Scientists built a book-sized, protein-powered biocomputer

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Supercomputers are absurdly impressive in terms of raw power, but it comes at a price: size and energy consumption. A multi-university team of researchers might’ve sidestepped that, though, with protein-powered biocomputers. Lund University notes that where this should really be helpful is with cryptography and "mathematical optimization" because with each task it’s necessary to test multiple solution sets. Unlike a traditional computer, biocomputers don’t work in sequence, they operate in parallel — leading to much faster problem solving.

The biocomputer in action, with proteins finding their way to the solution set at the bottom.

Oh and about that energy efficiency? Lund’s Heiner Linke says that they require less than one percent of the power a traditional transistor does to do one calculation step.

The CBC reports that the model biocomputer used in the experiment is only about the size of a book, rather than, say, IBM’s Watson (pictured above) that’s comprised of some 90 server modules. The ATP-powered biocomputer is admittedly limited for now (it’s only solved {2, 5, 9}), but the scientists involved say that scalability is possible and we might not be far off from seeing the tech perform more complex tasks.

"Our approach has the potential to be general and to be developed further to enable the efficient encoding and solving of a wide range of large-scale problems," the research paper says.

Via: The CBC

Source: PNAS, Lund University

OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest Feb 20-26

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Audience for Release Notes

  • We have 3 potential audiences for release notes:
    • Developers consuming libraries or other code directly.
    • Deployers and operators.
    • End-users.
  • Two kinds of documentation being discussed:
    • Reno [1] for release notes [2]
      • Keep in mind the audience is *not* someone who is necessarily going to be looking at code or writing apps based on libraries we produce..
      • Highlight information that deployers and operators will need, like changes to configuration options or service behaviors.
      • Describe REST API changes that an end-user may need to know about.
    • In-tree developer documentation [3] for Developers.
      • Internal details, library API changes, etc. — any changes the deployer is not going to see.
  • The two sets of documentation are meant for different purposes, so we need to think about what information we publish in each.
  • Full thread [4]

A Proposal to Separate the Design Summit

Today

  • Since the beginning, we’ve had face to face time at Design Summits to discuss development cycles to set goals and organize the work for the upcoming 6 months.
  • A more traditional conference took place at the same time to ensure interaction between upstream and downstream parts of our community.

Current Issues

  • For developers:
    • Difficult to focus on upstream work with so many distractions coming from the conference.
    • As a result the summit is less productive, and we form midcycles to fill our focus.
  • For companies:
    • Flying all their developers to expensive cities and conference hotels for the summit is pretty costly. – The goals of the summit location reaching out to users everywhere does not necessarily align with the goals of the design summit location.
    • Not enough time to build products on top of the recent release.
  • Not enough time for users to try out the new release to have feedback.
  • Finding venues that can accommodate both events is becoming increasingly complicated.

How to Split up the events

  • The first event would be for upstream technical contributors of OpenStack.
    • Held in a simpler, scaled-back setting that would let all OpenStack project teams meet in separate rooms, but in a co-located event that would make it easy to have ad-hoc cross-project discussions.
    • It would be held in closer to the centers of mass of contributors, in less-expensive locations.
    • It would happen a couple of weeks /before/ the previous cycle release. There is a lot of overlap between cycles. Work on a cycle starts at the previous cycle feature freeze, while there is still 5 weeks to go. Most people switch full-time to the next cycle by RC1. Organizing the event just after that time lets us organize the work and kickstart the new cycle at the best moment. It also allows us to use our time together to quickly address last-minute release-critical issues if such issues arise.
  • The second event would be the main downstream business conference.
    • This includes high-end keynotes, marketplace, and break out sessions.
    • Organized two or three months /after/ the release, to give time downstream users to deploy and build products on top of the release.
    • This will better allow us to gather feedback on the recent release, a gather requirements for the next cycle.
    • A subset of contributors who would like to participate in sessions can collect and relay feedback to other team members (similar to the operators midcycle meetups).
  • The split should reduce the number of midcycle events, however, if they’re still needed, they could happen at the conference event (which is in the middle of the cycle).
  • The split means that we need to stagger the events and cycles. We have a long time between Barcelona and the Q1 Summit in the US, so the idea would be to use that long period to insert a smaller cycle (Ocata) with a release early March, 2017 and have the first specific contributors event at the start of the P cycle, mid-February, 2017. With the already-planned events in 2016 and 2017 it is the earliest we can make the transition. We’d have a last, scaled-down design summit in Barcelona to plan the shorter cycle.
  • Operators midcycle will still continue to happen.

