Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Perfect Randomness Realized For the First Time
  2. Websites Have a New Way To Spy On Visitors: Analyzing Their SSD Activity
  3. Meta To Start Testing AI Subscription Services
  4. Nvidia To Spend $150 Billion a Year In Taiwan
  5. Rust Will Save Linux From AI, Says Greg Kroah-Hartman
  6. The AI Fight Brewing Inside the New York Times
  7. YouTube To Automatically Detect, Label AI-Generated Videos
  8. Roku Updates Its UI For the First Time In a Decade
  9. Tech CEOs Are Apparently Suffering From AI Psychosis
  10. Dropbox CEO Drew Houston To Step Down After 19 Years
  11. Company Behind School Bus AI Cameras Wants To Share Footage With Police
  12. Starlink and Amazon May Be Able To Buy Into EU Mobile Satellite Spectrum Plan
  13. American Airlines Picks Starlink For In-Flight Wi-Fi
  14. A Fundamental Principle of Aeronautical Engineering Has Been Overturned
  15. Windows’ Classic 3D Space Cadet Pinball Is Getting a Physical Re-Creation

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Perfect Randomness Realized For the First Time

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
ETH Zurich researchers say they have generated certified “perfect randomness” for the first time by using a quantum Bell-test setup with two entangled superconducting chips connected by a 30-meter cooled link. “In the long term, this work could play a similar role in digital security as atomic clocks do for timekeeping: a physically certified source of randomness that other systems can rely on,” reports Phys.org. “Possible applications range from the encryption of sensitive communications and digital identities to public randomness services for lotteries and blockchain applications.” From the report:
They call their method randomness amplification. “This was made possible by an improved so-called Bell-Test with simultaneously high quality and high data rate,” says [Renato Renner and Andreas Wallraff]. He and his coworkers use a complex setup that consists of two superconducting chips, which they cool down to very low temperatures close to absolute zero. Each chip represents a quantum bit or qubit, which can take on the states “0” or “1” or any arbitrary superposition of these states. A 30-meter-long tube, which is also cooled down, connects the two chips.

Microwave photons can fly back and forth between them, thus creating quantum mechanical entanglement. This means that a quantum measurement on one qubit, which randomly yields the values “0” or “1,” influences automatically and at a distance whether “0” or “1” is measured on the second qubit. The separation of 30 meters ensures that, during the measurement, even at the speed of light, no information can be exchanged between the qubits. This would disturb the perfect randomness.

Wallraff and his team made the choice of the exact type of measurement (or “measurement basis” in technical jargon) on the two qubits depending on an imperfect random number generator. Renner’s coworkers could then amplify the randomness of the measurement results further using a special algorithm. “The resulting sequence of zeros and ones is now really perfectly random, and we can even certify that,” says Renner. He likens this result to crossing a ridge: “The technical improvements allowed us, for the first time, to create random numbers that will remain perfectly random for all eternityâ"no matter what analytical methods are used to assess their randomness.”
The findings have been published in the journal Nature.

Websites Have a New Way To Spy On Visitors: Analyzing Their SSD Activity

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Now sites have a new way to spy on their visitors: measuring subtle interactions with their solid-state drives. The technique, named FROST (fingerprinting remotely using OPFS-based SSD timing), allows sites to monitor other sites a visitor is viewing and what apps are open on their devices. The technique, laid out in a research paper (PDF), exploits a side channel, a form of leak resulting from physical manifestations such as electromagnetic emanations, data caches, or the time required to complete a task. By measuring the manifestations, attackers can decrypt encrypted traffic and infer other confidential data.

The attack that FROST uses is known as a contention side channel, which measures the interaction of various processes all using (or competing for) a given resource. By measuring the timing of certain I/O (input-output) operations of the SSD a visitor is using, the researchers were able to determine the websites open in other tabs — even on other browsers — and the apps that were open on the visitor’s device. FROST requires no interaction from the visitor other than opening the site hosting the attack. […] Unlike previous contention side-channel attacks on SSDs, FROST runs exclusively in the browser. It uses JavaScript that interacts with the OPFS (origin private file system), an allocated storage space that’s reserved for a specific site to run code needed to complete a given task. Websites can create one with no interaction required by the visitor.

While each file system is sandboxed, meaning it’s isolated from other websites and from the device system itself, the JavaScript can measure the I/O interactions. Then, by running those interactions through a pretrained convolutional neural network — a system that uses deep learning to analyze text, audio, and images — the attacker can deduce various apps and websites open on the device. “The attacker continuously measures SSD contention by performing random reads from a large OPFS file,” the researchers explained. “SSD contention caused by user activity causes measurable latency differences for these read operations. By training a convolutional neural network (CNN) on these traces, the attacker can fingerprint user activity on the host system by classifying new traces using the trained model.”

adblock and privacy badger

By jhoegl • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Clearly an exploit, the sites that use this should be blacklisted, I dont care if its a large site or not. Using a hack is illegal and should be treated as such.

Re:adblock and privacy badger

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I’m stunned this even exists https://developer.mozilla.org/…

Bullshit, overblown synopsis

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Informative Thread

>By measuring the manifestations, attackers can decrypt encrypted traffic and infer other confidential data.
The research paper doesn’t say anything about decrypting encrypted traffic nor inferring confidential data. I think the author just looked up “side channel” and ascribed the implications of other side channel attacks to this particular technique.

Read the paper: what’s actually happening here is a demonstration where code in the browser can use local SSD timings to encode a stream of bits by influencing access times. Then, another open browser page on the same computer can infer the signal sent by the other process by examining SSD latency timing.

It’s mildy interesting, and far from the first such side channel, but nowhere does this technique break out of the browser’s sandbox or decrypt confidential data. This is nothing like “visit this page and you’re haxx0red noob.” In order to succumb to any sort of attack, a legitimate website you normally visit would have to be hacked too. And if they have gotten that far, they wouldn’t need to exfiltrate data via this side channel.

Re:adblock and privacy badger

By larwe • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
It’s not a question of asking people to think… it’s a question of undermining things that actually make them money. It would be possible to design a browser that is extremely hostile to advertising, tracking and other malware. Unfortunately, the people with enough money to maintain and promote a credible browser make most of that money from advertising, tracking and other malware. This whole article thread is just another example of “allowing other peoples’ unvetted code to run on your computer is never safe”, but the people who make browsers and major websites have business models that rely on this idea. It’s a tension that cannot be resolved in the Age of Enshittification.

