Two New Xbox One Consoles May Be Coming, More Powerful Than ‘PS4 Neo’

With E3 just around the corner, the rumor mills are working over time and the latest signs point to not one but two new Xbox One consoles, one coming this year, and another much more powerful one coming in 2017.The more recent rehash of the Xbox One SK…



With E3 just around the corner, the rumor mills are working over time and the latest signs point to not one but two new Xbox One consoles, one coming this year, and another much more powerful one coming in 2017.

The more recent rehash of the Xbox One SKU could see a new Xbox One console that's cheaper, comes with 2TB of storage, but possibly minus the Blu-ray drive. This new Xbox One "Slim" is 40 percent smaller than the current Xbox One, but will have the same power under the hood. Microsoft is expected to announce this new SKU at E3.

This, however, won't be true for second model in the updated Xbox One line-up. With Sony all but certain to release an updated, more powerful PS4, dubbed the PS4 Neo, it appears Microsoft has embraced a similar "iterative" upgrade plan. The "iterative" upgrade would make the console upgrade cycle similar to other consumer devices, such as the iPhone, but would ensure compatibility across newer and older devices.

Microsoft's new super console is apparently codenamed 'Scorpio', and what is has under the hood may hold a lethal sting for rival Sony. Early reports suggests that while the exact specs of Scorpio has not yet been finalized, Microsoft is targeting a peak performance of 6 teraflops. The PS4 Neo is rumored to have a performance target of 4.14 teraflops. To put all of this into context, the current PS4 is only capable of 1.84 teraflops, while the Xbox One only operates at 1.32 teraflops.

More will definitely be revealed at E3. Microsoft's E3 event is scheduled to occur on Monday, June 13 at 12:30pm (Eastern), while Sony's event is the same day, at 9pm (Eastern).

BSA Pays Disgruntled Employees to Rat on ‘Pirating’ Bosses

The Business Software Alliance, a trade group representing Adobe, Apple and Microsoft, is known to offer cash payments to people who help them find companies that run unlicensed software. Today we speak with an attorney who has represented more than 250 defendants in these cases, which are regularly triggered by disgruntled employees.

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

nopiracyOver the past two decades the Business Software Alliance (BSA) has represented major software companies, including Adobe, Apple, Microsoft, Oracle and Symantec, in their fight against under-licensed businesses.

This has resulted in audits at thousands of companies worldwide, whose computers are carefully inspected to see if the business owner has failed to pay his or her dues.

While companies are often contractually obliged to comply with such audits, BSA’s selection procedures are raising eyebrows.

Since a few years the industry group has been actively soliciting tips from the public about potentially infringing companies. Promising hard cash rewards, it asks “whistleblowers” to expose any wrongdoing.

BSA generally follows up these tips with a threatening letter to the business owner in which it requests an audit, something they are contractually obliged to agree to.

If unlicensed software is found during an audit, the group generally follows up with a demand for damages, which can run into hundreds of thousands of dollars for some companies.

To find out more about the process TorrentFreak spoke with Robert J. Scott, managing partner at Scott & Scott, LLP., who has represented hundreds of defendants in BSA related cases over the past couple of years.

According to Scott a typical audit request comes after “a tip by a disgruntled employee or former employee, often seeking to recover advertised reward money.”

Many of Scott’s clients liken BSA’s tactics to a form of extortion, but he prefers not to use this term. In principle he believes that software companies have the right to protect their work. However, he certainly doesn’t agree with BSA practices.

The reward money in particular is problematic as it tends to attract disgruntled people who have a history with the company. For example, a fired employee who hopes to cash in while getting back at a former boss.

“I challenge the payment of reward money to disgruntled employees,” Scott says. “I also have been opposed to the method of calculating damages in BSA cases as being contrary to law.”

The damages awards demanded in these cases are typically three times the regular licensing fee, and can easily run to hundreds of thousands of dollars depending on the number of computers that are in use.

In a recent article for TechCrunch Scott shares the story of Fuzzy’s Radiator, a Texas automotive repair company. In a threatening letter the BSA accused the company of running unlicensed Microsoft products, stating that it could owe millions of dollars for the alleged infringement.

The timing of the letter was interesting, as it came in shortly after Fuzzy’s Radiator’s in-house IT person left the company. “I think the disgruntled former employee was trying to bring down the company,” Fuzzy Radiator’s Trinda Lopez said.

