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[33]Close binspamdupenotthebestofftopicslownewsdaystalestupid freshfunnyinsightfulinterestingmaybe offtopicflamebaittrollredundantoverrated insightfulinterestinginformativefunnyunderrated descriptive typodupeerror Do you develop on GitHub? You can keep using GitHub but automatically [34]sync your GitHub releases to SourceForge quickly and easily with [35]this tool so your projects have a backup location, and get your project in front of SourceForge's nearly 30 million monthly users. It takes less than a minute. Get new users downloading your project releases today! [36]Sign up for the Slashdot newsletter! or [37]check out the new Slashdot job board to browse remote jobs or jobs in your area. [38]× 170468477 story [39]IBM [40]The SCO Lawsuit: Looking Back 20 Years Later [41](lwn.net) Posted by EditorDavid on Monday March 06, 2023 @07:34AM from the long-litigation dept. "On March 7, 2003, a struggling company called The SCO Group filed a lawsuit against IBM," [42]writes LWN.net, "claiming that the success of Linux was the result of a theft of SCO's technology..." Two decades later, "It is hard to overestimate how much the community we find ourselves in now was shaped by a ridiculous lawsuit 20 years ago...." It was the claim of access to Unix code that was the most threatening allegation for the Linux community. SCO made it clear that, in its opinion, Linux was stolen property: "It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts". To rectify this "misappropriation", SCO was asking for a judgment of at least $1 billion, later increased to $5 billion. As the suit dragged on, SCO also started suing Linux users as it tried to collect a tax for use of the system. Though this has never been proven, it was widely assumed at the time that SCO's real objective was to prod IBM into acquiring the company. That would have solved SCO's ongoing business problems and IBM, for rather less than the amount demanded in court, could have made an annoying problem go away and also lay claim to the ownership of Unix -- and, thus, Linux. To SCO's management, it may well have seemed like a good idea at the time. IBM, though, refused to play that game; the company had invested heavily into Linux in its early days and was uninterested in allowing any sort of intellectual-property taint to attach to that effort. So the company, instead, directed its not inconsiderable legal resources to squashing this attack. But notably, so did the development community as a whole, as did much of the rest of the technology industry. Over the course of the following years -- far too many years -- SCO's case fell to pieces. The "misappropriated" technology wasn't there. Due to what must be one of the worst-written contracts in technology-industry history, it [43]turned out that SCO didn't even own the Unix copyrights it was suing over. The level of buffoonery was high from the beginning and got worse; the company lost at every turn and eventually collapsed into bankruptcy.... Microsoft, which had not yet learned to love Linux, funded SCO and loudly bought licenses from the company. Magazines like Forbes were [44]warning the "Linux-loving crunchies in the open-source movement" that they "should wake up". SCO was suggesting a license fee of $1,399 -- per-CPU -- to run Linux.... Such an effort, in less incompetent hands, could easily have damaged Linux badly. As it went, SCO, despite its best efforts, instead succeeded in improving the position of Linux -- in development, legal, and economic terms -- considerably. The article argues SCO's lawsuit ultimately proved that Linux didn't contain copyrighted code "in a far more convincing way than anybody else could have." (And the provenance of all Linux code contributions are now carefully documented.) The case also proved the need for lawyers to vigorously defend the rights of open source programmers. And most of all, it revealed the Linux community was widespread and committed. And "Twenty years later, it is fair to say that Linux is doing a little better than The SCO Group. Its swaggering leader, who thought to make his fortune by taxing Linux, [45]filed for personal bankruptcy in 2020." apply tags__________ 170480733 story [46]Government [47]America's FDA Wants to Update Its Definition of 'Healthy'. The Food Industry Doesn't [48](msn.com) [49]43 Posted by EditorDavid on Monday March 06, 2023 @03:34AM from the healthy-today-gone-tomorrow dept. America's public health-protecting Food and Drug Administration wants to update its definition of "healthy" for purposes of product labeling. But the Washington Post reports dozens of food manufacturers are now "[50]claiming the new standards are draconian and will result in most current food products not making the cut, or in unappealing product reformulations." Under the proposal, manufacturers can label their products "healthy" only if they contain a meaningful amount of food from at least one of the main food groups such as fruit, vegetable or dairy, as recommended by federal dietary guidelines. They must also adhere to specific limits for certain nutrients, such as saturated fat, sodium and added sugars. It's the added sugar