VPN where you don't control both endpoints is not a VPN, by definition.
What these companies are offering are only glorified traffic tunneling services and proxies, not a true private network. Good for bypassing region restrictions on stuff like Netflix but not for anything where privacy is actually required.
Guys, before you go crazy fixing your CVs, do make sure you look at what permissions the app wants.
You need to register either by your Github - or your LinkedIn account. And it wants access to your private data, like e-mails, contacts, etc. Oh and it has your entire CV to boot - all that for a rather dubious benefit that any HR agency will do for you for free.
That only means that the product actually somewhat works and is not only a load of marketing hype. That is not really any endorsement and a pretty damning remark, in fact.
Also, Magic Leap is hardly a competitor of Oculus - they are not even in the same market. AR *does not* compete with or replace VR, they serve totally different purposes and applications (and also the price bracket is completely elsewhere).
Oculus doesn't have anything AR related in their portfolio, AFAIK.
Here we are talking about replacing a proven (albeit expensive) method with a cheap computer on board of the rocket.
Those computers have always been there in the past, the range safety explosives (and any eventual rescue systems in the case of manned flights - e.g. the Apollo/Soyuz escape towers) could have been either triggered automatically when the electronics detected an anomalous deviation from the pre-programmed path OR remotely by a human from the ground should something have gone so wrong that the computer didn't (or couldn't - e.g. the Challenger explosion where the errant boosters were destroyed from the ground after the fuel tank explosion destroyed the orbiter) handle it.
The system was designed with redundancy in mind. Now we are cutting one side of that redundancy to save costs. If you work in safety systems, you certainly know that there are plenty of examples from the past where such simplification and cost savings have costed lives - e.g. the infamous Therac 25 (hw interlocks replaced with software - several people dead from radiation overdoses and many more injured), original DC 10 cargo door design where the elements indicating whether the door was safe or not were changed to show only whether it was "supposed" to be safe and not an actual position of the interlocking (door blew out at altitude, causing an airplane crash that killed 300+ people), plenty of railway accidents have been caused by a loss of redundancy in the signalling systems over the years, etc.
It doesn't take that much imagination to envision a situation where e.g. an unfortunate lightning strike knocks the computers irrecoverably offline (freak accidents that shouldn't happen but they do - e.g Apollo 12 where they got uber lucky). And now you can only watch as those 500 tons of steel and explosive fuel are going to uncontrollably land somewhere, with no way to do anything about it.
Could the current method be made less expensive? Most likely, the airforce (or military in general) are rarely concerned with doing things in a cost effective way. But taking the human out of the loop completely? That doesn't sound like such a smart idea. His role is not to be reliable (that's the computer's job) but to guard against the unexpected.
Actually the Windows Firewall has a similar problem too.
You launch an application, it starts executing and communicating over the network - while the firewall pop-up asking the user for permission to access network is up. However, the application is communicating already!
This is easily visible with Wireshark, for example.
It boggles the mind why Microsoft thought that this is actually an useful feature...
There may not be a lot of retail market where margins are thin and development costs are exorbitant, but industrial market for VR is booming. We are literally turning down projects, because we have enough work.
Oculus' mistake is in focusing purely on the consumer retail - where $800 + $2000 for a PC is a tough sell, no matter what they do. For an industrial client used to pay $20-40k for an HMD *without* tracking it is an absolute steal, allowing a company to equip their worker training center for peanuts.
Valve & HTC understood this and are developing special business-oriented offers.
And I am not speaking about high end stuff like flight simulators or military (those rarely use HMDs anyway). I am speaking about blue collar workers training to operate machinery making car tires, making engine blocks or windshields - all for household brand companies I cannot name, unfortunately.
Or psychologists treating various phobias and anxieties. And those were examples only from a few of our recent projects.
Actually, even 3D TVs are useful for this - if we could actually find one that is actually sold with the glasses! Most stores don't stock and don't order them anymore, so we have to work with projectors instead.
You mean someone actually buys a *laptop* that is locked to only Windows Store?
What would be the point of doing that? If I buy a Windows laptop, I want to be able to run my own applications, not only what is in the Store (which isn't a lot).
This is not a laptop but a locked down disposable tablet with a keyboard (even the battery isn't replaceable - talk about planned obsolescence!)