Facing a potential bankruptcy, the company decided to freeze employee salaries and postpone the purchase of new equipment. Eventually, the dispute was settled for a fraction of the initial demand.

While some business owners may run unlicensed software on purpose, this is certainly not always the case. Sometimes the software is installed by relative outsiders, or IT personnel who decide to skip the licensing part on their own accord.

Intentional or not, if the BSA comes knocking it’s bound to get costly. Scott hopes that small business owners will become more aware of the potential risk and ensure that their licenses are in order.

“After handling over 250 cases by BSA, what I have learned is that small business owners can’t trust IT to manage software license compliance,” Scott tells us.

Finally, it’s worth keeping in mind that BSA uses the prospect of excessive penalties to intimidate companies and elicit fear. With a proper defense the actual settlements turn out to be much lower.

Too bad for the disgruntled employee, who gets a stake of the settlement.

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

Dealmaster: Save big on a Linksys WRT1900AC wireless router bundle

Get the router, a 128GB USB 3.0 drive, and a $100 Dell gift card for just $229.99!

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, the Dealmaster is here with a host of tempting deals for you today. The top item is a bundle involving a Linksys WRT1900AC wireless router. You get the router plus a 128GB USB 3.0 drive plus a $100 Dell gift card. The regular price for all this would be $319.99, but today you can get the whole shebang for $229.99!

Be sure to check out that and a host of other deals below.

Laptop & Desktop Computers

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Experts call Olympics “unethical,” want them moved/postponed—CDC disagrees

Amid Zika crisis in Brazil, the Olympics are not “too big to fail,” experts write.

With Brazil already swarming with Zika-loaded mosquitoes, hosting 500,000 foreign athletes and spectators for the 2016 Olympic games there in August poses unnecessary health risks and is downright “unethical,” according to an international group of 150 health experts.

In an open letter to Margaret Chan, the Director-General of the World Health Organization, the group strongly urged that the games be moved or postponed.

The health experts appealed to WHO, a specialized agency within the United Nations, because it has a well-established partnership with the International Olympic Committee. The partnership, which was affirmed most recently in 2010, is primarily aimed at coordinating the two groups’s efforts to promote healthy lifestyles, such as through physical activity campaigns and making Olympic games tobacco-free.

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Triple threat: The all-in-one LPR, speedometer, and facial recognition scanner

Tech currently being tested in Europe and the Middle East could come to US.

(credit: Ekin Technology)

Call it the next generation of light bars. Ekin Technology, a Turkish law enforcement technology company, was recently granted an American patent for what just might be the surveillance trifecta: a light bar with an integrated license plate reader (LPR), speedometer, and facial recognition capability.

If the "Ekin Patrol" catches on in the United States, it will facilitate a notable acceleration in the advancement of spy tech. While speedometers are relatively old and LPRs are increasingly catching on, facial recognition technology is not yet widespread in America. Agencies ranging from the FBI to the California attorney general's office have expressed their interest in the technology.

"The facial recognition equivalent of license plate reader scanning has always been a civil liberties nightmare," Jay Stanley, an analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union, told Ars. "We’ve definitely seen baby steps in that direction, but this technology, if widely deployed, would mean it’s arrived."

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Here are the finalists for “board game of the year”

Pandemic, T.I.M.E Stories, Imhotep, Codenames, and more!

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage right here—and let us know what you think.

While the worldwide board-gaming community has plenty of awards ceremonies, arguably the most important is still the "Spiel des Jahres" (Game of the Year) award issued by Germany's game critics. Past winners have included everything from Catan to Qwirkle, and winning one of the coveted trophies ensures solid sales and (very occasionally) fame and fortune.

This week, the Spiel des Jahres jury released its list of finalists (German) for the main "Spiel des Jahres" prize, which is always family friendly, and the newer "Kennerspiel" award for more complex/advanced games. (We won't cover the prize for children's titles, the "Kinderspiel," but the finalists in that category are Leo miss zum Friseur, Mmm!, and the children's version of the worker placement classic Stone Age.) While the winners won't be picked until July, any of these titles would make a great gift for the board game lover in your life, and the list provides a good starting point for exploring the terrific titles from the past year.