limit that has been the sticking point for many food executives. The FDA's previous rules put limits around saturated fat and sodium but did not include limits on added sugars. The Consumer Brands Association, which represents 1,700 major food companies from General Mills to Pepsi, wrote a 54-page comment to the FDA in which it stated the proposed rule was overly restrictive and would result in a framework that would automatically disqualify a vast majority of packaged foods.... The proposed rule, if finalized, they said, would violate the First Amendment rights of food companies and could harm both consumers and manufacturers. The Sugar Association has an issue with the added sugar limit; Campbell Soup is more focused on that sodium.... Virtually every part of the food industry appeared disgruntled ([51]here are the 402 comments about the proposed rule). Baby food company Happy Family Organics said the proposed rule probably would lead to an unintended exclusion of some nutrient-rich products. And the American Cheese Society took a more philosophical approach, saying the word "healthy" isn't that helpful on a label and should be used in a complete diet or lifestyle context rather than in a nutrient or single food-focused context. The FDA estimates that up to just 0.4% of people who try to follow their guidelines would be swayed by the word "healthy" in their long-term food-purchasing decisions, according to the article. It's a position supported by a [52]research paper in the Journal of Public Policy and Marketing analyzing hundreds of international studies on the effectiveness of front-of-package nutrition labeling. "The authors found that the most effective means of conveying nutrition information is a graphic warning label, as has been adopted in Chile, Peru, Uruguay, Mexico and Israel. In Chile, black warning labels shaped like stop signs are required for packaged food and drinks that exceed, per 100 grams: 275 calories, 400 milligrams of sodium, 10 grams of sugar or four grams of saturated fats." apply tags__________ 170480297 story [53]Transportation [54]New $10B High-Speed Rail Line to Las Vegas Planned in California [55](sfgate.com) [56]76 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @11:58PM from the leaving-the-stations dept. "For years, California has championed high-speed rail as its future, even as its marquee project faces headwinds," [57]writes SFGate. "While the high-speed rail connecting Los Angeles and San Francisco slowly comes to fruition, a separate rail plan in Southern California has finalized an important labor deal, and construction is set to begin this year... to connect Las Vegas to Los Angeles with [58]a new 218-mile rail system. On Feb. 23, Brightline announced it had reached an agreement to work with a coalition of major labor unions. The High-Speed Rail Labor Coalition includes 13 rail unions representing more than 160,000 freight, regional, commuter and passenger railroad workers.... The $10 billion investment is set to create 35,000 jobs during construction, with more than $10 billion in economic impact.... Brightline West trains can reach speeds of up to 200 mph. The company said its trains will [59]cut down the more than 40 million one-way trips to Las Vegas each year by car or bus. It said it aims to attract 12 million of those trips annually and reduce CO2 emissions by removing 3 million vehicles and 400,000 tons of CO2 from the road. Moreover, the train is expected to relieve traffic on Interstate 15.... Brightline Senior Vice President of Corporate Affairs Ben Porritt told SFGATE that Brightline West plans to break ground later in 2023. "Our construction timeline is approximately 3.5-4 years, which would have us opening by the end of 2027," he said. "Riders can expect a travel time of just over two hours as the train reaches its 180 mph top speed," [60]reports Jalopnik. "The line is expected to be an elevated line as well running above the desert floor." Brightline trains in Florida are [61]already reaching speeds of 130 miles per hour. apply tags__________ 170480475 story [62]AMD [63]Will AMD's 'openSIL' Library Enable Open-Source Silicon Initialization With Coreboot? [64](phoronix.com) [65]14 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @09:55PM from the in-the-chips dept. Formerly known as LinuxBIOS, coreboot is [66]defined by Wikipedia as "a software project aimed at replacing proprietary firmware (BIOS or UEFI) found in most computers with a lightweight firmware." Phoronix is [67]wondering if there's about to be a big announcement from AMD: AMD dropped a juicy tid-bit of information to be announced next month with "openSIL" [an open-source AMD x86 silicon initialization library], complete with AMD Coreboot support.... While about a decade ago AMD was big into Coreboot and at the time committed to it for future hardware platforms (2011: [68]AMD To Support Coreboot On All Future CPUs) [and] open-source AGESA at the time did a lot of enabling around it, that work had died off. In more recent years, AMD's Coreboot contributions have largely been limited to select consumer APU/SoC platforms for Google Chromebook use. But issues around closing up the AGESA as well as