Monday 31 August 2020

Next Apple event would present AirTags, Apple Watch Series 6, and iPhone 12 with LiDAR sensor?

We get new information related to the next Apple event. This time a report from Japanese site Mac Otakara claims that Apple will launch its new iPhone 12 lineup in October, along with other goodies. However, another report claims that the iPhone 12 may once again include a LiDAR sensor.

According to Mac Otakara, the next Apple event will take place in the second half of October. This event will introduce the new iPhone 12 lineup along with the new Apple Watch Series 6. We would also see the long-rumored AirTags, which were supposed to launch along the iPhone SE 2020. This new information goes against what leaker Jon Prosser said when he suggested that the Apple Watch and the new iPads will be released in September via press release. However, Apple has always launched its new Apple Watch along with the iPhone lineup, and we don’t expect things to change anytime soon.

Another report from DigiTimes claims that the new iPhone 12 will arrive with a LiDAR sensor. This Light Detection and Ranging sensor made its first appearance in the 2020 iPad Pro. It can be used to calculate distances by illuminating an object with laser light and measuring the reflection. The data is then used to create accurate 3D representations of objects and environments, which would improve AR experiences. However, the report doesn’t mention which variants of the iPhone 12 will include this sensor. Rumors suggest that it may only come in the 6.7-inch version of the iPhone 12 Pro, while others believe that it may also come in the Pro variant’s 6.1-inch version.

Source MacRumors (1)

Via MacRumors (2)

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Samsung Galaxy M51 launching in India on September 10

The Samsung Galaxy M51 announced yesterday will debut in India on September 10 at noon local time.

The Galaxy M51 is powered by the Snapdragon 730 SoC and runs Android 10-based One UI 2.0 out of the box. It has 6GB RAM and 128GB of expandable storage.

Samsung Galaxy M51 launching in India on September 10

The M51 is built around a 6.7″ FullHD+ Super AMOLED display having a punch hole up top in the center for the 32MP selfie camera. Around the back, it has an L-shaped quad camera setup, comprising a 64MP primary, 12MP ultrawide, 5MP macro and 5MP depth sensor units.

The biggest highlight of the Galaxy M51, however, is its massive 7,000 mAh battery that charges through a USB-C port at up to 25W. The smartphone also features a side-mounted fingerprint reader and comes with the 3.5mm headphone jack.

Samsung Galaxy M51 launching in India on September 10

The Galaxy M51 is currently up for pre-orders in Germany through the company’s official website for €360 with two color options – Black and White.

In India, it is rumored to be priced between INR25,000 ($340/€285) and INR30,000 ($410/€340), and it will be sold through Amazon.in in addition to other online and offline stores.

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JioFiber new Plans announced: Free 30 days trial, Subscription to 12 OTT Apps including Netflix

Reliance Jio has announced new JioFiber plans that start at Rs. 399 and offer up to 150Mbps upload and download speeds and ‘unlimited’ data.

The 4K set-top box in the bundle shall further grant access to subscriptions of 12 OTT services including Netflix, Disney+Hotstar, Prime videos, Zee5, and more with the Rs. 999 and Rs. 1499 rental plans. Of these 12 app subscriptions, one is exclusively available with Rs. 1499 plan and we are guessing this would be Netflix.

The inclusion of these OTT subscriptions in the plans should make the unification of DTH and OTT services under one umbrella (as was promised by JioTV+) a lot more meaningful.

JioTV+ also allows users to access these services without separate logins, and to search content across all different OTT services in one place.

JioFiber New Plan Details

These are all unlimited data plans. The Rs. 399 and Rs. 699 plans offer 30Mbps and 100Mbps speeds, respectively. The Rs. 999 plan offers up to 150Mbps upload and download speeds and access to content from 11 OTT apps. The Rs. 1499 Plan offers 300Mbps speeds and subscriptions to 12 OTT apps and we are guessing the extra app is Netflix.

JioFiber free trial

JioFiber free trial will be available to customers who register from September 1 onwards. Customers who came onboard between August 15 and September 1 can avail of the JioFiber free trial as well.

Existing JioFiber customers will get equivalent benefits as vouchers in My Jio app.

At the end of the trial period, customers will have the option to unconditionally cancel their subscription.

Commenting on this development, Mr. Akash Ambani, Director, Jio, said “JioFiber is already the largest Fiber provider in the country with over a million connected homes, but our vision for India and Indians is much larger.

We want to take Fiber to each and every home and empower every member of the family. After making India the largest and the fastest-growing country in mobile connectivity with Jio, JioFiber will propel India into global broadband leadership, thereby providing broadband to over 1,600 cities and towns. I urge everyone to Join the JioFiber movement to make India the broadband leader of the world.”

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Facebook users in Australia may be blocked from sharing news due to local regulations

Facebook is about to face some challenges in Australia as local government considers approving new regulations that will force digital platforms to pay for news publishers. In response to that, Facebook threatened to completely remove the option to share news for Australian users if the government approves these regulations.

As reported by NBC News, the new Australian rules would force Facebook and Google platforms to pay a commission for news outlets, which is considered the most aggressive attempt to change the power of big tech companies over the news business.

Facebook argues that the new regulations are impractical as they would force the social network to deal with revenue sharing agreements with publishers. Facebook head of global news partnerships Campbell Brown told NBC News that the company presented another proposal, but it wasn’t considered by the Australian government.

We tried to make this work. We proposed our version of something workable… Unfortunately, there are so many things in this proposed legislation that just make it untenable.

According to Brown, Facebook can now remove news entirely from the social network or accept a system that allows publishers to charge the company the price they want for individual news. “Unfortunately, no business can operate that way,” said Facebook’s head of global news.

Assuming this draft code becomes law, we will reluctantly stop allowing publishers and people in Australia from sharing local and international news on Facebook and Instagram.

Both Facebook and Google are responsible for more than half of the spending on digital advertising in the U.S., and more than 70% in Australia. That has made publishers want a percentage of these profits, even with their content reaching larger audiences with the help of these platforms.

Meanwhile, Apple is losing publishers on its Apple News+ subscription news platform. The New York Times was the most notable publisher that recently abandoned Apple’s platform claiming that “Apple had given it little in the way of direct relationships with readers and little control over the business.”

Other publishers who left Apple News+ complain about the 30% commission Apple takes out of each subscription, so it seems that the discussion about the value of news is just beginning.

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The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Workspaces – Forbes

Illuminated Cityscape With Binary Numbers At Night

Intelligent and intelligible office buildings

getty

Big buildings move slowly

It is a truth universally acknowledged that artificial intelligence will change everything. In the next few decades, the world will become intelligible, and in many ways, intelligent. But insiders suggest that the world of big office real estate will get there more slowly – at least in the world’s major cities.

