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15
Aug

Xiaomi’s Mi Router 3C is one of the best $20 routers you can currently buy


mi-router-3c-5.jpg?itok=jCLb6krd

The Mi Router 3C has an uncomplicated setup that makes it stand out in this segment.

Xiaomi’s increasing focus on the lifestyle segment sees the Chinese manufacturer making everything from smart lighting to robot vacuum cleaners and smart shoes. Like its phones, and it’s lifestyle products offer excellent value for money, often undercutting its rivals by a significant amount.

That’s the case with the Mi Router 3C as well. The router is available in India for ₹1,199 ($20), and there’s a lot to like — the device has four antennae for whole-house coverage, speeds up to 300Mbps, and two 100Mbps Ethernet ports. Best of all, you can control the router with your phone using the Mi Wi-Fi app. The router itself doesn’t look like a budget device, thanks to its minimalist design aesthetic.

The Mi Router 3C is a single-band Wi-Fi 802.11n router with a maximum throughput of 300Mbps. That’s standard fare for routers in the ₹1,000 segment, but what sets Xiaomi’s router apart is the four antennae. The antennae give the router significant range, and in this regard the device punches well above its weight.

Setting up the Mi Router 3C is very straightforward — plug in the router to a wall socket, hook up your internet connection into the WAN port, and continue the rest of the installation in the Mi Wi-Fi app. The app lets you pick an SSID and password for your router, and there’s also the option to sign in with your Xiaomi account. Doing so gives you the ability to control your Mi Router 3C from outside the confines of your house.

Mi Wi-Fi’s interface is an added bonus, as the app lets you see all the devices connected to the router and the bandwidth they’re consuming in real time. You can also set up a guest network, set dedicated IPs for devices like NAS enclosures, adjust QoS settings to prioritize video streaming services, set up a VPN, and more. The Mi Wi-Fi OS that controls the router is based on the OpenWRT platform.

The Mi Router 3C is a budget router with excellent range.

The router offers several Wi-Fi channels (1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9/10/11/12/13), allowing you to select a channel that has minimal interference. If you’re routinely witnessing issues with bandwidth, a good idea is to use an app like Wifi Analyzer to isolate Wi-Fi channels that aren’t in use in your vicinity.

I switched out my regular router (an AC2400 class ASUS RT-AC87) for the Mi Router 3C for three days, and Xiaomi’s offering fared better than I thought it would. I have a Gigabit line, and the router managed to deliver 60Mbps to 70Mbps consistently. The RT-AC87 (which costs ten times as much) averages 280Mbps at the same distances.

Overall, the Mi Router 3C is one of the best options available in this segment. There are a few downsides — you don’t get an Ethernet cable in the box, there’s no USB port for connecting a printer, and the router lacks a Gigabit Ethernet port — but considering what it costs, you’re getting a lot for your money. Unless you’re trying to push Gigabit speeds, you’ll be well-served by Xiaomi’s budget router.

See at Mi India

15
Aug

Intel CEO Brian Krzanich drops out of Trump council


Intel chief Brian Krzanich condemned hate speech and white supremacy on Twitter following the horrific events in Charlottesville this weekend. For a while, though, it wasn’t clear whether he’d continue backing President Trump’s American Manufacturing Council. Now, the CEO is making his stance crystal: he announced in a blog post that he’s resigning from the council to “call attention to the serious harm our divided political climate is causing to critical issues…”

He resigned, he says, because he wants to make real progress, while “many in Washington seem more concerned with attacking anyone who disagrees with them.” Krzanich added that we “should honor — not attack — those who have stood up for equality and other cherished American values.” He said he’ll be willing to serve again when that changes.

On Saturday, Heather Heyer was killed by a terrorist who plowed his car into the crowd while she was protesting white supremacist rallies in Charlottesville. She’s now the target of white supremacists’ harassment, which led GoDaddy to pull down a known neo-Nazi website. Google also cancelled that website’s registration, while Facebook has begun deleting Shares of a story from that domain disparaging the victim.

Intel wasn’t the only company that dropped out of Trump’s manufacturing council due to the incident in Charlottesville and the president’s hesitation to condemn white supremacy. Under Armour chief Kevin Plank and Merck CEO Ken Frazier also left the group on Monday, with Frazier explaining that he did so “as a matter of personal conscience.”

