Our Reliance on Cellphones Began 35 Years Ago This Week Slashdotby msmash on communications at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 14, 2018, 11:35 pm)

With 95% of Americans owning a cellphone, it can feel like we've been calling, texting, and tweeting on the go forever. But the infrastructure supporting our cellphones has actually not been around that long. From a report: While we're now on 4G networks, it was only 35 years ago this week that Ameritech (now part of AT&T) launched 1G, or the first commercial cell phone network. That network, called the Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS), went online on October 13, 1983, allowing people in the Chicago area to make and receive mobile calls for the first time. Ameritech president Bob Barnett, who made the first call, decided to make the historic moment count by ringing Alexander Graham Bell's grandson. A little more than a year later, UK's Vodafone hosted its first commercial call on New Year's Day. Israel's Pelephone followed suit in 1986, followed by Australia in 1987. Cellphone technology had been around for quite a while before that. AMPS was in development for around 15 years, and engineers made the first mobile call on a prototype network a decade before the first commercial network call. It took that long to troubleshoot the various hardware, software, and radio frequency issues associated with setting up a fully functional commercial network.

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Embattled Bangladesh opposition forges new alliance AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 11:30 pm)

BNP forms alliance with centrist parties ahead of elections in bid to boost support after jailing of its leaders.
Netanyahu threatens Hamas with 'very strong blows' AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 11:30 pm)

Israel recently announced it would suspend all fuel deliveries to Gaza as government increases pressure on Hamas.
Japanese Passport Now World's Most Powerful Slashdotby msmash on japan at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 14, 2018, 10:35 pm)

According to the Henley Passport Index, compiled by global citizenship and residence advisory firm Henley & PartnersCitizens, Japan now has the most powerful passport on the planet. From a report: Having gained visa-free access to Myanmar earlier this month, Japanese citizens can now enjoy visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to a whopping 190 destinations around the world -- knocking Singapore, with 189 destinations, into second place. Germany, which began 2018 in the top spot, is now in third place with 188 destinations, tied with France and South Korea. Uzbekistan lifted visa requirements for French nationals on October 5, having already granted visa-free access to Japanese and Singaporean citizens in early February.

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The Magic Leap Con Slashdotby msmash on business at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 14, 2018, 9:35 pm)

Reader merbs shares a report about Magic Leap, a US-based startup valued at north of $6 billion and which counts Google, Alibaba, Warner Bros, AT&T, and several top Silicon Valley venture capital firms as its investors. The company, which held its first developer conference this week, announced that it is making its $2,295 AR headset available in more states in the United States. Journalist Brian Merchant attended the conference and shares the other part of the story. From a story: After spending two days at LEAPcon, I feel it is my duty -- in the name of instilling a modicum of sanity into an age where a company that has never actually sold a product to a consumer can be worth a billion dollars more than the entire GDP of Fiji -- to inform you that it is not. Magic Leap clearly wants its public launch to appear huge -- who wouldn't? In decidedly Magic Leapian fashion, the company covered an entire side of LA Mart, the 12-story building in downtown Los Angeles where the conference was to be held, with a psychedelic image of an astronaut and the tagline 'Free Your Mind'. In similarly Leapian fashion, the actual demos and keynote took place in the basement, where a wrong turn could land you in shipping and receiving and cell reception was nil. [...] You know that weird sensation when it feels like everyone around you is participating in some mild mass hallucination, and you missed the dosing? The old 'what am I possibly missing here' phenomenon? That's how I felt at LEAP a lot of the time, amidst crowds of people dropping buzzwords and acronym soup at light speed, and then again while I was reading reviews of the device afterwards -- somehow, despite years of failing to deliver anything of substance, lots of the press is still in Leap's thrall. Demo after demo, I felt like, sure, that was kind of neat. The games were charming, if often glitchy and simplistic, and yes, it might be helpful for architects to be able to blow up and walk around their designs. I liked the developers, who were smart and funny. Some of the graphics and interactions were very nicely rendered. But there wasn't anything -- besides a single demo, which I'll get to in a second -- that I'd feel compelled to ever do again. It felt genuinely crazy to me that people could get too excited about this, especially after years of decent VR and the Hololens, without having a distinct monetary incentive to do so. As many have noted, the hardware is still extremely limiting. The technology underpinning these experiences seems genuinely advanced, and if it were not for a multi-year blitzkrieg marketing campaign insisting a reality where pixels blend seamlessly with IRL physics was imminent, it might have felt truly impressive. (Whether or not it's advanced enough to eventually give rise to Leap's prior promises is an entirely open question at this point.) For now, the field of vision is fairly small and unwieldy, so images are constantly vanishing from view as you look around. If you get too close to them, objects will get chopped up or move awkwardly. And if you do get a good view, some objects appear low res and transparent; some looked like cheap holograms from an old sci-fi film. Text was bleary and often doubled up in layers that made it hard to read, and white screens looked harsh -- I loaded Google on the Helio browser and immediately had to shut my eyes. Further reading: Magic Leap is Pushing To Land a Contract With US Army To Build AR Devices For Soldiers To Use On Combat Missions, Documents Reveal.

