Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Renewable Energy Passes 30% of World’s Electricity Supply
  2. FTX Customers Poised to Recover All Funds Lost in Collapse
  3. Defense Think Tank MITRE To Build AI Supercomputer With Nvidia
  4. Study Suggests Genetics as a Cause, Not Just a Risk, for Some Alzheimer’s
  5. OpenAI Exec Says Today’s ChatGPT Will Be ‘Laughably Bad’ In 12 Months
  6. Minor Car Crashes Mean High Tech Repairs
  7. Amazon’s Delivery Drones Won’t Fly In Arizona’s Summer Heat
  8. UK Startup ‘Wayve’ Gets $1 Billion Funding For Self-Driving Car Tech
  9. Theranos Fraudster Elizabeth Holmes Has Prison Sentence Reduced Again
  10. Apple Announces M4 With More CPU Cores and AI Focus
  11. Google’s Pixel 8A is a Midrange Phone That Might Actually Go the Distance
  12. Nintendo Confirms It Will Announce Switch Successor Console ‘Within This Fiscal Year’
  13. Boeing Says Workers Skipped Required Tests on 787 But Recorded Work as Completed
  14. Apple Quietly Kills the Old-school iPad and Its Headphone Jack
  15. Jane Street Gets Into Mobile Gaming

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Renewable Energy Passes 30% of World’s Electricity Supply

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Renewable energy accounted for more than 30% of the world’s electricity for the first time last year, according to climate thinktank Ember. The Guardian reports:
Clean electricity has already helped to slow the growth in fossil fuels by almost two-thirds in the past 10 years, according to the report by climate thinktank Ember. It found that renewables have grown from 19% of electricity in 2000 to more than 30% of global electricity last year. Solar was the main supplier of electricity growth, according to Ember, adding more than twice as much new electricity generation as coal in 2023. It was the fastest-growing source of electricity for the 19th consecutive year, and also became the largest source of new electricity for the second year running, after surpassing wind power.

The first comprehensive review of global electricity data covers 80 countries, which represent 92% of the world’s electricity demand, as well as historic data for 215 countries. The surge in clean electricity is expected to power a 2% decrease in global fossil fuel generation in the year ahead, according to Ember. […] World leaders are aiming to grow renewables to 60% of global electricity by 2030 under an agreement struck at the UN’s Cop28 climate change conference in December. This would require countries to triple their current renewable electricity capacity in the next six years, which would almost halve power sector emissions.

FTX Customers Poised to Recover All Funds Lost in Collapse

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Lawyers for the defunct cryptocurrency exchange FTX said customers would receive all the money they lost when the firm collapsed in 2022 and receive interest on top of it. “But the recoveries come with a caveat,” reports the New York Times. “The amount owed to customers was calculated based on the value of their holdings at the time of FTX’s bankruptcy in November 2022. That means customers won’t reap the benefits of a recent surge in the crypto market that sent the price of Bitcoin to a record high.” From the report:
The announcement was a landmark in the attempt to recover the $8 billion in customer assets that disappeared when FTX imploded virtually overnight, setting off a crisis in the crypto industry. Under a plan filed in federal bankruptcy court in Delaware, virtually all FTX’s creditors, including hundreds of thousands of ordinary investors who used the exchange to buy and sell cryptocurrencies, would receive cash payments equivalent to 118 percent of the assets they had stored on FTX, the lawyers said. Those payments would flow from a pool of assets that FTX’s lawyers have pulled together in the 17 months since the exchange collapsed, the lawyers said. […] It will take months for the payouts to begin. The plan must be approved by the federal judge overseeing FTX’s bankruptcy, John T. Dorsey.

Made whole in dollars because crypto increased?

By klipclop • Score: 3 Thread
If I under this whole fraud saga: FTX pissed away customer assets by giving unlimited interest free loans to their partner firm Alemeda. With what crypto and cash funds were left and recovered — unsecured customers will be made whole in dollar terms because they got EXTREMELY lucky and crypto prices have surged. IMO this is a very unusual and very lucky situation. Had the FTX fraud gone on longer, I’m fairly sure Bankman would have lost it all.

Defense Think Tank MITRE To Build AI Supercomputer With Nvidia

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Washington Post:
A key supplier to the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies is building a $20 million supercomputer with buzzy chipmaker Nvidia to speed deployment of artificial intelligence capabilities across the U.S. federal government, the MITRE think tank said Tuesday. MITRE, a federally funded, not-for-profit research organization that has supplied U.S. soldiers and spies with exotic technical products since the 1950s, says the project could improve everything from Medicare to taxes. “There’s huge opportunities for AI to make government more efficient,” said Charles Clancy, senior vice president of MITRE. “Government is inefficient, it’s bureaucratic, it takes forever to get stuff done. … That’s the grand vision, is how do we do everything from making Medicare sustainable to filing your taxes easier?” […] The MITRE supercomputer will be based in Ashburn, Va., and should be up and running late this year. […]

