Interactive fiction for smart speakers is the BBC’s latest experiment

Smart home speakers have quickly become the hot gadget people didn’t know they wanted. They can answer your movie trivia questions, call a cab, turn your heating on and do your shopping for you. They’re gaining new features every day, but are more than just a utility product. These speakers are a ripe platform for all kinds of screen-free entertainment, and I’m not just talking about streaming a Spotify playlist. Earplay is a popular Alexa skill that tells interactive stories, for example, and never one to be late to a fledgling medium , the BBC has taken note . In one of its many experiments outside the bread and butter of broadcast TV, the BBC is releasing its first immersive audio tale today: The Inspection Chamber . Like any good sci-fi story, The Inspection Chamber drops you into a disorientating situation without feeding you much context beforehand. A voice that sounds a lot like GLaDOS from the Portal games simply explains you are being held… somewhere for cataloguing. The sinister overtones quickly dissipate as we meet the rest of the supporting cast: A guy and girl (not that I’m assuming species here) with all the enthusiasm of workers stuck in a monotonous, dead-end cubicle job. Jaded by what, to them, is the humdrum, repetitive task of categorizing yet another thing for addition to an intergalactic database of sorts, they seem vaguely keen to get your processing over with as quickly as possible. After all, you’re the final entry that needs making before this loosely defined job is complete and they can, for lack of a more descriptive phrase, move on . And the fact that the auto-tuned AI assistant is getting progressively glitchier and more useless by the minute isn’t exactly speeding up the process. The human-sounding characters have to put you ‘on hold’ occasionally while they deal with this or that. Over the muffled elevator music an automated message congratulates you on being near the front of the queue, and that you should be dealt with any decade now. I won’t spoil the whole, nearly 20-minute experience by running through it scene by scene, as it’s genuinely fun and entertaining should you get the chance to listen yourself. It’smore Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy than dark and twisted Twilight Zone . Story-telling isn’t playing second fiddle to experimenting with a new format here, either. The voice acting is well done, the narrative tiptoes a line between menacing and comedic throughout, and as a listener you get this strange sense of power slowly shifting in your direction as the AI character, mid-meltdown, begins to take a, err, liking to you. Rosina Sound , the audio production company that originally approached the BBC with a collaboration in mind, went through many iterations of The Inspection Chamber before settling on the finished article. The attention paid to the story arc and dialogue shows. The Inspection Chamber isn’t a ‘choose your own adventure’ type deal. You can’t win, or die, or complete it, or restart it multiple times and head down different paths. In fact, the story only branches at a very obvious point towards the end of the story. The goal wasn’t to create a game, but something in between that and an audiobook; something more immersive and engaging, but not competitive. You’re a character in the story, but don’t steer it. The way you actually interact with the narrative is quite clever in that respect. During the 20-minute playthrough, you are asked questions pretty regularly. Early on, when the AI is glitching out, you’re asked to pick a best-fit category for yourself from a silly, nonsensical list. These type of interactions don’t take the story down a different path, though. Instead, your choice forms part of a punchline later down the road. At other times, you’re asked an open-ended question with no right answer. Your responses are of absolutely no importance. They are there, in part, to keep you involved and playing along, and also because the Alexa skill guidelines state something like The Inspection Chamber needs to have at least one interaction point every 90 seconds. I thought I had more than multiple-choice answers to offer my scripted co-stars, but ignorance is bliss as they say. The Inspection Chamber launches today for Amazon’s Echo devices , so head to the Alexa skills store to check it out. The plan is to bring it to Google Home speakers and the Google Assistant in the near future, and perhaps some other smart speakers later down the line. As is always the case with BBC Taster projects, it’s very much an experiment in storytelling. Maybe the BBC will commission more, or maybe it won’t. The BBC is effectively mandated to test creative boundaries, and I was told everyone involved was also keen to make the experience topical: Toying with the idea of a rogue AI, preying on fearfulness of the future. From a practical point of view, the BBC wants to assess how people respond to the content, and whether a smart speaker in the home is the best delivery device for interactive audio. How engaging or off-putting are different styles of questioning, and where exactly is the sweet spot on the scale between a story and a game? The Inspection Chamber also feeds into a bigger-picture exploration the BBC is undertaking, looking at how these newfangled smart speakers might help the broadcaster serve its audience. Will they become more important in how people consume news, for example? Or, one day, will you vote for the winner of a reality TV show live, by merely shouting enthusiastically in the direction of your bookshelf? Source: BBC Taster