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Turkey: Izmir lorry crash kills 22 migrants, including children AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 9:30 pm)

Vehicle carrying refugees and migrants plunges off highway in Izmir, killing 22 and wounding 13 others, police say.
DRC: The boy soldiers and girl brides of war-torn North Kivu AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 9:30 pm)

DRC is one of the most complex humanitarian crises on the planet, but has less than 30 percent of the funding it needs.
Merkel's Bavarian allies humbled in historic election setback AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 9:30 pm)

Christian Social Union suffers worst result since 1950, raising tensions within Merkel's crisis-prone government.
Man convicted of Mogadishu attack executed on bombing anniversary AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 9:30 pm)

One year ago, a massive bomb blast tore through the centre of Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, killing more than 500 people and injuring hundreds more.
Patent Filings Reveal New Details About Microsoft's Vision For a Foldable, Dual-Scre Slashdotby msmash on microsoft at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 14, 2018, 8:40 pm)

A patent application published this week by Microsoft adds more fuel to the fire about the possibility of a new hybrid dual-screen Microsoft Surface device that blurs the lines between phone and tablet. From a report: The patent filing is for a "hinged device" with a "first and second portion" that includes a "flexible display." It would sport a hinge in the middle, similar in appearance to the one on the Surface Book, as well as familiar smartphone components like a bezel and camera. The inventor listed on the document is Kabir Siddiqui, who has been named on previous patent documents related to a foldable Surface device. He's also credited with inventing features like the Surface kickstand and camera. The patents represent one of the clearest signs yet that Microsoft has shown interest in building a "new and disruptive" category that includes elements of a smartphone, tablet and computer all in one. Rumblings of a new Surface phone-like device, under the codename Andromeda, have persisted for years, though the company has yet to confirm such a plan.

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Egypt sentences three to death for attacks on police AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 8:30 pm)

Cairo court found three men guilty of forming an armed group and carrying out string of attacks on Egyptian policemen.
An ode to Oscar Romero: 'Honoured I once ate lunch with a saint' AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 8:00 pm)

Slain Salvadoran priest, who was a hero among country's poor, declared a saint with six others by Pope Francis.
Silicon Valley's Saudi Arabia Problem Slashdotby msmash on money at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 14, 2018, 7:35 pm)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Somewhere in the United States, someone is getting into an Uber en route to a WeWork co-working space. Their dog is with a walker whom they hired through the app Wag. They will eat a lunch delivered by DoorDash, while participating in several chat conversations on Slack. And, for all of it, they have an unlikely benefactor to thank: the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Long before the dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi vanished, the kingdom has sought influence in the West -- perhaps intended, in part, to make us forget what it is. A medieval theocracy that still beheads by sword, doubling as a modern nation with malls (including a planned mall offering indoor skiing), Saudi Arabia has been called "an ISIS that made it." Remarkably, the country has avoided pariah status in the United States thanks to our thirst for oil, Riyadh's carefully cultivated ties with Washington, its big arms purchases, and the two countries' shared interest in counterterrorism. But lately the Saudis have been growing their circle of American enablers, pouring billions into Silicon Valley technology companies. While an earlier generation of Saudi leaders, like Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, invested billions of dollars in blue-chip companies in the United States, the kingdom's new crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, has shifted Saudi Arabia's investment attention from Wall Street to Silicon Valley. Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund has become one of Silicon Valley's biggest swinging checkbooks, working mostly through a $100 billion fund raised by SoftBank (a Japanese company), which has swashbuckled its way through the technology industry, often taking multibillion-dollar stakes in promising companies. The Public Investment Fund put $45 billion into SoftBank's first Vision Fund, and Bloomberg recently reported that the Saudi fund would invest another $45 billion into SoftBank's second Vision Fund. SoftBank, with the help of that Saudi money, is now said to be the largest shareholder in Uber. It has also put significant money into a long list of start-ups that includes Wag, DoorDash, WeWork, Plenty, Cruise, Katerra, Nvidia and Slack. As the world fills up car tanks with gas and climate change worsens, Saudi Arabia reaps enormous profits -- and some of that money shows up in the bank accounts of fast-growing companies that love to talk about "making the world a better place."

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Hunter kills British cyclist in France, police speak of accident AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 7:30 pm)

The hunter has been admitted to hospital to be treated for shock after the Saturday evening shooting of the cyclist.
Jordan and Syria agree to reopen Naseeb border crossing AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 14, 2018, 7:30 pm)

Main border crossing between Jordan and Syria to reopen on Monday for first time in three years, say officials.