Clancy said the planned supercomputer will run 256 Nvidia graphics processing units, or GPUs, at a cost of $20 million. This counts as a small supercomputer: The world’s fastest supercomputer, Frontier in Tennessee, boasts 37,888 GPUs, and Meta is seeking to build one with 350,000 GPUs. But MITRE’s computer will still eclipse Stanford’s Natural Language Processing Group’s 68 GPUs, and will be large enough to train large language models to perform AI tasks tailored for government agencies. Clancy said all federal agencies funding MITRE will be able to use this AI “sandbox.” “AI is the tool that is solving a wide range of problems,” Clancy said. “The U.S. military needs to figure out how to do command and control. We need to understand how cryptocurrency markets impact the traditional banking sector. … Those are the sorts of problems we want to solve.”

Think Tank and AI

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
A match made in heaven. Brain dead elites and artificial pre programmed ignorance.

Why?

By Barny • Score: 3 Thread

Why is it called “Defense” when most US military actions are outside its border? Shouldn’t it be “Offense”?

Study Suggests Genetics as a Cause, Not Just a Risk, for Some Alzheimer’s

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Pam Belluck reports via the New York Times:
Scientists are proposing a new way of understanding the genetics of Alzheimer’s that would mean that up to a fifth of patients would be considered to have a genetically caused form of the disease. Currently, the vast majority of Alzheimer’s cases do not have a clearly identified cause. The new designation, proposed in a study published Monday, could broaden the scope of efforts to develop treatments, including gene therapy, and affect the design of clinical trials. It could also mean that hundreds of thousands of people in the United States alone could, if they chose, receive a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s before developing any symptoms of cognitive decline, although there currently are no treatments for people at that stage. The new classification would make this type of Alzheimer’s one of the most common genetic disorders in the world, medical experts said.

“This reconceptualization that we’re proposing affects not a small minority of people,” said Dr. Juan Fortea, an author of the study and the director of the Sant Pau Memory Unit in Barcelona, Spain. “Sometimes we say that we don’t know the cause of Alzheimer’s disease,” but, he said, this would mean that about 15 to 20 percent of cases “can be tracked back to a cause, and the cause is in the genes.” The idea involves a gene variant called APOE4. Scientists have long known that inheriting one copy of the variant increases the risk of developing Alzheimer’s, and that people with two copies, inherited from each parent, have vastly increased risk.

The new study, published in the journal Nature Medicine, analyzed data from over 500 people with two copies of APOE4, a significantly larger pool than in previous studies. The researchers found that almost all of those patients developed the biological pathology of Alzheimer’s, and the authors say that two copies of APOE4 should now be considered a cause of Alzheimer’s — not simply a risk factor. The patients also developed Alzheimer’s pathology relatively young, the study found. By age 55, over 95 percent had biological markers associated with the disease. By 65, almost all had abnormal levels of a protein called amyloid that forms plaques in the brain, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s. And many started developing symptoms of cognitive decline at age 65, younger than most people without the APOE4 variant.

Executive summary

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

If you have genes, you’re at risk for Alzheimer’s.

OpenAI Exec Says Today’s ChatGPT Will Be ‘Laughably Bad’ In 12 Months

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
At the 27th annual Milken Institute Global Conference on Monday, OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap said today’s ChatGPT chatbot "will be laughably bad" compared to what it’ll be capable of a year from now. “We think we’re going to move toward a world where they’re much more capable,” he added. Business Insider reports:
Lightcap says large language models, which people use to help do their jobs and meet their personal goals, will soon be able to take on “more complex work.” He adds that AI will have more of a “system relationship” with users, meaning the technology will serve as a “great teammate” that can assist users on “any given problem.” “That’s going to be a different way of using software,” the OpenAI exec said on the panel regarding AI’s foreseeable capabilities.

In light of his predictions, Lightcap acknowledges that it can be tough for people to “really understand” and “internalize” what a world with robot assistants would look like. But in the next decade, the COO believes talking to an AI like you would with a friend, teammate, or project collaborator will be the new norm. “I think that’s a profound shift that we haven’t quite grasped,” he said, referring to his 10-year forecast. “We’re just scratching the surface on the full kind of set of capabilities that these systems have,” he said at the Milken Institute conference. “That’s going to surprise us.”
You can watch/listen to the talk here.

In 12 months?

By narcc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s laughably bad now!

At least they’re not saying the new model will be too dangerous to release. It’s a refreshing change of pace.

This one is laughably bad

By Rosco P. Coltrane • Score: 5, Funny Thread

The next one won’t make anybody laugh.

Collaboration

By Waffle Iron • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

But in the next decade, the COO believes talking to an AI like you would with a friend, teammate, or project collaborator will be the new norm.

Just remember: This upcoming AI may very well be a friend, teammate or collaborator. But it will be to the corporation that creates it, not to you.

