пятница, 10 июля 2015 г.

uThis 9-Year-Old MP3 Player Is Ready For The Latest Tunes, Costs $300r


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  • philips_deviceIf you weren’t all that familiar with technology, this “portable media center” that reader S. found in the clearance section at Walmart might seem like a reasonable enough purchase. What isn’t obvious until you look more closely is that the $300 price tag has been on the box since 2011. What isn’t obvious until you perform a quick Google search is that the PMC7230 has been on the market since 2006, which would explain why it’s still languishing on the shelf.

    This device is one of the most comically overpriced discoveries of the Raiders of the Lost Walmart, the brave retail explorers who find strange electronic antiquities in big-box stores and bring them back for us to snicker at.

    In the case of this device, it’s not only an ancient media player, but the device also got a mediocre review from CNET, which found that it had low audio quality and too high a price for 2006. We presume that it hasn’t held up over the years, and it won’t be leaving the Walmart shelf at that price.



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uOffice Of Personnel Management Director Steps Down Following Massive Data Breach Affecting 21M Peopler


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  • Yesterday, the Office of Personnel Management – essentially the federal government’s giant human resources office – announced that 21 million current and former employees, as well as prospective employees, their families and others who applied for federal background investigations in the last 15 years were the latest victims of hackers. Today, the head of that agency announced she would no longer be leading the department.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that OPM director Katherine Archuleta resigned her post shortly after officials revealed that the hack was five times larger than originally disclosed.

    In a resignation letter to President Barack Obama, Archuleta said it was in the best interest of OPM that she step aside and allow the office to move forward with new leadership.

    “I conveyed to the president that I believe it is best for me to step aside and allow new leadership to step in, enabling the agency to move beyond the current challenges and allowing the employees at OPM to continue their important work,” Archuleta said in a statement to the WSJ.

    The White House announced Friday that the President had accepted Archuleta’s resignation and that Beth Colbert, the U.S. U.S. chief performance officer and deputy director for management at the Office of Management and Budget, would become the agency’s acting director starting on Saturday.

    “Given the urgent and significant challenges that are facing OPM right now, a new manager with a specialized set of skills and experiences is needed,” White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Friday.

    On Thursday, OPM said that if an individual underwent a background investigation in 2000 or after, it is “highly likely that the individual is impacted by this cyber breach. If an individual underwent a background investigation prior to 2000, that individual still may be impacted, but it is less likely.”

    Of the 21.5 million individuals affected in the breach, 19.7 million simply applied for a background investigation, while about 1.8 million non-applicants – predominantly spouses and co-habitants of applicants –were victims of the breach, OMP says.

    In some cases, compromised information includes interviews conducted by background investigators and approximately 1.1 million compromised profiles include fingerprints.

    OPM said that information regarding mental health or financial histories provided by those that have applied for a security clearance and by individuals contacted during the background investigation were not affected by the breach.

    There is no information at this time to suggest any misuse or further dissemination of the information that was stolen from OPM’s systems, the agency states.

    OPM Director Katherine Archuleta Resigns After Massive Personnel Data Hack [The Wall Street Journal]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uTwitter Removes Its Ads With Autoplay Videos After Epilepsy Charity Calls Them “Irresponsible”r


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  • Twitter has pulled two ads promoting its new music service after an epilepsy charity complained that the auto-playing videos with brightly flashing colors could trigger seizures.

    The ads promoting Twitter’s #DiscoverMusic campaign were posted via Vine, a service that loops short videos over and over again. The Vines had six seconds of flashing video, which is enough to trigger seizures in those with photosensitive epilepsy.

    The spots were online for 18 hours before Twitter pulled them Friday morning. British charity Epilepsy Action first pointed out the ads’ potential to cause seizures, and called out the social network for being “irresponsible” in running them.

    “Eighty seven people are diagnosed with epilepsy every day and that first seizure can often come out of nowhere,” Epilepsy Action’s deputy CEO Simon Wigglesworth told BBC. “For a huge corporation like Twitter to take that risk was irresponsible.”

    Twitter’s International Communications director Rachel Bremer acknowledged the group’s concerns in a Tweet, and said that the company had removed the Vines.

    If you are among those who don’t want to see videos autoplay on Twitter, you can change this in your account settings.

    In the desktop version: Click on your photo in the upper right corner of the screen, and then select on “Settings.” The option to turn off autoplay videos can be unchecked in the Content section. Save changes when you’ve finished:

    Twittersettings

    In the mobile app: Click on the “Me” icon on the lower right corner of the home screen. Once you’re viewing your profile, click the gear icon at the top and select “Settings.” Under “Video autoplay,” you can choose whether to use mobile data and Wi-Fi to play videos, Wi-Fi only or never play videos automatically:

    autoplay

    About one in 26 people in the US will develop a seizure disorder, according to the Mayo Clinic, while noting that a single seizure doesn’t mean you have epilepsy.