The real estate industry in London, New York, Hong Kong and other world cities moves in cycles of 10 or 15 years. This is the period of the lease. After a tense renewal negotiation, and perhaps a big row, landlord and tenant are generally happy to leave each other alone until the next time. This does not encourage innovation, or investment in new services in between the renewals. There are alternatives to this arrangement. In Scandinavia, for instance, lease durations are shorter – often three years or so. This encourages a more collegiate working relationship, where landlord and tenant are more like business partners.

Another part of the pathology of major city real estate is the landmark building. With the possible exception of planners, everyone likes grand buildings: certainly, architects, developers, and the property managers and CEOs of big companies do. A mutual appreciation society is formed, which is less concerned about the impact on a business than about appearing in the right magazines, and winning awards.

Bottom-up demand

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Outside the big cities, priorities are different. To attract a major tenant to Dixons’ old headquarters in Hemel Hempstead, for instance, the landlord will need to seduce with pragmatism rather than glamour.

Tim Oldman is the founder and CEO of Leesman, a firm which helps clients understand how to manage their workspaces in the best interests of their staff and their businesses. He says there is plenty of opportunity for AI to enhance real estate, and much of the impetus for it to happen will come from the employees who work in office buildings rather than the developers who design and build them. Employees, the actual users of buildings, will be welcoming AI into many corners of their lives in the coming years and decades, often without realising it. They will expect the same convenience and efficiency at work that they experience at home and when travelling. They will demand more from their employers and their landlords.

Christina Wood is responsible for two of Emap’s conferences on the office sector: Property Week’s annual flagship event WorkSpace, and AV Magazine’s new annual event AVWorks, which explores the changing role of AV in the workspace. She says that “workspaces are undergoing an evolution that increasingly looks like a revolution, powered by technology innovation and driven by workforce demands for flexibility, connectivity, safety and style.”

Responsive buildings

Buildings should be smart, and increasingly they will be. Smart buildings will be a major component of smart cities, a phenomenon which we have been hearing about since the end of the last century, and which will finally start to become a reality in the coming decade, enabled in part by 5G.

Buildings should know what load they are handling at any given time. They should provide the right amount of heat and light: not too little and not too much. The air conditioning should not go off at 7pm when an after-hours conference is in full flow. They should monitor noise levels, and let occupants know where the quiet places are, if they ask. They should manage the movement of water and waste intelligently. All this and much more is possible, given enough sensors, and a sensible approach to the use of data.

Imagine we are colleagues who usually work in different buildings. Today we are both in the head office, and our calendars show that we have scheduled a meeting. An intelligent building could suggest workspaces near to each other. Tim Oldman calls this “assisted serendipity”.

Generation Z is coming into the workplace. They are not naive about data and the potential for its mis-use, but they are more comfortable with sharing it in return for a defined benefit. Older generations are somewhat less trusting. We expect our taxi firm to know when we will be exiting the building, and to have a car waiting. But we are suspicious if the building wants to know our movements. Employees in Asian countries show more trust than those in France and Germany, say, with the US and the UK in between.

RPA and helpdesks

Robotic process automation, or RPA, can make mundane office interactions smoother and more efficient. But we will want it to be smart. IT helpdesks should not be rewarded for closing a ticket quickly, but for solving your problem in a way which means you won’t come back with the same problem a week later – and neither will anyone else.

That said, spreadsheet-driven efficiency is not always the best solution. Face-to-face “genius bar”-style helpdesks routinely deliver twice the level of customer satisfaction as the same service delivered over the phone, even when they use exactly the same people, the same technology, and the same infrastructure. There is a time and place for machines, and a time and a place for humans.

Predictive maintenance

Rolls Royce is said to make more money from predictive maintenance plans than it makes by selling engines. Sensors in their engines relay huge volumes of real-time data about each engine component to headquarters in Derby. If a fault is developing, they can often have the relevant spare part waiting at the next airport before the pilot even knows there’s a problem. One day, buildings will operate this way too.

The technology to enable these services is not cheap today, and an investment bank or a top management consultancy can offer their employees features which will not be available for years to workers in the garment industry in the developing world. There will be digital divides, but the divisions will be constantly changing, with laggards catching up, and sometimes overtaking, as they leapfrog legacy infrastructures. China is a world leader in smartphone payment apps partly because its banking infrastructure was so poor.

Accelerated by Covid

Covid will bring new pressure to bear on developers and landlords. Employees will demand biosecurity measures such as the provision of air which is fresh and filtered air, not re-circulated. They may want to know how many people are in which parts of the building, to help them maintain physical distancing. This means more sensors, and more data.

The great unplanned experiment in working from home which we are all engaged in thanks to covid-19 will probably result in a blended approach to office life in the future. Working from home suits some people very well, reducing commuting time, and enabling them to spend more time with their families. But others miss the decompression that commuting allows, and many of us don’t have good working environments at home. In the winter, many homes are draughty, and the cost of heating them all day long can be considerable.

Tim Oldman thinks the net impact on demand for office space will probably be a slight reduction overall, and a new mix of locations. There are indications that companies will provide satellite offices closer to where their people live, perhaps sharing space with workers from other firms. This is the same principle as the co-working facilities provided by WeWork and Regus, but whereas those companies have buildings in city centres, there will be a new demand for space on local High Streets.

Retail banks have spotted this as an opportunity, a way of using the branch network which they have been shrinking as people shift to online banking. Old bank branches can be transformed into safe and comfortable satellite offices, and restore some life to tired suburban streets. Companies will have to up their game to co-ordinate this more flexible approach, and landlords will need to help them. They will need to collect and analyse information about where their people are each day, and develop and refine algorithms to predict where they will be tomorrow.

Some employers will face a crisis of trust as we emerge from the pandemic. Millions of us have been been trusted to work from home, and to the surprise of more than a few senior managers, it has mostly worked well. Snatching back the laptop and demanding that people come straight back to the office is not a good idea. Companies will adopt different approaches, and some will be more successful than others. Facebook has told its staff they can work from wherever they want, but their salary will be adjusted downwards if they leave the Bay Area. Google has simply offered every employee $1,000 to make their home offices more effective.

The way we work is being changed by lessons learned during the pandemic, and by the deployment of AI throughout the economy. Builders and owners of large office buildings must not get left behind.

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Toward a machine learning model that can reason about everyday actions – MIT News

The ability to reason abstractly about events as they unfold is a defining feature of human intelligence. We know instinctively that crying and writing are means of communicating, and that a panda falling from a tree and a plane landing are variations on descending. 

