الثلاثاء، 31 مارس 2020

NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Google's Pixel manufacturing contract is reportedly the only profitable one for FIH.

Google announced the Pixel 3 and 3 XL with much fanfare in 2018, and we all hoped the issues from the previous generation would be solved. Alas, it was not to be. Google struggled to justify missing features and build quality issues throughout the Pixel 3’s run, and now that run has ended. Google confirms it’s run out of Pixel 3 and 3 XL devices. 

As is customary, Google continued to sell its previous-generation Pixels after the Pixel 4 and 4 XL launched. You could pick up one of the older devices for roughly half of the initial $800-900 price tag. That wasn’t really a bad deal, either. Unlike most Android device makers, Google commits to updating its phones every month for three years. While some new phones are still shipping with Android 9 Pie, the Pixel 3 has Android 10 and about 18 months of remaining update support. 

However, the Google Store suddenly reported no remaining stock early this week. Google has now confirmed that it sold through all its remaining units. Some other retailers might still have the phone for sale, but its days are clearly numbered. Last year, the Pixel 2 and 2 XL left the Google Store around the same time, so this isn’t much of a surprise. 

Credit: Zlata Ivleva/PCMag

The Pixel 3 and 3 XL were the first Google phones in years to support wireless charging, and the larger of the two had a display notch. That was all the rage among Android phones in 2017-2018. Even if they didn’t need the notch, it was a quick and easy way to ape the iPhone. Google’s gigantic Pixel 3 XL notch made the phone look lopsided, but it housed a pair of front-facing cameras. The Pixel 4 and 4 XL dropped that feature in favor of a larger bezel with 3D face unlock sensors. 

Throughout the Pixel 3 life cycle, there were signs that sales weren’t going well. In an earnings call last spring, Google admitted that the Pixel 3 and 3 XL were selling worse than the Pixel 2 and 2 XL. That was surprising as the second-gen Pixels weren’t particularly well-received either. Google’s budget-oriented Pixel 3a and 3a XL, on the other hand, sold extremely well and remain some of the best Android phones you can buy. There’s still no successor to that phone — Google was expected to announce the Pixel 4a at the I/O conference this year, but that has been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Today you can save a bundle on storage devices, including a handful of SSDs and some exceptionally priced external HDDs. The latter of these are well-suited as backup drives and network storage solutions due to their large capacity.

Western Digital 5TB Elements Portable External USB 3.0 HDD ($98.99)

This external HDD can hold an enormous 5TB of data and is small enough to fit into the pocket of your jeans. It can also transfer data relatively quickly using USB 3.0, and it’s marked down from $129.99 to $98.99 at B&H Photo Video.

Western Digital My Book 12TB External HDD ($259.99)

Western Digital equipped this external hard drive with a whopping 12TB of storage space. Although we as a society are using an ever-increasing amount of storage space to save documents and multimedia files, this drive still likely has more space than the average person will ever need. It’s also backed by a three-year warranty, which should give you some comfort as to how reliable the drive is. Currently, it’s marked down to just $259.99.

Seagate IronWolf 12TB NAS 7,200RPM HDD ($289.99)

Seagate built this 3.5-inch hard drive to hold an unusually large amount of data. With a storage capacity of 12TB, this drive is one of the largest 3.5-inch drives commercially available and it’s currently marked down from $369.99 to $289.99.

Featured Deals

  • WD Elements 5TB USB 3.0 Portable External Hard Drive for $98.99 at B&H Photo Video (Coupon applied in cart – list price $129.99)
  • WD My Book 12TB USB 3.0 Desktop External Hard Drive for $184.99 at B&H Photo Video (Coupon applied in cart – list price $259.99)
  • Seagate IronWolf 12TB 7200RPM 3.5″ Internal NAS Hard Drive for $289.99 at B&H Photo Video (list price $369.99)
  • Seagate Backup Plus 4TB USB 3.0 External Hard Drive for $79.99 at B&H Photo Video (list price $109.99)
  • Intel 660p 2TB NVMe M.2 Internal SSD for $219 at B&H Photo Video (list price $299)
  • WD My Passport Ultra 5TB USB 3.0 Type-C External Hard Drive for Mac for $115.99 at B&H Photo Video (Coupon applied in cart – list price $159.99)
  • WD My Cloud Pro PR4100 40TB 4-Bay NAS Server (4 x 10TB) for $1499.99 at B&H Photo Video (Coupon applied in cart – list price $1799.99)
  • WD Red 4TB 5400RPM 3.5″ Internal NAS Hard Drive for $94.99 at B&H Photo Video (list price $149.99)
  • WD Desktop Everyday 6TB SATA III 3.5″ Internal Hard Drive for $109.99 at B&H Photo Video (list price $219.99)
  • Seagate IronWolf 6TB NAS 3.5″ SATA Internal Hard Drive for $129.99 at Adorama (list price $164.99)
  • Seagate BarraCuda Pro 10TB 7200RPM 3.5″ Internal Hard Drive for $334.99 at B&H Photo Video (list price $434.99)
  • G-Technology G-DRIVE USB G1 4TB USB 3.0 Hard Drive for $119.95 at B&H Photo Video (Coupon applied in cart – list price $129.95)
  • SanDisk Ultra Fit 256GB USB 3.1 Flash Drive for $36.99 at Adorama (list price $54.95)

Note: Terms and conditions apply. See the relevant retail sites for more information. For more great deals, go to our partners at TechBargains.com.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Lego has an Ideas website, where users can submit ideas for products that Lego will consider turning into actual collectible sets. The idea of the website is simple: Anyone can upload a Lego design, which is then voted on by the community. If a project receives a certain number of votes, the length of time it has to meet the next interest tier is extended. If it reaches 10,000 votes, Lego may officially consider the set for production. Now, someone has proposed a GPU based on a design some of you might find a wee bit familiar.

3dfx may have vanished from the industry decades ago, but one creator has had the idea to bring the GPU back in Lego form. For those of you don’t remember, the 3dfx Voodoo was the first mainstream 3D accelerator for gaming systems. The Voodoo family implemented a simplified version of OpenGL that 3dfx called “Glide.” It wasn’t capable of displaying a 2D desktop — you actually connected the Voodoo or Voodoo 2 directly to your existing 2D GPU by an external monitor cable, then hooked your monitor to the Voodoo card.

