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Comment Re:I wonder when... (Score 1) 173

I wonder when ordering a regular meal to your hotel room will result in them bringing the "premium" version but the extra bits being locked in transparent boxes with a digital padlock. Pay extra $30 to unlock your garlic bread, glass of wine and bowl of fruit.

Hotels long ago mastered the art of extracting more money from their customers, for example: 13 Hotel Mini Bar Ideas That Actually Appeal to Guests

Submission + - SPAM: John V. Roach, Tandy CEO and early PC pioneer, dead at age 86

McGruber writes: John Vinson Roach II died early Sunday at age 83. Roach joined Tandy Corp. in 1967 as a data processing manager and rose throught the ranks becoming company President in 1981, at age 42, and CEO from 1983 to 1998. Tandy created the TRS-80 in 1977 and hired eventual Microsoft co-founders Bill Gates and Paul Allen to write the software code for it. When company founder Charles Tandy was skeptical about creating the TRS-80, Roach persuaded Tandy to agree to build 3,500—the number of Radio Shack stores—so that each store could use a computer for inventory purposes if they did not sell.
Until 1982, the TRS-80 was the best-selling PC line, outselling the Apple II series by a factor of five according to one analysis. ([spam URL stripped])

Roach earned a physics and math degree from Texas Christian University and later added a master’s degree in business administration. It was during his graduate school time at TCU that Roach first learned of computer programming.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - SPAM: After emergency landing, former President hopes to crowdfund "Trump Force One"

McGruber writes: The former President is fundraising for a new "Trump Force One" airplane according to an email his PAC sent on Wednesday. The PAC sent the email just hours after a private plane carrying the former president was forced to make an emergency landing shortly after takeoff after one of its engines failed ([spam URL stripped]).
Link to Original Source

Submission + - SPAM: Scott Kelly returns his "For Merit in Space Exploration" Medal to Russia

McGruber writes: Retired NASA Astronaut Scott Kelly just announced that he was returning a medal awarded to him by Russia. A translation of his announcement, which Mr Kelly made in Russian:

Mr. Medvedev, I am returning to you the Russian medal "For Merit in Space Exploration", which you presented to me. Please give it to a Russian mother whose son died in this unjust war. I will mail the medal to the Russian embassy in Washington. Good luck.


Link to Original Source

Submission + - SPAM: Antarctica's Famous Shipwreck, the Endurance, Found After 106 Years

McGruber writes: The Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust is pleased to confirm that the Endurance22 Expedition has located the wreck of Endurance, Sir Ernest Shackleton’s ship which has not been seen since it was crushed by the ice and sank in the Weddell Sea in 1915.

One hundred years after Shackleton’s death, Endurance was found at a depth of 3008 metres in the Weddell Sea, within the search area defined by the expedition team before its departure from Cape Town, and approximately four miles south of the position originally recorded by Captain Worsley.

The team worked from the South African polar research and logistics vessel, S.A. Agulhas II, owned by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and under Master, Capt. Knowledge Bengu, using Saab’s Sabertooth hybrid underwater search vehicles. The wreck is protected as a Historic Site and Monument under the Antarctic Treaty, ensuring that whilst the wreck is being surveyed and filmed it will not be touched or disturbed in any way.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - Google Tells Employees to Return to Offices Next Month (msn.com)

McGruber writes: Bloomberg reports that "Alphabet Inc.’s Google is asking employees in the San Francisco Bay Area to work in their offices three days a week starting in April, marking its first return to campuses since the pandemic began. John Casey, Google’s vice president of Global Benefits, shared the news with staff in an email on Wednesday. He said the company made the decision after a “steady decline in cases that we continue to see, and the improved safety measures” at its campus in Mountain View, California, and other neighboring sites." “We plan to use March to help folks transition to their new routines and aim to be fully functional in our hybrid working approach (in line with Product Area and function guidelines) by April 4,” Casey said in the email.

Good luck with that Google

Submission + - Burnt-out ship carrying 4,000 vehicles sinks, costing VW at least $155 million (autonews.com) 2

McGruber writes: The cargo ship that caught fire in the Atlantic while transporting roughly 4,000 Volkswagen Group vehicles to the U.S. has sunk despite efforts to tow it to safety.

“The weather was pretty rough out there,” Pat Adamson, a spokesperson for MOL Ship Management, a unit of Mitsui OSK Lines Ltd., said by phone. “And then she sank, which was a surprise.”

In a projection assuming all vehicles would be lost, the risk-modeling company Russell Group last week estimated that the incident could cost the automaker at least $155 million. About $438 million worth of goods were aboard the ship, $401 million of which were cars.

Earlier story: https://hardware.slashdot.org/...

Submission + - VW autos worth $155 million lost in cargo ship fire fueled by EV batteries (msn.com)

McGruber writes: An update to Friday's story about the burning cargo ship adrift in the Mid-Atlantic (https://news.slashdot.org/story/22/02/18/1615256/burning-cargo-ship-is-adrift-in-mid-atlantic-without-crew):

MSN is now reporting that the ship is aflame from bow to stern with a lithium-ion battery fire that can’t be put out with water alone. The fire has been burning since Wednesday (Feb. 16), as the ship drifts in the Atlantic about 200 miles southwest of Portugal’s Azores Islands. Its 22-person crew abandoned ship and was rescued on Thursday.

