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  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 30.Dec.2024


    Indian Space Progress: #23: How ISRO et al. laid the groundwork for a decade this year

    While 2023 was an incredible year for ISRO in terms of execution of space missions and projects, 2024 was more about those successes giving the Indian government’s Department of Space (DOS) the confidence to plan an ambitious next decade. But ISRO, as usual, remains uninterested in contextualizing all of these advances on any of their channels. This issue of India’s space program lacking clear communications and outreach is partly why I write Indian Space Progress in the first place. And so below is a linked overview of the some of the key groundwork laid this year by DOS and ISRO across orbital launch vehicles, Moon missions, human spaceflight, commercial and private space capabilities, space sciences, and more.

    Not much coverage of the Indian space program in North American media, so these are always interesting.

    via Jatan Mehta


    TechCrunch: Mercedes-backed Volocopter files for bankruptcy

    “We are ahead of our industry peers in our technological, flight test, and certification progress. That makes us an attractive company to invest in while we organize ourselves with internal restructuring,” CEO Dirk Hoke said in a statement.

    It’s unfortunate, but investors are probably looking at a couple of other big items, like revenues and path to profits.


    InsideEVs: The Best InsideEVs Stories Of 2024

    1. I Went To China And Drove A Dozen Electric Cars. Western Automakers Are Cooked
    2. The InsideEVs Breakthrough Awards
    3. The Facts Are In: It’s Not Looking Good For Internal Combustion
    4. Toyota’s Hydrogen Future Is Crumbling As Owners File Lawsuits, Call For Buybacks
    5. More EVs, Fewer Plugs: How Permit Delays Slow Down Charger Growth
    6. I Polled 600 Voters About Electric Cars. Here’s How To Get Republicans Behind Them
    7. Tesla Cybertruck In Europe: Here’s What It Takes To Buy And Register One
    8. You’re Being Lied To. The EV Market Hasn’t ‘Stalled’
    9. The 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5 N Reimagines What An EV Can Be
    10. How Does An Extended-Range Electric Vehicle Work?
    11. 2025 Ram 1500 Ramcharger: Everything We Know
    12. Why ‘Zonal Architectures’ Are The Next Big Thing In EV Design
    13. How Electric Vehicles Powered Houston Homes During Hurricane Beryl
    14. China’s Apple Car, The Xiaomi SU7, Rides On Apple Levels Of Hype
    15. I’ve Been Running An EV Publication For A Year. Here’s What I’ve Learned
    16. Plug-In Hybrids: Do They Get Plugged In? Even Carmakers Won’t Say
    17. The 2026 Mercedes CLA-Class Is A Groundbreaking EV And Hybrid Do-Over
    18. General Motors Was Right. You Don’t Need Apple CarPlay
    19. How Fisker Owners Are Banding Together To Keep Their Cars Running
    20. In Vietnam, VinFast’s Critics Face The Police
    21. Do Electric Vehicles Really Pollute More Than Gas Cars?
    22. You Don’t Really Need DC Fast Charging

    Last Updated: 30.Dec.2024 23:37 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:06 AM, Dec 31
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 29.Dec.2024


    NPR: Popeye, Tintin among works entering U.S. public domain in 2025

    Jan. 1 marks the dawn of a new era for Popeye and Tintin. It’s the day the nonagenarian cartoon characters officially enter the U.S. public domain along with a treasure trove of other iconic works.

    The copyrights of thousands of films, songs and books expire in 2025, making them instantly available for people to use, share and adapt. The list includes classics like Virginia Woolf’s book A Room of One’s Own, the Fats Waller song Ain’t Misbehavin' and the Marx Brothers' first feature film, The Cocoanuts.


    NPR: How not to be ageist

    Ageism — discrimination and prejudice based on someone’s age — is so ingrained in society that most of us don’t notice it. Yet “we all face the consequences and we all have a role in fixing it,” Clark-Shirley says.

    Experts say that fighting ageism isn’t only important to create an equitable and fair society, it also helps all of us live longer, healthier — even more fulfilling — lives.

    Yale professor Becca Levy studies the psychology of aging. Her research found that people who had positive beliefs about aging bounced back more effectively from illnesses and other setbacks than those who had negative perceptions about what it meant to be older.

    The positive people even lived an average of 7 1/2 years longer than those who thought aging was a bummer.


    CleanTechnica: Germany Embraces Balkonkraftwerke — Balcony Solar For Apartments

    In Germany, more than 1.5 million people have installed Balkonkraftwerke, which translates as “balcony power plants.” Almost every apartment has a balcony with a railing to keep folks from tumbling into the street below. If it gets any sun exposure during the day, balcony solar panels can be mounted to those railings to make electricity that helps power a home.


    Globe: Canada and the U.S. worked together to stamp out the invasive sea lamprey in the Great Lakes. Then COVID-19 happened

    Native to European seas, the sea lamprey wriggled its way up the Great Lakes' canal and channel system in the early 1900s where it found ample breeding grounds, a lack of predators and sufficient prey among lake trout, whitefish and other commercially valuable species in the region. By the fifties, an estimated two million sea lampreys infested the Great Lakes, killing up to 100 million pounds of fish.

    ⋮

    “We kill 8.5 million sea lampreys per year,” said Greg McClinchey, the commission’s director of policy and legislative affairs. “That’s what the commission, give or take, has to kill every year just to hold the population steady.”


    CBC: RCMP asks for help handling troubling number of kids radicalizing online

    Security agencies from Canada and other members of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance say they’ve seen a ‘rising prominence’ of young people and minors in counterterrorism cases.


    Daring Fireball: OpenAI’s Board, Paraphrased: ‘To Succeed, All We Need Is Unimaginable Sums of Money’

    Thus, effectively, OpenAI is to this decade’s generative-AI revolution what Netscape was to the 1990s’ internet revolution. The revolution is real, but it’s ultimately going to be a commodity technology layer, not the foundation of a defensible proprietary moat. In 1995 investors mistakenly thought investing in Netscape was a way to bet on the future of the open internet and the World Wide Web in particular. Investing in OpenAI today is a bit like that — generative AI technology has a bright future and is transforming the world, but it’s wishful thinking that the breakthrough client implementation is going to form the basis of a lasting industry titan.


    NYT: Jimmy Carter Funeral: Tentative Plans Will Play Out Over the Next Eight Days

    Memorial services for former President Jimmy Carter will play out over the next eight days, including a state funeral in Washington, D.C., and ceremonies in Georgia before he is buried in Plains, Ga., according to plans that have been in the works for years.


    NYT: Dorthy Moxley, Who Pursued Justice in Her Daughter’s Murder, Dies at 92

    Dorthy Moxley, who crusaded for half her life for justice in the murder of her teenage daughter, Martha, in Greenwich, Conn., in 1975, but who was never fully vindicated in her belief that a young neighbor related to the Kennedy family had killed Martha with a golf club, died on Tuesday at her home in Summit, N.J. She was 92.

    Her son, John, said the cause was complications of the flu.


    Last Updated: 29.Dec.2024 20:15 EST

    Saturday’s articles

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    → 3:07 AM, Dec 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 28.Dec.2024


    Heather Cox Richardson: December 27, 2024

    Civil war has broken out within the MAGA Republicans. On the one side are the traditional MAGAs, who tend to be white, anti-immigrant, and less educated than the rest of the U.S. They believe that the modern government’s protection of equal rights for women and minorities has ruined America, and they tend to want to isolate the U.S. from the rest of the world. They make up Trump’s voting base.

    On the other side are the new MAGAs who appear to have taken control of the incoming Trump administration. Led by Elon Musk, who bankrolled Trump’s campaign, the new MAGA wing is made up of billionaires, especially tech entrepreneurs, many of whom are themselves immigrants.

    via Dave Winer


    Telegraph: Musk threatens ‘war like you’ve never seen’ with Maga Republicans

    Elon Musk has said he will “go to war” with Maga Republicans over visas for skilled migrants.

    ⋮

    At least 14 conservative holders of accounts on Mr Musk’s social media platform X claimed that it had since revoked their blue verification badge, removing access to monetisation through subscriptions and advertising revenue.

    “Take a big step back and F— YOURSELF in the face. I will go to war on this issue the likes of which you cannot possibly comprehend,” Mr Musk wrote on X.

    Delightful.


    Wales Online: American teenager becomes fluent in Welsh for very sweet reason

    An American teenager has spoken about his journey learning Welsh in an attempt to get to know his grandmother better. Rhys Davis, 19, who lives in Oak Hill, which is a rural area of Ohio, had always known that Wales and the Welsh language meant a great deal to his family.

    But within the past year the Ohio State University student decided to take it upon himself to fully embrace the country and its culture. His grandmother — or ‘mamgu’ as he fondly calls her — Elizabeth Davis is originally from Aberaeron in Ceredigion.


    BBC: Magnus Carlsen: Chess champion quits FIDE tournament after being told to change jeans

    World chess number one Magnus Carlsen has quit a major tournament after being told he could not carry on playing while wearing jeans.

    The chess great had been defending his titles at the Fide World Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships in New York when officials made the request.

    The grandmaster said he had offered to change his trousers for the next day, but was fined and told he needed to change immediately.

    The chess federation (Fide) said its dress code regulations were designed to “ensure fairness and professionalism for all participants”.

    So basically they are opposing the idea of jeans, the symbolism.


    Last Updated: 28.Dec.2024 14:50 EST

    Friday’s articles

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    → 1:19 AM, Dec 29
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 27.Dec.2024


    Wales Online: ‘I quit my lucrative banking job to make coffee and it’s the best decision I ever made’

    Lab isn’t for laboratory – it’s for labrador, specifically James' fox red lab Dylan who was indirectly the inspiration for the first Coffi Lab in Monmouth. “The inspiration was having a walk through Llandaff Fields in Pontcanna with Dylan and not really feeling we had anywhere we really wanted to go for a coffee. I wanted to create somewhere for me and Dylan which I thought other people would gravitate towards too. Not a dog café as such but beautiful, open venues – a focal point of leafy neighbourhoods where family and friends could come together without having to leave their dogs at home.”


    CBC: Can’t give them away: Vintage upright pianos are meeting a sorry end

    Scroll through an online for-sale site like Kijiji or Facebook Marketplace and you will almost always spot old upright pianos on offer, either for free or for a very, very low price. 

    The wooden pianos can be beautiful, but the ads tend to stay up a while because the instruments are very heavy to move and often out of tune.


    CBC: Finland seizes tanker carrying Russian oil suspected of knocking out internet, power cables

    Two fibre optic cables owned by Finnish operator Elisa linking Finland and Estonia were broken, while a third link between the two countries owned by China’s Citic was damaged, Finnish transport and communications agency Traficom said.

    A fourth internet cable running between Finland and Germany and belonging to Finnish group Cinia was also believed to have been severed, the agency said.

    ⋮

    Baltic Sea nations are on high alert for potential acts of sabotage following a string of outages of power cables, telecom links and gas pipelines since 2022, although subsea equipment is also subject to technical malfunction and accidents.


    Now Toronto: Highway 407 fees will increase in the new year: Here’s what drivers need to know

    Starting in the new year, Highway 407  fees will be increasing for the first time in five years.

    The new rate schedule comes into effect on Jan. 1 and includes additional toll zones as well as new vehicle classifications, the Express Toll Route (ETR) 407 said in a news release last month.

    The highway will now be divided into 12 zones instead of four, each with different toll rates.

