
Pair that brought guns to Pokémon tournament gets two years in jail
Sentencing comes after players showed off weapons in threatening online posts.

Two men who were arrested last year for making online threats and bringing guns and ammunition to a Boston Pokémon card game tournament have been sentenced to two years each in prison and two years of probation afterward. The Boston Globe reports that James Stumbo and Kevin Norton pled guilty to unlawful possession of the guns and nearly 300 rounds of ammunition found in their car outside the Hynes Convention Center event last August.
Stumbo and Norton, both well-known members of the high-level Pokémon card playing community, were arrested after driving from Iowa to Boston for the event as well as posting messages on Facebook showing off the guns and threatening to "kill the competition." Another message stated that "my AR-15 says that you lose." Event security was warned about the postings and notified the police before informing attendees of the issue.
Miller's attorney, Robert LeRoy, tried to downplay the pair's online postings as "adolescent stuff" that "wasn’t threatening in any capacity." He also defended their actions by contrasting Iowa's relatively lax gun laws with the stricter regulations in Massachusetts. “They basically always drive around with loaded guns in the trunk in Iowa,” he said, according to the Globe report.
Koelnmesse: Tagestickets für Gamescom ausverkauft
Pokémon Go is “new level of invasion,” says stony-faced Oliver Stone
Snowden director: “This data-mining game is what they call totalitarianism.”

Pokémon Go heralds a new dystopian age that we should all be fretting about, film director Oliver Stone has warned.
Speaking at Comic Con on Thursday to promote his new movie about US National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, Stone described the data-slurping tactics of the freakishly successful game as “a new level of invasion.”
The panel—also featuring Snowden stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Shailene Woodley, and Zachary Quinto—was asked about the surveillance potential of the game.
Nvidia unveils new GTX Titan X: 11 teraflops, 12GB GDDR5X, just $1,200
Potentially 24% faster than GTX 1080; 60% faster than the old Titan X.

Forget the GTX 1080: there's a new slab of graphics card hotness on the way from Nvidia, and its name is, er, the GTX Titan X. Yes, Nvidia has taken its most expensive graphics card and given it a Pascal-architecture makeover. $1200—UK price TBC, but probably £1,100—buys you 11 teraflops of FP32 performance, which is a significant 24 percent jump over the 8.9 teraflops of the GTX 1080, and just over 60 percent higher than the 6.6 teraflops of the original Titan X.
The new Titan X launches on August 2 in the US and Europe. At first it'll only be available from the Nvidia website, but it will percolate down to other retailers soon after.
The Titan X is powered by a new chip, GP102, which packs in 3584 CUDA cores. While Nvidia hasn't revealed the amount of Streaming Multiprocessors (SMs), texture units, and the like, if the company uses a similar architecture to the GP104 chip (as used in the GTX 1080 and GTX 1070), expect a 40 percent boost in SMs over the GTX 1080 to 28. The chip runs at a 1417MHz base clock and 1531MHz boost clock.
The White House hits the accelerator pedal to increase electric vehicle adoption
There’s a coalition of car companies, utilities, and charging networks on board.

(credit: Getty Images | DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP)
The news earlier this week that the ambitious 54.5mpg Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency target is dead in the water was unwelcome for those worried about the ever-growing problem of climate change. But we can take some cheer from yesterday's announcement from the White House detailing plans to boost the uptake of electric vehicles here in the United States.
The plan involves a concerted effort from the government (the Department of Energy, Department of Transportation, Environmental Protection Agency, US Air Force and US Army) as well as a number of states, utilities companies, automakers, and EV infrastructure companies that is meant to make life a lot easier for EV drivers in the coming years.
As we've repeatedly noted, it's all well and good being able to buy an electric car, but widespread adoption will require the same kind of infrastructure support that already exists for fossil fueled vehicles. That's where this plan comes in. Among the specific measures announced there is $4.5 billion in loan guarantees for companies building charging facilities, the creation of alternative fuel and zero emissions corridors, more EVs on state and federal government fleets, and a plan for hackathons to find new solutions to topping up EV batteries.
Kluge Uhren: Weltweiter Smartwatch-Markt bricht um ein Drittel ein
Im zweiten Quartal 2016 wurden weltweit deutlich weniger Smartwatches verkauft als im gleichen Zeitraum 2015. Grund ist die Abhängigkeit des Marktes von Apple und seiner Watch – und die Erwartung eines neuen Modells. (Smartwatch, Apple)

More Xiaomi Mi Notebook details allegedly leaked
Xiaomi is holding an event on July 27th, when the company is expected to introduce its first laptop, among other things. We’ve already seen a few alleged photos of the upcoming laptop, but now some slides and pictures said to be from the upcoming presentation are making the rounds.
Take these with a grain of salt because they’re relatively easy to fake… but nothing in the presentation seems particularly unreasonable… including the derivative design of the laptop.
Continue reading More Xiaomi Mi Notebook details allegedly leaked at Liliputing.

Xiaomi is holding an event on July 27th, when the company is expected to introduce its first laptop, among other things. We’ve already seen a few alleged photos of the upcoming laptop, but now some slides and pictures said to be from the upcoming presentation are making the rounds.
Take these with a grain of salt because they’re relatively easy to fake… but nothing in the presentation seems particularly unreasonable… including the derivative design of the laptop.
Continue reading More Xiaomi Mi Notebook details allegedly leaked at Liliputing.
EFF sues US government, saying copyright rules on DRM are unconstitutional
DMCA’s “anti-circumvention” rule has rankled hackers and scholars for a long time.

Hacker Andrew "bunnie" Huang is EFF's newest client. (credit: Pauline Ng via Wikimedia)
Since the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) became law in 1998, it has been a federal crime to copy a DVD or do anything else that subverts digital copy-protection schemes.
Soon, government lawyers will have to show up in court to defend those rules. Yesterday, the Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a lawsuit (PDF) claiming the parts of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that deal with copy protection and digital locks are unconstitutional.
Under the DMCA, any hacking or breaking of digital locks, often referred to as digital rights management or DRM, is a criminal act. That means modding a game console, hacking a car's software, and copying a DVD are all acts that violate the law, no matter what the purpose. Those rules are encapsulated in Section 1201 of the DMCA, which was lobbied for by the entertainment industry and some large tech companies.
Linux: Nvidia ist bereit für einheitliche Wayland-Unterstützung
Die Unterstützung für Wayland in Nvidias proprietärem Linux-Treiber nutzt eine Eigenlösung, die die anderen Treiber nicht verwenden. Nvidia ist aber offenbar an einer einheitlichen Lösung interessiert. Google soll ebenso überzeugt werden. (Wayland, Linux-Kernel)