concerns with the AMD Platform Security Processor (PSP) have diminished open-source firmware hopes in recent years.... For the Open Compute Project Regional Summit in Prague, there is a new entry added with a title of OSF on AMD -- Enabled by openSIL (yes, folks, OSF as in "Open-Source Firmware").... [H]opefully this will prove to be a monumental shift for open-source firmware in the HPC server space. From the talk's description: openSIL (AMD open-source x86 Silicon Initialization Library) offers the versatility, scalability, and light weight interface to allow for ease of integration with open-source and/or proprietary host boot solutions such as coreboot, UEFI and others and adds major flexibility to the overall platform design. In other words, this library-based solution simply allows a platform integrator to scale from feature rich solutions such as UEFI to slim, lightweight, and secure solutions such as coreboot. The description promises the talk will include demonstrations "highlighting system bring-up using openSIL integrated with coreboot and UEFI Host Firmware stacks on AMD's Genoa based platforms." apply tags__________ 170479979 story [69]ISS [70]Cosmonaut Stranded on Mir in 1991 Now Heads Rescue Mission to ISS [71](mashable.com) [72]19 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @07:33PM from the rescue-missions dept. An anonymous readers [73]this surprising story from Mashable: When a Russian spaceship docked as a lifeboat for three stranded men at the International Space Station in February, one may have wondered if Sergei Krikalev, heading the rescue mission, felt any deja vu. If that name doesn't ring a bell, he's also sometimes known as "[74]the last Soviet" for his more than 311 days spent in space as the Soviet Union collapsed 250 miles beneath him in 1991. He was only meant to be at the Mir station for five months. Instead, he remained for close to a year, never abandoning the outpost. Today, Krikalev, the former cosmonaut, is the executive director of human spaceflight for the Russian space agency. That means it's on his watch to make sure NASA astronaut Frank Rubio and cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin get back home safely after their ship [75]sprang a leak at the station in December 2022. The three marooned crew members were supposed to return this month. But their mission will now stretch for a year, until a new crew arrives to relieve them on a separate spacecraft in six months. Krikalev's story of being stranded in space is now getting a perhaps overdue spotlight with a new podcast series called "The Last Soviet." And it's being told by another cosmonaut, Lance Bass.... Few may remember that boy-band member Bass almost made it to space on a Soyuz spacecraft himself. In 2002, he spent about six months, off and on, training in Star City, Russia, and was [76]certified by Russia and NASA to fly a mission to the space station. apply tags__________ 170479751 story [77]Government [78]Texts from Binance Reveal Plan to Elude US Authorities [79](livemint.com) [80]45 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @06:20PM from the made-in-China dept. Reuters writes: Binance, one of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchanges, [81]developed a plan to avoid the threat of prosecution by U.S. authorities as it started an American entity in 2019, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday. [82]The Wall Street Journal reports: Any lawsuit from U.S. regulators would be like "nuclear fall out" for Binance's business and its officers, a Binance executive warned colleagues in a 2019 private chat. Worried about the threat of prosecution, Binance set out on a plan to neutralize U.S. authorities, according to messages and documents from 2018 to 2020 reviewed by The Wall Street Journal as well as interviews with former employees. The strategy centered on building a bare-bones American platform, Binance.US, that would license Binance's technology and brand but otherwise appear to be wholly independent of Binance.com. It would shield from U.S. regulators' scrutiny the larger Binance.com exchange, which would exclude U.S. users. But Binance and Binance.US have been much more intertwined than the companies have disclosed, mixing staff and finances and sharing an affiliated entity that bought and sold cryptocurrencies, according to the interviews and the messages and documents reviewed by the Journal. Binance developers in China maintained the software code supporting Binance.US users' digital wallets, potentially giving Binance access to U.S. customer data. If U.S. regulators conclude that these links mean Binance has control over a U.S. company, they could claim the power to police Binance's entire business, which, to many investors, [83]has been a black box since the start. This would also put Binance's billionaire founder and chief executive, Changpeng Zhao, and his finances under closer scrutiny.... Developers in Shanghai maintained key software functions at Binance.US at least through the summer of 2021, the Journal [84]has reported. The Shanghai developers' contracts were with Binance, not with the U.S. platform, according to a person familiar with the