
Max Payne: RTX-Remix reduziert Bildrate um 94 Prozent
Dennoch haben Fans des Klassikers Grund zur Freude. Denn über 1.000 fps braucht kaum jemand, stattdessen gibt es nun viel höhere Grafikqualität. (Raytracing, Grafikkarten)

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Dennoch haben Fans des Klassikers Grund zur Freude. Denn über 1.000 fps braucht kaum jemand, stattdessen gibt es nun viel höhere Grafikqualität. (Raytracing, Grafikkarten)
Etwas über 50 Jahre nach ihrer Einführung verzichten nun auch Behörden in Japan auf die vorgeschriebene Nutzung von Disketten. (PC-Komponenten, RAM)
Die Bose Solo Soundbar Series II ist Topseller bei Amazon. Im Angebot kann man jetzt 80 Euro sparen. (Amazon, Heimkino)
Um als alternativer App-Marktplatz unter iOS antreten zu dürfen, verlangt Apple eine Bürgschaft. Das Unternehmen will so die notwendige Unterstützung für Nutzer und Entwickler sicherstellen. (Apple, Betriebssysteme)
After two UK regional police forces refused to supply information on the number of people cautioned, fined or arrested for simply watching illegal streams, this weekend it emerged that Greater Manchester Police received the same request and actually responded. For the years 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023, the number of people cautioned, fined and/or arrested for simply watching illegal streams was…..zero.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Last Friday, we reported on two Freedom of Information Act requests directed at two regional police forces in the UK.
In almost identical requests, which appear to have been filed by the same person, Wiltshire Police and West Yorkshire Police were asked eight questions relating to enforcement measures taken against suppliers, distributors, and consumers of illegal streaming services.
Both police forces said that no information was readily accessible, adding that it would take so long to retrieve information manually that the estimated costs rendered both requests ineligible for disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. That was disappointing.
A key component of an ongoing anti-piracy campaign in the UK includes sensitizing the public to the risk of being convicted for fraud offenses carrying prison sentences of up to 10 years. Not for getting involved in the supply or sale of pirate streams, but for simply watching them.
Certainly, legal theory doesn’t rule out the possibility, but in a campaign that relies almost entirely on fear, hard independent facts would’ve been a welcome addition.
During the weekend, we learned that the eight questions covering the five-year period 2019-2023, rejected by Wiltshire Police and West Yorkshire Police for being too costly to answer, were also sent to Greater Manchester Police (GMP). With just one exception (question 7 relating to the supply of illegal streams, see earlier article) GMP answered every question.
GMP reports that two people received a police caution for distributing or supplying illegal streaming services in 2021. During the same year, a total of two people were arrested for distributing or supplying illegal streaming services.
There’s insufficient information in the response to determine whether the two people arrested in 2021 were the same people who received cautions in 2021. In 2022, one person was arrested for distributing or supplying illegal streaming services.
Since GMP declined to answer question seven (which relates exclusively to the supply of illegal streams) but were happy respond to question six (which mentions both distribution and supply) it seems likely that all figures released here relate to distribution.
Overall then, a maximum of three arrests and two cautions in a five-year period doesn’t sound like a lot, even accounting for the possibility of additional arrests/cautions/fines relating to action under question 7.
Based on how many members of the public could be affected by the purported fraud prosecutions publicized in the media, we now turn to the most important disclosures by GMP with government figures for context.
The most recent data published by the Intellectual Property Office estimates that in 2022 alone, 3.9 million people in the UK watched live sports via illegal streams.
How many of the 3.9 million live in GMP’s area is unknown but, with almost 500 square miles of mostly urban conurbation and a population of 2.8 million, it accounts for 5% of the overall UK population.
In its response to the FOIA request, Greater Manchester Police reveal that the number of people cautioned, fined and/or arrested for simply watching illegal streams in 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023 combined, was…..zero.
GMP’s disclosure doesn’t come as a surprise but seeing the zero figure in black and white confirms our suspicions. Had there been a single arrest anywhere in the UK, purely for watching illegal streams, no effort would’ve been spared to ensure everyone heard about it.
Whether similar disclosures will appear in the days and weeks ahead is unknown but thanks to GMP’s ability to accurately retrieve information, at least some facts have entered the public domain. If West Midlands Police or Leicestershire Police receive similar requests, their record retrieval skills shouldn’t disappoint.
