Playdate Stereo Dock is postponed indefinitely

The Playdate is an unusual handheld game console with a 1-bit black and white display, a hand-crank on the side, and a catalog of unique indie games. The Playdate began shipping in 2022, but a long-awaited accessory that was first unveiled in mid-2021 …

The Playdate is an unusual handheld game console with a 1-bit black and white display, a hand-crank on the side, and a catalog of unique indie games. The Playdate began shipping in 2022, but a long-awaited accessory that was first unveiled in mid-2021 has yet to hit the streets… and now it’s unclear if it […]

The post Playdate Stereo Dock is postponed indefinitely appeared first on Liliputing.

PineNote Community Edition is a $399 E Ink tablet that ships with Debian Linux

As promised, Pine64 is now taking pre-orders for the PineNote Community Edition and it’s expected to begin shipping in mid-November. It’s a $399 tablet with a 10.3 inch E Ink display, a Rockchip RK3566 processor, 4GB of RAM, 128GB of storag…

As promised, Pine64 is now taking pre-orders for the PineNote Community Edition and it’s expected to begin shipping in mid-November. It’s a $399 tablet with a 10.3 inch E Ink display, a Rockchip RK3566 processor, 4GB of RAM, 128GB of storage and a Wacom EMR pressure-sensitive pen for writing and drawing on the screen. While […]

The post PineNote Community Edition is a $399 E Ink tablet that ships with Debian Linux appeared first on Liliputing.

These hornets break down alcohol so fast that they can’t get drunk

“No signs of intoxication or illness, even after chronically consuming huge amounts of alcohol.”

Many animals, including humans, have developed a taste for alcohol in some form, but excessive consumption often leads to adverse health effects. One exception is the Oriental wasp. According to a new paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, these wasps can guzzle seemingly unlimited amounts of ethanol regularly and at very high concentrations with no ill effects—not even intoxication. They pretty much drank honeybees used in the same experiments under the table.

“To the best of our knowledge, Oriental hornets are the only animal in nature adapted to consuming alcohol as a metabolic fuel," said co-author Eran Levin of Tel Aviv University. "They show no signs of intoxication or illness, even after chronically consuming huge amounts of alcohol, and they eliminate it from their bodies very quickly."

Per Levin et al., there's a "drunken monkey" theory that predicts that certain animals well-adapted to low concentrations of ethanol in their diets nonetheless have adverse reactions at higher concentrations. Studies have shown that tree shrews, for example, can handle concentrations of up to 3.8 percent, but in laboratory conditions, when they consumed ethanol in concentrations of 10 percent or higher, they were prone to liver damage.

Read full article

Comments

GitHub Copilot moves beyond OpenAI models to support Claude 3.5, Gemini

News sparks speculation Microsoft will go multi-model with other AI products.

The large language model-based coding assistant GitHub Copilot will switch from using exclusively OpenAI's GPT models to a multi-model approach over the coming weeks, GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke announced in a post on GitHub's blog.

First, Anthropic's Claude 3.5 Sonnet will roll out to Copilot Chat's web and VS Code interfaces over the next few weeks. Google's Gemini 1.5 Pro will come a bit later.

Additionally, GitHub will soon add support for a wider range of OpenAI models, including GPT o1-preview and o1-mini, which are intended to be stronger at advanced reasoning than GPT-4, which Copilot has used until now. Developers will be able to switch between the models (even mid-conversation) to tailor the model to fit their needs—and organizations will be able to choose which models will be usable by team members.

Read full article

Comments

The Ars redesign 9.0.2 brings the text options you’ve requested

Wide mode, font size controls, hyperlink colors, and more!

Readers of those other sites may not care much about font size and column widths. "40-character line lengths? In 18-point Comic Sans? I love it!" they say. But not you, because you are an Ars reader. And Ars readers are discerning. They have feelings about concepts like "information density." And we want those feelings to be soft and cuddly ones.