Hmm, they could have used inductive sensing/power as Wacom does since eons ago and completely eliminated the need for a battery or even a separate radio in that mouse (the Wacom ones communicate using the same signal that keeps them powered). The mouse would have been lighter too - some Logitech wireless mice are literally bricks with significant momentum due to their weight, making them very tiresome to use over longer periods.
Of course, you can't use the Wacom mouse outside of the tablet surface but I guess that is a moot point here - the Logitech charging pad is meant to be the mousepad too.
Right now Logitech has managed to replace one annoyance (running out of battery) in a wireless mouse with an even larger one - proprietary charger that takes up a ton of space on your desk. Oh and it costs $150 - for a mouse!
Not really, there is plenty of open source drone firmware and controller boards that is both more capable and not crippled by stuff like geofencing around already. And there has been plenty of it before DJI even started to sell their toys. DJI didn't invent a multicopter nor were the first to put camera on it.
This will do nothing for any software development - most people buying these things are amateur/semipro filmmakers that don't know how (and don't want) to tinker with the radios or firmware.
And then rich 'bros who want to show off and do stupid things like filming neighbors or planes near airports and at the same time aren't competent enough to put together their own.
Ehm, how is a "flying car" - which, in the current incarnations that actually are able to fly, really means a roadable airplane, including the requirements to have a pilot license and flight training - different from renting/stealing a Cessna from the nearest general aviation airport and smashing it somewhere?
The entire point of the IS calling for use of cars was because *anyone* can drive one and they are trivial to obtain. Neither of which is true when it comes to anything flying.
I somehow don't see this happening again since 9/11 - could that be because it is simply too complex, costly, risky and inefficient at actually causing mayhem?
But the terrorism bogeyman is so convenient for getting eyeballs and clicks...
That. Or simply retrieved the content from some temporary file/cache/whatever Whatsapp uses. Another possibility is that they simply got the content from whoever the message was sent to - which would explain the "human intelligence" (aka interrogating someone) part.
Who the f... thought that this is a good idea? That e.g. a woman would want to have her potentially naked photos "in the cloud"?
Oh and how long until this gets hacked and the juicy pictures leaked/sold? Amazon didn't take the lesson from the phone hacking scandal in the UK? This sort of device/service would be a goldmine for stalkers, creeps and tabloids hunting for juicy dirt.
They were replacing the faulty batteries with the same type (= same dimensions & capacity), only from a more recent batch, because the original suspicion was a battery manufacturing problem, not a design issue with the phone itself. Remember the Sony laptops catching fire few years ago because of defective batteries?
So the conclusion is still plausible, because the replacement batteries have never fixed the underlying design issue - essentially equivalent of the iPhone's "bendgate", unfortunately with much worse consequences.
I am only surprised that Slashdot caught wind of this only now, this hypothesis has been around pretty much since Samsung has anounced the recall.
This article once again ignores the elephant in the room - which is that 99.9% of consumers do not need to manufacture stuff at home.
It is both easier, faster, cheaper and better quality to buy it at the store.
It was the journalistic hype about a "revolution" that was supposed to come that fueled the rise of Makerbot and now those same journalists are crucifying the company for not being able to deliver on something the company didn't even originally target. It is ridiculous.
That's not to say that Makerbot didn't commit a ton of mistakes and howlers, alienating both their customers and investors. But that has little to do with any "revolution".
It is the same hype BS we see with autonomous cars, with AI, with virtual reality and many other things - journalists writing about things they barely understand based on corporate press releases and extrapolating far beyond of what the technology can actually do, because they don't understand neither the tech, nor basic economy.
On the other hand, when looking beyond the uncritical hype and the notion that everyone will have a printer at home, 3D printing is fine and sound - there are plenty of other manufacturers than Makerbot who make good and affordable printers. However, it is now a mature technology that people who need it have and use already and the most of the rest doesn't really care about. Same as CNC machining or laser cutting or whatever. It is not the "new shiny" frontpage material anymore.
The bigger problem is what happens when the SSD fails.
SSDs are components with limited life (flash has limited amount of write cycles), so that is a planned obsolescence built-in right there.
Replacing the SSD will mean either a very expensive Apple service intervention, or, more likely, a new notebook. Which was likely the idea from the start...
I am no Samsung lover, but sorry, that article is BS.
Insinuating that the model is "compromised" because of one freak accident and no other information (such as whether the phone had original battery or has been charged using original charger vs. some cheap fake Chinese special before) it is just sensationalism. There are millions of possible reasons why that could have happened and none related to a manufacturing fault.
