Amazon sees Alexa devices more than double in just one year

Found on CNet News on Monday, 06 January 2020
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The e-commerce titan announced Monday that there are now "hundreds of millions of Alexa-enabled devices" in customers' hands worldwide, a massive increase from the 100 million it announced last January.

One issue that may stifle Alexa's popularity is privacy. Amazon and other major voice developers faced mounting criticism last year for failing to let their users know they use human reviewers to listen to a small number of user recordings.

Ring, Amazon's video doorbell company, has also faced criticism for security lapses and its partnerships with local police departments.

Alexa can never be so good that should be considered to buy such a spying device.

Biden Suggests Coal Miners Learn to Code To Be Prepared for 'Jobs of the Future'

Found on Newsweek on Sunday, 05 January 2020
Browse Politics

The former vice president told an audience in Derry, New Hampshire, that coal miners could easily transition into programming jobs. "Anybody who can go down 300 to 3,000 feet in a mine, sure in hell can learn to program as well, but we don't think of it that way," he said.

"My liberal friends were saying, 'You can't expect them to be able to do that,'" Biden told his New Hampshire audience. "Gimme a break! Anybody who can throw coal into a furnace can learn how to program for God's sake."

This statement is so idiotic you're almost at a loss of words. With the same reasoning, they could learn to be doctors too; but would Biden allow one of them to do an operation on him? Probably not. He clearly has no idea what he is talking about and does not even in the slightest grasps the processes behind it. However, he could set an example and learn to program and deliver his amazing software to prove it is really all that simple. Or, more likely, he just fails to understand that data mining is not similar to coal mining.

Oracle copied Amazon’s API—was that copyright infringement?

Found on Ars Technica on Sunday, 05 January 2020
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Oracle has accused Google of infringing copyright law by copying the API of the Java programming language.

Oracle’s argument is that this “reimplementation” of the Java API is on par with writing an unauthorized “Harry Potter” novel and thus an infringement of Oracle’s copyrights in the command names and structures of the Java API.

Among the companies offering a copy of Amazon's S3 API is Oracle itself. In order to be compatible with S3, Oracle’s “Amazon S3 Compatibility API” copies numerous elements of Amazon’s API, down to the x-amz tags.

Leave it to Oracle to whine about abuse while doing the same to others.

Climate change: Last decade UK's 'second hottest in 100 years'

Found on BBC News on Friday, 03 January 2020
Browse Nature

Four new UK records were set last year alone, including the highest winter and summer temperatures ever recorded.

It said 2019 was provisionally the 11th warmest year on record, with a mean temperature of 9.42C, putting it just outside the top 10 - all of which have all occurred since 2002.

A government spokesman said climate change was a "national priority" and it was committed to increasing the momentum around environmental action.

As long as it's jus talk nothing will get better; and the vast majority of people will not change their own lifestyle but rely on others to fix it. So they can still receive daily parcels from online shopping with multiple delivery attempts because they are out, driving a few hundred meters to buy freshly imported oversea foods.

Disney+ Remove Multiple Titles Including Home Alone 1 & 2 In The United States

Found on What's on Disney Plus on Thursday, 02 January 2020
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It’s common for streaming services such as Hulu and Netflix to remove content at the end of the month, however Disney has said on many occasions that titles won’t be rotating on and off. But this doesn’t look to be the case.

Eventually existing streaming deals will expire and Disney+ won’t have this problem, but right now, Disney need to be much more transparent with what is planned to be removed and when.

The entertainment industry lied. Big surprise.

Chinese start-up Mobike loses more than 200,000 bikes

Found on BBC News on Wednesday, 01 January 2020
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In 2018, it pulled out of Manchester after a series of incidents.

In China, thousands of shared bikes have ended up in huge scrapheaps, leading to questions about whether there is demand for them.

Mobike also pulled out of Newcastle and Gateshead, after some bikes were dumped in the River Tyne.

Investors have backed dockless bike companies with hundreds of millions of pounds, but the business model for them has repeatedly been called into question.

Here the theory of easy and healthy transport meets realism. It would not be surprising if this business model even creates more CO2 than having people continue to use their current method of transport.

Unintended Perk of the Online Mattress Boom: Never-Ending Free Trials

Found on Slashdot on Tuesday, 31 December 2019
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"You could literally do this and never pay for a mattress," he realized. Online mattress sales are booming in the U.S.

To entice shoppers who would otherwise prefer to test the firmness of the mattress in the showroom, many of these online upstarts offer free home trials that can run for as long as a year. The customer typically pays for the mattress up front and gets a full refund if the mattress is returned before the cutoff.

This is the same year where everybody talks about protecting the environment, reducing waste and emissions. Then you have leeches like those people who just abuse the system to save money and create piles of trash, torpedoing he efforts of all others.

Internet shutdowns used to be rare. They're increasingly becoming the norm in much of the world

Found on CNN on Monday, 30 December 2019
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At the start of this year, as Zimbabwe cut off internet access across the country following anti-government protests, the internet pressure group Keep It On warned that such "shutdowns must never be allowed to become the new normal."

An ongoing internet blackout in Indian-controlled Kashmir is now the longest ever in a democracy -- at more than 135 days -- according to Access Now, an advocacy group that tracks internet freedom. Only the autocratic governments of China and junta-era Myanmar have cut off access for longer.

Silencing people has always been a mechanism of control. So it is not surprising that governments apply this to the internet. Some do it without being afraid of the publicity it causes, while others do it more secretly.

Facebook Messenger now requires a Facebook account to join

Found on Tech Input on Sunday, 29 December 2019
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If you want to sign up for Facebook Messenger, you can no longer escape Big Blue — you’ll need an account from now on. The company has stopped allowing new users to join using a phone number.

Facebook is working on unifying its suite of messaging apps including Messenger, Instagram, and WhatsApp, with the idea being that users will be able to message their friends no matter which app they’re using.

FB just keeps breaking promises it made in the past, so the best solution is never to sign up with it a all. There is nothing of value to be lost.

Trump could mandate free access to federally funded research papers

Found on Ars Technica on Saturday, 28 December 2019
Browse Science

The Trump White House is rumored to be working on a beefed-up open access mandate. The potential executive order would require all scientific papers that are based on federally funded research to be made available online free of charge as soon as they are published.

Supporters of the open access model question how much value traditional scientific publishers actually add. The peer-review process is typically carried out by working scientists on a volunteer basis. Meanwhile, you'd expect the Internet to reduce the costs of distributing scientific journals.

Paid by the public, free to the public. It's simple. If scientific magazines want research papers they can demand money for, they just should fund the research for those.