Schenker put Intel’s 125W Core i9-10900K chip in a laptop

Schenker has made a habit of releasing laptops that use desktop-class PC components. A month ago the company introduced a 15 inch notebook with a 16-core AMD Ryzen 9 3950X processor. And now the company is launching the XMG Ultra 17 laptop that support…

Schenker has made a habit of releasing laptops that use desktop-class PC components. A month ago the company introduced a 15 inch notebook with a 16-core AMD Ryzen 9 3950X processor. And now the company is launching the XMG Ultra 17 laptop that supports up to an Intel Core i9-10900K processor. Announced just this week, that […]

New earnings report shows Microsoft’s shift to cloud and subscriptions is working

Azure’s still going strong, and even Xbox avoided major losses.

Promotional image of desktop computer.

Enlarge / Xbox Series X, due in late 2020. It's tall. And it has a modified controller compared to the Xbox One pad. (credit: Xbox)

The gauntlet of tech earnings reports has mostly come to a close, and there's a wide range of performance. Almost every part of the tech industry has been rattled by COVID-19, but Microsoft managed to report accelerated growth and strong performance for all of its businesses. It's a sign that the software company's efforts to reinvent itself may be working—and that cloud and subscription services will define the company (and with it, customers' experiences with its products) for years to come.

Microsoft's Q3 2020 earnings report showed significant growth for all three of the company's business segments, which hasn't even always happened in a "normal" quarter. Productivity, which includes services like Office and LinkedIn, grew 16 percent year over year to $11.7 billion in revenue—that's a small step down compared to $11.8 in the immediate preceding quarter. Cloud, which includes Azure and GitHub, grew 27 percent year over year to $12.3 billion. And personal computing—an umbrella that covers Windows, Xbox, and Surface—grew a more modest 3 percent year over year to $11 billion.

All told, Microsoft's revenue for the quarter was $35 billion, down $2 billion from the previous quarter but up 15 percent from last year's Q3. Even Xbox, which saw an 11 percent drop last quarter, grew by three points. Microsoft this week announced that Xbox Game Pass, a Netflix-like subscription for accessing about 100 games on the Xbox One and Windows 10 platforms, reached 10 million subscribers—more evidence that subscription services and the like are now integral to the company's strategy across all its businesses.

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Daily Deals (5-01-2020)

Star Wars Day is just around the corner and a bunch of Star Wars games are on sale to celebrate the holiday that’s only a holiday because of a pun. And internet music store Bandcamp is waiving its revenue share fees today, which means any money y…

Star Wars Day is just around the corner and a bunch of Star Wars games are on sale to celebrate the holiday that’s only a holiday because of a pun. And internet music store Bandcamp is waiving its revenue share fees today, which means any money you spend on music at the site today will […]

Frontier, amid bankruptcy, is suspected of lying about broadband expansion

Small ISPs want investigation as Frontier tries to block FCC funding for rivals.

A Frontier Communications service van parked in a snowy area.

Enlarge / A Frontier Communications service van. (credit: Mike Mozart / Flickr)

Small Internet providers have asked for a government investigation into Frontier Communications' claim that it recently deployed broadband to nearly 17,000 census blocks, saying the expansion seems unlikely given Frontier's bankruptcy and its historical failure to upgrade networks in rural areas.

The accuracy of Frontier's claimed expansion matters to other telcos because the Federal Communications Commission is planning to distribute up to $16 billion to ISPs that commit to deploying broadband in census blocks where there isn't already home Internet service with speeds of at least 25Mbps downstream and 3Mbps upstream. An entire census block can be ruled ineligible for the $16 billion distribution under the FCC's Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) even if only one or a few homes in the block have access to 25/3Mbps broadband.

Frontier's recent FCC filing lists about 17,000 census blocks in which it has deployed 25/3Mbps broadband since June 2019 and tells the FCC that these census blocks should thus be "removed" from the list of blocks where ISPs can get funding. Frontier reported more new broadband deployments than any other provider that submitted filings in the FCC proceeding. The 17,000 blocks are home to an estimated 400,000 Americans.

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This $190 stick is a Windows 10 PC with Intel Gemini Lake

PC-on-a-stick computers had a bit of a moment a few years back, but we haven’t seen many new models since Intel phased out its Intel Compute Stick product family. But the new MINISFORUM S40 keeps the PC Stick dream alive. It’s a bit on the …

PC-on-a-stick computers had a bit of a moment a few years back, but we haven’t seen many new models since Intel phased out its Intel Compute Stick product family. But the new MINISFORUM S40 keeps the PC Stick dream alive. It’s a bit on the chunky side, but the S40 is a full-fledged computer that […]

Congress calls on Bezos to come explain Amazon’s possible lies

And if he doesn’t come voluntarily, he’ll be voluntold with a subpoena.

Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos and his surprised face speaking in 2019.

Enlarge / Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos and his surprised face speaking in 2019. (credit: Eric Baradat | AFP | Getty Images)

A bipartisan group of House representatives wants Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to show up and explain to their socially distanced faces why media reports say his company is doing something Amazon previously promised Congress it would never do.

The House Antitrust subcommittee opened its investigation into "abusive conduct" in the tech sector—focusing on Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, and Facebook—last June, almost a year ago. So far the committee has held several public hearings and has gone through untold reams of documentation it requested from all four firms about several of their business practices.

Among the practices under examination is Amazon's treatment of third-party vendors on its massive marketplace platform and its use of data generated by those merchants to compete against them directly with first-party private label sales. Company representatives explicitly told Congress several times in the past year that Amazon does not access vendors' data in that way or for those purposes.