I am in France and cheap and unsafe chargers are ubiquitious here, carried even by "serious" stores like Fnac or Boulanger. Normal person has no chance to know what they are buying. So it is well possible that the phone has been charged by a 3rdparty charger before (most people have several chargers at home for the various gizmos these days) and then the battery blew up a bit later.
Or the kid could have dropped the phone, triggering the runaway (shouldn't happen, but not completely impossible).
Because these guys are shipping what is basically the reference design from Intel packaged into a case, sans custom OS and with very little to nothing to develop?
That's not quite apples to apples comparison. Apple has pretty much everything custom - the motherboard, the OS, the peripherals on the MB, ton of tuning and tweaking so that the system doesn't only boot but actually runs well, etc.
If you want to compare, then look at major manufacturers that are using custom motherboards - e.g. DELL or Lenovo.
Sorry, but only person who has absolutely no clue about how a hardware product is being developed (and how long does it actually take!) can say nonsense like this.
A new product like the Surface computer or Mac Book is in development for more than a year, often even 2-3 years. And in the latter stages you need actually a stable and working system so that things like drivers can be developed, OS adapted, demo units produced, CE/FCC testing done, etc.
So if a new CPU/chipset combo shows up in the last 9-12 months of the cycle, it is simply too late - it would delay the release of the product by at least that much. This is *not* about just swapping a motherboard/CPU/GPU - the board for the chips needs to be actually *developed* first, before you can even start thinking about integrating it into a product.
The risk mitigation is also important, but that comes into play only after everything above is sorted out already. If there is nothing new to put in your product, you have no "unknown" to fear in the first place.
I did and I am following the project from the start.
It is an interesting idea and innovative approach to how to produce 3D images. I wouldn't actually call it AR, it is more a general mixed reality setup, because it doesn't really attempt to overlay registered virtual image over the real world - it displays computer generated imagery over a specially prepared surface (the retroreflective foil).
I think it will be interesting novelty item for the entertainment, but probably not all that big there. It depends a lot on what kind of content will be available. Also CastAR needs the multiplayer games to really shine - similar to what made Wii popular. The games were basic, but it was fun playing with friends in the same space. That is both a boon and a bane - how many gamers actually have someone to play together with next to them all the time?
Where there is a much bigger potential for that technology is the professional market - it is one of the very few technologies that is capable of displaying proper multi-user stereo in the same shared space. E.g. CAVEs that are able to do so can typically handle 2 simultaneous users max and cost millions. CastAR can handle 4 simultaneous users in the same space at least and costs a few orders of magnitude less... This is huge for collaborative applications, such as planning, design review, training, etc. I think that is where it will be flying off the shelves because there simply isn't a system with comparable capability for a similar price on the market.
I am working as both researcher and developer in this field for almost two decades.
There certainly isn't a "lack of a killer app" there. However, there is one big difference - I am talking about professional market. Simulators & marketing are one thing (even though those rarely focus on HMDs but rather on projected displays - HMD is cumbersome).
Then you have training applications - machine operators, surgery training, maintenance training, safety procedures, dangerous materials handling, you name it. Of course, military training too, even though that is a complete different market.
Another category I have been involved with are various medical therapy applications - psychology and psychiatry - e.g. various phobias, even additiction therapies, PTSD is successfully being treated using VR, pain distraction applications (e.g. for severely burned people, dentists or some cancer sufferers).
And those are just the domains I have been somehow involved with or seen around me. Retail/consumer market is a different story and there I see VR mostly as niche within the larger gaming/entertainment market. Things like 360 videos and watching TV using HMDs will likely fail as that is pretty much pointless and the novelty of it fades very quickly.
Concerning AR - I am not that sure. For one, AR is very overrated. The AR applications are perhaps numerous in movies and Hollywood (everyone wants a Terminator-like HUD, right?!), but not in reality. Stupid stuff like superheroes jumping out of cereal boxes were interesting perhaps 5 years ago. There are also numerous problems that would have to be overcome first and not all of them are technical ones.
* There is AR and "AR". Google Glass was not AR but a personal HUD - if there is no registration between the image overlay and the real world, *it is not AR*. Glass was incapable of that.