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uHere’s Why Amazon’s Stupid Shipping Gang Wrapped Some Bubble Wrap In Brown Paperr


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  • bubble_wrappedEarlier this week, we were amused to see a reader’s submission of a roll of bubble wrap in a massive box, protected with a substantial wad of kraft paper. While we laughed, though, a reader who is quite familiar with shipping procedures pointed out why Amazon needed to wrap up the bubble wrap.

    Reader Brittany points out that the problem isn’t necessarily protecting the contents of the box of, but protecting all of the other packages that ship along with it. Why is that? A box with a too-small item is in danger of collapsing on itself if too many other items are stacked on top. Your package does not ship in a vacuum–it ships surrounded by other boxes.

    “Think about it–if a box isn’t filled up, you could press on the box and it will flex,” Brittany explains. If other boxes are stacked on top of such an under-filled box and it collapses on itself, all of those packages stacked on top could collapse in an avalanche of cardboard boxes. Nobody wants a package avalanche.

    There are people who work in packaging who know what they’re doing, and a package that seems “stupid” on your doorstep may be over-packaged for a reason. Brittany explains:

    A well-packed box should be able to have at least 150 lbs stacked on top of it without a single crushed corner. In training, we actually had to group into teams and pack a single fragile item like a glass mug well enough that our instructor could stand on top of the box without any damage.

    Any idea how this was accomplished? Ranpack, or “kraft paper” as you call it in the article. This paper can be stuffed and compressed enough (especially in the corners) so that any item will be protected from trauma.

    Somehow, we feel reassured to know that what seems weird to us is happening for a reason in the warehouses of the world. Thanks, Brittany–keep up the good work, and may all of your shipments be avalanche-free.

    PREVIOUSLY:
    Amazon’s Stupid Shipping Gang Nestles Roll Of Bubble Wrap In Kraft Paper
    Here’s How Fulfillment Centers Make Shipping Stupid By Making It Smart



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uFCC Proposal: Phone Companies Need To Offer Backup Power, Actually Notify You If They Kill Off Your Copper-Wire Landliner


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  • FCC chairman Tom Wheeler is introducing new to the commission today that would attempt to protect consumers’ interests while advancing the transition away from plain old copper-wire service and onto IP data networks.

    The FCC gave the green light to some pilot programs for the IP transition (where service transitions to the internet protocol) in January, 2014 and in November, 2014 kicked off the rulemaking process to put some consumer protections in place as that transition goes forward.

    Landline companies are, in general, more than happy to get out of the copper wire business as soon as possible. Accusations abound that Verizon, in particular, has been neglecting maintenance to hasten the transition, preferring to push customers to FiOS. In recent weeks, that impatience has manifested in direct communications to customers threatening to cut off their service entirely if they don’t make the switch.

    Wheeler is circulating two different orders to his fellow commissioners this week that will, if adopted, formally create those consumer protections during the transition.

    When The Lights Go Out
    The first Report and Order deals very specifically with one of consumers’ largest concerns about abandoning copper-wire phone service: Old tech still works in a power outage, allowing you to make emergency calls. New tech does not.

    To resolve that, the FCC’s new rule would require phone providers to offer a backup power source (i.e. a battery) that would last for at least 8 hours to consumers when they sign up for service. Within three years, phone companies would also be required to offer a power source good for 24 hours or more of standby backup power.

    Businesses are allowed to charge as they will for that backup power source, but consumers would not be required to buy the backup power. The FCC fact sheet frames this as “promoting consumer choice,” but a senior FCC official also explained it as a cost containment measure. Allowing businesses to recoup the costs by passing them through to consumers should, in theory, keep the cost of service plans lower across the board.

    The rule would not only require providers to make backup power available, but also would require them to inform both existing and new customers about how services would be limited during power outages and to provide information about how to access service during a multi-day power outage.

    The other proposed rule is also all about transparency and notification.

    Knowing What You’re Plugged In To
    The second Report and Order addresses those accusations of neglect and nasty letters to consumers.

    A company that can provide 100% equivalent levels of service to its copper-wire service using another technology — fiber optics, coaxial cable, fixed wireless systems, whatever — is allowed to turn off its copper-wire service and replace it with the new tech without first seeking permission from the FCC under Sec. 214 of the Communications Act. But under the new rule, they would not be allowed to do so without first actively notifying their customers.

    The new rule would mandate that telephone companies notify their customers well in advance of any plans to retire local area copper networks. Residential customers would have to receive three months’ notice, and non-residential customers (businesses, schools, and so on) would get the heads’ up six months before the switch.

    The notification process would, in part, force telephone companies actually to retire their copper-wire networks specifically by choice and at a pre-announced time, rather than simply neglecting them until they fall apart and forcing customers to make a move then.

    As long as they meet the notification requirements, including to interconnecting carriers, companies that can transition to new tech without discontinuing, reducing, or impairing service can carry on.

    Competition and Consumer Needs
    The proposed rule also centers on the FCC’s mandate to promote competition wherever possible. The proposal is most concerned with the enterprise market and special access services: businesses, governments, schools, libraries, hospitals, and the like.

    The new rule proposes that, for the time being and specifically as an interim measure, any telecom company that drops copper wire service to those institutions has to provide their new service at “rates, terms, and conditions that are reasonably comparable” to the old service. That means they can’t just jack up prices to schools and libraries when they switch technology. A separate proceeding, to figure out how to deal with special access services, is also underway at the FCC. That proceeding, when concluded, would end the interim measure and replace it with a new, permanent rule of some kind.

    The new rule would also kick off a proceeding to clarify what, exactly, “discontinuing, reducing, or impairing” a service actually means legally, since it is the standard to which providers are held when transitioning without seeking prior approval. If adopted, the rule would kick off a public comment period asking for input.

    The FCC has a fact sheet and blog post about the proposals available, and the commission will be discussing and voting on these proposals at their August 6 open meeting.



ribbi
  • by Kate Cox
  • via Consumerist


uAmusement Park Takes Catapult Ride Out Of Operation Permanently After Cable Snapsr


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  • A catapult sounds like it could make for a fun ride, what with the implied image of objects flying through the air. But because that flinging needs to be under control if people are going to stay safe, one Wisconsin amusement park has taken its catapult ride out of commission after a cable snapped.

    Even scarier, a video of the incident shows the cable failing just a few moments before the ride was supposed to shoot a woman and a boy up into the air, reports WKOW.

    The incident happened this week at an amusement park in the Wisconsin Dells, an area known for such theme attractions. The owners shut down the ride quickly after the cable crashed down next to the two passengers.

    “I couldn’t believe that just happened. I had to collect myself,” said the boy’s father, who shot the video of his son accompanied by an adult family friend. “What if it had been 30 inches closer to [him] or what if they were shot up in the air? Things start going through your mind and most of them aren’t good.”

    Though the ride was open again yesterday after the owners said they’d replaced the cables, the park later closed it to investigate. Today the park managers issued a statement saying that after further review, the owner/operator of the catapult ride is required to “permanently cease operation of the ride and remove the ride” from the theme park.

    UPDATE: Catapult ride at Mt Olympus to be removed from park after cable snaps [WKOW]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uUnited Pilot Allegedly Threw Bullets In Plane’s Trash, Flushed Them Down Toiletr


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  • While it’s perfectly legal to transport ammunition on airplanes in checked luggage if it’s in a wooden or cardboard box specifically made for the purpose of transporting bullets, bringing those items in a carry-on and trying to dispose of them by throwing them in a trash can or down the toilet on an airplane is a big no-no. Just ask the United Airlines pilot accused of doing so.

    The Associated Press reports that United Airlines has opened an investigation into an incident in which a captain supposedly threw bullets in a trash can accessible to passengers and then flushed them down a toilet during a flight he was piloting from Houston to Germany.

    A flight attendant looking for a passenger’s missing ring, found 10 bullets in the trash bin. The crew member then alerted the pilot, who flushed them down the toilet and alerted authorities in Germany that he had been the one to dump the ammunition.

    Shortly after landing, the plane was moved to a remote area where the waste tanks were emptied and the bullets removed, the AP reports.

    A spokesperson for the airline said the pilot, who is allowed to carry a gun on domestic flights through a federal program, attempted to dump the bullets after realizing they were in his bag.

    According to the Transportation Security Administration, under the Federal Flight Deck Officer program, eligible flight crew members are authorized to use firearms to defend against an act of criminal violence or air piracy. However, eligible crew members are not allowed to bring firearms or ammunition when flying outside the United States or when not on duty.

    “He did incorrectly dispose of the ammunition,” the spokesperson said, “but it is likely that the pilot is not going to face any criminal charges.”

    While the incident is still under investigation, the pilot has not been fired, United said.

    “We are investigating,” she said. “I can’t give any details about his status other than he is still with us.”

    United Airlines pilot flushed bullets down toilet of plane [The Associated Press]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist