Category Archives: News

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Armed Mexicans Were Smuggled In to Guard Border Wall, Whistle-Blowers Say

Source: NYT > World

Article note: Irony.

In a complaint unsealed on Friday, whistle-blowers working on President Trump’s wall said that contractors were illegally bringing in Mexican guards to protect construction sites.

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Uber abandons dreams of self-driving domination, sells self-driving unit

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: They bribed whole automation research groups out of academia with VC money they grifted on the hype cycle. They used self-driving hype as an advertised avenue to profitability that didn't require they own up to "mass exploitation of workers in unstable below minimum wage jobs." And they're out.
A casually dressed man stands in front of a large automobile.

Enlarge / Aurora CEO Chris Urmson in front of an Aurora semi truck. (credit: Aurora)

Aurora, one of the nation's leading self-driving startups, will become the new owner of Uber's self-driving division, Aurora announced on Monday. In addition to turning over Uber's self-driving division, known as the Uber Advanced Technology Group (ATG), Uber will also pump $400 million into Aurora.

In exchange, Uber will get a minority stake in Aurora and Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi will get a seat on Aurora's board.

The deal allows Uber to unload a self-driving division that has struggled to regain its footing ever since an Uber ATG vehicle struck and killed a pedestrian in March 2018. Uber shut down its on-road testing for several months after that incident, and the program has faced lingering public skepticism ever since. It's not clear if the deal will lead to layoffs at Uber ATG.

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Comic: Home Theater

Source: Penny Arcade

Article note: Every now and then the PA folks make a comic we'll be referring to for ages. I expect this one, reminding us that the dying remains of movie theaters were always horrible, will be one such.

New Comic: Home Theater

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Docker’s Second Death

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I'm getting a little "I told you so" out of this one. Docker's prominence always confused me because it was a bulky veneer over relatively straightforward OS features (possibly owing largely to Linux's slow-to-mature isolation features?). I'm still a little less than enthused about the level of adoption that containers have, because containers mostly only make sense if we've utterly failed at software, but...we have.
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Monopoly Technology Platforms Are Colonizing Education

Source: Hacker News

Article note: This is only the _new_ carpetbaggers, the publishers (see: Cengage) have been in that game for a long time. It's a market where the customers are two layers removed from the users (deanlets make the purchasing decisions, instructors tolerate, students suffer) so of course it's terrible and driven by risk-aversion. That said, _reliability_ and _consistency_ make the hand-rolled ed tech a problem - if students need a different platform for each class, you've created an unacceptable burden. If shit keeps breaking, it's a burden on the students.
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Legendary Science Fiction Author Ben Bova Has Passed At the Age of 88

Source: Slashdot

Article note: Aw. I really enjoyed his Grand Tour books. I didn't know he was still producing them into last year.

Ben Bova "was the author of more than 120 works of science fact and fiction," according to Wikipedia, and was also a six-time winner of the Hugo Award. "He was also president of both the National Space Society and the Science Fiction Writers of America." Tor.com reports Bova has passed "due to complications from COVID-19 and a stroke..." Born in 1932, Bova brought experience to the science fiction genre that few authors could match: he worked as a technical editor for the U.S.'s Project Vanguard, the first effort on the part of the country to launch a satellite into space in 1958. Bova went on to work as a science writer for Avco Everett Research Laboratory, which built the heat shields for the Apollo 11 module, putting man on the Moon and ensuring that science fiction would continue to increasingly define the future. It was around that time that Bova began writing and publishing science fiction. He published his first novel, The Star Conquerors, in 1959, and followed up with dozens of others in the following years, as well as numerous short stories that appeared in publications such as Amazing Stories, Analog Science Fact and Fiction, Galaxy Magazine, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and others. In 1971, he took over the helm of Analog following the death of its long-running editor, John W. Campbell Jr. — a huge task, given Campbell's influence on the genre to that point... From there, he became the first editor of Omni Magazine until 1982, and consulted on television shows such as The Starlost and Land of the Lost. While Bova wrote an episode of The Land of the Lost, his best-known works "involved plausible sciences about humanity's expansion into the universe, looking at how we might adapt to live in space..." notes Tor. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction argues that "the straightforwardness of Bova's agenda for humanity may mark him as a figure from an earlier era; but the arguments he laces into sometimes overloaded storylines are arguments it is important, perhaps absolutely vital, to make."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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About Google’s approach to research publication – Jeff Dean

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Man, my expectation that tech companies are doing shady shit and my expectation that professional victims are doing shady shit are having a hard time with this one. On one hand, the review situation sounds hinky. On the other hand, "Tell me everyone who had input on not approving my work or I quit" being met with "OK, Bye" sounds ...reasonable.
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FlashFloppy: Open-source Firmware for floppy emulators

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Have a gotek flashed with this, it's delightful. Highly recommend.
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Digital Tools I Wish Existed

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oof, yes, so much. IMO, Google Reader was the closest ever to exist, but the very fact that it was murdered by a single vendor because it interfered with advertising and "curation" rendered it a non-solution even before it died. I have a self-hosted substitute rigged with TinyTinyRSS and Wordpress and such, but the ecosystem isn't even close. As the article notes, it's not a new need, Vannevar Bush was on this idea by 1945 with the Memex, but it's not good for commercial exploitation, so we never get it.
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Comcast to enforce 1.2TB data cap in entire 39-state territory in early 2021

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: It's just _such_ a dick move. During a pandemic, causing heightened usage, which has also demonstrated that their network can handle the load. Our local cable monopoly was eaten Insight -> Time Warner -> Spectrum making it part of the Charter regional monopoly, which is fortunately not _these_ assholes.
Illustration of a Comcast Internet user being yanked away from a computer monitor and other equipment.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty Images)

Comcast's 1.2TB monthly data cap is coming to 12 more states and the District of Columbia starting January 2021. The unpopular policy was already enforced in most of Comcast's 39-state US territory over the past few years, and the upcoming expansion will for the first time bring the cap to every market in Comcast's territory.

Comcast will be providing some "courtesy months" in which newly capped customers can exceed 1.2TB without penalty, so the first overage charges for these customers will be assessed for data usage in the April 2021 billing period.

Comcast's data cap has been imposed since 2016 in 27 of the 39 states in Comcast's cable territory. The cap-less parts of Comcast's network include Northeastern states where the cable company faces competition from Verizon's un-capped FiOS fiber-to-the-home broadband service.

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