    ⋮

    The new zoning means the cost of a trip will vary depending on the mode of transportation, its size, the travel time, day of the week, highway section and direction of travel, with prices ranging from $36 to $85.


    Last Updated: 27.Dec.2024 12:59 EST

    Thursday’s articles

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    → 1:06 AM, Dec 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 26.Dec.2024


    BBC: Alabama carries out second nitrogen gas execution in US

    Earlier this year, the Alabama state Supreme Court cleared the way for Miller to be executed by nitrogen hypoxia, a method that involves an inmate inhaling nitrogen gas through a fitted mask until their body is deprived of oxygen.

    Why not call it what it is: suffocation?


    BBC: Speedcubing: The retro hobby that can help boost happiness levels

    The 500 people who turned out - some from as far afield as Mongolia and Canada - were taking part in an activity less known for drawing in crowds: the Rubik’s UK Championship in “speedcubing,” or racing to solve puzzle cubes at terrific speed.


    Wales Online: I moved to Wales two years ago and while I love it some things need to change

    Over the last two years I’ve fallen deeply in love with Wales and its valleys, beaches, and people – but it is time for some things to change here in Cymru too.


    Last Updated: 26.Dec.2024 23:23 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

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    → 2:05 AM, Dec 27
  • I wonder @danielpunkass if you saw this BBC article?

    BBC: Speedcubing: The retro hobby that can help boost happiness levels

    → 2:44 PM, Dec 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 25.Dec.2024


    Bloomberg: The 30-Year Home Mortgage Isn’t Designed for Climate Chaos

    It sounded like artillery, an infiltration of a quiet suburban community in the dead of night, as Kevin Pelley stood in the dark in what was left of his yard on a bank of the Puyallup River. A combat Army veteran who served in Kuwait and Iraq, Kevin watched the storm for hours. An atmospheric river was filling the actual river, causing a flow of over 16,000 cubic feet per second, or 50 times the prior month’s average. Water washed away much of his backyard. When a large piece of soil cleaved off into the river, it fell with the force and noise of gunfire.

    By the time day broke in his town 35 miles south of Seattle, the foundation of the Pelley home was teetering over the bank of a newly formed cliff. The river that used to be about 100 feet behind their house was now under it. A code enforcement officer from Pierce County placed a yellow “Restricted Use” tag: the property was no longer safe to enter, except for analysis by engineers.

    gift link


    Last Updated: 25.Dec.2024 12:34 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

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    → 1:48 AM, Dec 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 24.Dec.2024


    Globe: A B.C. city put a family doctor on the payroll to address a shortage. Now, many physicians want in

    The City of Colwood on B.C’s Vancouver Island hired its first family physician under a municipal funding model, which will see doctors receive paid vacation and parental leave, medical benefits and a defined pension from the municipal pension plan as city employees do.


    Globe: Canada sees drop in number of family physicians for the first time in decades, study finds

    The number of family physicians in Canada declined last year for the first time since the mid-1990s, a downturn that happened as rapid population growth and a rising number of elderly, chronically ill patients were already straining the primary-care system.

    Although the reduction in head count was small – there were 28 fewer family doctors in the country in 2023 than in 2022 – it works out to a nearly 3-per-cent drop in family physicians per capita because the population expanded significantly at the same time, according to new data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI).


    Globe: A hiker spent 50 days in the northern B.C. wilderness. How he survived until his unlikely rescue sparked global intrigue

    Timber Bigfoot, a member of the Prophet River First Nation, whose territory extends to the park, volunteered with local search and rescue, telling search managers he had lived off the grid in the Redfern Lake area for several years and walked these trails his whole life.

    Mr. Bigfoot said he spoke with Ms. Crocker every day for more than a week at the height of the search, and every few days for a period afterward. He asked what gear Mr. Benastick had, to which she replied a hatchet, some fire starter, two jars of peanut butter, two small tarps and a backpack, he said.


    NYT: NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Will Attempt the Closest Ever Pass of the Sun’s Surface

    On Dec. 24 at 6:53 a.m. Eastern time, the Parker Solar Probe, a NASA spacecraft, will pass within 3.8 million miles of the sun’s surface, more than seven times closer than any previous mission has. While surfing across the corona, the sun’s outer atmosphere, Parker will surpass the blistering speed of 430,000 miles per hour, breaking its own record as the fastest object ever made by humans.


    UPI: AI model achieves human level performance on general intelligence test

    A new artificial intelligence (AI) model has just achieved human-level results on a test designed to measure “general intelligence”.

    On December 20, OpenAI’s o3 system scored 85% on the ARC-AGI benchmark, well above the previous AI best score of 55% and on par with the average human score. It also scored well on a very difficult mathematics test.

    In unrelated news, average voter fails to achieve human level performance on general intelligence test.


    BBC: Denmark boosts Greenland defence after Trump repeats desire for US control

    The Danish government has announced a huge boost in defence spending for Greenland, hours after US President-elect Donald Trump repeated his desire to purchase the Arctic territory.

    Danish Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen said the package was a “double digit billion amount” in krone, or at least $1.5bn (£1.2bn).

    He described the timing of the announcement as an “irony of fate”. On Monday Trump said ownership and control of the huge island was an “absolute necessity” for the US.

    Trump flexing his expansionist muscles (Greenland, Panama, Canada), following his idol Vlad!


    Last Updated: 24.Dec.2024 17:28 EST

    Monday’s articles

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    → 1:35 AM, Dec 25
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 23.Dec.2024


    Globe: Buy Nothing groups go easy on the pocketbook and the Earth

    As the pull of the holiday shopping season competes with the consequences of overconsumption on landfills and waterways, people such as Nigel Dadswell are turning to Buy Nothing groups to gift to neighbours the stuff they don’t need and also to acquire stuff they do.

    Buy Nothing communities, often formed through Facebook, encourage members to post their unwanted items for free, allowing other members to pick them up at no cost. A search for “buy nothing” on Facebook returns more than 50 results for the Metro Vancouver area alone. The groups are organized by neighbourhood, meaning someone can likely find goods for free within walking distance.


    Globe: Werner Antweiler: A new generation of biofuels will play a key role in the energy transition

    We may be entering the age of the electric car, but biofuels will still be an important tool in the fight against climate change for years to come. Most Canadian cars will run on conventional fuel for the foreseeable future, allowing Canada to take advantage of this latest generation of biofuels. By strengthening mandates, supporting innovation, developing new sustainable energy crops and negotiating fair access to U.S. markets, Canada can become a leader in the sector.

    The earliest iteration of biofuels were blend-in fuels: ethanol and biodiesel, mostly made from corn in Canada. However, engine compatibility imposed blending limits. As discussed in my recent publication, the next generation are drop-in fuels, which are chemically the same as ordinary fuels: renewable diesel for trucks, sustainable aviation fuel for planes, and biomethane for homes and industry. They also rely on feedstocks – currently canola oil and tallow – but can eventually shift toward using dedicated energy crops, such as perennial grass and fast-growing trees that can be grown on marginal agricultural land, easing concerns about competition with food production.

    I certainly don’t agree with some of his suppositions, but there are some interesting ideas here.


    Globe: Letters: Dec. 22: ‘Chrystia Freeland is simply playing the blood sport known as politics’

    Re “Justin Trudeau and the Liberals gather for a holly jolly family fight” (Dec. 19): A prime minister has the discretion to shuffle his cabinet as he sees fit, and in doing so Justin Trudeau offered Chrystia Freeland a key posting to oversee Canada-U.S. relations at a critical juncture when strong diplomacy – and a strong Canadian government – are essential to our national interests.

    Ms. Freeland responded by publicly attacking Mr. Trudeau and instead destabilizing the government at the worst possible time. I find her claims of prioritizing Canadians' interests over her own to be demonstrably false.

    James Hayes Mississauga


    Space: You can now wear an Apollo Guidance Computer keypad as a wristwatch

    Your doorbell today may have the same computing power as was on the Apollo spacecraft, but can it fly you to the moon?


    Atlantic: Trump’s Plan to Make America a Global Bully

    Yet Truman’s thoughts were already shifting to the postwar future. “We must now learn to live with other nations for our mutual good. We must learn to trade more with other nations so that there may be, for our mutual advantage, increased production, increased employment, and better standards of living throughout the world.”

    Truman’s vision inspired American world leadership for the better part of a century. From the Marshall Plan of the 1940s to the Trans-Pacific Partnership of the 2010s, Americans sought to achieve security and prosperity for themselves by sharing security and prosperity with like-minded others. The United States became the center of a network of international cooperation — not only on trade and defense, but on environmental concerns, law enforcement, financial regulation, food and drug safety, and countless other issues.

    via Dave Winer


    ScienceAlert: Stunningly Preserved Baby Mammoth Found in Siberian Permafrost

    Russian scientists on Monday showed off the remarkably well preserved remains of a baby mammoth found in the permafrost-covered region of Yakutia.

    The 50,000-year-old female mammoth has been nicknamed “Yana” after the river in whose basin it was discovered this summer.

    Experts say “Yana” is the best preserved mammoth carcass in the world and is one of only seven whole remains ever found.


    iPhone in Canada: 630+ Tesla Supercharging Stalls Coming to Canada in 2025

    Tesla plans to open over 630 new Supercharging stalls across more than 50 locations in Canada over the course of 2025, according to the electric vehicle (EV) giant’s roadmap (via Tesla North).

    The scheduled installations should greatly improve Supercharger density across Canada. Tesla’s planned locations even include Tofino on Vancouver Island, which will finally get its first Supercharger. Take a look at a list of all the new Supercharger sites coming to Canada next year below: …

    ⋮

    Tesla plans to open up its Supercharging network to Volvo and Polestar EVs in Canada next year, adding them to the likes of Ford, Rivian, and others who already have access. Earlier this month, Tesla started rolling out its annual Holiday Update with the ability to use an Apple Watch as a phone key and many other new features.


    iPhone in Canada: Starlink Mini Launches in Canada with Special Pricing

    SpaceX has launched Starlink Mini in Canada (via _Tesla North_), its compact portable internet device, making it easier for travelers, campers, and remote workers to stay connected. This is basically a smaller Starlink dish that can fit in your backpack.

    Originally launched in the U.S. in June, Starlink Mini is designed to bring high-speed internet to areas where it’s typically hard to find. Hikers, campers, and those living in RVs, will now be able to get online with a compact Starlink Mini dish.

    The Starlink Mini kit has debuted with special pricing of $399 CAD, discounted until January 6, and offers download speeds over 100 Mbps. It includes a WiFi router, has low power consumption, and a DC power option. Compared to the original $599 USD price, the Canadian pricing offers significant savings at launch.


    Guardian: Dozens of MPs in Justin Trudeau’s Liberal party agree prime minister should resign

    Dozens of MPs in Justin Trudeau’s Liberal party have now agreed that Canada’s embattled prime minister must abandon his post after last week’s catastrophic resignation of his deputy — a sign he has completely lost support from what were crucial loyalists.

    Several Canadian media outlets, including the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Toronto Star, reported over the weekend that 51 of Ontario’s Liberal MPs met virtually and agreed collectively that Trudeau’s time in office has expired.

    There are a total of 75 Liberal MPs in the province that is the country’s most populous and represents where most of the party’s support lies, indicating the core of the Liberals have abandoned Trudeau.

    Canada’s public broadcaster also reported that 21 Liberal MPs have publicly called on Trudeau to resign since the exit of Chrystia Freeland, who was his deputy prime minister and finance minister until her abrupt resignation on 16 December.

    What’s delaying his decision?!


    Guardian: Who owns the Panama Canal and what does Trump want with it?