Organizing the world into abstract categories does not come easily to computers, but in recent years researchers have inched closer by training machine learning models on words and images infused with structural information about the world, and how objects, animals, and actions relate. In a new study at the European Conference on Computer Vision this month, researchers unveiled a hybrid language-vision model that can compare and contrast a set of dynamic events captured on video to tease out the high-level concepts connecting them. 

Their model did as well as or better than humans at two types of visual reasoning tasks — picking the video that conceptually best completes the set, and picking the video that doesn’t fit. Shown videos of a dog barking and a man howling beside his dog, for example, the model completed the set by picking the crying baby from a set of five videos. Researchers replicated their results on two datasets for training AI systems in action recognition: MIT’s Multi-Moments in Time and DeepMind’s Kinetics.

“We show that you can build abstraction into an AI system to perform ordinary visual reasoning tasks close to a human level,” says the study’s senior author Aude Oliva, a senior research scientist at MIT, co-director of the MIT Quest for Intelligence, and MIT director of the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab. “A model that can recognize abstract events will give more accurate, logical predictions and be more useful for decision-making.”

As deep neural networks become expert at recognizing objects and actions in photos and video, researchers have set their sights on the next milestone: abstraction, and training models to reason about what they see. In one approach, researchers have merged the pattern-matching power of deep nets with the logic of symbolic programs to teach a model to interpret complex object relationships in a scene. Here, in another approach, researchers capitalize on the relationships embedded in the meanings of words to give their model visual reasoning power.

“Language representations allow us to integrate contextual information learned from text databases into our visual models,” says study co-author Mathew Monfort, a research scientist at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). “Words like ‘running,’ ‘lifting,’ and ‘boxing’ share some common characteristics that make them more closely related to the concept ‘exercising,’ for example, than ‘driving.’ ”

Using WordNet, a database of word meanings, the researchers mapped the relation of each action-class label in Moments and Kinetics to the other labels in both datasets. Words like “sculpting,” “carving,” and “cutting,” for example, were connected to higher-level concepts like “crafting,” “making art,” and “cooking.” Now when the model recognizes an activity like sculpting, it can pick out conceptually similar activities in the dataset. 

This relational graph of abstract classes is used to train the model to perform two basic tasks. Given a set of videos, the model creates a numerical representation for each video that aligns with the word representations of the actions shown in the video. An abstraction module then combines the representations generated for each video in the set to create a new set representation that is used to identify the abstraction shared by all the videos in the set.

To see how the model would do compared to humans, the researchers asked human subjects to perform the same set of visual reasoning tasks online. To their surprise, the model performed as well as humans in many scenarios, sometimes with unexpected results. In a variation on the set completion task, after watching a video of someone wrapping a gift and covering an item in tape, the model suggested a video of someone at the beach burying someone else in the sand. 

“It’s effectively ‘covering,’ but very different from the visual features of the other clips,” says Camilo Fosco, a PhD student at MIT who is co-first author of the study with PhD student Alex Andonian. “Conceptually it fits, but I had to think about it.”

Limitations of the model include a tendency to overemphasize some features. In one case, it suggested completing a set of sports videos with a video of a baby and a ball, apparently associating balls with exercise and competition.

A deep learning model that can be trained to “think” more abstractly may be capable of learning with fewer data, say researchers. Abstraction also paves the way toward higher-level, more human-like reasoning.

“One hallmark of human cognition is our ability to describe something in relation to something else — to compare and to contrast,” says Oliva. “It’s a rich and efficient way to learn that could eventually lead to machine learning models that can understand analogies and are that much closer to communicating intelligently with us.”

Other authors of the study are Allen Lee from MIT, Rogerio Feris from IBM, and Carl Vondrick from Columbia University.

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Gillmor Gang: Platforming

Much was made during the Republican Convention of the lack of a party platform. The media characterized this as a capitulation to the Cult of Trump phenomenon, but the questioned begged was: so what? If you’re running as a candidate to disrupt the status quo…. But beneath the media framing, an important question emerges. What exactly is the platform we need to emerge from the toxic situation we find ourselves in?

For months, if not years, the technology industry has been working on a new platform to succeed the previous one. Mobile would seem to be that fundamental shift from the desktop world of Windows and PCs. The twin dominance of powerful phones by Google and Apple has created a new language of notifications and streaming video perfectly timed for the devastating pandemic. Our devices are now the front lines for managing the struggle to stay alive for our loved ones, the economy, and our future.

Zoom is of course the poster child for all that it enables, and certainly what it doesn’t. The notion of work from home is more likely a question of what is home and what’s the difference with work? The routines of life are congealing around the interactions with phone, watch, iPad, laptop, and TV. When I wake up, the first dive is for the notification stream built up overnight from overseas and then the East Coast. The rhythm varies from day to day: intense on Monday as the weekend cobwebs dissipate, more issue oriented through the middle of the week, and finally a thank-god-it’s Friday feel. Email, text messages, media updates, and work calendar reminders.

And then there’s the outline of the new platform — live streaming notifications from what some call citizen media, or the influencer network, or the loyal opposition. That last one refers to the decline in trust of the mainstream media. Maybe it’s just me, but the cable model of host-driven cyclical repetition of the headlines, talking heads, and medical ads adds up to a trip first to the mute button and eventually the off switch. Which plugs me right back into the notification stream and a new contract with us based on whether we click on the link or even allow the notification in the first place.

And these new voices are networks of one or a few, broadcasting on a global reach pastiche of cloud services that begin with the ubiquity of Zoom and its click and you’re there ease of on boarding. Then there are the key networks of record as it were: Facebook Live, Twitter/Periscope, YouTube, and maybe LinkedIn if you’re Brent Leary and got an early invite. There’s a whole bunch of streaming accelerators like Restream and StreamYard and Just Streams (I made that up) to use software and a dash of hardware to do what it took many thousands of dollars and cables just a few years ago. Right now it’s early days, but soon you’ll be seeing something that looks like the media it’s replacing as the OG buys in.

Don’t believe me? Just look at how streaming has disrupted the television industry. Or the music business. Or the reemergence of podcasting and newsletters. Or how messaging is growing rapidly as a preferred digital commerce and marketing channel. The pandemic has certainly had a devastating effect with the loss of theaters, events, and travel that drive so much of our economy and the emotional underpinning of our lives. But as we learn to respect the power of the virus to force this digital wave of transformation, we fuel the winners that emerge from a new hybrid blend of evolution and adaptation.

Technology has often been seen as impersonal and cold to the touch. But now we should be making friends with robots for touchless shopping, At the beginning of this Gillmor Gang session, Frank Radice seemed stunned by the administration’s takeover of the symbols of our Washington monuments for political purposes. By the end, he seemed more hopeful of a different result. We have more ways now of making our voices heard, broadcasting our own names in fireworks above and beyond the fake news and suppression. Our platform: suppress the virus, not the vote.