* Contrast - optical see-through displays have inherently poor contrast and daylight visibility, digital see-through (using cameras) tend to suffer from lag, motion blur and poor dynamic range (big issue outdoors in sunlight, for ex.)
* Fragility - most AR displays are very fragile pieces of glass and electronics, not robust to day to day abuse. Can be solved, but at the expense of aesthetics and price.
* There is *no* robust tracking soluton for AR that would work both indoors and outdoors, have sufficient accuracy for registering overlays over objects beyond simplistic labels (think satnav instructions) and would not require enormous computational power. Projects like Tango are getting close, but still no cigar. This is actually *THE* problem we are fighting almost every week at work when clients ask for an AR application - nobody wants markers, but pretty much nothing else works with sufficient accuracy and low overhead.
* Battery life - AR needs to be mobile to be really useful which means batteries. Something iike Tango running full tilt tracking and displaying of the 3D scene would likely run out of battery within an hour or two. Or shut off due to overheating because of the heavy computation going on (see the GearVR problems with that - and GearVR is not doing any tracking at all).
And now the non-technical issues which could be the largest problem, in fact: * Most people don't want to look like Borgs from StarTrek wearing headsets. Not an issue in the pro market, but enormous problem for consumer market. Google has learned that firsthand with their Glass.
* We are far from headsets being socially acceptable. Both the cameras and the lack of eye contact/apperance of being distracted are an issue. Perhaps this will change as these devices become pervasive (talking on a phone in public used to be a social no-no too), but until then it will be a major hurdle for adoption.
No we can't. Circuit schematics is generally not copyrightable, because it only documents the workings of something else - a physical circuit. It is not considered a work in itself.
Even if it was, then the only thing that copyright license would do is to protect the schematics - not someone reproducing the actual circuit. For that you would have to patent it - which may not be possible (circuit is well known, for ex.) or not practical (patenting costing more than the widget itself). Not to mention that patents are not likely to stop an Asian fly-by-night cloner.
First - it is not really an open source project if it doesn't want to publish the design files/documentation. There is nothing wrong with wanting to keep that secret, but then, please, don't use the "open source" moniker.
Second - yes, the issue with clones is real - just look at Saleae (they produce USB logic analyzer). Their original hardware was widely cloned, because it was basically just a repurposed devboard for a common chip loaded with custom firmware that they made freely downloadable.
That said, the Saleae case also shows how not publishing the design files is ineffective - Saleae didn't publish anything, but all it took for the device to be cloned was someone buying a genuine one and reverse engineering it. It is not that difficult to do if someone really wants to do it.
So in the end who gets punished by the files not being available? Certainly not the cloners but more likely your own legitimate customers who will have more tricky time integrating the device into their own projects or repairing it.
Concerning support of the 3rdparty clones - nobody should be obligated to support unofficial hardware. Just don't be an ass about it, pulling another FTDI (company that tried to sabotage/brick the clones).
Voting Trump in protest? That will definitely help your cause if he wins and ruins the country in the process. But you have made your point about Clinton, yay!
Voting for a 3rd party/independent candidate? With the current election system in place, you can as well give your vote to Trump in such case. It is about equal to throwing your ballot in the trash - your vote won't count.
Not voting at all? That's the same as above - your voice will not count.
I am European, so this thing touches me only tangentially at best, but I see this "logic" here as well - "Party X/candidate Y is corrupt and incompetent, let's vote for a fringe/nutcase/extremist party Z in protest! That will show them! They cannot be worse than them anyway!"
The only result is the extremists gaining power in parliaments and once there, proceeding to show that they are even less competent and even more corrupt than their predecessors, because it is easy to run on a platform of "being against something". However, governing means that you have to actually bring *implementable* solutions to the table, not only soundbites for TV. That is where these parties universally fall flat on their faces.
Just look at what happened most recently in UK with the brexit vote or what is going on with Le Pen in France where her party controls some of the city councils. They are preoccupied with such important stuff like banning halal food from school canteens or banning veiled women from beaches, but not really addressing crime, dealing with unemployment or drug dealers. And then there is a new scandal about Front National deputy doing this or that almost every other day (usually involving graft, racism or worse).
VPN where you don't control both endpoints is not a VPN, by definition.
What these companies are offering are only glorified traffic tunneling services and proxies, not a true private network. Good for bypassing region restrictions on stuff like Netflix but not for anything where privacy is actually required.