Re:adblock and privacy badger

By Aighearach • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Sites don’t use it, even just reading the summary would tell you that this is something that works in the lab when the fake users are generated by scripts and there isn’t any other activity on the node. Real computers are doing lots of different shit in the background and don’t have narrowly consistent timing, especially compared to other users with similar storage systems. And storage performance operates in a set of narrow performance bands. “Which of a site’s 2 users are using it right now?” might be possible, but fingerprinting an anonymous user of a real web service would be a whole different issue.

The important thing is that some dingbat academician got a publishing credit.

Meta To Start Testing AI Subscription Services

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Meta will begin testing paid subscriptions for its Meta AI app and website, with a $7.99/month Meta One Plus plan and a more capable $19.99/month Meta One Premium plan offering. The test will start next month in Singapore, Guatemala, and Bolivia as Meta looks for AI revenue beyond advertising while continuing to offer a free tier. CNBC reports:
Naomi Gleit, the head of product at Meta, revealed the subscription testing in an Instagram video, announcing that the plans “give people who use Meta AI more to work with, more capacity, bigger, more complex requests, and more room to create for businesses and creators.”

Meta One Plus will cost $7.99 a month and the Meta One Premium plan will cost $19.99 a month, the company confirmed. The more expensive version offers users additional computing capacity to produce more comprehensive responses and other advanced features. The company will continue to provide a free version of the app and site.

“We’re offering premium tools that allow you to enhance presence, supercharge content, automate tasks, and protect your brand,” Gleit said in the post. “We’re also thinking about how to bring this all together in a way that makes sense.”

Reality check in 3.. 2.. 1..

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I guess this is the moment when they realise that the only reason why some people use AI because it’s free or forced upon us. No marketing campaign will ever make people pay this sort of money pay for a silly chatbot, especially the Meta AI crap.

Re:Reality check in 3.. 2.. 1..

By larwe • Score: 4, Informative Thread
I think “people” are not the target market; influencers (and wannabe influencers) and brands are the target market. I.e. it is a spam-enhancement tool.

Re: Meta has an AI?

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They might get a better responsie by requesting $4.99/month to remove the Meta AI slop from their Facebook interface.

Re:Meta has an AI?

By haruchai • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Anyone who’s seen Zuck testify at Congress has seen Meta AI in action.
I’m quite impressed at how close to human it appeared

Nvidia To Spend $150 Billion a Year In Taiwan

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the company plans to spend around $150 billion a year in Taiwan, calling it the “epicenter of the AI revolution.” “Four years ago, five years ago, Nvidia was spending about $10, $15 billion dollars a year in Taiwan. Now we’re spending $100, going to $150 billion dollars in Taiwan each year,” Huang said. Reuters reports:
Huang was speaking at a launch celebration in Taipei for the chip company’s planned Taiwan headquarters, which he said will break ground this year and aims to become operational in 2030. He did not provide a timeframe for the number of years the company plans to invest $150 billion. The Taiwan headquarters will bring Nvidia closer to TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker which makes many of the advanced semiconductors powering the trend towards AI and is a major supplier to the U.S. tech company.

“Taiwan is booming,” Huang said on stage at the celebration which was attended by his parents, wife, daughter and son in addition to around 1,000 employees. “Taiwan is the epicentre of the AI revolution. This is where the chips come, packaging comes, this is where the systems are made, this is where AI supercomputers were created. The number of partners we work with here in Taiwan, incredible.”

Re:Just trying to get Xi’s attention

By korgitser • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Huang’s billions are probs not going to impress the Chinese, who are investing multiples of that. The Chinese also consider developing their own (AI) semiconductors a national priority, with the US of the last 10-15 years having proven to them conclusively that Western supplies can not be relied upon. Their homegrown stuff is not as advanced as Nvidia on performance/watt yet, but it’s cheap (especially compared to the multiple orders of magnitude inflated prices of Nvidia) and it works, and has built an AI industry in China that rivals the US.

So this ship sailed for Huang some time ago. I’m reading this announcement more as a “screw you guys, I’m going home” to Trump. The Orange Man has had Huang lick his boots, messed with his business with his trade wars and sanctions games, and paraded him in China now… and all for nothing, Trump has zero leverage on China, he has nothing to offer to China, and thus, nothing to offer to Huang either. All mouth and no trousers. Why would Huang hang around …

Taiwan is where the semiconductor industry is at, and Taiwan is where Huang needs to be, too. The tech is there, the engineering is there, the manufacturing is also there, even if they branch a little to the US. The US semiconductor industry otoh is moving out of inertia by now, unable to keep up with the volume, and therefore, investment, and r&d of Taiwan. And all of that is before you take into account the US is basically in war with higher education by now, which does not bode well for any hopes of long term brain availability.

At what point will they get a private army?

By schweini • Score: 3 Thread
Serious question: at what point will it be worth it for the tech companies to investt directly into Taiwan’s defense from a Chinese invasion?
With hundreds of billions of dollars at stake, wouldn’t it make sense to buy Taiwan some AA systems and coastal artillery, just to deter an invasion a little more and hence secure their investment?

They must not think China is going to take Taiwan

By sarren1901 • Score: 4 Thread

Given how Trump is showing the world that “Might makes Right” we are basically showing China that it’s okay to use military force to try and take what you want. Given that little meeting they just had, will Trump actually defend Taiwan if China decides they want it?

Given that uncertainty, is it really wise to invest 150 billion into a territory that can’t remotely stand on its own? Taiwan’s best bet if the are invaded is to self-sabotage, which would likely be worse for the world then just letting China have it.

Nvidia CEO obviously has more connections and insider information then I do, but it still interesting to read about this all the same.

Rust Will Save Linux From AI, Says Greg Kroah-Hartman

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Linux stable kernel maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman says Rust can help Linux deal with a flood of AI-discovered security bugs (namely Dirty Frag, Copy Fail, and Fragnesia) by preventing common C mistakes around memory, locking, error handling, and untrusted data at build time rather than during human review. It’s “not a silver bullet” and does not mean rewriting the whole kernel, but he said new drivers and subsystems will increasingly use Rust as Linux evolves forward. ZDNet reports:
Kroah-Hartman illustrated those pitfalls with real C bugs in the kernel, including a 15-year-old Bluetooth bug that dereferenced a pointer without checking it and a Xen bug where “we forgot to unlock” in an error path. “The majority of the bugs in the kernel are this tiny, minor stuff,” he explained. “Error conditions aren’t checked, locks aren’t forgotten, unreleased memories leak, and vulnerabilities add up over time. They crash the kernel. This is what we live with in C. This is why we don’t like it.” Kroah-Hartman argued that the “best beauty of Rust” is catching those mistakes at build time rather than in review. For example, when it comes to locking, he highlighted Rust’s locking abstractions in the kernel: “The only way you can get access to inner pointers of structures is by grabbing that lock, and releasing the lock automatically. The compiler does it, it’s guarded, the lock happens, everything’s happy. You just can’t write code to access these values…without grabbing the lock. The compiler will not let you.”