summit-split

Voiced Concerns and Answers:

  • This creates two events instead of one. Creates community split, with developers skipping the main and non-developers not providing any feedback to the contributor specific event.
    • There will still be a lot of strategic discussions at the main event.
    • This is where we look at the N-1 release and start drawing plans and cross-project themes for the N+1 release.
    • We don’t need every developer there, but we still need a significant chunk of them, with every team represented, so that we can have those strategic and cross-project discussions.
    • Someone who wants to keep touch with development could still make only one trip, so it’s not expected for the communities to be split. We’d still all be represented in the main event.
  • Losing the main summit as an excuse to fund developers’ travel. Some developers are only sent to the Design summit because the main event is happening at the same time.
    • If you have to pretend to attend the Summit to be able to attend the Design Summit instead, there is deception involved. You should a talk with your employer on where the most value lies for you in attending which event.
    • The Foundation also has the Travel support program to cover the gaps [5].
  • The fear of US-centricity (translating from “closer to the centers of mass of contributors”). This makes travel cost cheaper at the expense of making it more costly for non-US parts of our community.
    • The goal is “minimize and *balance* travel costs for existing contributors”. There will still be some continent rotation involved, but we need to balance cost and fair.
  • The lost of midcycle spirit. Some people really like the midcycles as they stand: separated small events where only your small team is around. The split appears to reduce the likelihood, the need, or the funding for such events.
    • While the hope is the proposed format will let us fulfill all our team socialization needs, it’s true that there will be other people around, and it will feel a lot less exclusive and special.
    • The trade-off is that having people all together encourages cross-project work and breaks silos.
  • Full thread [6]

Brit brewer opensources entire recipe archive

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Fancy knocking up BrewDog’s Sink the Bismarck!? Now you can

Scottish brewer BrewDog has agreeably released its entire recipe back catalogue, encompassing the 215 beers developed during its almost 20-year history.…

The Internet of Linux Things

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The Linux Foundation is a non-profit organization that sponsors the work of Linus Torvalds. Supporting companies include HP, IBM, Intel, and a host of other large corporations. The foundation hosts several Linux-related projects. This month they announced Zephyr, an RTOS aimed at the Internet of Things.

The project stresses modularity, security, and the smallest possible footprint. Initial support includes:

  • Arduino 101
  • Arduino Due
  • Intel Galileo Gen 2
  • NXP FRDM-K64F Freedom

The project (hosted on its own Website) has downloads for the kernel and documentation. Unlike a “normal” Linux kernel, Zephyr builds the kernel with your code to create a monolithic …read more

Secret menu found in Mortal Kombat 20 years later

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MKII
The original Mortal Kombat games were great for many reasons. They had one of the more in-depth fighting game stories, a cast of colorful characters, really cool music, and of course, lots of […]

Imogen Heap is using digital currency tech to change music

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Imogen Heap is no stranger to using bleeding-edge technology to perform music, but she’s now using it to change how you buy music. Her Mycelia project not only lets artists sell music directly to fans, but uses blockchains (the same technology behind digital currencies like Bitcoin) to get the kind of data that would normally require the help of a label. It’d include credits and usage rights, and could track things such as where and when people play a given tune — if a song is really popular with Australians, you’ll know it without asking anyone else.

Heap doesn’t see Mycelia as a complete replacement for existing music streams and sales (she’s talking to Spotify about it), but she does believe it could upturn the industry. Artists would handle the sales and data themselves, limiting the labels to marketing. In effect, you’d have more control over your music career.

The technology is a ways off (there’s a hackathon in early April to help get it going), and how well it works is up in the air. Just how much data will musicians get, for example? How easy will it be to implement? We’ve reached out to Heap for more details. If it does work as promised, though, it could help indie artists make a living while resisting the temptation to make a deal with a major publisher.

