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AMD Announces FreeSync 2: Easier & Lower Latency HDR Gaming

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NewsHubThough they don’t get quite as much ongoing attention as video cards due to their slower update cadence, one of the nicer innovations in the last few years in the gaming hardware ecosystem has been variable refresh displays. By taking displays off of a fixed refresh rate and instead coupling it to the frame rate, the state of gaming on the PC has become a lot more pleasant, especially in the irksome area between 30 and 60 frames per second.
As it was NVIDIA to make the first move here in 2013, AMD only ended up rolling out their own variable refresh solution in 2015. Under the brand name FreeSync, AMD leveraged the VESA’s optional DisplayPort Adaptive-Sync standard to offer variable refresh in conjunction with the major monitor manufacturers. The fact that AMD was second to the market didn’t dampen their enthusiasm (or customers’) too much, but it did mean that until recently they were playing catch-up with NVIDIA on extra features. AMD finally reached (practical) feature parity with NVIDIA just last month when they added support for borderless windowed mode.
But now that AMD has caught up with NVIDIA, their attention is quickly shifting to what they need to do to get ahead and where they can go next. Which is a harder area to tackle than may at first be apparent; variable refresh is a fundamental feature, and once you have support for it, it shouldn’t require constant fiddling. The end result is that for their next monitor technology initiative, AMD is tackling more than just refresh rates. Looking to address the high-end market with a new solution for both HDR and variable refresh, today AMD is taking wraps off of this initiative: FreeSync 2.
Trying to explain FreeSync 2 can get a bit tricky. Unlike the original FreeSync that it takes its name from, it’s a multi-faceted technology: it’s not just variable refresh, instead it’s HDR as well. But it’s also a business/platform play in a different way than FreeSync was. And while strictly speaking it’s a superset of FreeSync, it is not meant to replace FreeSync wholesale. Perhaps the best way to think of FreeSync 2 is that it’s a second, parallel initiative that is focused on what AMD, its monitor partners, and its game development partners can do to improve the state of high-end monitors and gaming.
In terms of features then, what is easily the cornerstone feature of Freesync 2 – and really its reason to be – is improving support for HDR gaming under Windows. As our own Brandon Chester has discussed more than once, the state of support for next-generation display technologies under Windows is mixed at best. HiDPI doesn’t work quite as well as anyone would like it to, and there isn’t a comprehensive & consistent color management solution to support monitors that offer HDR and/or color spaces wider than sRGB. The Windows 10 Anniversary Update has improved on the latter, but AMD is still not satisfied with the status quo on Windows 10 (never mind all the gamers still on Windows 7/8).
As a result FreeSync 2 is, in part, their effort to upend the whole system and do better. For all of its strengths as a platform, this is an area where the PC is dragging compared to consoles – the PlayStation 4 was able to add functional & easy to use HDR10 support to all units as a simple software update – so for AMD they see an opportunity to improve the situation, not only making HDR support more readily available, but improving the entire experience for gamers. And to do this, AMD’s plans touch everything from the game engine to the monitor, to make HDR the experience it should be for the PC.
Diving into the technical details then, AMD’s solution is essentially a classic one: throw out what isn’t working and make something that works better. And what isn’t working right now? As mentioned before, Windows doesn’t have a good internal HDR display pipeline, making it hard to use HDR with Windows. Meanwhile HDR monitors, though in their infancy, have their own drawbacks, particularly when it comes to input lag. The processors used in these monitors aren’t always capable of low-latency tone mapping to the monitor’s native color space, meaning using their HDR modes can add a whole lot of input lag. And worse, current HDR transports (e.g. HDR10) require tone mapping twice – once from the application to the transport, and second from the transport to the native color space – so even if a monitor has a fast processor, there’s still an extra (and AMD argues unnecessary) step in there adding input lag.
FreeSync 2 then attempts to solve this problem by upending the whole display pipeline, to get Windows out of the way and to offload as much work from the monitor as possible. FreeSync 2 in this respect, is essentially an AMD-optimized display pipeline for HDR & wide color gamuts, in order to make HDR easier to use and better performing as well.
The FreeSync 2 display pipeline as a result is much shorter (i.e. lower latency), and much more in AMD’s control. Rather than the current two-step process, AMD proposes to have a single step process: games tone map directly to the native color space of a FreeSync 2 compliant monitor, AMD’s drivers and hardware pass that along, and then the monitor directly accepts the display stream without further intensive processing. The end result is that latency is potentially significantly reduced by removing the second tone mapping step from the process.
