Star Trek: Bridge Crew lets you go where no man has gone before (in VR)

Four-player co-op with tactical, helm, engineering, or captain roles—the game is awesome.

There's nerding out, and then there's playing Star Trek: Bridge Crew. But oh man is four-player VR co-op fun. (video link)

When you've spent the best part of your day playing collectible card games with a man cosplaying as Geralt from The Witcher, it takes a special something to make you feel like maybe, just maybe, you're a bit too nerdy. That special something is Ubisoft's Star Trek: Bridge Crew, a four-player VR co-op game for the Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, and PlayStation VR that lets you live the dream of captaining a Federation starship through deep space. Even the most hardened of Star Trek haters are going to love this.

Star Trek: Bridge Crew puts you in one of four roles: Captain, Helm, Tactical, or Engineering. If you're playing on your own, AI fills in for the other roles, but ideally you want to find a group of well-heeled friends with enough disposable income to buy both a great gaming PC and a VR headset (at least until PS VR comes out). From there, invite everyone over to your place and have one big nerdy Star Trek: Bridge Crew LAN party. That, not so coincidentally, is the exact setup on show at E3 2016.

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Halo Wars 2 beta shows there’s work left to do

Microsoft chips away at the console RTS; bringing PC players in hasn’t helped.

There are all kinds of problems associated with the console real-time strategy (RTS) game, as the original Halo Wars demonstrated with aplomb back in 2009. The limitations of a control pad compared to a mouse and keyboard make camera movement and unit selection difficult. RTS games are typically more reliant on the CPU than GPU, so processing power is limited. And because RTS games have never really had much success on console, there's far more hand-holding required to relay the basics to players. Despite its problems, though, Halo Wars was workable enough to be a somewhat fun entry into what is a fiendishly difficult genus to crack.

Now Halo Wars 2 will opt for an even more difficult task: a simultaneous release across Xbox One and PC. No longer can the design team overlook mouse and keyboard users in favour of the pad player. In theory, both sets must be catered for equally; in practice, as I sat down to play a beta version on an Xbox One, that's not the case yet.

For the most part, this is a game that—eight months before launch, at least—has the same wider feel as its predecessor. Simplicity is the priority. Radial menus are still used to expand your base, construct vehicles, and train troops, while the units themselves have a wide footprint in order to make them easier to select using the analogue stick. There's also the returning Halo visual style, of course—a mishmash of sci-fi military and alien tech. Base management here is considerably more limited than other games in the genre.

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Company Uses DMCA to Censor and Expose Critical Blogger

Marketing and sales company Smart Circle is using the DMCA to uncover the identity of a critical blogger. The company obtained a subpoena directed at WordPress, stating that the blogger in question violates their copyrights by publishing modified images of its key employees.

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

smartcircleAs one of the leading blog platforms, WordPress.com receives thousands of DMCA takedown requests every year.

The company is known to carefully inspect all notices and has a track record of defending its users against DMCA abuse. In addition, it regularly highlights the worst offenders in its own “Hall of Shame.”

This week WordPress.com is facing a challenge of a different kind, as a court-ordered DMCA subpoena requires them to expose the identity of a user following allegations of copyright infringement.

The user in question runs the weblog “The Devil Corp,” which is extremely critical of the marketing and sales company Smart Circle, as well as several related entities.

“This consortium profits by exploiting its employees and they’ll work you like a farm animal and give you nothing for your time,” the blog reads.

“They offer slave hours for slave wages disguised as an opportunity for financial freedom and their ‘owners’ are nothing more than professional dream sellers who’ll do anything to keep you around as long as possible. Drug dealers deserve more respect.”

These are harsh words, no doubt, but freedom of speech goes a long way in the United States. That said, it hasn’t prevented Smart Circle from targeting the blog via another route.

Late December, Smart Circle asked WordPress.com to remove various infringing images, which were copied from the company’s own website. The images in question were photos of some of Smart Circle’s key employees.

