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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/26/2021 02:40 EDT

Yeah, you should worry about the booming spyware industry

The world’s most sophisticated commercially available spyware may be being abused, according to an investigation by 17 media organizations in ten countries. Intelligence leaks and forensic phone analysis suggests the surveillance software, called Pegasus, has been used to target and spy on the phones of human rights activists, investigative journalists, politicians, researchers and academics. NSO Group, the Israeli cyber intelligence firm behind Pegasus, insists that it only licenses its spyware... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/25/2021 11:00 EDT

Studies of ‘Marsquakes’ reveal the red planet’s metallic innards

We may have walked on the Moon and sent probes across the solar system, but we know very little about what’s going on inside other planets. Now, for the first time, we have been able to view the interior of one, thanks to NASA’s Mars InSight probe. The probe, which landed in 2018, is equipped with a solar-powered lander bristling with equipment, including a seismometer (a very sensitive vibration detector).... Read more

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The Next Web
TNW Deals @ The Next Web · 07/25/2021 10:00 EDT

Have you always wanted to play the piano? This $20 training teaches you how

TLDR: The Complete 2021 Piano for Beginners Bundle is an all-in-one training package to get students of any age playing the keyboard with skill and confidence. If you want your kid to be smarter, it can occasionally mean some tough love. But for all those times you make them do their homework or read a book instead of playing video games, you can practically see their brains getting bigger in... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/25/2021 06:00 EDT

This AI can spot sunken ships from the damn sky

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work. The big idea In collaboration with the United States Navy’s Underwater Archaeology Branch, I taught a computer how to recognize shipwrecks on the ocean floor from scans taken by aircraft and ships on the surface. The computer model we created is 92% accurate in finding known shipwrecks. The project focused on the coasts of the mainland U.S. and Puerto... Read more

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The Next Web
TNW Deals @ The Next Web 3 place · 07/24/2021 10:00 EDT

ElevenSight puts a new spin on video conferencing with some tools you never knew you needed

TLDR: Try a new and different way to communicate with a lifetime subscription to the all-around video, audio and chat hub ElevenSight. If you’ve finally started to zero in on what you like and don’t like about your current video conferencing platform of choice, it may be time to start considering alternatives. While many companies made the snap decision to start using Zoom or Microsoft Teams or another one of... Read more

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The Next Web
TNW Deals @ The Next Web 2 place · 07/24/2021 10:00 EDT

Get 10TB of cloud storage and lifetime VPN coverage for just $90

TLDR: The Lifetime Backup and Security Subscription Bundle brings together $4,000 worth of Degoo premium cloud storage space and top-notch KeepSolid VPN coverage in one collection. If you don’t have VPN protection online, you need it. If you don’t have adequate cloud storage space to backup all of your systems and vital data, you need it. If you need both…then frankly, we’re surprised you’ve survived on the internet this long... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/24/2021 09:00 EDT

Can we build a computer with free will?

Do you have free will? Can you make your own decisions? Or are you more like an automaton, just moving as required by your constituent parts? Probably, like most people, you feel you have something called free will. Your decisions are not predetermined; you could do otherwise. Yet scientists can tell you that you are made up of atoms and molecules and that they are governed by the laws of... Read more

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The Next Web
Rhea Moutafis @ The Next Web · 07/24/2021 04:00 EDT

Object-oriented programming is dead. Wait, really?

Programming in the 1960s had a big problem: computers weren’t that powerful yet, and somehow they needed to split the capacities between data structures and procedures. This meant that if you had a large set of data, you couldn’t do that much with it without pushing a computer to its limits. On the other hand, if you needed to do a lot of things, you couldn’t use too much data... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 17:21 EDT

5 games that might not suck so much if they got modern remakes

Remakes, remasters, and retreads are all the rage these days. But don’t let the publishers fool you, they’re not taking many chances. From the Mass Effect franchise remasters to the outstanding Tony Hawks Pro Skater 1 & 2 remake, most of the game revivals we’re seeing are for titles that were beloved by the masses, critically acclaimed, and profitable in their heyday. But what if we could convince the secret... Read more

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The Next Web
Thomas Macaulay @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 12:13 EDT

Oh no… Mark Zuckerberg wants to build a metaverse

Imagine living in a virtual space that merges the physical and digital worlds — and is built by Facebook. It may sound like the stuff of nightmares, but Mark Zuckerberg hopes to make it a reality. Yup, the 37-year-old billionaire wants to build a metaverse. “You can think about the metaverse as an embodied internet, where instead of just viewing content — you are in it,” he told The Verge.... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 10:46 EDT

What will the EV battery of the future look like?

“Gigafactories” could one day be churning out millions of electric vehicle batteries in the UK. The government has already committed the country to a ban on selling new petrol- and diesel-engined cars by 2030, so it seems that electric vehicles (or EVs, as they’re often abbreviated) are likely to replace much of today’s fleet. The carmaker Nissan has promised to beef up EV production at its Sunderland plant in north-east... Read more

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The Next Web
Callum Booth @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 10:16 EDT

Lil Uzi Vert is buying a planet — here’s how long it takes to get there

Friends! Have you heard the news? Musician Lil Uzi Vert is trying to buy a planet? Named WASP-127 b, this is a gas giant exoplanet that’s 1.4 times larger than renowned Big Boy, Jupiter. The world was first alerted to this news by another musician, Grimes: Apparently @LILUZIVERT owns this planet – just a heads up https://t.co/rcyQ2ts7Hj — Grimes (@Grimezsz) July 22, 2021 Now, I’m not going into depth about... Read more

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The Next Web
TNW Deals @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 10:00 EDT

This 8-course, 160-hour cybersecurity package can turn you into a certified ethical hacker

TLDR: The How to Hack from Beginner to Ethical Hacking Certification courses can be a brilliant introduction to a whole new career as an ethical defender of vulnerable tech systems. Want to know the difference between a guy who knows a whole lot about cybersecurity and a guy who knows a whole lot about cybersecurity who’s been certified? Well, almost $15,000. That’s the disparity found by a survey of government... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 04:15 EDT

Thinking of booking a space trip? Here are 6 things to consider

It’s been a momentous month for space-faring billionaires. On July 11, British entrepreneur Sir Richard Branson’s Unity “rocket-plane” flew him and five fellow passengers about 85 kilometers above Earth. And this week, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ New Shepard capsule reached an altitude of 106km, carrying Bezos, his brother, and the oldest and youngest people ever to reach such a height. Passengers on both flights experienced several minutes of weightlessness and... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 07/23/2021 02:30 EDT

What we know about the innumerable planets outside of our solar system

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com. Are there any planets outside of our solar system? – Eli W., age 8, Baton Rouge, Louisiana This is a question that human beings have wondered about for thousands of years. Here’s how the ancient Greek mathematician Metrodorus (400-350 B.C.) put it: A universe where... Read more

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The Next Web
Napier Lopez @ The Next Web · 07/22/2021 23:42 EDT

You’ll probably have to wait until 2022 for the Mini-LED MacBook Air

Once Apple introduced the Mini-LED iPad Pro, it seemed practically a given that the company would eventually bring this tech to its MacBooks. Rumors have suggested Mini-LED Mac Pros will arrive in the second half of 2021, leading some to hope the MacBook Air would get the same treatment. Now it seems like you’ll have to wait until next year. At least, that’s what reliable Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has... Read more

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The Next Web
Napier Lopez @ The Next Web · 07/22/2021 23:00 EDT

This is the most important book a speaker-loving audiophile can read

I review a lot of speakers here at TNW, and — if may toot my own horn for a bit — I do so in a more technical manner than you’ll find in most other mainstream tech publications. My reviews are full of measurements and graphs that I genuinely believe provide powerful insights into not only a speaker’s technical prowess, but also how likely you are to actually enjoy that... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web · 07/22/2021 17:22 EDT

This startup replaces your entire live-streaming production crew with AI

LiveControl is an interesting company. Its mission is to take the incredibly complex and ridiculously expensive world of video production and distill it to a format that just about anyone can use and afford. And, because it’s 2021, that means it’s an AI startup. We love startups here at Neural, but the vast majority of pitches we get come from crappy companies pushing pie-in-the-sky misrepresentations of what predictive algorithms and... Read more

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The Next Web
Tristan Greene @ The Next Web 1 place · 07/22/2021 15:43 EDT

DeepMind’s protein-mapping breakthrough is awesome, but it sure as heck isn’t free

DeepMind, the UK-based, Google sister-company, has released a groundbreaking map of human protein structures developed with its breakthrough AI systems. That’s right, the company that taught AI to defeat humanity’s greatest chess and Go masters has turned its attentions to the greater good. And scientifically speaking, this is really good. What is protein-mapping and what do board games have to do with any of this? It’s really complex, but here’s... Read more

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The Next Web
Thomas Macaulay @ The Next Web · 07/22/2021 13:28 EDT

US government to space tourists: You’re not astronauts

Shed a tear for passengers on Jeff Bezos‘ joyrides to space: their trips may not make them official astronauts. The tragic ruling comes courtesy of the Federal Aviation Administration, which regulates all aspects of civil aviation in the US. In a new order, the transportation agency listed two ways to qualify for FAA Commercial Space Astronaut Wings: You have the appropriate flight crew qualifications and training, have flown beyond 50... Read more

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