Meanwhile on the usability side, AMD’s drivers and FreeSync 2 monitors would implement a form of automatic mode switching. The idea here being that Windows in its current form really doesn’t like anything other than sRGB, so for desktop use, users are better off with their monitor in this mode. However when a FreeSync 2-compatible game is fired up, the monitor and AMD’s drivers would then switch over to the native color space automatically, and back again when going back to the Windows desktop. The ultimate idea here being to make it easier use HDR and wide color gamuts when feasible, and sRGB when not.
Overall, this sounds like a reasonable solution to making HDR work in the short-term. AMD can’t fix Windows’ handling of HDR or wide color gamuts – you still don’t have a truly color managed environment on the Windows desktop for windowed applications – but it would be an improvement over the current situation by letting games and other applications call for something better than sRGB when they’re being used in fullscreen exclusive mode.
However to make all of this work, AMD will need to bring together both display manufacturers and game developers, and this is likely to be the trickiest part of AMD’s plan for FreeSync 2. Under the hood, AMD makes this shortened display pipeline work by having games tone map directly to a monitor’s native space, but to do so games need to know what the specific capabilities are of the attached monitor; what color space it can render to, and over what brightness range. This isn’t something Windows’ APIs currently support, and that means AMD has to provide a FreeSync 2 API instead. And that means AMD needs to get developers on-board.
The good news for AMD (and developers) is that the actual implementation of FreeSync 2 should be quite simple since most games are already rendering in HDR and tone mapping to at least SDR to begin with. Game developers only need to query for the API, tone map to the specifications AMD provides, and then from there it’s AMD and the monitor’s problem. But counting on developers to do anything extra for PC games is always a risk, one that has hurt initiatives in the past. For their part, AMD will be doing what they can: focus on the upstream engines and developer relations/evangelism. By getting FreeSync 2 support added to major engines like Unreal Engine and Unity, AMD makes it much easier for downstream developers to adopt FreeSync 2. Beyond that, it’s about convincing developers that supporting FreeSync 2 will be worth their while, both in terms of sales and improving the customer experience.
On the flip side of the coin, getting monitor manufacturers on-board should be relatively easy. AMD’s original FreeSync effort was extremely successful here (to the tune of 121 FreeSync monitors), in part because AMD made it such an easy feature to add, and they are aiming for something similar with FreeSync 2. It doesn’t sound like display controllers need to be substantially altered to support FreeSync 2 – they just need to have a tone mapping bypass mode and understand requests to switch modes – which would make it easy for the monitor manufacturers to add support. And for their part, the monitor manufacturers like features like FreeSync because they can be easily implemented as value add features that allow a monitor to be sold for a higher price tag.
On a final note, while the FreeSync 2 initiative as-planned requires game developers to buy into the ecosystem by supporting the related API, I did take a moment to ask AMD about whether they could do anything to better support games that might offer HDR support but not use AMD’s API. The answer, unsurprisingly, was “no comment”, but I got the distinct impression that it’s a question AMD has considered before. Without direct API support there’s still a need to do tone-mapping twice, and that would negate some of the latency benefits, but AMD could still potentially do it a lot faster than the display processors in some monitors. If AMD were to struggle with developer adoption, then that alone could still make FreeSync 2 worth it.
Earlier I mentioned that FreeSync 2 is really a collection of several idea/features, and while HDR is certainly the marquee feature of FreeSync 2, it’s not the only feature. With FreeSync 2 AMD will also be tightening the standards for what variable refresh functionality that approved monitors need to support.
The open nature of FreeSync has led to a large number of monitors that support the technology across a wide range of prices, but it has also led to a wide variety in how useful their FreeSync implementations are. A number of basic monitors on the market only support a range of 30Hz to 60Hz, for example. And while this is still useful, such a narrow range means that these monitors don’t deliver a very good experience below their minimum refresh rate. These monitors can’t support FreeSync’s Low Framerate Compensation (LFC) technology, which requires the maximum framerate to be at least 2.5x the minimum framerate (or 75Hz for our 30Hz monitor).
