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- Dozens of Boeing 777 planes grounded in US and Japan after engine failure
- Entire school board resigns in shame after forgetting their WebEx call was public
- Sophisticated hackers snuck sleeper malware into nearly 30,000 Macs
- Samsung imagines how its first AR glasses might look in these leaked concept videos
- Razer’s Blade 15 Base is $500 off today, but this Asus Zephyrus G14 deal is the one I’d pick
- The FAA is no longer concerned with SpaceX’s Starship SN9 and SN8
Dozens of Boeing 777 planes grounded in US and Japan after engine failure Posted: 21 Feb 2021 07:04 PM PST Airlines in Japan and the US have grounded dozens of Boeing 777 aircraft after the dramatic engine failure that United Airlines flight 328 experienced over Denver this weekend. According to the National Transportation Safety Board's ongoing investigation, two fan blades on the plane's number 2 engine had developed fractures. The Federal Aviation Administration issued an emergency airworthiness directive that requires "immediate or stepped-up inspections of Boeing 777 airplanes equipped with certain Pratt & Whitney PW4000 engines." The administration noted that this was likely to result in aircraft being removed from service. |
Entire school board resigns in shame after forgetting their WebEx call was public Posted: 21 Feb 2021 05:30 PM PST You would think the entire world would know how the Zoom world works by now. Lawyers can be cats, congressmen are sometimes inverted, but pants are not actually optional. That didn't keep the Oakley Union Elementary School District's board of trustees from badmouthing parents during a public WebEx call — suggesting that parents just "want their babysitters back," or want to go back to ingesting marijuana (via Gizmodo).
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Sophisticated hackers snuck sleeper malware into nearly 30,000 Macs Posted: 21 Feb 2021 03:47 PM PST There's a popular stereotype that Apple's computers are largely immune to malware. Not only is is that incorrect, it appears that sophisticated hacker(s) might have been toying with the idea of a heist or drop nasty enough they'd have needed to cover their tracks. As Ars Technica reports, security researchers at Malwarebytes and Red Canary discovered a mysterious piece of malware hiding on nearly 30,000 Macs, one designed to deliver an as-yet-unknown payload, and with a self-destruction mechanism that might remove any trace that it ever existed. They're calling it Silver Sparrow. Red Canary's own blog post goes into more detail, including how they discovered multiple versions targeting not only Intel, but also newer Macs based on Apple's... |
Samsung imagines how its first AR glasses might look in these leaked concept videos Posted: 21 Feb 2021 01:30 PM PST Samsung has been toying with AR glasses for years, most recently trotting out an extremely basic set of image-projecting goggles on the CES 2020 stage, but I've never seen the company suggest it might like to build an actually ambitious augmented reality wearable computing device — until perhaps today. WalkingCat, a fairly reliable source of gadget leaks, has published two new concept videos that show off some of the fun things a pair of "Samsung Glasses Lite" could do, like projecting a giant virtual screen where you can play your games, letting you kick back in your private movie theater, give you a giant virtual computer monitor, fire up an auto-dimming "sunglasses mode," or act as an instant first-person-view screen for your DJI... |
Razer’s Blade 15 Base is $500 off today, but this Asus Zephyrus G14 deal is the one I’d pick Posted: 21 Feb 2021 11:55 AM PST Pop quiz: which is the better deal, $500 off a Razer Blade laptop, or $150 off an Asus Zephyrus G14? It might hinge on whether you need a webcam, because in practically every other way the Asus is the laptop I'd buy today. That's not to say there's anything particularly wrong with the Razer Blade 15 Base at today's unheard of price of $1,099 at Amazon (regularly $1,599): aside from the paltry 256GB of solid state storage, you're looking at a speedy 6-core Core i7-10750H processor, GeForce GTX 1660 Ti graphics that should competently tackle yesteryear's biggest titles, a 144Hz 1080p screen, plus plenty of ports packed into an attractive black CNC aluminum chassis with single-zone RGB lighting. The deal at midnight PT Sunday. |
The FAA is no longer concerned with SpaceX’s Starship SN9 and SN8 Posted: 21 Feb 2021 10:40 AM PST The FAA seems satisfied with its investigations into Elon Musk's last two SpaceX Starship tests, each of which ended in an explosive crash, and the conclusion of those investigations should clear the way for a new SN10 flight in the very near future. In fact, Musk just tweeted there's a "good chance of flying this week!" Late last month, we broke the news that SpaceX had violated its launch license with its Starship SN8 launch in December, but an FAA spokesperson now says that matter has already been settled, according to CNN's Jackie Wattles. As for the SN9, which similarly exploded during a landing attempt on February 2nd, the FAA says it "failed within the bounds of the FAA safety analysis" and "its unsuccessful landing and explosion... |
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