What should Sony do with The Interview? Will anyone watch Vessel? Do you want a wristpand to pause your TV?
Monthly Archives: December 2014
DTNS 2391a – North Korea Internet Outage
A really short show in which Tom catches up on one headline missed in the show earlier in the day.
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Show Notes
DTNS 2391 – The Interview: Dictator’s Cut
Breki Tomasson is on the show and we’ll talk about a self-destructing Blackberry, a new kind of battery storage and what Sony should do with “The Interview.”
Using a Screen Reader? click here
Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.
Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.
A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.
If you enjoy the show, please consider supporting the show here or giving 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!
Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!
Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!
Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit
Show Notes
Today’s guest: Breki Tomasson, founder of the CSICON podcasting network
Headlines
Venturebeat reports that Google announced today that it has completed the first prototype of its self-driving vehicle. This is Google’s first fully functional self-driving car, complete with headlights, a steering wheel and pedal systems. Google says it plans to spend the holiday season driving it around the test track, with the goal of bringing the vehicle to Northern California streets in 2015.
Let’s catch you up on the weekend in Sony Pictures News. North Korea’s KCNA state news agency said regarding the group responsible for the attacks, “We do not know who or where they are but we can surely say that they are supporters and sympathizers with the DPRK.” The statement also suggested the US and North Korea should cooperate on an investigation to find the true perpetrators and said if the US did not cooperate the country would take counteraction against the US. Japan condemned the attacks but did not blame North Korea by name. Finally, Reuters reports that Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told the US Secretary of State that China “opposes all forms of cyberattacks and cyber terrorism,” but also stopped dhort of blaming North Korea. China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said “Before making any conclusions there has to be a full (accounting of) the facts and foundation.”
The New York Times passed along that Doug Madory, the director of Internet analysis at Dyn Research reports North Korea has lost access to the Internet. Access became unstable Friday, worsened over the wekend and disappeared by Monday morning. The difficulties seem consists with a DDoS attack according to Madory. The cause of the problem is unclear and no organization has claimed responsibility. North Korea has only 4 networks connecting it to the rest of the Internet, all running through China. The government might have taken the network down or it could be the work of outside actors.
The Next Web reports South Korean nuclear plant operator Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Coo. or KHNP is running cyber warfare drills after documentation such as manuals was copied from its servers and posted online last week. An account that posted the leaked documents on Friday warned that unless three reactors were closed by Christmas, people should “stay away” from them. KHNP has said the leaked data does not undermine the safety of the reactors which are also not on the same network as the severs that were compromised.
The Next Web repots that Google will begin selling Android One phones in Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka in the next few weeks. Micromax, Karbonn and Spice from India, and Bangladeshi manufacturer Symphony will also begin retailing Android One devices, beginning with its Road A50.
Reuters reports Blackberry is working with Boeing on a high-security Android-based smartphone that would wipe it’s data if tampered with. Reuters says the phone uses dual SIM slots and can be configured to connect with biometric sensors and satellites. Boeing has begun offering the phone to potential customers.
ZDNet notes a recent ITG research report states Apple Pay was responsible for 1 percent of digital payment dollars spent in November while Google Wallet accounted for 4 percent. The report also indicated Apple Pay customers tend to return to merchants who accept Apple Pay. 60 percent of Apple Pay customers used Apple Pay on multiple days in November.
And just a note that a page has gone back up at thepiratebay.se with a pirate flag, a counter marking the time since the raid took the site down, and an AES string. A Slashdot posting notes the domain is pointing to a server in Moldova.
News From You
metalfreak sent us a PC World report that the new developer builds of the Chromebook software let users ask the laptop questions using the “OK Google” voice command. The feature is still experimental, with no guarantee of ending up in a consumer version of the Chromebook OS.
johndezember pointed out the Technology Review article on a new kind of battery invented by Jay Whitacre, a professor of materials science at Carnegie Mellon University. Electrical current in the battery is generated as sodium ions from a saltwater electrolyte shuttle between manganese oxide–based positive electrodes and carbon-based negative ones. The batteries are expected to last twice as long as lead-acid batteries and cost about the same to make. Their slow charhe and discharge makes them suitable for things like storing power from a solar panel. The professor’s startup, Aqion Energy is about to start full-scale production of the batteries at a factory in Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania.