Via: Quartz

Source: Mycelia

Humans – 1 Robots – 0: Mercedes deautomates production lines

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Machines are just too inflexible, says production boss

In a surprise win for humanity, Mercedes Benz has announced that it’s ditching the robots used on its assembly line in favor of human workers because they can cope with the job better.…

The Politics Of The Internet Of Things 

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IOTcoffee The prospective scale of the Internet of Things (IoT) has the potential to fill anyone looking from the outside with the technical equivalent of agoraphobia. However, from the inside, the view is very different. Looked at in detail, it is a series of intricate threads being aligned by a complex array of organizations. As with any new technological epoch, questions around shape, ownership… Read More

People don’t want big OpenFlow deployments, so let’s do small ones

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Eating an elephant slice by slice is much easier than eating the whole thing

OpenFlow looks like it has all the hallmarks of inevitable success: it fits into a broad stack of open networking protocols, it has lots of vendor support, it’s backed by the Linux Foundation, and it’s been under development since 2009.…

Giving The Pi Zero USB, Ethernet, And Serial Over USB

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Just as the USB port on your phone can serve as a serial connection, mass storage device, and a network connection, the Pi Zero can do the same. We’ve seen a few people turn the Zero into a single USB gadget, but what about turning the Zero into a USB HID device, network connection, and serial port all at the same time? That’s what [Tobias] did, and his method is even easier than the old one.

The old method of turning the Pi Zero into a USB device required the user to modify and recompile the kernel. Obviously, this isn’t an ideal solution. …read more

Google wants hard drives designed to store your cloud data

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Take a look at the hard drive in your desktop PC. It might hold terabytes of data, but the basic 3.5-inch design can be traced back to the early days of computing — not really relevant in an era when a lot of your content sits in the cloud, is it? Google wants to change that. It’s hoping to work with both the tech industry and researchers to design hard drives that are tailor-made for cloud-based storage. It wants to optimize the "collection" of disks instead of focusing on individual drives, and is more concerned about capacity and performance — the things that matter most in a bustling data center — over sheer reliability.

You shouldn’t expect any breakthroughs in the immediate future, since companies will take a while to implement Google’s ideas. Google is well-aware of the practical realities, though — while it’s pushing for physical changes (such as taller, grouped-together drives), it’s also suggesting near-term improvements like firmware updates. It might not be long before your internet services of choice run that much faster.

Source: Google Cloud Platform Blog

13 cheap (or free) online classes you should take to boost your digital skills

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Laptop

Feed-twFeed-fb

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Image: Mashable Composite, Crew

We live in a digital world. Just look at where you’re reading this article right now — without that phone, tablet, or laptop in front of you, this content would never reach you.

Now, I’ll be honest and say that I’m old-fashioned, which is why I prefer using Post-its instead of Apple Calendars, holding a physical book rather than reading with a Kindle, or talking in person rather than through social media. But like everyone else, I’ve had to adapt to life’s changes — and quite honestly, it’s actually made me a lot more productive and efficient in everything I do. Read more…

More about WordPress, Job Search, Linkedin, Digital Advertising, and Business

OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest Feb 13-19

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OpenStack Operators Midcycle

  • Takeaways from the OpenStack Mid-Cycle Ops Meetup: first time’s the charm [1]
  • OpenStack Upgrading Tutorial: 11 pitfalls and solutions [2]

“No Open Core” in 2016 (continuing)

  • Continuing with discussions on Poppy in particular, Doug Hellmann raises that the Poppy team has done everything we’ve asked. The governance currently emphasizes on the social aspects of the project and community interactions. Tell the Poppy team they “are not OpenStack” even though they followed things is distressing.
  • Sean Dague mentions that solutions like Neutron have an open source solution. It may needed some work, but at least there was one open source solution for testing.
  • Dean Troyer brings up how we have things like Cinder with commerical products as storage drivers. Even without those storage drivers though, Cinder is still useful.
  • Poppy’s open source implementation option, OpenCDN is currently an abandoned project.
  • Full thread: http://bit.ly/1Q0gDIx

