Boeing acknowledges “gaps” in its Starliner software testing

“They did an abundance of testing.”

Starliner touches down in December.

Enlarge / Starliner touches down in December. (credit: NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)

On Friday during a detailed, 75-minute briefing with reporters, a key Boeing spaceflight official sought to be as clear as possible about the company's troubles with its Starliner spacecraft.

After an uncrewed test flight in December of the spacecraft, Boeing "learned some hard lessons," said John Mulholland, a vice president who manages the company's commercial crew program. The December mission landed safely but suffered two serious software problems. Now, Mulholland said, Boeing will work hard to rebuild trust between itself and the vehicle's customer, NASA. During the last decade, NASA has paid Boeing a total of $4.8 billion to develop a safe capsule to fly US astronauts to and from the International Space Station.

At the outset of the briefing, Mulholland sought to provide information about the vehicle's performance, including its life support systems, heat shield, guidance, and navigation. He noted that there were relatively few issues discovered. However, when he invited questions from reporters, the focus quickly turned to software. In particular, Mulholland was asked several times how the company made decisions on procedures for testing flight software before the mission—which led to the two mistakes.

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The man behind the sphere, Freeman Dyson, is dead at 96

He made critical contributions to science and contemplated colonizing the Universe.

Dyson's ideas even made it to where no man has gone before.

Freeman Dyson, a physicist whose interests often took him to the edge of science fiction, has died at the age of 96. Dyson is probably best known for his idea of eponymous spheres that would allow civilizations to capture all the energy radiating off a star. But his contributions ranged from fundamental physics to the practicalities of using nuclear weapons for war and peace. And he remained intellectually active into his 90s, although he wandered into the wrong side of science when it came to climate change.

Degrees? Who needs 'em?

It's difficult to find anything that summarizes a career so broad, but a sense of his intellectual energy comes from his educational history. Dyson was a graduate student in physics when he managed to unify two competing ideas about quantum electrodynamics, placing an entire field on a solid theoretical foundation. Rather than writing that up as his thesis, he simply moved on to other interests. He didn't get a doctorate until the honorary ones started arriving later in his career. His contributions were considered so important that he kept getting faculty jobs regardless.

That came after a fairly conventional start to his education: an undergraduate degree from the University of Cambridge. Like many other scientists at the time, his career was interrupted by World War II, with Dyson working at the Royal Air Force's Bomber Command, evaluating data from completed missions and finding ways of getting more out of the nation's aircraft. After the war, he returned to Cambridge to finish his degree, then started in a PhD program at Cornell University in the US.

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Man Who Sold Pirate IPTV Must Pay £521,000 or Face Five More Years in Prison

A man who was sentenced in 2018 to 4.5 years in prison for selling pirate IPTV devices to pubs and clubs has been ordered to pay £520,000 to the public purse. Failure to come up with the funds will result in John Dodds having his prison sentence extended by an additional five years. The Premier League, which brought the action, welcomed the judgment.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

From 2009 until 2016, John Dodds and Jason Richards were involved in an operation selling ‘pirate’ IPTV to around 270 pubs and clubs in the North-East of England.

For less than £200 per month, the pair provided a set-top box plus a service, which included Premier League soccer and pay-per-view boxing matches. The subscription package, which at some point was branded ‘Full Effects HD Sports’, eventually attracted the attention of the Premier League which launched a private prosecution for fraud offenses.

The football organization told the court that the “highly professional broadcasting service” was sold to subscribers at a rate designed to undercut legitimate broadcasters and in 2018, Dodds and Richards were sentenced to four-and-a-half years each in prison. That wasn’t the end of the matter, however.

According to a joint press statement by the Premier League and the Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT), a judge at Newcastle Crown Court has now ordered Dodds to pay back £521,000 to the public purse. Failure to do so within three months will result in his prison sentence being extended by an additional five years.

The judge handling the matter reportedly described Dodds “as an unreliable and dishonest character” who concealed the proceeds of his criminal activities by hiding large amounts of cash in his house and placing assets in his daughter’s name.

“This is a welcome judgment and we are pleased the courts have recognized how serious an issue illegal streaming is – it is a crime which has very significant consequences,” commented Kevin Plumb, Director of Legal Services at the Premier League.

“The defendant has now been ordered to forfeit the proceeds of his criminal activities, which we have requested go directly back to the public purse. The money recovered will go towards funding the courts and law enforcement agencies to help continue the brilliant work they do in helping bring people like this to justice.”

FACT, which worked with the Premier League on the cases against both Dodds and Richards, welcomed the decision and took the opportunity to warn others considering the same type of business model.

“This is a warning to anyone selling subscriptions or devices that allow access to content without remunerating the legitimate provider – you risk time in jail and the loss of your properties, cars and other proceeds of crime,” said FACT CEO Kieron Sharp.

“FACT will continue to work with members to crackdown on illegal streaming and to hold those behind it accountable for their actions.”

According to local sources at the time of original convictions, the scheme was lucrative for the pair. Using a fraudulent company, the men generated revenues of £1.5m, which among other things funded the purchase of luxury cars and foreign homes.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Review: The Invisible Man is a horror film that works on multiple levels

Elisabeth Moss’s emotionally intense yet nuanced performance anchors the film.

Elisabeth Moss gets the gaslighting treatment in Universal's reinvention of The Invisible Man.

