Nintendo’s next console will be a big departure from the Wii and Wii U
From The Verge
Nintendo still isn't talking about its next big console, codenamed NX, in detail until next year. But new company president Tatsumi Kimishima, who took over for the late Satoru Iwata in September, has revealed that the device won't just be a new take on the Wii like the Wii U was. "I can assure you we're not building the next version of Wii or Wii U," Kimishima explained in an interview with Time. "It's something unique and different. It's something where we have to move away from those platforms in order to make it something that will appeal to our consumer base."
Inori no Nagasaki
We decided to celebrate the end of the first school quarter by spending a weekend in Nagasaki. Ruby and I just hopped on a train and we arrived in less than two hours - I think I'm going to enjoy Japan's railway system.
The first day was a somber - if grim - pilgrimage through the "Peace Course" - the cluster of museums and parks that commemorate the atomic bombing of the city. It is a bit depressing, but these difficult moments have to be confronted.
I'm sort of a military otaku, but I never liked nuclear weapons. From a tactical standpoint - they're just too messy. You're likely to harm your own troops and resources in the process of employing them (and poison the terrain, which sort of moots the point of tactics). The strategic "options" that nukes give you (apocalypse or not apocalypse) are so inflexible and horrifying that they can't be used as leverage. Meanwhile, their very presence makes the world a very dangerous place. So, I never liked the ghastly things.
How scientists fool themselves – and how they can stop
From Nature:
“People forget that when we talk about the scientific method, we don't mean a finished product,” says Saul Perlmutter, an astrophysicist at the University of California, Berkeley. “Science is an ongoing race between our inventing ways to fool ourselves, and our inventing ways to avoid fooling ourselves.”
Edward Snowden Explains How To Reclaim Your Privacy
From The Intercept:
What we do need to protect are the facts of our activities, our beliefs, and our lives that could be used against us in manners that are contrary to our interests. So when we think about this for whistleblowers, for example, if you witnessed some kind of wrongdoing and you need to reveal this information, and you believe there are people that want to interfere with that, you need to think about how to compartmentalize that.
Windows turns 30: a visual history
From The Verge:
It's only now, with the popularity of modern smartphones and tablets, that Windows faces its toughest challenge yet. Microsoft may yet weather its mobile storm, but it will only do so by rekindling its roots as a true software company.
Google releases critical AI program under a free/open license
This could be a latchkey discovery for universities.
From Boing Boing:
Google says it opened the code because "machine learning is a key ingredient to the innovative products and technologies of the future" and "we hope to create an open standard for exchanging research ideas and putting machine learning in products."
Linkle!
From The Verge:
Linkle marks a bold departure from tradition for Nintendo. The character was first introduced in an art book for the Wii U version of Hyrule Warriors back in the summer of 2014 as a "girl version of hero Link" on a page dedicated to previously unseen yet ultimately rejected characters.
Copyright Suit Against Taylor Swift Dismissed
And the dismissal order has Taylor Swift lyrics. From Business Insider
"At present, the Court is not saying that Braham can never, ever, ever get his case back in court. But, for now, we have got problems, and the Court is not sure Braham can solve them," she wrote.
It's true. Taylor Swift works with everything in life and law.
Why Fingerprints Are Bad Security Tokens
I keep telling you guys that TouchID is a bad idea:
From Hackaday:
Passwords are crap. Nobody picks good ones, when they do they re-use them across sites, and if you use even a trustworthy password manager, they’ll get hacked too. But you know what’s worse than a password? A fingerprint. Fingerprints have enough problems with them that they should never be used anywhere a password would be.
...
But if your fingerprints are your password and they get leaked, it’s “impossible” to change them. Indeed in traditional fingerprint applications, uniqueness and immutability are the whole point — tying criminals to the scene of the crime, for instance. If you could just change your fingerprints after each heist, you wouldn’t have to wear those awkward gloves.
...
The problem with fingerprints is that close is good enough, and needs to be. If I press my finger harder into one reader than into another, or swipe differently, or have a cut, I still want the reader to accept my fingerprint. Trained FBI agents make matches with “partials” all the time, and with reasonable accuracy. Close matches are a fact of life with human flesh and real-world scanners. But a fingerprint with a tiny flaw will hash into something entirely different from the reference version. What this means is that fingerprints are not hashable. Hashing makes passwords strong and without it, fingerprint protection is much weaker.