Adidas will release shoes made from ocean plastic this year

Adidas is committing to integrating recycled ocean waste into a general-release shoe this year. The sportswear company showed off a shoe with a 3D-printed midsole made from up-cycled ocean plastic late last year , as part of a collaboration with Parley, an anti-ocean-pollution organization. That was a one-off concept shoe, but off the back of that the company is now showing off a product titled Adidas x Parley. The new limited-edition shoe’s upper is made from Parley Ocean Plastic and illegal deep-sea gillnets retrieved by the non-profit Sea Shepherd during a mission to protect sea life in the Southern Ocean. Announced to coincide with World Oceans Day, only fifty pairs will be made available, and they’ll be given away through an Instagram contest. A video posted by Parley for the Oceans (@parley.tv) on Jun 7, 2016 at 7:30am PDT More exciting than the limited-edition shoe is the promise of a bonafide commercial product coming soon. Adidas says it’ll be a world’s first, integrating Parley Ocean Plastic into one of its “top footwear franchises” in the second half of this year. That release is apparently possible due to the inroads Adidas and Parley have made in turning ocean plastics into “technical yarn fibres” that can easily be integrated into products. The new shoe will be one of an ongoing series of changes Adidas has made in an attempt to be friendlier to the environment. It’s already announced it’ll stop handing out plastic bags in its stores and end the use of microbeads in products like shower gels. If you’re interested in trying to snag a pair of Adidas x Parleys, the competition will run through to July 31st on Parley and Adidas’ various social media channels, where the rules will be shared in due course. Via: The Verge Source: Adidas

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Adidas will release shoes made from ocean plastic this year

Apple Invests $1 Billion In Uber’s Chinese Rival Didi

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Apple Inc. invested $1 billion in Chinese ride-sharing service Didi, making one of its biggest bets on software and services and dealing a blow to Uber Technologies Inc.’s ambitions in the country. The iPhone maker will help Uber’s largest rival build up a ride-sharing platform that handles more than 11 million rides a day and serves about 300 million users across China, Didi said in a statement on Friday. Executive Officer Tim Cook has highlighted higher-margin services as a growth area and suggested he would use some of its $200 billion-plus cash hoard for investments. The investment in one of China’s largest online companies will allow Apple to forge alliances in its single largest market outside of the United States. Didi, incorporated as Xiaoju Kuaizhi Inc., is in the process of raising more than $2 billion at a valuation of about $25 billion, people familiar with the matter have said. It operates in 400 Chinese cities and works with more than 14 million Chinese car owners. The company is Uber’s most potent rival and has formed an international coalition with Lyft Inc. in the U.S., India’s Ola and Southeast Asia’s Grab to fight the globally expanding San Francisco firm. Apple is hoping to reinvigorate lackluster iPhone sales in China with its $1 billion investment in Didi. The last big investment the company made was when it acquired Beats for $3 billion in 2014. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apple Invests $1 Billion In Uber’s Chinese Rival Didi

Wendy’s Plans To Automate 6,000 Restaurants With Self-Service Ordering Kiosks

An anonymous reader writes: In response to the rising minimum wage, the fast-food chain Wendy’s plans to start automating all of its restaurants. The company said it will have self-service ordering kiosks available to its 6, 000-plus restaurants in the second half of the year. Wendy’s President Todd Penegor said it will be up to franchisees to decide whether or not to adopt the kiosks in their stores, noting that many franchise locations have had to raise prices to offset wage increases. California’s decision to gradually raise the minimum wage to $15 by 2022 will impact Wendy’s 258 restaurants, all of which are franchise-operated. About 75% of 200-plus Wendy’s restaurants are run by franchisees in New York, a state that is also on its way to $15. Penegor said, wage pressures have been manageable both because of falling commodity prices and better operating leverage due to an increase in customer counts. The company is still “working so hard to find efficiencies” so it can deliver “a new QSR experience but at traditional QSR prices.” The CEO of Carl’s Jr., Andy Puzder, is also looking into replacing many of its workers with machines to save money. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Wendy’s Plans To Automate 6,000 Restaurants With Self-Service Ordering Kiosks