FYI, this is the same company that took the 3rd most popular add-on for SublimeText and silenty added ads and spyware (err, telemetry) to it.
https://qz.com/1043614/this-st...
https://forum.sublimetext.com/...
Sounds like someone who you want to trust with your company's source code, indeed.
Guys, before you go crazy fixing your CVs, do make sure you look at what permissions the app wants.
You need to register either by your Github - or your LinkedIn account. And it wants access to your private data, like e-mails, contacts, etc. Oh and it has your entire CV to boot - all that for a rather dubious benefit that any HR agency will do for you for free.
Don't be the product here.
That only means that the product actually somewhat works and is not only a load of marketing hype. That is not really any endorsement and a pretty damning remark, in fact.
Also, Magic Leap is hardly a competitor of Oculus - they are not even in the same market. AR *does not* compete with or replace VR, they serve totally different purposes and applications (and also the price bracket is completely elsewhere).
Oculus doesn't have anything AR related in their portfolio, AFAIK.
That's not a quite good analogy.
Here we are talking about replacing a proven (albeit expensive) method with a cheap computer on board of the rocket.
Those computers have always been there in the past, the range safety explosives (and any eventual rescue systems in the case of manned flights - e.g. the Apollo/Soyuz escape towers) could have been either triggered automatically when the electronics detected an anomalous deviation from the pre-programmed path OR remotely by a human from the ground should something have gone so wrong that the computer didn't (or couldn't - e.g. the Challenger explosion where the errant boosters were destroyed from the ground after the fuel tank explosion destroyed the orbiter) handle it.
The system was designed with redundancy in mind. Now we are cutting one side of that redundancy to save costs. If you work in safety systems, you certainly know that there are plenty of examples from the past where such simplification and cost savings have costed lives - e.g. the infamous Therac 25 (hw interlocks replaced with software - several people dead from radiation overdoses and many more injured), original DC 10 cargo door design where the elements indicating whether the door was safe or not were changed to show only whether it was "supposed" to be safe and not an actual position of the interlocking (door blew out at altitude, causing an airplane crash that killed 300+ people), plenty of railway accidents have been caused by a loss of redundancy in the signalling systems over the years, etc.
It doesn't take that much imagination to envision a situation where e.g. an unfortunate lightning strike knocks the computers irrecoverably offline (freak accidents that shouldn't happen but they do - e.g Apollo 12 where they got uber lucky). And now you can only watch as those 500 tons of steel and explosive fuel are going to uncontrollably land somewhere, with no way to do anything about it.
Could the current method be made less expensive? Most likely, the airforce (or military in general) are rarely concerned with doing things in a cost effective way. But taking the human out of the loop completely? That doesn't sound like such a smart idea. His role is not to be reliable (that's the computer's job) but to guard against the unexpected.
Actually the Windows Firewall has a similar problem too.
You launch an application, it starts executing and communicating over the network - while the firewall pop-up asking the user for permission to access network is up. However, the application is communicating already!
This is easily visible with Wireshark, for example.
It boggles the mind why Microsoft thought that this is actually an useful feature ...
Sadly, this is completely wrong.
There may not be a lot of retail market where margins are thin and development costs are exorbitant, but industrial market for VR is booming. We are literally turning down projects, because we have enough work.
Oculus' mistake is in focusing purely on the consumer retail - where $800 + $2000 for a PC is a tough sell, no matter what they do. For an industrial client used to pay $20-40k for an HMD *without* tracking it is an absolute steal, allowing a company to equip their worker training center for peanuts.
Valve & HTC understood this and are developing special business-oriented offers.
And I am not speaking about high end stuff like flight simulators or military (those rarely use HMDs anyway). I am speaking about blue collar workers training to operate machinery making car tires, making engine blocks or windshields - all for household brand companies I cannot name, unfortunately.
Or psychologists treating various phobias and anxieties. And those were examples only from a few of our recent projects.
Actually, even 3D TVs are useful for this - if we could actually find one that is actually sold with the glasses! Most stores don't stock and don't order them anymore, so we have to work with projectors instead.
You mean someone actually buys a *laptop* that is locked to only Windows Store?
What would be the point of doing that? If I buy a Windows laptop, I want to be able to run my own applications, not only what is in the Store (which isn't a lot).
This is not a laptop but a locked down disposable tablet with a keyboard (even the battery isn't replaceable - talk about planned obsolescence!)