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Interactive fiction for smart speakers is the BBC’s latest experiment

The Jolt is a $500 electric bike for the masses

 Electric bikes range in price but the best ones come in just north of $1, 000. Now, however, you can own a foldable electric bike with a 50 mile range for less than $500. The Jolt ebike, created by a guy named John Madden, is selling now at an early bird price of $499. That’s a quarter of the final price and a great deal on an ebike. The bike is about the same size as your standard… Read More

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The Jolt is a $500 electric bike for the masses

TorMoil Vulnerability Leaks Real IP Address From Tor Browser Users; Security Update Released

Catalin Cimpanu, reporting for BleepingComputer: The Tor Project has released a security update for the Tor Browser on Mac and Linux to fix a vulnerability that leaks users’ real IP addresses. The vulnerability was spotted by Filippo Cavallarin, CEO of We Are Segment, an Italian company specialized in cyber-security and ethical hacking. Cavallarin privately reported the issue — which he codenamed TorMoil — to the Tor Project last week. Tor Project developers worked with the Firefox team (Tor Browser is based on the Firefox browser) to release a fix. Today, the Tor team released version 7.0.9 to address the vulnerability. Tor Browser 7.0.9 is only available for Mac and Linux users. Tor Browser on Windows is not affected. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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TorMoil Vulnerability Leaks Real IP Address From Tor Browser Users; Security Update Released

Audacity 2.2.0 Released

Popular open-source audio editing software, Audacity, has received a significant update. The new version, dubbed Audacity 2.2.0, adds a range of features and options such as additional user interface themes, and the ability to customize themes for advanced users. It is also getting playback support for MIDI files, and better organised menus, the team wrote. You can find the complete changelog here. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Audacity 2.2.0 Released

Mars 2020 rover will observe the red planet with 23 eyes

The Mars 2020 rover will be able to show us more of the red planet than any of its predecessors ever did. NASA says the extraterrestrial vehicle will be equipped with 23 cameras , six more than Curiosity’s and all a lot more capable. Seven of those “eyes” are tasked with collecting data for scientific experiments, nine are engineering cameras that will keep an eye on its surroundings for navigation and the last seven will capture the rover’s descent and landing. Its main camera, however, is Mastcam-Z — an upgraded version of Curiosity’s Mastcam with a 3:1 zoom (hence, “Z”) lens the original didn’t have. Mastcam-Z will have the capability to take more 3D images than the first Mastcam and will give NASA scientists more info on the planet’s geological features. Meanwhile, the engineering/navigation cameras will be able to capture high-resolution, 20-megapixel colored images for the first time. Previous Navcams were only able to take one-megapixel black-and-white photos, so they have to capture several and stitch them together to be able to get a clear view of the surroundings. Since these new cameras have a wider field of view as well, they don’t have to waste time and processing power stitching photos together. The rover can spend that time collecting more samples and snapping more pictures instead. All those cameras will help the Mars 2020 rover achieve its goal to search for signs of past life on the red planet. Earlier this year, the agency picked three potential sites to drill, all of which have elements that could have supported life. Source: NASA

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Mars 2020 rover will observe the red planet with 23 eyes

Cheapest Michelin-star meal in the world costs a mere $1.50

Most Michelin-starred restaurants are on the pricey side, although you do hear of the occasional food truck that earns a star. But this food cart in Singapore, Hong Kong Soya Sauce Chicken Rice, run by 52-year-old master chef Chan Hon Meng, serves the “cheapest Michelin-starred meal in the world,” at just $1.50. Now, if I can just afford a ticket to Singapore.

