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Showing posts from June 15, 2018

Trump’s 2020 campaign might include ex-Cambridge Analytica staff

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A handful of former Cambridge Analytica employees might be working on Donald Trump's re-election campaign. The Associated Press reports that two of its reporters overheard Matt Oczkowski, Cambridge Analytica's former head of product, say that he and the firm he now leads were "doing the president's work for 2020" alongside Trump's 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale. A source familiar with that company, Data Propria, told the AP that work on the campaign had already begun. Data Propria is a new data analysis firm that provides ad-targeting services and the AP says at least four ex-Cambridge Analytica employees are affiliated with the company. Oczkowski confirmed that three people on his team previously worked at Cambridge Analytica, one of which is CA's former lead data scientist David Wilkinson. However, Oczkowski has denied that

Introducing Horizon Client for Chrome 4.8

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The new Horizon Client for Chrome 4.8 is here! The Horizon team's strategy for Chromebooks is like finger jello, with lots of colorful layers. We generally recommend that customers install the Horizon Client for Android from the Google Play Store. But some older Chromebooks can't access to the Google Play store. For those users, we […] The post Introducing Horizon Client for Chrome 4.8 appeared first on VMware End-User Computing Blog . via Latest imported feed items on VMware Blogs https://ift.tt/2JD3aJE If New feed item from https://blogs.vmware.com/feed , then send me an email at kr

Veeam VMCE 9.5 Study Guide

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Good morning! I recently studied for, and thankfully passed, the Veeam VMCE exam. Thought I'd do a write-up of my experience and share my opinions of the exam prep process, all within Veeam VMCE NDA, as well as post a Study Guide I created during my studies. If you wanna skip the 'mumbo-jumbo' […] The post Veeam VMCE 9.5 Study Guide appeared first on Perfect Cloud . via Latest imported feed items on VMware Blogs https://ift.tt/2teoqup If New feed item from https://blogs.vmware.com/feed , then send me an email at kr

vRealize Orchestrator – useful tips and commands

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This week I have worked with one my customer on vRealize Orchestrator Proof of Concept (PoC). vRealize Orchestrator is a pretty good tool for data center orchestration but it is a very hidden tool and customers usually do not know they are entitled to use such great way how to automate and orchestrate not only their infrastructure but almost anything. Here are some of my technical notes from via Latest imported feed items on VMware Blogs https://ift.tt/2t1Jjtx If New feed item from https://blogs.vmware.com/feed , then send me an email at kr

vRealize Orchestrator 7.x – Unlocking vRO Root Account after too many failed login attempts

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When you did too many failed login attempts as root account, your vRO root account will be locked. As SSH does not work, you need console access to the vRO server. Step 1 - Gain access vRO server root shell via Console Step 2 - Reboot server Step 3 - When the GRUB bootloaders appear, press spacebar to disable autoboot. Step 4 - Select VMware vRealize Orchestrator Appliance and type "e" to via Latest imported feed items on VMware Blogs https://ift.tt/2LViG0g If New feed item from https://blogs.vmware.com/feed , then send me an email at kr

Astronomy Picture of the Day: Dusty With a Chance of Dust

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Dusty With a Chance of Dust It's storm season on Mars. Dusty with a chance of dust is the weather report for Gale crater as a recent planet-scale dust storm rages. On June 10 looking toward the east-northeast crater rim, the Curiosity rover's Mastcam captured this image of its local conditions so far. Meanwhile over 2,000 kilometers away, the Opportunity rover ceased science operations as the storm grew thicker at its location on the west rim of Endeavour crater, and has stopped communicating, waiting out the storm for now. Curiosity is powered by a radioisotope thermoelectric generator, but the smaller Opportunity rover uses solar panels to charge its batteries. For Opportunity, the increasingly severe lack of sunlight has caused its batteries to run low. June 16, 2018 via NASA https://ift.tt/2ybKDii

A major upgrade to the Large Hadron Collider is underway

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The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is getting an upgrade that will let researchers collect approximately 10 times more data than they can now. Currently, the particle accelerator can produce up to one billion proton-proton collisions, but that number will be increased significantly once the upgrades are in place. Today, a ground-breaking ceremony kicked off the work that's scheduled to be wrapped up by 2026. Within the LHC, clouds of protons fly around the 27-kilometer ring at nearly the speed of light and there are four points at which they can collide. To see the increase in collisions the LHC team is looking for, they need to be able to squeeze the particle beams at those interaction points, which will increase the odds that all of those protons will run into each other. To do that, the researchers will add around 130 new magnets to the LHC. They'll also be bui

