Sir David Attenborough is no stranger to VR. The beloved naturalist and TV presenter has worked on immersive, look-where-you-like films for the Natural History Museum (NHM) in London, the American Museum of Natural History and Google. Now, the docume…
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Airbuds (Near) Real-Time Translator
Posted in: Today's ChiliLanguage barriers not easy to overcome, and that’s particularly true when you travel to places where you can neither read or speak. At the Global Sources Startup Launchpad in Hong Kong, I played with the Airbuds Air Translator, a combination of app and earbuds that aims to translate a conversation in near real-time.
The Air Translator works this way: two persons speaking different languages use one earbud each. The earbuds have a ”talk” button that signals to the smartphone app to listen. Each sentence is sent to the cloud for translation and comes back as audio to the other person and text on the app’s screen in the form of a chat. This way, both people can check that the translation was correct. In essence, it’s a talkie-walkie translator hardware+app.
Airbud claims to support 42 languages, which is more than other competing startup we’ve seen. I don’t know how good the translation is for the rather large number of possible combinations, but we did a test in which I spoke English or French to a Chinese person and vice-versa. For simple conversations, Airbuds did OK, and slightly more complex sentences sometimes got slightly truncated but not grossly mistranslated.
I didn’t have an opportunity to try this with “the man/woman in the street,” but that is when most apps typically start to show user friction, with latency and ambient noise making it difficult to make it work as intended. However, for a trade show environment (noisy and horrible networking conditions), I found the result to be rather interesting and promising.
Still, if you look at the past five years, things have gotten considerably better, and all three problems related to translation, namely: 1/ understanding what people say 2/ translate it 3/ translate writing/signs (another app) have made steady progress. With Deep Learning and perceptual computing in general, it is now possible to translate languages without going through a “neutral” intermediate language – and that improves the quality of the translation.
I don’t think that Airbuds is using those new advanced techniques yet. Instead, it looks to me like they have pushed the existing tech to the limit, and are trying to work out the ergonomics and user experience with some success. Earbuds provide better audio quality than necklace-style devices with a speaker, and the push-to-talk button is reliable and prevents the phone from having to listen all the time, and get confused by ambient noise.
The network latency remains a tough issue, and the pace of a conversation is clearly no natural. That’s why other solutions like Ili, have an embedded translation engine to bypass the network latency issue. But any proper translation is infinitely better than the alternative. Translation is an extremely hard problem to tackle (especially in real-time), and it’s nice to see startups making a difference by coming out with solutions that push the needle.
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This years flagships look mighty beautiful but also delicate. There is glass everywhere, both front and back. That is true for the LG G6, the HTC U Ultra, and, of course, the Samsung Galaxy S8. With the new style of smartphones comes a pressing question: how durable will these smartphones be? Will their classy look lead to more spider web … Continue reading
Late night host Jimmy Kimmel claims he’s got his hands on “an exclusive preview” of Fox News’ replacement for the ousted Bill O’Reilly.
After the network confirmed it had severed ties with its former host on Wednesday, “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” went to town on Fox deciding to “extend Bill’s vacation to forever.”
“Of all the jobs President Trump promised to create, you wouldn’t think Bill O’Reilly’s would’ve been one of them,” Kimmel said. “But it is.”
Fox News’ parent company, 21st Century Fox, released a statement earlier in the day, saying that it was parting ways with O’Reilly after reviewing multiple sexual harassment and behavioral complaints leveled at him.
And Kimmel had some exciting “news” on Fox’s next move.
“Fox News released an exclusive preview of his soon-to-be replacement,” Kimmel added.
Check out who “takes over” O’Reilly’s “No Spin Zone” in the video above.
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Maxine Waters: 'There's Something Wrong Psychologically' With Bill O'Reilly
Posted in: Today's ChiliRep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) says she’s quite pleased Bill O’Reilly is out of Fox News.
Earlier this month, the congresswoman said that O’Reilly “needs to go to jail” after The New York Times published its bombshell story on some $13 million that the former Fox News host and the network had paid in settlements to address sexual harassment and behavioral complaints about him. Days before the Times released its story, O’Reilly came under fire for making a racist and sexist joke about the congresswoman on Fox News’ morning show.
“Unfortunately, he was a man who made tremendous sums of money, had a huge show, and really, there’s something wrong with him psychologically,” Waters told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Wednesday.
“I hope he seeks some help,” she added. “And I hope that the women who have come forward feel good about the justice they are receiving.”
The Times article prompted protests and an advertiser boycott, which led to Fox News’ parent company, 21st Century Fox, reviewing the allegations against O’Reilly and severing ties.
Cooper asked Waters if she still thought O’Reilly “needs to go to jail.”
“The day will come when rich men won’t be able to buy their way out of this criminal activity, and they will go to jail, and they should go to jail,” she said.
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In his inaugural address, President Donald Trump painted a dark picture of America, a nation where “crime and gangs and drugs” are causing “American carnage” in its cities. The address echoed Trump’s campaign, in which he sold increases in homicides in a handful of cities as a nationwide crime wave and presented “more law enforcement, more community engagement and more effective policing” as the solution to a nonexistent problem.
A report released Thursday by the Brennan Center for Justice lists a few ways in which Trump’s vision of America, along with policies put forth by his administration, could lead to widespread rollbacks in criminal justice reform.