Those properties, he argued, directly remove a huge fraction of the bugs he sees: “This is going to save us those two things. First, 60% of the bugs in the kernel right there, they’re gone. Thank you.” The payoff is earlier, more automated enforcement: “If this happens at build time, not review time, don’t make me a maintainer who has to read your code [and] say, ‘Oh, then you properly check that error value. Oh, did you properly grab the locks in the right spot?’ Rust gives us that for free. This is the best thing ever.” Even if Rust vanished tomorrow, Kroah-Hartman argued, it has already forced the kernel to clean up C code and interfaces. He credited Rust’s influence outright: “We stole this from Rust. Thank you. It’s a good idea, so if Rust disappeared tomorrow, we have cleaned up the C code in the kernel so much and taken in the ideas. We thank you, you’ve made Linux better with it just by existing.”

[…] What ultimately sold a number of core maintainers, including him, on Rust was how it “makes reviewing code easier.” With CI [Continuous Integration] bots enforcing builds and Rust’s type system enforcing key invariants, maintainers can “focus on the logic” rather than resource bookkeeping: “I can care about that one function. I don’t have to worry about the rest of this stuff, because I assume that it works properly, because it was built properly.” Internally, he said, the top maintainers have already made their call on Rust’s status: “The Linux kernel maintainers, we get together every year and talk about what the processes are doing. Last year, we said the Rust experiment is over. It’s not an experiment. This is for real.” The rationale: “The people behind it are real. We trust them. We know what they’re doing. They’ve shown and put in the work to make Rust a viable language in the kernel, and we’re going to make this stick. Let’s go full speed ahead. And, as always,” he said wryly, “world domination proceeds.”
“If you never remember anything else in my talk, just remember these four words. It came from Microsoft Security many, many years ago,” Kroah-Hartman told attendees. “They realized all input is evil. You have to validate all input.”

What’s the benefit of Rust here though?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you’ve got the AI tools to tell you how you screwed up with C, why do you need Rust? Just fix what the LLM says you broke. Now you have the speed of C without the bugs. It ought to be easy to find that class of error, right?

Re:Wait, 4 words?

By Guspaz • Score: 4, Informative Thread

“All input is evil”

Re:I don’t currently use Rust

By Kisai • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Just to point it out, in case people drink the kool-aid.

Just be cause “Rust does this thing better” does not mean you should always use Rust instead of C. You should always be using C when performance matters. Not Rust, not C++. If anything, C developers should be always using /Wall or /W4 and then treat all warnings as errors with /Werror . Many MANY projects out there have thousands of warnings a lot of then dealing with uninitialized memory, integer/floating point casts, and string lengths.

Realistically, string handling sucks in C because of the baggage of ANSI C, as wchar_t makes things horrible to debug.

The thing that would make C/C++ code safer from the start to implicitly check the length of variables, instead of having to pass the length.

All post-unicode languages such as Rust, Javascript and Python (not PHP or Perl) handle their strings internally as unicode, thus you don’t actually need to know the length of the string to pass to it. In C is a UTF-8 string have a BOM? Does it use Windows, Mac or Unix line endings? you have up to three additional non-printable characters when dealing with unicode. Then there is Windows which is an additional special hell because it’s wchar_t is UTF-16 in visual C but UTF-32 in GCC. Yet the vast majority of software out there only wants to deal with UTF-8.

If C and C++ natively did UTF-8, a good chunk of mistakes would not happen. Pointer nonsense not withstanding, most of the mistakes in C could probably be tracked by an AI linter and OSS projects could just fix things instead of publishing code that would fall under treating all warnings as errors. It’s the pointer stuff that trips up people who don’t understand the underlying assembly language code it would make. So people not familiar with C or ASM will constantly use variables that use the local registers rather than the ram address, and then wonder why the compiler complains about stack space.

Fun fact “the switch” statement is a heavy use of the stack space, because the compiler is unwrapping this to a series of “jump if equal” which is equal to “if” statements. This is the purpose of making functions as small and single-purpose as possible and antithesis of C++ classes. This is why you don’t use C++ in performance code.

Rust seems to aim to be “better C” but doesn’t necessarily do so since it technically runs on the C runtime. I think Rust might be fine to use in things outside of kernel space, but it seems like it might be expensive to use in the kernel/driver space.

Meanwhile, Nvidia, AMD, Razer, and Logitech are out there making “Driver” bundles that are full on chromium embedded frameworks , going in much the wrong direction. These companies have stopped caring.

Re:embarrassing what qualifies as a programmer

By phantomfive • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
He sucks.

The reason is that even though he has been programming in C for 20 years or more in the kernel, he never sat down and asked himself, “How do I avoid memory bugs in C? How do I avoid bugs?” It wasn’t until he started using Rust that he even began approaching that question.

So his code is going to have plenty of other bugs, simply because he’s never asked himself the question, “How do I avoid bugs?” No language is going to save him.

Rust will bring world peace

By thesjaakspoiler • Score: 5, Funny Thread

We should allow for programming languages to be awarded the Nobel Peace Price.
If Henry Kissinger can get a Nobel Peace Price, Rust should also be able to get one because everything is better with Rust.
I’d wish that someone would have pointer out that Visual Basic doesn’t have pointers so we could have had Linux kernel support for it.

The AI Fight Brewing Inside the New York Times

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge:
How newsrooms should use AI — or if they should at all — has been a recurrent debate within the media industry over the last several years. Increasingly, these rules are being hammered out at the bargaining table between unions and publishers. Right now, employees at The New York Times are gearing up for a fight. Unionized staff with the Tech Guild say Times management has refused to provide the union with information related to how the company has used AI, its plans for AI use in the future, and how it will affect employees’ jobs and workflow. (The union filed an unfair labor practice charge earlier this month.) The Tech Guild, a NewsGuild of New York unit of around 700 software engineers, designers, product and project managers, and data analysts, also filed grievances saying Times management violated their collective bargaining agreement when it started using two internal AI tools that track and evaluate employee performance and activity.

