OxyContin Maker Purdue Pharma to Pay $270 Million as It Settles the First of 1,600 Lawsuits

https://gizmodo.com/purdue-pharma-to-pay-270-million-as-it-settles-the-fir-1833574965

Purdue Pharma, the company that makes OxyContin, has settled a lawsuit with the state of Oklahoma and will pay roughly $270 million over claims that the company helped fuel the opioid epidemic. Major media outlets all cite “people familiar with the matter,” but neither Purdue nor Oklahoma’s Attorney General have issued a public statement yet.

OxyContin was first introduced in 1996 and critics allege that it has fueled an opioid epidemic that has killed thousands of Americans. Roughly 130 Americans die every day from an opioid overdose, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Purdue Pharma allegedly encouraged overprescription of the drug and downplayed the health risks.

According to the New York Times, $100 million of the settlement will help fund a new addiction treatment center at the Oklahoma State University-Tulsa. The billionaire Sackler family, which controls Purdue Pharma through Connecticut-based trusts, will also shell out about $70 million to the new treatment center despite the fact that they weren’t personally named in the lawsuit.

Another $70 million of the $270 million settlement will reportedly go to “litigation costs.” There’s no word yet whether any victims of the opioid crisis in Oklahoma will see any money directly, though that seems extremely unlikely given how the money is being divvied up. Bloomberg found that the Sackler family made over $4 billion from OxyContin sales and other businesses between 2008 and 2015.

The trial against Purdue in Oklahoma was scheduled for May and everyone was keeping a close eye on this one because it was the first in the nation. There are an estimated 1,600 lawsuits that have been currently filed by municipalities across the country. The next opioid-related trial against Purdue isn’t scheduled until the fall in Ohio, according to the Wall Street Journal.

If history is any guide, the lawsuits could be consolidated in the future. When state Attorneys General started suing the tobacco companies in the 1990s, they were all pursuing individual lawsuits. After a handful of states started to win to recoup state medical costs from tobacco-related illness, like Mississippi, the rest of the lawsuits were put together into something called the Master Settlement Agreement in 1998. Notably, the first AG to win against Big Tobacco, Mississippi AG Michael Moore, is also spearheading efforts against Big Pharma in this latest fight.

[New York Times]

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

March 26, 2019 at 10:54AM

Firefox Lockbox provides access to your passwords on Android

https://www.engadget.com/2019/03/26/firefox-lockbox-for-android/

Mozilla’s Firefox Lockbox has been helping iOS users keep tabs on their many passwords for a while, and now it’s making that tool available on Android. Like its iOS counterpart, the app helps you fetch any password you already have stored in Firefox (and thus synced across your devices). It’s not a traditional manager, then — this is more for ensuring that you can sign into a streaming service on a friend’s TV.

The passwords are locked down with 256-bit encryption, and you can require a fingerprint to access the app if you want an extra layer of protection. It’s not terribly flashy as a result, but it’s free. If you’re already a Firefox user, it could be useful for those moments when you’d rather not reset an account just to retrieve a login you haven’t used in a long time.

Source: Google Play, Firefox (YouTube)

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

March 26, 2019 at 08:03AM

Fatal Tesla Model S crash illustrates challenge of EV fires

https://www.autoblog.com/2019/03/25/fatal-tesla-model-s-crash-ev-fires/

A crash and subsequent fire of a

Tesla Model S

near Fort Lauderdale last month that

claimed the driver’s life

illustrates once again a unique challenge presented by

electric vehicles

: that

electric vehicle

battery fires are very difficult to put out.

Bloomberg reports

that police initially tried to put out the blaze using a department-issued fire extinguisher, to no avail. Chemicals used in conventional fire extinguishers are useless against lithium-ion battery fires, which are susceptible to a chain reaction known as thermal runaway. Indeed, safety experts say the only way to put out this kind of fire is with thousands of gallons of water, well more than what is required to stop a fire in a gasoline combustion engine, or to let it burn itself out.

Firefighters eventually used water to put out the flames, but the

Model S

re-ignited two more times after being towed away from the crash site, a phenomenon that has happened

in previous Tesla crashes

. First responders eventually had to call the county hazmat unit for advice.

There are other risks to first responders as well, including motors that run silently and high-voltage cables — especially orange ones, which connote wires that carry more than 60 volts.

Electric vehicles

constitute only about 1.2 percent of total U.S. vehicle sales in 2018,

Bloomberg

reports, citing data from Edmunds, but virtually every automaker is making some degree of plans for one or more electric vehicle in its future product portfolio, with the expectation that

EV

sales will only rise.

Meanwhile,

Bloomberg

reports that the National Fire Protection Association estimates that only about a quarter of the 1.1 million firefighters in the U.S. have undergone EV fire training. Ironically, the fire department in Fremont, Calif., home to

Tesla

‘s vehicle assembly plant, has become an authority in dealing with

Tesla

fires because it has responded to several incidents there, including the submersion of battery packs in water tanks.

