Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending December 17th 2016

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending December 17th 2016 are in. The big release for the week was Suicide Squad.
Read the rest of the stats and analysis to find out how DVD, Blu-ray, Ultra HD…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending December 17th 2016 are in. The big release for the week was Suicide Squad.

Read the rest of the stats and analysis to find out how DVD, Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray did.

Fernsehstreaming: Fire-TV-App von Waipu TV bietet alle Kanäle kostenlos

Für die Fire-TV-Geräte gibt es eine erste Vorabversion der Waipu-TV-App. Damit steht der Fernsehstreaming-Dienst auch auf den Amazon-Geräten bereit und bietet kostenlos alle Fernsehkanäle. Einige Funktionen des Dienstes fehlen dafür noch. (WaipuTV, Apple TV)

Für die Fire-TV-Geräte gibt es eine erste Vorabversion der Waipu-TV-App. Damit steht der Fernsehstreaming-Dienst auch auf den Amazon-Geräten bereit und bietet kostenlos alle Fernsehkanäle. Einige Funktionen des Dienstes fehlen dafür noch. (WaipuTV, Apple TV)

US-Wahlen: Papier-Backup soll Wahlcomputer sicherer machen

Nach Ansicht von Sicherheitsforschern sind die US-Wahlen einfacher zu hacken als gedacht. Um das Wahlverfahren dennoch sicherer zu machen, empfehlen sie eine sehr traditionelle Methode. (Wahlcomputer, Sicherheitslücke)

Nach Ansicht von Sicherheitsforschern sind die US-Wahlen einfacher zu hacken als gedacht. Um das Wahlverfahren dennoch sicherer zu machen, empfehlen sie eine sehr traditionelle Methode. (Wahlcomputer, Sicherheitslücke)

Kodak Ektra im Test: Das Smartphone, das eine Kamera sein soll

Bullitt bringt unter der Marke Kodak ein Android-Smartphone namens Ektra, eine in der Geschichte des ehemaligen Kameraherstellers wegweisende Messsucherkamera der 1940er Jahre. Entsprechend sollen Hobbyfotografen angesprochen werden – leider kann das Gerät die Ansprüche nicht erfüllen. (Kodak, Smartphone)

Bullitt bringt unter der Marke Kodak ein Android-Smartphone namens Ektra, eine in der Geschichte des ehemaligen Kameraherstellers wegweisende Messsucherkamera der 1940er Jahre. Entsprechend sollen Hobbyfotografen angesprochen werden - leider kann das Gerät die Ansprüche nicht erfüllen. (Kodak, Smartphone)

Airpods: Käufer klagen über Akkuprobleme der Ladeschale

Nach der verzögerten Markteinführung der Airpods berichten einige Käufer über Akkuprobleme der Ladeschale. Über Nacht verliere diese ungewöhnlich viel Akkukapazität. Apple reagiert bei betroffenen Kunden mit einem Austausch der Ohrstöpsel. (Apple, Sound-Hardware)

Nach der verzögerten Markteinführung der Airpods berichten einige Käufer über Akkuprobleme der Ladeschale. Über Nacht verliere diese ungewöhnlich viel Akkukapazität. Apple reagiert bei betroffenen Kunden mit einem Austausch der Ohrstöpsel. (Apple, Sound-Hardware)

SpaceX just teased a photo of its highly anticipated Falcon Heavy rocket

Rocket could fly in time for Trump consideration for lunar return mission.

Enlarge / SpaceX has released the first image of its Falcon Heavy rocket. (credit: SpaceX)

On Wednesday afternoon SpaceX released the first photo of actual hardware for the Falcon Heavy rocket—the interstage, which connects the first and second stages of booster—and the photo included the massive launch vehicle's official logo. Published on Instagram, the photo included this caption: "Falcon Heavy interstage being prepped at the rocket factory. When FH flies next year, it will be the most powerful operational rocket in the world by a factor of two."

Ars understands that the new photo does not augur any kind of major announcement regarding a Falcon Heavy launch—at least not yet. A company official told Ars last week that SpaceX is now targeting "early-to-mid" 2017 for the launch of the massive rocket, which would indeed immediately become the most powerful operational booster on the planet, doubling the capacity of the Delta IV Heavy.