[…] Both the Tech Guild and the Times Guild (which represents 1,500 editorial, ad sales, and support staff at the Times) filed unfair labor practice charges against the Times, saying that company violated labor law by refusing to respond to their requests for information around AI use at the outlet. The Times did not respond to specific questions about how it uses DX and Glean, but spokesperson Danielle Rhoades Ha said in an email that the company disagrees with the characterizations made in grievances and that it would respond as part of its “normal contractual process.” “Likewise, we will respond to this Request for Information (RFI) in due course as we’ve done with 80+ other RFIs from the Guild in recent years,” Rhoades Ha said.

The Times Guild is currently bargaining a new contract, pushing for robust protections against AI, like requirements that a human is behind any AI tool being used, that any journalism utilizing AI is transparently labeled, and that staff are compensated for AI model training deals the company might make. The Times deploys artificial intelligence tools for some reporting, like using it to parse millions of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein or scan satellite images of Gaza to try to find where Israel had dropped a specific kind of bomb. […] [Ben Harnett, a software engineer at the Times and chair of the unit’s generative AI committee] emphasizes that the unit’s position is not that AI shouldn’t ever be used, but that workers should have a say in how it’s deployed. Metrics like how many tokens an employee uses or how often they’re using AI to do their jobs create pressure to do more and incentives that don’t align with doing quality work. “It’s going to distract [you] from actually doing a good job, which is what we think the company should want,” he says.
Two of the contentious AI tools mentioned in the report are DX and Glean. DX is an engineering productivity tool that tracks a developer’s output, generative AI use, efficiency, and other related metrics. Meanwhile, Glean is an internal knowledge-search tool that indexes materials like wikis, GitHub documents, Google Docs, and emails so employees can query company information.
The concern, according to Times Tech Guild members, is that data meant to measure broader developer experience is now being applied to individuals and cited in performance or disciplinary contexts. There’s also worry that it could be used to monitor individual contributions and produce false or misleading results.

Damn Communists

By machineghost • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I am sick of these socialists and their damn unions, trying to … um … make my news more accurate! Those fricking commies!

“And then they came for me…”

By jlowery • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

When the “anything for a profit” motivations of modern capitalism steamrolled over laborers of all stripes, it was “Don’t worry—we’ll retrain them and they’ll get better jobs.”

Now the white collar workers are next. Why don’t they learn a manual trade, or move to where the work is? Lazy bastards. /s

Automation has Been Eroding Journalism for Decades

By Koreantoast • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Just want to point out that automation is not new to journalism. Algorithms have been writing tons of articles for over a couple of decades now, from sports scores to earnings reports to reporting on earthquakes. LLM’s are perhaps the final straw for a journalism profession that has is on the verge of collapse from the one-two punch of the Internet and automation with CEO’s who are now experiencing AI psychosis having decided to pull the final plug on human written news articles.

The most valuable lesson

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
many journalist need to learn is Activism != Journalism.
The journalist that learn that lesson have a much better chance @ surviving.

YouTube To Automatically Detect, Label AI-Generated Videos

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
YouTube will begin automatically labeling videos when its systems detect “significant” photorealistic AI use, while also making AI-content disclosures more visible below long-form videos and directly on Shorts. “We’ve heard consistently from our community that they value transparency when it comes to generative AI content,” YouTube said in a blog post. “These changes are designed to balance transparency with creator control.” Variety reports:
Under YouTube’s guidelines, creators will still be required to manually disclose when they use realistic AI. But starting this week, it also will roll out a new internal system to help identify AI-generated content. “If a creator doesn’t specify whether or not they used AI, but our systems detect significant photorealistic AI use, we will now automatically apply a label,” YouTube said.

YouTube creators who believe their content was incorrectly flagged as AI-generated can modify the disclosure status using the YouTube Studio tool. However, according to YouTube, the AI labels will “remain permanent” in some cases, including for content created using YouTube’s own AI tools (such as Veo or Dream Screen) and for content that contains C2PA metadata (based on standards from the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity) that indicates it was fully AI-generated.

In addition, YouTube is moving the disclosure label for photorealistic and meaningfully AI-altered or AI-generated content to a more prominent position. Until now, YouTube labeled AI content in a video’s expanded description. Going forward, for long-form videos, the AI label will now appear directly below the video player and above the description. For YouTube Shorts, the label will appear as an overlay on the video itself.
“The goal here is context at a glance. If it looks real but was made with AI, viewers will know immediately,” said Rene Ritchie, YouTube head of editorial and creator liaison. He added that the AI labels alone “do not affect how our videos are recommended or whether they can earn money. This is purely about giving viewers the right information at the right time.”

Alternate headline

By BadgerStork • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Youtube creates vast adversarial network to make fake video undectable

Not enough, by far.

By SvnLyrBrto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They need to block the AI slop entirely and ban the frauds posting it.

Self-serving process

By SmaryJerry • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
YouTube needs to label content as AI so they can continue to train their AI on real data only. It is completely self-serving. In another year 90% of content will be AI and it will be more effective to label the other 10% of content as ‘real’ and just assume everything else is AI.

Not trying very hard

By NewtonsLaw • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Why aren’t they putting this information alongside the thumbnail so we can totally skip AI content if we want to. Only finding out once you’ve clicked on the video and the player has loaded is stupid — being both a waste of the viewer’s time and bandwidth.

This is necessary

By MpVpRb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I sometimes watch AI generated videos and find them amusing. I don’t hate AI videos, I just want honesty.
Someone who honestly uses a tool should be honest about it.
Someone who hides their tool use is probably up to no good.

Roku Updates Its UI For the First Time In a Decade

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Roku is rolling out its first major homescreen update in a decade. The UI doesn’t look too dramatically different, but users will notice more personalization-driven changes, including frequently used apps, “top picks,” household-specific layouts, and recommendations based on viewing habits. Rest assured, Engadget adds, “Everything is still in various shades of purple and Roku City is still available as a screensaver.” From the report:
Today’s update certainly brings more clutter into the mix, including a new “marquee” ad spot that takes up a large chunk of the screen. It’s worth remembering that Roku makes most of its money on ads and not its hardware. “More than 100 million households will feel the difference the moment they turn on their TV — and it opens up a better, more powerful experience for our partners as well,” CEO Anthony Wood wrote in a blog post.

The update does bring one novel feature, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The company says the new homescreen platform will adapt to how households use Roku devices. This is to accommodate “multiple people living in homes.” For instance, a child’s bedroom TV might have a different homescreen than TV in the living room, and so forth. This expansion is rolling out right now to US-based customers, though it might take a while to reach every user. Roku says “additional countries will follow in the coming months.”

Pi-hole ftw

By Kargan • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I have Roku to thank for my newest Linux pc hardware purchase late last year, with a 4GB Raspberry Pi that I set up specifically to block ads on our Roku players. This was the first dedicated Linux hardware that I had picked up in a couple of decades and I opted to go with a headless configuration, which also allowed me to get back into the CLI and relearn a few things I had forgotten over the years.

Fun geek project to play around with for sure and a bit of a reacquaintance with Linux. Cheers, Roku! :)

Annoying

By Cpt_Kirks • Score: 3 Thread

I got this update a couple of weeks ago, and it is ANNOYING.

Trying to shove crap I could care less about in my face, plus MORE ADS.

It takes a bit of work, but most of it can be turned off.

Re:Pi-hole ftw

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

They were probably talking about Pi Hole.https://pi-hole.net/

Tech CEOs Are Apparently Suffering From AI Psychosis

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch:
There is a certain wildness in the tech industry these days that both mimics previous eras of large changes, like cloud computing (runaway costs in the early days), and is like nothing we’ve ever seen before (record revenues accompanied by mass layoffs). One possible explanation: tech executives, especially CEOs, are collectively suffering from delusions of AI grandeur. And at least one tech CEO has said as much out loud: Box founder Aaron Levie.

“CEOs are uniquely prone to AI psychosis because they’re sufficiently distant from the last mile of work that still has to happen to generate most value with AI,” Levie wrote on X. CEOs “play with AI,” develop a prototype, or generate a contract, to use Levie’s examples, and then make the leap to believing agents can do the work. But these top-level executives aren’t the people who have to review code, discover bugs, and identify calls to hallucinated libraries before software is deployed. They aren’t responsible for training AI models on a company’s idiosyncratic contract terms, nor do they have to spend days combing through contracts to find sneaky terms, as Levie indicates.

In other words, Levie’s theory posits, CEOs don’t really understand processes well enough to know what really can and can’t be automated. But that lack of knowledge doesn’t stop them from acting on their beliefs. […] So what are CEOs to do instead? Levie advises CEOs to use AI “a ton” to really see what it can and can’t do, “and come out the other side with an appreciation for both the upside and the real work.”

Re:Box founder Aaron Levie

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Funny Thread

He invented the cardboard box. In fact he was trapped for months inside one of his early prototypes, during which time he spent a great deal of time thinking. Upon his release, he expressed his gratitude for finally being able to “think outside the box.”

Narcissits falling for a syncophancy machine?

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Narcissits falling for a syncophancy machine? Who could have predicted such an outcome?

Re:Use AI a ton = Move fast

By jheath314 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I like how his proposed solution for CEOs being distant from the last mile of work and thinking AI is a magic wand is to use AI even more.

Not “get to know the people working on the frontlines”. Not “learn more about the things we’re trying to automate”. Not even “have a basic understanding of the business you’re in.”

Nope. Spend more time with the delusional AI.

On an unrelated topic, I’ve discovered that staying drunk all day is a great cure for hangovers.

Eat it, da Vinci.

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

AI doesn’t really matter. It’s just that hectobillionaire bizbros aren’t especially smart.

They’re just exceptionally lucky. If you have a hundred million players playing the same game of Monopoly, almost all of them are going to lose. But somebody will win! And then they have everything. And since we all have to live on this Monopoly board the rest of our lives, people, bizbros included, want there to be a logical reason for this one particular guy to have so much when everybody else has so little. And also, everybody else needs to score a piece of that bizbro’s everything in order to stay on the board. He’s so powerful, it would be madness to cross him now that he has everything.

So there’s tons of incentives for everyone to believe, or pretend to believe, that the bizbro is incredibly, historically smart. And that includes the bizbro himself. Smart about what? Business! AI? Sure, that’s a business. Good enough! So Mr. Bizbro now has a million fans and sycophants and hangers-on telling him he’s a genius. Since the pot he’s won is bigger than anyone’s ever won before, they tell him he’s the greatest genius in history.

But, again, he isn’t. So that’s a lie. The biggest lie in history so far!

Eventually, the lie comes crashing down. If the hectobillionaire bizbro were a normal business guy, he would be ruined, and that would be the end of it. But he has a hundred billion dollars. It would take a thousand lifetimes to run out of money. So he doesn’t actually suffer any of the consequences of the deception around his intelligence. But now he’s scared! So he lingers on and on and on, flailing wildly, causing more and more damage to civilization, everyone making more and bigger excuses for him, until he, inshallah, finally dies and leaves the world to the next group of psychopaths to plunder.

The upshot is: If you think these oligarchs are acting crazy and causing societal damage here at the top of their game, just wait until the market finally drops out from under them.

Re:Adding one more to the list!

By Gleenie • Score: 4, Informative Thread

This still goes back to the likes of Altman etc. who are driving the bullshit hype. The things you noted above as AI success used to just be called Machine Learning and there was no real dispute (even from “AI” haters) that they were useful tools. But they were specialised tools - just like almost every other successful tool.

The LLM pushers want you to believe that their product (it’s real AI!) will solve every problem, and it’s just one more GPU generation away from Commander Data or R2-D2.

But there’s one thing that LLMs are really good at - passing the Turing test. Train them to always tell you your idea is the bestest idea ever in the history of ideas, you original genius, and it’s inevitable that CEOs insulated from the real work will fall for the hype.

Dropbox CEO Drew Houston To Step Down After 19 Years

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Dropbox founder Drew Houston is stepping down as CEO after 19 years and will become executive chairman, with product chief Ashraf Alkarmi set to take over after a co-CEO transition period. CNBC reports:
Drew Houston founded Dropbox nearly two decades ago at age 24, eventually becoming a household name in Silicon Valley and the first tech entrepreneur to take a company from the Y Combinator incubator program all the way to the public market. Now, at 43, Houston is ready to do something else. […]

By almost any measure, Houston has had a great run at Dropbox, helping pioneer the cloud storage market, competing head-to-head with Google and Apple and building a net worth of more than $2 billion, thanks to substantial ownership in his company. But in the land of outsized expectations, Houston has overseen a company that peaked too soon and never became a generation-defining brand.

Dropbox’s current market cap of just over $6 billion is down by half from the high price on its first day of trading in 2018, and is below the $10 billion valuation it was ascribed by private market investors in 2014. […] In its latest quarterly earnings report, Dropbox said it has more than 18 million paying users, and the service remains popular with media professionals, graphic designers, architects, and others who share files and photos as part of their daily work.
“Part of me has always thought, oh yeah, I’ll be the CEO of Dropbox until my last gasp of my career,” he said. “There’s never a perfect time, there was no part of me where I was like, ‘oh, this date is the date where it’s going to happen.’"
Since Alkarmi joined Dropbox from Vimeo in late 2024, the company has “become a lot more responsive to our customers and is taking bigger swings on innovation,” Houston said. “I trust the right leader,” he said. “The company’s in the right place.”

He drew what?

By Baby Duck • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Had to read that headline too many times to stop visualizing a CEO drawing the city of Houston.

Dropbox is a plague

By cpurdy • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
I have no idea why anyone likes Dropbox. It is terribly invasive to one’s operating environment, with very little to show for that invasiveness other than slow-downs, crashes, weird error messages, and (one can assume) security issues. The pricing for such a basic service was always a complete non-starter for anyone who knew anything about computers. And as a company/service/product, it made an immediate beeline for the enshitification awards.

It does seem like something that Y Combinator incubator would produce, which is a pretty big insult in my world.

Dropbox is a rather useful tool.

By flipk • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I’m not a big commentor on this site but I just had to counter this. I like Dropbox and have several reasons why.

I’ve been a Dropbox user for probably more than 10 years, not even sure. I have it on Windows, on two linux machines (fedora), and my iPhone, and my iPad.. I haven’t seen a crash since.... ever. I love dropping a file into a directory on one machine, and 5 seconds later it’s on the other machine. I take pictures on my phone and they appear on my PCs seconds later; I keep my KeePass database there, which is automatically sync’d to the iPhone too; and I recently started using Dropbox Fax because it sucks that we’re in the future and there are still services that mandate fax machines. And I use it for encrypted backups of project data.

There are other solutions out there, I’m sure. But Dropbox has been rock solid stable from the day I installed it, so now you know a few reasons why someone might like it.

Company Behind School Bus AI Cameras Wants To Share Footage With Police

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joshuark writes:
BusPatrol, a company that has installed AI-powered cameras in tens of thousands of school buses around the U.S., now plans to turn those cameras into automatic license plate readers (ALPRs), capturing the location of every vehicle the buses drive past, and give that data to law enforcement, 404 Media has learned. BusPatrol has already taken steps to share the collected data with law enforcement contracting giant Axon, according to leaked BusPatrol documents and a source with knowledge of the plans. BusPatrol has acknowledged how controversial its plan to collect and share this data is, pointing specifically to concerns about ICE using license plate data, but emphasizes the likely success of selling the angle of protecting children.

“Who would have thought that school buses would be turned into the mass surveillance state?,” Michael Soyfer, an attorney from the Institute for Justice, which has various ongoing ALPR-related lawsuits The Institute for Justice argues that warrantless use of ALPR systems is unconstitutional, describing similar systems as a “dragnet.” Kate Spree, senior manager of brand communications at BusPatrol, said in an email “This inquiry is based on a false premise and inaccurate information. BusPatrol does not pool or sell data across communities; student safety program data is used only to support the BusPatrol program in the community where that data was created.” When 404 Media asked clarifying questions and said that the reporting is based on leaked BusPatrol material, Spree stopped replying to text messages and emails. This plan gives new meaning to the animated cartoon series "The Magic School Bus"…
Further reading: FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers

What is it with surveillance?

By bradley13 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

What is it with the addiction our governments have to mass surveillance? Were the police unable to do their jobs before the Internet? When correspondence was by physical mail instead of Email? When they had to get warrants before invading a person’s privacy?

There are no words

By jenningsthecat • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The phrase “dystopian hellscape” comes immediately to mind. This is just so fundamentally fucked up that it’s hard to say much beyond that.

Can off-the-rack clothing which contains cameras and cell modems be far behind? Sure, that sounds like an impossible stretch, at least practically and technologically speaking. But wouldn’t many of the dystopian developments we live with now be seen as unthinkable or outright impossible a decade or two ago?

On the bright side, at least we’ll have sufficient data centres on line to process all that footage from all those cameras, along with AI to parse the images so humans will be spared the effort. /sarc

They always shared with police

By Compaq Disk Rereader • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I was in middle school and school bus cams first appeared (massive black box with a window, many of us speculated that only some of them even contained a camera)
There were some incidents where the video was used. The school always has the option of giving video to the cops. Likewise, the system always had the option to subpoena the video.

This is all about cops just being able to pull up the school bus footage on a whim. I don’t really see how increased access to video for investigative and not evidential reasons is going to keep society at large safe. I can imagine some rather nauseating use cases though

Re:What is it with surveillance?

By machineghost • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Look, I’m no fan of mass surveillance, but “Were the police unable to do their jobs before the Internet?” seems like a mind-numbingly stupid way to think about it.

Crimes go unsolved every day! Serious crimes, like rape, child abuse, torture, or murder. And with crimes like that, you don’t want the perpetrator running around free and able to continue committing crimes!

So yes, people have a very good reason to want to make the police more successful, and no that is not a bad thing! It still doesn’t make mass surveillance the right answer … but please, lets not turn our brains off, and ignore the real and serious issues people are (misguidedly) trying to solve here.

Re:It’s not the government

By PPH • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Noticed that all of this surveillance is being owned and operated by private companies.

Private companies don’t do things without a return on investment. These “psychopathic billionaires” found a business opportunity following defund the police movements. Instead of cops hiding behind every billboard, your town can now pay to have some cameras mounted*. Which cost a lot less.

*Far cheaper than cities DIY the surveillance systems. But if you want to see a really distopian world, ban federal law enforcement from accessing these local systems. And then watch them install their own. Or rather, expand the program of installing them. They are already up in a few select locations.

Starlink and Amazon May Be Able To Buy Into EU Mobile Satellite Spectrum Plan

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters:
Elon Musk’s Starlink and Amazon’s low-earth-orbit satellite business may be able to acquire some European mobile satellite spectrum next year, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said on Tuesday. But they said two-thirds of the satellite spectrum that allows mobile devices and vehicles to communicate seamlessly even in remote locations, would be reserved for European companies.

