Spotify raises $1 billion war chest for battle against Apple Music

More debt for money-losing music streaming service as it edges towards an IPO.

Spotify AB has raised £695 million (~$1 billion) in convertible debt, and reportedly promised its investors that they would get a tasty equity return if the Sweden-based music streaming service goes public in the next year.

Private equity outfit TPG, and hedge fund Dragoneer Investment Group, along with an unknown number of Goldman Sachs' clients, agreed to sink cash into Spotify, according to the Wall Street Journal. The deal was later confirmed by Spotify, with an agreement expected to close by the end of this week, Reuters reported.

Financial terms were kept secret. The WSJ earlier reported, however—citing sources familiar with the deal—that Spotify's new investors would be able to convert the debt into equity at a 20 percent discount if the company holds an IPO (initial public offering) within the next 12 months.

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Blizzard: Novas neue Missionen für Starcraft 2

Blizzard hat das erste Drittel von Novas Geheimmissionen veröffentlicht. Die kostenpflichtige Erweiterung kommt ohne gekauftes Starcraft 2 aus und handelt von einer blonden Heldin. Gleichzeitig gibt es mit dem Update 3.2.0 größere Änderungen beim Hauptspiel. (Starcraft, Blizzard)

Blizzard hat das erste Drittel von Novas Geheimmissionen veröffentlicht. Die kostenpflichtige Erweiterung kommt ohne gekauftes Starcraft 2 aus und handelt von einer blonden Heldin. Gleichzeitig gibt es mit dem Update 3.2.0 größere Änderungen beim Hauptspiel. (Starcraft, Blizzard)

Fisherman who has kept USGS buoy for 10 weeks: All I want is compensation

Daniel Sherer: “You don’t even know how much stress this has put me under.”

An autonomous monitoring transponder of the type used in the Coordinated Canyon Experiment.

All Daniel Sherer has ever wanted was for the government to pay him for a few days of lost work as a commercial fisherman after a scientific buoy suddenly popped into the path of his fishing boat in Monterey Bay on Saturday, January 15, 2016. As he tells it, his aim isn't to bilk the United States; he simply wants to be paid a fair amount for his lost earnings after the buoy took his boat out of commission. "I don't need a million dollars—I just want to be compensated for my days lost," he told Ars. "I want to be compensated for a diver going under the boat, I want to be compensated for cleaning the whole thing up, that's it."

As Ars reported on Monday, Sherer is the first named defendant in a lawsuit filed last week by federal prosecutors in California. The way the government sees it, Sherer and his fishing business partner are essentially hostage-takers, as they recovered a loose United States Geological Survey buoy, claimed ownership of it, and now demand $13,000 for its return.

Department of Justice lawyers have still not responded to Ars' request for comment.

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Enceladus’ geysers may persist for millions of years

A new model goes some way towards balancing the books on their energetic costs.

(credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA)

Saturn's moon Enceladus is a relatively small body, only a bit over 500km across. That's not big enough to have retained much heat from its formation, nor to have a huge cache of radioactive material that can provide heat. Yet all indications are that the moon has an extensive under-surface ocean, which fuels geysers near the moon's south pole. Thermal imaging suggests that there are Gigawatts worth of heat being released in the area around the geysers.

All of which should be unsustainable. Most of the heat inside Enceladus must be produced by tidal forces, which deform the moon over the course of its orbit, creating internal friction. And there's no indication that these can generate sufficient heat. This implies that the geysers, and the E-ring of Saturn that they create, are a very temporary phenomenon, and we're lucky to have sent Cassini there while the geysers were active. But that may not be the case. Some scientists are now suggesting that Enceladus may be relatively young, and a separate study is saying that the geysers may be stable for up to a million years.

The new study is based on an attempt to create a physical model of Enceladus' plumes. These originate in a series of fissures known as the tiger stripes, shown on the left side of the moon in the image above. Together, these fissures add up to roughly 500km of active venting.

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Amazon cracks down on dodgy USB Type-C cables and adapters

Marketplace sellers can no longer sell non-compliant USB-C products on Amazon.