Discussion Links: What’s next for Sony?
http://recode.net/2014/12/21/you-will-get-to-see-the-interview-sony-lawyer-says/
https://gigaom.com/2014/12/22/the-fair-use-case-to-show-the-interview-if-sony-will-not/
http://www.2600.com/?q=content/offer-sony-2600
http://www.theverge.com/2014/12/22/7435199/sony-the-petition-petition-by-independent-movie-theaters
Hey DTNS folks. Tom made a comment about folks who didn’t have access to the Google Play store sometimes using Amazon as an alternate marketplace, so I wanted to share my favorite source for Android software, https://f-droid.org/. F-droid is a repository of free and open source software. You initially side load the app, but then it functions just like any app store, except it’s free, (both gratis and libre).
——–Nile
Current Geek 37: Your world, virtual
Today, on Current Geek: What’s that other universe doing? Get your stuff from Amazon in an hour. HearthStone graces Android fiinally. Watch for Pixels coming soon. ICANN hack you. Sony stuff as we are aware of it. Fourcast! Some emails and more!
DTNS 2390 – Cute Is the New Black
Darren Kitchen is here and we’ll talk about the FBI’s identification of North Korea as responsible for the Sony attack. Should we believe them? Also the FCC gets sneaky and gets sneaked upon. Plus Len Peralta bravely illustrates the great leader.
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Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.
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A special thanks to all our Patreon supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.
If you enjoy the show, please consider supporting the show here at the low, low cost of a nickel a day on Patreon. Thank you!
Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!
Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!
Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit
Show Notes
Today’s guests: Darren Kitchen, founder of hak5.org and Len Peralta, author and artist
Headlines
The US FBI announced today that it has concluded that the North Korean government is responsible for the attacks on Sony Pictures Entertainment’s internal systems. The FBI cited similarities in code, infrastructure and tools used in previous attacks they have attributed to North Korea. Meanwhile Ars Technica reports on a public note claiming to be from Guardians of Peace saying Sony could released The Interview as long as it deleted the assassination scene. CNN reported a source from Sony told it that an email was sent asking for all trace of the movie to be eliminated. And the US President said he wish Sony had spoken to him first before bowing to pressure not to release the movie. Sony Entertainment CEO Michael Lynton said his company “spoke to a senior advisor in the White House” and told CNN “We have not given in. And we have not backed down. We have always had every desire to have the American public see this movie,” shifting responsibility to the theater owners.
The Telegraph reports Apple is upset at allegations by the BBC’s Panorama program that workers at a Pegatron plant that makes Apple products are being mistreated. Undercover reporters for Panorama brought back video of sleeping workers and alleged denial of days off, refusal to surrender government IDs and coercion in filling out forms regarding voluntary work choices. Apple senior vice president of operations Jeff Williams said both himself and CEO Tim Cook were “deeply offended by the report. Williams claims suppliers have achieved an average of 93 per cent compliance with the 60-hour workweek limit this year. Pegatron said they were carefully investigating the BBC’s claims, and will take “all necessary actions”.
ReCode reports T-Mobile USA has settled a lawsuit with the US Federal Trade Commission that accused the company of profiting from unauthorized charges known as cramming. At least $90 million will be returned to subscribers who can show that they had to pay the unauthorized charges, which includes $22.5 million in fines that T-Mobile will pay to the states and Federal Communications Commission for the violations. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau sued Sprint for a similar matter earlier this week. AT&T settled a similar FTC complaint in October for $105 million.
Tech Crunch reports that Facebook is releasing a new app today called “Stickered for Messenger”. The app allows users to select one their own images, resize it and paste a virtual sticker on top, then send it to their friends. The app was built by Facebook’s Creative Labs mobile design studio, and it is the first companion app for Messenger. Stickered For Messenger will be available later today on Android and is coming to iOS soon. The Messenger app itself is receiving a speed boost and new animated sending/sent/delivered/read receipts.
Google today filed a lawsuit in Mississippi district court against Mississippi attorney general Jim Hood for serving the search company a “burdensome retaliatory subpoena.” Hood has claimed that Google’s anti-piracy provisions violate a Mississippi consumer protection law. Google has also issued a document preservation notice to both the MPAA and the law firm Jenner & Block, asking them to retain documents related to a so-called Goliath campaign Umm, hello? I think you movie guys just woke a sleeping Goliath.
Reuters reports its sources say Google is working on a version of Android that would be embedded in cars. This would be different than Android Auto which transmits data from a phone to a car’s screen. The embedded version would always work whether a phone was in the car or not. It will supposedly come along with the Android M OS.
