Amazon
  • VECELO Corner Computer Desk 41 x 30 inches with Smooth Keyboard & Storage Shelves for $85 (was $100) at Amazon
  • VECELO 14-inch Twin Bed Frame Metal Platform for $59 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Sauder Miscellaneous Storage Cabinet for $89 (was $115) at Amazon
  • YITAHOME 10-Drawer Dresser, Fabric Storage Tower for $68 (was $120) at Amazon
  • Nespresso Vertuo Next Premium Coffee and Espresso Machine by Breville with Milk Frother for $168 (was $240) at Amazon
  • Nespresso VertuoPlus Coffee and Espresso Machine by De'Longhi for $130 (was $199) at Amazon
  • Goodful Stackable Lunch Box Container, Bento Style Food Storage with Removeable Compartments for $9 (was $16) at Amazon
  • Elite Gourmet EDB-302BF Countertop Double Cast Iron Burner for $30 (was $37) at Amazon
  • Brita XL Water Filter Dispenser for Tap and Drinking Water for $36 (was $51) at Amazon
  • Brita Water Filter Pitcher for $19 (was $29) at Amazon
  • Misen Nonstick Pots and Pans Set for $85 (was $145) at Amazon
  • HENCKELS Solution Razor-Sharp 7-pc Knife Set for $80 (was $140) at Amazon
  • HENCKELS Premium Quality 15-Piece Knife Set with Block for $130 (was $335) at Amazon
  • HENCKELS Solution Razor-Sharp 3-Piece Kitchen Knife Set for $35 (was $50) at Amazon
  • HENCKELS Solution Razor-Sharp 2-pc Knife Set, Santoku Knife 5 Inch, Santoku Knife 7 Inch for $25 (was $47) at Amazon
  • Anker 575 USB-C Docking Station (13-in-1) for $120 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Rubbermaid Dish Bucket, 15.6-Quart for $22 (was $30) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 91 Qt. Plastic Storage Container, 4-pack for $85 (was $100) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 17.5 Qt Plastic Storage Container, 12-pack for $72 (was $85) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 4 Wide Drawer Storage, Organizer Unit for $67 (was $80) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 19 Qt. Plastic Storage Container, 6-pack for $54 (was $60) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 72 Qt. Plastic Storage Container, 4-pack for $76 (was $90) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 4 Slim Drawer Storage for $42 (was $50) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 40 Qt. Plastic Storage Container for $81 (was $90) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 74 Quart WEATHERPRO Plastic Storage Box, 2-pack for $68 (was $80) at Amazon

Office and school supplies

  • Sharpie Pens, Fine Point (0.4 mm), Assorted Colors, 12 Count for $10 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Sharpie S-Gel, Gel Pens, Medium Point (0.7 mm), Black Ink Gel Pen, 12 Count for $14 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Sharpie Pens, Fine Point (0.4 mm), Assorted Colors, 12 Count for $10 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Sharpie Felt Tip Pens, Fine Point (0.4 mm), Black, 4 Count for $4 (was $12) at Amazon
  • Sharpie S-Gel, Gel Pens, Medium Point (0.7 mm), Black Gel Ink Pens, 12 Count for $11 (was $16) at Amazon
  • Pilot, G2 Premium Gel Roller Pens, Ultra Fine Point 0.38 mm, Pack of 12 for $14 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Fine Point Tip Permanent Markers for $7 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Extension Cord for $10 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Rectangular 8-Outlet Power Strip Surge Protector, 4,500 Joule - 6-Foot Cord for $17 (was $22) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Felt Tip Marker Pens, 12-Pack for $6 (was $9) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Fine Point Tip Permanent Markers - Assorted Colors, 24-Pack for $10 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Premium Colored Pencils, Soft Core, 24 Count for $5 (was $8) at Amazon

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Galaxy Z Flip 5 preorders

  • Preorder the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 and save on storage upgrades and up to $300 on bundled accessories at Samsung
  • Preorder the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 for $1,000 and get a $150 Amazon gift card along with storage upgrades on Amazon
  • Preorder the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 and save on storage upgrades and up to $300 on bundled accessories at Samsung
  • Preorder the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 for $1,800 and get a $200 Amazon gift card along with storage upgrades on Amazon

Smartphones

Yep, that's what I thought it would look like.