U.S. companies Viasat and EchoStar hold licenses that are due to expire in May 2027 and the European Commission has been considering how to allocate future spectrum at the same time as the bloc pushes to reduce reliance on U.S. tech. The European Union’s IRIS2 multi-orbit array of 290 satellites, a response to Starlink, will be among the European companies to receive some spectrum, the sources said. British and Norwegian companies can also bid for a license, the people said. Details of the proposal, set to be announced on Wednesday, could still change at a meeting of commissioners on the day, one of the sources.
Commission spokesman Thomas Regnier said EU-wide satellite connectivity was “synonymous with resilience, security, and capability” given the current geopolitical context.
“Satellite connectivity is a key piece of our technological sovereignty, our security, and our defense, as also highlighted by IRIS2,” he added.

Not a chance

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
One of the Nordic companies just stopped in American company from buying into their tech sector. Europe no longer trusts America enough to let them buy into things like this. Their governments will just block it.

Elon Musk was already a national security risk when he interfered with the Ukraine war. Remember Europe needs Ukraine to be independent and beholden to the rest of Europe because they need Ukraine’s grain because climate change is fucking shit up no matter what your asshole crazy uncle says.

So I predict this will go fucking nowhere no matter how big the bribes are. And the bribes will be very large. But we are starting to get to the point where the failing empire that is America is going to have to start doing expansionism in order to loot other countries and fill its coffers just like every other failing empire. And that will start with Canada and South America but it will eventually have to include the rest of the world because that’s just how failing empires work. Europe is going to start getting ready for that.

Re:Not a chance

By dunkelfalke • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Dude, the more I see what you write, the more I see that you are a know-nothing know-it-all. Ukrainian grain is generally exported to the middle east and Africa. Europe harvests more than enough grain. France alone can easily fulfill all European needs in this regard and France is nowhere near the sole cereal crop producer in Europe. For example, the EU supplies 25% of the world wheat exports - and that is excluding the domestic market. There are far more important reasons for Ukraine staying independent than this.

Re:EUACO (pronounced whacko)

By F.Ultra • Score: 4, Informative Thread
from what? The EU have never said that no American tech company should be able to operate in the EU, that is just the voices in you head speaking.

two-thirds of the satellite spectrum that allows mobile devices and vehicles to communicate seamlessly even in remote locations, would be reserved for European companies

So we are also only taking about 1/3 of the licenses, which the EU have opened up for non EU members which includes the US but also includes the UK and Norway.

British and Norwegian companies can also bid for a licence, the people said.

So again I ask, what did the EU chicken out of exactly?

American Airlines Picks Starlink For In-Flight Wi-Fi

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American Airlines plans to install SpaceX’s Starlink Wi-Fi on more than 500 narrow-body Airbus aircraft starting early next year. It does not, however, have any immediate plans to change providers on its Boeing fleet, which currently uses a mix of Viasat and Panasonic. CNBC reports:
American in January rolled out free in-flight Wi-Fi for members of its frequent flyer program, following United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and others. Delta in March said it would use Amazon Leo for in-flight Wi-Fi for hundreds of jets starting in 2028. United, Southwest Airlines and Alaska Airlines, which merged with Hawaiian Airlines in 2024, have selected Starlink.
The move is a big win for SpaceX as it prepares for a potentially massive IPO next month. SpaceX said Starlink and its connectivity business generated $11.39 billion in revenue last year, accounting for 61% of the company’s total sales.

AA.. We’re like Homelander

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 3 Thread
Only with more Roman Salutes and patriotic graphics than either Fox News or the late Colbert Report.

As opposed to?

By thegarbz • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Is there actually another player in this space which can provide these services (broadband, low latency, high speed - in the physical sense of the customer moving at >900km/h)?

Re:As opposed to?

By Luthair • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Don’t let your logic get in the way of a slashvertisment for spacex ahead of its IPO. You’ll make the elongelicals cry.

Re:AA.. We’re like Homelander

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

A shame we can’t deport this illegal immigrant https://www.theguardian.com/te…

A Fundamental Principle of Aeronautical Engineering Has Been Overturned

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
Aerodynamic drag is a major “barrier” in high-speed airplanes, automobiles, and bullet trains. This is because a design with less aerodynamic drag allows the aircraft to move at higher speeds with less energy. When an aircraft or car body moves at high speed, a thin layer of air called the "boundary layer" is formed on its surface. This boundary layer has two states: laminar flow, in which air flows in an orderly fashion, and turbulent flow, which involves turbulence. The longer the air stays in the laminar flow state with low friction, the smaller the air resistance becomes, but as the air speed increases, it transitions to turbulent flow. The key to reducing aerodynamic drag is how to delay this transition to turbulence.

For more than 80 years, the principle of “the surface of an object must be smooth” has been the basic premise of aeronautical engineering throughout the world in order to suppress the transition to turbulence and reduce aerodynamic drag. This premise was based on the results of a 1940 study by Ichiro Tani, a Japanese aerodynamicist who quantitatively demonstrated the relationship between “surface roughness” (an indicator of the state of the machined surface) and turbulent transition, arguing that surface roughness, which was unavoidable with the manufacturing technology of the time, prevented laminar flow from being realized. However, in 1989 Tani reinterpreted the experimental data on rough-surface pipes obtained by fluid engineer Johann Nikulase in the 1930s, bringing a new perspective that “roughness may not necessarily only promote turbulent transition and increase fluid resistance.” Inheriting this idea, a research group led by Yasuaki Kohama of Tohoku University experimentally demonstrated in the 1990s that fibrous rough surfaces, which have fine fibrous irregularities on their surface, have the effect of delaying transition under certain conditions.

The same Tohoku University research team recently announced a discovery that significantly advances this trend. Aiko Yakino, associate professor at Tohoku University’s Institute of Fluid Science, and her research group were the first in the world to demonstrate that aerodynamic drag can be reduced by up to 43.6 percent simply by applying distributed micro-roughness (DMR), a surface roughness so fine and irregular that it cannot be distinguished by the naked eye. This technology is fundamentally different from the “rivulet (shark skin) process,” which is known as a typical aerodynamic drag reduction technology. The rivulet process mimics the fine longitudinal grooves in shark skin, and by carving grooves approximately 0.1 mm wide along the direction of airflow, it aligns the vortices that occur near the wall surface of turbulent airflow areas. DMR, on the other hand, delays the switch from laminar to turbulent flow by means of random and minute irregularities. The flow zones it affects and the mechanisms it employs are based on completely different concepts.