I stand with others for equality and improving US competitiveness. Both require
improving in todays environment. https://t.co/RcjpGaFXBQ

— Brian Krzanich (@bkrunner) August 15, 2017

Via: Axios

Source: Intel

15
Aug

Peter Dinklage film ‘Rememory’ hits Google Play on August 24th


If you’re going to get sad once Game of Thrones ends its current short season at the end of August, there’s a little glimmer of hope: The show’s star Peter Dinklage has a movie coming out then. Rememory, a science fiction thriller also starring Julia Ormond and the late Anton Yelchin, is set to release on Google Play Movies for free on August 24th. After that, it hits select theaters on September 8th.

Dinklage plays Sam Bloom, who tries to unravel the mystery of an inventor’s mysterious death by using his newest creation: A device that can extract and replay a person’s memories. While the film’s reviews weren’t exactly glowing, it’s intriguing to see Google negotiate an early release on its Play platform.

Source: 9to5Google

15
Aug

Australia will build a solar power plant to meet the government’s energy needs


Why it matters to you

This sprawling solar thermal power plant will meet the entire local government’s energy needs and more.

Earlier in 2017, China completed the world’s largest floating solar power plant to meet its growing energy demands and it looks like another country is looking to diversify its domestic energy production with a massive clean energy initiative. Australia recently announced plans to construct a massive solar power plant to fuel the entire South Australian state government’s power needs and then some.

Australian State Premier Jay Weatherill confirmed a contract for the Aurora Solar Energy Project, 150-megawatt solar thermal plant, to be built in South Australia. Global solar power developer, SolarReserve, will begin construction on the $650 million facility in 2018 and plans to have the plant ready by 2020.

Currently, the maximum government power consumption is about 125MW (far less than the plant’s projected 150MW output). This means the plant should have enough production capacity to fulfill the government’s energy needs and send excess power to the local grid. When completed, the Aurora Solar Energy Project will produce 495-gigawatt hours of power annually (representing roughly five percent of South Australia’s yearly energy consumption). Once the system goes online, the emission-free plant will be the largest of its kind.

SolarReserve is no stranger to massive solar efforts by any means. The company was in charge of a similar enormous solar farm, the Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Project, covering more than 1,600 acres of Nevada desert and has also announced a 450MW plant to be built in Chile. Unlike traditional solar panel-based facilities, solar thermal power plants use a series of mirrors to heat molten salt contained within a central tower and this subsequent heat is used to activate a steam turbine.

In 2017, the federal government committed $110 million of equity to constructing a solar thermal power facility. The SolarReserve contract will last for 20 years and create about 700 jobs (including 650 construction jobs and 50 “ongoing positions” in the region). However, some experts worry about the long-term limitations of solar thermal technology.

“One of the big challenges for solar thermal as a storage tool is that it can only store heat. If there is an excess of electricity in the system because the wind is blowing strong, it cannot efficiently use it to store electrical power to shift the energy to times of shortage, unlike batteries and pumped hydro,” Dr. Matthew Stocks, a research fellow at the Australian National University, told The Guardian.

Nonetheless, Weatherill hopes that this project alongside other clean energy initiatives will make the energy grid more secure moving forward.




15
Aug

DOJ demands info on 1.3M visitors to protest-organizing website


A month ago, the Department of Justice served a warrant (PDF) to Dreamhost regarding one of its clients. This is routine for law enforcement to make such requests, the website hosting service said in a blog post — except the page in question, disruptj20.org, had helped organize protests of Trump’s inauguration. And the DOJ is demanding personal info and 1.3 million IP addresses of visitors to the site.

According to Dreamhost, that personal info includes “contact information, email content, and photos of thousands of people.” That could easily lead the DOJ to identify anyone who used the site in service of exercising their Constitutionally-protected rights of free speech, the website host pointed out.

After questioning the warrant’s extreme volume of info requested, the DOJ fired back with a motion (PDF) asking the DC Superior Court to compel the host to comply. Dreamhost’s counsel filed legal arguments in opposition (PDF), and will attend a court hearing about the matter in Washington, DC on August 18th.

It’s not the first time authorities have tried to pry information from internet companies on users that attended anti-Trump protests. DC law enforcement requested information from Facebook on a subscriber who attended an inauguration day protest — and they wanted that person’s addresses, phone numbers and online session details. Moreover, a gag order prevented the social titan from informing up to three users who had been so targeted, but Facebook has been appealing that decision in court.

