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Submission + - Wind turbines are friendlier to birds than oil-and-gas drilling (economist.com)

SpzToid writes: No one doubts that wind turbines do indeed kill at least some birds. But a new analysis of American data, published in Environmental Science & Technology, suggests the numbers are negligible, and have little impact on bird populations.

Wind power has expanded dramatically in America over the past 20 years, from 2.6 gigawatts of installed capacity on land in 2000 to 122 gigawatts in 2020. Many studies have analysed the effects in specific locations or on specific bird species. But few have looked at the effects on wildlife at the population level. Enter Erik Katovich, an economist at the University of Geneva. Dr Katovich made use of the Christmas Bird Count, a citizen-science project run by the National Audubon Society, an American non-profit outfit. Volunteers count birds they spot over Christmas, and the society compiles the numbers. Its records stretch back over a century.

Comparing bird populations to the locations of new gas wells revealed an average 15% drop in bird numbers when new wells were drilled, probably due to a combination of noise, air pollution and the disturbance of rivers and ponds that many birds rely upon. When drilling happened in places designated by the National Audubon Society as “important bird areas”, bird numbers instead dropped by 25%. Such places are typically migration hubs, feeding grounds or breeding locations.

Submission + - Consumer Reports: Easily delete your digital history from dozens of companies (archive.is) 1

SpzToid writes: Sick of companies grabbing and selling your address, birth date, location, online activity, dog food brand and even adult-film preferences? Oh boy, do I have some good news.

A new iPhone and Android app called Permission Slip makes it super simple to order companies to delete your personal information and secrets. Trying it saved me about 76 hours of work telling Ticketmaster, United, AT&T, CVS and 35 other companies to knock it off.

Did I mention Permission Slip is free? And it’s made by an organization you can trust: the nonprofit Consumer Reports. I had a few hiccups testing it, but I’m telling everyone I know to use it. This is the privacy app all those snooping companies don’t want you to know about.

Submission + - Twitter has lost almost 75% of its value under Musk (cnn.com) 1

quonset writes: Fidelity has once again put out its valuation of Twitter, and the news isn't good. According to their calculations, based on its share of Twitter, they believe Twitter is worth 71.5% less than when Musk purchased the company.

According to the new filing by Fidelity’s Blue Chip Growth Fund dated Dec. 30 and reporting information through Nov. 30, Fidelity estimates the shares of X that it owns are worth just under $5.6 million. The filing said its shares in X represent less than .01% of the total value of the fund, which it said is more than $49 billion.

That’s a sharp drop from the $19.66 million the Fidelity fund said its stake was worth around the time that Musk was finalizing his acquisition of Twitter, and 14.5% less than the $6.55 million the fund said its shares were worth last April.

Submission + - Japan Airlines flight 516 bursts into flames after clipping Coast Guard plane (archive.is)

SpzToid writes: A Japan Airlines plane burst into flames while landing at Haneda Airport in Tokyo shortly before 6 p.m. local time on Tuesday.

The airline reported that all 367 passengers and 12 crew members had evacuated the plane, which collided with a Japan Coast Guard aircraft, the public broadcaster, NHK, said. One member of the crew of the fixed-wing Coast Guard plane evacuated that aircraft, but another five were unaccounted for, the broadcaster reported.

The Coast Guard plane had been bound for western Japan to deliver supplies after the powerful earthquake that struck the region on Monday, according to NHK.

Submission + - A new type of jet engine could revive supersonic air travel (economist.com)

SpzToid writes: Since the 1960s engineers around the world have been fiddling with a novel type of jet called a rotating detonation engine (RDE), but it has never got beyond the experimental stage. That could be about to change. GE Aerospace, one of the world’s biggest producers of jet engines, recently announced it was developing a working version. Earlier this year America’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded a $29m contract to Raytheon, part of RTX, another big aerospace group, to develop an RDE called Gambit.

Both engines would be used to propel missiles, overcoming the range and speed limitations of current propulsion systems, including rockets and existing types of jet engines. However, if the companies are successful in getting them to work, RDEs might have a much broader role in aviation—including the possibility of helping revive supersonic air travel.

In a nutshell, an RDE “replaces fire with a controlled explosion”, explains Kareem Ahmed, an expert in advanced aerospace engines at the University of Central Florida. In technical terms, this is because a jet engine relies on the combustion of oxygen and fuel, which is a subsonic reaction that scientists call deflagration. Detonation, by comparison, is a high-energy explosion that takes place at supersonic speeds. As a result it is a more powerful and potentially a more efficient way of producing thrust, the force that drives an aircraft forward.
image: The Economist

A conventional jet engine uses lots of moving parts (see diagram). Rotating blades draw in air and compress it before igniting it with fuel in a combustion chamber, creating rapidly expanding hot gases that blast out of the rear. As the gases exit they drive a turbine, which keeps the whole process going. An RDE is simpler. Air entering the front is forced into a hollow space between two concentric cylinders. When fuel is pumped into this area, it mixes with the oxygen in the air and detonates, creating a rotating supersonic shock wave that spirals around the gap and out of the rear. Once it has started, the detonation is self-sustaining.

Read more

Submission + - Elon Musk told bankers they wouldn't lose any money on Twitter purchase (arstechnica.com)

SpzToid writes: Lenders unlikely to get even 60 cents on the dollar for the bonds and loans.

Elon Musk privately told some of the bankers who lent him $13 billion to fund his leveraged buyout of Twitter that they would not lose any money on the deal, according to five people familiar with the matter.

The verbal guarantees were made by Musk to banks as a way to reassure the lenders as the value of the social media site, now rebranded as X, fell sharply after he completed the acquisition last year.

Despite the assurances, the seven banks that lent money to the billionaire for his buyout—Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Barclays, MUFG, BNP Paribas, Mizuho and Société Générale—are facing serious losses on the debt if and when they eventually sell it.

The sources did not specify when Musk’s assurances were made, although one noted Musk had made them on several occasions. But the billionaire’s behavior, both in attempting to back out of the takeover in 2022 and more recently in alienating advertisers, has more broadly stymied the banks’ efforts to offload the debt since he engineered the takeover.

Large hedge funds and credit investors on Wall Street held conversations with the banks late last year, offering to buy the senior-most portion of the debt at roughly 65 cents on the dollar. But in recent interviews with the Financial Times, several said there was no price at which they would buy the bonds and loans, given their inability to gauge whether Linda Yaccarino, X’s chief executive, could turn the business around.

One multibillion-dollar firm that specializes in distressed debt called X’s debt “uninvestable.”

Selling the $12.5 billion of bonds and loans below 60 cents on the dollar—a price many investors believe the banks would be lucky to achieve in the current market—would imply losses before accounting for X’s interest payments of $4 billion or more, writedowns that have not yet been publicly reported by the syndicate of lenders, according to FT calculations. The debt is split between $6.5 billion of term loans, as well as $6 billion of senior and junior bonds and a $500 million revolver.

Submission + - Broadcom ends VMware perpetual license sales, testing customers and partners

echo123 writes: Already-purchased licenses can still be used but will eventually lose support.

Broadcom has moved forward with plans to transition VMware, a virtualization and cloud computing company, into a subscription-based business. As of December 11, it no longer sells perpetual licenses with VMware products. VMware, whose $61 billion acquisition by Broadcom closed in November, also announced on Monday that it will no longer sell support and subscription (SnS) for VMware products with perpetual licenses. Moving forward, VMware will only offer term licenses or subscriptions, according to its VMware blog post.

VMware customers with perpetual licenses and active support contracts can continue using them. VMware "will continue to provide support as defined in contractual commitments," Krish Prasad, senior vice president and general manager for VMware's Cloud Foundation Division, wrote. But when customers' SnS terms end, they won't have any support.