agreements. apply tags__________ 170479559 story [85]AI [86]Neal Stephenson Believes AI-Generated Creative Output Is 'Simply Not Interesting' [87](coindesk.com) [88]62 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @05:41PM from the YawnGPT dept. Neal Stephenson "sees artificial intelligence in general, and ChatGPT in particular, [89]as underwhelming," reports CoinDesk. "I think it depends on how it's used," Stephenson told CoinDesk TV's "First Mover" on Friday. "What we've tended to see is that it's used in creative applications where I don't think it's at all interesting." Stephenson said that with a painting or book, "what you're doing is having a kind of communion with the artist who made thousands of little micro decisions in the course of creating that work of art or writing that book." A decision that is generated by an algorithm, "that's simply not interesting," he said.... "Personally, I know a lot of writers who are putting a lot of effort into creating their own original works, and I'd rather support them and hear what they have to say than just look at the output of an algorithm," he said. When asked if an AI could've written Snow Crash, Stephenson responded "Well, maybe one did." But if that were the case, he added, a person would be reading only the output of an algorithm, "and if that's interesting to you, then fine." apply tags__________ 170479519 story [90]Books [91]Neal Stephenson Celebrates 'Snow Crash' 30th Anniversary by Auctioning Sword with NFT, Manuscripts [92](forbes.com) [93]12 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @05:11PM from the man-with-the-handle dept. The auction house Sotheby's is celebrating the 30th anniversary of Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash in a big way, [94]reports Forbes. Stephenson teamed with special effects and prop company Weta Workshop to create "[95]a bespoke piece, a cultural and historical artifact, stemming from the unique mythology of his new and coming Snow Crash universe." "The sword took us a year to create and is one of the finest pieces of craftsmanship WETA has created," said Sir Richard Taylor, founder of WETA workshop. "The whole collection is then housed in a crate from a fictitious gaming company that in theory has owned this sword that has now come up for auction. It is an insane, inworld fusion of ancient craft with the digital age." Taylor adds that "the swords Tansu storage case itself is an, automated, internally driven, magnetically activated, very unique box, with hidden compartments, secret items, coded messages and other inworld special nods to the world Neal authored." This auction will not only celebrate Stephenson's legacy and the lore of Snow Crash but could also serve as a springboard to expand the Snow Crash universe further. [Taylor adds that Stephenson is exploring "future transmedia developments".] For Taylor, they are at the cusp of creating a body of creative work that blurs the line between the physical and the digital, which we have been affectionately calling 'Masterworks for the Metaverse'. The sword will, of course, have its own unique NFT "capturing every detail of its physical twin," and someone's already bid $60,000 for it. Also up for auction are two [96]original [97]manuscripts for Snow Crash and the [98]painting used as the original edition's cover art -- but also two forgotten artifacts from the book's afterlife: * "The only surviving materials [99]from the original graphic novel concept for Snow Crash titled Dioxin Posse, ca. 1989" * "The [100]leather jacket meant to be worn by Y.T. in the original graphic novel concept for Snow Crash, featuring the 'Elmo' logo used by her group, the "Dioxin Posse," ca. 1989." apply tags__________ 170479235 story [101]GUI [102]Why is Meta Slashing Prices on its VR Headsets? [103](cnn.com) [104]101 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @03:47PM from the virtual-savings dept. "Meta is cutting prices for two of its virtual reality headsets as it continues trying to boost adoption for the nascent technology on which it has bet its future," [105]reports CNN: The company announced Friday that it is slashing the price of its higher-end Meta Quest Pro headset by some $500, bringing its cost to $999, roughly six months after it was [106]released. Meta is also lowering the price of its Quest 2 headset from $499.99 to $429.99. The price cut for the Quest 2 will go into effect in more than a dozen countries including the United States on Sunday. The Quest Pro price drop will take effect the same day in the United States and Canada and on March 15 in all other countries where it is sold. "Our goal has always been to create hardware that's affordable for as many people as possible to take advantage of all that VR has to offer," the company said in a blog post. Yahoo Finance believes Meta is lowering prices "because consumers are, well, [107]just not buying as many as the company expected." The Verge agrees that the Meta Quest Pro was "an absolute boondoggle of a device" -- but suggests [108]that's not the whole story. "if you look at the Quest 2, which most people use for playing games, as a game console, it's done reasonably well." Mark Rabkin, Meta's vice