California utility announces plan to shutter state’s last nuclear plant

The Diablo Canyon plant won’t apply for a license renewal.

The Diablo Canyon nuclear plant. (credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Nuclear power plants are the only current source of low-carbon electricity that can be built just about anywhere. But the Fukushima disaster has raised some significant questions about the wisdom of putting plants just anywhere. Now, after a decades-long battle, a plant in California that sits near several fault lines will not be relicensed when its current certifications expire in the middle of next decade. The decision will bring an end to nuclear power in the golden state, which has the most aggressive climate goals in the US.

At the time Fukushima occurred, California had two licensed nuclear reactors. But a faulty refurbishment had put the San Onofre in limbo; due to the uncertainty, its owners eventually decided to permanently shutter the plant. That left Diablo Canyon as the only operational plant in the state. That site had been controversial since before the plant was operational, as it is situated near several fault lines and on the coast; Fukushima did little to allay those fears.

Diablo Canyon's two reactors were scheduled to be relicensed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2024 and 2025. Now, in a deal negotiated between the utility and environmental groups, that relicensing won't occur. The deal calls for the lost generating power to be replaced by a mix of renewable energy, grid-scale storage, and efficiency measures.

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New FAA commercial drone rules require “pilot certificate”

FAA regulations met with applause by lawyers, calling them “good for pilots.”

A drone in flight during a race in the UK earlier this year. (credit: Dave Stock)

On Tuesday, the Federal Aviation Administration unveiled its long-anticipated rules for commercial use of small consumer drones. The rules call for a new "remote pilot certificate," a blanket ban on night flights, and a requirement that all flights remain below 400 feet or within 400 feet of a structure.

Under the new operational rules, which take effect in August 2016, drone pilots must be at least 16 years old or be supervised by an adult with a remote pilot certificate. The pilot must also maintain "visual line of sight" with the drone at all times, among other requirements. (Personal, or hobbyist, use rules remain unchanged.)

"This is a huge day for the industry!" Lisa Ellman, a drone lawyer with Hogan Lovells, told Ars. "Long term, this is going to be seen as a watershed moment—the flood gates will now be opened and drone use will be broadly authorized for commercial industry, so we can take advantage of all of their safety and efficiency benefits."

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Googling medical symptoms may no longer convince you that you’re dying

Searches will offer up reliable medical information above standard results.

(credit: Google)

If you ask the Internet what’s wrong with you when you’re not feeling well, it’s bound to break the news that you’ve probably got cancer or perhaps some rare, terminal disease. It doesn’t matter that you just have a mundane, generic symptom. You likely only have a few months left and you should start getting your affairs in order. Sincere condolences, poor Internet user.

With the Web brimming with such bum medical advice—alarming patients and irking doctors worldwide—Google is now rolling out new search tools to try to strip away the medical malarkey or at least shove it down deep in search results.

In the next few days, the Internet giant will be adding in new digital cards that should pop up above common results when you search for terms like “stomach ache” and “skin rash.” The cards are said to contain accurate medical information about common ailments, created with the help of doctors from Harvard Medical School and the Mayo Clinic.

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Tom Wheeler’s set-top box plan may be losing Democratic support

Commissioner Rosenworcel: Proposal has “real flaws,” should be changed.

A cable box, everybody's favorite piece of consumer equipment. (credit: Getty Images | Brian Finke)

The Federal Communications Commission plan to boost competition in the cable set-top box market may need some changes to shore up enough votes.

While Chairman Tom Wheeler and his Democratic majority led a 3-2 vote on the proposal in February, Democratic Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel is pushing for changes before it hits a final vote.

Now that the FCC has received public comments on the plan, "It has become clear the original proposal has real flaws and, as I have suggested before, is too complicated. We need to find another way forward," Rosenworcel said in a statement published by Broadcasting & Cable yesterday.

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Linux-Distribution: Fedora 24 ermöglicht grafische Upgrades

Die aktuelle Version 24 der Linux-Distribution Fedora ermöglicht es Nutzern, auch grafische Versionsupgrades durchzuführen. Außerdem ist die Snappy-Konkurrenz Flatpak enthalten und die Distribution nutzt GCC 6 als Standardcompiler. (Gnome, Fedora)

Die aktuelle Version 24 der Linux-Distribution Fedora ermöglicht es Nutzern, auch grafische Versionsupgrades durchzuführen. Außerdem ist die Snappy-Konkurrenz Flatpak enthalten und die Distribution nutzt GCC 6 als Standardcompiler. (Gnome, Fedora)

Google’s new two-factor authentication system: Tap “yes” to log in

Codes are for chumps. With Google’s new 2FA system, just tap on the pop up.