Just like with current tech companies, their business partners and advertisers will be their customers. You will still be the product, but with the creepiness factor cranked up by an order of magnitude.

Minor Car Crashes Mean High Tech Repairs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
“With all the improvements in car safety over the decades, the recent addition of a plethora of high tech sensors and warnings comes with increased costs,” writes longtime Slashdot reader smooth wombat. “And not just to have to have them on your car. Any time you get into an accident, even a minor one, it will most likely require a detailed examination of any sensors which may have been affected and their subsequent realignment, replacement, and calibration.” CNN reports:
Some vehicles require “dynamic calibration,” which means, once the sensors and cameras are back in place, a driver needs to take the vehicle out on real roads for testing. With proper equipment attached the car can, essentially, recalibrate itself as it watches lane lines and other markers. It requires the car to be driven for a set distance at a certain speed but weather and traffic can create problems. “If you’re in Chicago or L.A., good luck getting to that speed,” said [Hami Ebrahimi, chief commercial officer at Caliber] “or if you’re in Seattle or Chicago or New York, with snow, good luck picking up all the road markings.”

More commonly, vehicles need “static calibration,” which can be done using machinery inside a closed workshop with a flat, level floor. Special targets are set up around the vehicle at set distances according to instructions from the vehicle manufacturer. “The car [views] those targets at those specific distances to recalibrate the world into the car’s computer,” Ebrahimi said. These kinds of repairs also demand buildings with open space that meet requirements including specific colors and lighting. And it requires special training for employees to perform these sorts of recalibrations, he said

“The change that we’ve seen in the last five years is greater than we’ve seen, probably, in the last five decades,” said Todd Dillender, chief operating officer of Caliber Collision, one of the biggest auto body repair companies in the United States with more than 1,700 locations across 41 states. […] With a rapidly changing industry, qualified auto body repair technicians are in short supply, just as they are in the engine repair business. That’s also led to upward pressure on pay in the industry as technicians have to be highly qualified and educated, Dillender said. That’s good for people who work in the industry, of course, but tougher for those who pay, and for the insurance companies who, in turn, pay for the repairs.
A new study from consumer automotive group AAA says the cost to fix sensors and cameras in new vehicles “now accounts for more than a third of the post-crash repair costs,” reports CNN. However, “no one, including AAA, recommends not getting these features because of repair costs,” since many of them can cut crash rates in half and improve a car’s overall safety.
“They’re not going to prevent everything,” said Greg Brannon, director of automotive engineering at AAA. “And when you are in a crash, there are additional costs so it’s sort of the old ‘there’s no free ride’ when it comes to these things.”

This property is known as fragility.

By RightwingNutjob • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Its opposite is robustness. The latter is usually a compliment, and the former is an insult.

Finally time for OBD-III?

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Car’s are going the way of modules and networking, it would probably be a good time to introduce open diagnostic compatibility. So many bad stories are just about the fact that you need dealer tools for so many functions when in so many cases the calibration procedures are not that different from any other firmware update. If you have access to a mechanic grade scan tool they really do just step by step you through the process.

Car’s have always benefitted from pretty much de-facto right to repair, more technology doesn’t have to impede that, it’s just gotta catch up.

There is an OBD 3 from SEMA but it’s been on the books for like 2 decades or something.

https://fbaum.unc.edu/lobby/_1…

Re:Happened to me recently

By Smidge204 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

The sensors are mounted to, and often optically coupled with, the windshield. When removed and reinstalled they are disturbed and should be recalibrated.

=Smidge=

Re:Isn’t life grand?

By timeOday • Score: 5, Informative Thread
The cost/benefit analysis is not so simple, since the costs avoided by preventing a crash are huge. How many sensor bumpers can you pay for with the savings of avoiding a million-dollar personal injury lawsuit? Yet those savings do not factor in to a “cost to repair” figure.

Of course the cost/benefit would also vary wildly from one “doodad” to another, so there is no answer ‘in general.’

Re:Isn’t life grand?

By slack_justyb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Instead of making people better drivers

Just curious, what’s your solution to making people better drivers that isn’t also running into that nanny state thing you mentioned?

There’s way more people on the road today than yesterday, going to be more people on the road tomorrow than today. At some point, just saying “make better drivers” doesn’t work anymore without some sort of intervention. We can build it into cars or we can hire 100,000 more patrol to nanny us. But either way you slice it, I’m curious how you purpose we fix things that isn’t “nanny state”.

I’m all ears.