president for VR, told staff that Meta has [109]sold over 20 million Quest headsets thus far. That includes both the Quest and Quest 2.... That seems like a small number, but the Nintendo GameCube only sold 21 million consoles in its entire lifespan, and the Xbox Series X and S are estimated to have sold approximately 20 million consoles thus far. So if you look at the Quest 2, which most people use for playing games, as a game console, it's done reasonably well. Their conclusion? "Meta might have big ambitions for VR headsets and their place in the metaverse, but the reality is that [110]the top software on the Quest 2 are all games.... And while Meta is thrusting metaverse experiences onto users, it's kind of ignoring that core gamer audience." apply tags__________ 170478903 story [111]AI [112]AI's Latest Problem? Screwing Up Orders at McDonalds [113](zdnet.com) [114]91 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @02:35PM from the not-lovin'-it dept. Perhaps AI "needs a little more work," writes ZDNet columnist Chris Matyszczyk -- noting [115]problems with the automated voice-recognition systems at McDonald's drivethrough lanes. The trouble started when TikTok-er Ren Adams [116]ordered hash browns, sweet tea and a Coke. All seemed fine until, at a second drive-thru lane, another car pulled up. Adams' AI helper seems to have overheard that order and added it to Adams'. Adams tried to make the robot see sense. Or, rather hear it. Instead, the robot removed the errant Diet Coke and replaced it with, oh, nine sweet teas instead of one. Which suggests something of a problem. When your robot drive-thru employee makes a mistake, to whom can you complain? Complaining to the robot seems to create an extra layer of complication and the potential for even greater misunderstanding. Adams, indeed, isn't alone. Here's Caitlyn Sykora (not) [117]ordering $254 of McNuggets meals. And here's Madilynn Cameron [118]wanting a large cup of water and a cup of ice cream and discovering butter is included. She seems to have given up. The customer who'd ordered one sweet tea and instead got nine also drove off in a huff, according to the end of their TikTok video. Matyszczyk's conclusion? " if you're [119]not so good at fixing ice-cream machines, how good will you be at maintaining thousands of robot order-takers?" apply tags__________ 170478699 story [120]Programming [121]C++ 23 Language Standard Declared Feature-Complete [122](infoworld.com) [123]46 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @01:36PM from the get-with-the-programming dept. An anonymous reader shares [124]this report from InfoWorld: C++ 23, a planned upgrade to the popular programming language, is now feature-complete, with capabilities such as [125]standard library module support. On the horizon is a subsequent release, dubbed C++ 26. The ISO C++ Committee in early February completed technical work on the C++ 23 specification and is producing a final document for a draft approval ballot, said Herb Sutter, chair of the committee, in a [126]blog post on February 13. The standard library module is expected to improve compilation. Other features slated for C++ 23 include simplifying implicit move, fixing temporaries in range-for loops, multidimensional and static operator[], and Unicode improvements. Also featured is static constexpr in constexpr functions. The full list of features can be found at [127]cppreference.com. Many features of C++ 23 already have been implemented in major compilers and libraries, Sutter said. A planned C++ 26 release of the language, meanwhile, is slated to emphasize concurrency and parallelism. apply tags__________ 170471067 story [128]Earth [129]Why Some California Cities are Banning Children's Balloons [130](msn.com) [131]57 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @12:34PM from the up-up-and-away dept. The editorial board of the Los Angeles Times writes that [132]it doesn't take a Chinese spy balloon to threaten ocean wildlife. "Even the child-size pink plastic 'Happy Birthday' balloon can be hazardous if left in the wrong hands. Or, more precisely, left from the wrong hands." There are several recent cases of sea turtles, seals and sea lions off the California coast discovered entangled in or choked by balloon strings, or in physical distress after ingesting balloons. Among the key findings of a [133]2020 Oceana report on ocean plastic was that balloons were one of the most common types of plastics entangling or consumed by marine life, along with bags, recreational fishing line, sheeting and food wrappers. The threat to sea life is one of the main reasons a handful of coastal Southern California cities have [134]slapped restrictions on the use of balloons, ranging from prohibiting the sale or release of lighter-than-air balloons (which generally means those filled with helium) to a ban on the sale, distribution or public use of all balloons [135]passed by Laguna Beach on Tuesday. If this trend sounds familiar, that's because a few years back it was single-use plastic straws that were targeted by local bans. Eventually, there were so many different rules about distribution of plastic disposable straws that a statewide