Source: Dreamhost

15
Aug

Target buys same-day delivery company to battle Amazon


A couple of months ago, Target took on Amazon’s Prime Pantry services with its own version: Restock. The retailer’s new service undercut Amazon by a dollar for a 45-pound box full of goodies, and even offered next-day service to beat out Amazon’s four-business-day deliveries. According to Bloomberg, Target is taking the next step in its competition by agreeing to purchase Grand Junction, a startup that manages local and same-day deliveries. The San Francisco-based business already handles same-day delivery for Target’s Tribeca store in Manhattan.

According to Bloomberg, the move is part of larger logistics and operations changes at Target, which has only seen a 22 percent increase in online sales this past quarter. That’s good, but still much less than Walmart’s reported 63 percent growth online.

While the terms of Target’s acquisition of Grand Junction were not disclosed, Bloomberg reports that the 13 employees will move to Target’s San Francisco offices to start helping the retailer get products to its customers faster. “Speed matters,” Target’s Arthur Valdez told Bloomberg. “Grand Junction’s platform, along with our 1,800 stores, allows for speed to the guest that can be very competitive.”

Amazon Prime same-day delivery is the service to beat, however, with coverage for almost 30 metropolitan areas across the US as of last year alone. Amazon has been doing this for much longer, too, with Prime Now’s debut as far back as 2014.

Source: Bloomberg

15
Aug

Google hires a legendary Apple engineer to tackle AI


Legendary programmer Chris Lattner has had a roller coaster of a year. He left Apple (where he developed the Swift programming language) to help build Tesla’s Autopilot technology, only to leave months later after realizing that he wasn’t a good fit. However, Lattner might be settling down. He just announced that he’s joining Google (namely, the Brain team) to make AI “accessible to everyone.” While Lattner doesn’t specify exactly what he’ll be doing, Bloomberg sources say he’ll be working on the TensorFlow language Google uses to simplify AI programming.

The hire won’t necessarily change the state of affairs for Apple, which has had to make do without Lattner for months, but it’s a definite coup for Google. Lattner earned praise for Swift because it was fast, thoroughly modern, and (most importanty) accessible — everyone from first-timers to seasoned programmers stands to benefit from it. Google could put that know-how to work making TensorFlow easier to use, or lowering the hardware demands so that AI runs more smoothly on phones and computers. There’s no guarantee that he’ll repeat his previous feats at Google, but the potential is certainly there.

Via: Bloomberg

Source: Chris Lattner (Twitter)

15
Aug

Ditch the glasses and hit CNN for a safe, 360-degree total solar eclipse stream


Why it matters to you

Here is a good way to watch the total solar eclipse next week without relying on questionable, possibly faulty viewing glasses.

CNN recently teamed up with Volvo to provide a live, safe way to watch the total solar eclipse moving across North America on August 21. Right now, CNN provides a map that shows a blue path stretching west to east indicating areas that will see a perfect solar eclipse. This line starts on the shores of Oregon at 9:06 a.m. Pacific Time, and ends on the shores of South Carolina at 4:06 p.m. Eastern Time, spanning 14 states in total.

Of course, if you are living toward the top and bottom of the United States, you will only see a partial crescent-shaped solar eclipse. But CNN and Volvo have your back, as those residents can jump on CNN’s website or use one of CNN’s apps to see the sun fully blocked from coast to coast. CNN will have seven points established along the blue line using 360-degree cameras.

A solar eclipse is a result of the moon passing between the Earth and the sun. Not everyone can see a perfect total eclipse, hence CNN’s live coverage. The further you move away from the line, the more “crescent” the eclipse will appear. By contrast, a lunar eclipse is when the Earth sits perfectly between the sun and the moon, casting its shadow on the orbiting satellite.

But unlike a lunar eclipse, you cannot look directly at a solar eclipse. That is due to the intensely bright rays reaching around the moon’s circular form, and the invisible radiation that these fiery tentacles create. Looking at this focused light for just a few seconds could fry your retinas, causing possible blindness. And because retinas have no nerves regarding pain, the damage will not be immediately noticeable.

According to NASA, spectators should not look directly at any solar eclipse, whether it is full or partial. Spectators also must not use sunglasses to view the solar eclipse. Instead, rely on special viewing glasses or handheld solar viewers that meet specific requirements:

  • Listed ISO 12312-2 international standard certification
  • Manufacturer’s name and address printed on product
  • Does not rely on homemade filters
  • Is not older than three years old
  • Does not have scratched or wrinkled lenses

That said, keep a sharp eye on what you buy for this rare event. Amazon is currently dishing out refunds on protective solar eclipse glasses despite their supposed 12312-2 certification due to the inability to verify the safety of many versions sold by its sellers. The move to refund customers, according to Amazon, is out of “caution.”