Yep, that's what I thought it would look like. (credit: OnLeaks and Smartprix)

  • SAMSUNG Galaxy A54 5G for $350 with Prime (was $450) at Amazon
  • Google Pixel 7 for $449 (was $599) at Amazon
  • Google Pixel 7a for $444 (was $499) at Amazon

Vacuums and robot vacuums

  • iRobot Roomba s9+ (9550) Self Emptying Robot Vacuum for $600 (was $1,000) at Amazon
  • iRobot Braava Jet m6 (6113) Ultimate Robot Mop for $330 (was $500) at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba i4+ EVO (4552) Self Emptying Robot Vacuum for $450 (was $600) at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba i4 EVO (4150) Wi-Fi Connected Robot Vacuum for $210 (was $365) at Amazon
  • Dyson V12 Detect Slim Cordless Vacuum Cleaner for $550 (was $650) at Amazon

DeWalt tools

  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Drill and Impact Driver, Power Tool Combo Kit with 2 Batteries and Charger for $159 (was $239) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Impact Driver Kit, Brushless, 1/4-inch Hex Chuck, 2 Batteries and Charger for $159 (was $169) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Right Angle Cordless Drill/Driver Kit for $176 (was $205) at Amazon
  • DeWalt XTREME 12V MAX* Impact Driver Kit, 1/4-Inch for $94 (was $159) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Impact Wrench, 1/2-inch Hog Ring for $195 (was $279) at Amazon

EDC: Watches, flashlights, knives, and multitools

Timex returns to traditional design for its latest activity-tracking smartwatch.

Timex returns to traditional design for its latest activity-tracking smartwatch. (credit: Photo: Scott Akerman)

  • Timex Men's Expedition Grid Shock 50 mm Watch for $45 (was $83) at Amazon
  • Timex Men's Expedition Gallatin Solar-Powered Watch for $49 (was $57) at Amazon
  • Timex Men's Expedition Scout 40 Watch for $37 (was $43) at Amazon
  • Timex Men's Expedition Scout 40 Watch for $30 (was $62) at Amazon
  • Timex Men's Classic Digital Watch for $29 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Casio Men's W800H-1AV Classic Sport Watch with Black Band for $22 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Casio Men's A158WA-1DF Stainless Steel Digital Watch for $22 (was $23) at Amazon
  • Casio 10-Year Battery for $22 (was $30) at Amazon
  • KeySmart Air for $36 (was $40) at Amazon
  • KeySmart iPro - Apple Find My App Compatible for $50 (was $80) at Amazon
  • Pebblebee Clip & Card Combo (2xClip, 2xCard) | Rechargeable Item Tracker | Compatible with Apple Find My for $90 (was $120) at Amazon | $100 at Pebblebee
  • Mossy Oak Pocket Folding Knife for $18 (was $20) at Amazon
  • CJRB CUTLERY Folding Knife Crag (J1904) AR-RPM9 Powder Steel for $45 (was $50) at Amazon
  • ACEBEAM H16 1000 High Lumens Rechargeable Led Headlamp for $30 (was $50) at Amazon
  • ACEBEAM Pokelit AA Rechargeable Mini Flashlight with Clip, 550 High Lumens Pocket EDC Flashlight for $17 (was $30) at Amazon
  • IMALENT LD70 EDC Flashlight Led Rechargeable Torch for $45 (was $80) at Amazon
  • Streamlight 66608 MicroStream 250-Lumen for $33 (was $59) at Amazon
  • ThruNite EDC Flashlight Archer Mini, 405 Lumens Tail Switch LED Flashlight for $20 (was $36) at Amazon
  • WUBEN C3 Flashlight 1200 High Lumens Rechargeable Flashlight for $25 (was $38) at Amazon
  • FZH Rechargeable Keychain EDC Flashlight Set 900 High Lumens Super Bright Mini Flashlight for $19 (was $30) at Amazon
  • LUMINTOP Tool AA 2.0 EDC Flashlight, Pocket-Sized Keychain Flashlight, Super Bright 650 Lumens for $22 (was $26) at Amazon
  • Gerber Gear Suspension-NXT 15-in-1 Multi-Tool Pocket Knife Set for $29 (was $50) at Amazon
  • RAK 2-in-1 Multi-Tool Pen Set (2 Pack) for $17 (was $21) at Amazon

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Google Search Asked to Remove One Billion ‘Pirate’ Links in 9 Months

In a period of less than nine months, Google received requests to remove over a billion links to pirate sites from its search engine. This is a significant increase compared to recent years, but not necessarily a new trend. More than a quarter of all reported links, relating to a single website, were sent by MindGeek, the parent company of PornHub.

