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Comment May become human rated (Score 1) 52

What intrigued me the most was the mention of being capable of becoming a human rated rocket. A lot of questions come to mind with that statement alone. There is a lot of growth potential with this move to a larger rocket with regard to a larger payload but the potential of launching humans to space (perhaps to the Moon?) raises the stakes for the little rocket company that could. I'm excited! Good for them

Comment Re:That is pretty alarming (Score 1) 95

With the increasing amount of satellites being launched, upgrades being planned/implemented (laser interlinks between sats), and perhaps as needed adding more ground stations I for one don't really feel too worried. Especially as this isn't supposed to replace local ISP's in metropolitan urban areas that already have some infrastructure available. More for locations that don't have Internet connectivity or is underserved.

Comment Re:Any landing you can walk away from... (Score 1) 285

What you do need to keep in mind is that, prior to Starship, EVERY first flight of an orbital booster was just understood to result in destruction of the booster.

The only issue with that statement is that this is the 2nd stage of the vehicle, not the booster stage. Starship isn't really meant to be an SSTO vehicle

Submission + - Proposal Would Give EU Power To Boot Tech Giants Out of European Market (arstechnica.com) 1

An anonymous reader writes: The EU wants to arm itself with new powers to take on big technology companies, including the ability to force them to break up or sell some of their European operations if their market dominance is deemed to threaten the interests of customers and smaller rivals. EU Commissioner Thierry Breton told the Financial Times that the proposed remedies, which he said would only be used in extreme circumstances, also include the ability to exclude large tech groups from the single market altogether. In addition, Brussels is considering a rating system that would allow the public and stakeholders to assess companies’ behavior in areas such as tax compliance and the speed with which they take down illegal content.

“There is a feeling from end users of these platforms that they are too big to care,” said Mr. Breton, who is leading the overhaul of digital rules in the bloc. “[Under] certain conditions we may also have the power to impose structural separation." The new EU legislation would increase Brussels’ powers to scrutinize the way technology companies gather information on users, following concerns raised by independent researchers that the voluntary disclosures groups make are often misleading or partial. Mr. Breton confirmed that the EU would not remove the limited liability that companies have for the content published on their platforms. “The safe harbor of the liability exemption will stay,” he said. “That’s something that’s accepted by everyone." Mr. Breton said draft legislation will be ready by the end of the year. Proposals are being finalized, and once they are agreed they will go through the European Parliament and the European Council.

Submission + - Kiwi ingenuity makes drone flying safer (suasnews.com)

NewtonsLaw writes: A Raspberry Pi, a USB SDR dongle, an LCD a buzzer and a little bit of coding in Python and C has created a very useful alarm for drone and RC model aircraft operators. The device allows users to set an "alarm" perimeter around their operating area and automatically alert them whenever a manned aircraft with ADSB fitted intrudes into that area.

While there are apps like FlightRadar24 that allow you to monitor ADSB-equipped air traffic, this is the first stand-alone hand-held unit that isn't reliant on cellular or Wifi data and which not just monitors aircraft movments but also sounds an alarm according to user-defined parameters.

For those worried about the risks of drones colliding with aircraft this should bring a little extra peace of mind — even though there has never been a single death attributed to the use of recreational multirotor drones in the decade or so since their ready availability.

Submission + - Tesla Wins Lawsuit Against Whistleblower Accused of Hacks (cnet.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The US District Court of Nevada awarded Tesla a win in its lawsuit against a former employee, filed two years ago. You may recall CEO Elon Musk referred to this incident in a previously leaked email calling on employees to be "extremely vigilant." Martin Tripp, who worked at the company's Nevada Gigafactory, was accused of hacking the automaker and supplying sensitive information to unnamed third parties. Reuters reported Friday the court ruled in Tesla's favor and dismissed Tripp's motion to file another reply to the court. Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but according to Reuters, the court will grant Tesla's motion to seal the case.

Submission + - Researchers demonstrate in-chip watercooling (arstechnica.com)

FallOutBoyTonto writes: Part of the problem with liquid cooling solutions is that they're limited by having to get the heat out of the chip and into the water in the first place. That's led some researchers to consider running the liquid through the chip itself. Now, some researchers from Switzerland have designed the chip and cooling system as a single unit, with on-chip liquid channels placed next to the hottest parts of the chip. The results are an impressive boost in heat-limited performance.