    Ships using the canal must pay fees set by the canal authority. Variable rates have soared in recent years amid droughts worsened by global heating, which dry up essential reservoirs and reduce the canal’s capacity.

    As a result of severe drought in late 2023, only 22 ships crossed the canal each day instead of the usual 36, forcing ships to queue for weeks or pay as much as $4m (£3.2m) to jump ahead. Transits fell by nearly a third in the year to this September.


    Electrek: Honda, Nissan confirm EV deal amid ‘100 year’ industry shake-up

    Honda and Nissan will team up to build EVs as they look to keep pace with Tesla and BYD. The Honda and Nissan EV merger will create one of the world’s largest auto groups as they look to pull a third Japanese automaker into the partnership. Here’s everything you need to know.

    It’s official. Honda and Nissan signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on Monday, laying the groundwork for a joint EV holding company. Executives from both companies confirmed the news.

    We knew the EV merger was coming soon after a Nikkei report last week claimed Honda and Nissan were closing in on a deal. With around 8 million combined sales, the landmark partnership will create the third-largest auto group globally, behind Volkswagen and Toyota.

    ⋮

    After kicking off discussions on Monday, Honda and Nissan said they plan to provide more details on Mitsubishi’s involvement around the end of January 2025. The EV merger is expected to be official by August 2026.


    Last Updated: 23.Dec.2024 23:40 EST

    Sunday’s articles

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    → 1:08 AM, Dec 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 22.Dec.2024


    How to Geek: Your Own Linux Desktop in the Cloud and in Your Pocket, for Free

    • Cloud desktops run an entire PC online for remote access from any device or location.
    • Raspberry Pi Connect allows you to set up a free cloud desktop using your own Raspberry Pi device.
    • A full Linux desktop using Raspberry Pi Connect is feasible, but may be lacking in speed and usability.

    2024 Was Raspberry Pi’s Biggest Year to Date

    • The Year That Raspberry Pi Became “Real” Again
    • All-New Pi Hardware and RISC-V
    • Pi OS Lept Into the Future
    • Pi Went Public, for Better or Worse

    ⋮

    Here’s all the new Pi products of 2024:

    • Raspberry Pi 500
    • Pi Compute Module 5
    • Raspberry Pi Pico 2
    • Raspberry Pi Pico 2 W
    • Raspberry Pi 5 (2GB RAM Model)
    • USB 3 Hub
    • Desktop Monitor
    • Pi Touch Display 2
    • AI HAT+
    • First-party SSDs
    • First-party SD Cards
    • Raspberry Pi AI Camera
    • HAT+ M.2 Module

    Hackaday.io: CH32V003 Dev Kit

    CH32V003 Dev Kit is a development board that allows developers to evaluate all the interfaces available on the MCU.


    CBC: Could tariffs fight climate change?

    The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is sometimes described as “the first carbon border tariff in the world.” It’s the only example we have so far, but different countries have proposed different ways to implement these kinds of import fees.

    The EU will begin collecting carbon fees through CBAM in 2026, but began a transitional phase in 2023, which involves collecting info about emissions generated by the production of different goods.

    Initially, the fees will be applied to materials that traditionally generate lots of emissions to produce and have a lot of global competition, including iron, steel, cement, fertilizers, aluminum, hydrogen and electricity.


    Last Updated: 22.Dec.2024 16:14 EST

    Saturday’s articles

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    → 4:53 AM, Dec 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 21.Dec.2024


    PBS: Rejecting Trump’s demands, Congress averts government shutdown just after midnight

    House Speaker Mike Johnson had insisted Congress would “meet our obligations” and not allow federal operations to shutter ahead of the Christmas holiday season. But the day’s outcome was uncertain after Trump doubled down on his insistence that a debt ceiling increase be included in any deal — if not, he said in an early morning post, let the closures “start now.”

    The House approved Johnson’s new bill overwhelmingly, 366-34. The Senate worked into the night to pass it, 85-11, just after the deadline. At midnight, the White House said it had ceased shutdown preparations.


    CleanTechnica: Carlos Ghosn Sees Trouble Ahead For Japanese Auto Manufacturers

    Carlos Ghosn, the former head of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, has some thoughts on the proposed new partnership between Honda, Nissan, and possibly Mitsubishi

    ⋮

    Ghosn: It’s a desperate move. It’s not a pragmatic deal because frankly the synergies between the two companies are difficult to find. They’re in the same markets, they have the same products, the brands are very, very similar. From one side, Nissan, it’s a desperate move to try to find a future. And from the other side, Honda — if I understand well, they were not very excited about this move, but you know, you have to count with METI (Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry) in Japan. They’re trying to figure out something that could marry the short term problems of Nissan and the long term vision of Honda.


    CNN: Stonehenge may have united ancient Britons before European populations replaced them

    Scientists made a major discovery this year linked to Stonehenge — one of humanity’s biggest mysteries — and the revelations keep coming.

    A team of researchers shared evidence in August suggesting that the Altar Stone, an iconic monolith at the heart of Stonehenge, was transported hundreds of miles to the site in southern England nearly 5,000 years ago from what’s now northeastern Scotland. Just a month later, a report led by the same experts ruled out the possibility that the stone came from Orkney, an archipelago off Scotland’s northeastern coast that’s home to Neolithic sites from that time frame, and the search for the monolith’s point of origin continues.

    Now, research building on the two previous studies suggests that Stonehenge may have been reconstructed in England around 2620 to 2480 BC to help unify ancient Britons as newcomers arrived from Europe. The new study, published Thursday in the journal Archaeology International, also reveals how Neolithic people may have moved the 13,227-pound (6-metric-ton) block over 435 miles (700 kilometers) from where it originated.


    Last Updated: 21.Dec.2024 14:40 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:02 AM, Dec 22
  • I was just given a copy of Catherine Tsalikis’ new book on Chrystia Freeland (Chrystia) by an old friend. It’s looking interesting… (I’m surprised though that author Catherine Tsalikis has no apparent social media profile, unless she’s on X which I have no interest in.)

    → 12:26 AM, Dec 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 20.Dec.2024


    CBC: B.C. ministry singles out Oak Bay, West Vancouver for not meeting housing targets

    Housing minister says neighbouring communities have done the hard work to meet or exceed goals.


    Slashdot: Russia Space Chief Says Country Will Fly On Space Station Until 2030

    In a wide-ranging interview with a Russian television station, the chief executive of Russia’s main space corporation said the country is now planning to participate in the International Space Station project all the way to NASA’s desired goal of 2030. “In coordination with our American colleagues, we plan to de-orbit the station sometime around the beginning of 2030,” the country’s chief space official, Yuri Borisov, said during the interview. “The final scenario will probably be specified after the transition to a new NASA administration.”


    NYT: How the Right and the MAHA Movement Have Co-opted ‘Crunchy’

    Once, eating whole foods and avoiding toxins was associated with a lefty worldview. Now, being a “crunchy mom” is more often about “health freedom.”


    MacRumors: Ice Dive Apple Vision Pro Immersive Video Now Available

    Apple Vision Pro users can watch a new episode [episode 3] of the “Adventure” series starting today, delving into a freezing underwater dive in the Arctic with athlete Ant Williams.

    The Ice Dive episode follows Williams as he attempts to shatter the world record for swimming the longest distance under ice with just one breath.


    Last Updated: 20.Dec.2024 14:56 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:11 AM, Dec 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 19.Dec.2024


    NYT: Starbucks’ China Problem: Coffee Drinkers Want More for Less

    For years, Starbucks was the dominant coffee chain in China. Now rivals offering local flavors and cheaper prices are crushing the company’s bottom line in its second-largest market.


    NYT: This Brazilian Velvet Ant Is So Dark That It’s Super-Black

    A team of scientists led by Dr. Lopez recently found that the black parts on female velvet ants were actually ultrablack — so matte that they absorbed nearly all visible light. The discovery, published in the Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology this month, makes this particular species of velvet ant, Traumatomutilla bifurca, the first known insect among Hymenoptera — the group of animals consisting of bees, wasps and ants — to display such a striking shade.

    “We have never seen this kind of color in the dragonflies or bees or beetles we have analyzed,” said Rhainer Guillermo-Ferreira, another entomologist at the Federal University of Triângulo Mineiro and an author of the paper.


    SMH: Electric vehicle chargers: Plan to install chargers on power poles

    Drivers across Victoria could charge their electric cars directly from power poles on the street if a joint trial by energy companies is approved.

    CitiPower, Powercor and United Energy want to install 100 electric vehicle chargers on power poles across Melbourne’s inner and south-eastern suburbs, the Mornington Peninsula and parts of western Victoria next year.


    MacRumors: iCloud Backups No Longer Available for iPhones and iPads Running iOS 8 or Earlier

    Making a device backup over iCloud now requires iOS 9 or later, which means iPhones and iPads that are running iOS 8 or earlier are no longer able to be backed up using ‌iCloud‌.


    Last Updated: 19.Dec.2024 17:59 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:51 AM, Dec 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 18.Dec.2024


    Tedium.co: So, Bluesky Has An Extortion Problem

    Bluesky, until now, has had a reputation as being a more moderation-friendly alternative to X, Threads, Mastodon, and other social networks.

    But what happens when the pedal is put to the metal, and shady figures attempt to test the network’s ground rules?

    You may not find the results to your liking. That was a realization I made this week after getting an up-close view of an extortion attempt involving a prominent journalist and a well-known entrepreneur.


    NYT: Honda and Nissan Are in Talks to Deepen Ties and Possibly Merge

    The merger talks between Japan’s second- and third-largest automakers highlight the intense upheaval within the world’s auto industry.


    Wired: CDC Confirms First US Case of Severe Bird Flu

    A severe case is significant because bird flu has previously been associated with severe illness in other countries, including outbreaks that resulted in death in up to 50 percent of cases. From 2003 to 2023, of the 878 people who tested positive for the virus, 458 deaths were reported.

    The virus has decimated poultry flocks and wild birds across the country and has infected more than 800 dairy herds in 16 states. Infected animals have been spreading the virus to people who come into contact with them. Since April, the US has seen a total of 61 reported human cases of bird flu in eight states. Of those, 37 had exposure to sick or infected dairy cows, while 21 had exposure to poultry farms and culling operations. In those cases, people developed conjunctivitis and mild respiratory symptoms and fully recovered.


    MacRumors: Apple Says Meta is Making Unreasonable Interoperability Requests Under Europe’s DMA Requirements

    In a statement provided to Reuters, Apple said that Meta is asking for changes that could compromise user security and privacy.

    In many cases, Meta is seeking to alter functionality in a way that raises concerns about the privacy and security of users, and that appears to be completely unrelated to the actual use of Meta external devices, such as Meta smart glasses and Meta Quest.

    If Apple were to have to grant all of these requests, Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp could enable Meta to read on a user’s device all of their messages and emails, see every phone call they make or receive, track every app that they use, scan all of their photos, look at their files and calendar events, log all of their passwords, and more.


    Guardian: Two-inch long ‘murder hornets’ eradicated from US, agriculture department says

    World’s largest hornet, which killed 42 people in China in 2013, has been wiped out in US five years after first being spotted

    The world’s largest hornet, an invasive breed nicknamed the “murder hornet” for its dangerous sting and ability to slaughter a hive of honeybees in as little as 90 minutes, has been declared eradicated in the US, five years after being spotted for the first time in Washington state near the Canadian border.