Upgrade Implications of Lots of Content in paste.ini

  • A set of Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) patches came out recently [3], that adds a ton of content to paste.ini.
  • Paste.ini is a config that operators can change.
    • Large amounts of complicated things in there which may change in future releases is really problematic.
    • Deprecating content also is a challenge.
    • Why aren’t these options just the defaults of the CORS middlware?
      • Some projects like Ironic did request to not have headers prescribed, for eample, if Ironic is using something other than Keystone, different allowed headers would be required.
      • However, Keystone is defcore, so the default should be useful there first. Then be flexible to other auth options can go on top.
  • Where do we go from here?
    • Option 1: Implement as is, keep things consistent, fix them in Newton.
      • This is not fixable in Newton as it requires deprecating out for the next three releases.
    • Option 2: Try to fix it in Mitaka 2 of CORS middleware setting defaults and projects having the ability to override [4].
      • This will require patches against a bunch of projects [5]. Who can help?
  • Full thread: http://bit.ly/1PNvKSC

 

[1] – http://bit.ly/1TwyWWl

[2] – http://bit.ly/1PNvKSD

[3] – http://bit.ly/1TwyZ4D

[4] – http://bit.ly/1PNvKSE

[5] – http://bit.ly/1TwyZ4E

Thinking Different: Data Centers and IoT

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Microsoft Launches Plumbago, A Paper App Competitor That Lets You Sketch & Handwrite Notes

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PlumbagoMain Microsoft’s Office suite already has a popular note-taking app with OneNote, but today the company is turning its attention to how note-taking should work on tablets that support stylus and touch-based input. The company has now released Plumbago, a digital notebook application for Windows 8.1 and 10 tablets that allows users to handwrite text, highlight, plus sketch and draw using… Read More

Ford Sync 3 is also heading to Europe this summer

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Ford is apparently launching the Sync 3 connected car system this summer not only in the US, but also in Europe. The voice-activated 8-inch infotainment center can easily find establishments for you — all you need to do is press a button and say "I need a coffee" or "I need gas petrol." And since the automaker baked both Android Auto and Apple Car Play support into the system, you can pair it with either an iPhone or an Android device.

Ford has added five additional European languages* to Sync 3’s knowledge bank in preparation for its debut. The company has also installed localized versions of Emergency Assistance, so drivers and passengers can initiate emergency calls in the country’s own language. Sync 3 will initially be available in Europe aboard the Mondeo, the S‑MAX, the Galaxy and eventually, the Kuga SUV. It will make its first appearance in the continent on the new Kuga at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next week.

(*The system’s European languages are: Czech, Danish, Norwegian, Polish (including voice control), Swedish (including voice control), Dutch, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Turkish and U.K. English.)

Source: Ford

PrimaryIO first flash cacher with VAIO support

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No, not for Sony notebooks. VMware application IO filtering

PrimaryIO, once known as CacheBox, has the first VAIO-integrated caching software to the market to speed database apps in vSphere 6.…

You Can Now Dual Boot Windows and Chromium with CloudReady

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CloudReady, the software that allows you to turn just about any old laptop into a Chromebook , now offers a dual boot option so you can check out Chromium without ditching your default operating system.

Read more…



ARM Cortex-R8 aka ‘Now your hard drive will have a quad-core CPU in it’

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New design for demanding real-time applications

Brit processor designer ARM has drawn up a quad-core Cortex-R8 CPU so storage drives can cope with the demands of increasing capacities – and phones can download stuff faster.…

IBM open sources its blockchain code – the non-crazy part of Bitcoin

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Places bet on software for future transactions

IBM has open sourced a significant chunk of the blockchain code it has been working on, putting its weight behind the Linux Foundation and its Hyperledger project.…

Microsoft’s new Wireless Display Adapter is more responsive

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Like other Miracast HDMI dongles, Microsoft’s Wireless Display Adapter lets you easily mirror the screen of your Windows (or Android) devices on monitors, TVs and projectors — anything with an HDMI input, really. Redmond’s reasonably priced dongle has been kicking around for roughly 18 months now though, meaning its high time for an updated model. Microsoft’s next-gen Wireless Display Adapter improves on its predecessor in two ways. For starters, the HDMI dongle itself has been almost halved in length, though it still draws power from a tethered USB cable. More importantly, the new version improves responsiveness (aka latency), so your poorly framed smartphone video should pop up on your living room TV that bit quicker.