As a result, AMD has tightened the standards for FreeSync 2. All FreeSync 2 certified monitors will be required to support LFC, which in turn means they’ll need to support a wide enough range of refresh rates to meet the technology’s requirements. Consequently, anyone who buys a FreeSync 2 monitor will be guaranteed to get the best variable refresh experience on an AMD setup, as opposed to the less consistent presence of LFC on today’s FreeSync monitors.
Similar to this and AMD’s HDR efforts with FreeSync 2, AMD will also be mandating a general low latency requirement for the new standard. It’s not fully clear just what this will entail, but at a high-level AMD is going to require that monitors be low latency in SDR mode as well as HDR.
The final shift in FreeSync 2 – and really what makes it a parallel effort as opposed to a replacement for FreeSync 1 – is how AMD will be approaching the market. The costs of meeting the HDR and variable refresh requirements for FreeSync 2 means that this is very much a play at the high-end monitor market. Budget monitors won’t be able to meet these requirements (at least not right away), so AMD’s focus is going to be on the high-end of the market.
The significance, besides the parallel standards, is that it will impact how AMD goes about certifying monitors, and potentially how “free” FreeSync 2 ends up being. The additional requirements mean that AMD will need to run a more complex certification program. They will need to bring in monitors to profile their native color space and confirm they meet the latency & refresh requirements. All of which cost time and money for AMD.
As a result, when questioned on the matter, AMD is not currently commenting on the subject of FreeSync 2 royalties. Presumably, AMD is pondering the idea of charging royalties on FreeSync 2 hardware.
The subject of royalties on gaming hardware is not a very happy subject, nor is it one that too many companies like to talk about. NVIDIA for their part does charge manufacturers a form of royalties on their G-Sync technology – this being part of the impetus for AMD calling their variable refresh implementation Free Sync – and while no one will go on record to confirm the numbers, what rumblings I’ve heard is that G-Sync is “not cheap.” But numbers aside, at the end of the day this makes variable refresh a value add feature for NVIDIA just as much as it does their monitor manufacturer partners, as they profit from the sale of G-Sync monitors. At the same time it also means that the ongoing development of G-Sync is self-sustaining, as the program can now be funded from G-Sync royalties.
There are a number of assumptions in here, but ultimately the fact that AMD isn’t immediately rejecting the idea of royalties could prove to be a very important one. Royalties at a minimum would help fund the certification program, and taken to the same extent as NVIDIA could become another revenue stream entirely. And since FreeSync 2 is aimed at high-end monitors, it would allow AMD to claim a piece of the pie on their own value add feature, as high-end monitors can fetch a significant profit of their own. Negatively however, it would also likely push FreeSync 2 monitor prices up, making them less affordable.
At any rate, while AMD is pondering royalties on FreeSync 2, they won’t be giving up on the free-as-in-speech aspects of FreeSync 2. AMD tells us they will still be pushing for technological openness so that everyone can see how FreeSync 2 works, even if ultimately AMD decides to charge monitor manufacturers to make it work with their video cards. Ultimately, where exactly we’ll end up remains to be seen, as AMD is very much still in the early stages of planning with FreeSync 2.
Wrapping things up, now that we’ve covered the proposed feature set of FreeSync 2, let’s talk about hardware compatibility. AMD has repeatedly touted the flexibility of their more recent display controllers, and this is once again going to be the case when it comes to FreeSync 2. Because all of AMD’s FreeSync 1-capable cards (e.g. GCN 1.1 and later) already support both HDR and variable refresh, FreeSync 2 will also work on those cards. All GPUs that support FreeSync 1 will be able to support FreeSync 2. All it will take is a driver update.
Admittedly I don’t see too many Radeon HD 7790 or R9 290X owners shelling out for what will likely be an expensive generation of HDR monitors, but it’s nonetheless neat to see that AMD will be able to bring that tech to older cards. More practically speaking, this means that recent buyers of the RX 480 and other Polaris cards won’t be left out in the cold once FreeSync 2 arrives.
And when will FreeSync 2 arrive? The answer to that is a bit less clear. AMD is not setting any hard dates and is not announcing any monitors today. They are only announcing the start of the FreeSync 2 initiative. They still need to finish writing the necessary driver code and bring on both hardware and software partners.
The nature of their presentation makes it sound like FreeSync 2 is something that should arrive this year. Certainly the timing is right given the impending launch of HDR-capable PC monitors. But as FreeSync 2 relies on a number of external factors, I suspect AMD wants to avoid making promises they can’t deliver on alone.
In the meantime AMD’s initiative will definitely bear keeping an eye on. AMD is pushing the right buttons with their plan to improve the state of HDR gaming on the PC. If they and their partners can deliver on what they propose, then it would mean that HDR gaming on the PC would shine far more brightly than it otherwise would.

Similarity rank: 1.1

© Source: http://www.anandtech.com/show/10967/amd-announces-freesync-2-improving-ease-lowering-latency-of-hdr-gaming
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Trump tweet-slaps China and North Korea

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NewsHubYou don’t mess with a Trump tweet.
Monday was a holiday for many, but not for Donald Trump’s Twitter account.
Seven tweets adorned the feed, each with its own intensity. The last two may have the greatest international reverberations.
In one, the president-elect fired a warning shot across the brows of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il.
«North Korea just stated that it is in the final stages of developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the U. S. It won’t happen! » he tweeted.
North Korea states a lot of things. Not all — some might say not many or even any — resemble actual truth.
True, the post-truth drift isn’t isolated to North Korean shores, but to suddenly make Americans fretful about a potential North Korean attack seems like a scene from «The Interview. » The North Korean remake of «The Interview,» that is.
The next to feel the Trump burn was China.
«China has been taking out massive amounts of money & wealth from the U. S. in totally one-sided trade, but won’t help with North Korea. Nice! » hissed Trump.
This isn’t the first time Trump has tweeted his annoyance at China. On the last occasion , he accused the Chinese of committing an «unpresidented» act.
The Chinese have already expressed displeasure with some of the president-elect’s actions, such as chatting on the phone with the Taiwanese president. They will scarcely find these tweets endearing.
Perhaps, though, Trump’s tweets signal a new world order — one in which America orders the world around.
One assumes, indeed, that he is completely focused on America’s best interests. That’s not to say, however, that he doesn’t have time to fight for his own self-image.
In an earlier tweet , Trump worried that CNN refuses to paint him in the very best light.
«@CNN just released a book called ‘Unprecedented’ which explores the 2016 race & victory. Hope it does well but used worst cover photo of me! » he noted.
There’s a balance in Trump’s tweeting. Some tweets are clearly presidential. They concern vital world issues and seem intended to show his hand — sometimes seemingly with its middle finger firmly erect — to other countries.
Others, though, are purely personal. In them, he reveals his emotions using stark terms.
What happens, though, when the presidential tweets become personal? We may soon discover.

Similarity rank: 12.5

© Source: https://www.cnet.com/news/trump-tweets-china-north-korea-book-cover/
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Beijing Confirms Its Aircraft Carrier Conducted Drills In the South China Sea

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NewsHub(BEIJING)—China has confirmed that its aircraft carrier has for the first time conducted drills in the South China Sea with a formation of other warships and fighter jets, a move that could raise concerns among its neighbors.
The Defense Ministry said several J-15 fighter jets took off and landed from the flight deck of the aircraft carrier Liaoning on Monday. The Liaoning, China’s first and only aircraft carrier, sailed into the South China Sea last week.
The confirmation comes days after Taiwan’s defense ministry said the carrier and five other warships had passed south of Taiwan. The self-ruled island deployed fighter jets to monitor the fleet.
China calls the drills part of a routine open-sea exercise, but they could add to tensions between Beijing and Taipei.

Similarity rank: 9.5

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Trump names China critic Lighthizer as U. S. trade representative

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NewsHubBy David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — U. S. President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday named Robert Lighthizer, an official in the Reagan administration and harsh critic of China’s trade practices, to be his chief trade negotiator, responsible for better deals aimed at reducing U. S. trade deficits.
Trump, who promised during his presidential campaign to renegotiate international trade deals like NAFTA and punish companies that ship work overseas, said in announcing his choice that Lighthizer would help «fight for good trade deals that put the American worker first. «Lighthizer is a former deputy U. S. trade representative under former Republican President Ronald Reagan who helped to stem the tide of imports from Japan in the 1980s with threats of quotas and punitive tariffs.
His return to the agency follows nearly three decades as a lawyer representing U. S. steelmakers and other companies in anti-dumping and anti-subsidy cases.
Lighthizer has argued that China has failed to live up to commitments made in 2001 when it joined the World Trade Organization and that tougher tactics are needed to change the system, even if it means deviating from World Trade Organization rules.
«Years of passivity and drift among U. S. policymakers have allowed the U. S.­-China trade deficit to grow to the point where it is widely recognized as a major threat to our economy,» Lighthizer wrote in 2010 congressional testimony.
«Going forward, U. S. policymakers should take these problems more seriously, and should take a much more aggressive approach in dealing with China,» he wrote.
Lighthizer is regarded as an experienced tactician with an intimate knowledge of trade tools that were widely used before the WTO was created in 1995, including «Section 301» tariffs used to stem a tide of imports of Japanese steel and vehicles in the 1980s.
During his tenure, Reagan struck the 1985 Plaza Accord currency deal with Japan, Germany and other major trading partners that brought down the dollar’s value and encouraged more foreign companies to set up U. S. manufacturing plants.
«Bob Lighthizer is very smart, very strategic and totally fearless,» said a Washington attorney who has worked with him for three decades but asked not to be named. «You can expect him to use every tool available to create leverage to get China and anyone else to stop the cheating. He is no fan of the WTO. »
Still, Lighthizer is not expected to be the Trump administration’s leading voice on trade policy. Last month, Trump’s team said that task would fall to the U. S. Commerce Secretary nominee, billionaire investor Wilbur Ross..
Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, has also named Peter Navarro, an economist and adviser who has urged a hard line against China, as the head of a newly formed White House National Trade Council.
(Additional reporting by David Alexander; Editing by Susan Heavey, Chizu Nomiyama and Jeffrey Benkoe)

Similarity rank: 5.5

© Source: http://news.yahoo.com/trump-names-lighthizer-u-trade-130903227.html
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Trump's Pick For U. S. Trade Representative Hints At Big Policy Overhaul : The Two-Way : NPR

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NewsHubJackie Northam
President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday that he intends to nominate Robert Lighthizer as his U. S. trade representative, potentially signaling a major overhaul of U. S. trade policy once Trump takes office.
Lighthizer has long advocated a tougher stand on trade with China, which is in line with Trump’s campaign rhetoric.
Lighthizer, 69, was deputy U. S. trade representative under former President Ronald Reagan during a time of ferocious trade wars with Japan. He has spent the past three decades as a Washington, D. C., lawyer primarily representing U. S. steelmakers in trade cases.
He would replace Michael Froman, who led negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a massive trade deal devised to link the economies of the U. S. and 11 other Pacific nations. Trump says the TPP would take away American jobs and has vowed to pull out of the deal. He has also threatened to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement, hammer out new bilateral deals and slap punitive tariffs on a number of U. S. trading partners seen as violating trade rules.
Lighthizer gained plenty of experience negotiating tough bilateral trade deals on everything from steel to grain during his time in the Reagan administration, according to a statement from Trump’s office. The president-elect says Lighthizer will do an «amazing job helping turn around the failed trade policies which have robbed so many Americans of prosperity. »
One target would be China, which Lighthizer has accused of unfair trade practices.
He wrote in 2010 congressional testimony that years of passivity had allowed the U. S.-China trade deficit to grow «to the point where it is widely recognized as a major threat to our economy. » Going forward, he wrote, U. S. policymakers needed to take more aggressive approach in dealing with China.
Lighthizer won’t be the lone voice on trade in the Trump administration. Peter Navarro, widely considered a China hawk, will head up a new trade council. Trump’s pick for Commerce secretary, billionaire investor Wilbur Ross, also could play a role on trade policy.
Lighthizer’s nomination quickly drew praise from many Democrats calling for a change in U. S. trade policy. Richard Neal, D-Mass., ranking member of the Ways and Means Committee, called Lighthizer a skilled negotiator whose nomination could «signal a welcome move in a new direction for the Republican party. » Still, Neal acknowledged that many Republicans are advocates of free trade deals, saying Lighthizer’s ability to change policy will depend on «if he is able to overcome the resistance he is likely to face within his party. «

Similarity rank: 3

© Source: http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/01/03/508041286/trumps-pick-for-u-s-trade-representative-hints-at-big-policy-overhaul?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=politics
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Trump’s top trade pick ‘set to strain economic ties with China’

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NewsHubDonald Trump’s top pick as his US trade representative – a veteran supporter of “get tough on ­China” trade talks – will cast a ­further shadow over bilateral trade and investment ties, ­according to senior Chinese government advisers. Robert Lighthizer, a trade lawyer who served as deputy US trade representative under president Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, is tipped to head Trump’s top trade-negotiating agency. Analysts said Lighthizer’s expected nomination was just another example of Trump packing his economic team with conservative veterans of US steel interests and vocal critics of China’s trade barriers such as export subsidies and market access restrictions. Trump’s trade team, including his nominee for commerce secretary, billionaire investor ­Wilbur Ross, and Peter Navarro, director of the newly established National Trade Council, would inevitably make economic and trade ties between China and the US more difficult, according to former vice-commerce minister Wei Jianguo. Wei, now a deputy director of the China Centre for International Economic Exchanges, said the nomination of Lighthizer, one of Trump’s top trade advisers and a supporter of the president-elect’s tough approach to trade with ­China since at least 2011, was not surprising. “I am not optimistic about bilateral trade relations under Trump as we look set to see more disagreements and frictions on various import and export sectors, which is definitely not good news for China-US ties,” he said. “But considering the increasingly intertwined trade ties between Beijing and Washington in recent years, I don’t think we are going to see the possibility of a full-fledged trade war between the world’s top two economies.” Wang Huiyao, president of the Centre for China and Globalisation and an adviser to the State Council, said that while Beijing should be prepared for trade disputes under Trump, it was too early to say if he would translate his aggressive anti-free trade campaign rhetoric into policy. “Trump is a businessman and I think he is just talking tough to get better deals vis-à-vis China,” Wang said. Trade had been a central issue throughout Trump’s election campaign. “He has to talk tough on trade to China partly because that’s how he got elected,” Wang said. Analysts also noted Trump and many of his trade advisers, such as Navarro and Dan DiMicco, former chief executive of North Carolina-based steelmaker Nucor, vigorously opposed the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership pact and promised to levy hefty tariffs on Chinese imports. Trump criticised China on Twitter on Monday for “taking out massive amounts of money & wealth from the US in totally one-sided trade” while refusing to rein in nuclear-armed North Korea. “We should take Trump’s tough talk seriously but not literally. I’d rather think he intends to test Beijing’s bottom line instead of provoking China,” Wei said. Under Trump, the US trade representative – who traditionally has had authority over trade negotiations – will not serve as the main architect of US trade policy, according to Reuters. Instead, the commerce secretary and Navarro’s new office are expected to play more important roles in setting the trade agenda.

Similarity rank: 2

© Source: http://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article/2059011/trumps-expected-choice-trade-representative-dims-hopes
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A smart home scoreboard for CES 2017

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NewsHubHow about a good, old-fashioned technology arms race?
You could just buy a smart light bulb set, but for a lot of consumers (reportedly more than 5 million of you, as of November 2016), it’s Amazon ‘s voice-activated Alexa that will be the entry point for controlling devices around your home.
Along with Amazon, Apple continues to grow its Siri-powered HomeKit smart home system. Google has also entered the fray with its own blandly named smart home AI, Google Assistant, which featured prominently in Google’s Echo-imitating Google Home speaker in November 2016.
The scoreboard captures both quantity and quality of new devices, the latter based on the importance of each announcement to its respective platform. Check back every morning at 8 a.m. ET or 5 a.m. PT for your daily update.
We’ve left Google off of our scoreboard for now, but we’ll add it in if we start to see enough new Google Home or Google Assistant support. Also note that we’re only counting products that have explicitly stated support for their respective platforms «We’re looking into adding platform X later this year» doesn’t count.
For a deeper look at the new devices coming to each platform, these are our dedicated pages rounding up all the new announcements:
The list represents everything we’re aware of at the start of each day here at the show. See something we missed? Drop us a comment, or you can send me an email by clicking the link on my CNET profile page.
Click here for the rest of our coverage from CES 2017.

Similarity rank: 2.1

© Source: https://www.cnet.com/news/a-smart-home-scoreboard-for-ces-2017/
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Designer Vitaly Bulgarov insists South Korean robot Method-2 is real

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NewsHubBut while this 13ft «robot-powered suit» is the work of Hollywood designer Vitaly Bulgarov, he says Method-2 is very real and being developed in a giant lab in Gunpo, South Korea.
Bulgarov has been involved in a number of blockbusters. His latest movie project, «Ghost in the Shell,» is a sci-fi based on a Japanese manga, starring Scarlett Johansen as a cyborg counter-terrorist field commander.
«It is fair to say that I draw knowledge and inspiration from each project I work on. And with some later movies it’s the other way around,» Bulgarov tells CNN.
Piloted robots have been a staple of Japanese animation (anime) and comics (manga), for decades in Japan and feature household names like «Gundam» and «Evangelion. »
The phenomenon then spread to popular culture abroad with cartoons like «Voltron» — originally from Japan but a hit in the U. S. — and movies such as 2013’s «Pacific Rim. »
«With robotic designs for the newer films I worked on, I was trying to bring more realism in terms of how a fictional design functions mechanically; whether it’s believable enough, how it’s structurally built,» he says.
Bulgarov’s other recent projects include designing the Lamborghini Transformer «Lockdown» and the robotic body suit for the latest «Robocop» reboot.
However, unlike these fictional enterprises, Method-2 has some very real aspirations.
Built by South Korean company Hankook Mirae Technology , which translates to Korea Future Technology in English, the company says its goal with the Method-2 prototype is to develop technology that can be put to use in a variety of real-world scenarios.
«Future iterations could find its application in a lot of different areas, from construction and cargo loading to rescue operations,» Bulgarov tells CNN.
He says that one short-term modification includes mounting the top part of the robot-suit on to a larger wheeled platform, which enables it to pass through uneven terrain and leaves room for a «sufficient power source. »
«A modified version of that robotic vehicle is already in development and planned to operate in the Fukushima disaster area,» he says.
In March 2011, an earthquake and tsunami triggered a nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, leaking dangerous radiation and making it extremely risky for workers tasked with containing the damage.
USA vs. Japan Part II: Giant robots set to duel
Hoax?
Some media outlets have questioned the veracity of the prototype , drawing attention to Bulgarov’s professional experience as a visual effects artist, the initial lack of online presence for the firm Hankook Mirae, and skepticism surrounding engineer secrecy and the look and feel of the lab.
«It is real,» says Bulgarov. «The videos I posted don’t use any visual effects and have no computer graphics elements. » He says the only editing involved was a little bit of color and contrast correction to make it look «more clean» and «feel more cool and futuristic. »
He also argues that the website’s early inactivity was due to the fact the company hadn’t planned to unveil Method-2 until much later in 2017, and they were caught by surprise when videos Bulgarov had permission to publish to his own followers went viral.
«The company planned to do a proper press release and website release with more materials next year, when the current prototype was complete,» he says.
«We didn’t think it would go viral just yet. »
He says his team’s still refining Method-2’s functionality and exterior design.
«As you can see the legs still have no shells covers and feature a ‘naked’ frame,» he says, adding that they also need to rework the arm frames and reduce the way the arms shake when it walks.
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto: Japan’s robot revolution
Bulgarov says the next version of Method-2 could be ready to face the public later this year.
For now, says Bulgarov like a proud parent, «Method-2 is just a one-year-old, and like a baby making its first steps. «

Similarity rank: 1

© Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/edition_asia/~3/Y4DJngU_640/index.html
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Study claiming North Carolina isn't a democracy is dangerous and ridiculous

