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Submission + - Electric Cars Are Already Cheaper To Own and Run Than Petrol or Diesel (theguardian.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Electric cars are already cheaper to own and run than petrol or diesel cars in the UK, US and Japan, new research shows. The lower cost is a key factor driving the rapid rise in electric car sales now underway, say the researchers. At the moment the cost is partly because of government support, but electric cars are expected to become the cheapest option without subsidies in a few years. The researchers analyzed the total cost of ownership of cars over four years, including the purchase price and depreciation, fuel, insurance, taxation and maintenance. They were surprised to find that pure electric cars came out cheapest in all the markets they examined: UK, Japan, Texas and California.

Pure electric cars have much lower fuel costs — electricity is cheaper than petrol or diesel – and maintenance costs, as the engines are simpler and help brake the car, saving on brake pads. In the UK, the annual cost was about 10% lower than for petrol or diesel cars in 2015, the latest year analyzed. Hybrid cars which cannot be plugged in and attract lower subsidies, were usually a little more expensive than petrol or diesel cars. Plug-in hybrids were found to be significantly more expensive — buyers are effectively paying for two engines in one car, the researchers said. The exception in this case was Japan, where plug-in hybrids receive higher subsidies.

Submission + - Was Your Name Stolen To Support Killing Net Neutrality? (dslreports.com)

An anonymous reader writes: New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has launched a new tool for users interested in knowing whether their identity was stolen and used to fraudulently support the FCC's attack on popular net neutrality rules. The NY AG's office announced earlier this month that it was investigating identity theft and comment fraud during the FCC's public comment period. Researchers have noted repeatedly how "someone" used a bot to fill the comment proceeding with bogus support for the FCC plan, with many of the names being those of folks who'd never heard of net neutrality — or were even dead. The new AG tool streamlines the act of searching the FCC proceeding for comments filed falsely in your name, and lets you contribute your findings to the AG's ongoing investigation into identity theft.

"Such conduct likely violates state law — yet the FCC has refused multiple requests for crucial evidence in its sole possession that is vital to permit that law enforcement investigation to proceed," noted Schneiderman. "We reached out for assistance to multiple top FCC officials, including you, three successive acting FCC General Counsels, and the FCC’s Inspector General. We offered to keep the requested records confidential, as we had done when my office and the FCC shared information and documents as part of past investigative work." "Yet we have received no substantive response to our investigative requests," stated the AG. "None." As such, the AG is taking its fight to the public itself.

Submission + - Tiny Space License Plates

kj_chaotic writes: Los Alamos National Laboratory [www.lanl.gov] is developing an optical “license plate” for space objects that will allow observers on the ground to know exactly what kind of object it is, what company or country owns it, and what orbital path it follows. [www.popsci.com/tiny-space-license-plates-space-junk]. Targeting a total size less than 1 in x 1 in x 0.2 in and a per unit cost under $1000, this self-powered Extremely Low Resource Optical Identifier (ELROI) uses a laser diode to blink unique binary sequences for positive identification. The technique is analogous to transponders used in aircraft that greatly reduce the identification and tracking tasks of ground controllers. First flight is schedule for early next year aboard a New Mexico Tech [www.nmt.edu] cubesat.

Submission + - Google's street view could reveal more than you think (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit writes: How many people in your city voted for Barack Obama? How many have college degrees? And how much money does everyone make? Collecting such data could take years—if it weren’t for Google Maps. In a new study, researchers downloaded 50 million photos of street scenes taken by the tech company’s vehicles as they mapped 200 U.S. cities. They then used a couple of machine-learning algorithms—software tools that learn from examples—to determine the make, model, and year of 22 million cars in the images. From this, other algorithms were able to estimate local demographics by learning that certain vehicle types were more common in areas that census and election data said were, say, wealthier or more conservative. The algorithms became surprisingly accurate at determining the median household income of the area; the percentage of white, black, and Asian people there; the share of people with various levels of education; and the rate of voting for Obama versus John McCain in 2008.

Submission + - Two Stars Slammed Into Each Other And Solved ½ of Astronomy's Problems.Now (fivethirtyeight.com) 1

schwit1 writes: Progress, as they say, is slow. In science, this is often true even for major breakthroughs; rarely is an entire field of research remade in a single swoop. The Human Genome Project took a decade. Finding the first gravitational waves took multiple decades. So it’s hard to overstate the enormous leap forward that astronomy took on Aug. 17, 2017.

On that day, astronomers bore witness to the titanic collision of two neutron stars, the densest things in the universe besides black holes. In the collision’s wake, astronomers answered multiple major questions that have dominated their field for a generation. They solved the origin of gamma-ray bursts, mysterious jets of hardcore radiation that could potentially roast Earth. They glimpsed the forging of heavy metals, like gold and platinum. They measured the rate at which the expansion of the universe is accelerating. They caught light at the same time as gravitational waves, confirmation that waves move at the speed of light. And there was more, and there is much more yet to come from this discovery. It all happened so quickly and revealed so much that astronomers are already facing a different type of question: Now what?

