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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 10 declined, 4 accepted (14 total, 28.57% accepted)

Submission + - Sony Killing BD-R (techspot.com) 1

storkus writes:

For home videographers and data hoarders who still rely on optical discs for archiving, some bad news just dropped: Sony is winding down production of recordable Blu-ray media. The last factory in the world churning out those massive 100GB triple-layer and 128GB quad-layer BDXL discs is preparing to shut its lines for good.

Last I checked, there are still other companies (mainly Chinese) making them, so maybe not?

Submission + - Mastercard to phase out manual card entry for online payments in Europe by 2030 (cnbc.com)

storkus writes:

Instead of the 16-digit card number we’re all accustomed to using for transactions, this will be replaced with a randomly-generated “token."

This story, as currently written, says nothing about their plans outside Europe but in the past the USA in particular has been dead last in getting this kind of tech.

Submission + - Solar modules deployed in France in 1992 still provide 79.5% of original output (pv-magazine.com)

storkus writes:

The testing showed that the modules still produce on average 79.5% of their initial power after 31 years of operation. In a previous testing carried out 11 years ago, the panels were found to produce 91.7% of their initial power. “This result exceeds the performance promised by the manufacturers who said the panels would have maintained 80% of their output after 25 years

Another US NREL study says ~0.75% per year. Locally here in Arizona there are a LOT of used panels available at VERY cheap prices, but CSA / UL / NFPA may be the reason they go uninstalled.

Submission + - Are there any Linux-friendly DESKTOP x86 motherboard manufacturers? (phoronix.com) 1

storkus writes: The release of Haswell-E and a price drop on Devil's Canyon has made me itch for a PC upgrade. However, looking around I discovered a pair of horror stories on Phoronix (2nd story link at the bottom of the first), and plenty more Googling around.

My question: if MSI, Gigabyte, Asus (and by extension Asrock) are out, who's left and are they any good? Note that I want to build a (probably dual-boot, but don't know for sure) gaming and "other" high-end machine with one of the above chips so we're talking Z97 or X99; however, these stories seem to point to the problems being M$-isms in the BIOS/UEFI structures rather than actual hardware incompatibility, combined with a real lousy attitude (despite the Steam distro being real soon now).

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