TCL Low Cost Foldable Display for Everyone: Patented DragonHinge

https://www.anandtech.com/show/14006/tcl-readies-dragonhinge-foldable-smartphones-for-everyone

Out of the top smartphone manufacturers, Samsung has clearly beat its competitors to the punch with its foldable smartphone, but it certainly will not be the only company to offer such a product. TCL, the company behind such brands as Alcatel and BlackBerry, is working on its own foldable display designed for more mainstream-priced handsets. Along with the display, it has patented its ‘DragonHinge’ design to deal with the fold in a device. The company states that these foldable handsets promise to be considerably more affordable than the first ones to market.

via AnandTech https://ift.tt/phao0v

February 24, 2019 at 10:10AM

‘Cultured’: A Look At How Foods Can Help The Microbes Inside Us Thrive

https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2019/02/24/696272090/cultured-a-look-at-how-foods-can-help-the-microbes-inside-us-thrive?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

Korean kimchi, made of salted and fermented vegetables, contains microbes that contribute to its distinctive taste.

The foods we put in our bodies affect the kinds of bacteria that live and flourish there. A new book explores this collaboration — and the cultures whose dishes maximize the relationship.

(Image credit: 4kodiak/Getty Images)

via NPR Topics: News https://ift.tt/2m0CM10

February 24, 2019 at 06:09AM

Why putting Xbox games on Switch isn’t as ridiculous as it might sound

https://arstechnica.com/?p=1462589

Why putting Xbox games on Switch isn’t as ridiculous as it might sound

Aurich

Here at Ars, we tend to be skeptical of the regularly recurring rumors that two major video game competitors are going to be merging or teaming up in some way. From the early 2000s whispers that Microsoft would buy a struggling Sega to suggestions that Apple should buy Nintendo, these rumors often reflect wishful thinking at least as much as actual insider knowledge.

That said, we’re still intrigued by recent rumors that Microsoft could be bringing certain Xbox One games—and a version of its Xbox Game Pass subscription service—to the Nintendo Switch and other consoles.

As the current scuttlebutt has it, an Xbox app to be released for the Switch would let players with an Xbox Game Pass subscription play a selection of Xbox One games on Nintendo’s hardware. High-end games would work on Nintendo’s lower-end hardware thanks to streaming via Microsoft’s recently announced Project xCloud. Meanwhile, Microsoft would also sell certain low-end first-party Xbox One games, like the Ori series, to the Switch directly, according to the rumors.

These latest reports originate with a video from Direct Feed Games, who cites “several” unnamed sources creating “teasing and hinting [that] has reached a point to which I can no longer ignore it.” The Direct Feed Games channel is mainly known for extremely basic gameplay videos, though, and it has a spotty history of accurate rumor reporting. Last March, the channel confidently but incorrectly stated that “Call of Duty will come to Switch in 2018,” for instance.

But Game Informer also cites its own sources as saying that Xbox Game Pass on Switch could be announced “this year.” And the usually reliable Windows Central says that they’ve been “hearing for almost a year that Microsoft was aiming to put Xbox Game Pass on Nintendo Switch, and even PlayStation 4.”

Venturing outside the walls

The idea of Microsoft bringing its games and services to competing consoles isn’t as ridiculous as it might seem at first. Xbox’s Phil Spencer may have already hinted at it in a December interview with Gamespot, where he said Game Pass “started on console, it will come to PC, and eventually it will come to every device.” Back at E3 2018, Spencer similarly said a future Microsoft “game streaming network” would bring “console quality gaming on any device.” He specifically cited phones and PCs at the time, but the Nintendo Switch definitely counts as “any device.”

There have been other signs Microsoft is interested in opening up its walled console garden. Just this month, the company revealed that it will soon

let Xbox Live integrate with Switch and mobile games

, letting players bring their “gaming achievement history, their friends list, their clubs, and more” along with them beyond Xbox hardware. That comes years after Microsoft

opened up cross-platform gameplay

for Xbox One titles and

introduced a “Play Anywhere” initative

linking PC and Xbox One purchases and game progress.

On top of all that, there’s Microsoft’s PlayFab Multiplayer Servers, which have maintained SDKs for Xbox, Windows, PlayStation, Switch, iOS, and Android despite a Microsoft buyout in early 2018.

Microsoft has taken baby steps to bringing its own games to competing platforms in the past, as well. Minecraft is the biggest example, but that game was already a multi-platform behemoth well before Microsoft bought publisher Mojang, and the game simply remained so under the new regime. But there have been Microsoft-published games on Steam and iOS/Android, and Microsoft-owned properties like Viva Pinata and Age of Empires have shown up on the Nintendo DS, too.

One among many

Add it all together, and you can paint a picture of a Microsoft that is less interested in continuing to fight another battle in the traditional my-way-or-the-highway console wars. Microsoft is

currently losing that war pretty badly

, as measured purely by hardware sales (Microsoft says

that is not how it measures things

, for what it’s worth). Microsoft has also been struggling a bit to

attract as many big-name exclusives

to its platform, making the walled console garden approach look even less viable for the company these days.