Let's hope Trump didn't give Kim Jong Un the wrong ‘direct number’

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President Trump's historic meeting with Kim Jong-Un may not have resulted in the complete de-nuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, but it did lead to a fascinating exchange in which the President claims to have given Kim a "very direct number" if the North Korean leader "has any difficulty." Wired raises an interesting point about the situation, though: given President Trump's attempts to keep his own smartphones away from security-minded staffers, is it possible he inadvertently created a potential security nightmare by giving Kim his personal phone number? There's no way to know for sure from the outside, but let's hope not. If he in fact gave Kim his personal phone number, there are several avenues Kim's intelligence corps could approach from. A known flaw in Signaling System 7 — the protocol used to allow roaming and ensur

'Lucifer' will get a fourth season on Netflix

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Every time a show gets cancelled or even seems close to being cancelled, fans cry out for Netflix to save it. The streaming service has hosted new seasons of several TV shows that other outlets sent to the grave ( The Killing , Arrested Development , Longmire ), and today announced another one: Lucifer . The series used to air on Fox before it was cancelled last month, but after a long #SaveLucifer campaign on social media -- and, according to Deadline , negotiations over domestic and international streaming rights of prior seasons -- the show will go on. Like Brooklyn Nine-Nine and The Expanse , middling ratings and a complicated streaming situation and played a role in Lucifer's status. Hulu has its streaming rights in the US, while Amazon (which was also reportedly interested) has the rights in the UK and Germany. Just one more thing to keep in mind when you're t

Google’s VR180 Creator simplifies VR video editing

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Anyone can make a film using equipment most of us have in our pockets. Filmmakers are creating full-length movies using iPhones , for instance. Creating virtual reality experiences, however, requires some more specialized equipment. You'll certainly need cameras capable of capturing VR-ready photos and video, but you'd probably like to edit your creations too. So, enter Google, with its new VR180 Creator tool for Mac and L inux. The tool is designed to work with footage from cameras that use Google's VR180 format . VR180 was designed to help creators capture VR photos and videos in a way that makes sure you can see them in a normal perspective in 2D, too. In other words, you can use a VR headset to look around what you've shot, or view the photos and videos on a PC or phone screen without them appearing too distorted. VR180 Creator converts f

iPhone 3GS comes back from the dead in South Korea

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Have you ever wished you could relive the experience of owning a classic smartphone? You can, if you live in South Korea. SK Telink is putting the iPhone 3GS back on sale at the end of June after finding a slew of unsold units in a warehouse. Yes, you too can revisit the heady days of 2009, when the Black Eyed Peas dominated the music charts and LTE was still a pipe dream. It won't cost a lot to walk down memory lane when the phone costs 44,000 won (about $40), and don't stress too much over the nine-year-old battery -- SK Telink is inspecting each unit to be sure it's working. Whether or not you'd enjoy this nostalgia trip is another matter. Remember, the iPhone 3GS didn't even have a front-facing camera, let alone other modern bells and whistles -- selfies on an Apple smartphone had to wait until 2010 . And since Apple dropped software sup

Apple hires ex-Waymo engineer for self-driving project

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Apple may not be as loud about its plans to create a self-driving car as Google or Uber , but the company is still in the game. According to The Information , Apple has just hired Jamie Waydo, a prominent engineer from Waymo's autonomous vehicle unit. Apple's project, currently code-named Titan, could likely benefit from the excitement over such a high-profile executive. It could mean that the company is closer to a prototype, or that it's ready to start showing off its progress. Either way, Apple needs to ramp things up if its to remain relevant in the highly-competitive (and scrutinized) arena of self-driving cars. According to The Information's sources, Ms Waydo was the head of systems engineering at Waymo, and was instrumental in the company's tests in Phoenix as well as upgrades that let Waymo remove human backup drivers from vehicles.

Venmo won't let you pay or charge people from its website anymore

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If you've ever used Venmo to pay someone your share of the electric bill or for a half a pizza, you probably did it from your smartphone. Most of the service's users do. There's a loyal subset of people who prefer using Venmo's website for all that, too, but they're all pretty upset right now. According to a statement included in users' May 2018 account summaries, Venmo will "phase out some of the functionality on the Venmo.com website over the coming months," and it's starting with the ability to send payment requests and complete charges from inside a web browser. (In a chilling coda, the company reiterates at the end of the statement that "this is just the start.") All told, it's probably not a huge surprise to hear that a company with a long-standing focus on mobile payments will, you know, continue to focus on mo