    ⋮

    DNA evidence suggested the populations found in British Columbia and Washington were not related and appeared to originate from different countries. There also have been no confirmed reports in British Columbia since 2021, and the nonprofit Invasive Species Centre in Canada has said the hornet is also considered eradicated there.


    BBC: Montana Supreme Court upholds landmark youth climate ruling

    Montana’s Supreme Court has upheld a lower court’s decision that had sided with 16 young activists who argued that the state violated their right to a clean environment.

    The lawsuit was brought by students arguing that a state law banning the consideration of climate when choosing energy policy was unconstitutional.

    In a 6-to-1 ruling, the top court found that the plaintiffs, between ages five and 22, had a “fundamental constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment”.


    Last Updated: 18.Dec.2024 23:03 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:54 AM, Dec 19
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 17.Dec.2024


    Globe: Freeland’s resignation upends the Commons, sending shock waves throughout Ottawa

    Mr. Trudeau, in a call that a source told The Globe and Mail lasted an hour, told her that after she delivered the fall economic statement, he wanted to take the finance portfolio away from her in exchange for a job overseeing U.S. relations. It would come with no staff, no money and no authority.

    No thanks, Ms. Freeland responded.


    NYT: His Family Voted to Support Trump’s Deportation Plan. That Includes Him.

    Sky had spent much of his adulthood preparing to protect his family in a crisis. He’d learned survival tactics in the Army and had trained in hand-to-hand combat as a Georgia corrections officer. In the last few years, as he sensed the country becoming more polarized and volatile, he’d built up a small collection of firearms and a cache of emergency supplies. He’d been anticipating a moment when the government might rise up against his family, but this particular crisis was one he’d helped to create.

    “I’m going to be straight with you,” he told Jaime. “I voted for Trump. I believe in a lot of what he says.”

    “I figured as much,” Jaime said. “You and just about everyone else around here.”

    “It’s about protecting our rights as a sovereign country,” Sky said. “We need to shut down the infiltration on the border. It’s not about you.”

    “It is about me,” Jaime said. “That’s the thing I don’t understand.”

    gift link


    Globe: Trudeau told Freeland that Carney would replace her as finance minister over Zoom

    The sources say Mr. Trudeau was direct in the call, telling her that by Tuesday morning she would no longer be finance minister and that the job would be handed to Mr. Carney, former governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England. The Prime Minister still expected her to deliver the economic and fiscal update on Monday that showed she would miss the government’s promised $40.1-billion deficit target by more than $20-billion.

    Ms. Freeland resigned Monday morning, before delivering the update.


    Daring Fireball: Mozi

    Mozi is a private social network for seeing your people more, IRL. Add your plans, check who’s in town, and know when you overlap.


    Last Updated: 17.Dec.2024 23:37 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:39 AM, Dec 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 16.Dec.2024


    CBC: Canada Post says workers to return Tuesday after labour board ruling

    Canada Post says it has agreed with the Canadian Union of Postal Workers to implement a five per cent wage increase retroactive to the day after the collective agreements expired.


    The Lamp Magazine: The One Hundred Pages Strategy

    Almost nothing I have written in the last few years has given rise to more correspondence than a throwaway column about reading, in which I alluded to what I call the “hundred pages strategy.” This is exactly what it sounds like: every day, come rain or shine, on religious and secular holidays, when I travel and when I am exceptionally busy, I read at least one hundred printed pages.

    The most common question I have received regarding the hundred pages strategy is, of course, How do you do it? This has proven more difficult to answer than I thought it would. While I have chosen to refer to it as a “strategy,” the truth is that most of it, including the page target itself, is really something more like a post-hoc attempt at systematizing my own habits; I did not wake up one day as an infrequent reader and work slowly towards one hundred pages a day out of some inchoate desire for self-improvement. Rather, like many of us, I decided some years ago that if I did not take it upon myself to spend less time scrolling through Wikipedia or the AllMusic Guide or returning to my Twitter “feed”–the implicit image of a trough is appropriate–I would find myself losing one of my greatest pleasures to sheer indolence.


    CBC: Chrystia Freeland’s unexpected resignation sparks stunned reactions from all sides

    Freeland said PM Trudeau told her Friday she would no longer be serving as finance minister.


    SMH: Heatwave: Out-of-control bushfire burns near Ballarat as mercury tops 40 degrees in parts of Melbourne

    Firefighters are battling an out-of-control blaze in Victoria’s west after Melbourne sweltered through its hottest day of the year with the mercury topping 40 degrees in parts of the city.

    Hottest day since since January 2020 when it peaked at 42.9 during the Black Summer bushfires.


    Globe: Eight highlights from the Liberal government’s fall economic update

    • The Deficit …
    • Fiscal targets…
    • No funding for the $250 cheques…
    • Support for business…
    • $1.3-billion for the border…
    • Crime…
    • Housing…
    • Terry Fox on the $5 bill…

    Last Updated: 16.Dec.2024 23:27 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:00 AM, Dec 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 15.Dec.2024


    TED Talk: Scott Galloway: How the US is destroying young people’s future

    In a scorching talk, marketing professor and podcaster Scott Galloway dissects the data showing that, by many measures, young people in the US are worse off financially than ever before. He unpacks the root causes and effects of this “great intergenerational theft,” asking why we let it continue and showing how we could make it end. (Note: This talk contains mature language.)

    Populist-style delivery although probably not populist-style content


    Globe: Andrew Coyne: With Trudeau and his Finance Minister at war, it’s clear: this government is done

    When Chrystia Freeland rises in the House Monday to deliver the Fall Economic Statement – if she does – the country will be presented with a remarkable and disturbing sight.

    The Finance Minister will read out a document that it is now known she does not agree with, charting an economic course she does not believe in, and that will repudiate promises to which she nailed her credibility just eight months ago.

    After which, Justin Trudeau will in all probability fire her.


    CBC North: Six decades ago folk-singer Valdy got booed off stage. It led to his biggest hit

    Many people know Paul Valdemar Horsdal, better known as Valdy, as the singer behind Rock And Roll Song. It became a hit in 1972, and remains the Canadian folk singer’s most popular tune. 

    But that huge hit came out of a bad situation. In the late 1960s, as Valdy’s popularity grew, the Aldergrove Rock Festival invited him to perform. But the rock fans at the B.C. festival didn’t like Valdy playing his own folk music and covers of Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen. They raised their fists in the air yelling “Rock! Rock!” and “Get this jerk off the stage!”


    Wired: The UK Now Has Its Own Illegal Rubberized Cybertruck on the Road

    Car customizer to the stars Yianni Charalambous, owner of luxury vehicle wrapping workshops in England, is aiming to legalize a Tesla Cybertruck for driving in the UK. If successful, this would be the first Cybertruck allowed on British roads, and would join the rubberized Cybertrucklegalized for use on Czech roads through the fitting of skinny bumpers over the electric pickup’s sharp edges.

    To the dismay of road safety organizations, the minimally altered Czech Cybertruck passed an individual vehicle approval (IVA) test, one of the ways to legalize low-volume imported cars in the EU.


    Guardian: Interview: ‘Trump has been explicit about revenge’: Asif Kapadia on his new film about the threat to democracy

    “Generative AI didn’t exist when we started this film. Trump had just lost the election. Every American was saying: ‘Why do you have shots of him in the film? He’s finished, he’s old news. Everyone’s sick of him.’ And then by the time the film’s come out, he’s just won the election.”

    ⋮

    I watch 2073 for the first time in the summer with an invited audience of journalists and activists who in some way helped and even though they all know some bits of the story, they’re still shocked by having it threaded together in a way that seems new and revealing and alarming: populist politics plus surveillance technology plus climate emergency equals our dystopian future – which is actually our dystopian present.


    ScienceAlert: Health Gap at End of Life Is Now Wider in US Than Any Other Country

    Humans today are living longer than ever before, but how many of those added years are spent in good health?

    A data-crunching survey covering 183 member nations of the World Health Organization has now confirmed what some scientists feared: while years are being added to most people’s lives, healthy life is not being added to most people’s years.


    Last Updated: 15.Dec.2024 23:49 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:30 AM, Dec 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 14.Dec.2024


    Time: Fact-Checking Trump’s 2024 Person of the Year Interview

    For the 2024 Person of the Year issue, former and future President Donald Trump sat down for a lengthy interview with TIME on Nov. 25 at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla.

    TIME has published the transcript of that conversation. In addition, below is a review for facts and context of several of Trump’s statements from the interview.

    Did they really give it to him?! (He wanted it so badly.)


    Electrek: Tesla is buffing Foundation Series badges off Cybertrucks to sell them as regular trucks

    Tesla is turning some of its Foundation Series Cybertrucks into regular Cybertrucks to sell them and sending hundreds of US Cybertrucks to be homologated in Canada as it is having issues selling them in the US.

    There have been several signs lately that Tesla has worked through its Cybertruck reservation backlog and it is now having some demand issues.


    NYT: Ocean Heat Killed Half the Common Murres Around Alaska

    About four million common murres were killed by a domino effect of ecosystem changes, and the population is showing no signs of recovery, according to new research.

    ⋮

    About half of Alaska’s common murres, some four million birds, died as a result of the marine heat wave, the scientists found. They believe it is the largest documented die-off of a single species of wild birds or mammals. The state is home to about a quarter of the world’s common murres, scientists say.

    Murres were the victims of a domino effect of oceanic changes tied to the warm water, according to a growing body of research. It affected marine life from plankton to humpback whales. Critically for the murres, it led to a collapse in the fish they depend on.


    NYT: John McWhorter: How to Dangerously Misread a Very Important Verdict

    Since Monday, when a jury found Daniel Penny not guilty in the death of Jordan Neely on a New York City subway, the conversation has threatened to go off the rails.

    Penny was the man who stepped up when Neely caused a commotion on the F train, shouting at passengers, “I’m fed up. I don’t mind going to jail and getting life in prison. I’m ready to die.” Penny put him in a chokehold and held him for about six minutes. Neely died from compression to his neck, according to the medical examiner.

    It should have been a story about the horror of a mentally ill person abandoned by the city and left to fend for himself in subway tunnels or on street corners, or about how scary it can be for those around him to navigate the wreckage, or about how one 24-year-old Marine veteran tried to protect a group of strangers, taking action that ended in unintended tragedy.


    Utah News Dispatch: As he leaves office, Romney says GOP policies don’t always align with the working class

    When Mitt Romney joined the Senate in 2018, he was mostly seen as a mainstream Republican. Now, with his one and only term coming to an end, the 77-year-old isn’t sure what the future holds for his party. 

    But he did caution Republicans during a news conference on Friday. 

    “The Republican Party, made up of working class Americans, and Republican policy positions don’t necessarily line up terribly well,” he said. 

    Whatever happens with the GOP, don’t expect Romney to be a part of it. His time on the political stage is over, he said on Friday.


    Last Updated: 14.Dec.2024 23:58 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:10 AM, Dec 15
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 13.Dec.2024


    Vanity Fair (YouTube): Hugh Grant Rewatches Love Actually, Notting Hill, Heretic & More

    “I just think, why doesn’t my character have any balls?” Hugh Grant takes a walk down memory lane as he rewatches scenes from his classic works including ‘Love Actually,’ ‘Notting Hill,’ ‘Bridget Jones’s Diary,’ ‘Paddington 2,’ ‘A Very English Scandal,’ ‘The Undoing’ and ‘Heretic.’ Hugh looks back at working alongside Julia Roberts in ‘Notting Hill’, shooting fight scenes with Colin Firth for ‘Bridget Jones’s Diary’ and so much more.