That's why we're today rolling out version 9.0.2 of the Ars Technica site redesign, based on your continued feedback, with a special emphasis on text control. (You can read about the changes in 9.0.1 here.) That's right—we're talking about options! Font size selection, colored hyperlink text, even a wide column layout for subscribers who plonk down a mere $25/year (possible because we don't need to accommodate ads for subs).

Here's a quick visual look at some of the main changes:

Read full article

Comments

“Impact printing” is a cement-free alternative to 3D-printed structures

Impact printing uses a high-velocity jet of material, fusing it into a structure.

Recently, construction company ICON announced that it is close to completing the world’s largest 3D-printed neighborhood in Georgetown, Texas. This isn’t the only 3D-printed housing project. Hundreds of 3D-printed homes are under construction in the US and Europe, and more such housing projects are in the pipeline.

There are many factors fueling the growth of 3D printing in the construction industry. It reduces the construction time; a home that could take months to build can be constructed within days or weeks with a 3D printer. Compared to traditional methods, 3D printing also reduces the amount of material that ends up as waste during construction. These advantages lead to reduced labor and material costs, making 3D printing an attractive choice for construction companies.

A team of researchers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, however, claims to have developed a robotic construction method that is even better than 3D printing. They call it impact printing, and instead of typical construction materials, it uses Earth-based materials such as sand, silt, clay, and gravel to make homes. According to the researchers, impact printing is less carbon-intensive and much more sustainable and affordable than 3D printing.

Read full article

Comments

TSA silent on CrowdStrike’s claim Delta skipped required security update

CrowdStrike and Delta’s legal battle has begun. Will Microsoft be sued next?

Delta and CrowdStrike have locked legal horns, threatening to drag out the aftermath of the worst IT outage in history for months or possibly years.

Each refuses to be blamed for Delta's substantial losses following a global IT outage caused by CrowdStrike suddenly pushing a flawed security update despite Delta and many other customers turning off auto-updates.

CrowdStrike has since given customers more control over updates and made other commitments to ensure an outage of that scale will never happen again, but Delta isn't satisfied. The airline has accused CrowdStrike of willfully causing losses by knowingly deceiving customers by failing to disclose an unauthorized door into their operating systems that enabled the outage.

Read full article

Comments

How The New York Times is using generative AI as a reporting tool

LLMs help reporters transcribe and sort through hundreds of hours of leaked audio.

The rise of powerful generative AI models in the last few years has led to plenty of stories of corporations trying to use AI to replace human jobs. But a recent New York Times story highlights the other side of that coin, where AI models simply become a powerful tool aiding in work that still requires humanity's unique skillset.

The NYT piece in question isn't directly about AI at all. As the headline "Inside the Movement Behind Trump’s Election Lies" suggests, the article actually reports in detail on how the ostensibly non-partisan Election Integrity Network "has closely coordinated with the Trump-controlled Republican National Committee." The piece cites and shares recordings of group members complaining of "the left" rigging elections, talking of efforts to "put Democrats on the defensive," and urging listeners to help with Republican turnout operations.

To report the piece, the Times says it sifted through "over 400 hours of conversations" from weekly meetings by the Election Integrity Network over the last three years, as well as "additional documents and training materials." Going through a trove of information that large is a daunting prospect, even for the team of four bylined reporters credited on the piece. That's why the Times says in a note accompanying the piece that it "used artificial intelligence to help identify particularly salient moments" from the videos to report on.

Read full article

Comments

Asteroidengürtel: Herkunft von 90 Prozent aller Meteoriten geklärt

Vor 5,8 sowie 7,5 und 40 Millionen Jahren ereigneten sich Kollisionen, die Zweidrittel aller Meteoriten ausmachen. Auch Mond, Mars und Vesta dienen als Quelle. (Asteroid, Wissenschaft)

Vor 5,8 sowie 7,5 und 40 Millionen Jahren ereigneten sich Kollisionen, die Zweidrittel aller Meteoriten ausmachen. Auch Mond, Mars und Vesta dienen als Quelle. (Asteroid, Wissenschaft)