Broadcom hopes this will force customers into subscriptions, and it's offering "upgrade pricing incentives" that weren't detailed in the blog for customers who switch from perpetual licensing to a subscription.

These are the products affected, per Prasad's blog:

        VMware Aria Automation
        VMware Aria Suite
        VMware Aria Operations
        VMware Aria Operations for Logs
        VMware Aria Operations for Networks
        VMware Aria Universal
        VMware Cloud Foundation
        VMware HCX
        VMware NSX
        VMware Site Recovery Manager
        VMware vCloud Suite
        VMware vSAN
        VMware vSphere

One big question that we’ve been hearing from many of our customers is “What will become of the Fusion and Workstation product groups?”

In a nutshell: VMware by Broadcom is committed to our focus on the desktop hypervisor products and platform, today and into the future.

Comment Re:Look to an Insta360 X3 for similar technology (Score 1) 45

Not only are your assessments accurate given my experience with the 360 hardware, but one thing I forgot to mention is the lens protection is a bitch! Seriously! Like you need a plan if you own one of these things.

What am I talking about?! No way can you simply place the chocolate bar shaped camera on a flat surface to rest without protection. One touch upon doing so will scratch and thus destroy 1 of the 2, 360' lenses.

Thanks for your insightful comments.

Comment Look to an Insta360 X3 for similar technology (Score 2) 45

This recording technology seems a lot like '360 cameras' have been making for a number of years. I am most familiar with the Insta360 One X2 because I own one. The newer X3 version has the same recording specs but comes with a better display on the camera. They really like a lot of daylight -- there's a pricier Leica version with a much larger sensor. An X2 is probably The Bargain since it is older with the same specs.

It's a really fun camera too. With a large purpose-built 'invisible' selfie-stick, recordings look like drone shots, (the camera automatically removes the stick).

The X2/X3 hardware display doesn't seem important, because unlike a regular camera or phone, one rarely looks at the display to record. The hardware can be viewed and controlled remotely via an app -- the unit acts as a wifi access point to connect to it. But even then that kinda misses The Point: After a 360 photo/video is recorded, all the fun stuff is done in post-production, and by that I mean aiming and focusing the camera to generate regular 2d movies, (and a single 360 recording can generate several different movie scenes by capturing different perspectives.).

I imagine future Apple software will similarly allow one to focus and create scenes in post-production with this new semi-360 format, which clearly is meant to sell expensive VR hardware.

Here's some examples:
https://invidious.private.coff...

Comment Here's my front-page submission do-over: (Score 2) 36

Recently I submitted an article that made it to the front page, and only afterwards did I put two and two together to realize why this news is a really big deal to focus my fellow slashdotters' attention on. It was like a Woosh that went over everyone including me at the time. I've even reconsidered re-doing the front-page weekend submission with a new version, but this reply seem as good a place as any to do the deed:

Here's the scam, now that I understand better: North Korean agents set up shop in either Russia or China. From there they fraudulently pose as Western IT contractors working remotely from home developing Wordpress websites or whatever. As far as I can tell, they use sites like upwork.com to get work, which the US FBI says, (without specificity to upwork.com) is allowing North Korea to buy weapons with hard currency. This is a nation state effort with nation state efficiencies to deal with things like US e-Verify apparently, according to the FBI

To get the work in the first place, they are stealing identities of people like us here on the slashdots. They fraudulently claim the IDs of people with extensive GitHub account histories, because that yields credibility with potential employers because GIT commit histories cannot be faked, along with LinkedIn resumes. Months before I submitted TFA to the front page, I heard this podcast episode that explains how the hackers achieve success, (you can choose to listen or click to read the full transcript). I didn't make the explanatory connection until after I posted the FBI warning to the front page.

Submission + - Mike Johnson Admits He and His Son Monitor Each Other's Porn Intake (rollingstone.com)

SpzToid writes: At first glance, the headline seems more salacious than newsworthy, however continue reading the summary to understand the National Security risk...

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson admitted that he and his son monitored each other’s porn intake in a resurfaced clip from 2022.