Google's two-factor authentication system (2FA) is a great way to secure your account, but in the past it has relied on codes from the Google Authenticator app or the presence of a USB security dongle. There's now a new method called "Google Prompt," which, like many other 2FA systems, just uses a simple push notification. When it's time to sign in, just enter your password, and you'll get a pop-up message on your phone asking you if you want to sign in. Press "yes," and you're in.

If you want to set this up yourself, just go to the "Security" section of your Google Account settings. Click on the "2-Step Verification" section, and there should be a new option called "Google Prompt." The option works on Android and iOS (provided you have an iPhone 5S or later). Of course Google recommends you have some kind of secure lock screen if you're going to use this feature, as is standard with other forms of phone-based 2FA. Enabling Google Prompt will automatically disable "Sign in with your phone," which used a similar prompt as a password replacement.

If you aren't using 2FA on your Google account, you have no excuse now, since the push notification makes 2FA faster and easier than ever.

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15 years later, new Ecco the Dolphin game leaks onto Dreamcast

Unearthed prototype may be Sega’s last project for the long-defunct system.

The Dreamcast Ecco sequel you never expected is now available as a prototype download. (credit: Hidden Palace)

You probably thought that Sega's official abandonment of the Dreamcast back in 2001 meant we wouldn't see any new, Sega-produced Ecco the Dolphin games for that system. If so, you thought wrong. That's because a newly unearthed prototype of the Dreamcast's cancelled Ecco II: Sentinels of the Universe has hit the Internet, more than 15 years after it was made.

The prototype build, uploaded by the game preservationists at Hidden Palace, is dated February 19, 2001, less than a month after Sega announced it would stop supporting the Dreamcast and step away from the hardware business for good. It comes to the Internet via a large lot of Ecco Dreamcast assets acquired by Hidden Palace, and the site promises "more exciting (and long overdue) [Ecco] stuff in the weeks to follow."

In addition to the ripped GD-ROM version, which is fully playable on PC Dreamcast emulators, Hidden Palace also released a self-boot CDI image that can be burned to disc and played on actual Dreamcast hardware (and hopefully on a real CRT television, for that authentic 2001 console gaming experience). We can thank the Dreamcast's extremely broken copy protection technology for that little wrinkle and for the widespread piracy that helped doom and/or popularize the system back in its day.

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Verbände: Neue Vectoring-Verordnung “aus dem Bonner Tulpenfeld”

Der neue Einigungsversuch der Bundesnetzagentur mit der EU-Kommission über das exklusive Vectoring der Telekom wird von den Wettbewerber-Verbänden verrissen. Der Ton wird noch schärfer. (Vectoring, DSL)

Der neue Einigungsversuch der Bundesnetzagentur mit der EU-Kommission über das exklusive Vectoring der Telekom wird von den Wettbewerber-Verbänden verrissen. Der Ton wird noch schärfer. (Vectoring, DSL)

Angeblicher Bitcoin-Erfinder: Craig Wright will die Blockchain patentieren

Er wollte der Bitcoin-Erfinder sein, jetzt will er die Kryptowährung offenbar besitzen – jedenfalls Patente, mit denen die Verwendung der Technik lizenziert werden könnte. Craig Wright hat in Großbritannien offenbar schon mehr 50 Patente angemeldet. (Blockchain, Tauschbörse)

Er wollte der Bitcoin-Erfinder sein, jetzt will er die Kryptowährung offenbar besitzen - jedenfalls Patente, mit denen die Verwendung der Technik lizenziert werden könnte. Craig Wright hat in Großbritannien offenbar schon mehr 50 Patente angemeldet. (Blockchain, Tauschbörse)

UE Boom speakers now have “voice integration” for Siri, Google voice search

UE Boom speakers now have “voice integration” for Siri, Google voice search

The Ultimate Ears UE Boom 2 and Megaboom are popular, well-reviewed cylindrical Bluetooth speakers that allow you to stream music from your phone, tablet, computer, or other gadgets without wires.

Their shape also makes them look a bit like Amazon’s Echo or Amazon Tap devices… and now you can UE’s speakers a lot like an Amazon Tap.

UE has rolled out a software update that lets you use the speakers to ask questions or send voice commands to Apple’s Siri or Google’s voice search digital assistants.

Continue reading UE Boom speakers now have “voice integration” for Siri, Google voice search at Liliputing.

UE Boom speakers now have “voice integration” for Siri, Google voice search

The Ultimate Ears UE Boom 2 and Megaboom are popular, well-reviewed cylindrical Bluetooth speakers that allow you to stream music from your phone, tablet, computer, or other gadgets without wires.

Their shape also makes them look a bit like Amazon’s Echo or Amazon Tap devices… and now you can UE’s speakers a lot like an Amazon Tap.

UE has rolled out a software update that lets you use the speakers to ask questions or send voice commands to Apple’s Siri or Google’s voice search digital assistants.

Continue reading UE Boom speakers now have “voice integration” for Siri, Google voice search at Liliputing.