Feed the-guardian-technology Technology | The Guardian

Favorite IconTechnology | The Guardian

Link https://www.theguardian.com/us/technology
Feed http://www.theguardian.com/technology/rss
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2024
Updated 2024-10-05 23:02
Scottish homes to be first in world to use 100% green hydrogen
Some 300 homes in Fife to be fitted with free boilers, heaters and cooking appliancesHundreds of homes in Scotland will soon become the first in the world to use 100% green hydrogen to heat their properties and cook their meals as part of a new trial that could help households across the country replace fossil fuel gas.Some 300 homes in Fife will be fitted with free hydrogen boilers, heaters and cooking appliances to be used for more than four years in the largest test of whether zero carbon hydrogen, made using renewable energy and water, could help meet Britain’s climate goals. Continue reading...
Coding the future: the tech kids solving life’s problems
They’re too young to vote or drive. But meet the children writing computer programs to track our health and wellbeing, choose a new school… and even how to cheat at online gamesI started getting interested in coding when I was about 11. I joined a local community lab where biologists and computer scientists come together and conduct experiments. I wanted to join the lab because my brother was really into biology and at the time I wanted to be exactly like him. I was too young to participate in the experiments, so my mentor pushed me more towards coding. Continue reading...
'Christmas slots went in five hours': how online supermarket Ocado became a lockdown winner
For years, it never made a profit – despite having bigger warehouses and better tech than its rivals. Post Covid-19, can Ocado go global?Ocado’s warehouse in Erith, 15 miles east of London on the Thames estuary, is staffed by 1,050 “personal shoppers”. Outnumbering them are 1,800 robots the size of small washing machines.You see them by climbing to the top level of the vast warehouse – at 564,000 sq ft, it is more than three times the size of St Peter’s in Rome – where a sign tells you that photography is strictly prohibited. The online supermarket is paranoid that rivals will glimpse the technology it believes to be revolutionary. Continue reading...
‘Why did it take nine hours to go 130 miles in our new electric Porsche?’
A Kent couple love their new car – but their experience suggests there are problems with the charging networkA couple from Kent have described how it took them more than nine hours to drive 130 miles home from Bournemouth as they struggled to find a working charger capable of producing enough power to their electric car.Linda Barnes and her husband had to visit six charging stations as one after another they were either out of order, already had a queue or were the slow, older versions that would never be able to provide a fast enough charge in the time. Continue reading...
Robots on the rise as Americans experience record job losses amid pandemic
The pandemic has left millions of Americans unemployed – including many in the hospitality industry, which has seen a rise in the adoption of new techThey can check you in and deliver orange juice to your hotel room, answer your questions about a missing package, whip up sushi and pack up thousands of subscription boxes. And, perhaps most importantly, they are completely immune to Covid-19. While people have had a hard time in the coronavirus pandemic, robots are having a moment.The Covid-19 pandemic has left millions of Americans unemployed – disproportionately those in the service industries where women and people of color make up the largest share of the labor force. In October, 11 million people were unemployed in the US, compared with about 6 million people who were without a job during the same time last year. Continue reading...
The Harlem teens who started a musical storm – podcasts of the week
Actor Taraji P Henson exploes the history of the poppy, R&B-influenced New Jack Swing. Plus: rapper Eve turns interviewer, and a US politics podcast high on camaraderie and insightJacked: Rise of the New Jack Sound
Yanis Varoufakis calls for Black Friday boycott of Amazon
Economist takes on retail giant before planned day of international protestsThe economist Yanis Varoufakis has called for a one-day boycott of Amazon on Black Friday as trade unionists, environmental activists, privacy campaigners and tax justice advocates plan coordinated actions against the company’s sites and supply chain.Amazon’s success during the coronavirus pandemic – at one point the company was reported to be making sales of $11,000 (£8,200) a second – has vastly inflated its share price, increasing the personal wealth of its chief executive, Jeff Bezos, already the world’s richest man, by $70bn. Bloomberg estimates his current wealth to be $187bn. Continue reading...
Microsoft productivity score feature criticised as workplace surveillance
Tool allows managers to use Microsoft 365 to track their employees’ activityMicrosoft has been criticised for enabling “workplace surveillance” after privacy campaigners warned that the company’s “productivity score” feature allows managers to use Microsoft 365 to track their employees’ activity at an individual level.The tools, first released in 2019, are designed to “provide you visibility into how your organisation works”, according to a Microsoft blogpost, and aggregate information about everything from email use to network connectivity into a headline percentage for office productivity. Continue reading...
Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity review – a blast in the past
Nintendo Switch; Omega Force/Koei-Tecmo/Nintendo
Part human, part machine: is Apple turning us all into cyborgs?
With its iPhones, watches and forthcoming smart glasses, Apple’s gadgets are increasingly becoming extensions of our minds and bodies. It’s the big tech dream – but could it turn into a nightmare?
Black Friday 2020: best early UK deals and bargains
Some of the discounts UK retailers such as Tesco, Argos, Asda and Aldi are offering
Elon Musk overtakes Bill Gates to become world's second-richest person
Further rise in Tesla share price pushes entrepreneur past Microsoft co-founderElon Musk, the maverick chief executive of Tesla, has overtaken Bill Gates to become the world’s second-richest person with a $128bn (£97bn) fortune after the electric car company he helped found 17 years ago soared in value to more than $500bn.Musk, 49, has seen his personal fortune increase by $100bn so far this year as investors worldwide rush to buy shares in Tesla, which is seen as key in helping wean the world off its reliance on fossil fuels. Continue reading...
'Antiquated process': data regulator on obtaining Cambridge Analytica warrant
UK information commissioner calls for international approach to emerging threat
Snapchat to give users share of $1m a day for most entertaining clips
Messaging app to pay users for most viral ‘snaps’ as it seeks to head off exodus to TikTokThe promise of viral fame has always been a lure for online content creators, but Snapchat hopes it has found a more immediate way of encouraging people to post pictures and videos: a share of a daily $1m (£747,000) prize.The messaging app is to begin paying its users for their most viral snaps, as the platform moves to head off a feared exodus to TikTok with a new feed of user-generated content. Continue reading...
Once more with feelings: How Yakuza: Like a Dragon reinvents middle-aged men in video games
Instead of being driven by a twisted sense of vengeance, protagonist Ichiban, a washed-up gangster in his 40s, seeks answers. He’s a welcome antidoteIt sounds like the set-up for a violent revenge movie. Low-ranking yakuza Ichiban Kasuga takes the blame for an inter-clan assassination and does 18 years in prison to protect the organisation’s patriarch. But, on his release, the gang disowns him and the boss, who he considers a father figure, shoots him and leaves him for dead. Kasuga wakes up days later, destitute and alone in another city. Surely, the stage is set for bloody retribution?Well … not quite. Kasuga is not that kind of protagonist. Continue reading...
Video games can improve mental health. Let's stop seeing them as a guilty pleasure | Keza MacDonald
Many still regards video games as a waste of time or downright sinister. But the real story is very differentAfter an Oxford study this week showed that people who play more video games report greater wellbeing, the headlines reflected a sense of stunned incredulity. “Playing video games BENEFITS mental health,” exclaimed MailOnline, while Business Insider went with “Video games might actually be good for you.” My dad sent me a clipping from the Times, as he has done every time he’s seen video games mentioned in the paper for the past 15 years, that began with the words “parents beware”. Who’d have thunk it?But why the surprise? For anyone who actually plays video games, this is hardly news. Video games are fun and interesting, and doing fun, interesting things makes you happy. Would we need a study to show that watching a few episodes of a beloved TV show makes you feel good, or that sitting down with a good book is relaxing? This year especially, video games have been an essential form of escapism and therapy for millions, and this study proves that I was hardly the only one devotedly playing Animal Crossing to decompress after an intense day of lockdown parenting. And that’s not to mention the 11-year-olds whose only meaningful social contact with other kids for months was playing Roblox together. Continue reading...
Eddie Yeadon obituary
My brother Eddie Yeadon, who has died aged 82, was an engineer and physicist with a particular interest in optics and astronomy.In the late 1960s he worked in the US for the optics company Perkin Elmer on the visors for the helmets used in the Apollo 11 moon landings. He also designed a reflector left on the moon to “bounce” a laser beam. He often joked that this was the part of the mission which did not work (although it was used subsequently). Continue reading...
Facebook condemned for hosting neo-Nazi network with UK links
Tech giant criticised for failing to act after being told two years ago about extremist activity on its platformA white supremacist network with more than 80,000 followers and links to the UK far right, including a student charged with terrorist offences, is being hosted by Facebook and Instagram, putting the world’s largest social media company under fresh pressure to tackle extremism.The network, which includes more than 40 neo-Nazi sites, offers merchandise including NaziSS symbols and stickers praising Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager under investigation for shooting dead two Black Lives Matter protesters in Wisconsin in August. Continue reading...
Playstation 5 consoles replaced with cat food or grain, Amazon customers say
Online retailer is investigating spate of pre-delivery thefts of newly released £450 consoleAmazon has said it is investigating reports that new PlayStation 5 consoles have been stolen in transit, as customers have complained of missing deliveries, and bags of grain or tins of cat food delivered instead of the electronics.Supply shortages have left the new games console even more desirable than its £450 price tag would suggest. But some shoppers waiting at home for the console to be delivered received an unwelcome surprise on Thursday and Friday, opening their parcels to find something other than the item they ordered. Continue reading...
Tech giants join with governments to fight Covid misinformation
Facebook, Twitter and Google part of working group targeting false claims about vaccines
Apple accuses Facebook of 'disregard for user privacy'
Criticism made as Apple pushes ahead with transparency feature disliked by advertisers
PlayStation 5 launch overwhelms outlets and courier firms
Gamers express anger as demand crashes websites and new console sells outGames retailers have been overwhelmed by demand for the latest Sony PlayStation console, which launched in the UK on Thursday.The rush for the Playstation 5 – which in non-pandemic times would have sparked midnight queues and camping outside high street stores – caused the entire John Lewis website to crash for nearly two hours. The department store apologised to shoppers and blamed “extremely high levels of demand” for the technical issues. Continue reading...
UK unveils National Cyber Force of hackers to target foes digitally
New unit aims to disrupt online activities of hostile states, terror groups and paedophilesBritain has unveiled its new National Cyber Force, a unit of offensive hackers that can target hostile states such as China and Russia, terror groups and even paedophiles by disrupting their online communications.The NCF, controlled by the spy agency GCHQ and the Ministry of Defence (MoD), has been secretly up and running since April with several hundred hackers based in Cheltenham and other military sites around the country. Continue reading...
Locked Down: The Scariest Show You Will Never See review
Available online
Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War review – plenty of carnage, not enough Kraftwerk
PC, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series S/X; Activision
Should robots have faces? – video
Many robots are designed with a face – yet don't use their 'eyes' to see, or speak through their 'mouth'. Given that some of the more realistic humanoid robots are widely considered to be unnerving, and that humans have a propensity to anthropomorphise such designs, should robots have faces at all - or do these faces provide other important functions? And what should they actually look like anyway? Continue reading...
Diary of a Lyft driver during Covid: 'He says he’s not wearing a mask to ride in a car'
As I pick up maskless rider after maskless rider, I begin to wonder: am I going crazy? The pandemic is real, right?It is Sunday afternoon, and Jimmy is dancing a slow drunkard’s shuffle in the general direction of my car. His hand-eye coordination is severely compromised. He’s also not wearing a face mask.Related: Want to skip Thanksgiving dinner with family? This expert negotiator can help Continue reading...
How Amazon became a pandemic giant – and why that could be a threat to us all
Online retail grew massively in lockdown, and Amazon reaped huge profits. But where is the company’s relentless innovation and automation heading – and is it time to clip its wings?For the last year, Anna (not her real name) has been working as an Amazon “associate”, in the kind of vast warehouse the company calls a fulfilment centre. For £10.50 an hour, she works four days a week, though, during busy periods, this sometimes goes up to five. Her shift begins at 7.15am and ends at 5.45pm. “When I get home,” she says, “it’s about 6.30. And I just go in, take a shower and go to bed. I’m always exhausted.”Anna is a picker in one of the company’s most technologically advanced workplaces, in the south of England. This means she works in a metal enclosure in front of a screen that flashes up images of the products she has to put in the “totes” destined for the part of the warehouse where customer orders are made ready for posting out. Everything from DVDs to gardening equipment is brought to her by robot “drives”: squat, droid-like devices that endlessly lift “pods” – tall fabric towers full of pockets that contain everything from DVDs to toys – and then speed them to the pickers. Continue reading...
Fleets: Twitter launches disappearing tweets tool worldwide
Concern among some users that Fleet feature, similar to stories on Snapchat and Instagram, creates opportunities for online harassmentTwitter has launched a new feature worldwide called ‘fleets’: tweets that disappear after 24 hours, similar to the stories feature on Snapchat and Instagram.Twitter has previously announced its plan for these ephemeral tweets, dubbed “fleets”, and tested the feature in Brazil, Italy, India, and South Korea. Continue reading...
Fortnite maker Epic Games sues Apple in Australia for App Store ban
Video game company alleges Apple misuses its market power and forces apps to pay ‘monopoly prices’The company behind the popular online video game Fortnite is suing Apple in Australia for allegedly misusing its market power by taking a slice of all revenue earned by apps on iPhones, iPads and Macs.Fortnite is a big money maker for Epic, with millions of daily users logging billions of hours on the game each month. It is forecast to bring in US$5bn in revenue in 2020. Continue reading...
Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey face Senate grilling over tech platforms –as it happened
Chief executives of Facebook and Twitter quizzed by judiciary committee on allegations of anti-conservative bias and handling of election
'I wanted to discover the starting point of video games': Edward Ross on new book Gamish
In his non-fiction graphic novel, the writer and comic-book artist takes us on a revealing exploration of the timeline of games – and why we play themVideo game histories tend to follow an achingly familiar structure. They start with Pong and the Atari years; they do the console wars between Nintendo and Sega; they cover the success of the PlayStation and the dawn of 3D visuals. All the technological waypoints are slavishly ticked off, but rarely does anyone stop and ask: why do we even play video games? What do they mean?These questions were very much on the mind of writer and artist Edward Ross when he began work on Gamish, a non-fiction graphic novel about the history of games. Five years ago, Ross wrote the acclaimed Filmish, an enthralling illustrated romp through cinema from George Méliès to The Matrix, whose accessible comic-strip presentation was a Trojan Horse for a wealth of in-depth film theory. With Gamish he uses a similar approach, constructing a loving, pastel-coloured visual narrative around titles such as Metroid, Doom and Papers Please, exploring not just the timeline of games but also the culture that makes and consumes them. Continue reading...
Twitter hires veteran hacker Mudge as head of security
Peiter Zatko’s appointment follows mass attack on social media platform in JulyTwitter has appointed one of the world’s most respected hackers as its new head of security in the wake of a humiliating mass attack in July.The company has placed Peiter Zatko in charge of protecting its platform from threats of all varieties, poaching him from the payments startup Stripe. Zatko is better known as Mudge, his handle for more than 20 years of operation on both sides of the information security arena. Continue reading...
Elon Musk set to be world's third-richest person as Tesla shares soar
Entrepreneur to overtake Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg as electric carmaker selected for S&P 500Elon Musk, the maverick chief executive of electric car company Tesla, is poised to overtake Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg to become the world’s third-richest person after Tesla’s shares jumped 13% following its selection to join the S&P 500 index of leading US companies.The latest surge in the Tesla share price, which had already risen by almost 500% so far this year, is estimated to have increased Musk’s fortune by about $15bn (£11.4bn) to about $117.5bn. Continue reading...
UK should revisit 5G ban now Trump is defeated, says Huawei
Exclusive: vice-president Victor Zhang says north-south divide in England would be exacerbated by missing out on 5GThe UK should revisit its decision to ban the Chinese telecoms equipment maker Huawei from its 5G network in the post-Trump era and recognise that it will worsen England’s north-south divide, the vice-president of Huawei has told the Guardian.Victor Zhang’s intervention comes as Boris Johnson prepares on Monday to meet the Northern Research Group, the lobby group of Conservative MPs determined to turn the prime minister’s levelling up agenda into a reality. Zhang urged the UK to stay true to its roots as the birthplace of the first Industrial Revolution, saying the government could not afford to fall behind in the 5G revolution. Continue reading...
‘Sound walks’ offer a new way to travel in lockdown
At a time when even leaving our homes is tricky, new audio guides with a difference can take listeners over the Atlantic or to splash about in the MedThe bear’s throaty growl starts to my right, then circles predatorily around to my left as I turn. But I stay calm, because the beast is not really there – it’s an illusion. I’m on a street corner in Leeds on a bright, chilly autumn morning and there are no bears for thousands of miles – or at least there haven’t been for well over a century.Between 1840 and 1858, before Burley Park was all tarmac and terraced housing, the street where I’m standing was part of the short-lived Headingley Zoological and Botanical Gardens. I’m on a guided “sound walk” around the graffitied remnants of its walls, and I’ve just reached Bearpit Gardens. Continue reading...
Amazon ridiculed on Twitter for error reunifying Ireland
Tech firm told Northern Ireland resident who wanted to watch rugby that he didn’t live in UKIt was an unlikely statement from one of the world’s biggest companies, but for a brief period on Saturday afternoon it appeared that Amazon had pledged its backing to a united Ireland.The tech company has now apologised after telling a resident of Northern Ireland that he could not watch its rugby union coverage because he didn’t live in the UK. Continue reading...
Mark Zuckerberg defends not suspending Steve Bannon from Facebook
CEO told staffers Bannon had not violated enough policies to justify ban when he called for beheading of Anthony FauciMark Zuckerberg told Facebook staffers on Thursday that former Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon had not violated enough of the company’s policies to justify his suspension from the platform when he called for the beheading of two US officials and the posting of their heads outside the White House as a “warning”. Continue reading...
Trump administration to delay enforcement of TikTok ban
Restrictions tied to national security concerns were scheduled to take effect on ThursdayThe US government has announced it will delay enforcement of a ban on TikTok, granting the Chinese-owned social media app a temporary reprieve in its battle against the Trump administration.The popular app was facing restrictions over national security concerns that would have effectively barred it from app stores in the US. The rules were expected to take effect on Thursday. But the US commerce department said it was holding off “pending further legal developments”. Continue reading...
NBN blames pandemic for $6.7bn funding blowout as execs rake in bonuses
The company says it requires an extra $600m in funding for 300,000 premises that were not factored into original plansNBN Co has blamed the Covid-19 pandemic in part for a $6.7bn blowout in funding, as executives raked in almost $3m in bonuses last financial year for “significantly” overachieving targets.At the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, when office workers and school children were sent home to work and study, NBN Co moved to cushion the boom in demand for capacity on the NBN network by offering an additional 40% broadband capacity to retailers for free. Continue reading...
Facebook extends political ad ban in US for at least a month
Deadline pushed back amid ongoing wave of US election misinformationFacebook has announced it will extend its ban on political ads in the US for at least another month, as it continues its effort to keep tabs on the wave of misinformation washing over its platform in the wake of the US election.The ad ban, which started a week before the vote and was initially projected to last just one week after, frees Facebook from having to make difficult calls about whether individual adverts are potentially harmful to the democratic process. Continue reading...