__________________

The Gillmor Gang — Frank Radice, Michael Markman, Keith Teare, Denis Pombriant, Brent Leary, and Steve Gillmor. Recorded live Friday, August 28, 2020.

Produced and directed by Tina Chase Gillmor @tinagillmor

@fradice, @mickeleh, @denispombriant, @kteare, @brentleary, @stevegillmor, @gillmorgang

For more, subscribe to the Gillmor Gang Newsletter and join the notification feed here on Telegram.

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Attackers are trying to exploit a high-severity zeroday in Cisco gear

A complex network of wires and computing devices.

Telecoms and data-center operators take note: attackers are actively trying to exploit a high-severity zeroday vulnerability in Cisco networking devices, the company warned over the weekend.

The security flaw resides in Cisco’s iOS XR Software, an operating system for carrier-grade routers and other networking devices used by telecommunications and data-center providers. In an advisory published on Saturday, the networking-gear manufacturer said that a patch is not yet available and provided no timeline for when one would be released.

Memory exhaustion

CVE-2020-3566, as the vulnerability is tracked, allows attackers to “cause memory exhaustion, resulting in instability of other processes” including but not limited to interior and exterior routing protocols. Exploits work by sending maliciously crafted Internet Group Management Protocol traffic. Normally, IGMP communications are used by one-to-many networking applications to conserve resources when streaming video and related content. A flaw in the way iOS XR Software queues IGMP packets makes it possible to consume memory resources.

“An attacker could exploit this vulnerability by sending crafted IGMP traffic to an affected device,” Saturday’s advisory stated. “A successful exploit could allow the attacker to cause memory exhaustion, resulting in instability of other processes. These processes may include, but are not limited to, interior and exterior routing protocols.”

Independent researcher Troy Mursch, who monitors active Internet attacks using honeypots—or simulated production networks belonging to organizations and consumers—told me he had seen limited signs of exploitation attempts.

“There was some IGMP scanning activity last week, but we haven’t seen a widespread type of attack,” he said.

He said the most likely purpose of the attacks would be to cause denial of services that, by definition, prevent the intended use of products, often to huge swaths of the Internet.

DVMRP

Attacks have the potential to be severe because they threaten high-availability servers where reliability and security are paramount. To be vulnerable, a device must be configured to accept traffic that uses DVMRP, short for the Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol. Networks use DVMRP to share information between routers in the transport of IP multicast packets. Networks that have no need of DVMRP often turn it off.

Cisco didn’t elaborate on what the attacks were doing beyond saying they could exhaust memory that would disrupt various processes. Cisco also didn’t say if any of the exploit attempts are succeeding. The company rated the severity of the vulnerability “high” with a Common Vulnerability Scoring System tally of 8.6 out of a total of 10. The IGMP packet-queuing flaw resides in the Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol folded into iOS XR.

The advisory provides indicators that users can check to look for evidence they’re under attack. The document says there are no workarounds available to use until a patch can be installed. It does, however, list things administrators can do to mitigate the effects.

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How Home Automation Can Keep Homes Sanitized During the Pandemic – Security Sales & Integration

Thanks to features like geofencing and Bluetooth disarming, today’s control panels can allow for a completely automated and touchless home experience.

We’ve all seen movies that take place in the future where people arrive to their homes and instantly everything turns on automatically. There’s no flicking of a light switch or physical disarmament of a security system. However, the reality is we are now living in those times.

Smartphones can be used to literally automate the entire home —increasing convenience and decreasing energy bills. During the COVID-19 crisis especially, consumers are trying to eliminate as many touch-points as possible.

Qolsys Senior Director of Global Security & Smart Product Marketing Jeremy McLerran explains how control panels such as the Qolsys IQ Panel are able to execute such features:

“Bluetooth touchless disarming is one of our favorite features and one that our security dealers primarily are telling us closes their sale 20% more often than other platforms out there. The concept is that you would pair your smartphone with the panel. When the panel’s been armed into away mode (you can set up a geofence with Alarm.com to remind you to arm your panel in away mode) and you come home, the smartphone in your pocket or purse automatically connects with the security panel, disarming it and then through the magic of Alarm.com or a smart rule, also say at the same time do these other actions.

For example, because that rule is set up in the Cloud now … you’ll literally walk up to the house from the driveway and before you even reach the front door, you hear the door unlock, you’re able to simply turn the handle, walk inside and the home is getting set to the right temperature, the lights are on and you didn’t have to type anything into your security system.”

This type of hands-free automation is especially useful while society continues to endure the COVID-19 pandemic. McLerran adds that dealers and end users are finding this capability especially appealing:

“In today’s current climate, we’re also having dealers telling us that they’re getting tremendous reactions from their customers saying that this is not only secure and convenient, but it’s also sanitary. You’re trying to reduce the amount of things you have to walk around and wipe off with a Clorox wipe — now you don’t have to have the keypad on your smart door lock, your security panel keypad, your light switch, your thermostat, those don’t have to be added to the list because those are automatically happening without you touching them.

So the only thing you’re having to sanitize potentially is the doorknob handle itself and then maybe your car door handle. It’s that convenience with the added sanitization as well.”

If you want to learn more about the benefits of home controls and how to profit off them, make sure to read this feature with more insights from McLerran and other experts from the industry.

To learn more about coronavirus-specific solutions being offered by the security industry, check out SSI‘s official coronavirus page.

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AVerMedia Live Gamer Duo review — The right capture card for livestreamers

AVerMedia’s Live Gamer Duo makes so much sense, so why did it take so long to turn into reality? The key feature is that it has two HDMI inputs. One is an HDMI 2.0 port for your console or gaming PC. The other is an HDMI 1.4 that is ideal for something like a mirrorless camera. This enables you to have one piece of equipment for capturing all of your imaging devices, which should help simplify the livestreaming process.

The AVerMedia Live Gamer Duo is available for $250. It captures 1080p60 footage in HDR through its HDMI 1 port. And that can pass-through a 2160p60, 1440p144, or 1080p240 image (all in HDR) to your display. The HDMI 2 port, meanwhile, captures 1080p60. So this isn’t a card for recording 4K lossless video from a PlayStation 5 or the upcoming RTX 3080. That is a good thing, however, because of the price.

At $250, this is a well-positioned card for anyone who needs to capture both a gaming feed and a camera.

Simple yet powerful

The biggest benefit of a capture card like this is that it eliminates the need for multiple individual capture cards. AVerMedia’s Live Gamer Duo does the job of an Elgato Gaming HD60S+ and its Camlink all by itself, all while maintaining that attractive price.