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Iron floating into the sea on aerosols is driving a loss of oxygen

Pollution and currents combine to increase an oxygen-poor region in the Pacific.

(credit: Flickr user marya)

The oxygen minimum zone is the section of ocean that has the lowest oxygen saturation. While the thickness and depth of the OMZ varies, the Pacific Ocean's OMZ has been expanding in recent years. This has consequences for oceanic ecosystems, since animals struggle in this region, and its primary productivity is low. However, the cause of this oxygen decline is not fully understood. A paper published in Nature Geoscience uses climate modeling to indicate that aerosol particulate pollution may be contributing significantly to the acceleration of oxygen depletion.

To determine the relationship among atmospheric pollution, ocean dynamics, and the OMZ, researchers performed computational simulations of atmospheric chemistry and its impact on marine biochemistry. This modeling included fluctuations of aerosols that contained soluble iron and fixed nitrogen, coupled with a dust-iron dissolution scheme. The model also included hindcast simulations that tracked anthropogenic pollution increases between the years of 1750 and 2002.

The researchers’ model showed that the combination of climate variability and longterm increases in macro- and micronutrients going into the ocean alters the large-scale patterns of ocean productivity and dissolved oxygen. They also saw that variability in ocean circulation and pollution enhanced the deposition of soluble iron, whereas fixed nitrogen did not see the same effect.

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Vorke V1 is a $200 mini PC with 4GB RAM, Celeron J3160 processor

Vorke V1 is a $200 mini PC with 4GB RAM, Celeron J3160 processor

Another day, another tiny desktop computer with a low-power processor and Windows 10 software. But the specs on these little desktops keep getting (a little) better.

Yesterday we highlighted the Beelink BT7, with an Atom x7 Cherry Trail processor, 4GB of RAM, and up to 320GB of storage. Today the folks at Geekbuying wrote in to let me know about a similar mini PC with a more powerful Celeron J3160 Braswell processor.

It’s called the Vorke V1, and it’s up for pre-order from Geekbuying or AliExpress for about $200.

Continue reading Vorke V1 is a $200 mini PC with 4GB RAM, Celeron J3160 processor at Liliputing.

Vorke V1 is a $200 mini PC with 4GB RAM, Celeron J3160 processor

Another day, another tiny desktop computer with a low-power processor and Windows 10 software. But the specs on these little desktops keep getting (a little) better.

Yesterday we highlighted the Beelink BT7, with an Atom x7 Cherry Trail processor, 4GB of RAM, and up to 320GB of storage. Today the folks at Geekbuying wrote in to let me know about a similar mini PC with a more powerful Celeron J3160 Braswell processor.

It’s called the Vorke V1, and it’s up for pre-order from Geekbuying or AliExpress for about $200.

Continue reading Vorke V1 is a $200 mini PC with 4GB RAM, Celeron J3160 processor at Liliputing.

California mayors demand surveillance cams on crime-ridden highways

“Evidence suggests these shooting appear to be gang related,” CHP says.

(credit: CBS SF Bay Area)

The 28 shootings along a 10-mile stretch of San Francisco-area highway over the past six months have led mayors of the adjacent cities to declare that these "murderous activities" have reached "crisis proportions." Four people have been killed and dozens injured, including a pregnant mother of four children who was shot to death earlier this month.

These five mayors want California Gov. Jerry Brown to fund surveillance cameras along all the on and off ramps of Interstate 80 and Highway 4 along the cities of El Cerrito, Hercules, Richmond, San Pablo, and Pinole.

According to their letter (PDF) to the governor:

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Telekom-Konzernchef: “Vectoring schafft Wettbewerb”

Die Telekom schafft ihre eigene Definition von Netzneutralität: möglichst viele neue Dienste. Außerdem solle das Kupferkabel nicht unterschätzt werden – das exklusive Vectoring des Unternehmens schaffe Wettbewerb und verhindere ihn nicht, glaubt Vorstandsmitglied van Damme. (Telekom, Glasfaser)

Die Telekom schafft ihre eigene Definition von Netzneutralität: möglichst viele neue Dienste. Außerdem solle das Kupferkabel nicht unterschätzt werden - das exklusive Vectoring des Unternehmens schaffe Wettbewerb und verhindere ihn nicht, glaubt Vorstandsmitglied van Damme. (Telekom, Glasfaser)