HomePod mini review: Apple’s smaller and cheaper smart speaker
Small, spherical speaker packs a sonic punch for its size but is only for those all-in on Apple’s ecosystemApple’s HomePod mini is finally here – the iPhone maker’s attempt to break the Amazon Echo-Google Home duopoly and put itself back into the voice assistant race.The HomePod mini costs £99 and sits below the full-sized HomePod costing £279. Continue reading...
The Falconeer review – soaring combat on the wings of giant warbirds
Xbox Series X|S (version tested), Xbox One, PC; Tomas Sala/Wired Productions
Felipe Neto: the YouTuber who became one of Jair Bolsonaro's loudest critics
Neto’s outspokenness landed him on Time’s most influential people list, but also made him the target of a vicious fake news campaignFelipe Neto is an irreverent YouTuber with 40 million followers on his channel where he plays computer games, pokes fun at celebrities and riffs on social media trends.With another 25 million followers on Instagram and Twitter, he is one of the biggest names on Brazil’s boisterous internet. Continue reading...
Bugsnax review – you are what you eat
PC, PS4, PS5; Young Horses
Twitter flags ballot conspiracy theory shared by Trump – after it is shared widely
Video baselessly questioning the collection of valid ballots is retweeted more than 70,000 timesTwitter took more than an hour to flag a highly misleading video shared by Donald Trump, which baselessly pushed claims of ballot fraud and was retweeted more than 70,000 times before the platform took action.The president, who lost the US election to Joe Biden last week, shared a video of election workers in Los Angeles collecting valid, mail-in ballots that were posted on or before election day from a ballot drop box. The video, which has been shared thousands of times in recent days, falsely suggested something unusual was under way and has been repeatedly debunked. The Los Angeles county registrar confirmed that the ballots were collected on 4 November from a box that was locked at 8pm on election day and were later processed and counted. Continue reading...
TikTok asks US court to intervene after Trump administration leaves app in limbo
Platform says it’s received ‘no clarity’ from government about status of proposal to place app under control of US companiesThe popular video-sharing app TikTok says its future has been in limbo since Donald Trump tried to shut it down earlier this fall and is asking a federal court to intervene. Continue reading...
Dyson staff express concern over return to workplace order
Research and development workers told they can only work from home in ‘exceptional cases’
Xbox's Phil Spencer: 'We're not driven by how many consoles we sell'
As the Xbox Series X and Series S are released, Microsoft gaming chief Phil Spencer says the next games generation is all about how many players you have, not how many consoles you shiftThe launch of the Xbox Series X this week marked the start of a new video game console generation – historically a super-exciting time for players, as better technology unlocks new dimensions for games. But despite the usual competitive crowing about teraflops, frame rates and resolutions, there’s a different dimension to the console wars this time around. The looming Netflix-ification of video games threatens to upend the whole idea of video game consoles. Amazon and Google are both working on game streaming services that let people play cutting-edge games without paying for a box that sits under the TV. And Microsoft has spent the past five years spending billions on game developers to shore up its star service: Xbox Game Pass, a monthly subscription that lets you play hundreds of games for a monthly fee.It’s been clear for a while that Microsoft sees the future of gaming in subscriptions, streaming and services. Phil Spencer, the head of Xbox since 2014, is known to players as the guy who shows up on stage at press conferences in video-game T-shirts. Under his leadership, Microsoft has massively broadened its stable of game developers, started selling Xbox games on PC, and engineered its own streaming service to let people play on any screen, known in prototype as Project xCloud. Subs and streaming have already transformed other creative industries, with varying effects on artists – Spotify has been a disaster for musicians, where Netflix has arguably been good news for TV producers. With Microsoft already clearly committed to this direction of travel, what will its effect be on the games industry? Continue reading...
The Pathless review – open-world puzzler foiled by its own ambition
PS5, PS4, PC; Giant Squid/Annapurna Interactive
...100101102103104105106107108109...