    UPI: A Charlie Brown Christmas nearly didn’t air — why the holiday special endures today

    But this beloved TV special almost didn’t make it to air. CBS executives thought the 25-minute program was too slow, too serious and too different from the upbeat spectacles they imagined audiences wanted. A cartoon about a depressed kid seeking psychiatric advice? No laugh track? Humble, lo-fi animation? And was that a Bible verse? It seemed destined to fail — if not scrapped outright.

    And yet, against all the odds, it became a classic. The program turned Peanuts from a popular comic strip into a multimedia empire — not because it was flashy or followed the rules, but because it was sincere.


    Kottke: Restoring Vintage Star Wars Posters

    Watching these expert restorers mend & refresh a pair of vintage Star Wars posters (neither of which features the logo we’re familiar with todayand one of which is signed by the designer) is both fascinating and relaxing. It’s like the posters are having a spa day: bit of a soak, a gentle scrub, some light bodywork, and voila, you’re brand new.


    CNN: Duke lacrosse accusations: Crystal Mangum, who accused three players of rape, now says she lied about the encounter

    Crystal Mangum, the former exotic dancer who accused three Duke men’s lacrosse players of rape in 2006, igniting a national firestorm, now says she lied about the encounter.

    “I testified falsely against them by saying that they raped me when they didn’t, and that was wrong. And I betrayed the trust of a lot of other people who believed in me,” Mangum said on the web show “Let’s Talk with Kat," hosted by Katerena DePasquale.

    ⋮

    The charges brought broad media attention, forced the cancellation of the team’s 2006 season, and cost coach Mike Pressler his job. The district attorney on the case was convicted of criminal contempt and disbarred.

    This is most unfortunate.


    TechCrunch: The federal crash-reporting rule Tesla opposes could be on the chopping block

    The Trump transition team wants to end a federal rule requiring automakers to report crashes when advanced driver-assistance or autonomous driving technology is engaged, Reuters reports.

    Federal safety agencies would lose the ability to investigate and regulate the safety of vehicles with automated-driving systems should the rule — which went into effect in 2021 — be killed.

    The crash-reporting rule has allowed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to analyze data on more than 2,700 crashes, leading to 10 investigations into six companies, including Tesla and Cruise, along with nine safety recalls from four different companies, says Reuters.


    Globe: Freeland confirms Ottawa to develop $15-billion program to help pension funds invest in AI data centres

    Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland confirmed Ottawa plans to develop a $15-billion program to generate up to $45-billion in investments from pension plans to build AI data centres, as first reported by The Globe and Mail.

    Ms. Freeland announced a suite of measures aimed at making it more attractive for major pension funds to invest in Canada at an event in Toronto on Friday. The new measures will be part of Ottawa’s fall economic statement, which will be released on Monday.


    Globe: Ontario didn’t inform public about expert advice to shift away from natural gas

    It is unclear how this report has informed the Ford government’s energy plans, which adopt an “all-of-the-above” approach that includes renewable energy but also a large increase in natural gas to mitigate the energy supply gap. The move has already made Ontario’s grid dirtier: in 2021, the electricity system was 94 per cent emissions-free, but that is now down to 87 per cent.


    CBC: These musicians bought a seat for cello worth $4.5M. Air Canada wouldn’t let it on board

    A pair of classical musicians, including famed British cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason, cancelled a sold-out show in Toronto after Air Canada refused to allow them to board their flight with a cello, even though they’d purchased a seat for the instrument.

    Kanneh-Mason and his pianist sister Isata were scheduled to perform at Koerner Hall on Wednesday, but had to cancel last minute, the pair shared in an Instagram post.

    “First we had delays, then a cancellation, and the day concluded by being denied boarding with the cello — despite having a confirmed seat for it — on a new, final flight into Toronto,” they wrote.


    UPI: Trump advocates eliminating daylight saving time, calling it ‘inconvenient’

    In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said he would work to ditch the practice of setting clocks ahead by one hour each spring and back in the fall.

    Something we agree on!


    Last Updated: 13.Dec.2024 23:10 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 3:31 AM, Dec 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 12.Dec.2024


    TorStar: Canadian iPhone and Android users should stop texting each other, experts advise, as FBI investigates cyberattacks in the U.S.

    Instead of relying on texting, experts say Android and Apple users should use fully end-to-end encrypted services to communicate with each other, like WhatsApp or Telegram. Hengartner personally recommends the app Signal, which he says “has a very good reputation in the security community.”


    TorStar: Trudeau government unveils new target to cut greenhouse gas

    Climate activists expressed disappointment over the target, with the organization Environmental Defence decrying the goal as a “failure” for Canada’s contribution to the global struggle against the climate crisis. 

    Caroline Brouillette, executive director of an umbrella group of organizations called Climate Action Network Canada, said the new target shows the federal government “has chosen to cave” instead of pledging to seriously address national emissions.

    “This weak target is deeply disconnected from Canada’s fair share of the global climate effort, and from the level of ambition we are seeing in other countries,” she said in an emailed statement.

    ⋮

    Over more than 30 years of participation in international efforts to fight climate change, Canada — one of the world’s heaviest emitters and a major fossil fuel producer — has never hit a promised emissions-reduction target. Other wealthy countries also have more ambitious climate targets. The United Kingdom recently declared it would slash emissions to 81 per cent below 1990 levels by 2035.


    TorStar: Suncor to increase oil and gas output by up to five per cent in 2025

    Suncor says it is aiming to add more than 100,000 barrels per day of oil and gas production between 2023 and 2026.

    And in related news…


    UPI: U.S. fines foreign airlines $825K for designator code violations, flying in prohibited air space

    U.S. authorities fined Etihad Airways $400,000 for using United Airlines designator code and Ethiopian Airlines $425,000 for using the code that belongs to JetBlue Airways.

    “Ethiopian Airlines operated a significant number of flights carrying the United Airlines code between Ethiopia and Djibouti in airspace prohibited by the FAA to U.S. operators,” the Transportation Department officials said in a statement.


    Guardian: ‘Unprecedented risk’ to life on Earth: Scientists call for halt on ‘mirror life’ microbe research

    World-leading scientists have called for a halt on research to create “mirror life” microbes amid concerns that the synthetic organisms would present an “unprecedented risk” to life on Earth.

    The international group of Nobel laureates and other experts warn that mirror bacteria, constructed from mirror images of molecules found in nature, could become established in the environment and slip past the immune defences of natural organisms, putting humans, animals and plants at risk of lethal infections.

    Although a viable mirror microbe would probably take at least a decade to build, a new risk assessment raised such serious concerns about the organisms that the 38-strong group urged scientists to stop work towards the goal and asked funders to make clear they will no longer support the research.


    Guardian: Gukesh Dommaraju becomes youngest world chess champion after horrific Ding Liren blunder

    “I was totally in shock when I realized I made a blunder,” Ding said. “His facial expression showed that he was very happy and excited and I realized I made a blunder. It took some time to realize it.”


    Guardian: Pompeii experts back Pliny’s account of Mount Vesuvius eruption date

    The date on which Mount Vesuvius erupted, wiping out the lives of thousands in ancient Pompeii and other nearby towns, has long divided scholars.

    But a study by Pompeii experts suggests that the Roman author Pliny the Younger probably had it right all along: the volcano erupted on 24 August AD79 and not later in the year as has been suggested.


    Last Updated: 12.Dec.2024 23:58 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:45 AM, Dec 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 11.Dec.2024


    MacRumors: Apple Releases tvOS 18.2 With Snoopy Screen Savers and Projector Support

    Apple today released tvOS 18.2, the newest version of the tvOS 18 operating system that came out in September. tvOS 18.2 comes more than a month after Apple released tvOS 18.1, and it is available for the Apple TV 4K and the ‌Apple TV‌ HD models.


    CBC: Entertainer and mentalist The Amazing Kreskin dead at 89

    A former manager says George Joseph Kresge Jr. died in his New Jersey home Tuesday.


    Last Updated: 11.Dec.2024 23:59 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:17 AM, Dec 12
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 10.Dec.2024


    CleanTechnica: US Postal Workers Love Their New Electric Mail Trucks!

    What’s new with the new USPS electric mail trucks? Nearly everything, as the design of the vehicles hasn’t had an upgrade since the 1980s. Carriers had offered ideas for improving their vehicles for years, and some of their suggestions were incorporated into the final design. These vehicles offer a 360-degree camera, side cargo door for loading and unloading packages, storage space extraordinaire, and air conditioning — so au courant!


    PBS: Probate commissioner rejects Rupert Murdoch’s attempt to change family trust over Fox News media empire control

    A probate commissioner has ruled against Rupert Murdoch’s effort to change his family’s trust to give one of his sons control of his media empire and ensure Fox News maintains its conservative editorial slant, according to a sealed document obtained by The New York Times.

    In a decision filed on Saturday, a probate commissioner in Nevada concluded that Murdoch, 93, and his son, Lachlan Murdoch, had acted in “bad faith” in their endeavor to amend the irrevocable trust, The New York Times reported on Monday.


    Wired: Poker Cheaters Allegedly Use Tiny Hidden Cameras to Spot Dealt Cards

    Several recent schemes were uncovered involving poker players at casinos allegedly using miniature cameras, concealed in personal electronics, to spot cards. Should players everywhere be concerned?


    TechCrunch: Google kicks off $20B renewable energy building spree to power AI

    Nuclear power may have received the lion’s share of attention from energy hungry tech companies over the past few months, with Google among them. But it appears that those new reactors won’t be enough for their AI ambitions: Google is now working with partners to build gigawatts of renewable power, battery storage, and grid upgrades to power its data centers.

    Google announced Tuesday it signed a deal with renewable developer Intersect Power and investment fund TPG Rise Climate to spin up enough carbon-free power to drive several gigawatt-scale data centers. Altogether, the investment in renewable power will run about $20 billion, and Intersect is already financing the first project, the company told TechCrunch.

    How much AI will be “free” in the next year or two?


    Globe: Trudeau declines to defend Finance Minister in exchange with Poilievre

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declined to say whether he is at loggerheads with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland over government spending, on the same day that she gave the clearest signal yet that the minority Liberals will not meet their promised deficit target.

    Opposition MPs seized on a Globe and Mail report Tuesday that said tensions have risen between Ms. Freeland and the Prime Minister’s Office about increased spending on political strategies such as the two-month GST holiday on toys, alcohol and food and a promised $250 rebate for people earning $150,000 or less.

    The Globe, citing 10 sources, said Ms. Freeland is concerned that this kind of spending has put what she previously called her $40.1-billion “fiscal guidepost” in jeopardy and that her department had characterized the GST and rebate policies as economically unwise.


    TechCrunch: Amazon is officially in the online car sales business

    Amazon expanded Tuesday into online car sales with the launch of Amazon Autos, an e-commerce business that lets customers find, order, and buy new cars, trucks, and SUVs from dealerships.

    Amazon is kicking off the new endeavor with Hyundai in 48 U.S. cities, including Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. The launch comes a little more than a year since the e-commerce giant announced plans to start selling vehicles on its website in the second half of 2024. Amazon said it will add more cities and additional auto manufacturers in 2025.


    MacRumors: Apple Releases iOS 18.2 and iPadOS 18.2 With Genmoji, Image Playground, Siri ChatGPT and More

    Safari

    • New background images to customize your Safari Start Page
    • Import and Export enables you to export your browsing data from Safari and import browsing data from another app into Safari
    • HTTPS Priority upgrades URLs to HTTPS whenever possible
    • File Download Live Activity shows the progress of a file download in the Dynamic Island and on your home screen

    Last Updated: 10.Dec.2024 23:59 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:24 PM, Dec 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 09.Dec.2024


    Just Have a Think (YouTube): Renewable Energy Domination

    Renewable technology cost curves are dropping so quickly and installation rates are accelerating so fast that in some countries around the world they already account for more than fifty percent of all electricity generation. No wonder the fossil fuel industry is trying every trick in it’s playbook to try to hoodwink the public and slow progress. But seriously guys…give it up. It’s over already!

    Video Transcripts available at our website http://www.justhaveath…

    • IEA PVPS - trends in Solar PV 2024
    • Lawrence Livermore - Energy Sankey Chart
    • EIA - US energy projection 2023
    • Solar domination of California grid [LinkedIn]
    • The primary energy fallacy

    Mark Z. Jacobson: On Bluesky


    IEA-PVPS: Trends in PV Applications 2024

    For the 29th consecutive year, the IEA-PVPS Trends report is now available. This document provides the most comprehensive global overview of the development of the Photovoltaics sector, covering policies, drivers, technologies, statistics and industry analysis.

    Key Highlights:

    • Global PV Installations: A record-breaking 456 GW of photovoltaic capacity was installed globally in 2023.

    • China’s Dominance: China’s solar market accounted for the majority of global growth, contributing 277 GW, while the rest of the world added 179 GW.

    • Operational Capacity: By early 2024, over 1.6 TW of PV systems were operational globally, producing 2,136 TWh of electricity, which accounts for 8.3% of global electricity demand.

    • Emission Reductions: These PV systems reduced 0.92 gigatons of CO2 emissions, equivalent to 2.5% of global energy-related emissions, if we consider they now replace baseload power generation — confirming solar energy as a cornerstone of the sustainable energy transition.

    report (PDF)


    Benzinga: Warren Buffett Says Medical Costs Are ‘The Tapeworm’ Of The U.S. Economy – And Warns ‘The Tapeworm Won the Fight

    Buffett’s longtime partner, the late Charlie Munger, didn’t hesitate to share his critique of the U.S. health care system. In a 2018 interview on Squawk Box, Munger called the system “shot through with rampant waste” and even went as far as to label it “deeply immoral.”


    EIA: Today in Energy - U.S. Energy Information Administration

    Recent articles


    Mark Jacobson: Growing Effectiveness of Renewables

    3 U.S. states produced 70-78% of their electricity demand with just wind for a full year (Oct 1, ‘23-Sep 30, ‘24)

    SD: 77.5% wind IA: 76.6% KS: 69.82%

    Another 4 produced 46-51% wind:

    OK: 51.4% WY: 49.7% NM: 46.3% ND: 48.5%


    NYT: Police Identify ‘Strong Person of Interest’ in C.E.O.’s Killing

    • The man was arrested in Altoona, Pa., on gun charges after he was spotted in a McDonald’s.
    • He was carrying a handwritten manifesto criticizing health insurance companies, law enforcement officials said.

    NYT: Trump’s Perfume Line Hits the Market With Jill Biden Photo

    With weeks until he takes office, Mr. Trump is capitalizing on the attention of his election victory, hawking fragrances and footwear to supporters who are in the mood to celebrate. There have been $299 “Trump Crypto President” sneakers on offer, along with $119 “Victory” cologne and $299 “First Lady” shoes. There is little information available about what materials the products are made from or where they are manufactured. And according to the products’ website, sales are final.


    The Atlantic: Sora Is the Most Hyped Bot Since ChatGPT

    OpenAI’s key word this afternoon was product. The company is billing Sora not as a research breakthrough but as a consumer experience–part of the company’s ongoing commercial lurch. At its founding, in 2015, OpenAI was a nonprofit with a mission to build digital intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole, unconstrained by a need to generate financial return.” Today, it pumps out products and business deals like any other tech company chasing revenue. OpenAI added a for-profit arm in 2019, and as of September, it is reportedly considering revoking the control of its nonprofit board entirely. Sora’s marketing is even a change from February, when OpenAI presented the video-generating model as a step toward the company’s lofty mission of creating technology more intelligent than humans. Bill Peebles, one of Sora’s lead researchers, told me in May that video would enable “a couple of avenues to AGI,” or artificial general intelligence, by allowing the company’s programs to simulate physics and even human thoughts. To generate a video of a football game, Sora might need to model both aerodynamics and players’ psychology.


    Guardian: Exercising for 30 minutes improves memory, study suggests

    For cycle-to-work commuters and those who start the day with a brisk walk, the benefits of banking some early exercise is well understood.

    Now scientists believe activity is not just a good idea for improving the day ahead — physical activity could be associated with small increase in memory scores the next, too.

    A study from University College London has shown that 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity and sleeping for at least six hours at night, could contribute to improved cognitive performance the following day.


    Globe: On the front lines of the EV revolution: Inside the plant making the first made-in-Canada production EV

    As the first made-in-Canada production EVs start rolling off the line at the Stellantis plant in Windsor, Ont., we take an in-depth look at what it took to get here.

    ⋮

    Getting to this moment – the first mass-produced electric passenger car made in Canada — is the culmination of years, arguably decades, of work by governments, unions, auto workers, suppliers and car company executives, not to mention tens of billions of dollars in government subsidies for companies all along the EV supply chain.

    Most of that money is intended to establish Ontario as a global electric vehicle manufacturing hub — a key part of our green future and new economy.


    Last Updated: 09.Dec.2024 23:12 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:30 AM, Dec 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 08.Dec.2024


    Globe: I paid $16 to not see Taylor Swift at her Vancouver Eras Tour show, and the ‘no stage view’ seats were worth it

    Some magic must have been at work when a friend of mine snapped up a pair of $16 “no-stage view” tickets to the Eras Tour’s first Vancouver show and asked me to go.


    MacRumors: 20 New Things Your iPhone Can Do in iOS 18.2

    While not all advertised Apple Intelligence features will be available immediately, iOS 18.2 introduces several capabilities that aim to make your iPhone smarter and more intuitive. Below, we’ve listed 20 new things your iPhone will be able to do when the update rolls out in time for the holidays.


    CBC: A huge hack of U.S. phone companies means your text messages may not be safe

    Canadians should consider encrypted messaging services to protect themselves, cybersecurity experts say.


    How to Geek: Bluesky Doesn’t Allow for Private Accounts Yet, so How Do You Protect Yourself?

    Many like to tout Bluesky as being a safer, less toxic platform than one like X (formerly Twitter). But as more people create accounts, that includes the trolls. So, how do you protect yourself from trolling, harassment, and other toxic behavior without the ability to lock your account?


    Last Updated: 08.Dec.2024 21:06 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 4:20 AM, Dec 9
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 07.Dec.2024


    Six Colors: Simply brings its piano app to Vision Pro

    This week I took Simply Piano for Vision Pro for a spin, and it was anything from boring. The popular iPad app for teaching piano has come to Vision Pro, and so I sat down at the very same piano I used to practice on as a kid–it’s in a somewhat warmer room now–but with a Vision Pro over my head.

    Simply Piano works by listening to you playing notes and detecting if you’re playing the right or wrong ones. It’s very clever, but the Vision Pro version adds in the ability to overlay a virtual keyboard on your real one, so it can provide visual cues (in the form of glowing notes) when you’re not sure which key to play. It also annotates your fingers, so you can see which fingers are supposed to play which notes.


    Globe: Chrystia Freeland answered Senate questions on the GST break. It did not go well

    Too often these days, House of Commons committees are like one of those “inspiration vs. reality” split images comparing the perfect magazine version of a cake with the melting, cockeyed, radioactive-looking reality some poor schmuck whipped up at home.

    Magazine-cake version of Commons committees: We are here to study complex issues in depth and use our partisan tensions constructively to shape better legislation.

    Hideous home-baker reality: We are here to kick each other in the crotch for social-media clips.

    But this week, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland appeared before the Senate finance committee to defend her government’s two-month GST holiday. And because it was a Senate and not a Commons committee, the manner of working was completely different. It was not recognizably partisan and there were no histrionics or cheap games, just precise and technical questions seeking real answers.

    It was, in short, a disaster for a government looking to claim thoughtfulness and coherence for this policy.


    Fast Company: Supreme Court could make it easier for projects to ignore environmental impact

    The Eagle County case stems from a proposal by a coalition of railway project developers to build an 85-mile rail line in Utah to transport waxy crude oil from wells to the interstate rail network. The developers sought a license from the Surface Transportation Board, an independent federal agency, which prepared an environmental impact statement and ultimately approved the license in 2021.

    Officials in Eagle County, Colorado, sued, along with several environmental groups, arguing that the environmental impact statement was defective. In their view, the Surface Transportation Board should have gone further in considering “upstream” environmental effects that the railway would induce, such as increased oil drilling, and “downstream” effects of refining and consuming that additional oil.


    NewsNation: Ohio bill would require high-demand liquor bottles to be opened when sold

    The problem, DeMora said, is that people who he refers to as “flippers” quickly buy up the allocated bourbons and illegally resell them on a secondary market for significantly more than what they paid. 

    “If they buy a bottle of Pappy Van Winkle (a brand of bourbon) for $165, they turn around and sell it for $2,000 on the internet with these various sites, and that is illegal, and what it does is it basically stops people that are bourbon drinkers that want the bourbon for themselves, they can’t get them,” DeMora said. 

    Maybe the state should be auctioning high demand bourbons?


    ScienceAlert: Scientists Reveal a Very Compelling Reason to Use Your Air Fryer

    Stir frying, deep fat frying, boiling, and pan frying food are all far more likely to pollute your home’s indoors than the relative newcomer to the modern kitchen, the benchtop air fryer oven.

    Researchers from the University of Birmingham in the UK and the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany set up a kitchen in their lab to see how the different methods compared when cooking chicken breast.

    They measured levels of particulate matter (PM) between 0.18 and 26 microns (millionths of a meter), as well as levels of volatile organic compounds (VOCs); chemical pollutants found across foods, cleaning products, paint, and many other substances.


    TechCrunch: Google says its new AI model outperforms the top weather forecast system

    In a paper published in Nature, DeepMind researchers said they found that GenCast outperforms the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts' ENS – apparently the world’s top operational forecasting system.

    And in a blog post, the DeepMind team offered a more accessible explanation of the tech: While its previous weather model was “deterministic, and provided a single, best estimate of future weather,” GenCast “comprises an ensemble of 50 or more predictions, each representing a possible weather trajectory,” creating a “complex probability distribution of future weather scenarios.”


    Last Updated: 07.Dec.2024 23:16 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:08 AM, Dec 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 06.Dec.2024


    Atlantic: Appeasement in the New Age of Trump

    It is a very ominous thing if our leading forums for discussion of public affairs are already feeling the chill of intimidation and responding with efforts to appease.

    I write these words very aware that I’m probably saying goodbye forever to a television platform that I enjoy and from which I have benefited as both viewer and guest. I have been the recipient of personal kindnesses from the hosts that I have not forgotten.

    I do not write to scold anyone; I write because fear is infectious. Let it spread, and it will paralyze us all.

    gift link


    BBC: Storm Darragh: Rare red weather warning cancels Christmas events

    A rare red weather warning has been issued with extremely strong and damaging winds possible this weekend.

    The wind warning - the highest level - is predicting dangerous and potentially life-threatening weather across 13 counties as Storm Darragh arrives.

    Gusts of 90mph (144 km/h) or more are possible over the coasts and hills of north, west and south Wales and are expected to develop during the early hours of Saturday morning.