But could the long-delayed rocket actually be close to flying? A photo of real hardware offers a positive sign that the rocket may indeed be getting closer to the launch pad. And the fact that the Falcon Heavy's pad at Launch Complex 39A in Florida is now almost ready for use also lends credence to the fact that the long-promised booster may soon fly.

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How humans survived in the barren Atacama Desert 13,000 years ago

Geologists solve the mystery of early settlers in Chile by finding lost wetlands.

Enlarge / The Atacama Desert today is barren, its sands encrusted with salt. And yet there were thriving human settlements there 12,000 years ago. (credit: Vallerio Pilar)

When humans first arrived in the Americas, roughly 18,000 to 20,000 years ago, they traveled by boat along the continents' shorelines. Many settled in coastal regions or along rivers that took them inland from the sea. Some made it all the way down to Chile quite quickly; there's evidence for a human settlement there from more than 14,000 years ago at a site called Monte Verde. Another settlement called Quebrada Maní, dating back almost 13,000 years, was recently discovered north of Monte Verde in one of the most arid deserts in the world: the Atacama, whose salt-encrusted sands repel even the hardiest of plants. It seemed an impossible place for early humans to settle, but now we understand how they did it.

At a presentation during the American Geophysical Union meeting this month, UC Berkeley environmental science researcher Marco Pfeiffer explained how he and his team investigated the Atacama desert's deep environmental history. Beneath the desert's salt crust, they found a buried layer of plant and animal remains between 9,000 and 17,000 years old. There were freshwater plants and mosses, as well as snails and plants that prefer brackish water. Quickly it became obvious this land had not always been desert—what Pfeiffer and his colleagues saw suggested wetlands fed by fresh water.

Quaternary Science Reviews

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Police ask: “Alexa, did you witness a murder?”

Drowning in hot tub was followed by 140-gallon hose-down recorded by utility.

Enlarge / Always listening—but can it solve a murder? (credit: Valentina Paladino)

In November of 2015, former Georgia police officer Victor Collins was found dead in a backyard hot tub at the Bentonville, Arkansas, home of acquaintance James Andrew Bates. Bates claimed it was an accidental drowning when he contacted police at 9:30am, claiming he had gone to bed and left Collins and another man behind in the tub. But Bentonville Police investigators determined that Collins had died after a fight, while being strangled and held underwater—and that Bates was the only person at the scene at the time. Now investigators have reportedly served a search warrant to Amazon in hopes of getting testimony from a possible witness: the Amazon Echo that was streaming music near the hot tub when they arrived at the scene.

The police were immediately suspicious when they found that the water of the hot tub was tinted red and that Collins had injuries suggesting a struggle—including cuts on an eyelid, a bloodied nose, and swollen lips. There were signs of blood on the sides of the hot tub and on the patio around it and evidence that the tub and the patio had been hosed down to remove the blood. A water meter record from the city’s utility department showed that 140 gallons of water had been used between 1:00am and 3:00am on the night of the incident.

As investigators continued to gather evidence, as first reported by The Information, the Bentonville Police Department requested a search warrant to obtain records from Amazon for anything the Echo might have recorded that night. Police obtained a search warrant for Bates’ Amazon account information on December 4, 2015 and went back to Amazon again in January of 2016 with an extension of the warrant; according to a warrant return affidavit filed by police, Amazon "eventually complied with the warrants on February 8, 2016, but only supplied a portion of what was requested in both search warrants."

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South Korea slaps Qualcomm with record-setting $850M fine

Largest-ever penalty said to be warranted by Qualcomm’s unfair patent licensing.

Qualcomm displays some of its patents on a wall in its headquarters in San Diego, California. (credit: Nathan Rupert / flickr)

South Korean regulators say that Qualcomm's patent-licensing methods violate Korean unfair competition laws, and the company must pay a fine of 1.03 trillion won, or about $850 million. Qualcomm has said it will fight the massive fine in court.

The Korea Fair Trade Commission, or KFTC, held that Qualcomm refused to license certain standard-essential patents on its chips to rival chipmakers including Intel, Samsung, and MediaTek. The commission ordered Qualcomm to renegotiate those licenses in good faith, according to a Reuters report on the matter. The fine is the largest ever issued in Korea.

In its report on the Korean fineBloomberg notes that Qualcomm makes most of its profits, about $6.5 billion in its most recent year, from selling the rights to its chip technology.

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