Hmm, they could have used inductive sensing/power as Wacom does since eons ago and completely eliminated the need for a battery or even a separate radio in that mouse (the Wacom ones communicate using the same signal that keeps them powered). The mouse would have been lighter too - some Logitech wireless mice are literally bricks with significant momentum due to their weight, making them very tiresome to use over longer periods.
Of course, you can't use the Wacom mouse outside of the tablet surface but I guess that is a moot point here - the Logitech charging pad is meant to be the mousepad too.
Right now Logitech has managed to replace one annoyance (running out of battery) in a wireless mouse with an even larger one - proprietary charger that takes up a ton of space on your desk. Oh and it costs $150 - for a mouse!
Not really, there is plenty of open source drone firmware and controller boards that is both more capable and not crippled by stuff like geofencing around already. And there has been plenty of it before DJI even started to sell their toys. DJI didn't invent a multicopter nor were the first to put camera on it.
This will do nothing for any software development - most people buying these things are amateur/semipro filmmakers that don't know how (and don't want) to tinker with the radios or firmware.
And then rich 'bros who want to show off and do stupid things like filming neighbors or planes near airports and at the same time aren't competent enough to put together their own.
Ehm, how is a "flying car" - which, in the current incarnations that actually are able to fly, really means a roadable airplane, including the requirements to have a pilot license and flight training - different from renting/stealing a Cessna from the nearest general aviation airport and smashing it somewhere?
The entire point of the IS calling for use of cars was because *anyone* can drive one and they are trivial to obtain. Neither of which is true when it comes to anything flying.
I somehow don't see this happening again since 9/11 - could that be because it is simply too complex, costly, risky and inefficient at actually causing mayhem?
But the terrorism bogeyman is so convenient for getting eyeballs and clicks ...
That. Or simply retrieved the content from some temporary file/cache/whatever Whatsapp uses. Another possibility is that they simply got the content from whoever the message was sent to - which would explain the "human intelligence" (aka interrogating someone) part.
Who the f... thought that this is a good idea? That e.g. a woman would want to have her potentially naked photos "in the cloud"?
Oh and how long until this gets hacked and the juicy pictures leaked/sold? Amazon didn't take the lesson from the phone hacking scandal in the UK? This sort of device/service would be a goldmine for stalkers, creeps and tabloids hunting for juicy dirt.
Jesus Christ ...
HTC Vive actually has (some) Linux support already, thanks to Valve.
Content is another story, but that won't be changed by an alliance like this
They were replacing the faulty batteries with the same type (= same dimensions & capacity), only from a more recent batch, because the original suspicion was a battery manufacturing problem, not a design issue with the phone itself. Remember the Sony laptops catching fire few years ago because of defective batteries?
So the conclusion is still plausible, because the replacement batteries have never fixed the underlying design issue - essentially equivalent of the iPhone's "bendgate", unfortunately with much worse consequences.
I am only surprised that Slashdot caught wind of this only now, this hypothesis has been around pretty much since Samsung has anounced the recall.
This article once again ignores the elephant in the room - which is that 99.9% of consumers do not need to manufacture stuff at home.
It is both easier, faster, cheaper and better quality to buy it at the store.
It was the journalistic hype about a "revolution" that was supposed to come that fueled the rise of Makerbot and now those same journalists are crucifying the company for not being able to deliver on something the company didn't even originally target. It is ridiculous.
That's not to say that Makerbot didn't commit a ton of mistakes and howlers, alienating both their customers and investors. But that has little to do with any "revolution".
It is the same hype BS we see with autonomous cars, with AI, with virtual reality and many other things - journalists writing about things they barely understand based on corporate press releases and extrapolating far beyond of what the technology can actually do, because they don't understand neither the tech, nor basic economy.
On the other hand, when looking beyond the uncritical hype and the notion that everyone will have a printer at home, 3D printing is fine and sound - there are plenty of other manufacturers than Makerbot who make good and affordable printers. However, it is now a mature technology that people who need it have and use already and the most of the rest doesn't really care about. Same as CNC machining or laser cutting or whatever. It is not the "new shiny" frontpage material anymore.
The bigger problem is what happens when the SSD fails.
SSDs are components with limited life (flash has limited amount of write cycles), so that is a planned obsolescence built-in right there.
Replacing the SSD will mean either a very expensive Apple service intervention, or, more likely, a new notebook. Which was likely the idea from the start ...
