Gamestop: Nintendo’s next system will support physical retail games

NX won’t be the first major home console to go download-only.

Since its off-handed announcement more than a year ago, Nintendo has released precious few details about its upcoming NX console, currently set for a March release. That has left the press to speculate wildly about "the new hardware system with a brand-new concept."

That's also why it qualifies as news when GameStop CEO Paul Raines confirms publicly that, yes, NX will sell games on physical media, just like pretty much every other home console ever made.

Raines' statement in a recent earnings conference call comes about a year after patent-filing-based rumors suggested the NX might eschew retail games entirely in favor of a download-based business model. Don't believe everything you read, Raines said.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Tonight’s Decoded doc shows how much Mr. Robot outclasses CSI Cyber-types

Special tries to offer something for both n00bs and series diehards.

Season 2 trailer for Mr. Robot.

"You can't turn on the TV or read the newspaper without hearing about a corporate hack," actor Rami Malek tells the camera; maybe he is an Ars reader after all. The Mr. Robot star appears almost immediately in Mr. Robot Decoded, a one-off documentary airing tonight on USA (11:05pm ET). But unlike the series at large, Malek isn't the star here. Writers and technical experts from the show's staff take center stage with TV critics and real-life security professionals. Their goal isn't to overthrow virtual financial prisons à la the show's "fsociety" hacker collective; they just want everyone to know more about Mr. Robot's subject matter and to realize how exceptional the show is at depicting and predicting real-world drama.

Decoded does well to include a handful of notable names: Jeff Moss (DefCon founder), Lance James (chief scientist at Flashpoint), and Peiter "Mudge" Zatko (leader of the L0ght hacker collective who later joined DARPA) all chime in on various topics. A lot of the extremely technical nerding out may have been left for the cutting room floor, however. These experts instead lay out many of the basics for the world depicted in the show: What is hacking? What's a DDoS? How come password cracking seems so easy? The special spends equal time relaying network news-level detail on major events like Apple v. FBI, the Ashley Madison hack, and the Sony data dumps. (It's a lot of old-hat stuff for Ars readers.)

In this sense, Decoded works best as a recruiting tool to get non-tech-savvy friends up to speed enough to appreciate the relevance and tech mindfulness of Mr. Robot as opposed to something like CSI CyberThe documentary seemingly acknowledges this target audience, too. It starts with a brief (and major, spoiler-free) plot recap of season one to introduce major characters and explain the worldview of Elliot Alderson. Series stars like Portia Doubleday (Angela), Christian Slater (Mr. Robot), and Malek appear interspersed between the technical discussions to praise the storytelling and explain how much they learn through osmosis on set. Series creator Sam Esmail even chuckles in victory after Malek and Carly Chaikin (Darlene) proudly declare they now tape their webcams.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Solar Impulse leaves New York, heads for Spain

Two-thirds of the way around the planet, and still going.

Moving the plane was a manual affair, and it was rolled sideways rather than forward. (credit: John Timmer)

Early Monday morning, Solar Impulse 2 left John F. Kennedy Airport in New York on its attempt to cross the Atlantic as part of its 'round-the-world flight. The solar-powered craft is expected to take four days to make its way to Seville, Spain. This leg features Bertrand Piccard at the controls after fellow pilot André Borschberg brought the craft into New York.

As of noon Eastern Standard Time, the craft was eight percent of the way through its journey, which will take it northeast along the US and Canadian coasts to Newfoundland, after which it will turn southeast to head more directly to Spain. After starting the flight on battery power, the craft has largely recharged its batteries as it continues to climb above a kilometer in altitude.

Progress of the flight can be monitored at the Solar Impulse website.

Read on Ars Technica | Comments

UEFA Cracks Down on ‘Pirate’ Euro Cup Streams

Now that the Euro Cup is well underway, UEFA and its partners have started cracking down on the many unauthorized streams that are being broadcasted online. Despite their efforts, it seems to be a game that they can’t possibly win.

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

uefa2016logoWith a daily audience of tens of millions of people, the 2016 UEFA Euro Cup in France is one of the largest sporting events of the year.

While football is considered to be a game of the people, UEFA is carefully controlling who can watch what, when and where.

One of the thorns in the side of the football organization and its rightsholders are unauthorized live streams. These streams have become quite common, and offer people a chance to follow the various matches without having to pay for a subscription.

Over the past week UEFA and its partners have targeted several sites offering such streams. They includes several Google Blogspot blogs that are specifically setup to stream sports events.

TorrentFreak has checked several UEFA notices that were addressed to Blogspot and found that none of the pages were taken down. However, the live feeds on these sites are no longer available, which means that there is no infringing activity either.

uefablogspot

This also signals one of the problems sports broadcasters often have to deal with. Due to the live nature of their “works” the actual takedowns have to be pretty much instant. After all, when a match has ended it’s already too late.

Some UEFA Euro Cup rightsholders have tried to address this by sending advance notices to various sites. However, for site owners it is hard to take something down that doesn’t yet exists.

Various torrent sites therefore refused to take pre-preemptive action, and Google hasn’t responded yet to a similar pre-piracy request.