This will be the first total solar eclipse seen by the entire contiguous United States (sans Alaska, Hawaii, etc.) since June 1918. It is also the first solar eclipse exclusively experienced in the upper western hemisphere since February 1979, which only passed through the northwestern United States, a portion of Canada, and Greenland. The next solar eclipse won’t take place in North America until April 2024.

CNN’s streaming event will start at 10 a.m. (PT) and conclude at noon. NASA will have a show too.




15
Aug

The machine may be on the rise, but Lyft still has a place for humans


Why it matters to you

Many of us may be worried about robots and machines taking over our jobs, but Lyft wants to assuage some of those fears.

Despite the burgeoning interest in driverless cars and autonomous technology, there will always be a place in this world (and in cars) for humans. That, at least, is the stance that Lyft is taking according to its interview with Recode. In a recent episode of the publication’s podcast, the company’s director of product, Taggart Matthiesen, noted that while Lyft is certainly focusing on self-driving automobiles, their human counterparts will not be forgotten in the face of technological progress.

“Drivers have always been part of our family, they have been core to our service,” Matthiesen said. “As far as I’m concerned, they will continue to be that. Over time, technology will give us the opportunity to provide additional services on our platform, whether that is a concierge service, whether that is an in-vehicle experience … these are all things that we will slowly evolve and work with our drivers on.”

This certainly comes as encouragement and reassurance to those who fear that their jobs may soon be obviated by the rise of the machine. After all, robots have previously been estimated to have the capacity to replace some 5 million jobs in the next three years. However, given that most of these jobs will likely be lower level, administrative roles, this replacement could also herald the dawn of a more creative and innovative era in the human workforce.

In any case, Lyft is making clear that it has no intentions of completely turning to robots and machines when it comes to its own driving fleet. Already, Matthiesen said, the company has formed an “advisory council” tasked with “proactively reaching out about the future of human workers in self-driving cars.” And ultimately, the director noted, Lyft might “never be 100 percent” autonomous. Why? Because when push comes to shove, there are some scenarios in which human empathy and understanding are necessary.

“If I need to go to the doctor’s office and my leg is in a cast, and I can’t drive, we have a service for that,” Matthiesen said. “If you get into the world of autonomous, we may need someone in that vehicle to help that person. There are things we’re doing beyond getting a passenger from point A to point B, additional services that we as a company can look at.”




15
Aug

AI draws parallels between fields you never knew were connected


Why it matters to you

Teaching AI to understand analogies could help solve problems in new and innovative ways.

Analogies are the comparison of one thing with another, most commonly with the goal of explaining or clarifying a certain concept. Like a well-chosen metaphor, a good analogy can be a great tool for people such as writers. However, it can also be crucial for problem-solving, since comparing separate problems or methods in this way can be used to highlight underlying — often times useful — similarities. For instance, a few years ago a car mechanic was watching a YouTube video showing how to extract a cork from a wine bottle when he struck upon using the same approximate method for helping babies stuck in the birth canal.

Unfortunately, analogies are not the most straightforward idea for a computer to understand. As we turn to artificial intelligence to solve more and more of our problems, the need for software that can understand analogies, therefore, becomes more important. That is where a new deep-learning project from Carnegie Mellon University and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem comes into play. AI researchers there have created a means by which smart agents can analyze databases of patents, inventions, and research papers, and identify ideas which could be useful for solving new problems or creating innovative products.

“Finding useful analogies automatically is very hard for computers,” Dafna Shahaf, a CMU alumnus and a computer scientist at Hebrew University, told Digital Trends. “Previous work relies heavily on hand-created databases, taking thousands of person-hours to create. Instead, we decided to try the data-driven approach. There are lots of idea repositories online, with millions of problems and solutions. We took advantage of recent advances in deep learning and AI, and found a lightweight way to learn, given a product description, a representation for what the product does, and how it does it. This allows us to ask questions such as ‘find me another product in the dataset that solves a similar problem in a completely different way’ and ‘find me another use for this product.’”

This is not necessarily about handing over yet another sphere of human endeavor, though. In a test of the work, Shahaf said that human participants were tasked with problems in need of solving — such as extending the battery of a cell phone. “[The] people who were exposed to inspirations from our algorithm came up with significantly more creative ideas,” she said. “We could even see in some cases how the algorithm helped people explore more diverse parts of the design space — things they would not have thought of on their own.”

The researchers will present their work this week at KDD 2017, the Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, in Halifax, Nova Scotia.