“Problematic” fossil turns out to be oldest known example of life on land

Martin Smith Detail of the Tortotubus fungus, which lived 440 million years ago in Sweden. 4 more images in gallery Life oozed out of the seas onto land somewhere between 450 and 500 million years ago, but we have almost no fossils from this period on land. That may be about to change. A scientist in the UK believes he’s identified the oldest terrestrial organism yet discovered, after careful analysis of 440-million-year-old microfossils gathered in Scotland and Sweden in the 1980s. Durham University Earth scientist Martin Smith suggests in a new paper published in the  Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society that a few fossilized filaments discovered in Scotland and Sweden are actually part of a root-like system used by fungus to gather nutrients from soil. They were long known as “problematic” fossils because nobody was sure what they were, nor where they fit into fungal evolution. Smith identified the filaments as part of an ancient fungus called  Tortotubus,  which bears some resemblance to modern mushrooms—though we have no fossils that could prove that the fungus had fruiting bodies like mushrooms do. Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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“Problematic” fossil turns out to be oldest known example of life on land

This is the first object 3D-printed from alien metal

So-called “asteroid mining” company Planetary Resources is built on the belief that asteroids and other objects in space are loaded with resources that we can take advantage of, both here on earth and as we begin to explore space in earnest. The essentially infinite supply of rocks floating through space, filled with valuable minerals that we’ll eventually run out of on our home planet, sounds like a great resource to take advantage of. But the idea of mining, processing and building with alien metals also sounds like a massive and daunting undertaking. But today, Planetary Resources is showing that it can do the last item on that list: building with metals not from this earth. At its booth at CES this year, the company is showing off a 3D-printed part that was made from a material not of this planet. Specifically, the company took material from a meteorite that landed landed in Argentina in prehistoric times, processed it and fed it through the new 3D Systems ProX DMP 320 direct metal printer . The result is a small 3D-printed model of a part of a spacecraft that resembles the Arkyd spacecraft that Planetary Resources is testing. It’s not spectacular in a vacuum — but the fact that Planetary Resources and 3D Systems were able to successfully make a print using meteorite material is an important first step towards realizing the company’s vision. If we’re ever going to explore space in any significant fashion and really move beyond earth, Planetary Resources CEO Chris Lewicki believes we’ll need to figure out how to build and manufacture in space. “Instead of manufacturing something in an earth factory and putting it on a rocket and shipping it to space, ” Lewicki muses, “what if we put a 3D printer into space and everything we printed with it we got from space?” That would mean Planetary Resources would have to get really good at both mining raw materials from space and converting them into a state that we’d be able to use for manufacturing items off of our home planet.”There are billions and billions of tons of this material in space, ” Lewicki says. “Everyone has probably seen an iron meteorite in a museum, now we have the tech to take that material and print it in a metal printer using high energy laser. Imagine if we could do that in space.” Turning a chunk of space rock into something you can feed into a 3D printer turns out to be a pretty odd process. Planetary Resources used a plasma that essentially turns the meteorite into a cloud which then “precipitates” metallic powder that can then be extracted via a vacuum system. “It condenses like rain out of a cloud, ” says Lewicki, “but instead of raining water, you’re raining titanium pellets out of an iron nickel cloud.” Lewicki also notes that extraction could be accomplished with magnets; either way it produces material that lets you start building. But it’s pretty crude building at this point, Lewicki cautions. “We’re in the iron age of building in space, quite literally.” If the process for creating the printer’s “ink” (as Lewicki has become fond of calling the 3D printing material) is somewhat unusual, the 3D Systems printer used to make this part is commercially available. There’s been a partnership between Planetary Resources and 3D Systems since very early in the company’s founding day, in large part because Lewicki believes that 3D printing will be essential to space exploration. “We knew that one of the key technologies for lowering the cost of exploring space and building things in space was 3D printing, ” says Lewicki. Of course, to move this forward, the printer will need to work in space, likely in zero gravity environments, something is isn’t equipped for now. “How do you get [the printed object] to stay in place while it’s being printed? How do you get the powder to stay in place?” Lewicki asks, noting just a few of the inherent challenges. I had a chance to check out the 3D Systems ProX DMP 320 printer on the CES show floor, and it’s a massive, impressive and imposing piece of technology itself — the idea of getting it working in space seems like a significant challenge. But some things get easier in zero gravity. When I ask Lewicki what challenges go into making sure objects theoretically made in space, using space-mined materials, will handle the rigors of the environment, he notes that some things get a lot easier when you’re not on a planet. “This is a part where if you made it in space it would never have to ride on a rocket, it would never experience gravity or any of the high stress and strains that you have to deal with, ” he says. Ultimately, today’s announcement doesn’t really move us any closer to realizing Lewicki’s futuristic ambitions. It’s going to be a long time before we’re able to manufacture anything in space in a safe and consistent fashion, if it ever happens. But Planetary Resources still has plenty to keep it busy as it works towards its ultimate goals. “People think about asteroid mining and think it’s in the far, far future, but this is stuff that we’re doing right now, ” Lewicki says. “We launched a satellite in space last year, have two more on the way this year.” The company is also planning to launch an “infrared earth imager” into space this year that’ll supposedly make it easier to scan the planet for resources. It’s all very high-minded, ambitious stuff that’s just as likely to fail as it is to succeed, but that’s just par for the course when you’re trying to figure out how to get humanity off earth and out into the reaches of space.