I am no Samsung lover, but sorry, that article is BS.
Insinuating that the model is "compromised" because of one freak accident and no other information (such as whether the phone had original battery or has been charged using original charger vs. some cheap fake Chinese special before) it is just sensationalism. There are millions of possible reasons why that could have happened and none related to a manufacturing fault.
I am in France and cheap and unsafe chargers are ubiquitious here, carried even by "serious" stores like Fnac or Boulanger. Normal person has no chance to know what they are buying. So it is well possible that the phone has been charged by a 3rdparty charger before (most people have several chargers at home for the various gizmos these days) and then the battery blew up a bit later.
Or the kid could have dropped the phone, triggering the runaway (shouldn't happen, but not completely impossible).
Because these guys are shipping what is basically the reference design from Intel packaged into a case, sans custom OS and with very little to nothing to develop?
That's not quite apples to apples comparison. Apple has pretty much everything custom - the motherboard, the OS, the peripherals on the MB, ton of tuning and tweaking so that the system doesn't only boot but actually runs well, etc.
If you want to compare, then look at major manufacturers that are using custom motherboards - e.g. DELL or Lenovo.
Sorry, but only person who has absolutely no clue about how a hardware product is being developed (and how long does it actually take!) can say nonsense like this.
A new product like the Surface computer or Mac Book is in development for more than a year, often even 2-3 years. And in the latter stages you need actually a stable and working system so that things like drivers can be developed, OS adapted, demo units produced, CE/FCC testing done, etc.
So if a new CPU/chipset combo shows up in the last 9-12 months of the cycle, it is simply too late - it would delay the release of the product by at least that much. This is *not* about just swapping a motherboard/CPU/GPU - the board for the chips needs to be actually *developed* first, before you can even start thinking about integrating it into a product.
The risk mitigation is also important, but that comes into play only after everything above is sorted out already. If there is nothing new to put in your product, you have no "unknown" to fear in the first place.
I did and I am following the project from the start.
It is an interesting idea and innovative approach to how to produce 3D images. I wouldn't actually call it AR, it is more a general mixed reality setup, because it doesn't really attempt to overlay registered virtual image over the real world - it displays computer generated imagery over a specially prepared surface (the retroreflective foil).
I think it will be interesting novelty item for the entertainment, but probably not all that big there. It depends a lot on what kind of content will be available. Also CastAR needs the multiplayer games to really shine - similar to what made Wii popular. The games were basic, but it was fun playing with friends in the same space. That is both a boon and a bane - how many gamers actually have someone to play together with next to them all the time?
Where there is a much bigger potential for that technology is the professional market - it is one of the very few technologies that is capable of displaying proper multi-user stereo in the same shared space. E.g. CAVEs that are able to do so can typically handle 2 simultaneous users max and cost millions. CastAR can handle 4 simultaneous users in the same space at least and costs a few orders of magnitude less ... This is huge for collaborative applications, such as planning, design review, training, etc. I think that is where it will be flying off the shelves because there simply isn't a system with comparable capability for a similar price on the market.
I am working as both researcher and developer in this field for almost two decades.
There certainly isn't a "lack of a killer app" there. However, there is one big difference - I am talking about professional market. Simulators & marketing are one thing (even though those rarely focus on HMDs but rather on projected displays - HMD is cumbersome).
Then you have training applications - machine operators, surgery training, maintenance training, safety procedures, dangerous materials handling, you name it. Of course, military training too, even though that is a complete different market.
Another category I have been involved with are various medical therapy applications - psychology and psychiatry - e.g. various phobias, even additiction therapies, PTSD is successfully being treated using VR, pain distraction applications (e.g. for severely burned people, dentists or some cancer sufferers).
And those are just the domains I have been somehow involved with or seen around me. Retail/consumer market is a different story and there I see VR mostly as niche within the larger gaming/entertainment market. Things like 360 videos and watching TV using HMDs will likely fail as that is pretty much pointless and the novelty of it fades very quickly.
Concerning AR - I am not that sure. For one, AR is very overrated. The AR applications are perhaps numerous in movies and Hollywood (everyone wants a Terminator-like HUD, right?!), but not in reality. Stupid stuff like superheroes jumping out of cereal boxes were interesting perhaps 5 years ago. There are also numerous problems that would have to be overcome first and not all of them are technical ones.