The photos were swiftly removed by WordPress, a decision the blog owner didn’t protest. Instead, he uploaded modified versions of the original, portraying the employees in a devilish manner.

“Although the inclusion of those pictures was clearly fair use, I thought it best not to trouble the justice system and instead altered them in a satirical manner,” the blogger notes.

Smart Circle parody/critique

smartcircle

After a few months passed, Smart Circle sent WordPress.com another DMCA takedown request, targeting the modified images. This time, however, WordPress.com left them online.

Not pleased with this decision, Smart Circle asked the court for a DMCA subpoena against the blog owner, which a clerk has now signed off on. This means that the company can compel WordPress.com to hand over the personal details of the blog owner.

wpsubpoena

TorrentFreak contacted WordPress.com’s parent company Automattic, who inform us that they have yet to be served.

“At the time of writing we have not been served with this subpoena. If and when we are, we’ll assess the available options at that point,” the company says.

Given the fact that WordPress.com didn’t comply with the DMCA request, it’s likely that the company will protest the subpoena.

The present case is relevant considering the recent discussions about DMCA abuse. Many independent content creators and digital rights activists have complained about various forms of abuse and threats in recent weeks.

While Smart Circle hasn’t crossed the line here (from a legal perspective at least), one can doubt whether DMCA subpoenas are meant to expose critics in cases like these, where fair use appears to be a reasonable defense.

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

Calculating the costs of adding storage to renewables

For tech other than batteries, the economics look good right now.

A dam with a pumped hydro storage reservoir in Pennsylvania. (credit: Army Corps of Engineers)

The two fastest growing sources of renewable energy, wind and solar, are intermittent—they don't always generate power when you need them to. The obvious solution is to add storage, like batteries, to shift some of the electricity to when demand is highest. Elon Musk is betting a Gigafactory that consumers are going to be interested in doing this, while California has mandated that 1.3 gigawatts of storage be added to the power grid before the decade is out.

But there are a number of different types of storage, each of which has distinctive properties: how fast electrons can be shuffled in and out, how easy it is to expand the storage capacity, and so on. All of these have different costs, and figuring out what storage is most economically viable is a serious challenge.

Three academics from MIT have decided to take up that challenge. They've tried to calculate when it makes economic sense to add storage to renewable projects in three different locations in the US. Their analysis indicates the finances among options are similar right now, but only for options other than batteries.

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Open access: All human knowledge is there—so why can’t everybody access it?

We paid for the research with taxes, and Internet sharing is easy. What’s the hold-up?

(credit: Diliff)

In 1836, Anthony Panizzi, who later became principal librarian of the British Museum, gave evidence before a parliamentary select committee. At that time, he was only first assistant librarian, but even then he had an ambitious vision for what would one day became the British Library. He told the committee:

I want a poor student to have the same means of indulging his learned curiosity, of following his rational pursuits, of consulting the same authorities, of fathoming the most intricate inquiry as the richest man in the kingdom, as far as books go, and I contend that the government is bound to give him the most liberal and unlimited assistance in this respect.

He went some way to achieving that goal of providing general access to human knowledge. In 1856, after 20 years of labor as Keeper of Printed Books, he had helped boost the British Museum's collection to over half a million books, making it the largest library in the world at the time. But there was a serious problem: to enjoy the benefits of those volumes, visitors needed to go to the British Museum in London.

Imagine, for a moment, if it were possible to provide access not just to those books, but to all knowledge for everyone, everywhere—the ultimate realisation of Panizzi's dream. In fact, we don't have to imagine: it is possible today, thanks to the combined technologies of digital texts and the Internet. The former means that we can make as many copies of a work as we want for vanishingly small cost; the latter provides a way to distribute those copies to anyone with an Internet connection. The global rise of low-cost smartphones means that "anyone with an Internet connection" will soon include even the poorest members of society in every country.

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Deals of the Day (6-17-2016)

Deals of the Day (6-17-2016)

The Google Nexus 5X smartphone has a list price of $349 and up, but it’s been pretty much constantly on sale for the past few months.

But right now B&H is offering one of the best deals I’ve seen in a while: you can pick up a model with 16GB of storage for just $230. Sure, that’s not a lot of storage space for a phone that has no microSD card slot, but several stores are also selling 32GB models for $40 more.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (6-17-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (6-17-2016)

The Google Nexus 5X smartphone has a list price of $349 and up, but it’s been pretty much constantly on sale for the past few months.

But right now B&H is offering one of the best deals I’ve seen in a while: you can pick up a model with 16GB of storage for just $230. Sure, that’s not a lot of storage space for a phone that has no microSD card slot, but several stores are also selling 32GB models for $40 more.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (6-17-2016) at Liliputing.

Kabelnetz: Gesetz für Einspeisegebühr von ARD und ZDF dürfte kommen

Bund und Länder wollen ermöglichen, dass ein angemessenes Entgelt für Übertragungspflichten von den Fernsehsendern ARD und ZDF vereinbart werden kann. Für die TV-Kabelnetzbetreiber geht es um 60 Millionen Euro. (Unitymedia, Kabel Deutschland)

Bund und Länder wollen ermöglichen, dass ein angemessenes Entgelt für Übertragungspflichten von den Fernsehsendern ARD und ZDF vereinbart werden kann. Für die TV-Kabelnetzbetreiber geht es um 60 Millionen Euro. (Unitymedia, Kabel Deutschland)

Android: ADW Launcher kehrt mit Betaversion zurück

Der ADW Launcher gehört zu den bekanntesten alternativen Benutzeroberflächen für Android – in den vergangenen Jahren wurde die App aber nicht mehr aktualisiert. Jetzt meldet sich das Entwicklerteam mit einer Betaversion zurück, die zahlreiche neue Funktionen bietet. (Android, Softwareentwicklung)

Der ADW Launcher gehört zu den bekanntesten alternativen Benutzeroberflächen für Android - in den vergangenen Jahren wurde die App aber nicht mehr aktualisiert. Jetzt meldet sich das Entwicklerteam mit einer Betaversion zurück, die zahlreiche neue Funktionen bietet. (Android, Softwareentwicklung)

VLC 3.0 nightlies arrive with (sort of working) Chromecast support

It’s still under construction, but soon VLC will stream local media to a Chromecast.

Streaming online content to a Chromecast is fast and easy, but what if you have local files on your desktop that you want to get on the big screen? There are a few niche apps out there that will serve, but one of the biggest media players, VLC, is working on built-in support for Google's Chromecast. Recently the nightly build servers started pumping out early, unstable builds of VLC with Chromecast support, so I gave it a try.

You won't find the familiar "cast" button that you see in many apps in this VLC build. Instead, the "Tools" menu has a new option called "Render Output"—this screen is for playing media on something other than the computer screen in front of you. It will detect and display Chromecasts on your local network, and the detection process seems to work great. You just pick the device you want to use and hit "OK."

If you're playing media you'll need to stop it, and then once you hit play the casting process should start. I got an "unknown certificate" error at first, but, after accepting it, the usual Chromecast stuff started to happen. My TV turned on and switched to the right input. A Chromecast logo appeared, the loading bar popped up—and then it failed.

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Like Comcast, Google Fiber now forces customers into arbitration

Fiber customers have three more weeks to opt out of binding arbitration clause.

(credit: Getty Images | Digital-Saint)

Google Fiber's new terms add a clause familiar to subscribers of other large Internet service providers: customers who want to sue the company must now instead submit to arbitration.

The Google Fiber terms were updated last week with a note that they now "require the use of binding arbitration to resolve disputes rather than jury trials or class actions." While the clause allows cases in small claims court, it otherwise forces customers to waive the right to bring legal actions against the ISP. Arbitration must be sought on an individual basis, as the clause also prevents class arbitration.

The previous terms of service did not have the binding arbitration clause, though they did limit Google Fiber's liability to the amount customers pay to use the services. (The Consumerist published an article on the change yesterday.)

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