For a six-week period early 2023, West Midlands Police were able to report that four crimes were linked to Prime Energy drink, (pdf) including assault, harassment, criminal damage, and theft from a machine. None of the offenses related to the extortionate price of the drink, however.
In response to a FOIA request to disclose caller logs that featured terms including ‘UFO’, ‘Alien’, ‘UAP’ and ‘spaceship’, Leicestershire Police went to considerable lengths to protect caller privacy (pdf).
After being provided with an example of appropriate redaction (“Male caller named (REDACTED) reports seeing four flashing lights hovering above his property in (REDACTED) street before a female was beamed into the sky”) the force published a spreadsheet. It lists 65 calls but no information that could identify any particular caller.
West Yorkshire Police received the same request (pdf) and was able to confirm that the words ‘UFO’, ‘UAP’, ‘ALIEN’ or ‘SPACESHIP’ appeared in log text 1805 times.
GMP’s response to the FOIA request related to streaming is available here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Ingenuity packed more computing power than all other NASA deep space missions combined.
Enlarge / An image from Ingenuity, looking down at the surface of Mars. That's its shadow. (credit: NASA/JPL)
Much has been written about the plucky exploits of NASA's small Ingenuity helicopter on Mars. And all of the accolades are deserved. "The little mission that could" did, flying 72 sorties across the red planet and pushing out the frontier of exploration into the unknown.
Yet as impressive as Ingenuity's exploits were over the last three years, and though its carbon fiber blades will spin no more, its work has only just begun.
Ingenuity was groundbreaking in two significant ways that will ripple through the culture of NASA and its exploration efforts for decades to come. Although it is impossible to know the future, both of these impacts seem overwhelmingly positive for our efforts to divine the secrets of our Solar System.
Wie angekündigt stoppt Tesla die Produktion in Grünheide. Laut IG Metall hat das Folgen für die Belegschaft. (Gigafactory Berlin, Elektroauto)
Beeilung! Amazon reduziert seit heute haufenweise Artikel von Apple wie iPad und iPad Air, Apple Watch 9, Airpods Pro und vieles mehr. (Apple, Amazon)
Great ideas go up against awkward limitations in Framework’s 16-inch sequel.
Enlarge / The Framework Laptop 16. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)
Specs at a glance: Framework Laptop 16 | |
---|---|
OS | Windows 11 23H2 |
CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 7940HS (8-cores) |
RAM | 32GB DDR5-5600 (upgradeable) |
GPU | AMD Radeon 780M (integrated)/AMD Radeon RX 7700S (dedicated) |
SSD | 1TB Western Digital Black SN770 |
Battery | 85 WHr |
Display | 16-inch 2560x1600 165 Hz matte non-touchscreen |
Connectivity | 6x recessed USB-C ports (2x USB 4, 4x USB 3.2) with customizable "Expansion Card" dongles |
Weight | 4.63 pounds (2.1 kg) without GPU, 5.29 pounds (2.4 kg) with GPU |
Price as tested | $2,499 pre-built, $2,421 DIY edition with no OS |
Now that the Framework Laptop 13 has been through three refresh cycles—including one that swapped from Intel's CPUs to AMD's within the exact same body—the company is setting its sights on something bigger.
Today, we're taking an extended look at the first Framework Laptop 16, which wants to do for a workstation/gaming laptop what the Framework Laptop 13 did for thin-and-light ultraportables. In some ways, the people who use these kinds of systems need a Framework Laptop most of all; they're an even bigger investment than a thin-and-light laptop, and a single CPU, GPU, memory, or storage upgrade can extend the useful life of the system for years, just like upgrading a desktop.
The Laptop 16 melds ideas from the original Framework Laptop with some all-new mechanisms for customizing the device's keyboard, adding and upgrading a dedicated GPU, and installing other modules. The result is a relatively bulky and heavy laptop compared to many of its non-upgradeable alternatives. And you'll need to trust that Framework delivers on its upgradeability promises somewhere down the line since the current options for upgrading and expanding the laptop are fairly limited.
Ein Konzern sucht nach einer Person, die sich mit Legacy-Software und obsoleten Windows auskennt. Es gibt Hinweise auf den Auftraggeber. (Windows, Siemens)
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