* There is AR and "AR". Google Glass was not AR but a personal HUD - if there is no registration between the image overlay and the real world, *it is not AR*. Glass was incapable of that.
* Contrast - optical see-through displays have inherently poor contrast and daylight visibility, digital see-through (using cameras) tend to suffer from lag, motion blur and poor dynamic range (big issue outdoors in sunlight, for ex.)
* Fragility - most AR displays are very fragile pieces of glass and electronics, not robust to day to day abuse. Can be solved, but at the expense of aesthetics and price.
* There is *no* robust tracking soluton for AR that would work both indoors and outdoors, have sufficient accuracy for registering overlays over objects beyond simplistic labels (think satnav instructions) and would not require enormous computational power. Projects like Tango are getting close, but still no cigar. This is actually *THE* problem we are fighting almost every week at work when clients ask for an AR application - nobody wants markers, but pretty much nothing else works with sufficient accuracy and low overhead.
* Battery life - AR needs to be mobile to be really useful which means batteries. Something iike Tango running full tilt tracking and displaying of the 3D scene would likely run out of battery within an hour or two. Or shut off due to overheating because of the heavy computation going on (see the GearVR problems with that - and GearVR is not doing any tracking at all).
And now the non-technical issues which could be the largest problem, in fact:
* Most people don't want to look like Borgs from StarTrek wearing headsets. Not an issue in the pro market, but enormous problem for consumer market. Google has learned that firsthand with their Glass.
* We are far from headsets being socially acceptable. Both the cameras and the lack of eye contact/apperance of being distracted are an issue. Perhaps this will change as these devices become pervasive (talking on a phone in public used to be a social no-no too), but until then it will be a major hurdle for adoption.
No we can't. Circuit schematics is generally not copyrightable, because it only documents the workings of something else - a physical circuit. It is not considered a work in itself.
Even if it was, then the only thing that copyright license would do is to protect the schematics - not someone reproducing the actual circuit. For that you would have to patent it - which may not be possible (circuit is well known, for ex.) or not practical (patenting costing more than the widget itself). Not to mention that patents are not likely to stop an Asian fly-by-night cloner.
First - it is not really an open source project if it doesn't want to publish the design files/documentation. There is nothing wrong with wanting to keep that secret, but then, please, don't use the "open source" moniker.
Second - yes, the issue with clones is real - just look at Saleae (they produce USB logic analyzer). Their original hardware was widely cloned, because it was basically just a repurposed devboard for a common chip loaded with custom firmware that they made freely downloadable.
That said, the Saleae case also shows how not publishing the design files is ineffective - Saleae didn't publish anything, but all it took for the device to be cloned was someone buying a genuine one and reverse engineering it. It is not that difficult to do if someone really wants to do it.
So in the end who gets punished by the files not being available? Certainly not the cloners but more likely your own legitimate customers who will have more tricky time integrating the device into their own projects or repairing it.
Concerning support of the 3rdparty clones - nobody should be obligated to support unofficial hardware. Just don't be an ass about it, pulling another FTDI (company that tried to sabotage/brick the clones).
So what are you proposing?
Voting Trump in protest? That will definitely help your cause if he wins and ruins the country in the process. But you have made your point about Clinton, yay!
Voting for a 3rd party/independent candidate? With the current election system in place, you can as well give your vote to Trump in such case. It is about equal to throwing your ballot in the trash - your vote won't count.
Not voting at all? That's the same as above - your voice will not count.
I am European, so this thing touches me only tangentially at best, but I see this "logic" here as well - "Party X/candidate Y is corrupt and incompetent, let's vote for a fringe/nutcase/extremist party Z in protest! That will show them! They cannot be worse than them anyway!"
The only result is the extremists gaining power in parliaments and once there, proceeding to show that they are even less competent and even more corrupt than their predecessors, because it is easy to run on a platform of "being against something". However, governing means that you have to actually bring *implementable* solutions to the table, not only soundbites for TV. That is where these parties universally fall flat on their faces.
Just look at what happened most recently in UK with the brexit vote or what is going on with Le Pen in France where her party controls some of the city councils. They are preoccupied with such important stuff like banning halal food from school canteens or banning veiled women from beaches, but not really addressing crime, dealing with unemployment or drug dealers. And then there is a new scandal about Front National deputy doing this or that almost every other day (usually involving graft, racism or worse).
So that is what you get for your protest votes.