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

google oldRoughly 25 years ago, Google started its business as a simple and straightforward search engine.

The startup swiftly captured a dominant market share which it managed to retain and grow as the years passed by.

Google’s position as a search leader also brings responsibility, an issue copyright holders hammered on for a long time. Slowly but steadily, Google tweaked its policies to hinder pirate sites.

The most direct way for the search engine to address the piracy problem is by responding to DMCA notices. If copyright holders spot pirate sites in search results, they can direct Google to remove these links from its indexes.

Seven Billion Reported URLs

Google first started to keep track of these takedown notices at the beginning of the last decade. In the spring of 2012, Google launched its Transparency Report which publishes all DMCA requests the company receives, including the targeted links and their senders. This provided fuel for hundreds of news reports as well as academic research.

A few days ago, Google reached a new milestone when it processed the seven billionth removal request. It’s a mind-boggling number that comes less than a year after the six billionth takedown was recorded.

7 billion

Looking more closely at the timeline, we see that a billion URLs were reported to Google search in less than nine months. For comparison, it took twice as long to go from five to six billion, suggesting that the takedown volume picked up again after a previously reported decline.

There’s no denying the recent surge in reported links but much of the increase was generated by a single rightsholder in an effort to remove a particular pirate operation from Google search.

Two Domains, One Pirate

Around the start of the year MG Premium began to increase its takedown efforts. The company is an intellectual property vehicle of the MindGeek conglomerate, known for popular adult sites such as PornHub. One of MG Premium’s main goals is to shut down ‘unlicensed’ sites or at least make when unfindable.

Last year, MG Premium scored a multi-million dollar damages win in a U.S. federal court against pirate ‘tube site’ Daftsex . This order also took down the main .com domain, but that didn’t stop the site. Daftsex simply continued using alternative domains which remain available to this day.

This defiant stance prompted MG Premium to start a DMCA takedown spree on a scale never witnessed before. In the first few months of the year, the company flagged more than a quarter billion Daftsex URLs, mostly dsex.to and daft.sex.

mg premium

The surge is clearly visible in the graph above and at times the company was averaging more than two million takedown requests per day. More recently the volume has come down a bit, but it’s been a major contributor to Google’s takedown uptick.

7 Billion in Perspective

The seven billion figure itself also deserves some clarification. This number only refers to the URLs that were reported to Google, and includes duplicates, as well as pages that were not in Google’s index. The latter category is placed on a special watchlist to make sure they’re not added again in the future.

Google also rejects millions of takedown requests because they fail to show links to infringing content. This applies to more than one hundred TorrentFreak URLs that were flagged incorrectly, as well as pages from Netflix, IMDb, The White House, NASA, and even the FBI.

Finally, it’s worth mentioning that not all takedown notices are sent by the people or companies listed in them. Over the past several years, we have seen numerous imposters sending notices on behalf of legitimate rightsholders. These are often sent by pirate site owners attempting to take out the competition.

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

Lilbits: Purism’s refund policy (or lack thereof), Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE, and better QR code scanning

The Purism Librem 5 Linux smartphone has had a long and storied journey. Purism was one of the first companies to announce plans to release a smartphone capable of running software based on a mainline Linux kernel… but it took years for the comp…

The Purism Librem 5 Linux smartphone has had a long and storied journey. Purism was one of the first companies to announce plans to release a smartphone capable of running software based on a mainline Linux kernel… but it took years for the company to actually begin shipping phones to customers who had placed pre-orders, […]

The post Lilbits: Purism’s refund policy (or lack thereof), Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE, and better QR code scanning appeared first on Liliputing.