GigaOm reports BlackBerry is profitable! One cent a share but STILL! PROFITABLE! It also generated a positive cash flow of $43 million in the last quarter. And the good news pretty much ends there. Smartphone sales were down to 1.9 million from 2.4 million in the previous quarter. Service revenue was also down 12 percent from the previous quarter. But hey, PROFITABLE!
The Washington Post cites industry officials who say the US House of representatives will consider legislation in the new year to prevent ISPs from blocking or slowing down certain websites while also providing a new provision for regulation of broadband providers called Title X. That would make Title II classification unnecessary.
Meanwhile the FCC slipped out an official notice of proposed rulemaking to consider widening the definition of a Multichannel Video Programming Distributor to include Internet delivery alongside cable and satellite. The change would technically remove the requirement that an MVPD have transmission facilities thus allowing the use of the Internet as that facility. All that means broadcasters have to negotiate for carriage with anyone who wants to carry multiple channels of live TV.
News From You
Jaymz668 posted a TechDiret column by Timothy Geigner describing a fight in southwest Chicago over whether to add filters to Internet access in the Orland Park Public Library. After a complaint from a mother, the board decided not to install filters but instead ask for ID. However the mother and others have continued to press the board to install filters. Geigner states that open access to the unfiltered Internet for adults should be defended.
spsheridan sent us the Wired UK report that International Space Station commander Barry Wilmore needed a ratcheting socket wrench. Which was kind of a bummer, because he left his on EARTH. Normally, Wilmore would have had to wait months for the next ISS resupply. But the folks who made the 3D printer on the space station overheard th eproblem and whipped up a quick design for the wrench. Then NASA emailed Wilmore the design, he printed it out on the station’s 3-D printer and hey presto SPACE WRENCH!
jaymz668 passes along a Consumerist article about a US Department of Commerce report on broadband competition. At 10 Mbps 70% of US citizens have a choice between two companies and 28% have a choice between 3. Only 85% have 25 Mbps service or faster available. At that speed 37% have a choice between two providers and 9% can choose among three. 59% have access to 100 Mbps service and 8% have a choice between two providers at that speed the rest have one choice. 3% have access to gigabit fiber and only one choice in all those areas.
Discussion Links:
http://www.fbi.gov/news/pressrel/press-releases/update-on-sony-investigation
http://arstechnica.com/security/2014/12/fbi-claims-north-korean-involvement-in-sony-pictures-attack/
http://arstechnica.com/security/2014/12/hackers-tell-sony-the-interview-may-release-now-with-edits/
http://recode.net/2014/12/19/live-blog-president-obama-to-address-north-korean-role-in-sony-hack/
Tom,
When you were discussing the need for batch renaming tools you mentioned that you would sometimes need this for renaming digital camera files with a date or location instead of just having them named something like IMG_0001.JPG.
I use “geosetter” to read the EXIF header and automatically rename the files with the date the pictures were taken. There are options to choose the date format or embed some descriptive words in the filename.
Love the show,
John from Silicon Valley
=====
Thanks for fielding this question, and many thanks for the great feedback from the DTNS community, Alex Hana and Darren Kitchen
While researching this on my own, I stumbled on a web site that crowd sources alternative technology solutions. So, here’s a pick from me:
AlternativeTo
http://alternativeto.net/
(And here’s the one for Truecrypt)
http://alternativeto.net/software/truecrypt/
I haven’t used it a lot yet, but it let’s you vote on nominated alternatives, has a review and comments section for each solution.
Thanks again! Mike
Facebook Developer’s Conference alert link:
DTNS 2389 – Les Is More
Raj Deut joins us to talk about how Australia wants to START retaining innocent people’s data, and what we actually know about the Sony Pictures attacks.
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Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.
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A special thanks to all our Patreon supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.
If you enjoy the show, please consider supporting the show here at the low, low cost of a nickel a day on Patreon. Thank you!
Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!
Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!
Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit
Show Notes
Today’s guest: Raj Deut, Raj Deut, Lead developer for @efront, writer for @ReckonerAU
Headlines
While CNN and the New York Times reported that a US agency would tie the attacks on Sony Pictures Entertainment to North Korea, we have as yet received no such statement. Instead White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters only that the attack was done by a “sophisticated actor,” and he was not in a position to confirm a nation as responsible. Earnst said the US National Security Council was considering a proportionate response mindful that some organizations or individuals might try to enhance their standing by provoking a specific response. Meanwhile Variety reports a spokesman for Sony saying the studio has no further release plans for “The Interview.” And The Daily Beast reports three movie theaters have said Paramount studios has ordered them to stop planned screenings of Team America: World Police.
The Verge reports Microsoft’s obligation to provide users a screen promoting choices in browsers has expired after five years. Microsoft will remove the so-called Browser Ballot saying, “the Browser Choice Update will no longer be delivered to new users.”
The Next Web reports messaging app maker Line is acquiring Microsoft’s MixRadio music streaming service. MixRadio will continue maintain its personalized music service fro Microsoft’s Lumia phones. MixRadio was developed as a Nokia service before its handset division was acquired by Microsoft. The deal is expected to be completed in early 2015.
Engadget reports that Micromax has revealed its first Yu (that’s Y-U) smartphone, the Yureka (that’s Y-U-reka). The exclusive collaboration with Cyanogen was the reason the OnePlusOne smartphone was banned this week in India. The Yureka costs $142, and has the Cyanogen modified version of Android KitKat. It is the first 64 bit device supported by Cyanogen, although the benefits of that support won’t come until the Cyanogen version of Android Lollipop arrives.
CNET reports Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel was angry and upset by information leaked to the public as part of emails stolen from Sony Pictures Entertainment. In a memo to employees that he later posted on Twitter Spiegel wrote, “I felt like I was going to cry all morning, so I went on a walk and thought through a couple things.” He also wrote: “We keep secrets because we get to do our work free from judgement — until we’re ready to share it. We keep secrets because keeping secrets gives you space to change your mind until you’re really sure you’re right.”
Finally some good news if you’re an Uber executive. TechCrunch reports that Rocket Internet’s Easy Taxi app is no longer coming to India. Easy Taxi will also scale down operations in Hong Kong and Indonesia in order to focus on other markets. Stiff competition and wads of cash raised by Uber and SoftBank-backed Grab Taxi may have contributed to the move. Easy Taxi covers 160 cities in 40 countries with a focus on emerging markets.
Hey Windows Phone users, The Verge reports Microsoft has started rolling out the Lumia Denim updates to its Lumia devices. Among the changes are a new Lumia Camera update that is faster and supports 4K-quality videos. The updates are not coming to all phones in all countries at once. A wider rollout of Lumia Denim to all Lumia smartphones running Windows Phone 8.1 is expected to begin in early January. Till then you may want to keep an eye on the Microsoft support site.
News From You
dmmacs sends us word that Amazon has launched Prime Now, a one-hour delivery option for Amazon Prime members in select areas of Manhattan. Tech Crunch reports that the service will cover tens of thousands of “essential products” like batteries, books and paper towels. The service is accessible via a dedicated Prime Now app for iOS and Android and delivers between 6 a.m. and midnight, seven days a week. One-hour delivery costs $7.99 but two-hour delivery is free for Prime subscribers. The service should roll out to additional cities in 2015.
AllanAV posted the TorrentFreak article that researchers at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands released the first version of their anonymous and decentralized BitTorrent network called Tribler. The service searches for torrents through peers rather than a centralized service and deals with spam by raising trackers with more likes from users. Tribler also includes a built-in Tor-like network which preserves anonymity. Please keep in mind that while many people use torrents for questionable purposes, anonymity and the Bittorrent protocol are not and in my opinion should not be illegal and do not imply criminal activity.
starfuryzeta sent us the amazing story of a man named Les Baugh who now has two bionic arms that he can control with his mind. Engadget reports that Les lost both of his arms at the shoulder level forty years ago. But thanks to a DARPA funded prosthetics project at Johns Hopkins, Les Baugh can now move cups from one shelf to another just by thinking. First he underwent a procedure called muscle reinnervation which reassigned nerves that used to control his arms and hands. The team recorded the patterns his brain makes for each muscle and then they had him control virtual arms to train his brain. Then they designed a custom socket for his torso for the prosthetics and attached the Modular Prosthetic Limbs. Even more amazing, Baugh was able to control a combination of motions across both arms at the same time. What would he like to be able to do with these once he can use them all the time? [[PLAY BITE]] So let’s all raise a glass to RoboLes to celebrate the fact that he can raise one right back at us.
Discussion Links: Australia and Sony
http://www.zdnet.com/article/data-retention-may-have-helped-police-in-sydney-siege-abbott/
http://www.zdnet.com/article/asio-afp-quiet-on-metadata-definition/
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-06/security-laws-abbott-browsing-history-not-collected/5652364
http://variety.com/2014/film/news/sony-has-no-further-release-plans-for-the-interview-1201382167/
http://www.wired.com/2014/12/evidence-of-north-korea-hack-is-thin/
Pick of the Day: Tiesta Tea via Sheala in Georgia
Thought I’d give some balance to the caffeine force with a tea recommendation.