But in simplifying the hardware, AVerMedia doesn’t skimp on the capabilities. You can easily bring the game feed and camera feed into a tool like OBS or Xsplit. But it also gives you the option of sending each HDMI port to different software. This is important if you want to capture full 1080p60 video from both feeds and then edit them together later.

This makes the Duo an easy recommendation because it does everything that almost any streamer would ever need. Even if you’re not planning to use a fancy, expensive DSLR or mirrorless camera to start, this gives you the option to upgrade in the future. And at just $50 more than the Elgato HD60 S+, that seems like a smart move.

AVerMedia’s Live Gamer Duo makes some necessary compromises

You can tell that one of AVerMedia’s goals with the Live Gamer Duo was to keep the price down. It succeeded, and it did so without any major sacrifices. But that doesn’t mean the Duo is without shortcomings.

A big frustration for me is the lack of HDMI 2.1. I get that support for HDMI 2.1 is limited now, but that’s going to change in a matter of months. PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, and the next-gen GPUs from Nvidia and AMD will all use HDMI 2.1. And that means we won’t get 2160p120 video pass-through on the Duo. Even worse, we don’t get adaptive sync, which enables the framerate to sync up across devices to eliminate tearing and jittering. Support for adaptive sync would make the Duo a lot better at handling a second PC, but since it processes video at 60Hz, it can actually produce more tearing in your footage if you play at a higher refresh-rate.

Other issues include the lack of 2160p30 support on the camera port. This card should be able to handle that — although I get that AVerMedia likely doesn’t want to imply that this is a 4K capture device.

The last issue is that the card itself has a somewhat bulky profile. This can make it difficult to fit into you case if you have a lot of other PCIe devices.

You should get it

When I think about who this capture card is for, I get excited. The AVerMedia Live Gamer Duo is great for anyone who wants to focus on livestreaming. That audience won’t even notice its issues. All they’ll know is that it provides a streamlined solution for getting high-quality video from both a source and a camera.

And it makes sense to recommend at $250 because it’ll save you money, space, and time in the future.

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Upcoming Smartphone Launches in September 2020 – TechnoSports

The wait is almost over. After just one day, in the month of September, a huge number of smartphones from various companies are going to be launched. It will be a festive month for smartphone lovers. Let’s see what are those smartphones are going to be released in the next month.

1. ZTE Axon 20 (September 1)

This phone will run on Android 10 OS and powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G 7nm CPU Octa-Core (1 x 2.4GHz + 1 x 2.2GHz + 6 x 1.8GHz Kryo 475 CPUs). This phone weighs 198 g and will have a 6.92 inches Technology OLED (Screen resolution 1080 x 2460 pixels) Capacitive Touchscreen. There are three RAm variants of 6 /8 /12 GB and two variants of internal storage 64 / 128 GB. This phone has a 64 MP + 8 MP + 2 MP + 2 MP Quad Camera with LED Flash and a 32 MP selfie shooter in the front. It has a decent battery of 4,200 mAH and most importantly this phone 4G Dual VoLTE as well as 5G connectivity.

Also read: ZTE Axon 20 5G to have Four different colour options

2. OPPO F17 Series (September 2):

OPPO F17 series phones will be powered by MediaTek Helio P90 processor and will run on Android 10 OS. Regarding the display, this phone will have a 6.5-inches (1080 x 2400 Pixels) capacitive touchscreen, multi-touch screen display protected by Corning Gorilla Glass. This will come in an 8GB RAM and 128 GB of internal storage variant. Memory is also expandable to 256GB. Coming to its camera specs, this will have a 48 MP + 8 MP + 5 MP + 2 MP Quad Rear Camera with LED Flash and a 16 MP selfie shooter in the front. It has a decent battery of 4,500 mAH (supported by VOOC flash charge) and the price is expected to be Rs. 21,990.

Also read: Oppo F17 and F17 Pro is officially arriving on September 2

3. POCO X3 (September 7):

POCO X3 will have a huge 6.67-inch 120Hz AMOLED display with a 240Hz touch display. This phone will run on Android 10 Os and will be powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 732 SoC. it will have a 64-megapixel quad rear camera set up with a 20-megapixel front camera. The battery will be of 5,160 mAH with 33W fast charging support. This phone has a side-mounted fingerprint scanner. Regarding the RAM and internal storage, this phone will have 6GB RAM and 64GB internal storage, which is expandable to 512 GB.

Also read: POCO X3 launching on 7th September might pack in Snapdragon 732G SoC

4. Sony Xperia 5 II (September 17):

This phone has a display size of 6.1-inches (1080 x 2520 pixels, 21:9 ratio) and also has OLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors, protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 6 with 120Hz refresh rate. It is powered by the Qualcomm SM8250 Snapdragon 865 (7 nm+) processor and runs on Android 10 OS. It has a triple camera of 12MP wide + 12MP telephoto + 12 ultra-wide sensor. It has 8GB RAM and 128GB internal storage and also a decent battery of 4,000mAH, supported by fast charging.

Also read: Leaked promo video of Sony Xperia 5 II gives a detailed view

5. Realme X7 Series (September 1)

This phone has a 6.43-inches (1080 x 2400 Pixels) AMOLED display with a refresh rate of 120Hz, protected by Corning Gorilla Glass v5. This is powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G Processor and runs on Android 10 OS. Regarding its camera, Realme X7 has a 64 MP + 8 MP + 2 MP + 2 MP Quad rear camera set up with a 32MP selfie shooter. This phone will have a 6GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage (expandable up to 256GB). It has a decent battery of 4,300mAH which is supported by a 65W superfast charging. The Realme X7 series supports 5G connectivity.

Also read: Realme V3 expected to be the most affordable 5G phone: Specification and Price revealed

6. Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 (September 1)

This will be an expensive phone from Samsung, which will run on Android 10 and powered by the Qualcomm SM8250 Snapdragon 865+ Processor, supported by Samsung One UI. This phone has a folding display of 7.6-inches (1768 x 2208 Pixels) with a refresh rate of 120Hz. It has a triple rear camera of 12 MP + 12 MP + 12 MP and a dual front camera of 10 MP + 10 MP. This folding phone will have 12GB RAM and 256GB internal storage. Regarding the battery, this phone will have a decent battery of 4,500mAH. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 supports 5G connectivity.

Also read: Samsung Galaxy M51 appeared in the official German company website: Specifications revealed

7. Realme 7 Series (September 3)

The Realme 7 Series smartphones are powered by the MediaTek Helio G90T Octa-core Processor, which runs on Android 10 (Realme UI). This phone has a 6.5 inches (1080 x 2400 pixels, 20:9) punch-hole type IPS LCD display with a refresh rate of 90Hz. Coming to its camera specification, this phone has a Quad Rear camera setup of 64 MP + 8 MP + 2 MP + 2 MP and a 32MP front selfie camera. The Realme X7 series phones have 6GB RAM and 64GB internal memory (expandable up to 256GB). It has a decent battery of 5,000mAH that supports 30W fast charging with USB-Type C. This series does not support 5G connectivity.

Also read: iPhone 12 Pro Max is expected to launch soon leaked specifications

8. Motorola Razr 5G (September 9)

The Motorola Razr 5G has a flexible display of 6.20-inches and it will run on Android 10 OS. This is powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 765 processor, coupled with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of internal storage. Coming to its camera specification, this phone has a 48-megapixel rear camera and a 20-megapixel secondary shooter/ front camera. This phone also has a 2,854mAH battery with 18W fast charging support. This phone supports dual-SIM (Nano + eSIM) with 5G capability.

Also read: Vivo has filed the patent for a new smartphone: Report

9. Samsung Galaxy M51 (September *date not fixed*):

Coming to its specification, this phone comes with a 6.67-inch full-HD+ (1,080×2,340 pixels) Super AMOLED display with a 60Hz refresh rate. It runs on Android 10 OS and powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 730G SoC Processor. This phone has 8GB RAM and 64GB internal storage that is expandable up to 512GB. Coming to its camera, this phone has an L-shaped Quad Rear camera set up of 64MP + 12MP + 5MP + 5MP and a decent front camera of 32-megapixel and it will be a hole-punch style of selfie camera. Now coming to the battery part, the M51 is has a huge 7,000mAH battery with 25W fast charging. This phone also supports dual SIM connectivity (5G not supported) and USB Type-C port.

Also read: Samsung Galaxy M51 Full specifications revealed through Samsung’s German Website

Firework Videos

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A felt desk pad really ties this setup together

iMac Setup In this setup, everything is in its right place.
Photo: @landonbtw

Landon Bytheway is a Salt Lake City-based content creator for Full Time Filmmaker, a crash course on everything film. And his setup is geared for creating top-quality videos. The linchpin of the rig is a 27-inch iMac. It rests on top of a Walnut Monitor Desk Stand by Grovemade. Mounted over it is a 34-inch LG Curved UlraWide that takes this rig to the next level. In fact his only complaint about the setup is the kink he gets in his neck from staring upwards so long.

To build the desk itself, he got a beautiful 70×40-inch slab of Acadia wood from Home Depot and attached it onto an electric UPLIFT V2 Commercial Standing Desk Frame. This sit-stand desk is his favorite part of the whole setup. When he is not standing, he sits on an ErgoChair 2 from Autonomous. The only slight thing you could say about the ErgoChair is that it might be over-designed. It looks like it was meant for Quasimodo.

Bytheway used to have the Apple Magic Keyboard and Trackpad but has since ditched them. Instead, he picked up a Keychron K2 Bluetooth Wireless Mechanical Keyboard and replaced the enter key with a custom built one that better matches the Acadia finish. He loves the classic “click” noise that mechanical keyboards make when he types. He pairs it with a Logitech MX Master 2s mouse, the precursor of the legendary Master MX 3, which many call the best mouse on the planet.

For audio, this perfectionist has a pair of Klipsch The Sixes Powered Monitor Speakers. These beautiful mid-century inspired speakers not only perfectly compliment the desk but also pack quite a punch. They have 6 1/2-inch long woofers for some awesome bass. For more intimate listening he has a pair of beyerdynamic DT 770 Pro 250 ohm Limited Edition Professional Studio Headphones. They sit atop a Grovemade Walnut Headphone Stand, which, with its wood and black leather design, make it blend in like a chameleon. He also has a pair of AirPods Pro for on-the-go listening and an Echo Dot for casual listening. No matter the mood, this guy is strapped for audio.

He uses a Rode USB Cardioid Condenser Microphone for recording voice-overs and while in Zoom meetings. To simplify his workspace he bought himself a Satechi Aluminum Type-C Clamp Hub Pro. For data management he has a SanDisk 2TB Extreme Portable External SSD and a Mediasonic USB Bay SATA Hard Drive Enclosure. The Wool Felt Pad by Grovemade really ties the setup together.

Shop these items now:

Via: @landonbtw

If you would like to see your setup featured on Cult of Mac, send some high-res pictures to [email protected]. Please provide a detailed list of your equipment. Tell us what you like or dislike about your setup, and fill us in on any special touches or challenges.

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Apple’s App War Needs Peace – The New York Times

I asked for ideas on how Apple could improve the app store from Jacob Eiting, a founder of RevenueCat, which helps app makers design in-app purchases and knows what drives developers crazy.

Specify how developers can fix rejected apps: Apple says yes or no to each new iPhone app or app update, based on the company’s 12,700-word app rule book — not including addendums. (The United States Constitution plus all the amendments runs for 7,600 words.)

Eiting said developers sometimes get rejection letters that simply recite a portion of Apple’s rules. He said it would be more helpful if Apple’s staff offered specific suggestions for what developers could change — sometimes as minor as tweaking a menu — to get the app approved.

Improve Apple’s payments technology: Eiting said it could take weeks or longer for app makers to write software that links their app to Apple’s proprietary system for people to pay for stuff with a fingerprint or face scan. Creating software hookups with other payments technology is much simpler, Eiting said.

Clarify the gray zone: Apple has two categories of app purchases: When you buy something virtual, like an e-book, Apple collects from the app maker a fee of up to 30 percent on the purchase. When you buy something to use in the real world, like a physical book or an Uber ride, Apple doesn’t charge a fee.

But an increasing number of apps offer services that are somewhere between real and virtual — personal training or cooking classes conducted over an app, for example.

Eiting said Apple needed to clarify when the company will assess commissions on apps that offer these hybrid activities. Confusion over this question is stopping some apps before they even start, he said.

Consider an independent app review: There are inevitable questions about conflict of interest between app makers and Apple’s own apps that compete with them. The founders of Blix, an email app maker that has fought with Apple, suggested to me that Apple create an independent app review process to make sure it isn’t unfairly punishing rival apps.

Apple has in the past made changes to its app system to respond to developers’ complaints, and the company told me it’s always open to more. Any tweaks, though, won’t go as far as some app makers want: essentially, to blow up Apple’s control over what apps are allowed on people’s iPhones.

But it’s still possible to revamp the app system in ways that could bring more calm for Apple, developers and our smartphone-dependent lives.


Brian X. Chen, the consumer technology columnist for The New York Times, offers these helpful tips to tame the apps that nag us too much or bog down our phones:

Apps can make our lives better. But some pester you with too many notifications, and others hog too much battery life or device storage.

Here are four steps you can take to minimize app nuisances:

1) Declutter: Purge all the apps you haven’t used for a long time.

2) Find and eliminate the storage hogs: On iPhones, go to Settings > General > iPhone Storage to see a list of the apps that are taking up the most space on your device. Select each one of them and follow the recommendations to reduce their load.

On Android devices, use Google’s tool called Files, which has an option to sort apps on your device by the biggest storage hogs.

3) Minimize notifications: On iPhones, go to Settings > Notifications to see a switchboard of apps that send notifications. On Androids, do the same thing by opening Settings > Apps & Notifications > Notifications.

From there, turn off notifications for all but the most important apps such as messaging and email.

4) Find the battery suckers: Be on the lookout for apps that are active for extended periods, even when you’re not using them, as this can drain your battery life.

On iPhones and Android phones, open the Settings app, and in the Battery menu, there are sorted lists of apps that are using the most energy.

On the iPhone’s battery usage screen, tap on an app to reveal information about how much of your battery life it is consuming when you’re actively using it (“on screen”) compared with when you’re not (“background”).

On Android devices, the most useful information is the timers for “CPU total” and “CPU foreground.” Foreground is how much time you had the app open; subtract “foreground” from “total,” and you’ll know how much time it has been chipping away at your battery even when you haven’t been using it.

When you find a battery-sucking culprit, go to the app’s individual settings and turn off some features to minimize its power usage.


  • We have no clue what’s happening with TikTok: The app might be shut down in the United States soon, or get sold and stay alive, or face something else entirely. The latest twist my colleagues reported: The government of China, the home country of TikTok’s current owner, ByteDance, revised its rules in ways that might — as the U.S. government has done — dictate who gets to own TikTok based on national security guidelines.

  • Episode 4 zillion of tech companies’ reality contradicting their idealism: Erin Griffith, who writes about young tech companies for The Times, takes us inside the conflicts at Carta. This start-up was built to give workers more power at their companies and help close gaps in pay and workplace treatment for women. But Erin reported that some of Carta’s employees — many of them women — said that they were mistreated and underpaid by their own employer, and that their complaints were ignored or worse.

  • Virtual school might mean missing out on special education: With many school districts in the United States restarting at least in part online this fall, it’s not clear whether children with disabilities will be able to receive physical or occupational therapy or other forms of specialized instruction that they often get in school, The Wall Street Journal reported.

I recently learned that a shore bird called the Wilson’s Phalarope spins in the water to create a vortex that sucks in insects and other tasty treats. A whole marsh of these spinning birds, as this 2013 video shows, is quite a sight.


We want to hear from you. Tell us what you think of this newsletter and what else you’d like us to explore. You can reach us at ontech@nytimes.com.

If you don’t already get this newsletter in your inbox, please sign up here.

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Dell Latitude 14 9410 2-in-1 Convertible Review: A Latitude 7400 At Heart

In review: Dell Latitude 14 9410 2-in-1 P110G. Test unit provided by Dell USIn review: Dell Latitude 14 9410 2-in-1 P110G. Test unit provided by Dell US

The good news is that the Latitude 9410 2-in-1 isn’t all that different from the already excellent Latitude 7400 2-in-1. Dell didn’t mess with a good thing and instead simply upgraded some components like the CPU and WLAN to remain competitive against the HP EliteBook x360 and Lenovo Yoga convertible series.

On the other hand, the bad news is that the Latitude 9410 2-in-1 isn’t all that different from the already excellent Latitude 7400 2-in-1. It’s a double-edged sword because users can purchase last year’s Latitude 7400 2-in-1 for essentially the same experience and performance as the pricier 2020 Latitude 9410 2-in-1. Minor drawbacks like the lack of a proper webcam or brighter display options haven’t been addressed and GPU options are still nonexistent, but they don’t detract from a superb chassis design that’s barely a year old.

Don’t let the brand new name fool you because the Latitude 9410 2-in-1 is just a minor refresh of the already excellent Latitude 7400 2-in-1. It’s still one of the best 14-inch business convertibles you can get right now even though it may not have the brightest display out there.

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Six strategic areas identified for shared faculty hiring in computing

Nearly every aspect of the modern world is being transformed by computing. As computing technology continues to revolutionize the way people live, work, learn, and interact, computing research and education are increasingly playing a role in a broad range of academic disciplines, and are in turn being shaped by this expanding breadth.

To connect computing and other disciplines in addressing critical challenges and opportunities facing the world today, the MIT Stephen A. Schwarzman College of Computing is planning to create 25 new faculty positions that will be shared between the college and an MIT department or school. Hiring for these new positions will be focused on six strategic areas of inquiry, to build capacity at MIT in key computing domains that cut across departments and schools. The shared faculty members are expected to engage in research and teaching that contributes to their home department, that is of mutual value to that department and the college, and that helps form and strengthen cross-departmental ties.

“These new shared faculty positions present an unprecedented opportunity to develop crucial areas at MIT which connect computing with other disciplines,” says Daniel Huttenlocher, dean of the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing. “By coordinated hiring between the college and departments and schools, we expect to have significant impact with multiple touch points across MIT.”

The six strategic areas and the schools expected to be involved in hiring for each are as follows:

Social, Economic, and Ethical Implications of Computing and Networks. Associated schools: School of Humanities, Arts and the Social Sciences and MIT Sloan School of Management.

There have been tremendous advances in new digital platforms and algorithms, which have already transformed our economic, social, and even political lives. But the future societal implications of these technologies and the consequences of the use and misuse of massive social data are poorly understood. There are exciting opportunities for building on the growing intellectual connections between computer science, data science, and social science and humanities, in order to bring a better conceptual framework to understand the social and economic implications, ethical dimensions, and regulation of these technologies.

Focusing on the interplay between computing systems and our understanding of individuals and societal institutions, this strategic hiring area will include faculty whose work focuses on the broader consequences of the changing digital and information environment, market design, digital commerce and competition, and economic and social networks. Issues of interest include how computing and AI technologies have shaped and are shaping the work of the future; how social media tools have reshaped political campaigns, changed the nature and organization of mass protests, and spurred governments to either reduce or dramatically enhance censorship and social control; increasing challenges in adjudicating what information is reliable, what is slanted, and what is entirely fake; conceptions of privacy, fairness, and transparency of algorithms; and the effects of new technologies on democratic governance.

Computing and Natural Intelligence: Cognition, Perception, and Language. Associated schools: School of Science; School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences; and School of Architecture and Planning.