3dfx-Lego-Voodoo-2

Fun fact: we didn’t actually call them GPUs back then, because the term hadn’t been invented yet. Nvidia popularized the term GPU, while VPU, ATI’s proposed alternative, failed to catch on in-market. The 3dfx Voodoo became a legendary GPU for a lot of people. I didn’t personally own one; I got into 3D gaming when an uncle bought me a Diamond Monster 3D II for Christmas circa 1997, and I’m a bit disappointed that we’re starting with the original Voodoo rather than the significantly improved follow-up.

As the creator notes:

In the early 1990’s, more complex PC video games would demand more powerful computers, forcing PC gamers to upgrade from 286’s to expensive 386’s and beyond to play the latest titles. With the appearance of 3D graphics cards, such radical upgrades were no longer as necessary and cards such as the Voodoo quickly became the upgrade of choice for PC owners wanting to play games such Quake by id Software at their best. This card was one of a short series of PC cards I made for fun in 2019 as fun way to pass the time. I’ve enjoyed making them and they have been a source of some enjoyable nostalgia.

The Lego Voodoo has met the 100-vote and 1,000-vote requirement interest tiers so far. I’ve never bought a Lego set as an adult, but if the company actually built this, I’d probably buy one. The fact that there’s a faux shadow on the Lego build is a really nice touch to the way we typically handle product photography. No word on whether this model comes with an SLI pass-through cable, and you may have trouble finding a motherboard that supports Lego PCI, but it looks like a worthy endeavor to us.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

The social distancing call has gone out far and wide. And though it might seem unexpected, most Americans say they’re actually complying with the six-foot rule. Recent Gallup poll numbers show more than 90 percent of folks are staying away from any large gatherings.

But that urge to reach out and connect doesn’t just go away. So even while you stay separated from most of the outside world, there are still ways to stay engaged with the rest of humanity. The three apps available in The Social Distancing Lifetime Subscription Bundle ft. Rosetta Stone ($199, over 76 percent off) can go a long way toward making your suddenly isolated world seem a bit larger once again.

The package is headlined with lifetime access to the entire catalog of language training offered by Rosetta Stone. There’s a reason the Wall Street Journal calls the web’s language learning leader “the next best thing to living in a country.” With Rosetta Stone, your language training is immersive, including interactive lessons that help vocabulary, grammar and writing rules for your new language truly sink in.

Since the true measure of language acquisition is how well you speak, Rosetta Stone’s own TruAccent speech recognition technology actually listens to your speech and offers an immediate critique, so you’ll always know what you need to work on. And with the lifetime subscription, you can move through all 24 languages like Spanish, French, Greek, Japanese, Russian and more at your own pace.

If you really want to understand the world, use your time inside to read. And with a lifetime subscription to the 12min Premium Micro Book Library, you’ll have the access and method for downing multiple volumes each day. The 12min team has taken hundreds of nonfiction best-sellers and influential texts and boiled them down, extracting their most important themes and relatable knowledge into concise 12-minute summaries. With the app, you can download any micro book you want and get all of its knowledge whenever you create a small gap in your day.

Finally, social distancing may only be temporary, but web security is forever — so this lifetime of KeepSolid VPN Unlimited protection will remain an invaluable resource long after your current stay-at-home stint ends. One of the top-rated VPN services available, KeepSolid’s 10 million worldwide customers enjoy unrestricted web access with no speed or bandwidth limits and a full host of security protections to ensure they always remain completely anonymous online. And if you’re sick of geo-restrictions that block streaming services in some parts of the world, KeepSolid can slip you around those walls effortlessly, so you can keep up with content around the world hassle-free.

Lifetime access to all three services would usually run you almost $850, but with this limited-time deal, all three are available now together for less than $70 a piece.

Note: Terms and conditions apply. See the relevant retail sites for more information. For more great deals, go to our partners at TechBargains.com.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

It’s been a tough week for Detroit, with the president yapping at US automakers to produce ventilators, shields, and masks faster. Now the date-shifted North American International Auto Show is kaput for 2020. Last held in January 2019 and slated this year for June 2020, the show organizers called it off when it became likely the downtown convention center, TCF Arena, would be requisitioned for use as a FEMA field hospital to support hospitals overtaxed treating coronavirus patients over the summer.

The show has now been reset for June 2021 as a convention-center auto show, plus rites-of-spring outdoor events along the Detroit River.

Detroit’s convention center, Cobo Hall, in 2018, now called TCF Center, after the frozen yogurt company. Sorry, we meant bank. TCF has 300 branches, about 10 times as many as TCBY has flavors.

Auto Shows in Free-Fall Before the Pandemic

It has been a tough year and a half for auto shows. How tough?

  • Detroit, the North American International Auto Show, was most recently held in January 2018. Where it’s cold and snows. A couple of times in the past two decades, auto execs and press people were stranded in Detroit because Detroit Metro Airport was snowed in. Journos had nothing to do … except write snarky articles. The show was reset for June 2020, a 17-month gap, and now it’s off until 2021.