In win for Google, judge dismisses many claims in DOJ monopoly case

Six claims dismissed ahead of the September trial.

In win for Google, judge dismisses many claims in DOJ monopoly case

Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto / Contributor | NurPhoto)

Over the weekend, a US district court judge decided to narrow the scope of the federal government's massive years-long monopoly case against Google.

In his opinion unsealed Friday, Judge Amit Mehta dismissed one of the more significant claims raised in the case brought by the Justice Department and the attorneys general from 38 states that alleges that Google rigged search results to boost its own products over those of competitors like Amazon, OpenTable, Expedia, or eBay. Mehta said that these claims were "raised only by the Colorado plaintiffs" and failed to show evidence of anticompetitive effects, relying only on the "opinion and speculation" of antitrust legal expert Jonathan Baker, who proposed a theory of anticompetitive harm.

"Simply put, there is no record evidence of anticompetitive harm in the relevant markets" resulting from Google allegedly limiting competitors' visibility in search results, Mehta said.

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Innocent pregnant woman jailed amid faulty facial recognition trend

US police departments continue to use the tech despite low accuracy and obvious mismatches.

Innocent pregnant woman jailed amid faulty facial recognition trend

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Aurich Lawson)

Use of facial recognition software led Detroit police to falsely arrest 32-year-old Porcha Woodruff for robbery and carjacking, reports The New York Times. Eight months pregnant, she was detained for 11 hours, questioned, and had her iPhone seized for evidence before being released. It's the latest in a string of false arrests due to use of facial-recognition technology, which many critics say is not reliable.

The mistake seems particularly notable because the surveillance footage used to falsely identify Woodruff did not show a pregnant woman, and Woodruff was very visibly pregnant at the time of her arrest.

The incident began with an automated facial recognition search by the Detroit Police Department. A man who was robbed reported the crime, and police used DataWorks Plus to run surveillance video footage against a database of criminal mug shots. Woodruff's 2015 mug shot from a previous unrelated arrest was identified as a match. After that, the victim wrongly confirmed her identification from a photo lineup, leading to her arrest.

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AI researchers claim 93% accuracy in detecting keystrokes over Zoom audio

Mitigating factors include typing style, multi-case passwords, uncommon laptops.

Woman setting up a microphone right by her MacBook

Enlarge / Some people hate to hear other people's keyboards on video calls, but AI-backed side channel attackers? They say crank that gain. (credit: Getty Images)

By recording keystrokes and training a deep learning model, three researchers claim to have achieved upwards of 90 percent accuracy in interpreting remote keystrokes, based on the sound profiles of individual keys.

In their paper A Practical Deep Learning-Based Acoustic Side Channel Attack on Keyboards (full PDF), UK researchers Joshua Harrison, Ehsan Toreini, and Marhyam Mehrnezhad claim that the trio of ubiquitous machine learning, microphones, and video calls "present a greater threat to keyboards than ever." Laptops, in particular, are more susceptible to having their keyboard recorded in quieter public areas, like coffee shops, libraries, or offices, the paper notes. And most laptops have uniform, non-modular keyboards, with similar acoustic profiles across models.

Previous attempts at keylogging VoIP calls, without physical access to the subject, achieved 91.7 percent top-5 accuracy over Skype in 2017 and 74.3 percent accuracy in VoIP calls in 2018. Combining the output of the keystroke interpretations with a "hidden Markov model" (HMM), which guesses at more-likely next-letter outcomes and could correct "hrllo" to "hello," saw one prior side channel study's accuracy jump from 72 to 95 percent—though that was an attack on dot-matrix printers. The Cornell researchers believe their paper is the first to make use of the recent sea change in neural network technology, including self-attention layers, to propagate an audio side channel attack.

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Daily Deals (8-07-2023)

Google’s probably going to unveil its Pixel 8 smartphone lineup this fall. But if you’re looking to save some money on a phone that’s probably almost as good, last year’s Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro are on sale for up to $200 off t…

Google’s probably going to unveil its Pixel 8 smartphone lineup this fall. But if you’re looking to save some money on a phone that’s probably almost as good, last year’s Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro are on sale for up to $200 off their list prices at the moment. Meanwhile you can pick up an […]

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