Intelligence — what it is, how the brain produces it, and how it can be engineered — is simultaneously one of the greatest open questions in natural sciences and the most important engineering challenges of our time. Significant advances in computing and machine learning have enabled a better understanding of the brain and the mind. Concurrently, neuroscience and cognitive science have started to give meaningful engineering guidance to AI and related computing efforts. Yet, huge gaps remain in connecting the science and engineering of intelligence.

Integrating science, computing, and social sciences and humanities, this strategic hiring area aims to address the gap between science and engineering of intelligence, in order to make transformative advances in AI and deepen our understanding of natural intelligence. Hiring in this area is expected to advance a holistic approach to understanding human perception and cognition through work such as the study of computational properties of language by bridging linguistic theory, cognitive science, and computer science; improving the art of listening by re-engineering music through music classification and machine learning, music cognition, and new interfaces for musical expression; discovering how artificial systems might help explain natural intelligence and vice versa; and seeking ways in which computing can aid in human expression, communications, health, and meaning.

Computing in Health and Life Sciences. Associated schools: School of Engineering; School of Science; and MIT Sloan School of Management.

Computing is increasingly becoming an indispensable tool in the health and life sciences. A key area is facilitating new approaches to identifying molecular and biomolecular agents with desired functions and for discovering new medications and new means of diagnosis. For instance, machine learning provides a unique opportunity in the pursuit of molecular and biomolecular discovery to parameterize and augment physics-based models, or possibly even replace them, and enable a revolution in molecular science and engineering. Another major area is health-care delivery, where novel algorithms, high performance computing, and machine learning offer new possibilities to transform health monitoring and treatment planning, facilitating better patient care, and enabling more effective ways to help prevent disease. In diagnosis, machine learning methods hold the promise of improved detection of diseases, increasing both specificity and sensitivity of imaging and testing.

This strategic area aims to hire faculty who help create transformative new computational methods in health and life sciences, while complementing the considerable existing work at MIT by forging additional connections. The broad scope ranges from computational approaches to fundamental problems in molecular design and synthesis for human health; to reshaping health-care delivery and personalized medicine; to understanding radiation effects and optimizing dose delivery on target cells; to improving tracing, imaging, and diagnosis techniques.

Computing for Health of the Planet. Associated schools: School of Engineering; School of Science; and School of Architecture and Planning.

The health of the planet is one of the most important challenges facing humankind today. Rapid industrialization has led to a number of serious threats to human and ecosystem health, including climate change, unsafe levels of air and water pollution, coastal and agricultural land erosion, and many others. Ensuring the health and safety of our planet necessitates an interdisciplinary approach that connects scientific understanding, engineering solutions, social, economic, and political aspects, with new computational methods to provide data-driven models and solutions for providing clean air, usable water, resilient food, efficient transportation systems, and identifying sustainable sources of energy.

This strategic hiring area will help facilitate such collaborations by bringing together expertise that will enable us to advance physical understanding of low-carbon energy solutions, earth-climate modelling, and urban planning through high performance computing, transformational numerical methods, and/or machine learning techniques.

Computing and Human Experience. Associated schools: School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences and School of Architecture and Planning.

Computing and digital technologies are challenging the very ways in which people understand reality and our role in it. These technologies are embedded in the everyday lives of people around the world, and while frequently highly useful, they can reflect cultural assumptions and technological heritage, even though they are often viewed as being neutral prescriptions for structuring the world. Indeed, as becomes increasingly apparent, these technologies are able to alter individual and societal perceptions and actions, or affect societal institutions, in ways that are not broadly understood or intended. Moreover, although these technologies are conventionally developed for improved efficacy or efficiency, they can also provide opportunities for less utilitarian purposes such as supporting introspection and personal reflection.

This strategic hiring area focuses on growing the set of scholars in the social sciences, humanities, and computing who examine technology designs, systems, policies, and practices that can address the dual challenges of the lack of understanding of these technologies and their implications, including the design of systems that may help ameliorate rather than exacerbate inequalities. It further aims to develop techniques and systems that help people interpret and gain understanding from societal and historical data, including in humanities disciplines such as comparative literature, history, and art and architectural history.

Quantum Computing. Associated schools: School of Engineering and School of Science.

One of the most promising directions for continuing improvements in computing power comes from quantum mechanics. In the coming years, new hardware, algorithms, and discoveries offer the potential to dramatically increase the power of quantum computers far beyond current machines. Achieving these advances poses challenges that span multiple scientific and engineering fields, and from quantum hardware to quantum computing algorithms. Potential quantum computing applications span a broad range of fields, including chemistry, biology, materials science, atmospheric modeling, urban system simulation, nuclear engineering, finance, optimization, and others, requiring a deep understanding of both quantum computing algorithms and the problem space.

This strategic hiring area aims to build on MIT’s rich set of activities in the space to catalyze research and education in quantum computing and quantum information across the Institute, including the study of quantum materials; developing robust controllable quantum devices and networks that can faithfully transmit quantum information; and new algorithms for machine learning, AI, optimization, and data processing to fully leverage the promise of quantum computing.

A coordinated approach

Over the past few months, the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing has undertaken a strategic planning exercise to identify key areas for hiring the new shared faculty. The process has been led by Huttenlocher, together with MIT Provost Martin Schmidt and the deans of the five schools — Anantha Chandrakasan, dean of the School of Engineering; Melissa Nobles, Kenan Sahin Dean of the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences; Hashim Sarkis, dean of the School of Architecture and Planning; David Schmittlein, John C. Head III Dean of MIT Sloan; and Michael Sipser, dean of the School of Science — beginning with input from departments across the Institute.

This input was in the form of proposals for interdisciplinary computing areas that were solicited from department heads. A total of 29 proposals were received. Over a six-week period, the committee worked with proposing departments to identify strategic hiring themes. The process yielded the six areas that cover several critically important directions. 

“These areas not only bring together computing with numerous departments and schools, but also involve multiple modes of academic inquiry, offering opportunities for new collaborations in research and teaching across a broad range of fields,” says Schmidt. “I’m excited to see us launch this critical part of the college’s mission.”

The college will also coordinate with each of the five schools to ensure that diversity, equity, and inclusion is at the forefront for all of the hiring areas.

Hiring for the 2020-21 academic year

While the number of searches and involved schools will vary from year to year, the plan for the coming academic year is to have five searches, one with each school. These searches will be in three of the six strategic hiring areas as follows:

Social, Economic, and Ethical Implications of Computing and Networks will focus on two searches, one with the Department of Philosophy in the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, and one with the MIT Sloan School of Management.

Computing and Natural Intelligence: Cognition, Perception and Language will focus on one search with the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences in the School of Science.

Computing for Health of the Planet will focus on two searches, one with the Department of Urban Studies and Planning in the School of Architecture and Planning, and one with a department to be identified in the School of Engineering.

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