A traumatized woman escapes her abusive relationship, only to find she is being stalked by an unseen entity in The Invisible Man, (very) loosely based on the H.G. Wells science fiction novel. It's less a direct adaption than a reinvention, written and directed by Leigh Whannell, best known for the Saw and Insidious horror franchises. The Invisible Man is horror in the best sense of the word, working on multiple levels and firmly anchored by star Elisabeth Moss's intensely emotional, yet nuanced performance.

(Some spoilers below.)

First serialized and then published as a book in 1897, the novel tells the story of a scientist named Griffin, whose research into optics leads him to invent a means of turning himself invisible with a serum that chemically alters his body's refractive index to match that of air. Wells cited Plato's Republic as one of his influences, notably a legend involving a magic ring that renders a man invisible, which Plato used to explore whether a person would behave morally if there were no repercussions for bad behavior.

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More than 2,200 agencies and companies have tried Clearview, report finds

Schools, stores, federal agencies, and legions of local police are on the list.

More than 2,200 agencies and companies have tried Clearview, report finds

Enlarge (credit: Spencer Whalen | EyeEm | Getty Images)

Secretive startup Clearview AI distributes an apparently very powerful facial recognition tool that matches anyone against an enormous database of photos—it claims more than 3 billion—scraped from basically every major US platform on the Internet. A leaked list now reveals that more than 2,200 government agencies and private businesses have tried the service.

Clearview, which first came to light courtesy of a New York Times report from January, claims to have about 600 customers, all in law enforcement. The company has repeatedly refused to make a client list public, however, and previous reports find that at least some of its marketing claims are significantly exaggerated.

Earlier this week, Clearview disclosed that its client list and some information about searches those customers have run was lost in a data breach. Reporters at BuzzFeed ended up with access to a copy and found far more in it than Clearview has ever admitted.

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Daily Deals (2-28-2020)

While Chromebooks have a reputation for being cheap, in recent years we’ve seen a growing number of models with higher price tags and better specs. The HP Chromebook x360 14 is an excellent case in point. With a 14 inch full HD touchscreen displa…

While Chromebooks have a reputation for being cheap, in recent years we’ve seen a growing number of models with higher price tags and better specs. The HP Chromebook x360 14 is an excellent case in point. With a 14 inch full HD touchscreen display and 360-degree hinge you can use it in laptop or tablet […]

The post Daily Deals (2-28-2020) appeared first on Liliputing.

Congress gives small ISPs $1 billion to rip out Huawei/ZTE network gear

ISPs banned from using FCC funds on Huawei/ZTE, get $1B for replacement gear.

Huawei's logo seen at a technology conference.

Enlarge / Huawei's logo at the Smart City Expo World Congress in Barcelona in November 2019. (credit: Getty Images | SOPA Images)

The US House and Senate approved legislation to create a $1 billion fund that will help small telecom providers remove and replace Huawei and ZTE networking equipment.

The bill, which awaits President Trump's signature, also prohibits telcos from using Federal Communications Commission funding to purchase Huawei or ZTE equipment. But the Congressional action is largely duplicative, as the FCC had already approved a ban.

The Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Act was approved in voice votes by the House in December and by the Senate yesterday. It doesn't mention Huawei or ZTE by name but says the FCC must produce a list of equipment providers "posing national security risks" and prohibits ISPs and phone companies from using FCC funding to purchase, rent, lease, or maintain equipment and services made by those companies.

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Rip and Replace Act: Huawei-Ersatz im US-Mobilfunknetz kostet 1 Milliarde Dollar

Der US-Senat hat dem sogenannten Rip and Replace Act zugestimmt, der die Demontage von Huawei-Technik finanziert. Das politische Verbot wird für den Steuerzahler teuer. (Huawei, Handy)

Der US-Senat hat dem sogenannten Rip and Replace Act zugestimmt, der die Demontage von Huawei-Technik finanziert. Das politische Verbot wird für den Steuerzahler teuer. (Huawei, Handy)

Elektromobilität: Die Post baut keine Streetscooter mehr

Der Streetscooter, ein elektrisch angetriebener Lieferwagen aus Aachen, galt als Vorzeigeprojekt der Elektromobilität. Ein wirtschaftlicher Erfolg war das Auto aber nicht. Deshalb hat die Deutsche Post bekannt gegeben, dass sie die Produktion des Elekt…

Der Streetscooter, ein elektrisch angetriebener Lieferwagen aus Aachen, galt als Vorzeigeprojekt der Elektromobilität. Ein wirtschaftlicher Erfolg war das Auto aber nicht. Deshalb hat die Deutsche Post bekannt gegeben, dass sie die Produktion des Elektroautos beende. (Streetscooter, Elektroauto)

22FDX-Verfahren: Globalfoundries produziert eMRAM-Designs

Erste Tape-outs noch 2020: Globalfoundries hat die die Fertigung von Chips mit Embedded MRAM aufgenommen, dahinter steht das 22FDX-Verfahren. Foundries wie Samsung arbeiten ebenfalls an eMRAM-Designs. (Globalfoundries, Halbleiterfertigung)

Erste Tape-outs noch 2020: Globalfoundries hat die die Fertigung von Chips mit Embedded MRAM aufgenommen, dahinter steht das 22FDX-Verfahren. Foundries wie Samsung arbeiten ebenfalls an eMRAM-Designs. (Globalfoundries, Halbleiterfertigung)