Last fall, the

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration issued a report

that found that the risk of fires in electric vehicles “are anticipated to be somewhat comparable to or perhaps slightly less than those for gasoline or

diesel

vehicular fuels.”

NHTSA

also

publishes guidance for owners of electric and hybrid vehicles

with high-voltage batteries, advising owners in part to always assume that batteries and other electric components and wires are fully charged and present a dangerous shock hazard. It also noted that vehicle battery technology is still evolving and that there’s no industry consensus on what is safest in terms of system design.

Read the

full Bloomberg story here

.

via Autoblog https://ift.tt/1afPJWx

March 25, 2019 at 12:25PM

How to Automate Parenting With IFTTT 

https://offspring.lifehacker.com/how-to-automate-parenting-with-ifttt-1833498110

IFTTT, the tool that lets you automate your digital life, can help any parent whose mental load has reached max capacity—and you kind of feel like a tech magician every time you use it. Here are some great IFTTT applets that can make parenting easier. (If you’re new to the service, check out our beginner’s guide to understand the basics.)

Start a livestream in your home after school so you know your kids arrived safely 

You can see if they brought home a friend (or five).

Uses: Date & Time, Manything

Text kid-related calendar events to a co-parent 

When you use the word “kids” in a calendar event, a text with the event URL will be sent to your spouse, co-parent, ex, nanny or whomever else you choose. It gives them an extra heads-up, which helps if they’re not the type that will constantly check a shared calendar.

Uses: Google Calendar, Android SMS

Flash the lights when Mommy or Daddy are almost home

After work, when you are exiting the freeway and close to home, the applet will trigger your Philips hue lights to flash. Your kids will squeal in excitement—or possibly scramble to put away that game they weren’t supposed to be playing.

Uses: Location, Philips Hue

It’s hard to negotiate just five more minutes of Mario Kart when the lights say it’s time to start their night routine. 

Uses: Date & Time, Philips Hue

Keep track of when your kid’s big projects are due 

Just type in “Report on the world’s grossest bugs due on April 10″ and the event will show up on your calendar.

Uses: Note widget, Google Calendar

Get a text if your kid ever calls 911

If your child calls 911 for whatever reason, you’ll know immediately.

Uses: Android Phone Call, Android SMS

They’ll know to get ready and meet you at their designated pick-up spot.

Uses: BMW Labs, Android SMS

Your soundly sleeping children will never again be accidentally woken by your “My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard …” ringtone.

Uses: Date & Time, Android device

Remember places to revisit with your family later on

When you come across a neat park, museum or hike and think “I should bring the kids here one day,” email yourself a photo and the location. Then, on those days when you need to get out, you’ll know where to go for ideas.

Uses: Camera widget, email

via Lifehacker https://lifehacker.com

March 22, 2019 at 01:41PM

All the Game Streaming Services Google Stadia Is Up Against

https://gizmodo.com/all-the-game-streaming-services-google-stadia-is-up-aga-1833457411

Photo: Alex Cranz (Gizmodo)

This week Google announced Stadia, a gaming service that runs from the cloud rather than a console in your living room or a souped-up gaming rig in your study. The concept of streaming games over the web isn’t new though—these are the other services that Stadia is going up against, and what they offer.

First, let’s quickly recap what Stadia is. Essentially, it runs games on Google’s servers, then streams them to your device of choice at up to a 4K resolution. It will work on basically any device that can run Chrome or supports the Chromecast protocol.

Running games from the cloud to a device means Google can promise some pretty cool tricks—like being able to easily swap between devices, and being able to easily share game states with other people—but we’re still waiting on quite a few of the details, like how much it’s all going to cost.

For this to work, it needs a fast internet connection and a way of minimizing lag between inputs and responses—something Google is looking to do with its own dedicated controller (it connects to the cloud directly via wifi). We’ll have to wait and see just how polished Stadia is when it finally goes live, but in the meantime, this is what it’s up against.

Nvidia GeForce Now

Nvidia launched its GeForce Now platform back in 2015, and it’s still in beta—perhaps a sign of just how difficult streaming video games is. The principle is the same as Google Stadia, with Nvidia GPUs and other hardware running the games, and then streaming them to your devices over the web.

Here the video is capped at 1080p at 60 frames per second, but at least it’s already live, unlike Google’s offering. For that top speed, Nvidia recommends a 50 Mbps connection and will knock the stream down to 720p for connections of 25 Mbps and under. You are limited to four hours of gaming per session however, at which point you’ll have to save the session and come back later.

Originally offered only on the Shield Android TV box, GeForce Now has since been expanded to PCs and Macs—you get access to a full remote Windows PC in the cloud, where you can install any game from a selection of over 400 and stream them to another computer or a Shield. That’s on top of the original Shield package, which focuses on a more limited list of less advanced titles.

Saves are handled in the cloud and enable quick swapping across different devices, and as well as the several hundred (usually older) games that come free with GeForce Now, you can also choose to bolster the selection by buying new games. Online multiplayer is supported for those games that include it.

As we’ve said, GeForce Now remains in beta, and has evolved since it first appeared—like everyone else, Nvidia is still figuring out just how this game streaming stuff works. There is a waiting list to sign up, but it’s free for now until the full commercial launch happens (which might be soon, now Stadia is coming): You can access it in North America and Europe, once you reach the front of the queue.

Blade Shadow

Like what the GeForce Now service has morphed into, Shadow from French company Blade gives you your very own high-powered Windows 10 machine in the cloud—but in this case you can use it for video editing and other intensive tasks, as well as gaming, and Blade says it’ll work with an internet connection as slow as 5 Mbps.

It’s basically a remote desktop setup, with a 720p, 60 fps stream the maximum you can get on a 5 Mbps connection (15Mbps is recommended for the best experience, especially if you’re gaming). Blade says Shadow uses a secret AI sauce to predict problems in connectivity ahead of time, and make adjustments accordingly.

Pay month-to-month, and Shadow costs $35; stump up for a year at once, and it works out to $30 per month. In both cases, there’s a 30-day free trial available. If you need other stuff besides gaming, then it may be the best option out there at the moment: The service is available in selected regions in the US, as well as the UK, France, Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany.

In terms of the features you get, it’s just like having a Windows 10 PC in front of you, although we’ve noticed a few limitations (using VPNs is discouraged, for instance, and mining cryptocurrency isn’t allowed either). The Shadow app runs on Windows, macOS, Android (including Android TV), and iOS.

Most recently, and perhaps most pertinently when it comes to Stadia, Blade launched the $140 Shadow Ghost: A set-top box that focuses exclusively on the gaming aspect of its service. Instead of using the app on a computer or phone, you plug the Ghost straight into your TV, attach a controller, and get going.

PlayStation Now

The big two players in consoles, Sony and Microsoft, won’t have been at all blindsided by Google’s Stadia unveiling—despite the question marks over bandwidth and latency we’ve got today in 2019, streaming seems to be the future (or at least part of the future) for gaming going forward, and Sony and Microsoft aren’t going be caught out.

Indeed, it’s Google playing catch up. Sony’s PlayStation Now subscription service has been streaming games since 2014—albeit a limited number of games to a limited number of devices. Today, you can stream games to a PC (through a dedicated app) or a PS4, and use your DualShock controller for an input device, with streaming resolution capped at 720p (Sony says a minimum 5 Mbps connection speed is required). Multiplayer is available too.

At the time of writing, you can pick from over 750 titles from the PS2, PS3, and PS4, and the selection continues to grow. The emphasis is on older titles rather than new AAA blockbusters, but some PS4 games can be downloaded and played locally if you don’t trust your broadband connection. PlayStation Now costs $20 a month if you pay monthly, $45 if you pay for three months in advance ($15 a month), or $100 for a year (a little over $8 a month), with a free trial available.

The service is live in the US, Canada, the UK, Japan, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Norway, Denmark, Finland, and Sweden right now. Online multiplayer is available as normal for the games that support it, and you can switch between titles on PlayStation 4 and a separate Windows machine.

It feels like a more cautious, limited attempt at what Google is trying (it did once support more devices, including Bravia TVs, but has now been scaled back). The service has its critics and isn’t always reliably stable, but it’s more or less what you would expect from a company with an established gaming business that wants to test the waters with something new.

Microsoft Project xCloud

And what then of Microsoft’s Project xCloud? From what we’ve heard so far (which isn’t all that much), it sounds very Stadia-esque. “Our vision for the evolution of gaming is similar to music and movies—entertainment should be available on demand and accessible from any screen,” wrote Microsoft’s Kareem Choudhry back in October.

Promising “state-of-the-art global game-streaming technology” when it eventually arrives, Project xCloud is going to put Xbox games in the cloud without any extra work needed from the developers, so it’s already got one advantage over Stadia. Of course, Microsoft already has plenty of experience in console and server building to draw on too.

Public trials are starting this year, Microsoft says, with input provided by Xbox Wireless Controllers or “game specific touch input overlay” for some titles on mobile. The company has also revealed that private testing is working over connection speeds of 10 Mbps, so it might not be as demanding in terms of bandwidth as Stadia.

With its existing cloud and gaming services—Azure, Xbox, and Windows—Microsoft might be best placed to take on what Google is offering. We don’t know how much Project xCloud is going to cost, or when and where it’s going to be available, but it sounds like it’ll tie in quite closely with the $10/month Xbox Game Pass.

We’re still waiting to hear more on features, pricing, availability and so on, but expect to hear a lot more when E3 rolls around in June. Like Sony, for the time being Microsoft will be supporting both traditional gaming and the streaming future. It is talking about keeping the Xbox console as a “flagship experience” while at the same time providing an experience that works on any device (like Office or Skype).

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

March 22, 2019 at 09:06AM