Submission + - Bitcoin drops over $1000 in value over 48 hours (reuters.com)

sqorbit writes: Bitcoin dropped below $7000 after hitting an all time high. After a possible fork was suspend bitcoin reached a peak at $7888 before dropping down below $7000. Some investors appear to be selling in order to buy "Bitcoin Cash" which was a split August 1st. Bitcoin cash reached $850.

Submission + - SPAM: NASA discovers mantle plume that's melting Antarctica from below.

schwit1 writes: Researchers at NASA have discovered a huge upwelling of hot rock under Marie Byrd Land, which lies between the Ross Ice Shelf and the Ross Sea, is creating vast lakes and rivers under the ice sheet. The presence of a huge mantle plume could explain why the region is so unstable today, and why it collapsed so quickly at the end of the last Ice Age, 11,000 years ago.

Mantle plumes are thought to be part of the plumbing systems that brings hot material up from Earth’s interior. Once it gets through the mantle, it spreads out under the crust, providing magma for volcanic eruptions. The area above a plume is known as a hotspot.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - Kaspersky was used by the CIA, not just the KGB and Mossad (theregister.co.uk)

Baron_Yam writes: Wikileaks' Vault 8 shows the CIA was using fake Kaspersky certs to ply their trade. At this point I'm starting to feel sorry for Kaspersky Labs.

From the Register in the UK: "The CIA wrote code to impersonate Kaspersky Labs in order to more easily siphon off sensitive data from hack targets, according to leaked intel released by Wikileaks on Thursday."

Submission + - Tax plan would levy a tax on graduate student tuition waivers 1

Camel Pilot writes: The new Tax Plan will tax Tuition Waivers as income. Graduate Students working as a TA or RA on meager stipends would have to declare Tuition Waivers as income on the order of $70K income. This will force many Graduate Students of modest means to quit their career paths and walk away from their research. As Prof Claus Wilke points out "This would be a disaster for US STEM Ph.D. education"

Submission + - Kennedy files declassified and released.

SharpFang writes: The documents related to the 1963 assassination of late President John F Kennedy have been declassified and released by the National Archives. The documents are available for download from the Archives site. Many news sites are abuzz, either providing real-time updates on their findings as the reporters read the documents, or providing advice how to go about finding your way through the trove. Some excerpts have been censored, primarily related to living persons. Some last documents have been held back pending review and censoring of sensitive information, but President Trump set the deadline on their release to six months.

Submission + - Bill Gates Says He's Sorry About Control-Alt-Delete (qz.com) 1

An anonymous reader writes: At the Bloomberg Global Business Forum today, Carlyle Group co-founder and CEO David Rubenstein asked Microsoft founder Bill Gates to account for one of the most baffling questions of the digital era: Why does it take three fingers to lock or log in to a PC, and why did Gates ever think that was a good idea? Grimacing slightly, Gates deflected responsibility for the crtl-alt-delete key command, saying, “clearly, the people involved should have put another key on to make that work.” Rubenstein pressed him: does he regret the decision? “You can’t go back and change the small things in your life without putting the other things at risk,” Gates said. But: “Sure. If I could make one small edit I would make that a single key operation.”

Submission + - A Unique Type Of Object In The Solar System (scienmag.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Astronomers have observed the intriguing characteristics of an unusual type of object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter: two asteroids orbiting each other and exhibiting comet-like features, including a bright coma and a long tail. This is the first known binary asteroid also classified as a comet.

Comment Re:No. (Score 1) 1058

If the price for electricity storage for cars was instantly ZERO, there is still no way that anything close to the "predictions" (really breathless hyperbole meant to secure additional research grants and headlines) from this study could be true. My guess is that, just to move around the new machines, material, and retrofitting equipment necessary for such an abrupt transition to all electric vehicles would require 8 years of using ICE vehicles in the first place. What happens to gasoline pumps that need to be removed? What about all the inventory of car parts at thousands of retail outlets in the US alone? Just physically moving all that stuff to some landfills (likely using ICE dumptrucks and earth movers) in the desert would take a huge, dedicated fleet of vehicles. Consider the momentum of the ICE system in our world. There is scarcely anything in that system that could disappear in 8 years, let alone the whole kit and caboodle.

Submission + - Fake anti-neutrality comments flooding the FCC feedback site (theverge.com) 1

nobuddy writes: Clearly bot-generated comments in support of anti-Net Neutrality are flooding the FCC feedback page. People who's name and addresses are used report they have no idea how it got there.
Search feature disabled, last count prior to that was 140,000 and rising fast. Searching for key phrases in the identical posts tracked the input.

"The comments seem to be posted by different people, with their addresses attached. But people contacted by The Verge said they did not write the comments and have no idea where the posts came from.
'That doesn’t even sound like verbiage I would use,' says Nancy Colombo of Connecticut, whose name and address appeared alongside the comment.
'I have no idea where that came from,' says Lynn Vesely, whose Indiana address also appeared, and who was surprised to hear about the comment."

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