Liveblog: Microsoft takes on Chrome OS with new Windows, new hardware

Join us at 9:30 EDT today to hear how Microsoft plans to take on Google in education.

Microsoft is back in New York City for another hardware and software event, and we'll be live on the scene to tell you everything that's going on. Our liveblog, and the event itself, will kick off at 9:30am EDT (2:30pm UK, or see here for your own timezone).

The event will have an education focus, with Microsoft promoting it with the hashtag "#MicrosoftEDU." Google's Chrome OS, and the Chromebooks it runs on, is making headway in the education space, and we're expecting Microsoft to announce new products to take on this new threat.

On the software side, this should mean that a new version of Windows 10 will make its debut. Leaks and rumors have indicated that a new Windows SKU, variously known as Windows 10 Cloud or Windows 10 S, will be released. This will be a full version of Windows 10, but it will be restricted to running apps acquired from the Windows Store. Removing this restriction will be a paid upgrade of some kind. The Store restriction should mean greater simplicity, security, and reliability. Store apps all offer clean installation and uninstallation, for example, and also provide some ability to roam between machines, bringing all your applications and settings with you.

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Google Assistant SDK offers voice service to 3rd-party hardware

Google Assistant SDK offers voice service to 3rd-party hardware

Google Assistant currently works on a handful of platforms including select Android phones, the Google Home smart speaker, and Google Allo chat app. But soon Google Assistant may be available in third-party devices ranging from smart home gadgets to robots. Google has released a new software development kit that you can use to build-your-own hardware […]

Google Assistant SDK offers voice service to 3rd-party hardware is a post from: Liliputing

Google Assistant SDK offers voice service to 3rd-party hardware

Google Assistant currently works on a handful of platforms including select Android phones, the Google Home smart speaker, and Google Allo chat app. But soon Google Assistant may be available in third-party devices ranging from smart home gadgets to robots. Google has released a new software development kit that you can use to build-your-own hardware […]

Google Assistant SDK offers voice service to 3rd-party hardware is a post from: Liliputing

Ferrari won’t drop the naturally aspirated V12 any time soon

Forget about turbocharging the V12, says CEO Marchionne.

Ferrari

When Ferrari announced the 812 Superfast in February, I wondered if it might be the last ever naturally aspirated Ferrari road car. The auto industry is in the midst of a full-blown turbocharger addiction—even in Maranello, where forced-induction V8s now power the California T, 488, and GTC4 Lusso T. But there will always be a place for a naturally aspirated V12 at Ferrari, according to CEO Sergio Marchionne; it's just that they'll come with some batteries included.

Emissions standards might be getting tougher but Autocar reveals that Ferrari has no plans to ditch the V12, or turbocharge it:

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10 Years in Jail For Internet Pirates Now Reality in the UK

Having received royal assent before the weekend, the UK’s Digital Economy Bill is now law. As a result, Internet file-sharers can be jailed for up to ten years, if they knowingly make infringing content available to the public while exposing a copyright owner to even a risk of loss.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

In 2015, the UK Government announced a controversial plan to increase the maximum prison sentence for online copyright infringement from two to ten years.

The proposal followed a suggestion put forward in a study commissioned by the UK Intellectual Property Office (IPO). The study concluded that criminal sanctions for online copyright infringement available under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (CDPA 1988) should be harmonized with ‘offline’ penalties, such as those available for counterfeiting.

“By toughening penalties for commercial-scale online offending we are offering greater protections to businesses and sending a clear message to deter criminals,” then Intellectual Property Minister Baroness Neville-Rolfe said at the time.

In July 2016, the government published a new draft of its Digital Economy Bill which duly proposed an extension of the current prison term of two years to a maximum of ten.

Throughout the entire process of passing the legislation, the government has insisted that ‘regular’ members of the public would not be subjected to harsh punishments. However, that is not how the legislation reads.

As detailed in our earlier article, anyone who makes infringing content available to the public while merely putting a copyright holder at risk of loss, is now committing a criminal offense.

There are a number of variables, but this is the relevant part distilled down for the average file-sharer who downloads as well as uploads, using BitTorrent, for example.

A person…who infringes copyright in a work by communicating the work to the public commits an offense if [the person] knows or has reason to believe that [they are] infringing copyright in the work, and…knows or has reason to believe that communicating the work to the public will cause loss to the owner of the copyright, or will expose the owner of the copyright to a risk of loss.

Earlier this year, the Open Rights Group launched a campaign to try and make the government see sense. ORG did not dispute that there need to be penalties for online infringement but asked the government make amendments to target large-scale infringers while protecting the public.

“Our proposal is to set a threshold of ‘commercial scale loss’, and revising ‘risk of loss’ to ‘serious risk of commercial scale loss’. These are flexible rather than ‘specific’,” ORG said.

But the group’s appeals fell on deaf ears. No one in the law-making process was prepared to make this minor change to the Digital Economy Bill, even though legislation already exists for punishing even the smallest of copyright infringements through the civil courts.

