Netflix’s first comic book is Mark Millar’s ‘The Magic Order’

When Netflix acquired Mark Millar’s comic book empire in August, many assumed the streaming service would just adapt his various works for the screen. That isn’t quite the case: Netflix announced today that it will publish The Magic Order as a comic book, with art handled by Olivier Coipel. Millar is on writing duties for the six-issue dark fantasy series. In a somewhat surprising move, the story will be available in print in addition to digital starting with the premiere issue next spring.

But, given that Netflix sells Blu-ray versions of its original shows, perhaps a physical edition of the book isn’t all that unexpected. This move into comics could be seen as a way to compete with Amazon as well. In 2014, Amazon bought Comixology, a Netflix-style service that offers all-you-can-read digital comics for $6 a month.

We’ve reached out to see if The Magic Order will be available on the service and will update this post should a response arrive.

Source: Netflix

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Warby Parker recommends glasses using your iPhone X’s depth camera

The depth-sensing front camera on the iPhone X isn’t just useful for unlocking your phone or making silly emoji clips. Eyewear maker Warby Parker has updated its Glasses app for iOS to include an iPhone X-only recommendation feature. Let the app scan your face and it’ll recommend the frames that are most likely to fit your measurements. This isn’t the same as modeling the frames on your face (wouldn’t the iPhone X be ideal for that?), but it could save you a lot of hemming and hawing as you wonder which styles are a good match.

This is something of a niche use — how often do you go shopping for frames, really? With that said, it illustrates how a depth-aware front cam can serve a genuinely practical purpose. If it can map your face and other objects in a scene, it can measure all kinds of data that just wouldn’t be an option with 2D photos. You might not want to buy an iPhone X just for this, but you may get more value out of it as developers get a feel for what TrueDepth can do.

Via: Joanna Stern (Twitter), The Verge

Source: App Store

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Disney Calls Off Ban On Los Angeles Times After Backlash From Critics

The Walt Disney Company has reversed an earlier decision to ban the LA Times from attending advanced screenings of its movies for reviewing purposes. Originally, the company put a halt on inviting the newspaper to screenings due to what it called biased reporting about Disney as it relates to the company’s relationship with Anaheim, Ca., the home of Disneyland, and the tax incentives it receives from the city.

On November 3, a note was posted on the website of the LA Times that reads, "Walt Disney Co. studios declined to offer The Times advance screenings, citing what it called unfair coverage of its business ties with Anaheim. The Times will continue to review and cover Disney movies and programs when they are available to the public."

No Caption Provided

What followed was backlash from several critics groups, some of whom threatened to disqualify Disney films from year-end awards consideration. "Disney’s actions, which include an indefinite ban on any interaction with the Times, are antithetical to the principles of a free press and set a dangerous precedent in a time of already heightened hostility toward journalists," the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, the New York Film Critics Circle, the Boston Society of Film Critics, and the National Society of Film Critics wrote in a joint statement.

The Television Critics Association followed with a statement of their own, reading, "The Television Critics Association understands that screeners and coverage opportunities are a privilege and not a right, but we condemn any circumstance in which a company takes punitive action against journalists for doing their jobs."

Among others who spoke up was director Ava DuVernay, whose next film is Disney’s A Wrinkle In Time. She tweeted her solidarity with the reporters and critics boycotting Disney movies over the ban, writing, "Saluting the film journalists standing up for one another. Standing with you."

Now, Disney is backing off of the ban. It aren’t necessarily admitting it were in the wrong, though. "We’ve had productive discussions with the newly installed leadership at The Los Angeles Times regarding our specific concerns, and as a result, we’ve agreed to restore access to advance screenings for their film critics," the company says.

The move comes as Disney heads into a busy end of the year. Not only did Thor: Ragnarok just land in theaters, but the Pixar film Coco releases on November 22 and, on December 15, Star Wars: The Last Jedi will debut.

Interestingly, it was also recently reported that Disney has been in talks to possibly acquire rival media conglomerate 21st Century Fox recently. Those discussions are no longer believed to be active.

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Hospitals are helping make us all sick

Skin and gastrointestinal infections are on the rise in Houston, Texas as the result of sewage-laden floodwaters. In Puerto Rico, the thousands of people living without clean water are at an increased risk of all sorts of diseases. Natural disasters are public health disasters.

As temperatures go up due to climate change, extreme weather events (like Hurricane Maria and Hurricane Harvey) become more frequent, and more intense. Warmer temperatures are also a public health problem in and of themselves, aiding the spread of infectious diseases and increasing rates of malnutrition. The changing climate is going to make people sick.

And the healthcare system in the United Sates—which is supposed to keep people healthy—is partially to blame.

Between powering facilities, manufacturing medical supplies, creating pharmaceuticals, and other activities, the U.S. healthcare system is responsible for a solid chunk of the greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change; it released the equivalent of 614 million metric tons of carbon dioxide in 2013, and around 10 percent of the total emissions in the United States.

However, most healthcare professionals don’t have a good understanding of the harms caused by their industry, says Jodi Sherman, professor of anesthesiology and director of sustainability at Yale University. “The harms are indirect,” she says. “We’re concerned with the patients right in front of us. It’s hard for us to wrap our mind around how we’re affecting human health that’s distant geographically, and also in time.”

As citizens, Sherman says, everyone has a responsibility to try and reduce their climate impacts. But for the healthcare system, there’s an additional charge: “We’re the only ones that have the principle of ‘first, do no harm.”