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This is the first object 3D-printed from alien metal

APT Speed For Incremental Updates Gets a Massive Performance Boost

jones_supa writes: Developer Julian Andres Klode has this week made some improvements to significantly increase the speed of incremental updates with Debian GNU/Linux’s APT update system. His optimizations have yielded the apt-get program to suddenly yield 10x performance when compared to the old code. These improvements also make APT with PDiff now faster than the default, non-incremental behavior. Beyond the improvements that landed this week, Julian is still exploring other areas for improving APT update performance. More details via his blog post. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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APT Speed For Incremental Updates Gets a Massive Performance Boost

Baltimore’s Stealthy Plan to Make Its Harbor Swimmable By 2020

If a friend told you he was off to take a dip in Baltimore’s Harbor, you’d probably be concerned for his health and sanity. But five years from now, swimming in Baltimore’s waterways might not sound so crazy—and there’s an innovative piece of technology to thank. Read more…

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Baltimore’s Stealthy Plan to Make Its Harbor Swimmable By 2020

Comcast Resets Nearly 200,000 Passwords After Customer List Goes On Sale

itwbennett writes: Over the weekend a Dark Web marketplace had 590, 000 Comcast email addresses and passwords for sale, offering the entire list for $1, 000, writes CSO’s Steve Ragan. Saturday evening Ragan contacted Comcast about the accounts being sold online and learned that Comcast had ‘already obtained a copy of the list’ and was checking it against their customer base. ‘Of the 590, 000 records being sold, only about 200, 000 of them were active, ‘ Comcast said. Still unknown is the source of the data being sold online, although signs point to it being recycled. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Comcast Resets Nearly 200,000 Passwords After Customer List Goes On Sale

EPA finds more toxic VW emissions fraud in Audis and Porsches

The EPA, the California Air Resources Board and Environment Canada have detected more fraudulent firmware in VW products; this time in 2014-2016 cars from the super-profitable Audii and Porsche lines. (more…)

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EPA finds more toxic VW emissions fraud in Audis and Porsches

The Keurig Kold Is A Space Oddity In The World Of Soft Drinks

 The Keurig Kold is such an odd product that it almost looks like it came from an distant world where no one cares about corn syrup ingestion. Clad in white plastic and covered in grills, the case is far bigger than anything else in your kitchen and makes a noise like Darth Vader taking a nap. It takes two hours to prime and then, in a minute or so, can produce a glass of fizzy beverage without… Read More

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The Keurig Kold Is A Space Oddity In The World Of Soft Drinks