The ship left Germany on Feb. 10 and headed for the US with about 4,000 Porches, Bentleys and other luxury cars aboard, and some of those were electric vehicles. It’s not clear if the batteries contributed to the fire starting in the first place—a greasy rag in a lubricant-slicked engine room or a fuel leak are the usual suspects in ship fires—but the batteries are keeping the flames going now. A forensic investigation will take months to determine the cause.

Bloomberg adds (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-02-21/porsches-and-lamborghinis-lost-at-sea-may-be-worth-155-million) that the fire could cost Volkswagen at least $155 million based upon the Russell Group's estimate that there are $401 million worth of cars. VW group had Volkswagen, Porsche, Audi, Bentley and Lamborghini models on the vessel.

Submission + - Zuckerberg Has Burned $500 Billion Turning Facebook to Meta (nymag.com) 1

McGruber writes: NY Magazine has a great article that succinctly summarizes Meta's self-immolation:

There has never been a self-immolation quite like Meta Platforms, the parent company of Facebook. Mark Zuckerberg’s social-media company has lost more than half a trillion dollars in market value since its August peak — about half of that vaporized in a single day, the biggest drop ever — as it starts to weaken from the constant siege of competitors and dissenters without and within. The fallout is so bad that Meta, once the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization, has fallen out of the top ten, replaced by two computer-chip makers, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, and the Chinese e-commerce company Tencent. For a CEO who has openly courted comparisons to the Roman emperor Augustus, it’s an ignominious fall from a rarefied group of world-dominating companies.

We may be witnessing the early days of the fall of Zuckustus. Facebook’s once unbeatable ad-tracking system — the engine that made it a more than $1 trillion company — has effectively been neutralized by the likes of Apple, which allows users to block the company’s trackers. (Google is set to start phasing in similar protections to its users over the next two years.) Facebook’s user base has started to shrink after revelations by whistleblowers and leaks that showed how harmful social media could be to teen users, who are flocking to less toxic competitors like TikTok anyway. And Zuckerberg — clearly bored with the company he founded 18 years ago — has shifted his vision into an immersive version of the internet, complete with headsets and digital avatars, that he calls the metaverse, an ambition that sets up Facebook’s competition not with another Silicon Valley company but with reality itself.

The important piece of this is the ads. Essentially, there are two main channels for advertisers to sell digital ads: one based on what you search for and the other based on which sites you’ve visited and your other online behaviors. The latter was Facebook’s business model — and the reason you would get uncanny ads for goods before you even knew you needed them. Apple and Google have decided they’re going to allow their users to disable code that tracks people across the internet, which happens to be good for their business model. According to The Wall Street Journal, the fallout has been so severe that advertisers are shifting their entire ad budgets to Google since Facebook is no longer profitable. It’s a bitter irony for the company as its opaque rules about what would show up on users’ feeds once led to the rise of clickbait farms like ViralNova and the decimation of an untold number of local news sites across the world.


Submission + - FAA Reaches One Million Airspace Authorization for Drone Pilots (faa.gov)

McGruber writes: Two weeks ago,the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued its millionth airspace authorization for drone pilots to use busy airspace safely. The Low Altitude Authorization and Notification Capability (LAANC) automates the process for drone pilots to quickly gain authorization and provides Air Traffic professionals with awareness of where drones may be operating.

“This system has allowed drone pilots to gain timely access to busy airspace without sacrificing safety,” said Teri L. Bristol, the chief operating officer of the FAA’s Air Traffic Organization. “We are grateful to everyone who helped us reach this milestone safely.”

Under Part 107 of the Federal Aviation Regulations, drone operators need to secure approval from the FAA to operate in any airspace controlled by an air traffic facility. Prior to LAANC, airspace authorizations were done manually, which could take drone pilots weeks to get approved. In 2017, the FAA recognized that the manual system delayed the agency’s goal to support routine drone operations and launched LAANC as a prototype for automatic airspace approvals.

Since becoming an official program in 2018, LAANC has provided an automated system for drone pilots– both commercial pilots and recreational pilots — requesting to fly below 400 feet in controlled airspace. Drone pilots are able to request airspace authorizations through any of the FAA-Approved LAANC Service Suppliers up to 90 days before they plan to fly. The system now covers 542 air traffic facilities serving approximately 735 airports. LAANC also allows the agency to provide drone pilots with information and guidance on where they can and cannot fly a drone.

In 2021, the LAANC capability expanded to provide night authorizations to Part 107 Remote Pilots.

Comment DOJ Press Release (Score 1) 78

Interesting statement in the DOJ's Press Release:

“Today, federal law enforcement demonstrates once again that we can follow money through the blockchain, and that we will not allow cryptocurrency to be a safe haven for money laundering or a zone of lawlessness within our financial system,” said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Polite Jr. of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “The arrests today show that we will take a firm stand against those who allegedly try to use virtual currencies for criminal purposes.”

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