  • The world’s most important show, Frankfurt (IAA), saw attendance fall at the odd-years-only  September 2019 show from 931,700 in 2015 to 810,000 in 2017 to just 561,000. Opel board member Karl-Thomas Neumann called it a “huge fail.” (Isn’t it nice when businessmen speak their minds, even if it annoys the Frankfurt Convention Bureau?) Sponsors put the 2021 show’s location out for bid. The commercial vehicles show continues in Hannover in September 2020. For the auto show, Munich won over Berlin, Hamburg, and three others for the next show in the fall of 2021.
  • The Los Angeles Auto Show went off in November 2019 and generally did well, in part because of its heavy emphasis on alternative-energy vehicles. Also, LA is a nice place for auto execs and the media to be heading into winter. LA is the de facto auto capital of the Americas because of design and tech centers in SoCal and Silicon Valley, plus the number of international automakers with US headquarters there. Unlike in Detroit, there’s no hometown bias in the media coverage. LA took on a life of its own when it gave up its early January date in 2006 for November/December. For now, the 2020 show is still on, Nov. 18-29. LA’s biggest problem is the convention center is small and cut into two halls that are a five-minute walk apart.
  • The Chicago Auto Show, the fourth of the three major US auto shows, went off Feb. 13-21, 2020 and was the last major or mid-major auto show to be held. For impact, Chicago ranks just behind the three international US shows – Detroit, New York, LA – but is the envy of the others for the best show facility, McCormick Place. It’s the one US site that can handle a million visitors. Should that many people show up for an auto exposition in the near future.
  • The Geneva International Motor Show (GIMS) was slated for March 2-15, just as the expanse of the coronavirus epidemic in China became evident. Automakers had been pulling their top execs back from the show, and days before the Swiss government banned gatherings of more than 1,000 people, which ended the show. Geneva is considered one of the Big Five auto shows of the world – Frankfurt, Geneva, Detroit, Paris, Tokyo – but its attendance slipped in previous years. Non-participants included Cadillac, Ford, Jaguar, Lamborghini, Land Rover, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Peugeot, Citroen, Opel, Vauxhall, Subaru, Tata, Tesla, and Volvo. But the show went on, online: Virtually every automaker with a major introduction live-streamed the rollout from headquarters.
  • The New York International Auto Show (NYIAS), scheduled every year starting the Wednesday before Easter (April 8) and running a week and a half, postponed the show to one of the least desirable times of the year, the week and a half leading up to Labor Day weekend. Press days are Aug. 26-27, with public days through Sept. 6. Greater New York is one of three sales hotspots for luxury cars along with SoCal and Miami, but Audi, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz said they’ll skip the show.
  • The Paris Motor Show, Oct. 1-11, just announced the main part of the show has been canceled. For now, off-site events are planned: Movin’On and Smart City.
  • The Tokyo Motor Show, Oct. 22-Nov. 2, has made no announcement of plans for this year.

Happier days: Steve McQueen’s exuberant granddaughter Molly McQueen, in 2018 at the rollout of the new Ford Bullitt Mustang, done in the same Dark Highland Green as in the 1968 movie.

Detroit’s Tough-Luck Story Gets Tougher

Detroit 2018 press days: Selfies against the Detroit River next to Cobo Hall with (we’re not sure) clouds reflected in the water. Or ice floes.

It has been a difficult week for the auto show, Michigan-based automakers, and the state’s economy. Detroit will now be going almost two and a half years between shows. More than any other city and show, the automakers and auto dealers have used NAIAS to remind themselves of past glory: when US automakers sold half the cars in the US and when GM alone sold half the cars (1962).

Even as market share shifted away from the Big Three – GM, Ford, and the Chrysler-Ram-Dodge part of FCA – Michigan remains the auto engineering capital of the Americas. When the automakers shed employees in the past 20 years, many of them went to work for big US suppliers such as Magna or Lear, or international suppliers with big presences: Bosch, Denso, Continental, ZF, Aisin, Hyundai and the like. At the same time, the era of Rust Belt assembly line jobs paying $30 an hour is gone and will never come back. Manufacturing growth, with factory workers making $15-$20 an hour to start, is in the new south: the Carolinas, Georgia Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas. Plus Tesla in California using a former Toyota/GM plant to build a small-scale EV company in one with the largest market value outside Toyota.

A GM technician setting up and testing machinery to produce Level 1 face masks in Warren, Michigan. GM will ramp to 50,000 masks per day within two weeks, and later to 100,000 if there’s need. (Probably will be.)

Meanwhile, POTUS Blasts GM

This should have been a good-news story week about automakers pitching in to help fight coronavirus (as have many industries). Ford, GM, and Chrysler (FCA) are recalling employees to build masks, face shields, and even respirators. At the same time, the White House has been praising and then criticizing the automakers for not being in production already.

Friday President Trump castigated GM and CEO Mary Barra for slow-walking production plans to build ventilators. This was the event where the president said both “General Motors” and “General Electric” in the same extended sentence and described the federal relief package as “$2.2 billion …. $2.2 trillion.” GE does make ventilators through its healthcare unit. GM is partnering with Ventec Life Systems. Insiders at GM and Ventec said the past week was not GM stalling, but cutting red tape and expediting parts ordering, finding the best-skilled workers, and getting plants ready. According to a story in Tuesday’s New York Times:

President Trump on Friday accused G.M. and its chief executive, Mary T. Barra, of dragging their feet on the project and directed his administration to force the company to make ventilators under a 1950s law. But accounts from five people with knowledge of the automaker’s plans depict an attempt by G.M. and its partner, Ventec Life Systems, a small maker of ventilators, to accelerate production of the devices.

With deaths surging as cases snowball, the two companies have moved urgently to find parts, place orders and deploy workers, the people said. Tasks that normally would take weeks or months have been completed in days. The companies expect production to begin in three weeks and the first ventilators to ship before the end of April.

Why automakers? They have big assembly lines that are the opposite of clean rooms. But they also have smaller, cleaner prototype rooms and rapid-development assembly areas that can, and will be, repurposed. One of the things automakers do well is source parts from third parties.

In the making of a car, we’re almost a century removed from the Ford River Rouge plant, where freighters docked at the 900-acre factory with iron ore and a finished Model A came out the other end. Instead, an automaker may produce the highest-value items itself, typically engines, and outsource tires, wheels, transmissions, infotainment, and driver-assist electronics, sometimes even body panels.

Some outside the administration allege that the executive branch is pressing GM, and many others, to light a fire now in order to make up for lost time responding in January. Multiple reports say the CDC and national security advisors in January described the coronavirus as out of control and on the way to being a pandemic – an epidemic that reaches much of the world.

Regardless, protective equipment and ventilators will begin flowing soon from automaker factories and other sources. At the same time, doctors, nurses, and hospital staff are stuck reusing old masks or creating makeshift protection until the so-called “arsenal of health” starts flowing. And with no end in sight for people suffering from Covid-19, there won’t be many auto shows, large or small, in the near future.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

NASA’s Mars 2020 mission is finally taking shape. The rover finally has a name — Perseverance, and engineers have wrapped up testing on the rover’s flying companion. The Mars Helicopter just spun its blades on Earth for the last time. When next it spins up, it’ll be on the red planet. 