As the dongle simply mirrors the screen of the source device directly, you’re not limited to specific, supported apps. Your PC, tablet or smartphone, however, will need to be running Windows 8.1 or above, and any Android device with Jelly Bean (4.2) or later should also be compatible. The new Wireless Display Adapter is available to pre-order from Microsoft in the US now for $49.95 ($10 cheaper than the previous generation’s launch price), heading to other outlets including Best Buy and Amazon when it’s officially released on March 1st.

Source: Microsoft (1), (2)

Silk Labs Sense: Not your typical home monitoring camera

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As useful as Nest’s Dropcam is, it isn’t the best looking home monitoring camera. Still, there aren’t many of them that do a better job design-wise. Silk Labs, a startup founded by Mozilla’s former CTO, Andreas Gal, sees this as an opportunity to offer something different. Enter Sense, which is similar to Dropcam in functionality but also comes with a few notable differences. For example, it’s said to be smart enough to recognize multiple faces; that can be used to let you know if it thinks a stranger is in your home, or play music based on a particular individual’s taste.

Sense (pictured above) also pairs with third-party hardware, such as Sonos speakers and smart light bulbs, among others. Not surprisingly, you’ll find a built-in microphone and speaker on the back of it, used for voice recognition and more features that may be added in the future. Meanwhile, the Sense’s industrial design is intended to blend with people’s lifestyle, according to Gal. It’s supposed to be "something you’re happy to put in your living room," he says.

Gal, who left the Firefox team in 2015, told me that Silk Labs’ goal with Sense is to create a whole new Internet of Things platform: "We are not a hardware company," he says. Instead, Gal hopes the device will drive interest from both developers and manufacturers, especially since Sense and the software powering it are going to be open source. The Kickstarter is launching today, with the product priced at $225.

And Gal doesn’t want you to worry about it being a crowdfunded project, because Silk Labs isn’t financed that way. "Kickstarter is just a way to bring this to people," he added.

Source: Kickstarter (Silk Labs)

‘5D’ discs can store data until well after the sun burns out

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Researchers at the University of Southampton’s Optical Research Center announced on Tuesday that they’ve perfected a technique that can record data in 5 dimensions and keep it safe for billions of years. The method etches data into a thermally stable disc using femtosecond laser bursts. The storage medium itself holds up to 360 TB per disc, can withstand temperatures up to 1000 degrees C and are estimated to last up to 13.8 billion years at room temperature without degrading.

Each file is comprised of three layers of nanoscale dots. The dots’ side and orientations, as well as their position within the three standard dimensions, constitute its five dimensions. These dots change the polarization of light travelling through the disc which is read using a microscope and polarizer.

The Southampton team originally demonstrated the technology back in 2013 though, at that point, they could only fit a 300kb test file onto a disc. In the three years since their first demonstration, they’ve essentially perfected the recording technique and have since recorded the entirety of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), Newton’s Opticks, Magna Carta and Kings James Bible.

"It is thrilling to think that we have created the technology to preserve documents and information and store it in space for future generations," Professor Peter Kazansky from the ORC said in a statement. "This technology can secure the last evidence of our civilisation: all we’ve learnt will not be forgotten."

Source: University of Southampton

Getting Ready For HTTP/2: A Guide For Web Designers And Developers

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The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is the protocol that governs the connection between your server and the browsers of your website’s visitors. For the first time since 1999, we have a new version of this protocol, and it promises far faster websites for everyone.

Getting Ready For HTTP/2: A Guide For Web Designers And Developers

In this article, we’ll look at the basics of HTTP/2 as they apply to web designers and developers. I’ll explain some of the key features of the new protocol, look at browser and server compatibility, and detail the things you might need to think about as we see more adoption of HTTP/2. By reading this article, you will get an overview of what to consider changing in your workflow in the short and long term. I’ll also include plenty of resources if you want to dig further into the issues raised.

The post Getting Ready For HTTP/2: A Guide For Web Designers And Developers appeared first on Smashing Magazine.

NICE catch, Amazon: Bezos buys HPC toolkit from Italy

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Is Uncle Jeff’s cut-price bit-barn rental company contemplating HPCaaS?

Amazon’s sparking speculation a more ambitious high-performance computing (HPC) plan with the acquisition of Italian company NICE Software.…