Web User - UK (2019-08-07)

(Antfer) #1

6 7 - 20August 2019


T

he 50th anniversary of Neil
Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s
walk on the Moon may have
grabbed all theattentionrecently,
but they’re not the only peopleto
have taken such a giant leap.Ten
other astronauts have put a boot
on the lunar surface, as NASA is
now reminding us with the help of
imagery specialistWarren Harold.
Haroldhas combined images
taken by the Apollo astron auts to
produc e a stunning set of lunar
panoramas, which you can see on
Flickr (bit.ly/flickr481). He has also
converted the Apollo 17 panorama
into an immersive view on Facebook
(bit.ly/facebook481) that gives us
Earth dwelle rs a fasc inating glimpse
of our nearest celestial object.
Meanwhil e, National Geographic
(bit.ly/nategeo481) has been busy

store.steampowered .com/labs
Steam is one of th e most popu lar gaming platforms, but
there’s alwaysroom for improvement. As such, its owner,
Valve Software , has been developin g some potential new
feat ures and is inviting usto try them out.
So far, the Steam Labs beta includes thre e experiments.
Micro Traile rs lets you hover your mouse over a thumbnail of
a game to see a six-second snapshot of th e action, with
options to run multiple traile rs at once. Interactive
Recommender uses machine learning to examine the games
you play, and lets you filter its results by popu larity, releas e
dates and tags.
The final experiment is an
automated half-hour
programme generated fr om
snip pets of new and popular
games as a way of encourag ing
you to discover something new.
This one can be a little
tiresome, but the point is that
you can leave feedback to help
Valve decide which
experiments to include in
Steam and which to abandon.


bit.ly/fsecure 481
Most free online
services are not really
free. The price we pay
for using them is the
data we share and the
privacy we give away.
This means it’s
important to know
exactly what data the
web companies are
collecting, but since
the details are often buried deep within a website, fi nding
out can be a chore.
F-Secure has set up a Data Discovery Portal to make the
proc ess easier, and it’s entirely free. Visit the site, then click
a link for one of th e six firms – Google, Apple, Facebook,
Snap chat, Twitter and Amazon. This takes you straig ht to
the relevant data and privacy pages onthe service itself –
after all, there’s nothing better than hearing this important
information straig ht from the horse’s mouth.
There’s not much more to it, other than a few ti ps for
protecting your data, but the site gives you a quick way to
tighten your securi ty settings.

studying 200 known moons elsewhere
in our solar system. Scrolling down the
page takes you on a fact-packed tour
that explains each moon’s orbit, the
dist ance fromits parent planet,
geological make-up and more. It even

includes deta ils of scientific
interest and miss ions, with
imagesthat you can drag to
rotate for a closer look.
Not to be outdone, Google Earth
has teamed up with Science Friday to
explor e NASA’s launchpads and look
at how the agency is upgr ading them
for future rockets (bit.ly/earth481).
http://www.nasa.gov

Explore our Moon and

hundreds of others

Test Steam’s latest


experiments


Discover how web firms

handle your data

What’s New Online
Free download pdf