Try Tiesta tea. They have a great selection of a variety of teas all packed nicely is tins. Haven’t found a flavor I didn’t like yet.
DTNS 2388 PART 2 – Post-show Talk about Sony and the Interview
Justin Robert Young and Producer Jennie Josephson chat post-show about the Sony decision to pull The Interview form theaters. It was such a substantial conversation we decided to include it in the feed as a bonus audio track. Hope you enjoy. (This conversation is included at the end of the video version as well.)
DTNS 2388 – They’re Bringing Berry Back
Justin Young is on the show to talk about SnapChat’s moves as shown through leaked emails. SnapChat is not just another social app. Is Evan Spiegel the top CEO of the future?
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Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.
Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.
A special thanks to all our Patreon supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.
If you enjoy the show, please consider supporting the show here at the low, low cost of a nickel a day on Patreon. Thank you!
Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!
Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!
Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit
Show Notes
Today’s guest: Justin Robert Young, DTNS Raconteur & co-host of Night Attack and Weird Things podcast
Also this! Night Attack Comedy Album 3: http://nightattack.tv/album/
Headlines
The Next Web reports on BlackBerry’s announcement of the BlackBerry Classic today in New York. The Classic has a 3.5-inch square 720 x 720 screen similar to the Passport but brings back a physical keyboard. It runs OS 10.3.1 and claims 22 hours of battery life. It also brings back the Brick Breaker game. Preorders are undereway at blackberry.com for $450 unlocked in the US and $499 unlocked in Canada. Devices should ship next week.
The Next Web reports Sony unveiled a clip-on display unit that can attach to any eyewear frames. Yep like a clip-on Google Glass. The accessory has Bluetooth, WiFi, a compass, accelerometer and touch sensors. It shows information using a 640×400 OLED microdisplay, however Sony says the field of view will be equivalent to a 16-inch display 2 meters in front of the viewer. Sony will show the device at CES, go into mass production later this year and hope to sell them in 2016.
Gigaom reports that Dish satellite TV subscribers can now access Netflix on all broadband-connected second-generation Hopper set-top boxes. You can launch the app by clicking the blue button on the DISH remote and selecting the Netflix icon, or from the Netflix icon on the Hopper main menu. Netflix has said they have made pay-TV partnerships a priority in 2015.
Business Insider’s sources say Twitter and Foursquare are planning a partnership to improve location in tweets. Twitter’s current location data is limited to a generalized location tagging option. Future improvements could include more specific location tagging (not just Los Angeles, or West Los Angeles but Mastro’s Steakhouse in Beverly Hills, for example). Another potential improvement, surfacing tweets by proximity. The source says geo-based features could roll out as soon as Q1 2015. Twitter and Foursqaure declined to make any comment on any of this.
TechCrunch reports that the One phone from OnePlus is the latest to be banned in India after a New Delhi court upheld a complaint from rival phone company Micromax. One week before the One launched in India, OnePlus learned about Micromax’s exclusive deal with Cyanogen to use the Cyanogen Android operating system on Micromax’s Yu phone (Y U) in India. The One phone uses Cyanogen everywhere outside China. The court will allow OnePlus to sell its remaining stock. One Plus co-founder Cal Pei said the company is working on its own version of Android. Hurry up!
ReCode reports on former Hulu CEO Jason Kilar’s posting on the Vessel website giving more details about what that video service has to offer creators. 70% of the ad revenue is the big number. That’s compared to the 55% creators get from YouTube. There’s also a cut of the $3 a month subscription fee. Vessel will take 60% of the total subscription money and split it up among creators by usage. Creators only have to agree to a 3-day exclusive for videos they put on Vessel, then they can post them wherever else they want. Vessel will be ad supported for both free and paid versions of its service.
The Hollywood Reporter says the US’s top five theater chains have decided not to play Sony’s movie “The Interview” in response to threats from the attackers who took data from Sony Pictures Entertainment’s internal network. Regal Entertainment, AMC Entertainment, Cinemark, Carmike Cinemas and Cineplex Entertainment have all decided against showing the film. Other smaller chains have also decided not to screen the film. Both Sony Pictures and the National Association of Theater Owners left the decision up to the individual theaters. The Verge’s Bryan Bishop suggested Sony should release the Interview for free online. Variety reports an insider says Sony Pictures Entertainment is weighing releasing the film on premium video-on-demand.