“Trump’s dark portrait of America, however, comes at a time when the national crime rate is near historic lows ― 42 percent below what it was in 1997,” the report reads. “As his first 100 days near an end, what has the president done to address crime and criminal justice? And what can the country expect in the weeks and months ahead?”
Here are a few ways, as outlined in the Brennan Center report.
Fear mongering to justify a return to tough-on-crime policies
Trump, who often presented himself as a “law and order” candidate in his campaign, has made repeated false claims about murder rates even though crime remained at near-historic lows in 2016. The report says that Trump’s logic in warning of a supposed rise in crime is linked to his immigration stance.
“By finally enforcing our immigration laws we will raise wages, help the unemployed, save billions and billions of dollars and make our communities safer for everyone,” Trump said in an address to Congress in February.
He has painted calls for police reform as “anti-law enforcement.” In July, Trump accused the Black Lives Matter movement of stoking violence against cops after five law enforcement officers were killed in Dallas. Trump also supports reimplementing “stop and frisk,” a policy that violates the constitutional rights of citizens by allowing unwarranted police searches ― particularly of black and Latinx people. Trump has also claimed that too much scrutiny of police departments has resulted in a “war on police.”
“Trump and his new attorney general, Jeff Sessions, insist that they must ‘Make America Safe Again,’ citing outside forces that have brought in drugs and violence ― justifying a travel ban, a border wall with Mexico and mass deportations,” the report reads. “The administration has also issued several executive orders focused on combatting this phantom crime wave, without offering solutions to solve the real and serious localized problems of violence in Chicago and Baltimore.”
Trump has already signed three executive orders expanding the powers of federal law enforcement agencies ― including allowing the Department of Homeland Security to utilize “all necessary and lawful action to break the back of the criminal cartels that have spread across our nation.”
The Justice Department Has Moved To Stop Policing The Police
Sessions is cynical of widespread police reform and civil rights investigations into departments. He has spoken out against consent decrees and sees “bad apples” as the reason for police misconduct rather than systemic failures. To Sessions, the government shouldn’t be “dictating to local police how to do their jobs” or dishing out “scarce federal resources” to sue cities.
Under Sessions, the Justice Department will “pull back” on investigations that he believes diminish the effectiveness of police departments. The Brennan Center report also notes that local police departments could evolve into a way for the government to enforce its immigration policies in sanctuary cities.
“Historically, the Justice Department has played a key role overseeing and regulating civil rights violations committed by local police departments. … Sessions outright rejects this role for the federal government, labeling it as part of a broader ‘war on police,’” the report says. “He has directed a review of all existing consent decrees and attempted to stall pending agreements. This trend will likely continue, potentially emboldening police departments to become more aggressive.”
Sessions Could Restart A War On Drugs And Bring Back ’90s Crime Policies
Sessions isn’t a fan of criminal justice reform. Like Trump, he may part with the bulk of conservatives and require federal prosecutors to seek the most extreme charge in every case they try, which could lead to the revival of mandatory minimum laws for relatively low-level, nonviolent offenses. This ideology, in many ways, contradicts a number of conservatives who have joined progressives in the stance that criminal justice reform is needed because too many Americans are incarcerated.
“Since taking office, Sessions has given several speeches calling for a return to harsher federal charging policies, and issued memoranda directing U.S. Attorneys to stand by for such major policy shifts,” the report says. “Sessions could revoke key [Attorney General Eric] Holder-era initiatives, directing federal prosecutors to pursue maximum penalties in drug cases even in states where marijuana is legal. Notably, the administration has shown interest in expanding treatment options for opioid addiction, which disproportionately affects white, rural communities, while increased marijuana prosecutions would more affect communities of color.”
Rod Rosenstein, Trump’s choice to be deputy attorney general, is another fan of mandatory minimum sentences (even though the report says he has claimed they can be excessive in some cases).
Eric Dreiband, who could be nominated to run the Justice Department’s civil rights division, opposes “ban the box” reform, named for the criminal history check box on job applications, which would delay criminal background checks and focus hiring on a person’s qualifications.
Richard Baum, the acting drug czar, defended the “war on drugs” in 2001.
Steven Cook, a prosecutor who opposes sentencing reform, was appointed by Sessions to run the new Task Force on Crime Reduction and Public Safety, which would guide the country’s approach to violent crime. Cook and Sessions are planning to prosecute a higher number of drug and gun cases while pursuing mandatory minimums, according to The Washington Post, signaling a desire to reinstitute the war on drugs and “tough on crime” policies.
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Talk about a bad day on the slopes.
Skier Magnolia Neu posted a clip on Instagram showing her making a jump and then taking a dramatic tumble ― and another tumble… and another tumble…
By the time she was done, she had flipped seven times.
“Qualified for the Olympics today… in gymnastics,” she joked in the post.
Neu was skiing over the weekend in the Balls, a range in the Sierra National Forest in California.
Luckily, the 16-year-old wasn’t injured.
“I’m pretty sore now. No broken bones,” she told Australia’s 9news Wednesday. “It was hella fun.”
(H/T Mashable)
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The Intercontinental Hotels Group (IHG) thought only a handful of Holiday Inns were affected by a data breach that happened last year, but it turned out to be a much bigger deal. In a statement posted on its website, IHG has admitted that it found si…