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NewsHubAn academic study claiming North Carolina is only slightly more democratic than Cuba is not only ridiculous, but also dangerous.
This absurd charge was repeated recently in a Raleigh News & Observer op-ed by political science professor Andrew Reynolds, co-founder of the Electoral Integrity Project.
His article, titled » North Carolina is no longer classified as a democracy ,» came amid attempts by Republican state lawmakers to limit incoming Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s power.
Several newsrooms, including MSNBC and the Huffington Post, repeated the unflattering claim, despite the many questions surrounding the EIP’s methodology, and the fact that previous versions of the group’s global measurement of electoral integrity ranked North Korea ahead of most other nations.
Individual reporters were also quick to share Reynolds’ dubious claim on social media:
The Raleigh News & Observer op-ed reads:
In the just released [Electoral Integrity Project] report, North Carolina’s overall electoral integrity score of 58/100 for the 2016 election places us alongside authoritarian states and pseudo-democracies like Cuba, Indonesia and Sierra Leone. If it were a nation state, North Carolina would rank right in the middle of the global league table — a deeply flawed, partly free democracy that is only slightly ahead of the failed democracies that constitute much of the developing world.
Cuba currently ranks as 56 in the group’s measurement of electoral integrity in 127 countries.
Though the EIP’s claim that the Tar Heel State is only slightly more democratic than Cuba dates back a few years, it has been repeated recently by multiple newsrooms, including Vox.com , Slate , MSNBC and the Huffington Post .
But despite the apparent popularity of the claim, the EIP’s methodology not only leaves much to be desired, its findings are also likely politically motivated, according to the statistician Andrew Gelman.
Reynolds, tellingly, singled out North Carolina even though the state ranks higher than Ohio, Michigan and Alabama, to name a few. North Carolina has recently been at the center of culture wars and partisan warfare.
«If Reynolds, Norris, etc., don’t like what the North Carolina legislature has been doing, fine. It could even be unconstitutional, I have no sense of such things,» Gelman wrote. «And I agree with the general point that there are degrees of electoral integrity or democracy or whatever. Vote suppression is not the same thing as [a] one-party state and any number-juggling that suggests that is just silly, but, sure, put together enough restrictions and gerrymandering and ex post facto laws and so on, and that can add up. »
The result looked like «an unstable combination of political ideology, academic self-promotion, credulous journalism, and plain old incompetence,» Gelman concluded.
North Korea managed to rank 65 out of a 127 countries in EIP’s 2014 global measurement of voter integrity. Political ideology and «plain old incompetence» would certainly explain how the Hermit Kingdom managed to score above 50 out of 100 on categories including «electoral laws, «voter registration,» «voting process» and «results. »
«[T]he response rate for North Korea is given as 6%,» Gelman noted, citing the group’s methodology and data. «And the report said they consulted about 40 ‘domestic and international experts’ for each election. Hmmm… 6% of 40 is 2.4, so maybe they got 3 respondents for North Korea, 2 of whom were Stalinists. »
North Korea was quietly removed from all studies published after 2014.
Aside from being absurd, the EIP study is also dangerous, as Gelman and his associate, Nick Stevenson, rightly note.
It’s the sort of thing that bad faith actors will cling to as they attempt to obscure and justify their actions. When human rights activists and dissidents correctly and accurately accuse countries with one-party rule of fraud and other election abuses, the accused can point to supposedly reliable reports and say with a straight face, «This study says otherwise. »
Paul Ryan’s election was far smoother than John Boehner’s in 2015.

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In Under an Hour Trump Has Provoked a Foreign Dictatorship Over Nuclear Weapons and a Foreign Nuclear Power

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NewsHubDonald Trump is still not the president but he’s certainly acting as if he were – although his actions are far from presidential. Late Monday afternoon Trump tried to provoke two powerful foreign countries over nuclear weapons, just ten days after calling for a nuclear arms race with Russia.
His first nuclear tweet was almost a dare to the highly volatile North Korea (DPRK):
His second was to China, a nuclear power:
Independent journalist Leah McElrath who has written about Trump for Salon made the observation:
Also on Twitter, many are sounding the alarm:
Trump Doubles Down On Nuclear Tweet: ‘Let It Be An Arms Race’
After Trump Asks Why US Can’t Use Nuclear Weapons, Nuclear Launch Officer Warns ‘Buckle the Hell Up’
Trump Says He Wants to Increase America’s Stockpile of Nuclear Weapons – After Putin Just Said He Does Too
Nearly Half of Voters Believe Donald Trump Will Drop a Nuclear Bomb if He’s Elected
A Trump Presidency Would Be Such a Crisis It Was Just Added to The Economist’s Top Ten Global Risks
Watch: Trump Spokeswoman Says Trump Won’t Be Afraid To Use Nuclear Weapons
Trump Gaining Control of Nuclear Weapons ‘Could End Mankind’ Says Director of Top Think Tank
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