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Cheapest Michelin-star meal in the world costs a mere $1.50

How a Stone Quarry Cuts Perfectly Rectangular Blocks Using a Ride-able Machine

As industrial designers, most of us are keenly aware of how plastic, metal, wood and glass are manipulated into objects. But stone is a lesser-used and more mysterious material; how exactly does a quarry turn what’s in the earth into a slab, and turn that slab into rectangular blocks? In this video shot at a stone quarry in Malta, we see that it requires first surfacing the top of the slab and then performing a series of “rip cuts” (we don’t get to see these two steps), then setting up a dolly track perpendicular to the initial cuts, something like the track of a tracksaw. Then a ride-able machine goes along the track making two cuts at once, while a trailing splitter separates the blocks and helps a second worker set them vertically: More Examples of How to Work Stone: How to Hand Drill Holes in Stone and Concrete How to Quickly Carve Stone Using Cheap Tools Ben Uyeda’s DIY Stone Bench CNC Wire Machines Can Cut Stone Into Crazy Shapes

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How a Stone Quarry Cuts Perfectly Rectangular Blocks Using a Ride-able Machine

Australia’s national broadband network under relentless attack—by cockatoos

Enlarge / I’m in ur tower, nommin ur Internets (credit: Tim Graham/Getty Images) Australia’s National Broadband Network (NBN) , the effort to bring high-speed Internet to the masses down under, has encountered many speed bumps. The plan to bring fiber-optic broadband Internet to every Australian has been pared back in its ambitions, with a shift to a fiber backbone between “nodes” and distribution over copper wire or cable networks to the majority of users. That cost-saving move, which puts ISPs and cable providers in charge of managing customers’ access,  has caused some consternation . But now the operators of the NBN have discovered another problem that affects the cost of delivering the backbone. And it’s for the birds. The BBC reports that NBN technicians have discovered cockatoos have been damaging the ends of spare fiber cables left in place on communications towers for future network expansion by chomping on them, wearing through the steel braiding that protects the fiber. Active cables haven’t been affected, so there has been no loss of service (as of yet) due to cockatoo attacks; the ends of cables carrying active traffic are protected by a plastic cages. But cables left with their ends exposed have become a favorite of the birds, who use them to help wear down their ever-growing beaks. And the cables cost AUS$10,000 (about US$7,700) to replace. NBN’s Chedryian Bresland told the BBC, “That’s Australia for you. If the spiders and snakes don’t get you, the cockies will.” Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Australia’s national broadband network under relentless attack—by cockatoos

Thieves pilfer $370,000 worth of iPhone Xs in San Francisco

Thieves broken into a UPS truck parked outside a San Francisco Apple Store and made off with 300 iPhone Xs valued at around $370, 000, CBS SF Bay Area reports. The suspects were “husky, ” and “wearing hooded sweatshirts, ” according to SFPD Captain Rick Yarid, adding “it appears [they] knew what they were looking for.” The UPS driver reportedly parked the vehicle outside a mall and went to do a delivery at a Macy’s when the thieves snatched the devices, according to a witness. “Given the dollar value in the incident itself it appears it was planned, ” said Yarid. UPS and Apple are assisting police, and the IMEI serial number of each phone has been recorded. That created one of the “fattest” police reports he’d ever seen, said SFPD Sgt. Paul Weggenmann. The phones will likely be blacklisted on all US cellular networks, but it’s a lot easier for thieves to change an EMEI before an iPhone is set up by a customer. Obviously, if you happen to see a particularly good deal on an iPhone X on the SF Craiglist, assume it’s stolen. So far, the iPhone X is Apple’s hottest-selling smartphone ever, with more than double the number ordered in the first few days than the previous champ, the iPhone 6S . Within minutes, the iPhone X sold out online, pushing orders well back from the original November 3rd ship date. This despite reports that the device, which is Apple’s first without a home button and with “Face ID” facial recognition security, is in short supply. As a result, folks have been queuing at Apple Stores as much as ever, hoping to get one in hand before they disappear. Luckily, folks who pre-ordered their iPhone Xs from the Stonestown Apple Store will still receive them on time, CNET reports. Via: MacRumors Source: CBS SF Bay Area

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Thieves pilfer $370,000 worth of iPhone Xs in San Francisco

Another Million Subscribers Cut the Pay TV Cord Last Quarter

A report from FierceCable says that a million more U.S. pay TV subscribers cut the TV cord last quarter. “Only five of the seven biggest pay TV providers have released their third quarter subscriber data, but collectively these companies saw a net loss of 632, 000 pay TV subscribers during the period (385, 000 for AT&T and DirecTV, 125, 000 for Comcast, 104, 000 for Charter, 18.000 for Verizon FiOS TV), ” reports DSLReports. “Dish has yet to report its own cord cutting tallies, but the company is again expected to be among the hardest hit due to a high level of retransmission fee feuds and a lack of broadband bundles.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Another Million Subscribers Cut the Pay TV Cord Last Quarter