NASA did not design the Mars 2020 mission or Perseverance rover around the Mars Helicopter, but it’s making the trip nonetheless. The helicopter is a technology demonstration, not an integral part of the mission. However, it could pave the way for future flying endeavors on Mars. The team has already confirmed that the helicopter should be able to fly in the thin Martian atmosphere thanks to its ultra-light design and the planet’s lower gravity. 

The last flight test took place about a year ago (see below), and the helicopter still hasn’t lifted off again — it’s tuned for the Martian atmosphere, so any flights on Earth require extensive preparation to avoid damaging the machinery. However, the team did conduct one more vital test of the rotors last week in the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility. 

Engineers ran the Mars Helicopter rotors at 50 RPM on a static test stand, which is much slower than they’ll rotate on Mars. The planet’s thin atmosphere means even a light craft like the four-pound helicopter needs a very high rate of rotation to generate lift. The design allows for up to 2,800 revolutions per minute, but it should be able to lift off at around 1,900 RPM. The JPL test confirms the motor is working as intended, and the helicopter is ready to be mounted on the underside of the Perseverance rover. 

Despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, NASA has worked to keep the Mars 2020 mission on-schedule. Work has stopped on the James Webb Space Telescope for now, but the clock is ticking for the rover. If it doesn’t launch as planned this summer, NASA will have to wait another two years for Earth and Mars to be aligned again. 

If all goes as planned, Perseverance will touch down on Mars in February 2021. It will deploy the helicopter, which has its own solar power system and camera. It will communicate with Perseverance wirelessly via the ZigBee radio protocol. Image data from the helicopter might help Perseverance navigate the challenging terrain of Mars, but future flying drones could be much more integral to exploring Mars.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Not everyone obsesses about their home energy use. But as rates climb and concern over the impact using electricity from the grid has on climate change, it is becoming increasingly popular to try to get a handle on what you’re using, which devices or appliances are using it, and whether there is anything practical you can do about it. In particular, for anyone thinking of investing in solar, each watt is real dollars, and reducing consumption — at least up to a point — can be a more cost-effective place to start.

That’s where the Sense home energy monitor ($299) comes in. The core of the Sense is a wireless current and voltage meter that installs into your electrical box and reads out how much power you are consuming at any given time. So far, that’s a pretty standard piece of gear. Where the interesting part comes in is that Sense will attempt to figure out the load created by specific appliances, allow you to label them as you figure out what they are, and then provide reports on the consumption from each device and estimated running cost. I’ve had one installed for just over a month, and have lots of findings to report.

Installing the Sense meter

We didn't have room in our box for the Sense, so we mounted it on the wallThe Sense is actually pretty easy to install. It does need to be wired to a 240-volt breaker, either dedicated or shared. Its sensors are the traditional “clamp” type current meters that can simply be placed around each leg supplying electricity to your house. If your panel has an easily accessible main breaker to shut it off, and you’re comfortable messing with circuit breakers, none of this is super-hard. But if you’re in any doubt, a licensed electrician should be able to do it in 30 minutes or less. Ideally, you’ll mount the Sense inside the electrical box, if there’s room, and run its antenna cable out through one of the punch outs. In our case, there wasn’t room in the box, so we used the provided mounting bracket to attach the Sense to the wall and ran the sensor wires into the box, as you can see from the attached photo.

If you have solar, then you can get an optional ($50) additional pair of current sensors to monitor your solar production. In our case, Sense helped us use one of those to monitor a third electrical leg instead since our house has a separate sub-panel for solar loads. Then you complete setting it up by doing the typical IoT drill of downloading an app, connecting to the meter directly, teaching it about your Wi-Fi, and then setting up an account with Sense that you can access from the app or the web.

Using the Sense App

Example of Sense showing current usage by device or categoryThe Sense mobile and web apps both allow you to look at a chart of your power consumption over time. They also feature graphs of power consumption by device — once Sense has identified a device — and a cute bubble chart of your largest power consumers currently. You can export data, add details for devices Sense has found, and see a list of devices alongside their current consumption.

Sense Is a Slow, but Patient, Learner

Sense learns about devices in your home or office by patiently watching power consumption, and looking for patterns in power usage. It combines your data with its database of devices found by other users to try to guess when it has found an identifiable power load. Once it does, it will attempt to put it in a category like “Light” or “Heat” and ask you if you recognize it and want to label it further.

Because Sense requires a lot of power cycles to identify devices, it can take days, weeks, or even months for it to sort out devices that don’t turn on and off all the time. In fact, it doesn’t have a clue about devices that are always on and lumps them into an “Always On” category. In our case, it found our refrigerator, oven, and microwave within a couple of weeks, although it seems to have lumped our Dishwasher and Instant Pot cooker together into a single appliance for some reason.

Using Sense to Isolate Power Hogs Manually

In our case, since we both run businesses from our house (all the time, not just now), a lot of our power consumption is computers, servers, and networking equipment. I was hopeful that Sense could learn to identify some of that and give us an idea of which ones were power hogs. Unfortunately, even after a month, it couldn’t. However, it did let us do a much more effective job of measuring them manually than we used to. Previously we had to either plug each device in turn into a portable power meter and let it run, or have someone with a radio out at our electric meter watching the change in power consumption when it was turned off and then back on. Now it was easy to stand by the electrical box and watch power consumption on the app as breakers were flipped off and back on (note that first, we made sure sensitive devices were on UPS backups, so they didn’t lose power, they just stopped drawing it from the box). That was helpful, but not entirely fulfilling. Fortunately, the folks at Sense showed me there is a better approach.

Smart Plugs Are Pretty Important

Sense has integrated with a variety of smart plugs and power strips. Once you activate one of those, not only can you see the load in the devices’s app, but the plug is automatically discovered by Sense and added to your device inventory. For a power strip, each plug appears separately. We tried this out with a Kasa Smart Plug Power Strip ($79.97) that provides six measured outlets along with 3 USB charging ports. By placing it in our “machine room” we were able to easily label our NAS devices and network equipment into the Sense app. Eventually, I’ll probably get some single smart plugs for our desktop computers and cable box. You can also control devices that are connected to a smart strip or plug, so if you find some that are power hogs, you can set up schedules for them that way.

Here’s What We Learned That We Didn’t Know Before

Sense at base is a real-time energy meter for your homeWe’ve been pretty obsessive about trying to quantify our electricity usage for a while — especially since we spent a lot on a solar installation 20 years ago, and upgraded it again recently, keeping our cost per KWh top of mind. So we already had a good handle on the easy stuff, but we’ve still learned plenty. First, it was a relief to find out that our 30-year-old refrigerator is actually fairly energy efficient, so we could stop worrying about whether we needed to replace it. Second, it was very helpful to start to get a handle on the 24 x 7 load of some of the NAS units that we mostly use to store backups. I realized that by time-shifting when we ran backups and the power schedules of those servers, we could save some power. It also makes clear when one of our servers or desktops isn’t falling asleep as scheduled (a problem I’ve had frequently with Windows), so that we knew to debug the issue. It can even alert you when a particular device powers on or off, although we haven’t really used that feature yet.

Adding a Sense to your home probably won’t change your life, and if you’re not already curious enough about your energy usage to be trying to figure it out on your own, it is unlikely to turn you into an energy sleuth. But if you are curious about where your power goes, and whether there are steps you can take to reduce your electricity demand, then it is a unique and helpful tool.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

It’s been almost exactly a month since I published my last Deep Space Nine report, where I showed how different AI software could upscale the show to something approaching HD quality. Despite the ongoing pandemic, I’ve kept the Cascade Lake testbed and RTX 2080 crunching busily away, testing various permutations. Some folks have contacted me to express interest in working together, and I’ve learned some interesting things along the way.

I haven’t been able to find my DVDs, so I bought Season 6 brand-new and started working with that source. I chose Season 6 because it has some of the best space-combat scenes, including the largest battle ever staged in the Star Trek universe in the episode “Sacrifice of Angels.” SoA was the obvious episode to work with and the Defiant image above is from an upscaled encode. Here’s the full shot.

I had hoped that the DVD source would offer a better upscaling alternative than using already-encoded MKVs. I still believe it does, but guys, I have to tell you — the baseline DS9 source sucks.

I watched this show when it was broadcast on cable, on a new 24-inch TV my parents had just bought. It’s one of my all-time favorite shows, and watching it on DVD looks nothing like watching it on TV did 25 years ago. Obviously the base resolution is low, but that’s not the problem. The video is noisy, it’s much darker than I remember, there’s a clearly visible 3:2 pulldown/telecine effect, and distant vessels are often heavily aliased (meaning they crawl with jagged lines). The credits are particularly bad as far as image quality. If the rest of the show looked as bad as the credits, I’d never want to watch it. I may upload a few videos just to show how rough they are.

Click to enlarge

This is what 3:2 pulldown looks like. You’re literally seeing half a frame of information, which is why every other line is blank. There are a number of these moments in any given episode, and while they don’t prevent anyone from enjoying the show, they can be annoying.

NanaVisitor

Nana Visitor’s reaction to the DVD source quality… or a very lucky pause on my part. You be the judge.

What I’ve Been Working On (and Learned)

Here’s the honest truth: You can get a pretty good looking video if you just rip the DVD without deinterlacing or detelecine via Handbrake (use the H.264 Production Max preset) and then upscale it. While the half-frame transitions are noticeable and annoying, upscaling this way actually cleans up some areas that are otherwise quite jagged and “crawly” at specific points in the show. If you want a one-and-done solution and you aren’t bothered by the occasional half-frame, it’s a great option and I recommend it. The result is 70-80 percent of what I think is likely possible, best-case. If you rip the DVD using Handbrake’s detelecine option, it will solve the half-frame flicker, but at the cost of introducing additional aliasing that wasn’t present before. In my opinion, the telecined upscaled DVD looks better, on the whole, than the detelecined Handbrake output post-upscale.

My long-term goal with this project is to create a guide using as much free software as is possible (Topaz VEAI is obviously a paid purchase). I’m working with a reader who has done some incredible color balance changes, and I’m excited about what that might mean for the project.

What I’ve done for the past month? About 600GB of renders at 3-8GB each. I’ve been examining color grading with DaVinci Resolve, rescaling in that same application, various AviSynth filters for antialiasing, detelecine, and deinterlacing using algorithms like QTGMC. The truth is, I could accelerate the process if I focused on smaller clips, but I prefer to upscale the entire episode. That way, I can check any trouble spot or problem area in one area of an encode against all the previous settings I’ve tested, to see how that particular area was handled.

Another thing I’ve learned? The best version of Deep Space Nine would be constructed clip by clip, using optimized video processing settings for each. I have no intention of slicing and dicing episodes up by hand, but if there was an episode you truly loved, you could achieve some truly impressive results that way.

I want to show you a short clip from “Sacrifice of Angels.” First, the DVD source and second, the upscaled output with QTGMC applied. QTGMC is a deinterlacing filter, not a detelecine filter, and it works by creating additional frames. The final output does not have the hypersmooth look of interpolated sports video, but I’ve had trouble matching audio to the clip. There’s a lot of hands-on learning involved in this kind of project because ultimately, each video benefits from a different set of filters. For best quality, change both videos to top available playback source.

This is the original DVD source. Note how the nacelles on the Miranda-class starship (the two ships in the opening frames) shimmer. This is telecined output, which means they look much better in this video than they do if I detelecine the source using Handbrake. There’s a lot of noise in certain frames and some visible compression artifacts in others.

This is the upscaled video after I applied QTGMC deinterlacing to it via a buggy and difficult-to-parse application named StaxRip. It’s been incredibly useful to me in certain respects, but if I’m being honest, I’m trying to find an alternative because this app is rather ornery and difficult to use. It also only seems to output H.265. Figuring out how to use applications like AviSynth (current user level: Bad) is part of the experience. One of our readers, Shortstick, has contacted me to show off some of his own color grading work on DS9, with impressive results:

We are looking into how to combine efforts and further improve the show.

Why I’m Doing This

If you watched Deep Space Nine on TV growing up as I did, I have news for you: You never actually saw the work that VFX designers put into those battle scenes. Watching “Sacrifice of Angels” in upscale on a much larger display, I was struck by how incredible the shots were. The space battle in Insurrection may have had more expensive special effects and a few more years of CGI advances, but it didn’t involve half as many ships or as many complex maneuvers.

Until I started working on this episode, I never thought about how space combat evolved from Star Trek: The Next Generation to DS9. On TNG, battle is almost stately, with large ships firing at each other from static positions. The exception to this is stern chases, where the Enterprise is pursued by an opponent.

DS9 changed all that. The decision to introduce the Defiant and to make it a small ship completely changed the rhythm and flow of space combat. The Defiant wasn’t made for stately, sweeping broadsides — it’s an antimatter-powered flying gun that can absorb significant amounts of damage while it blows your ass into next week. Above all, the Defiant is fast, and Jadzia Dax is one hell of a pilot.

The entire battle “language” of Star Trek changed dramatically between TNG and DS9, largely on the backs of the VFX artists who were tasked with doing the work. DS9 didn’t just add more ships; it showed those ships doing more things, with background battles often as dramatic as the foreground shots. True, some people disliked the look and preferred the idea of a more spread-out fleet engagement, but I’m not one of them. I’m watching a show in which aliens with no concept of time live inside a stable wormhole. I don’t need the starships to stay far away from each other to enjoy the battle scenes.

Speaking of wormholes…

Watching this episode in standard DVD quality is like looking at a da Vinci painting with 500 years of grime on it. You can recognize the mastery of the work, but there’s a lot of schmutz between you and it. Thanks to advances in AI processing, we’re finally seeing consumer tools that can wipe the grime away — and not just for DS9, but for any number of additional shows. The artists that worked on these episodes deserve to have their work seen in something approaching the way it could have looked.

I’m never going to be able to make these old DVDs look as good as what Paramount could do. Heck, I’m never going to improve them as much as a professional video editor could do. But Paramount has no plans to upgrade DS9 itself, and that means the only way to restore the TV show to some semblance of how it could look is with a lot of elbow grease, filter testing, and one exhausted RTX 2080. I think the work deserves to be done, even if Paramount disagrees.

Interested in helping? Give me an email or sound off below. Got ideas or tips for using AviSynth? Get in touch.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Google has essentially owned the premium Chromebook market ever since it launched the first Chromebook Pixel way back in 2013. Now, Samsung is about to dive in with its Galaxy Chromebook, which it unveiled at CES 2020. Samsung has finally announced a release date for the laptop, which starts at $1,000. You’ll be able to get the Galaxy Chromebook at Best Buy starting on April 6th

Many Chromebook aficionados were expecting Google to refresh the Pixelbook in 2019, but the company instead announced the less expensive Pixelbook Go. Samsung worked closely with Google on the Galaxy Chromebook, and many think of it as the true successor to the 2017 Pixelbook. Not only does it have impressive specs, but the design is also reminiscent of the Pixelbook. It’ll come in an understated gray color or the lovely “Fiesta Red” seen above.

The centerpiece of Samsung’s new Chromebook is the 13.3-inch 4K OLED screen. Yes, $1,000 is objectively a lot of money to spend on a Chromebook, but this will be one of the least-expensive, high-resolution OLED laptops available. It will also have 256GB of storage, 8GB of RAM, and a 10th generation Intel Core i5 CPU. At CES, Samsung said it would have a version with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage, but there’s no sign of that variant yet. Like other Samsung notebooks, the Galaxy Chromebook comes with a fingerprint sensor and a built-in stylus. 

The stylus docks inside the Galaxy Chromebook when not in use.

Google has worked to improve the value proposition of Chromebooks over the years with support for Android and Linux applications. The former is included on every Chromebook out of the box, but Linux support is still in beta and requires you to jump through some hoops. Still, the additional software capabilities help to justify the powerful hardware on a device like the Galaxy Chromebook. 

The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook is going to be a tough sell when other Chromebooks offer almost the same experience for much less. The Asus Chromebook Flip C434 is under $600, and the Google Pixelbook Go is $649. Samsung is probably hoping that 2017 Pixelbook owners will want an upgrade, but Google didn’t sell many of those until the prices dropped. Nevertheless, you can pick up a Galaxy Chromebook next week at Best Buy. There are no pre-orders available at this time.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

A few months ago, we covered how Mathwork’s Matlab software didn’t run workloads on AMD CPUs at full speed. These products use the Intel Math Kernel Library, which will only run fully optimized code on Intel CPUs. AMD CPUs were shunted into using a different and much slower code path. Despite widespread speculation from the community that MathWorks might either be unable or unwilling to patch the issue, the company has surprised us all and fixed it.

According to NedFlanders1976 (the same individual who made the original Reddit report), MathWorks has incorporated a permanent path fix into Matlab 2020a, the latest version of its application. Essentially, Matlab now always starts in a mode that allows it to run AVX2 code on AMD CPUs. Previously, you could only force this capability by creating a System Environment Variable or a special batch file to launch the program.

Kudos to Matlab

I’d like to acknowledge and thank MathWorks for being willing to resolve this issue and for doing so quickly. I’ve had a number of conversations on this topic with my colleague David Cardinal, who has more experience than I do with the software development side of things. One of the points he made in our discussions is that these sorts of situations play out very differently from the software developer’s perspective.

Matlab performance from our 3970X review. Top scores are from a non-optimized run, bottom scores use AVX2.

Individual developers may not be aware that the Intel MKL doesn’t execute AVX2 code on non-Intel CPUs. Even if developers do know, many applications have user bases that are almost entirely Intel-based. If 90-99 percent of your customers own Intel hardware to begin with, the AVX2 codepath issue isn’t going to look very pressing. Working with Intel to maximize performance on an application with a user base that has chosen to buy Intel processors doesn’t necessarily look unfair from the software developer’s perspective. The low performance of AMD’s Bulldozer-derived CPUs made these questions moot until the launch of Ryzen, and just because AMD launched Ryzen in 2017 doesn’t mean everyone running Matlab instantly ran out and bought one.

Given that developers may not be aware of the impact of these issues, I think it’s only fair to judge them by how they address the problem rather than by assuming immediate bad faith just because the issue exists. Evaluated by these criteria, MathWorks’ response is excellent — the company fixed the issue in the next major application update. While NedFlanders1976 notes that “If you use other software including the MKL, e.g. Anaconda, SymPy, etc. along with Matlab, you actually might want to keep that system-wide variable as the new fix only applies to Matlab,” but he states that Matlab itself has been updated appropriately. MathWorks also confirmed the update to ExtremeTech in a separate discussion, even though the fix is not listed in the Matlab 2020a release notes.

There aren’t that many applications that rely on Intel’s compiler or libraries in this manner, but it’s encouraging to see MathWorks react this quickly to guarantee best performance on both Intel and AMD hardware. There’s nothing wrong with using an Intel-optimized library, but if companies are going to do so, they ought to inform their users that they do so, allowing customers to buy the best hardware for the task. Ideally, they would also work with other CPU vendors to offer optimized code paths for their architectures or take action to allow AVX2 code to run unimpeded on CPUs that support it. MathWorks has opted for this last approach and we hope other vendors in similar situations either follow its example or release alternately-optimized code paths that don’t rely on the Intel MKL when running on an AMD CPU if a different library would produce faster results.

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الاثنين، 30 مارس 2020

NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Being a smart person does not preclude making foolish mistakes. Case in point: Australian astrophysicist Daniel Reardon. With the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, Reardon decided to tinker with a magnetic system that would warn people not to touch their faces. A noble idea, yes, but what followed was a comedy of errors that ended with Reardon in the hospital with four magnets stuck in his nose

As doctors are frequently reminding us lately, touching your face can cause infection via virus particles on your hands. It’s good advice to follow, but we all absentmindedly do it from time to time. Dr. Reardon’s idea was to use a magnetic field detector and neodymium magnets to set off an alarm if the wearer’s hand got too close to their face. Reardon studies pulsars and gravitational waves, but he admits to having no particular experience with electronic circuitry. Therein lies the problem. 

Reardon started by putting two small magnets inside his nostrils and two on the outside to hold them in place. This allowed him to test the magnetic field detector, moving it toward and away from his face. The fatal flaw in his plan was using powerful rare-earth magnets. He attempted to remove the magnets with another magnet, but the shape of the nostril prevents the sandwiched magnets from sliding out. As he attempted to pluck the magnets from his nose, he lost his grip and all the magnets became stuck to each other. This left Reardon with three powerful magnets in his left nostril and one in the right, all stuck together with his septum in between. “At this point, I ran out of magnets,” Reardon said.

If this happened to you (and don’t go thinking you’re too smart to get yourself in this situation—Reardon is an astrophysicist, after all), you’d probably go for pliers or tweezers to try and get the magnets out. That’s what Dr. Reardon attempted, but the magnets just magnetized the pliers, making it impossible to grab them. 

Luckily, Reardon’s partner works at a Melbourne hospital and took him to the emergency room so all her coworkers could get a laugh. Dr. Reardon was a good sport about it, and the staff was able to remove the magnets. The emergency room discharge paperwork shows that Reardon denied there are any more magnets in his nose. Thank goodness. We at ExtremeTech applaud Dr. Reardon’s outside-the-box thinking. 

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Stay home where it’s safe and indulge in a blazingly fast gaming experience with one of Dell’s 240Hz Alienware displays for just $384.99.

Dell Alienware AW2521HF 240Hz 1080p 24.5-Inch Gaming Monitor ($384.99)

Enjoy your games to the fullest with a blazing 240Hz monitor! In addition to its extreme refresh rate, this display features support for both FreeSync and G-Sync and a fast 1ms response time giving you a highly responsive gaming experience. Right now you can get this display from Dell marked down from $509.99 to $384.99.

Microsoft Surface Pro 7 Intel Core i3 12.3-Inch Tablet w/ 4GB RAM, 128GB SSD and Type Cover ($599.00)

Microsoft’s new Surface Pro 7 tablet features a 10th Gen Intel Core i3 processor and 4GB of RAM. Although it isn’t particularly powerful, its compact size and high-resolution display make it excellent to use while traveling. The tablet also comes with a type cover that lets you use the tablet as a PC, and the whole system weighs in at just 1.7 pounds. Best Buy is currently selling the Surface Pro 7 marked down from $959.00 to just $599.00.

DJI Mavic Mini Fly More Combo & Accessory Bundle ($499.00)

It’s dangerous to go outside right now, but with a drone, you are free to explore the outside world without the risk of contracting coronavirus. This drone features a high-quality quad HD camera and it comes bundled with tons of extra accessories including a 64GB SD card, a cleaning kit, and a bag for carrying and storing the drone and equipment in. Right now you can get it from Adorama marked down from $796.29 to just $499.00.

Featured Deals

  • Alienware AW2521HF 24.5″ 240Hz 1ms 1080p IPS Gaming Monitor for $384.99 at Dell (list price $509.99)
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  • Dell Vostro 3000 Intel Core i5-9400 6-core Desktop for $649.07 at Dell (use code: SAVE35 – list price $998.57)
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  • eufy RoboVac 25C WiFi Robot Vacuum with 1500Pa Suction for $149 at Walmart (list price $249.99)
  • Garmin Vivoactive 3 GPS Smartwatch for $129.99 at BuyDig (list price $269.99)
  • Arozzi Verona Pro V2 Gaming Chair for $229.99 at Best Buy (list price $379.99)
  • NordicTrack SpeedWeight Adjustable Dumbbells with Weight Racks (12.5 lbs Pair) for $139.99 at Walmart (list price $199)

 

Note: Terms and conditions apply. See the relevant retail sites for more information. For more great deals, go to our partners at TechBargains.com.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

There’s a lot of uncertainty around how long we’ll be self-isolating during this COVID-19 outbreak. Whether we’re hunkering down for the next couple weeks or several months, why not use this time to focus on a bit of personal development? In fact, if there’s any silver lining to this ordeal, it’s that we all have considerably more time to jump online and learn something new.

If there’s something you don’t know, there’s a good chance you might find it in the mountains of learning available through Integrity Training Online Workforce Courses. Right now, you can get a lifetime of access to their epic training archives for just $59, hundreds off the regular price.

This membership plan is truly the keys to the kingdom as Integrity opens up full access to more than 600 courses, each with its own completion certificate to prove your new skills. When it comes to business and IT, good luck finding a topic that an Integrity Training course doesn’t cover, including everything from IT certifications and project management to sales and marketing.

In addition to all those categories, you’ll also be able to choose from a wide array of training geared toward preparing you to get certified with some of the world’s most popular systems and providers. If you wanted to get certified with Microsoft services, Office or Azure, you can find the training you need here. CompTIA help? Also here. PMI Project Management certification prep? Affirmative.

Meanwhile, all this training is coming from expert instructors with serious experience in their fields, each with at least 15 years of experience and multiple certifications from providers like CompTIA, Cisco, Microsoft and more.

This kind of universal access for life is usually available for $1,450, but with the current deal, it’s on sale for just $59.

Note: Terms and conditions apply. See the relevant retail sites for more information. For more great deals, go to our partners at TechBargains.com.

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NEWS TECHNOLOGIE

Ford's Dave Jacek, 3D printing technical worker, with a prototype of a 3D-printed medical face shield done at Ford’s Advanced Manufacturing Center. (Photo: Ford)

Eighty years ago, automakers called themselves the “Arsenal of Democracy” as they built bombers, tanks, and heavy trucks for World War II. Now as Ford, GM and other carmakers in the US ramp up to manufacture ventilators and even masks, they’ve been labeled the “Arsenal of Health.”

It’s possible because automakers are more than mile-long assembly lines. They also have expertise in procuring parts, they have specialized short-run assembly lines for development work, and they have 3D printers. They also have a workforce that is otherwise unoccupied since automobile manufacturing has been shut down beginning March 18. Even Tesla shut down after a short-term holdout on the part of its CEO.

In the US, 17 million motor vehicles were produced in North America last year. Ramping up production of tools for dealing with coronavirus isn’t instantaneous, so the country has been hurt by the lag between the first knowledge of coronavirus in early January and early March when life as we know it started shutting down. Early January is when US intelligence services first learned of the magnitude of problems in China and the odds of the epidemic becoming a pandemic.

Medtronic ventilator. (Photo: Medtronic)

General Motors says it will work with Ventec Life Systems of Washington State “as soon as April” to build 10,000 ventilators a month at an electrical components factory in Kokomo, Indiana. The plan is to produce up to 200,000 ventilators, which would mean production through the end of 2021. Separately, GM at a Warren, Michigan facility will start producing masks in early April, ramping up to 50,000 a day; GM says it could later double the number.

Ford will work with GE Healthcare to do additional production of GE ventilators, meanwhile developing a simplified ventilator design that Ford would build. Similarly, Ford will partner with 3M to build additional 3M respirators and, again, designing a simpler respirator it would build. And it is designing and tooling for face shields that could be turned out 100,000-per-week at a Michigan plant.

Tesla said it will reopen its idled Gigafactory 2 in Buffalo, NY, to produce Medtronic ventilators. The factory has been an alternate source of pride and anger upstate. The so-called Buffalo Billion, a state grant of that amount, went to create high-tech factories. Much of it went to a factory that was, in alliance with Panasonic, to build solar panels through Tesla subsidiary SolarCity. Then it was repurposed to build lithium-ion battery cells for Teslas, and Tesla had a deadline of April to show the factory was up and running, building batteries in quantity. Now, it’s being repurposed, at least for the time being, to build ventilators.

The major makers of ventilators, pre-coronavirus, have capacity to build ventilators in the hundreds of units per month. Now they’re ramping to double or quadruple production but the needs are in the tens of thousands per month. A hundred thousand units in April would still not meet the spike in demand.

Praise, Criticism, Praise From the White House

General Motors has been alternately praised and criticized by President Trump. Friday he said he was invoking the Defense Production Act to produce ventilators.  A White House statement Friday said:

Our negotiations with GM regarding its ability to supply ventilators have been productive, but our fight against the virus is too urgent to allow the give-and-take of the contracting process to continue to run its normal course. GM was wasting time. Today’s action will help ensure the quick production of ventilators that will save American lives.

Other reports have said GM already had the project in motion and that it was unclear if the president had invoked DPA before Friday. At several news conferences, reporters tried to get the president to say if he earlier had invoked DPA. At Friday’s event, the president talked in the same sentence about getting “General Motors” to make ventilators and then referring to “General Electric.” That was the point where he spoke of $2 billion in relief funds then said $2 trillion. (The Coronavirus Aid Package, or stimulus, is for $2 trillion.)

Blacksmiths, not watchmakers: B-24 production at Ford Willow Run (MI) plant in World War II. (Photo via Wikipedia)

History of Repurposed Auto Factories

The automakers and Michigan media love “Arsenal of Health” because it harks back to World War II and the “Arsenal of Democracy.” In early 1942, the US ended auto production and turned to build weapons of war. One of the greatest advantages the US and the Allies held over the Axis powers was its ability to vastly outproduce armaments as well as food and clothing.

The automakers also reveled in their ability to produce complex weapons (tanks) and even more complex weapons (bombers) when the aviation industry doubted Ford, GM, and other carmakers had the skill. James Dutch Kindelberger, then-president of North American Aviation (P-51 Mustang and other planes), ridiculed the idea that mere auto factory workers at Ford’s Willow Run, Michigan, plant could build an 18-ton aircraft such as the B-24 Liberator. (A 3,000-pound car of the 1930s had about 15,000 parts. The B-24 had 450,000.)

“You can’t expect a blacksmith to make a watch overnight,” Kindelberger famously said. He was wrong. By war’s end, four genuine aircraft company factories run by Consolidated Aircraft, Douglas Aircraft, and North American Aviation turned out 9,808 Liberators, while Ford’s mile-long factory (included a turntable and 90-degree turn halfway through) built 8,465, each with four Buick-built, 1,200-hp Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp engines.

Now, it’s the automakers’ turn again, including the ones who got a billion-dollar bailout a decade ago.

Top image: Ford’s Dave Jacek, 3D printing technical worker, with a prototype of a 3D-printed medical face shield done at Ford’s Advanced Manufacturing Center. (Photo: Ford)

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