Letting previously exclusive games and services outside the Xbox hardware ecosystem probably wouldn’t help the consumer appeal of Microsoft’s own console offerings. But getting Xbox-branded games and services onto other platforms would let the company bring in revenue from a much bigger pool of potential players—even if Microsoft’s share of that revenue would be smaller than that directly from Xbox hardware.

For Nintendo, allowing Xbox-branded Game Pass streaming is another checkbox that could help drive already healthy Switch sales, and such a move would let the company extract an easy cut of any Switch-based revenue Microsoft generates. Nintendo has already used server-side game streaming to bring high-end games like Resident Evil 7 to the Switch in Japan, so the concept isn’t an entirely new one.

Even if the rumors are true, none of this means Microsoft will be pulling a post-Dreamcast Sega-style departure from the console hardware business. After all, at the last E3 Spencer said that it was “deep into architecting the next Xbox consoles [that will] set the benchmark for console gaming.”

What Microsoft might be setting up is a situation more akin to its place in PC gaming. There, Microsoft publishes its own games, runs its own online storefront, makes its own hardware, and even provides the operating system that runs it all. But despite worries from some corners, Microsoft hasn’t taken any real steps to flex its muscles and try to make PC gaming a console-style walled garden.

That could be because such a system would be harder to pull off on an open platform like the PC, or it could be because today’s Microsoft is growing to accept a world where it provides games and services to multiple platforms, not just its own. If rumors are to be believed, perhaps we should all get more used to that approach, even in the console space.

via Ars Technica https://arstechnica.com

February 22, 2019 at 11:45AM

How US experts helped China build a DNA surveillance state

https://www.technologyreview.com/the-download/613000/how-us-experts-helped-china-build-a-dna-surveillance-state/

How US experts helped China build a DNA surveillance state

China has been leaning on American know-how to build a sprawling surveillance program in Xinjiang province, according to the New York Times

Crack down: Chinese authorities have created “a vast Chinese campaign of surveillance and oppression” targeting Uighurs, an ethnic minority who are mostly muslims and live in the northwestern province. A comprehensive DNA database is part of the plan to keep the restive group under control.

American role: Scientists working with Chinese police have been using equipment from Thermo Fisher, a supplier of biotechnology tools in Massachusetts. They also shared genetic survey data with Kenneth Kidd, a geneticist at Yale University.

The genetic data was being used to be able to determine, from a blood sample, if someone had Uighur ancestry. Chinese scientists even filed a patent on the idea.

Backlash: Thermo Fisher’s role in China has been known for some time, thanks to reports by Human Rights Watch. In November, US senator Marco Rubio called out the company in a tweet for “making lots of $ helping #Xinjiang authorities conduct mass detention…” 

But the company seems only to have buckled because of scrutiny from the Times. According to the paper, Thermo Fisher announced on February 20 that it would stop sales of its equipment in Xinjiang. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Not just in China: The issue of genetic privacy is also of concern in the US, where some commercial databases of genetic information are being used by police to identify rapists and murderers. In theory, these tools could also be employed for ethnic profiling.

via Technology Review Feed – Tech Review Top Stories https://ift.tt/1XdUwhl

February 21, 2019 at 01:55PM

Why a Japanese spacecraft is firing a bullet into an asteroid

https://www.popsci.com/japanese-spacecraft-bullet-asteroid?dom=rss-default&src=syn

And that’s actually not the craziest thing in store for this mission.

About 180 million miles from Earth lies a tiny asteroid called Ryugu, with a diameter of a little less than 1 kilometer, orbiting the sun about once every 16 months. If…

via Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now https://ift.tt/2k2uJQn

February 21, 2019 at 02:38PM

ThisPersonDoesNotExist, A Website That Uses AI To Make Fake Human Faces

https://geekologie.com/2019/02/thispersondoesnotexist-a-website-that-us.php

thispersondoesnotexist.jpg
Above: All fake people.
ThisPersonDoesNotExist.com is a website that’s exactly what it sounds like provided it doesn’t sound like anything but a site that uses artificial intelligence to create realistic human faces of people who don’t exist. "Ghost people!" Not really, no. Who let this person in here?

Thispersondoesnotexist.com generates a new lifelike image each time the page is refreshed, using technology developed by chipmaker Nvidia.
Some visitors to the website say they have been amazed by the convincing nature of some of the fakes, although others are more clearly artificial.
Nvidia developed a pair of adversarial AI programs to create and then critique the images, in 2017.
The company later made these programs open source, meaning they are publicly accessible.

No word how many of the people I was matched with and messaged on the dating site I use are actually fake people, but I suspect from my perfect 0% response rate, all of them. I want my money back and then some. Enough for a fancy dinner to cry into.
Thanks to atheistgirl, who agrees fake people are the worst people. That’s why I insist on honesty and am the smartest, most handsome man in all the kingdom.

via Geekologie – Gadgets, Gizmos, and Awesome https://geekologie.com/

February 21, 2019 at 09:35AM