Social Media: Facebook-Nutzer müssen vorerst weiter Klarnamen angeben

Max Mustermann muss Max Mustermann heißen: Ein deutsches Gericht hat den Klarnamenzwang bei Facebook bestätigt. Der Hamburger Datenschutzbeauftragte hatte geklagt. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Max Mustermann muss Max Mustermann heißen: Ein deutsches Gericht hat den Klarnamenzwang bei Facebook bestätigt. Der Hamburger Datenschutzbeauftragte hatte geklagt. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Xiaomi Mi Qicycle: Elektrisches Klappfahrrad mit Smartphone-Anschluss

Xiaomi hat mit dem Mi Qicycle sein erstes Elektrofahrrad vorgestellt. Das Klapprad wiegt 14,5 kg und lässt sich für den Transport in öffentlichen Verkehrsmitteln zusammenfalten. Das Smartphone wird mittels Bluetooth mit dem Rad verbunden. (Elektrofahrrad, Technologie)

Xiaomi hat mit dem Mi Qicycle sein erstes Elektrofahrrad vorgestellt. Das Klapprad wiegt 14,5 kg und lässt sich für den Transport in öffentlichen Verkehrsmitteln zusammenfalten. Das Smartphone wird mittels Bluetooth mit dem Rad verbunden. (Elektrofahrrad, Technologie)

The Mill Blackbird: “Transformer”-artiges Fahrzeug für Filmaufnahmen

Wie stellt man ein Auto, das es nicht gibt, realistisch im Film dar? Damit setzt sich die auf visuelle Effekte spezialisiere Firma The Mill aus London auseinander. Sie hat ein veränderbares Chassis gebaut, auf das im Computer jede beliebige Karosserie gesetzt werden kann. (Elektroauto, Film)

Wie stellt man ein Auto, das es nicht gibt, realistisch im Film dar? Damit setzt sich die auf visuelle Effekte spezialisiere Firma The Mill aus London auseinander. Sie hat ein veränderbares Chassis gebaut, auf das im Computer jede beliebige Karosserie gesetzt werden kann. (Elektroauto, Film)

Early Sales Figures: Ultra HD Blu-ray Growing Faster Than Blu-ray

Ultra HD Blu-ray is off to a better start than Blu-ray, according to the latest sales stats from Home Media Magazine.Launching only in March, 228,000 Ultra HD Blu-ray discs have already been sold as of June 24. This compares extremely we…



Ultra HD Blu-ray is off to a better start than Blu-ray, according to the latest sales stats from Home Media Magazine.

Launching only in March, 228,000 Ultra HD Blu-ray discs have already been sold as of June 24. This compares extremely well to when Blu-ray was first launched, when only 57,000 discs were sold in roughly the same time period.

The fast uptake is happening despite the fact that only two Ultra HD Blu-ray player models have been launched so far, from Samsung and Panasonic (availability of the Panasonic model varies according to region). 

But despite the lack of hardware choices, over 45 Ultra HD Blu-ray releases are already on store shelves. In trying to answer the age old question of who came first, the chicken or the egg, or more specifically, the movies or the players, it appears that the overall strategy is leaning towards making 4K movies available first.

Of the released titles so far, the popular picks among early 4K adopters have been a mix of new releases, like 'The Martian' and 'Deadpool', and re-released classics like 'Independence Day'. But showing that the format still has a long way to go, one of the more popular recent releases on 4K, 'Independence Day', only accounted for 4.54% of all disc sales for the title (including Blu-ray, DVD and combo editions).

The format also recently received a huge boost from an unlikely source, with Microsoft announcing their upgraded Xbox One console will include Ultra HD Blu-ray playback, and will retail for $100 less than the Samsung player, currently the cheapest on the market.

[Via Variety]

HP awarded $3B in damages from Oracle over Itanium database cancellation

Oracle found to be in breach of contract for ending Itanium software support.

Safra Catz, Oracle Corp. CEO, second left, exits superior court in San Jose in 2012. (credit: Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

A San Jose jury has awarded Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) $3 billion (£2.25B) in damages from Oracle after Oracle breached its contract to provide Itanium support in its namesake database and Linux distribution.

Oracle unilaterally decided to drop support for Itanium systems running HP's HP-UX operating system in 2011. HP (as then was; the company split into two last year, with HPE retaining the interest in the server business) sued, claiming that Oracle was in breach of a 2010 contract between the two companies in which the database firm promised to support HP's Itanium systems.

That suit was decided in 2012 in HP's favor. The judge required Oracle to fulfill its contractual obligations to support HP's Itanium systems and decided that HP was due damages. Oracle resumed the software support in late 2012, but the damages portion was undetermined. The two companies were back in court some four years later to decide just what those damages should be.

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Volkswagen lawyer says 3.0L diesel cars will likely be fixed, not bought back

A fix would keep Volkswagen from having to shell out for another 85,000 cars.