Amazon’s Delivery Drones Won’t Fly In Arizona’s Summer Heat

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
Amazon plans to start flying delivery drones in Arizona this year — but don’t count on them to bring you a refreshing drink on a hot day. The hexacopter can’t operate when temperatures top 104 degrees Fahrenheit, or 40 degrees Celsius, the company says, and average daily highs exceed that for three months of the year in Tolleson, the city outside Phoenix where Amazon is preparing to offer aerial deliveries from inside a 7.5-mile radius. The drones can’t help with midnight snacks either, because they’ll be grounded after sunset. Potentially being inoperable for a quarter of the year might make launching drone deliveries in Tolleson and neighboring desert communities seem like an odd choice. It’s far from the first challenge faced by Amazon’s much-delayed drone project. The unit is years behind its goals of flying items to customers in under an hour on a regular basis, and a one-time target of 500 million deliveries by 2030 seems distant. Amazon Prime Air has completed just thousands of deliveries, falling behind rivals; Alphabet subsidiary Wing has notched hundreds of thousands of delivery flights and Walmart more than 20,000.

In the California wine country town of Lockeford, where Amazon initially launched drone deliveries, some residents told WIRED last year that they ordered only because Amazon lured them with gift cards. In Arizona, it could be discouraging not being able to rely on drones during those hours when one might not want to venture too far from the comfort of air conditioning. […] That temperature and other environmental conditions could ground or hamper the drone industry has been known for years. A team from University of Calgary’s geography department estimated that on average across the world, drones with limitations similar to Amazon’s, including from weather and daylight, would be limited to flying about 2 hours a day. In the world’s 100 most populous cities, the average daily flight time would be 6 hours. “Weather is an important and poorly resolved factor that may affect ambitions to expand drone operations,” they wrote in a study published in 2021. Heat, in particular, forces motors to work harder to keep drones aloft, and their batteries are only so powerful.

Suspensors

By TwistedGreen • Score: 3 Thread

Sounds like drone delivery won’t really be viable until Amazon invents gravity-nullifying suspensor fields. Better get cracking!

UK Startup ‘Wayve’ Gets $1 Billion Funding For Self-Driving Car Tech

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Wayve, a UK-based AI firm focused on developing self-driving car technology, has secured a record $1.05 billion in funding, with Microsoft and Nvidia participating in the round led by SoftBank. According to the BBC, this investment is the largest for an AI company in Europe. The BBC reports:
Wayve says the funding will allow it to help build the autonomous cars of the future. […] Wayve is developing technology intended to power future self-driving vehicles by using what it calls “embodied AI.” Unlike AI models carrying out cognitive or generative tasks such as answering questions or creating pictures, this new technology interacts with and learns from real-world surroundings and environments.
"[The investment] sends a crucial signal to the market of the strength of the UK’s AI ecosystem, and we look forward to watching more AI companies here thrive and scale,” said Wayve head Alex Kendall.

Theranos Fraudster Elizabeth Holmes Has Prison Sentence Reduced Again

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
For the second time, the disgraced former CEO of Theranos has had her federal prison sentence shortened. In July, it was reduced by two years. Now, 40-year-old Holmes is scheduled for release on August 16, 2032 instead of December 29, 2032 — a reduction of more than four months. The Guardian reports:
People incarcerated in the U.S. can have their sentences shortened for good conduct and for completing rehabilitation programs, such as a substance abuse program. The latest reduction of Holmes’s sentence still meets federal sentencing guidelines. Those guidelines mandate that people convicted of federal offenses must serve at least 85% of their sentence, regardless of reductions for good behavior.

In 2022, Holmes was sentenced to 11 years and three months in prison after being convicted on four counts of defrauding investors. She was also ordered to pay $452m in restitution to those she defrauded, but a judge delayed those payments due to Holmes’s “limited financial resources.” Holmes’s lawyers have already begun attempts to get her conviction overturned. Oral arguments for her appeal are set to begin on June 11 in a federal appeals court in San Francisco, California, NBC News reported.

Sociopath manipulates justice system

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Are we surprised? Honestly, my surprise stems from her apparent ability to afford the lawyers for this, but I guess it helps when you don’t actually have to pay the fine.

Kind of overblown

By peterww • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Some CEOs have literally worked through shadow companies to disrupt state and federal elections, and their investigations were cancelled, even after emails from them that are basically a smoking gun are released. I don’t feel bad for Holmes, but I do think she’s getting it way harder than other people who had nothing happen to them. Nobody went to jail for the global financial meltdown, but we’re quibbling over a few months’ sentence for a single snake-oil saleswoman?

Financial Priorities

By Roger W Moore • Score: 3 Thread

She was also ordered to pay $452m in restitution to those she defrauded, but a judge delayed those payments due to Holmes’s “limited financial resources.” Holmes’s lawyers....

Clearly her financial resources were not so limited that she could not afford lawyers. Perhaps repaying those she defrauded should have a higher priority than finding money to pay lawyers for an appeal?

Anger fueling clickbait article

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
This is a run of the mill sentence reduction for good behavior. It was fully expected. She’d have gotten the same treatment no matter what, it’s completely normal.

This is the “Velma Season 2” of clickbait. Something to get your blood boiling so you’re get angry and click and comment and engage with all these “fun” advertisements!

Learn to spot these things. Find some good articles and/or videos on media literacy if you haven’t already. You’re being made into a fool.