During a conversation on the “War on Technology” at Benton, Louisiana’s Cypress Baptist Church — unearthed by X user Receipt Maven last week — the Louisiana representative talked about how he installed “accountability software” called Covenant Eyes on his devices in order to abstain from internet porn and other unsavory websites.

“It scans all the activity on your phone, or your devices, your laptop, what have you; we do all of it,” Johnson told the panel about the app.

“It sends a report to your accountability partner. My accountability partner right now is Jack, my son. He’s 17. So he and I get a report about all the things that are on our phones, all of our devices, once a week. If anything objectionable comes up, your accountability partner gets an immediate notice. I’m proud to tell ya, my son has got a clean slate.”

Outside of the creepy Big Brother-ness of it all, Receipt Maven also aired concerns about whether Covenant Eyes — which is still a working subscription-based service — might “compromise” Johnson’s devices, if he’s still actively seeking accountability.

“A US Congressman is allowing a 3rd Party tech company to scan ALL of his electronic devices daily and then uploading reports to his son about what he’s watching or not watching.,” Receipt Maven wrote. “I mean, who else is accessing that data?”

Submission + - Remote IT workers sent wages to North Korea, funding weapons programs, says FBI (apnews.com) 1

echo123 writes: ST. LOUIS (AP) — Thousands of information technology workers contracting with U.S. companies have for years secretly sent millions of dollars of their wages to North Korea for use in its ballistic missile program, FBI and Department of Justice officials said.

The Justice Department said Wednesday that IT workers dispatched and contracted by North Korea to work remotely with companies in St. Louis and elsewhere in the U.S. have been using false identities to get the jobs. The money they earned was funneled to the North Korean weapons program, FBI leaders said at a news conference in St. Louis.

Court documents allege that North Korea’s government dispatched thousands of skilled IT workers to live primarily in China and Russia with the goal of deceiving businesses from the U.S. and elsewhere into hiring them as freelance remote employees. The workers used various techniques to make it look like they were working in the U.S., including paying Americans to use their home Wi-Fi connections, said Jay Greenberg, special agent in charge of the St. Louis FBI office.

Greenberg said any company that hired freelance IT workers “more than likely” hired someone participating in the scheme. An FBI spokeswoman said Thursday that the North Koreans contracted with companies across the U.S. and in some other countries.

“We can tell you that there are thousands of North Korea IT workers that are part of this,” spokeswoman Rebecca Wu said.

Federal authorities announced the seizure of $1.5 million and 17 domain names as part of the investigation, which is ongoing.

FBI officials said the scheme is so prevalent that companies must be extra vigilant in verifying whom they are hiring, including requiring interviewees to at least be seen via video.

Submission + - Ubuntu 23.10 is a Minotaur that moves faster and takes up less space (arstechnica.com)

SpzToid writes: Ubuntu 23.10, codenamed Mantic Minotaur, is the 39th Ubuntu release, and it's one of the three smaller interim releases Canonical puts out between long-term support (LTS) versions. This last interim before the next LTS doesn't stand out with bold features you can identify at a glance. But it does set up some useful options and upgrades that should persist in Ubuntu for some time.

Two of the biggest changes in Ubuntu 23.10 are in the installer. Ubuntu now defaults to a "Default installation," which is quite different from what the "default" was even just one release prior. "Default" is described as "Just the essentials, web browser, and basic utilities," while "Full" is "An offline-friendly selection of office tools, utilities, web browser, and games." "Default" is somewhat similar to what "Minimal" used to be in prior versions, while "Full" is intended for those who are offline or have slow connections or just want as many options as possible right away.

Elsewhere in the installer, you can now choose ZFS as your primary file system. There's also an experimental option to set up Trusted Platform Module (TPM) full-disk encryption rather than rely entirely on passphrases to encrypt your disk. This brings Ubuntu up to speed with Windows in offering a way to both secure your system and find out the hard way that you lack a backup key to get in after messing with your boot options. (Kidding! Somewhat.)

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