(credit: We Like Cars)

A lawyer for Volkswagen Group told a US district judge today that the company will probably be able to fix the 85,000 outstanding 3.0L diesel Porches, Audis, and Volkswagens that were also discovered to flout emissions regulations, following revelations that nearly 500,000 2.0L diesel vehicles were built with illegal emissions cheating software.

The 3.0L diesels were not included in Tuesday’s news that Volkswagen would spend $10 billion to buy back diesel cars that were spewing up to 40 times the legal limit of nitrogen oxide (NOx). The 3.0L cars were discovered two months after the first revelations of cheating and have since been on a separate track. VW Group contests that its 3.0L cars did not cheat on federal emissions tests in the same way that the 2.0L engines did, although the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has asserted that the cars in question were built with illegal auxiliary devices to circumvent emissions regulations.

Reuters reports that US District Judge Charles Breyer asked that VW Group provide and update on this fix on August 25, but the judge has not yet given VW Group a firm deadline to present a fix to US regulators. VW Group’s lawyer told the judge that the fix the company is currently working on would not be complicated or impact the cars’ performance greatly.

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Dell gets out of the Android business, and everything old is new again

Company will stop updating Android tablets and focus on 2-in-1 Windows PCs.

Dell's Venue 8 7000 was a decent tablet, but its future doesn't look bright. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

There's a lot of competition and not a lot of profit in the Android ecosystem, so it's not exactly surprising to hear that Dell plans to exit the Android business in order to focus on its Windows PCs and convertibles. According to The Verge, the company will continue to honor warranties and service contracts for Venue Android tablets, but it will no longer sell or develop new hardware and will stop releasing software updates for current devices.

This means no more updates for relatively recent releases like the odd but relatively well-reviewed Venue 8 7000.

The move is part of a wider strategy shift at Dell, one in which it will "divest from the slate tablet market" in favor of convertibles, partly because "the tablet opportunity in big business has passed" (read: it can't sell enough of these at a high enough margin to make the effort worthwhile). Windows is a stronger choice for devices that spend all or most of their time attached to keyboard docks, since it offers a wider range of "professional" apps and is already accepted among and familiar the business and IT types that Dell is targeting with these products. Dell also takes a not-so-subtle swipe at a couple of recent Apple tablets, saying that "CIOs and IT administrators have to consider much more than just the word “Pro” and visual appeal of a device when deciding which products to deploy among their workforce."

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Report: Apple blocks Spotify app update after in-app subscription removal

Spotify claims that Apple is trying to boost its own subscription music service.

Enlarge / Spotify says Apple is using its privileged position to hurt Spotify's chances against Apple Music.

Apple Music has been around for about a year now, and despite being a little late to the game, Apple boasts that it has managed to pick up about 15 million paying subscribers. Spotify has at least twice that many users, but the company is worried that Apple is using its privileged position on iPads and iPhones to push Apple Music at the expense of third-party services.

According to a report from Recode, Apple has blocked an update to the iOS Spotify app, citing "business model rules." Spotify no longer offers iOS users the ability to subscribe to its Premium tier from within the app, a move which inconveniences users but more relevantly denies Apple its typical 30 percent cut of the revenue. The report claims this led directly to the new update being blocked, which according to Spotify's lawyers "raises serious concerns under both U.S. and EU competition law" and "[diminishes] the competitiveness of Spotify on iOS and as a rival to Apple Music."

The iOS Spotify app used to offer in-app subscriptions but charged users $12.99 instead of the standard $9.99 to compensate for Apple's cut. Spotify recently offered iOS users a three-month trial of Spotify for $0.99 if they signed up through Spotify's site rather than the app, but pressure from Apple prompted the company to remove that promotion and the in-app subscription option altogether.

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Compulab Fitlet-RM is a tiny, rugged PC for $311 and up

Compulab Fitlet-RM is a tiny, rugged PC for $311 and up

Compulab’s Fitlet line of computers are small and fanless. And the latest model is also ruggedized, for use in conditions where it might be exposed to dust, chock, or vibrations.

The Fitlet-RM computer measures about 4.3″ x 3.2″ x 0.9″and features a low-power AMD A10 Micro-6700T quad-core processor with Radeon R6 graphics and a pretty good range of ports, including up to four Gigabit Ethernet jacks.

Compulab is selling barebones models for $311 and up.

Continue reading Compulab Fitlet-RM is a tiny, rugged PC for $311 and up at Liliputing.

Compulab Fitlet-RM is a tiny, rugged PC for $311 and up

Compulab’s Fitlet line of computers are small and fanless. And the latest model is also ruggedized, for use in conditions where it might be exposed to dust, chock, or vibrations.

The Fitlet-RM computer measures about 4.3″ x 3.2″ x 0.9″and features a low-power AMD A10 Micro-6700T quad-core processor with Radeon R6 graphics and a pretty good range of ports, including up to four Gigabit Ethernet jacks.

Compulab is selling barebones models for $311 and up.

Continue reading Compulab Fitlet-RM is a tiny, rugged PC for $311 and up at Liliputing.