Re:good - some people

By schwit1 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Her blood analyzer scam may have cost people their lives.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/t…

Apple Announces M4 With More CPU Cores and AI Focus

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
In a major shake-up of its chip roadmap, Apple has announced a new M4 processor for today’s iPad Pro refresh, barely six months after releasing the first MacBook Pros with the M3 and not even two months after updating the MacBook Air with the M3. Apple says the M4 includes “up to” four high-performance CPU cores, six high-efficiency cores, and a 10-core GPU. Apple’s high-level performance estimates say that the M4 has 50 percent faster CPU performance and four times as much graphics performance. Like the GPU in the M3, the M4 also supports hardware-accelerated ray-tracing to enable more advanced lighting effects in games and other apps. Due partly to its “second-generation” 3 nm manufacturing process, Apple says the M4 can match the performance of the M2 while using just half the power.

As with so much else in the tech industry right now, the M4 also has an AI focus; Apple says it’s beefing up the 16-core Neural Engine (Apple’s equivalent of the Neural Processing Unit that companies like Qualcomm, Intel, AMD, and Microsoft have been pushing lately). Apple says the M4 runs up to 38 trillion operations per second (TOPS), considerably ahead of Intel’s Meteor Lake platform, though a bit short of the 45 TOPS that Qualcomm is promising with the Snapdragon X Elite and Plus series. The M3’s Neural Engine is only capable of 18 TOPS, so that’s a major step up for Apple’s hardware. Apple’s chips since 2017 have included some version of the Neural Engine, though to date, those have mostly been used to enhance and categorize photos, perform optical character recognition, enable offline dictation, and do other oddities. But it may be that Apple needs something faster for the kinds of on-device large language model-backed generative AI that it’s expected to introduce in iOS and iPadOS 18 at WWDC next month.
A separate report from the Wall Street Journal says Apple is developing a custom chip to run AI software in datacenters. “Apple’s server chip will likely be focused on running AI models, also known as inference, rather than in training AI models, where Nvidia is dominant,” reports Reuters.

Further reading: Apple Quietly Kills the Old-school iPad and Its Headphone Jack

It’s very telling that the iPad is first in line

By zuki • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
The fact that they’re put their fastest and most capable CPU in a device running iOS before anything more substantial is yet another sign that Apple isn’t really caring much about laptops or desktops anymore. Not to speculate too much, but for about five years many of us have theorized that the writing was on the wall and that OS-X and iOS will eventually soon be merged.... somehow. Clunky file system and all the simplified rest included.

Even the announcement where they’re hinting that with the addition of a Magic Keyboard it’ll feel like a MacBook Air is prepping the ground for getting users gently accustomed to the idea that laptops are a thing of yesteryear. Classic Apple, really.

As for me personally, these premonitions slowly becoming reality were what made me move away from the platform some years ago, because of still depending on large screens, lots of RAM and compatibility with some older peripherals which can sometimes cost more than the computers themselves. Exactly the things Apple charges an insane premium for, where they seem to be expecting customers to constantly refresh all of their gear and who cares if it creates more landfill waste in the process....

Google’s Pixel 8A is a Midrange Phone That Might Actually Go the Distance

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The Pixel 8A is officially here. The 8A gets Google’s latest processor, adds a bunch of new AI features, and still starts at $499 in the US. But the very best news is that the 8A adopts the Pixel 8 and 8 Pro’s seven years of software support, which is just unheard of in a midrange phone. From a report:
The 8A retains the same general shape and size as its predecessor. But its 6.1-inch screen gets a couple of significant updates: the top refresh rate is now 120Hz, up from 90Hz, and the panel gets up to 40 percent brighter, up to 2,000 nits in peak brightness mode. They’re important upgrades, especially since the 8A’s main competition in the US, the OnePlus 12R, comes with an excellent display.

It comes with the same generative AI photo and video features that made a splash on the Pixel 8 and 8 Pro, including Best Take, Magic Editor, and Audio Magic Eraser. Circle to Search is also available, and the 8A will be able to run Google’s mobile-optimized on-device AI model, Gemini Nano. As on the Pixel 8, it’ll be a developer option delivered via feature drop. Other specs are either unchanged or slightly boosted compared to the last generation. There’s still 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage, though there’s now a 256GB option. Camera hardware is unchanged from the 7A, including a stabilized 64-megapixel main sensor. There’s an IP67 rating, consistent with the 7A, and battery capacity is a little higher at 4,492mAh compared to 4,385mAh. Wireless charging is available via Qi 1.3 at up to 7.5W — no Qi2 here.

Re:7 years of support

By awwshit • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I’ll believe it when I see it. Chances are Google will cancel the whole thing before the end of this month. I don’t trust Google to be there for me for 7 minutes, let alone 7 years.

No reason to upgrade

By Local ID10T • Score: 3 Thread

It looks like a solid phone offered at a decent price.

I don’t need a brighter screen.
I don’t need AI on my phone.
I don’t need better snapshots.