Submission + - Woke NASA to crack down on 'racist' space names such as 'Eskimo Nebula' & 'S (rt.com)

FallOutBoyTonto writes: When people gaze at the stars, some see their beauty, while others discover reasons to be offended by the nicknames we invented for them. Luckily for the latter, NASA is about to purge the star charts for the sake of “diversity.”

The first target for NASA’s desire to keep woke bullies appeased is planetary nebula NGC 2392. Lay astronomers know it by the nickname ‘Eskimo Nebula,’ which it gained because its spectacular shape resembles a head in a parka hood.

The US agency will no longer call it that, because “‘Eskimo’ is widely viewed as a colonial term with a racist history, imposed on the indigenous people of Arctic regions,” it said on Wednesday....

Another example of a supposedly ‘racist’ nickname that NASA wants to eradicate is that of the ‘Siamese Twins Galaxies.’ It refers to NGC 4567 and NGC 4568, a pair of galaxies in the Virgo Galaxy Cluster, which are separated by just 52 million light years and are in the process of colliding with each other. The colloquial term for conjoined twins was deemed inappropriate by NASA, which may now roll back to the other nickname for the same objects: the ‘Butterfly Galaxies.’

Submission + - Massive 20GB Intel IP Data Breach Floods the Internet, Mentions Backdoors (tomshardware.com)

FallOutBoyTonto writes: A leaker today posted on Twitter a link to a file sharing service that contains what an anonymous source claims is a portion of Intel's crown jewels: A 20GB folder of confidential Intel intellectual property. The leaker dubbed the release the "Intel exconfidential Lake Platform Release ;)"

The folder has been posted by an anonymous source that claims more is coming soon, and while we don't know the exact specifics of the folder's contents, we have verified that it does exist. In fact, the title of many of the documents do correlate to the list of purported information posted by the leaker

        Intel ME Bringup guides + (flash) tooling + samples for various platforms
        Kabylake (Purley Platform) BIOS Reference Code and Sample Code + Initialization code (some of it as exported git repos with full history)
        Intel CEFDK (Consumer Electronics Firmware Development Kit (Bootloader stuff)) SOURCES
        Silicon / FSP source code packages for various platforms
        Various Intel Development and Debugging Tools
        Simics Simulation for Rocket Lake S and potentially other platforms
        Various roadmaps and other documents
        Binaries for Camera drivers Intel made for SpaceX
        Schematics, Docs, Tools + Firmware for the unreleased Tiger Lake platform
        (very horrible) Kabylake FDK training videos
        Intel Trace Hub + decoder files for various Intel ME versions
        Elkhart Lake Silicon Reference and Platform Sample Code
        Some Verilog stuff for various Xeon Platforms, unsure what it is exactly.
        Debug BIOS/TXE builds for various Platforms
        Bootguard SDK (encrypted zip)
        Intel Snowridge / Snowfish Process Simulator ADK
        Various schematics
        Intel Marketing Material Templates (InDesign)
        Lots of other things

Submission + - The Next Step in SSD Evolution: NVMe Zoned Namespaces Explained (anandtech.com)

FallOutBoyTonto writes: In June we saw an update to the NVMe standard. The update defines a software interface to assist in actually reading and writing to the drives in a way to which SSDs and NAND flash actually works.

Instead of emulating the traditional block device model that SSDs inherited from hard drives and earlier storage technologies, the new NVMe Zoned Namespaces optional feature allows SSDs to implement a different storage abstraction over flash memory...

The NVMe Zoned Namespaces (ZNS) specification has been ratified and published as a Technical Proposal. It builds on top of the current NVMe 1.4a specification, in preparation for NVMe 2.0.

Submission + - SpaceX's Starship SN5 testbed successfully makes 150m controlled flight (arstechnica.com)

Zitchas writes: Tuesday evening SpaceX launched a testbed system which flew 150m into the air, hovered, and made a controlled landing. This testbed is noteworthy for being made out of stainless steel, as well as for being powered by a single off-center raptor engine. It demonstrates that the propulsion system can successfully compensate for the off-balanced propulsion via vectored thrust, as well as handle the stresses involved with landing and take-off.

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