    ⋮

    The red warning is due to come into effect at 03:00 GMT and remain in force until 11:00.

    ⋮

    The current red wind warning covers counties including Monmouthshire, Cardiff and Carmarthenshire in the south, Ceredigion, and Gwynedd and Anglesey in the north west.


    Last Updated: 06.Dec.2024 20:32 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:04 AM, Dec 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 05.Dec.2024


    TorStar: Ford government defends tripling spending on ads

    Auditor general Shelley Spence castigated the Tories for an Ontario Place redevelopment conducted in a way that was “not fair, transparent or accountable” with a $2.237-billion price tag five to six times original estimates.


    Steven G Harris (GitHub): MarkupEditor: WYSIWYG editing for SwiftUI and UIKit apps

    Jealous of those JavaScript coders with their WYSIWYG text editors, but just can’t stomach the idea of immersing yourself in JavaScript when you’re enjoying the comfort and joy of Swift? Yeah, me too. So when I was forced to do it, I thought I’d share what I did as a way to help others avoid it.

    via Johan L


    CBC: Federal minister Harjit Sajjan defends accepting taxpayer-funded Taylor Swift tickets

    Federal cabinet minister Harjit Sajjan is defending his decision to accept taxpayer-funded Taylor Swift tickets for himself and his daughter.

    Sajjan, the minister responsible for the Pacific Economic Development Agency of Canada, was invited by PavCo, a B.C. Crown corporation that owns and operates B.C. Place Stadium, where the concerts will take place.

    PavCo has been donating Swift tickets to food banks and other charity organizations so that they could raffle them off and raise money. PavCo has also donated B.C. Place suites to be auctioned off, raising more than $1 million, according to the corporation.


    MacRumors: Former Apple Employees Used Charity Scam to Steal Over $150,000

    Apple has a program that will match or double employee donations made to charities, and the employees came up with a plan to make fake donations and collect money from Apple.

    Ringleader Siu Kei Kwan had five other Apple employees make donations to the American Chinese International Cultural Exchange (ACICE) or Hop4Kids, both of which he was associated with. After Apple matched the donations, the original money was returned to the employees, and the matched money was kept. The employees also wrote off their fake charitable donations on their tax returns, earning them additional money.

    Between July 1, 2018 and April 6, 2021, the employees collected approximately $152,000 from Apple’s program and overreported $100,000 in charitable contributions as tax deductions. Apple detected the fraud and brought it to the attention of the district attorney’s office.


    NYT: Zeynep Tufekci: The Rage and Glee That Followed a C.E.O.’s Killing Should Ring All Alarms

    I’ve been studying social media for a long time, and I can’t think of any other incident when a murder in this country has been so openly celebrated.

    Bernie Getz?


    Last Updated: 05.Dec.2024 18:58 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 9:28 PM, Dec 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 04.Dec.2024


    NYT: California Democrat Flips Seat in the Last House Race to Be Called

    Though the G.O.P. has won more than the 218 seats necessary to control the House, President-elect Trump wants two of the Republican House members to serve in his administration. A third, Matt Gaetz, resigned last month after Mr. Trump announced that he intended to nominate him for attorney general. (Mr. Gaetz later withdrew from consideration after considerable opposition surfaced to his potential nomination.)


    ListenNotes: About Listen Notes Podcast Search Engine and Database

    Search the whole Internet’s podcasts. Curate your own podcast playlists. Listen on your favorite podcast player apps.

    via Dave Winer


    UPI: High-fructose corn syrup in foods might speed cancer

    The new research shows that fructose differs from other sugars (such as glucose) in the way that it aids and abets cancer cells.


    BBC: Secretary of State begins process of repealing Legacy Act

    The secretary of state for Northern Ireland has begun the process of formally repealing the controversial Legacy Act.

    The act, which was brought in by the Conservative government, introduced a ban on inquests and civil actions related to incidents during the Troubles.

    It also sought to offer a conditional amnesty for people suspected of Troubles-related crimes in exchange for co-operating with a new information recovery body.

    Labour pledged to repeal the Legacy Act if they won the general election in July.


    Last Updated: 04.Dec.2024 22:30 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:05 AM, Dec 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 03.Dec.2024


    Ars Technica: Certain names make ChatGPT grind to a halt, and we know why

    Filter resulting from subject of settled defamation lawsuit could cause trouble down the road.


    Ars Technica: Company claims 1,000 percent price hike drove it from VMware to open source rival

    Companies have been discussing migrating off of VMware since Broadcom’s takeover a year ago led to higher costs and other controversial changes. Now we have an inside look at one of the larger customers that recently made the move.

    According to a report from The Register today, Beeks Group, a cloud operator headquartered in the United Kingdom, has moved most of its 20,000-plus virtual machines (VMs) off VMware and to OpenNebula, an open source cloud and edge computing platform. Beeks Group sells virtual private servers and bare metal servers to financial service providers. It still has some VMware VMs, but “the majority” of its machines are currently on OpenNebula, The Register reported.


    NPR: People who take obesity drugs lose the taste for alcohol, new study finds

    Many social drinkers who take obesity medications, such as Wegovy or Mounjaro, say they don’t enjoy alcohol as much.

    A new study of WeightWatchers members who take obesity drugs — and were in the habit of drinking — finds about half of them cut back after they started the medication.

    ⋮

    Hall’s experience fits with the results of the new study published in the journal JAMA Network Open. The study included survey data from about 14,000 WeightWatchers members, mostly women, all of whom were taking medication including Wegovy and Mounjaro. Some were taking older medications such as metformin.


    Daring Fireball: Google Search Is Already in Decline

    The accompanying chart (“Estimated share of U.S. search advertising revenue”) suggests Google’s decline has been Amazon’s gain. Basically, Google may still dominate the market for general web search, but people more and more are searching using apps and services that aren’t (or aren’t only) general web search engines. And the reason why is that Google web search has gotten worse.


    Ars Technica: Flour, water, salt, GitHub: The Bread Code is a sourdough baking framework

    One year ago, I didn’t know how to bake bread. I just knew how to follow a recipe.

    If everything went perfectly, I could turn out something plain but palatable. But should anything change—temperature, timing, flour, Mercury being in Scorpio—I’d turn out a partly poofy pancake. I presented my partly poofy pancakes to people, and they were polite, but those platters were not particularly palatable.


    NYT: How Amazon Delivers Packages Within A Day

    Walmart, which last year started offering customers deliveries in as little as 30 minutes, says it can now offer same-day delivery to 86 percent of all U.S. households from its 4,600 stores. In November, Walmart’s chief financial officer said deliveries from stores were up nearly 50 percent from a year earlier and accounted for $2.5 billion in sales in each of the previous 12 consecutive months. Sales on delivered items grew faster than sales in stores.


    CBC: Convoy organizer Steeve Charland found guilty of mischief

    Steeve Charland was found guilty by an Ontario Superior Court judge on Tuesday for his role in the Freedom Convoy protest in downtown Ottawa in early 2022.

    Over the course of the trial, the defence argued the convoy demonstration was being “managed” by the City of Ottawa and that the Crown had not established beyond a reasonable doubt that the protest was illegal.

    The judge said in French it was unreasonable to believe the city approved of the demonstration. He listed 10 consequences of the protest including street congestion, noise from horns and engines, the closure of some businesses and the disproportionate use of police resources to maintain public order.


    The Street: McDonald’s is facing the brutal aftermath of price increases

    The average price of a McDonald’s menu item has increased by roughly 40% since 2019, so it is no surprise that consumers are pursuing other options for quick meals.


    CBC: Excavation begins at Winnipeg-area landfill for remains of women, victims of serial killer

    The search for the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran has officially started at Prairie Green landfill, north of Winnipeg.

    The dig began Monday morning, Premier Wab Kinew announced at a noon news conference.

    “At 10:01 a.m., the first truck carrying landfill material drove down this mountain that is Prairie Green and delivered that first load of landfill material into the search facility,” he said.


    Inside Climate News: Droughts in Brazil and Vietnam Are Driving up Global Coffee Prices

    Climate change is projected to drastically reduce suitable coffee-growing regions by 2050.

    Your morning caffeine fix could soon become a luxury in the face of climate change. Last week, coffee prices surged to a 47-year high as global growers struggle to recover from extreme weather.


    Last Updated: 03.Dec.2024 23:40 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 3:30 AM, Dec 4
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 02.Dec.2024


    CBC: Call to reopen search for missing paramedic comes after hiker survives 50 days in northeast B.C. woods

    The story of a man who survived 50 days in northeastern B.C.’s backcountry has reignited interest in the search for a second man who was reported missing the same weekend in a different part of B.C.’s Peace region.

    Jim Barnes, 29, was last seen on Oct. 18 when he took his golden retriever, Murphy, out to an area near Groundbirch Forest Service Road, southeast of Chetwynd, B.C., and about 60 kilometres southwest of Fort St. John.

    He was reported missing on Oct. 19 after he failed to return home — the same day that 20-year-old Sam Benastick was reported missing in the Redfern-Keily Provincial Park, about 250 kilometres northwest of Fort St. John.


    ScienceAlert: Mysterious Driving Factor Behind Long COVID May Have Been Identified

    Around 5–10% of people with COVID infections go on to experience long COVID, with symptoms lasting three months or more.

    Researchers have proposed several biological mechanisms to explain long COVID. However, in a perspective article published in the latest Medical Journal of Australia, we argue that much, if not all, long COVID appears to be driven by the virus itself persisting in the body.

    ⋮

    What needs to happen next?

    The obvious response to this is to fast-track trials of known antivirals for prevention and cure of long COVID.

    This should include more left-field therapies such as the diabetes drug metformin.


    MacRumors: Coinbase Onramp Now Supports Buying Crypto With Apple Pay

    Cryptocurrency platform Coinbase today announced the launch of a new feature designed to let people buy cryptocurrency using Apple Pay.

    Apple Pay‌ is available for all fiat-to-crypto purchases (aka paper currencies like the U.S. dollar) in Coinbase Onramp, a tool that developers and websites can use to accept crypto payments from customers.

    With ‌Apple Pay‌ integration in Coinbase Onramp, a customer can use ‌Apple Pay‌ to buy an item or a service, paying in dollars that are converted to cryptocurrency for the merchant. Coinbase promises a straightforward verification process and free offramping.

    Does Manton take crypto?


    UniLadTech: Apple’s guide to uninstalling iOS 18 after iPhone users rage about latest update

    Complaints over features like the new photo gallery, emoji size, and countless other additions or changes have caused quite the pushback, and the frustration has largely been left at the feet of Apple as people feel like they’re stuck.


    UniLadTech: Life-changing hidden iPhone weather app setting texts you before it’s going to rain

    To activate Apple’s weather alerts, follow these simple steps:

    • Go to Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services
    • Select Weather and tap on ‘Always’
    • Ensure Precise Location is turned on
    • Head to the Weather app and tap the menu button at the bottom right (it looks like three stacked dots)
    • Tap the menu button in the top right (three dots in a line)
    • Press notifications

    There should be options for ‘Severe Weather’ and ‘Next-Hour Precipitation’, and you’ll want to make sure both are toggled on. There are some limits to the service, but according to the official information from Apple, severe weather information uses national weather services from Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, Japan, Mexico, Thailand, the United States, and ‘most’ of Europe. If you’re in China, severe weather warnings are available from QWeather.