I got an “insider offer” on it this morning: $200 off plus the (expected) $200 trade-in value on my 7a (that I got last year). That makes it a $100 upgrade.

I still don’t need to upgrade. I probably wont for many years.

If your old phone is not meeting your needs, or is busted, this is a solid option at a good price/feature point. If not… meh.

Card/Jack

By markdavis • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Meh. Paid slightly less for my current phone, the Samsung A52 5G. It, too is fast, OLED screen, in-screen fp sensor, multi-sensor camera, similar size. But also has SD card slot and a real headphone jack.

Why can’t we have freaking card slots and headphone jacks?? I really do use them. I like syncing/moving my stuff quickly on a card. I actually do use the headphone jack in several cases where I don’t want a dongle mess so I can charge with USB AND use wired earphones at the same time. Plus I like using magnetic connectors, much better than wireless charging, and I would have to REMOVE that every single time I want to use wired headphones.

Otherwise, looks like a decent phone that is very similar to what I would want.

Cool

By TwistedGreen • Score: 3, Funny Thread

Cool but can it make phone calls?

Re:Card/Jack

By markdavis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

>“About the only way to get me to switch to Bluetooth would be if there’s some device I can plug my headphones into that picks up the BT signal - anyone ever see such a thing?”

Of course, it is just a bluetooth receiver. Like this:

https://www.amazon.com/Upgrade…

But it is still something that has a battery, has to be charged, turned on, paired, carried around, etc. There is no GOOD reason devices are dropping analog headphone jacks. They don’t impair water resistance (there are plenty of devices that have waterproof jacks, plus USB is a jack), there is almost no cost, and they don’t take up that much space (especially on larger devices). I love bluetooth headphones, but NOT ALWAYS and for ALL occasions.

Nintendo Confirms It Will Announce Switch Successor Console ‘Within This Fiscal Year’

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Nintendo has said it will finally announce its Switch successor console "within this fiscal year,” so at some point before March 31, 2025. From a report:
In a statement published to X / Twitter, Shuntaro Furukawa, President of Nintendo, confirmed the new console as Nintendo published its financial report for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2024. Furukawa also confirmed a Nintendo Direct for this June, but said there will be no mention of the Switch successor during that presentation. Instead, it will focus on Switch games for the latter half of 2024.

Re:Consistent with Nintendo practice…

By slack_justyb • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

the controls will be weird AF and it’ll have about half the processing power of a Steam Deck

Yes. It absolutely will do this. But if a powerful console is what you were expecting, clearly you haven’t been paying attention to Nintendo since the GameCube. They aren’t looking to capitalize on hardware power but on their Intellectual Property. That’s literally what they have going for them. The fact the people will fall over themselves in droves for a good Mario platformer, another open-world Zelda, a shoot ‘em up Metroidvania, a Mario Kart, or any other of the IP that Nintendo commands a pretty hefty loyalty over.

I mean every go round we hear everyone shouting the “shortcomings” of Nintendo’s console or their shitty consumer tactics of having everyone rebuy all their old stuff for the newest platform. And every time, millions of people empty their pockets for Nintendo, showing that all that lackluster hardware or all that abusive relationship that Nintendo puts their customers through means jackshit at the end of the day. Because people kept begging Nintendo to depart them of thousands of dollars of cash.

So yeah. The console will be absolute trash from a pure specs view. Yeah. So bullshit marketing thing will happen and suddenly you need to rebuy literally everything for the new console. And lots of Nintendo fans will absolutely do it to a degree to make Nintendo profitable yet again. Or it’ll be a WiiU, but the biggest killer of the WiiU was Nintendo hoping that the Wii name would carry people into it. The marketing for the new console was trash so it never had the penetration to draw any third party from the word go.

That said, I won’t be buying Nintendo’s newest trash. I’m pretty done with supporting their massively hostile approach to consumers. But even so, I’m not doubting that should they actually market this fucking thing, that they’ll convince enough people with their strong IP to fork over another couple of thousands on a garbage system.

Better be a superset of the original Switch

By Torodung • Score: 3 Thread

All my current Switch games had better work on this thing. I’ve got a lot invested and very few are on cart.

Boeing Says Workers Skipped Required Tests on 787 But Recorded Work as Completed

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating whether Boeing failed to complete required inspections on 787 Dreamliner planes and whether Boeing employees falsified aircraft records, the agency said this week. The investigation was launched after an employee reported the problem to Boeing management, and Boeing informed the FAA. “The FAA has opened an investigation into Boeing after the company voluntarily informed us in April that it may not have completed required inspections to confirm adequate bonding and grounding where the wings join the fuselage on certain 787 Dreamliner airplanes,” the FAA said in a statement provided to Ars today. The FAA said it “is investigating whether Boeing completed the inspections and whether company employees may have falsified aircraft records. At the same time, Boeing is reinspecting all 787 airplanes still within the production system and must also create a plan to address the in-service fleet.” The agency added that it “will take any necessary action — as always — to ensure the safety of the flying public.”

Boeing VP Scott Stocker, who leads the 787 Dreamliner program, described “misconduct” in an April 29 email to employees in South Carolina. Boeing provided a copy of the email to Ars. “After receiving the report, we quickly reviewed the matter and learned that several people had been violating Company policies by not performing a required test, but recording the work as having been completed,” Stocker wrote. “As you all know, we have zero tolerance for not following processes designed to ensure quality and safety. We promptly informed our regulator about what we learned and are taking swift and serious corrective action with multiple teammates.”

Re:Pencil-whipping. That was *jail* in the militar

By Frobnicator • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Back in the day it was run by engineers, and had many strong ties to the military. The engineers were absolutely strict about adhering to the protocols and the military-related folks reinforced the strict protocols. As you wrote, “pencil-whipping” or falsely recording that procedures were followed, can range from reprimands, to court martial being charged with forgery, reduction in rank, dishonorable discharge, and even confinement.

In “Old Boeing” everything was double-checked and had a paper trail associated. You check out a tool and double-check the serial number. You record the serial number of every part you install with the tool. When you’re done you check in the tool and double-check the serial number. Now you have a paper trail showing you didn’t leave a wrench inside the wing, and also a record of every part the wrench touched. Between the nerds in engineering and the strict protocols of the military, all the paper trails and quality levels outweighed the costs and burdens of paperwork.

Consolidations in the mid 1990’s generally, and the merge with McDonnel Douglas especially, brought an end to that culture. Management transition from people experienced aviation engineers over to people with backgrounds business management and accounting further eroded the culture.

Around that time many analysts and workers complained that everything needed to be cost-justified rather than protocol-justified. Before the transition if a worker spent more time double-checking something or chose to throw out a part because it wasn’t up to speck they could justify it based on protocol. After the transition reports are that management switched to demanding cost justification

Now the company’s announced the turnover of Calhoun as CEO with his background in investment funds and turning profits, that’s a start. They still have C-suite executives with backgrounds in Walmart and Disney, the supply chain is managed by a business admin, a policy director with a background on minimizing political risk exposure rather than engineering safety practices, a tech officer that’s been primarily focused on the business portfolio, space and security exec that came from Citigroup, etc., etc.

How much of that’s just pencil-whipping reports, how much is an edict to save money, how much is requiring a financial analysis instead of an engineering analysis, that’s all changed from the company pre 1990’s.

Why?

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why would employees would skip a non-functional step in the process?
To save time.

Why do these employees want to save time?
Pressure to "Get it done now."

Pressure from where?
Management.

Found the problem!

Put the blame where it belongs

By Iamthecheese • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Put the blame where it belongs. We all know this isn’t a case of lazy workers skipping out on the job. It’s supervisors telling the workers “do all the things, each thing on the checklist must be done carefully” and also “do this and this and this and this today”. And when questioned as to the priority between quality and speed being told, “just do it all’ or “just prioritize” with a nudge and a wink. And those supervisors being told the same things by managers. And those managers being told those things by corporate officers who collected big bonuses for squeezing more work out of the system and not hiring enough workers to actually do all the work. The rot is all the way at the top. Tell the managers to tell the supers to tell the workers, “do each thing and actually take the time to get it done, and if it doesn’t all get done that’s my problem” and quality will happen. It’s not a cultural thing, not really. it can be changed in one year by hiring enough people and refusing work that can’t be done by the number of people involved. If that means selling fewer planes, or slower turnaround, or whatever then that’s what needs to happen.

Re:Or is that the problem?

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Then companies started saying, profit is not as important as reducing our carbon emissions.

Then companies started saying, profit is not as important as “inclusivity”.

Then companies started to say “we can’t do any work without a lot of training that assumes all of our employees are monsters who will rape anyone at the drop of a hat”.

Pretty soon companies were not caring about profits or quality at all, but only making sure they were offending no-one, inside or outside the company… and here we are today.

Maybe what needs to happen is a little more focus back on profit and hard facts like numbers.

It’s hard to argue that employees doing unacceptable nonsense like this is not directly tied to inclusive hiring practices that require hiring people because of the color of their skin, rather than skill or even ethical background.

What a long winded way to say “Fox told me Boeing is failing because they hired unqualified minorities”

Boeing used to do this work internally but they didn’t feel like paying union shop wages so they contracted out to a cheaper company Spirit Aerosystems. The old saying is always true. You get what you pay for. You pay low wages to aerospace workers you get low quality work as a result.

Old Boeing and Today’s Boeing

By TigerPlish • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

When Old Boeing was a thing, America and the world itself were different.

Consider this:

The Model 288 — the B-17 prototype — was built by Boeing with their own money, with their own time, not at Air Force behest. They *knew* war was coming, even by ‘37 the whole world kinda knew. So they made this, showed it to the USAF, who reluctantly started testing. eventually… well, you know the rest. Over 10k built. And many shot down.

The Model 367-80. A bullshit name, but it was a bluff made to sound like a new version of an old prop plane. But it was the prototype 707 instead - built after Comet showed how not to do it. Swept wings. Twice the capacity. Boeing built that on their on dime, on their own time. They literally bet every desk, every pencil, every building, every piece of furniture on that project. It gave not one but two airplanes — the KC135 tanker, still flying, and the slightly plumper 707, which gave the world the Jet Age and shrank it hard.

And then they did it AGAIN. They bet every building, every asset, every machine tool, to built the 747 prototype. On their own time. For a competition the C-5 won. But Juan Trippe of Pan Am saw it, liked it, and bought 25 right there.

What I"m getting at is.. Old Boeing had cojones. They bet the farm twice, maybe three times and won, and won big. B-17 took the war to Hitler’s front door. 707 and 747 re-wrote the world. I’ll note 747 took 18 months from scribble to flyable prototype, all the while they were building the factory to build it, as they built it.

Today’s Boeing.. wouldn’t take such a chance. Today’s Boeing is frankly incapable of the crazy that 707 and 747 were. Or the brilliant decision to make a narrowbody and widebody that shared the same airfoil, engines and flight deck. I’m talking 757 and 767

Had they any smarts, by the time they’d finished 777, they knew 73, 75 and 76 were getting old. They should’ve done the 767 trick again: A new set of airliners, one fat, one skinny, based on a common set of components.

But no. They went on the weird take that is the 787, without making a narrow counterpart of it to replace the now-very-obsolete 737. They coulda had it all. Again. But it didn’t happen because right after 777 was done, the McD merger happened. The good people left.

That’s what MBA-think does. It hobbles companies. I lay the disaster of 787’s development and 737’s long-overdue retirement at the feet of the new management.

And believe it or not, the 747 prototype when it came out, it flew two weeks later.

When the 787 came out, the roll-out bird was devoid of engines, and it was months before it flew. They rolled out an incomplete prototype, you may even call it a mockup.

That’s when I knew Boeing had lost it. Not with MCAS, but with their nightmare development hell with 787. MCAS just drove home the point that not developing 787 and a new narrowbody alongside it was patently retarded, short-sighted, and out of character, considering the smashing success 757 / 767 are.

Apple Quietly Kills the Old-school iPad and Its Headphone Jack

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Along with introducing a new iPad Air and iPad Pro during its Let Loose event, Apple quietly killed its ninth-gen iPad — also known as the last iPad with a headphone jack. From a report:
The 10th-gen iPad is now the sole entry-level iPad in Apple’s official lineup and, as such, has received a $100 price cut. Released in late 2022, the 10th-generation iPad arrived starting at $449, or about $120 more than base entry-level iPads from previous years. Apple justified the price increase with new iPad Air-like features, like a 10.9-inch screen and USB-C support.

headphone jack is a necessity

By gillbates • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Anyone who has ever tried to do home recording with bluetooth headphone knows of the BT delay problem: the audio you hear through the headphones is delayed, in some cases, by several hundred milliseconds. Which means that if you’re recording against a backing track, your playing/singing will be out of time. When you play back the combined tracks, your part will be behind the beat and you’ll sound like an amateur. And recording multiple tracks in this manner only compounds the problem.

So, if you want to do professional, or even demo quality audio recording, you need at least a headphone jack, because that audio is not measurably delayed. Apple devices might make great status symbols, but they’re really more for consuming content, rather than creating it.

Re: It’s Apple

By Currently_Defacating • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Pretty disingenuous to use a generation of people who have never had access to devices sold with headphone jacks not owning headphones with Jacks as evidence that bluetooth is preferable.

Kids today have never owned houses either…

Jane Street Gets Into Mobile Gaming

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
Financial Times Alphaville:
Look, we know we write a lot about Jane Street, but it’s a fascinating place, and people seem interested in it. So it was hard to resist writing about the trading shop entering the mobile phone game space (kinda). Back in 2013 Jane Street developed a card game called “Figgie,” which it made to simulate open outcry trading, teach trading nous, and generally burnish its reputation for quirkiness — de rigueur in the industry.

All you need are 40 cards from a normal deck, and the rules have been public for a while. During Covid, Jane Street made a virtual version for remote interns. Now it’s a mobile game that’s publicly available on the official Apple and Google app stores.

Who?

By RobinH • Score: 5, Informative Thread

For those of you (like me) who have no idea who Jane Street is, here you go.

It’s a trading firm that “trades a broad range of asset classes on more than 200 venues in 45 countries”.

Re:Who?

By alvinrod • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Someone should edit their Wikipedia page to let everyone know they pay for slashvertisements. Or just more generally for the press to write stories about them. I’ll accept that the latest crop of /. editors are stupid enough to post something that would be marked as binspam by anyone with a brain.