Non-IT News Thread
-
EELV isn’t what it used to be: Air Force changes launch program name
SpaceX's success with reusable rockets has driven the name change.
Even before the space shuttle Challenger accident in 1986, the US military wanted access to space independent of the civilian space agency. But that accident spurred the Reagan administration to devise a National Space Launch Strategy that directed the military to develop a “mixed fleet” policy and ensure access to space by way of multiple vehicles.
-
Steven Spielberg will campaign to bar streaming movies from the Oscars
Spielberg feels that films like Roma should be classified as TV movies instead.
A spokesperson for Amblin, the production company run by Director Steven Spielberg, has told IndieWire that Spielberg plans to support an effort to change the rules of the Oscars to bar some films primarily distributed via streaming platforms like Netflix from nomination for Academy Awards.
-
@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
Steven Spielberg will campaign to bar streaming movies from the Oscars
Spielberg feels that films like Roma should be classified as TV movies instead.
A spokesperson for Amblin, the production company run by Director Steven Spielberg, has told IndieWire that Spielberg plans to support an effort to change the rules of the Oscars to bar some films primarily distributed via streaming platforms like Netflix from nomination for Academy Awards.
Because he's own films can't stand on merit and so needs to ban the good movies from competing against him. This is what a sore loser looks like.
-
We should start a campaign to bar films that don't primarily stream from the Oscars because they are a sad legacy format that isn't able to compete on merit.
-
How about we just ban Spielberg? Or all awards shows?
-
Sony begins refunding Anthem purchases in light of “full power down” reports
Reddit users, journalists have gotten refunds after asking Sony customer service.
The story begins with a scary "full" system crash mid-game, which doesn't just hard-lock the game or dump users into an error message and system menu. Instead, the crash completely powers down PS4 consoles, as if the power cord had been yanked out. That means a tap of the controller's "PS" button won't power the console back on. Once users press the system's power button, the PS4 reboots in a black, 480p-resolution screen to check for possible issues with corrupted memory. After that disk check, the console's menus remind users not to power down their systems in such an unsafe way.
-
@mlnews wow
-
@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
Steven Spielberg will campaign to bar streaming movies from the Oscars
Spielberg feels that films like Roma should be classified as TV movies instead.
A spokesperson for Amblin, the production company run by Director Steven Spielberg, has told IndieWire that Spielberg plans to support an effort to change the rules of the Oscars to bar some films primarily distributed via streaming platforms like Netflix from nomination for Academy Awards.
Well he can just kick rocks.
-
Juan Guaidó flies back to Venezuela despite arrest risk
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-47447438 -
How a missing letter helped create a tech billionaire
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47301446 -
Ocean heat waves remake Pacific and Caribbean habitats
Short, extreme events may have a bigger impact than a slow warming.
Climate change tends to deal in averages. We measure its progress using the global mean temperature, and we use climate models to project what that value will be in the future. But those average changes don't always capture what future climate change will be like. While you can raise an average by increasing every day's temperature by a tiny amount, but it's also possible to raise an average by throwing in an occasional extreme event. to do so by throwing in an occasional extreme event. Heat waves and extreme storms have indicated that nature seems to be going for the latter option.
-
Fists of fury: Warrior channels fierce fighting spirit of Bruce Lee
The series is based on an idea Lee pitched in 1971, but studio heads took a pass.
In 1971, Hollywood lore has it that the legendary Bruce Lee pitched an idea for a TV series about a martial artist in the Old West. Skittish studio heads passed on the project (and on Lee as its star), opting to make Kung Fu with David Carradine instead. Now Lee's vision is getting a second life, as Cinemax prepares to debut its new period drama, Warrior, based on the martial arts master's own writings.
-
Mercedes-Benz debuts EQV electric van at the Geneva auto show
It seats between six and eight, and will have up to 249 miles of range.
The Geneva International Motor Show just got underway in Europe. If, like me, you're sitting at home, that means waking up to a flood of new car reveals. Audi showed off a smaller e-tron sedan and some plug-in hybrids; I'm still waiting to find out which—if any—are coming to the US. There were a bunch of hand-built hypercars, some from companies you've heard of, and some you haven't. Volkswagen had the new I.D. Buggy we showed you yesterday. And then there was the Mercedes-Benz Concept EQV.
-
@mlnews nice, now that I could use.
-
Here be dragons: HBO drops full trailer for Game of Thrones final season
There's no guarantee of a happy ending as the epic series heads into the end game.
Based on George R.R. Martin's best-selling epic fantasy series, A Song of Ice and Fire, Game of Thrones long ago outstripped the novels in terms of plot, although the author had some input in shaping the TV series' narrative arc. We've seen plenty of sex, blood, and horrifying death over the course of seven seasons, and now it's time for the end game. This being George R.R. Martin, there's no guarantee of a happy ending.
-
@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
Here be dragons: HBO drops full trailer for Game of Thrones final season
There's no guarantee of a happy ending as the epic series heads into the end game.
Based on George R.R. Martin's best-selling epic fantasy series, A Song of Ice and Fire, Game of Thrones long ago outstripped the novels in terms of plot, although the author had some input in shaping the TV series' narrative arc. We've seen plenty of sex, blood, and horrifying death over the course of seven seasons, and now it's time for the end game. This being George R.R. Martin, there's no guarantee of a happy ending.
I'll wait until the season is over and then binge watch it like I always do.
-
Google pay equity analysis leads to raises for thousands of men
A 2017 lawsuit accused Google of underpaying women.
Google has given raises to thousands of men after an analysis of Google's pay structure found that the company would otherwise be underpaying those men relative to their peers, The New York Times reports. The analysis also led to raises for some women.
-
There’s new evidence for what happened to people who survived Vesuvius
Archaeologist studied tomb inscriptions and matched names to historical records.
Modern visitors to the ruins of the two main cities destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD are usually enthralled when they see the site of plaster casts of those who were killed, frozen in the midst of action. The catastrophic eruption wiped out several nearby towns and killed thousands of people. But some survived, and Miami University archaeologist and historian Steven Tuck thinks he knows where they ended up. He created a database of Roman names and matched them with records from other cities in Italy, describing his findings in a forthcoming paper in the journal Analecta Romana.
-
Treating lymphoma with HIV-resistant stem cells stops an HIV infection
This is the second time we've cleared HIV, and it may help us learn what works.
The identification of HIV ultimately led to the development of therapies that specifically target the virus' ability to make new copies of itself. These therapies have radically altered the lives of infected people, turning a often-lethal virus into something that can be managed for decades. But while the treatments control the virus, they don't eliminate it. Infected people still have reservoirs of virus in their bodies, raising the prospect that a drug-resistant strain could ultimately evolve.
-
NASA takes to the air to capture amazing new images of shockwaves
Technique may one day lead to return of commercial supersonic flight.
To take these unprecedented photos, the space agency updated the imaging system on one of its Beechcraft B200 Super King Air aircraft. NASA scientists upgraded the camera so that it could capture a wider field of view, improved its connection to data storage, and increased its frame rate to 1,400 frames per second.