In addition to various specialized live streaming portals, the UEFA Euro Cup and other events are also more frequently shared on social media. Apps such as Periscope make is very easy for people to stream and watch these events and despite the horrible quality, some get hundreds or thousands of views.

UEFA has previously gone after Periscope streams of other events and some recent Euro Cup streams have disappeared as well, suggesting that the football organization is keeping a close eye on these social streams too.

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

10 million-core supercomputer hits 93 petaflop/s, tripling speed record

There’s a new world’s fastest supercomputer for the first time in three years.

The Sunway TaihuLight supercomputer at the National Supercomputing Center in Wuxi, China. (credit: Top500.org)

A Chinese supercomputer called Sunway TaihuLight now ranks as the world's fastest, nearly tripling the previous supercomputer speed record with a rating of 93 petaflops per second. That's 93 quadrillion floating point operations per second (or 93 million billion).

Sunway TaihuLight surpassed another Chinese supercomputer, Tianhe-2, which had been the world's fastest for three consecutive years with speeds of 33.9 petaflop/s, according to the latest Top500.org ranking released today. Top500 rankings are based on the Linpack benchmark, which requires each cluster "to solve a dense system of linear equations."

"Sunway TaihuLight, with 10,649,600 computing cores comprising 40,960 nodes, is twice as fast and three times as efficient as Tianhe-2," the Top500 announcement said. Sunway TaihuLight is one of the world's most efficient systems, with "peak power consumption under load (running the HPL benchmark)... at 15.37MW, or 6 Gflops/Watt."

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Streaming: Twitch geht gegen gefälschte Zuschauer vor

Wer Spiele-Streams oder sonstige Sendungen auf Twitch sieht, muss ein echter Mensch sein – bei vielen Zuschauern handelt es sich jedoch stattdessen um Bots. Jetzt hat Twitch Klage gegen mehrere Anbieter von View- und Follow-Bots eingereicht. (Twitch, A…

Wer Spiele-Streams oder sonstige Sendungen auf Twitch sieht, muss ein echter Mensch sein - bei vielen Zuschauern handelt es sich jedoch stattdessen um Bots. Jetzt hat Twitch Klage gegen mehrere Anbieter von View- und Follow-Bots eingereicht. (Twitch, Amazon)

Huawei Matebook launches in the US July 11th for $699 and up

Huawei Matebook launches in the US July 11th for $699 and up

The Huawei Matebook is a 12 inch Windows tablet with a high-resolution display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and support for an optional keyboard cover and an optional digital pen.

First unveiled in February, Huawei has now announced that the Matebook is coming to America starting July 11th.

It’ll be available from the Microsoft Store for $699 and up… with an emphasis on up if you want all the available bells and whistles.

Continue reading Huawei Matebook launches in the US July 11th for $699 and up at Liliputing.

Huawei Matebook launches in the US July 11th for $699 and up

The Huawei Matebook is a 12 inch Windows tablet with a high-resolution display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and support for an optional keyboard cover and an optional digital pen.

First unveiled in February, Huawei has now announced that the Matebook is coming to America starting July 11th.

It’ll be available from the Microsoft Store for $699 and up… with an emphasis on up if you want all the available bells and whistles.

Continue reading Huawei Matebook launches in the US July 11th for $699 and up at Liliputing.

Fairphone 2 gets a little more fair thanks to conflict-free minerals

Some smartphone shoppers are looking for phones with the best possible specs, a software experience that meets their needs, or an attractive price point. But there are at least some people interested in a phone that puts ethical considerations front an…

Fairphone 2 gets a little more fair thanks to conflict-free minerals

Some smartphone shoppers are looking for phones with the best possible specs, a software experience that meets their needs, or an attractive price point. But there are at least some people interested in a phone that puts ethical considerations front and center.

The Fairphone 2 is easy to take apart and repair, in order to let you hold onto your phone for longer. A portion of the sales price goes to a worker welfare fund that helps the people who actually manufacture the device.

Continue reading Fairphone 2 gets a little more fair thanks to conflict-free minerals at Liliputing.

Trademark dispute with Sky broadcasting sought name change for No Man’s Sky

Dispute ends after “three years of secret stupid legal nonsense.”

Did you think that the highly anticipated, procedurally generated space exploration game No Man's Sky was in any way related to British telecommunications and broadcasting giant Sky? Of course you didn't. But it apparently took the legal system three years to come to the same conclusion.

That's according to Sean Murray, managing director of No Man's Sky maker Hello Games. Over the weekend, Murray tweeted that the company had settled a legal dispute with Sky over the game's name after "3 years of secret stupid legal nonsense." In a follow-up tweet, he added that "this is the same folks who made Microsoft change Skydrive to Onedrive... so it was pretty serious." ("On the plus side perhaps this is the real reason Skynet never happened..." he joked)

Sky did indeed go after Microsoft's Skydrive back in 2014, forcing an abrupt name change from the massive company. Last year, Sky also took legal action against Microsoft's Skype, arguing that the service's logo looked like a cloud "and thus may readily be associated with the word 'sky.'" A European court eventually agreed with that argument.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments