Author Archives: pappp

Google closes Stadia’s dedicated game studios after less than 2 years

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Well that obviously-doomed project is passing peak right on schedule.
Google's dedicated Stadia Games and Entertainment studios will soon shut down. Google has not confirmed whether former employees will be sent out while gliding on one of these Stadia-branded <em>PUBG</em> parachutes.

Enlarge / Google's dedicated Stadia Games and Entertainment studios will soon shut down. Google has not confirmed whether former employees will be sent out while gliding on one of these Stadia-branded PUBG parachutes. (credit: PUBG / Getty Images)

This isn't a typical entry in our long-running "Google kills product" series, but it's close enough: Google is shutting down its first-ever dedicated game studios, which had been founded as part of its beleaguered Google Stadia cloud-gaming service.

Kotaku editor Stephen Totilo confirmed the news on Monday ahead of Google posting its own formal statement on the matter, and it means Stadia Games and Entertainment will soon be no more, according to "one source familiar with Stadia operations." This move will impact the combined 150+ staffers for the endeavor, headquartered in both Montreal and Los Angeles. Google may rehire those staffers at other divisions.

One of those staffers, however, will not move to another Google division. Jade Raymond, the Assassin's Creed co-creator and Stadia's highest-profile hire who previously headed the studios, is no longer with Google.

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Ford says ‘millions’ of its vehicles will run on Google’s Android starting in 2023

Source: The Verge - All Posts

Photo by Sean O’Kane / The Verge

Ford is the latest automaker to turn its vehicle operating systems over to Google. The Dearborn, Michigan-based company said it will use Google’s Android to power the infotainment systems in “millions” of its cars starting in 2023. That means Google’s voice-activated Assistant, Google Maps, and other automotive-approved Android apps will be available in Ford’s cars without requiring the use of an Android smartphone.

The deep integration of Android will allow drivers and passengers to use Google Assistant to change things like climate settings, and it will also enable over-the-air updates that can add new features or address some maintenance issues, according to Ford. But iPhone people, don’t despair: Ford’s system will still be...

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‘It’s dead, Jim’: Torvalds marks Intel Itanium processors as orphaned in Linux kernel

Source: The Register

Article note: I've been watching Itanium be a industry-wide disaster for my entire adult life, it's the fail that keeps on failing.

Itanic sinks further beneath the waves

The Linux kernel will no longer support Intel Itanium processors following a decision by Linus Torvalds to merge a patch marking the architecture as orphaned.…

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CDC website built by Deloitte at a cost of $44M is abandoned due to bugs

Source: Hacker News

Article note: At the furthest reaches of "The greater the distance between the people making the procurement decisions and the people who will use it, the worse software will be," we have parasites like Deloitte and their counterparts in the federal government.
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Cory Doctorow: IP

Source: Hacker News

Article note: This is a superb take. Very slow-burning and historical to a super pertinent conclusion.
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Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal – Science Fictions

Source: Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal

Article note: This. Is. Majestic.


Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
If anyone's having deja vu, this was run in Nautilus magazine a while back. I'm linking to the amazon page where you can buy.


Today's News:
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Facebook is banning leftwing users like me – and it’s going largely unnoticed

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Good, maybe some of the ladder-pullers are noticing how bad a decision they're making. One of the scariest things I've seen in the last couple months is an assortment of people associated with movements who benefited enormously from organizing online while their cause was outside socially acceptable norms arguing that speech currently outside acceptable norms should be policed online. ...also, several of the bans in the article looks like perfectly reasonable incitement bans, so maybe this is still just "Censorship is good when applied to the enemy other, bad when applied to me and mine."
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How to improve your mask game amid the new COVID-19 strains

Source: The Week: Most Recent Home Page Posts

Article note: They're _finally_ fixing what has, IMO, been one of the biggest holes in pandemic messaging: talking about mask effectiveness. Do the best you can! Filter quality! Seal quality! Actually covering your disease holes!

"The discovery of highly transmissible coronavirus variants in the United States has public health experts urging Americans to upgrade the simple cloth masks that have become a staple shield during the pandemic," The Washington Post reports. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, suggested on Monday's NBC Today that people consider wearing two masks at the same time, explaining, "If you have a physical covering with one layer, you put another layer on, it just makes common sense that it likely would be more effective."

Experts suggest wearing a surgical mask underneath a cloth mask, assuming you don't have access to N95 or KN95 masks, which afford the most protection. Linsey Marr, an engineering professor at Virginia Tech and mask effectiveness researcher, told the Post that if you don't have access to surgical masks, you can create a protective three-layer mask by sandwiching a high-efficiency filter — like one cut from a vacuum bag — between two tightly woven fabric masks.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advises Americans to wear a tight-fitting masks with "two or more layers of washable, breathable fabric," and to leave surgical masks and N95 respirators for health care workers. Fauci appeared alongside new CDC Director Rochelle Walensky at a CNN town hall on Wednesday and advised people to follow the CDC guidelines. Walensky said N95s are uncomfortable and might turn people off of wearing masks entirely.

Many other countries have responded to the contagious new variants by mandating that people wear medical-grade masks in public — Europe's solution — or by mass-producing high-quality masks and shipping them directly to residents, as South Korea, Singapore, and other Asian nations have done, the Post reports. Some medical experts — and The Week's Ryan Cooper — say the Biden administration should consider following Asia's lead.

All available evidence "suggests two masks are likely more effective than a single mask," and "in situations where you are not able to social distance, you may want to double up by wearing a cloth mask over a surgical mask or two cloth masks," Jamie Ueda writes at Reviewed. But "if you already have trouble breathing while wearing one mask, adding another may not be the best option. The CDC notes wearing one mask is better than not wearing any face covering."

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Losing faith in UX

Source: Hacker News

Article note: The illustration of an angler-fish labeled "Business model" with it's head light-dangle labeled "UX" is a delightful summary of the situation.
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Rocky Linux gets a new sponsor, with $4m Series A funding

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Good for Greg!
Ctrl IQ provided us with this diagram of its proposed technology stack. (Thankfully, spelling correction is not one of the core services Ctrl IQ offers.)

Enlarge / Ctrl IQ provided us with this diagram of its proposed technology stack. (Thankfully, spelling correction is not one of the core services Ctrl IQ offers.) (credit: Ctrl IQ)

Gregory Kurtzer, co-founder of the now-defunct CentOS Linux distribution, has founded a new startup company called Ctrl IQ, which will serve in part as a sponsoring company for the upcoming Rocky Linux distribution.

Rocky Linux is to be a beneficiary of Ctrl IQ's revenue, not its source—the company describes itself in its announcement as the suppliers of a "full technology stack integrating key capabilities of enterprise, hyper-scale, cloud and high-performance computing."

About Rocky Linux

If you've been hiding under a Linux rock for the last few months, CentOS Linux was the most widely known and used clone of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Kurtzer co-founded CentOS Linux in 2004 with mentor Rocky McGaugh, and it operated independently for 10 years until being acquired by Red Hat in 2014. When Red Hat killed off CentOS Linux in a highly controversial December 2020 announcement, Kurtzer immediately announced his intention to recreate CentOS with a new distribution named after his deceased mentor.

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