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Watch Tower Sues Journalists For Millions in Copyright Infringement Damages

The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, the supervising body and publisher for the Jehovah’s Witness religious group, has filed a major copyright infringement lawsuit against two journalists. The men, who allegedly posted 74 leaked convention videos to their site, face a claim for statutory damages that could run to millions of dollars.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, torrent sites and more. We also have an annual VPN review.

The Jehovah’s Witness religious group is perhaps best known for knocking on doors to recruit new followers to the faith. When it comes to their promotional videos and documents, however, the organization takes a very different approach.

As reported recently, people who post their videos to YouTube, for example, can find themselves on the wrong end of a copyright lawsuit. On Thursday, that’s what happened to journalists Ryan McKnight and Ethan Gregory Dodge, who together founded Truth & Transparency (TTF), a site with a mission to provide “religious accountability through impact journalism”.

According to a lawsuit filed in a New York district court by the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, the supervising body and publisher for the Jehovah’s Witness religious group, the pair committed massive copyright infringement for illegally distributing Watch Tower’s “motion picture” works.

The complaint alleges that in mid-2018, Watch Tower discovered that 487 of its “copyrighted literary works” had been posted by the defendants on FaithLeaks.org, a site presented in a Wikileaks-style format. Late December 2018, Watch Tower demanded that the works be taken down, alleging breaches of copyright. The defendants reportedly refused to remove the content, claiming fair use under the Copyright Act.

Then, in May 2019, Watch Tower learned that “74 motion pictures” to which it holds the copyrights had been uploaded to RuTube.ru, a Russia-based YouTube-like platform. Watch Tower sent takedown notices to RuTube which resulted in the videos being removed. Shortly after, however, it’s alleged that McKnight and Dodge re-uploaded the videos to FaithLeaks where they remain available today.

Watch Tower points to a May 2019 article published on TruthandTransparency.org in which the defendants “boasted not only about their past infringements and refusals to comply with Watch Tower’s efforts to enforce its copyrights, but also about these new infringements, leaving no doubt as to Defendants’ willfulness.”

The article in question suggests that the videos, apparently recordings of conventions to which the public was invited, were indeed uploaded by the defendants, to elicit commentary and critique from observers. The article further notes that Watch Tower was approached for comment on the event but failed to respond. Albeit several months later, it has now.

In a complaint that details every video and alleged infringements one by one, there are repeated allegations that the defendants “unlawfully copied, reproduced, publicly displayed, publicly performed and distributed” Watch Tower’s videos, in their entirety and without alteration. Dozens of pages of evidence later, the religious group reaches its conclusion.

“Defendants McKnight and Dodge personally participated in, and supervised and directed, the infringing acts described above. Indeed, they personally conceived of, and directed and approved all key aspects of, TTF’s infringing activities. They were the moving force behind those infringing acts,” it reads.

“The acts of Defendants described above were committed without the permission, license or consent of Watch Tower. Upon information and belief, the acts of Defendants described above were committed with knowledge or in reckless disregard of Watch Tower’s exclusive rights in the Watch Tower videos.

“Plaintiff, accordingly, seeks injunctive relief and statutory damages for willful copyright infringement.”

Given that damages for willful copyright infringement can reach $150,000 per infringed work, McKnight and Dodge are facing a potentially massive damages claim running to millions of dollars. Additionally, Watch Tower is demanding the removal of the videos and an injunction which prevents infringement of its copyrights moving forward.

TorrentFreak approached both McKnight and Dodge for comment on but at this time, the journalists declined.

The complaint, filed in a New York district court, can be found here (pdf)

Image credit: Pixabay

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, torrent sites and more. We also have an annual VPN review.

Sündenbock China

Konservative uind Liberale möchten lieber über chinesische Labore als über die Arbeitsbedingungen deutscher Pflegekräfte reden

Konservative uind Liberale möchten lieber über chinesische Labore als über die Arbeitsbedingungen deutscher Pflegekräfte reden

Smartphone shipments tank in response to the global pandemic

Demand for personal computers may be up due to all the people working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. But it looks like demand for smartphones is down… way down. Research from IDC and Canalys shows that smartphone shipments during the fir…

Demand for personal computers may be up due to all the people working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. But it looks like demand for smartphones is down… way down. Research from IDC and Canalys shows that smartphone shipments during the first quarter of 2020 were down by 12 to 13 percent compared with the same […]

NASA is counting on a lot of unproven rockets for its Artemis plan

Notably, the space agency seems to have taken an upgraded SLS off the table.

It's still not clear how NASA will get its lunar lander to the Moon.

Enlarge / It's still not clear how NASA will get its lunar lander to the Moon. (credit: NASA)

On Thursday, NASA announced awards to begin final design and initial development of landers to carry humans down to the Moon—a big step for the Artemis Program.

Building these landers to reach the lunar surface by 2024 is a big challenge, as it leaves a little more than four years to design, build, test, and fly these complex vehicles. After all, it took Grumman more than six years to build the Lunar Module in the 1960s, and the company had done some preparatory work before NASA issued its first contracts.

But assuming at least one of the three lander concepts is ready to go by 2024—Blue Origin's Blue Moon lander, Dynetics' landing system, or SpaceX's Starship—there remains the question of how to get it to the Moon. NASA has not settled upon a final architecture for the Artemis III mission to land on the Moon in 2024, and a choice of four rockets remains.

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