Enlarge (credit: Google)

Amazon has added shoddy and non-standards-compliant USB Type-C cables and adapters to its list of restricted products. This means that third-party marketplace sellers can no longer sell USB Type-C products that aren't compliant with the relevant USB standards that they purport to support.

The crackdown is almost certainly in response to the glut of cheap USB Type-C cables that have flooded Amazon over the past year, and at least one example of a dodgy cable frying a Google engineer's Chromebook Pixel. In that case, the third-party seller stated that it was a standards-compliant USB 3.1 Type-C cable with SuperSpeed; as it turned out, the cable was completely missing the extra wires needed for SuperSpeed, and two of the other wires had been transposed. The miswired cable killed his laptop instantly.

Back in December, Amazon banned the sale of self-balancing scooters following a spate of reports of cheap hoverboards bursting into flames.

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To SQL or NoSQL? That’s the database question

But as technological lines blur, there’s not always a clear cut answer.

It's a tangled, database web out there. (credit: Getty Images)

Poke around the infrastructure of any startup website or mobile app these days, and you're bound to find something other than a relational database doing much of the heavy lifting. Take, for example, the Boston-based startup Wanderu. This bus and train focused travel deal site launched about three years ago. And fed by a Web-generated glut of unstructured data (bus schedules on PDFs, anyone?), Wanderu is powered by MongoDB, a "NoSQL" database—not by Structured Query Language (SQL) calls against traditional tables and rows.

But why is that? Is the equation really as simple as "Web-focused business = choose NoSQL?" Why do companies like Wanderu choose a NoSQL database? (In this case, it was MongoDB.) Under what circumstances would a SQL database have been a better choice?

Today, the database landscape continues to become increasingly complicated. The usual SQL suspects—SQL Server-Oracle-DB2-Postgres, et al.—aren't handling this new world on their own, and some say they can't. But the division between SQL and NoSQL is increasingly fuzzy, especially as database developers integrate the technologies together and add bits of one to the other.

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Betriebssystem: OpenBSD 5.9 filtert weitgehend Systemaufrufe

Die Funktion zum Filtern und Beschränken von Systemaufrufen ist in OpenBSD 5.9 um viele Anwendungen erweitert worden. Außerdem unterstützt das System nun neuere Laptops besser – dank UEFI und WLAN nach 802.11n. (OpenBSD, Browser)

Die Funktion zum Filtern und Beschränken von Systemaufrufen ist in OpenBSD 5.9 um viele Anwendungen erweitert worden. Außerdem unterstützt das System nun neuere Laptops besser - dank UEFI und WLAN nach 802.11n. (OpenBSD, Browser)

Mögliche Beschädigungen: Amazon beschränkt Verkauf von USB-Typ-C-Kabeln

Verkäufern auf Amazon ist es jetzt offiziell untersagt, USB-Typ-C-Kabel zu verkaufen, die nicht bestimmten Spezifikationen entsprechen. Grund ist eine Vielzahl an Kabeln, die wegen falsch gesetzter Widerstände elektronische Geräte beschädigen können. (USB Typ C, Onlineshop)

Verkäufern auf Amazon ist es jetzt offiziell untersagt, USB-Typ-C-Kabel zu verkaufen, die nicht bestimmten Spezifikationen entsprechen. Grund ist eine Vielzahl an Kabeln, die wegen falsch gesetzter Widerstände elektronische Geräte beschädigen können. (USB Typ C, Onlineshop)

Festnetz: Telekom stattet Förderkommunen binnen 2 Jahren aus

Die Telekom berichtet von ihren Förderprogrammen auf dem Land: Dort wird zwar meist VDSL ausgebaut. Wenn sich der Aufbau eines Outdoor-DSLAMs in einem Weiler nicht lohnt, wird aber auch direkt FTTH errichtet. (Telekom, DSL)

Die Telekom berichtet von ihren Förderprogrammen auf dem Land: Dort wird zwar meist VDSL ausgebaut. Wenn sich der Aufbau eines Outdoor-DSLAMs in einem Weiler nicht lohnt, wird aber auch direkt FTTH errichtet. (Telekom, DSL)