Sherman and her collaborator, Matthew Eckelman, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northeastern University, wanted to put a number on the damage of healthcare emissions in a form familiar to healthcare professionals. Based on a series of calculations, they determined that the contribution to climate change by the institutions trying to protect your health will be responsible for the loss of 123,000 to 381,000 years of healthy life in the future. The results were published in the American Journal of Public Health in October.

The study used models projecting health damages from climate change-related effects of five health risks: malaria, floods, malnutrition, diarrhea, and cardiovascular disease. It used a range of models, Eckelman says, and the researchers were careful to use only those that were well-cited and well-reviewed. Across all of the different systems, malnutrition caused by climate change topped the list as the biggest contributor to health problems. And, Sherman says, the numbers they used were conservative estimates.

Putting a number on the health impacts of climate change from one particular sector is complicated, notes Howard Frumkin, a professor at the University of Washington School of Public Health, in a commentary on the research published in the same journal. To make these sorts of calculations, scientist grapple with a maze of variables and uncertain predictions. They have to track down all the sources of emissions that support the healthcare system, and there are countless ways to project out impacts those emissions will have in the future.

However, even though different scientists and researchers can argue the specific numbers involved, the overall qualitative logic is sound, writes Frumkin. The healthcare system plays a significant role in climate change, and therefore, a significant role in future harms to human health.

Sherman hopes this paper serves as a call to action for the healthcare community. “Knowledge about the magnitude of our impact is severely lacking,” she says. She wants the industry to respond in the same way it did to data about the loss of life due to medical errors, which sparked an entire patient safety movement.

Some hospitals across the country, like Gunderson Health Systems, are shifting to renewable energy and cutting their carbon footprints. The advocacy organization Health Care Without Harm urges hospitals to shrink their carbon footprints, move to more sustainable sources of energy, cut down on waste, and take other steps to reduce the system’s impact.

Strategies like increasing energy efficiency should be a no-brainer for hospitals, says President of Health Care Without Harm Gary Cohen. “It saves money, reduces the use of fossil fuels, and is more efficient,” he says. Energy efficient systems, like combined heat and power, also help hospitals stay up and running during natural disasters. “They allow resilience.”

Hospitals and healthcare providers should also put pressure on manufacturers up the pipeline to switch to more energy efficient practices, Sherman says. “Certainly we have the power together to demand better manufacturing practices and better materials.”

And by entering the conversation on climate change, hospitals and the healthcare system can shift the conversation around the importance of reducing emissions and reducing waste, says Cohen. “It goes from being about the environment and protection of polar bears, to being really about protecting the health of the communities,” he says. “It’s a complete reframing of the climate issues.”

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Comcast’s nationwide outage was caused by a configuration error

Yesterday, folks across the country reported that Comcast internet was down — an unusually large outage that lasted around 90 minutes. It turns out that the problem was caused by Level 3, an enterprise ISP that provides the backbone for other internet providers like Verizon, Comcast and RCN. "Our network experienced a service disruption affecting some of our customers," the firm said in a statement. "The disruption was caused by a configuration error."

The outage shows yet again just how vulnerable the internet is in the US. Last year around this time, a DDoS attack shut down Spotify, Twitter, the New York Times and other sites, prompting some soul-searching from ISPs and internet security experts. This time it was a case of simple human error, but the results were similar: The internet, which many individuals and businesses now depend on for their livelihoods, went down.

The problem, according to an expert contact by Wired, was a "route leak." ISPs use something called the Border Gateway Protocol to find networks they can route data packets through. To figure out which routes are the most efficient, so-called Autonomous Systems (ASes) track data packets that are moving through various networks.

A route leak is caused when these ASes relay bad information about their IP addresses. That can cause internet providers to make bad or inefficient routing decisions, causing packets to be delayed or stopped altogether.

A good example of this is an error Level 3 made back in 2015. In that case, a telecom in Malaysia accidentally told Level 3 that it could relay internet data from anywhere around the world. Level 3 accepted the routes, even thought it shouldn’t have, causing worldwide data to be shunted through the Malaysian telecom, which had no way of handling all the traffic.

Something similar could have happened yesterday if Level 3 was, say, tweaking its routing settings and made a mistake. ISPs use filters to guard against such errors, but the scale of the internet makes it difficult to catch them all. After last year’s large DDoS attack, security experts pointed out that internet infrastructure providers like Dyn and Level 3 are particularly vulnerable to attacks. Yesterday’s outage shows how vulnerable they are to human error, too.

Via: Wired

Source: Comcast

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Google Search and Maps Now Show You Estimated Wait Times at Restaurants

google maps wait times

It has been almost a year since Google began showing their Popular Times feature in Google Search and Maps, so today, they are adding an additional bit of information to it. As you search for your favorite restaurants in Google, you’ll now see estimated wait times along with the busy indicator.

In order to see the new estimated wait times, you’ll simply tap on the hour bars in the Popular Times section, as can be seen in the image above. So not only will you be able to see the times a restaurant is busy or if it might be busier than usual at the moment, you’ll also know just how long you might have to wait for a table should you show up.

Google says that you should start seeing this new addition show up for “nearly a million” sit-down restaurants around the globe.

// Google

Google Search and Maps Now Show You Estimated Wait Times at Restaurants is a post from: Droid Life

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Piracy site for science research dinged again in court—this time for $4.8M

First came the $15 million fine a New York federal judge imposed on Sci-Hub, a scientific research piracy site that has freed tens of thousands of research papers from behind paywalls. That was in June, and the site’s overseas operator, Alexandra Elbakyan, said she’d never pay plaintiff Elsevier or stop the infringing behavior.

Elbakyan

Elbakyan

Now on Friday, a Virginia federal judge dinged the site for another $4.8 million for the same infringing behavior, this time from a lawsuit brought by the American Chemical Society.

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