Sandpaper Smooth Fiberglass Sailboat Hulls

By melanopsin • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
small sailboat racers knew in 1970s that using 800 grit sandpaper to rough the smooth surface of fiberglass hulls reduced drag by noticeable amounts. The Engineers and Physicists at the yacht club explained the roughness held a layer of water which is far smoother than the fiberglass or waxed fiberglass.

Re:shark skin

By Rei • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I think the only reading comprehension difficulty here is on your side. The impacts of “roughness” as a general term is a fundamental aspect of aerodynamic engineering. There has been evidence steadily emerging over time that this isn’t exactly correct, that the distribution of roughness matters greatly, and the right distribution can even surpass a smooth surface. The confirmation in this paper helps close the chapter on this.

And honestly, their two approaches doesn’t sound that difficult to manufacture at all. Certainly much easier than riblets. And the side effect of the first one - surface glass beads - would actually be beneficial for RAM. One of the principles for radar absorption is that you want a steady transition of the impedence (and by relation, dielectric constant) from the surface (which you want to be as much like air as possible) to the deeper layers. The outermost layer of RAM is commonly something like PTFE full of hollow glass beads. Under that you may have pure PTFE, and under a polymer with like 5% chopped carbon fibre fill, and so on. Well, here it turns out that having tiny glass beads on the surface can improve your drag coefficient as well.

Re:Mythbusters?

By Rei • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The dimples on golf balls are actually to create turbulent flow. TL/DR, a sphere isn’t a very aerodynamic shape; its rear taper is too sharp, so flow detaches and there’s a big low pressure wake in the back. High pressure in the front and low pressure in the rear = pressure differential, and a large area times the pressure differential = large drag force.

While it’s best to not have flow separation, or at least delay it as long as possible, if you’re going to have flow separation, you commonly want to generate vortices at the point of flow separation. That’s why cars commonly abruptly truncate (kammback) where they’d become too steep in the rear rather than continuing to curve, and often have various vortex generating surfaces (lips, radial protrusions, etc) at the termination; it causes air to “pull down” and help fill in the wake. This is what the dimples on golf balls do.

Now, most of the dimples on a golf ball at any time are actually doing harm, or at least not helping. You really only want the dimples right around the point of flow separation. Unfortunately, golf balls don’t have a specific flight orientation, so it’s all or nothing - and “all” happens to be the better choice.

But as mentioned, this is entirely different than what is being talked about here, which is about the laminar-turbulent flow transition.

Re:shark skin

By Falconhell • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The gold standard for laminar flow aircraft is gliders. Modern gliders can achieve laminar flow up to 95% of chord on the bottom surface, and around 40% on the top surface. Any waviness across the direction of the airflow of more than .004 inch can cause the boundary layer to detach, and form a separation bubble, at the rear of which the flow re attaches as turbulent flow. The bubble has a sluggish internal vortex.

  Modern gliders place a spanwise turbulator on the bottom surface to force the turbulent transition before a bubble forms, either by mechanical strips of blowing air from small holes fed by a NACA duct.
The air sees the bubble as though it were a bump on the the surface, with the associated drag penalty.

Laminar flow is assisted by the acceleration of the airflow from the stagnation point on the leading edge to the point of maximum thickness of the airfoil. When the flow starts to decelerate, laminar flow is easily lost.
Turbulent flow thereafter has increased drag known as scrubbing drag on the surface, and the friction between the surrounding air and the turbulent flow.
A simple way to look at it is view a wing from the front at a zero angle of attack. The part of the surface you can see can support laminar flow.

Placing chordwise grooves may help to promote laminar flow a bit further, however surface contaminants will quickly render any gains moot. The flow is so easily disturbed that Splattered bugs on the leading edge can rob up to 30% of the drag reduction, so those same gliders have mechanical bug wipers that can clean the leading edge in flight.

Composite wings have a much better chance of laminar flow, in practice metal wing in service required frequent resurfacing to maintain laminar flow. Those with rivets, suck as the much vaunted P51 laminar wing rarely achieved laminar flow to any great extent doe to surface imperfections.

Further info and diagrams here: https://eaglepubs.erau.edu/int…

Re: shark skin

By LifesABeach • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

golf balls.
they are designed that way for a reason.
and are much more approachable than sharks

Windows’ Classic 3D Space Cadet Pinball Is Getting a Physical Re-Creation

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Hobbyist CNCDan is trying to build a real-world version of Windows’ classic 3D Pinball for Windows — Space Cadet, using 3D-printed flippers, bumpers, LEDs, slingshots, and a raised playfield modeled after the original virtual table. But in bringing the digital table into the real world, CNCDan has already run into several physical challenges the software never had to contend with… Ars Technica reports:
After scaling and skewing the on-screen, perspective-shifted view of the Space Cadet playfield onto a 1-meter-tall table, he ended up with a rectangular playfield just 56 cm wide. That’s on the smaller side for commercial pinball tables and maps to playfield bumpers that are just 53 mm wide — way smaller than any prebuilt bumpers that are commercially available.

Once CNCDan dealt with issues with unreliable plastic microswitches for those tiny bumpers (Hall effect magnets seemed to help), he ran into a separate problem with the even smaller bumpers on the raised playfield. The wiring for those bumpers had to be arranged very carefully to avoid blocking a kickback return alley underneath, a positioning problem that the original designers of the virtual table didn’t have to consider at all. CNCDan also ended up adding a physical mechanism to simulate the short delay 3D Space Cadet players may remember, when the ball dropped down a hole from the raised playfield back to the flippers below.

CNCDan says he’s currently looking for artists to help him with a hand-drawn re-creation of the original Space Cadet playfield, which he doesn’t want to use AI for. “I’m sure [AI] can do it, but I’d much rather give this job to a real human being,” he said in the video.

Re:Pinball machines are still made

By redback • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

because the objective is to build something, not to simply have it.

Re:Why not scale it up?

By redback • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Watch the video. Even at quite a large scale some of the stuff is still too small for off the shelf parts.

Hard to get the look right

By HalAtWork • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Trying to get the real table to update the ball at 20fps is proving insanely difficult.

Re:Pinball machines are still made

By MDMurphy • Score: 4 Thread
I can understand wanting to build it yourself, but reinventing the wheel for bumpers, rollovers, and other standard pinball parts seems a bit too far, especially if you want to it work like the original game. Those 3D printed parts looked rough and will take a lot of fiddling to get them to work as smoothly and reliably as an off the shelf part.

Live Action sucks

By Bu11etmagnet • Score: 3 Thread

Live-action recreations usually suck.