law, [136]beginning in 2019, made sense. Balloons may be heading for the same fate.... California will [137]phase out mylar balloons by 2031 because their metallic nylon foil shells have a tendency to cause blackouts and spark wildfires when they float into power lines. That's good, but now California legislators should consider placing restrictions on the use and release of latex balloons. The balloon industry markets latex rubber balloons as biodegradable, but studies have found that they [138]don't break down in the ocean. Furthermore, the strings attached to balloons are generally plastic. This makes them single-use trash in the same way that grocery bags and straws are, and releasing them into the environment is littering. A Laguna Beach environmentalist tells the Times people need to rethink the way they look at plastic. "When people say they throw things away -- there's really no away." apply tags__________ 170474223 story [139]Programming [140]Rust Project Reveals New 'Constitution' in Wake of Crisis [141](thenewstack.io) [142]61 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @11:34AM from the Rust-never-sleeps dept. "The Rust open source project, which handles standards for the language, released a new governance plan Thursday," [143]reports The New Stack, "the cumulation of six months of intense work." Released as a [144]request for comment on GitHub, it will now undergo a comment period. It requires ratification by team leaders before it's accepted. The Rust project interacts with, but is separate from, the [145]Rust Foundation, which primarily handles the financial assets of Rust. Two years ago, the project had a very public blowup after its entire mod team resigned and [146]publicly posted a scathing account of the core team, which the mod team called "unaccountable to anyone but themselves." It even suggested the core team was not to be trusted, although the team later recanted and apologized for that. [Rust core team developer] Josh Triplett understandably didn't want to dwell on the [147]kerfuffle that lead to this action. He focused instead on the underlying structural issues that lead to the leadership crisis. "As a result of that, there was widespread agreement within the project that we needed to create a better formal governance structure that removed some of those ambiguities and conflicts, and had mechanisms for dealing with this without ever having a similar crisis," Triplett told The New Stack. "We don't want to ever to have things get to that point again...." The original Rust project governance structure evolved out of Mozilla, where Rust began and was nurtured for years. Around 2016 or 2017, a request for comment came out that established the Rust project's governance, Triplett said. It created approximately six teams, including the core, language, mod, library and cargo teams. Among the problems with the old model was that the core team became responsible for not just overseeing problems that arose, but solving them as well, Triplett said. That led to burnout and problems, said JT Turner, one of the co-authors on the new model and a member of the Rust core team.... Ultimately, the old governance model was "not a very precise document," Triplett added. "It was just, 'Hey, here's the rough divisions of power,' and because that document was very rough and informal, it didn't scale to today," he said. "That's one of the things that led to the governance crisis." apply tags__________ 170474497 story [148]GUI [149]A 'Cruelty-Free' Circus Replaced Animals with Holograms [150](msn.com) [151]47 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @10:34AM from the greater-showmen dept. The Washington Post reports: A new spectacle is taking over the tented world of acrobats, clowns and juggling entertainers. And while it may have a trunk and tusks, it weighs absolutely nothing. Circuses, once known for showcasing elephants in all their heft [152]are now presenting a much lighter creature -- a 3D hologram. The Circus-Theater Roncalli in Germany was the first to do it, and photographer Davide Bertuccio wanted to see for himself how the group pulled it off. When he attended a show at the end of 2022, he was immediately struck by the quiet atmosphere inside the tent. "Finding a circus without the din of animals, but the simple noise of people was a surprise" he said. The holographic figures are custom-built for the circus using 3D animations, photography and virtual rendering. The system of 11 digital laser projectors positioned around the stage flash animations onto a circular net hoisted up for each performance. The entire light show is operated by one person, and it takes about 10 people to take down the metallic netting to make room for the other performers, including acrobats, clowns and dancers, Bertuccio said. The circus introduced the holograms in 2019, the Post reports, and "other acts have followed suit, including the French circus L'Écocirque, which features holograms of a lion, an elephant and beluga whales, accompanied by a live orchestra blaring rock music." apply tags__________ 170473889 story [153]IT [154]Washington Post Urges Funding Office-to-Apartment Conversions as Downtown Workers Stay Home [155](dailyprogress.com) [156]137 Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday March 05, 2023 @07:34AM from the communities-without-commuters dept. "Cities across the nation face a dilemma," writes the Washington Post's editoral board," warning local leaders to respond to "the urgency and scale of the downtown crisis in many major metro areas..." "[157]Downtown office buildings are empty as workers prefer to stay home." Nearly all local leaders agree part of the solution is [158]an office-to-apartment conversion boom. Cities have started rolling out tax incentives to encourage developers to begin this transformation. This strategy is straight out of the playbook that revived [159]center city Philadelphia and [160]Lower Manhattan in the past quarter century. But there's a problem: City leaders aren't doing enough... Consider the nation's capital city. Downtown D.C. is more than 90 percent commercial buildings. The vibrancy and workers are largely gone. [161]Crime and grime are increasing, while property tax revenue is [162]quickly decreasing as building values plummet. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) has put out an ambitious "[163]Comeback Plan" that calls for [164]15,000 new residents living downtown by 2028. To make that a reality, the city needs developers to convert roughly 7 million square feet of office space to apartments and condos. Her team estimates about 1 million square feet is on track for conversion so far. There's a long way to go. The situation is [165]similar in Chicago, San Francisco, New York and [166]Atlanta, among other cities.... The longer cities wait to get conversions underway, the more tax values drop and crime goes up, and the more people see no value in living in the heart of the city -- or even visiting. One way or another, cities are going to pay. D.C. is already staring at [167]$464 million in lower revenue for 2024 to 2026 mainly due to lower commercial property taxes downtown. San Francisco is facing a [168]$728 million shortfall over the next two fiscal years for similar reasons. Buildings constructed in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s are quickly becoming distressed. It's far better to invest now than to spend years overseeing stagnation and decline. As D.C.'s Chief Financial Officer Glen Lee [169]warned, this is "a serious long-term risk to the District's economy and its tax base." The sooner these buildings can convert to residential, the sooner the city can generate some tax revenue again from an area that once brought in hefty commercial property revenue. Cities will have to rely much more on residential income tax revenue from downtowns. apply tags__________ [170]« Newer [171]Older » Slashdot Top Deals Slashdot Top Deals [172]Slashdot Deals Slashdot Poll With increasing advances in lifespans, health, and medicine, how old will the oldest person who is already alive today live to be? (*) 125 years old or less ( ) Between 126 and 175 years old ( ) Between 176 and 225 years old ( ) Between 225 and 275 years old ( ) Between 276 and 325 years old ( ) Between 326 and 500 years old ( ) Between 500 and 1000 years old ( ) Over 1000 years old (BUTTON) vote now [173]Read the 121 comments | 20814 votes Looks like someone has already voted from this IP. If you would like to vote please login and try again. With increasing advances in lifespans, health, and medicine, how old will the oldest person who is already alive today live to be? 0 Percentage of others that also voted for: * [174]view results * Or * * [175]view more [176]Read the 121 comments | 20814 voted Most Discussed * 219 comments [177]Roald Dahl eBooks Reportedly Censored Remotely * 172 comments [178]Ask Slashdot: Can You Use an Unsafe Computer Safely? * 137 comments [179]Washington Post Urges Funding Office-to-Apartment Conversions as Downtown Workers Stay Home * 131 comments [180]Amazon Employees Are Fighting on Slack About Returning to the Office * 130 comments [181]Solar Geoengineering 'Only Option' To Cool Planet Within Years, UN Says [182]Firehose * [183]Mind reading or just highly processed statistics? * [184]Beyond CRISPR babies: How human genome editing is moving on after scandal * [185]Reinventing High Performance Computing * [186]The Internet Doesn't Want To Help You Anymore - Does AI? * [187]Code.org Celebrates 10th Anniversary with Fond Memories of its Viral 2013 Video [188]This Day on Slashdot 2013 [189]Gnome Founder Miguel de Icaza Moves To Mac 815 comments 2012 [190]Why Distributing Music As 24-bit/192kHz Downloads Is Pointless 841 comments 2009 [191]Oklahoma, Vatican Take Opposite Tacks On Evolution 1161 comments 2004 [192]Chernobyl...18 Years Later 971 comments 2003 [193]Slashdot Subscribers Now See The Future 1018 comments [194]Sourceforge Top Downloads * [195]TrueType core fonts 2.2B downloads * [196]Notepad++ Plugin Mgr 1.5B downloads * [197]VLC media player 899M downloads * [198]eMule 686M downloads * [199]MinGW 631M downloads Powered By [200]sf [201]Slashdot * [202]Today * [203]Sunday * [204]Saturday * [205]Friday * [206]Thursday * [207]Wednesday * [208]Tuesday * [209]Monday * [210]Submit Story Make it myself? 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