Reuters reports that Amazon staffers at German warehouses extended a strike today in a dispute over better pay and working conditions. Labor union Verdi had launched a three day strike in five of Amazon’s German distribution centers on Monday with a sixth center joining on Tuesday. Now workers at four of the centers will continue the strike until Saturday and one warehouse will strike until December 24th. An Amazon spokeswoman said only a minority of staff had joined the strike and that the company had not seen any delays so far.
Ars Technica reports unknown attackers have used a spearphishing campaign to compromise systems at ICANN the organization that maintains things like the Domain Name System. The attackers got to employee and business contanct info as well as admin access to all files stored in its centralized zone data system used by registries to manage the allocation of TLDs. ICANN recommended account holders of that system immediately change their accounts passwords.
News From You
Johnsie776 pointed out the Ars Technica story that an analysis by the Sunlight Foundation claims that an organization called American Commitment was responsible for 56.5% of the comments in the second round of feedback to the FCC regarding its Open Internet guidelines. The Sunlight Foundation describes American Commitment as “a 501(c)(4) social welfare group founded in 2011. American Commitment said it delivered 808,363 comments “opposing any regulation of the Internet.” About 88% of all responses int he second round were form letters compared to 60% in the first round.
anotherjmartin pointed out the CNET story that Ting Mobile plans to buy Blue Ridge Internet Works in Charlotesville, VA and its 35 miles of fiber network. Ting intends to build out the network to the entire college town and offer gigabit Internet service for less than $100 a month. Ting CEO Eliot Noss said Google Fiber helped confirm the belief that this was a good business opportunity.
Discussion Links: Snapchat Insight
http://techcrunch.com/2014/12/16/snapchat-emails-not-so-ephemeral/
http://www.businessinsider.com/snapchat-ceo-evan-spiegels-email-memo-2014-12
http://www.epiphanyeyewear.com/?technology#
http://vergencelabs.com/yougen.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitch_Lasky
Pick of the Day: Android Wear via Marlon, “The Guy From Trinidad”
Hi Marlon “TheGuyFromTrinidad” here, my pick of the day is Android Wear. Why you ask? Because it just got a major update to 5.0 , which has added features like the ability to bring a card back you dismissed, its easier to block app notifications directly from the watch, easy access to a sunlight mode (boost brightness) and a theatre mode (turn off the display and mute vibrations) and the long awaited watchface api. One of the best implementations of the api I have seen is former pick of the day, the live wallpaper app Muzei that mirrors the wallpaper on your phone straight to your watch.
The update also brings the feature that when you do image searches the images will appear right on your watch so you don’t have to pull out your phone.
https://plus.google.com/+MarlonThompson/posts/ibBq2YpV5sq
So if your in the Android ecosystem and your not waiting on that other smartwatch to come out maybe check out an Android wear watch as many of them are on sale right now and you have six to choose from.
It’s Spoilerin’ Time Episode 49 – Marco Polo, Black Mirror (Season 2), The Shield (402)
Marco still needs Polo, Black Mirror mess with your brain and The Shield gets a psychological profile
00:45 – Marco Polo
11:33 – Black Mirror
28:35 – The Shield
S&L Podcast – #199 – Integrity for Sale
This week we almost wrap up The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, discuss the intricacies of eBook DRM and try to decide just how high a price our integrity would fetch. We also wonder the same about Neal Stephenson and Steven Hawking. Join us, won’t you?
WHAT ARE WE DRINKING?
Tom: Forgotten Fire 1871
Veronica: Greyhound
QUICK BURNS
Tamahome: Gotta love the NPR filter tool for the best books of 2014. Hat tip to Jenny.
Shad: Interesting ruling on DRM. It might not hold up on appeal, but it would be great if stripping DRM to make a backup of books you bought stopped being illegal
Related thread by Eric
Daniel: Something I’ve noticed in my own personal tastes. All the best new books I’ve been reading have been firmly in the fantasy genre. For my sci-fi fix I’ve definitly been in comics and manga.
Sci-Fi Author Neal Stephenson Joins Mystery Startup Magic Leap as ‘Chief Futurist’
BARE YOUR SWORD
Scott: 2014 Book Themes?
Alex: Reading in 2015
Andy: If you were able to take Veronica and Tom on an adventure (think RPG), what would their roles be?
BOOK OF THE MONTH DISCUSSION
Next Month’s Book Pick Poll
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
ADDENDUMS
Support our show on Patreon
You can also support the show by buying books through our links! Find upcoming and past new releases at swordandlaser.com/calendar
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