Tech News Flash: Tuesday -- April 11, 2017
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Headline Scan
Hackers Blast Emergency Sirens in Dallas
United Airlines Gives Appalling New Meaning to Customer Service
Why VR Is Failing
Google's Fact Check Labeling System Goes Global
Gadget Ogling: Samsung Swings, Plus Live 360 Cameras and Smart Tuners
Shuttleworth Gives Up Hope for Convergence Breakthrough
Microsoft's Project Scorpio Goes to Extremes
Zunum's Hybrid-Electric Planes Could Disrupt Commercial Flight Industry
Fatdog64: More Bark Than Bite
Take Command of Your Linux System's Processes
What Is Verizon Promising With Its New Oath?
Samsung's Tizen OS Riddled With Security Holes
Galaxy S8 vs. iPhone 8: Winning Has Little to Do With Phones
Microsoft Shutters CodePlex, Will Migrate Projects to GitHub
Prank Responsibly: April Fools' Gags That Missed the Mark
EquiSeq CEO Lexi Palmer: Act Like You're Not Scared and Go at It
Today's Story Highlights
Hackers Blast Emergency Sirens in Dallas
Screaming sirens serenaded Dallas residents in the early morning hours
Saturday after a cyberattack set off the city's emergency warning
system. All of the city's 156 sirens reportedly were set off more than a
dozen times. Officials have not yet identified the perpetrator of the
attack, but it likely was someone outside the Dallas area, said Office
of Emergency Management Director Rocky Vaz.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84447.html
United Airlines Gives Appalling New Meaning to Customer Service
United Airlines' self-made firestorm spread on Tuesday, as a video
showing a passenger being forcibly dragged off a plane continued to make
the rounds on social media. The passenger had refused to comply after
being told he'd been bumped off the Sunday flight. The incident sparked
international outrage, including calls for a boycott of the airline and
for CEO Oscar Munoz to step down.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84448.html
Why VR Is Failing
As a market, we seem to have trouble learning that three key elements
are necessary for a new technology to take hold: It has to appear
complete, it has to be compelling, and it has to seem like a value --
that is, be affordable. Compared to what we have today, the car that
opened up the automotive market in the U.S. was none of those things --
yet it was incredibly successful.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84440.html
Google's Fact Check Labeling System Goes Global
Google has extended the Fact Check feature it introduced last fall.
Publishers now can display a Fact Check tag in news stories everywhere
that Google News is available. The company also has introduced the Fact
Check feature globally in Google Search, in all of the languages it
supports. Not all stories will be fact checked, though, and only certain
publishers will be able to participate.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84444.html
Gadget Ogling: Samsung Swings, Plus Live 360 Cameras and Smart Tuners
Samsung is back with a new pair of flagship smartphones it desperately
needs to be hits in the wake of previous handsets that were a touch too,
erm, explodey. The Galaxy S8 and S8+ have dispensed with the physical
home button and added an artificial intelligence assistant, screens that
so very almost kill the bezel, and fingerprint sensors on the rear. It's
a smart, striking design.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84442.html
Shuttleworth Gives Up Hope for Convergence Breakthrough
Canonical's long and winding quest for a unified user experience came to
a sudden halt on Wednesday, as founder Mark Shuttleworth announced the
firm's decision to stop investing in its struggling Unity8 shell and
revert to Gnome. The 6-year-old Unity plan was to create a user
interface that could work on various types of devices, ranging from a
mobile phone to a personal computer or tablet.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84445.html
Microsoft's Project Scorpio Goes to Extremes
The latest specs for the upcoming Xbox update, codenamed "Project
Scorpio," suggest that it could take gaming to new extremes. Microsoft
officially unveiled Project Scorpio at last year's E3, but it has
offered few details about what gamers can expect, until now. Project
Scorpio reportedly is ahead of schedule, but it is still at least six
months away from a consumer launch.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84439.html
Zunum's Hybrid-Electric Planes Could Disrupt Commercial Flight Industry
Zunum Aero, a startup backed by Boeing and JetBlue, on Wednesday
announced that it was developing regional hybrid-electric aircraft with
backing from Boeing's HorizonX innovation cell and JetBlue Technology
Ventures. The planes, which will have 10 to 50 seats, are scheduled for
launch in the early 2020s. Zunum aims to democratize access to fast,
affordable travel.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84437.html
Fatdog64: More Bark Than Bite
Fatdog64 has the potential to serve as an alternative lightweight OS to
Linux distros such as Puppy Linux, Knoppix and Zephyr. However, it has
some critical usability issues that need to be fixed first. Fatdog64
seems to have lost its performance edge over earlier versions that made
it more appealing as an alternative "frugal" Linux candidate. The latest
update does nothing to remedy that problem.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84433.html
Take Command of Your Linux System's Processes
Who's afraid of the Linux terminal? Not you, if you've learned the
basics of navigating your system. But how will these newly acquired
skills help improve your computing life? To give you a sense of the
terminal's everyday usefulness, here are some examples of tasks the
terminal is well-disposed to handle. To start with, system
administration is much more straightforward on the terminal.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84436.html
What Is Verizon Promising With Its New Oath?
Verizon on Monday confirmed reports that it will rebrand its AOL and
Yahoo businesses under a new entity called "Oath." AOL CEO Tim Armstrong
delivered the message via a tweet. The rebranding is part of a plan to
reinvest millions into the legacy digital content companies with the aim
of creating a major new platform. The "Yahoo" and "AOL" names will live
on under the overarching Oath brand.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84434.html
Samsung's Tizen OS Riddled With Security Holes
There are more than three dozen previously unknown flaws that pose a
potential threat to consumers using some Samsung TVs, watches and
phones, a security researcher has reported. Hackers could exploit the
vulnerabilities found in Samsung's Tizen operating system to gain remote
access and control of a variety of the company's products, according to
Amihai Neiderman, head of research at Equus Software.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84435.html
Galaxy S8 vs. iPhone 8: Winning Has Little to Do With Phones
The new Samsung Galaxy S8 has launched, and its target of choice is the
as yet unlaunched Apple iPhone 8 Anniversary Edition. These phones are
critical for both companies. Apple survives largely off the iPhone
today, and Samsung is trying to recover both from its burning phone
problem and from its top executive being arrested on bribery charges.
Neither firm can afford a big loss to the other.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84425.html
Microsoft Shutters CodePlex, Will Migrate Projects to GitHub
In a move that caps off its gradual embrace of open source in a bear
hug, Microsoft last week announced that it would shutter its nearly 11-
year-old CodePlex project site and migrate its library of work to
GitHub. The company has been forced to deal with a couple of major
issues, such as a 2015 spam epidemic and a substantial decrease in
usage, which in part prompted the move.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84430.html
Prank Responsibly: April Fools' Gags That Missed the Mark
The Internet is a minefield on April 1, with tech companies getting in
on the April Fools' act in weird, wonderful and often woeful ways. The
line between a successful prank and one that leaves users sighing, or
worse, is micron-thin, and the boost to one's reputation -- or knock on
it -- can hang around for some time. This year, we've rounded up some of
the Internet's worst April Fools' pranks.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84426.html
EquiSeq CEO Lexi Palmer: Act Like You're Not Scared and Go at It
Lexi Palmer is CEO of EquiSeq, a biotech firm that does genetic testing
of horses. Palmer met the company's founder, genetic researcher Paul
Szauter, in 2015. "I was just finishing up my degree in interpersonal
communications ... and he told me about the company he'd started,"
Palmer recalled. "I told him I knew everything about horses and said I
could learn everything he did and market it."
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/84411.html
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