As a result, the bill received royal assent last week which means that the country’s millions of small-time copyright infringers are now criminals in the eyes of the law.

Worst still, depending on the whims of copyright holders, any one could now be reported to the police for sharing even a single movie, an offense (as painted in our hypothetical piece in March) that could result in years in jail.

The government says that won’t be allowed. We’ll see.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

SpaceX just provided views of a rocket landing all the way from 150km down

Because SpaceX couldn’t show the whole launch, we got amazing views of the landing.

SpaceX webcast

On Monday morning SpaceX made its fifth launch of 2017, flying its first major national security payload into low-Earth orbit since becoming certified as a US military launch provider in 2015. Because of the classified nature of the spy satellite, the rocket company was only able to show footage of the launch until the second stage separated from the first.

However, this proved to be a real boon, as SpaceX was able to focus on the return of its Falcon 9 first stage to Earth. New footage showed the first stage all the way from when the second stage lifted away, during a period when it coasted up to 150km, and then finally the various burns as it flew back down to the ground. Along the way we got to see incredible views of the landing from on-board cameras, and also from ground-tracking cameras on a mostly clear Florida morning.

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Apple has a record $250 billion in the bank

Pressure for a huge acquisition—think Netflix or Tesla—may grow.

Enlarge / A customer buying a new iPhone in Russia. (credit: Sergei FadeichevTASS via Getty Images)

When it reports its quarterly financial results on Tuesday, Apple will likely have a quarter-trillion dollars in cash in the bank.

That's a greater hoard than any other company in recent US history, according to the Wall Street Journal, which reported the numbers on Sunday. For comparison, Apple's cash pile exceeds the market value of Walmart and Procter & Gamble. The sum is more than the foreign cash reserves of the UK and Canada combined.

Some 93 percent of the company's cash and other liquid assets are kept overseas. The Trump administration has proposed a tax holiday to encourage companies to bring money back to the US, as well as a lower corporate tax rate, fueling more speculation about how Apple will use its money. Apple CEO Tim Cook has said he's interested in moving some of the company's cash stateside, if tax conditions are right.

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Spionage: SpaceX startet geheimen Militärsatelliten

Zum ersten Mal hat eine Falcon-9-Rakete von SpaceX einen geheimen Satelliten für das US-Militär gestartet. SpaceX zeigte Bilder des Landemanövers, der Rest des Fluges unterlag der Geheimhaltung. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (SpaceX, Raumfahrt)

Zum ersten Mal hat eine Falcon-9-Rakete von SpaceX einen geheimen Satelliten für das US-Militär gestartet. SpaceX zeigte Bilder des Landemanövers, der Rest des Fluges unterlag der Geheimhaltung. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (SpaceX, Raumfahrt)

Modern “Hackintoshes” show that Apple should probably just build a Mac tower

Today, running macOS on PCs isn’t just a way to avoid paying Apple’s prices.

Dan Counsell

Apple is working on new desktop Macs, including a ground-up redesign of the tiny-but-controversial 2013 Mac Pro. We’re also due for some new iMacs, which Apple says will include some features that will make less-demanding pro users happy.

But we don’t know when they’re coming, and the Mac Pro in particular is going to take at least a year to get here. Apple’s reassurances are nice, but it’s a small comfort to anyone who wants high-end processing power in a Mac right now. Apple hasn’t put out a new desktop since it refreshed the iMacs in October of 2015, and the older, slower components in these computers keeps Apple out of new high-end fields like VR.

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Hilfsmittel-Paradoxon: Smarter Rollator soll Sturzrisiko verringern

Bis Ende 2019 soll ein Rollator entwickelt werden, der eine falsche Handhabung oder Haltung verhindert. Distanzsensoren sollen Korrektur-Feedback geben. Das vom Bundesforschungsministerium mit knapp einer Million Euro geförderte Projekt richtet sich vor allem an Senioren. (DFKI)

Bis Ende 2019 soll ein Rollator entwickelt werden, der eine falsche Handhabung oder Haltung verhindert. Distanzsensoren sollen Korrektur-Feedback geben. Das vom Bundesforschungsministerium mit knapp einer Million Euro geförderte Projekt richtet sich vor allem an Senioren. (DFKI)

Watch live: SpaceX’s second attempt to launch its first spy satellite

Not much is known about the National Reconnaissance Office’s NROL-76 satellite.

SpaceX

SpaceX got to within 52 seconds of launching its Falcon 9 rocket Sunday morning before a problem with a sensor on its first stage forced a 24-hour scrub. Now, the rocket company is ready to try a second time on Monday morning to launch its first major national security payload.

Not much is known about the National Reconnaissance Office's NROL-76 satellite, a classified payload, which will liftoff into low Earth orbit from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The launch window on Monday opens at 7am ET (12pm UK) and lasts two hours. SpaceX is targeting 7:15am ET for launch, and the webcast should begin about 20 minutes prior to this time.

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