    Interesting Engineering: Japan launches FAST fusion project to achieve limitless energy by 2030

    The plan is to use the high-temperature superconducting (HTS) coils and select the low aspect ratio tokamak to generate high-pressure plasmas in a compact size, compared to more conventional, larger tokamaks. Reducing the device size also helps to lower manufacturing times and costs.

    This device will operate using novel technologies such as HTS coils, new low-activation materials, and deuterium production from seawater. FAST will be carried out in collaboration with a wide range of partners in the public and private sectors, both domestically and internationally.


    Last Updated: 02.Dec.2024 23:50 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:08 AM, Dec 3
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 01.Dec.2024


    CBC: Black plastics may contain toxic compounds that can leach into food, experts say

    Study finds fire retardants in products like kitchen utensils, takeout containers made with recycled plastics.

    Those containers look awfully familiar…


    Norrsken: Impact/100

    Don’t you know that there are literally thousands of people out there working on mind-blowing solutions to the world’s greatest challenges?

    That’s why we’ve created the Impact/100. It’s a list of the world’s most promising impact startups, as chosen by Norrsken and our partners.

    You could say a lot about them, but it’s basically this: It’s 100 ways to fix the future.


    NYT: Cara Hoffman: Running Away From Trump’s America Is Complicated. I Should Know.

    My next departure was after the first Trump victory in 2016. I didn’t want to live in a nation capable of electing a Donald Trump, with his world of endless self-promotion, dishonesty and accumulation. I didn’t want to watch his hatred and lies become accepted or rationalized. But it wasn’t just Mr. Trump. I had become a workaholic, sometimes spending 12 hours a day staring into the void of a glowing computer screen. My partner and I lived in part of the Lower East Side that eventually became gentrified beyond recognition. Every year I felt more certain that to succeed in an atomized consumer culture was to fail as a human being.

    ⋮

    In 2015, roughly 6,800 Americans applied for Canadian residence. After Mr. Trump’s inauguration in 2017, that number jumped to over 9,000. According to a 2023 Gallup poll, 17 percent of Americans said they wanted to leave the country permanently. In the latest polling from 2024 that number had risen to 21 percent.

    American Citizens Abroad estimates 3.9 million Americans were living abroad permanently as of 2023. According to World Population Review, as of 2024 those millions of Americans were living in 158 different countries. The largest number, about 800,000, were in Mexico. Financial advisers and immigration experts are now anticipating a new surge of Americans leaving.

    Of course, for many people they need to leave to find a place that they can afford.


    SMH: Eyes of the energy world on WA vanadium battery tech

    A deep-storage battery being trialled in Kununurra in the Kimberley region of Western Australia could solve the clean energy challenge for some of the nation’s most remote communities.

    As well as being a challenging environment to live or work in, hot and humid Kununurra is not connected to the state or national electricity grid.

    “A lot of our communities are remote and do struggle with the cost of living and we don’t want them to miss out on the energy transition,” Horizon Power’s executive general manager for business development and strategy Vi Garrood said.

    ⋮

    Horizon is also trialling Redflow’s zinc bromine flow battery (100 kW/400 kWh) on Nullagine’s microgrid and BASF’s sodium sulphur battery (250 kW/1450 kWh) at Carnarvon.


    NYT: Kash Patel’s Threat to the Rule of Law

    The perfect expression of the authoritarian approach to the rule of law comes from a former Peruvian president, Óscar Benavides: “For my friends, everything; for my enemies, the law.” The truly corrupted legal system combines impunity for the ruling class with punitive repression of political dissent.

    When Jack Smith moved to dismiss his federal cases against Donald Trump, that clearly signaled Trump’s impunity. It was a representation of the adage that might makes right. He won, so he now enjoys a privilege from prosecution.

    The selection of Kash Patel to lead the F.B.I. — a move that would require firing or forcing the resignation of Christopher Wray, the current F.B.I. director, well before the end of his 10-year term — demonstrates Trump’s commitment to repression and revenge.

    Patel is the ultimate Trump loyalist. I strongly recommend reading Elaina Plott Calabro’s profile of Patel in The Atlantic. Much of her reporting was based on interviews with Patel’s former colleagues in the first Trump administration.

    “Patel was dangerous,” Calabro wrote, summarizing their thoughts, “not because of a certain plan he would be poised to carry out if given control of the C.I.A. or F.B.I., but because he appeared to have no plan at all — his priorities today always subject to a mercurial president’s wishes tomorrow.”


    Last Updated: 01.Dec.2024 16:07 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:09 AM, Dec 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 30.Nov.2024


    CleanTechnica: Volt Solar Tile Set to Expand into the US Market

    In a nutshell, Peter has learnt that cracking the US market needs to be done properly. It’s more challenging and has different regulations, requiring lots more design tweaks to maintain Volt’s unique benefits of speed of install and low cost. But now Volt is ready to storm the Bastille. As part of the push forward, Volt is seeking crowdfunding.


    WashPo: Inside your body, aging unfolds at remarkably different rates

    The research suggests aging isn’t strictly temporal, not solely about minutes and years passing. Once considered a steady, predictable decline, affecting everything in our bodies, everywhere, all at once, aging is much more haphazard than we once thought, starting in different parts of our bodies at different times, possibly long before we’re even thinking about aging.

    It’s also personal, occurring at a unique molecular level inside each of us, and the process may be partially within our control. Once we know how our own organs are aging, we may be able to brake or speed that process by how we live.

    Full article via Yahoo. Also found in AppleNews+.


    NYT: Cucumbers Are Recalled After Salmonella Sickens People in 19 States

    At least 68 people have fallen ill in the outbreak believed to be linked to cucumbers sold in the United States and Canada, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.


    NYT: It’s Time to Talk About Your Advance Care Directive

    Instead of talking about politics around the Thanksgiving table this year, consider a less fraught topic: death.

    It’s something few of us want to think about, but death is a fact of life that we will all encounter, often first as a caregiver and then, inevitably, when we reach our own.

    As uncomfortable as it can be, discussing what medical care you want to receive at the end of your life is “one of the most loving things” you can do for your family, said Dr. Jennifer Gabbard, the director of the Palliative Medicine Research Program at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine.


    ScienceAlert: Scientists Discover Wolves Mimicking Bees in an Incredible New First

    If they are contributing to flower fertilization, the endangered wolves would join an exclusive but adorable group of non-flying mammals that pollinate plants. Examples of what is referred to as therophily include rodents, primates, elephant shrews and honey possums (Tarsipes rostratus) — the only entirely nectarivorous mammal that isn’t a bat.

    Includes pictures of cute animals.


    How to Geek: How to Use a Website as Your Mac’s Desktop Wallpaper

    • Plash allows you to use any web page as your wallpaper, making it always visible behind your other windows.
    • By default the web page is locked in state, but you can use Browser Mode to interact and adjust appearance and audio settings.
    • Consider using Plash to display a highly visible clock or calendar, to avoid closing sites while screen capturing, or to keep track of sites by refreshing them frequently.

    How to Geek: Proton VPN vs NordVPN: Will Nord Carry the Day?

    • Proton VPN and NordVPN both have a complex interface, hindering usability.
    • Proton VPN performs better than NordVPN, with faster speeds in recent years.
    • Proton VPN has a straightforward pricing scheme compared to NordVPN’s complicated plans.

    ⋮

    When it comes to security and privacy, Proton VPN has the advantage, albeit a slim one. Over the years, it has garnered a reputation for being a privacy-focused service, based in part on the company’s tireless activism, as well as the fact that it’s based in Switzerland. This country’s strict privacy laws give Proton users a large umbrella to shelter under — though Proton does make clear it’s not bulletproof.


    ScienceAlert: Expired Cans of Salmon From Decades Ago Reveal a Huge Surprise

    That’s a problem for parasite ecologists, like Natalie Mastick and Chelsea Wood from the University of Washington, who had been searching for a way to retroactively track the effects parasites had on Pacific Northwestern marine mammals.

    So when Wood got a call from Seattle’s Seafood Products Association, asking if she’d be interested in taking boxes of dusty old expired cans of salmon – dating back to the 1970s – off their hands, her answer was, unequivocally, yes.

    The cans had been set aside for decades as part of the association’s quality control process, but in the hands of the ecologists, they became an archive of excellently preserved specimens; not of salmon, but of worms.


    Last Updated: 30.Nov.2024 23:58 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:16 AM, Dec 1
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 29.Nov.2024


    ScienceAlert: The World’s Rarest Mineral Is So Rare It’s Only Ever Been Found Once

    The stone itself was purchased in 2010 at a market in Chaung-gyi in Myanmar by gemologist Kyaw Thu, who thought the raw gem was a mineral called scheelite. After he faceted the stone, though, he realized that he was looking at something unusual.

    Unable to match the mineral with anything known, he sent it to the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) Laboratory in Bangkok, Thailand. There, mineralogists were able to relate the stone to synthetic BiSbO4 — bismuth antimonate — though with the formula Bi3+Sb5+O4, an arrangement never before found in nature.


    SMH: Kristian White: Clare Nowland killer to remain on bail over Christmas

    “Mr White did not intend to kill or seriously injure Ms Nowland,” the judge said.

    “Mr White did not act out of anger, or malice, or revenge, or retribution, or envy, or jealousy, or avarice, or greed, or some misplaced desire to inflict harm or to avoid detection for some crime. Mr White made a significant mistake in the course of his work.”

    Crown prosecutor Brett Hatfield, SC, had submitted a full-time custodial sentence was “realistically inevitable” and that the jury had found White’s use of force “was not reasonably necessary”.

    It’s easy to see how the Taser/Axon company’s repeated claims that they are relatively harmless devices lead, at least in part, to this mistake.


    Guardian: We need to talk about plastic: five everyday items choking the planet

    Some plastics are worse than others and have a unique impact in various parts of the world. Here, we look at five of the worst offenders.

    • Plastic sachets, Indonesia …
    • Polyester clothing, Ghana and Kenya …
    • Drinks bottles, Caribbean islands …
    • Tetra Pak, Vietnam …
    • Wet wipes, UK …

    Guardian: Andrei Popoviciu: My father voted for Romania’s ultra-nationalist. I am beginning to understand why)

    His sentiment is not uncommon. For the past 35 years, Romania’s two dominant parties — centre-left social democrats and centre-right liberals — have presided over corruption scandals, nepotism, politically connected fraud and opaque use of public funds. Their decision to govern together in a coalition for the past three years has only deepened public mistrust, reinforcing the perception that they are all in it together against the people. For many Romanians, voting for Georgescu wasn’t just about ideology, but frustration.


    iPhone in Canada: Flickr’s “Your Best Shot 2024” Photo Contest Opens December 1st

    Photography enthusiasts, mark your calendars! Flickr’s most anticipated annual photo contest, Your Best Shot 2024, is set to begin on Sunday, December 1st.

    What began as a casual discussion in the FlickrCentral group in 2007 has grown into Flickr’s most popular contest. Over the years, Your Best Shot has become a global stage for photographers of all skill levels, highlighting exceptional talent and fostering a sense of community among Flickr members.

    This year’s contest is bigger than ever, featuring five competitive categories, including the much-loved “Open” category, which makes a triumphant return. Whether you’re a landscape photographer, portrait specialist, or experimental artist, there’s a category to showcase your finest work.


    Last Updated: 29.Nov.2024 15:35 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 3:47 AM, Nov 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 28.Nov.2024


    NYT: E.U. Vessels Surround Anchored Chinese Ship After Cables Are Severed in Baltic Sea

    For more than a week, a Chinese commercial ship has apparently been forced to anchor in the Baltic Sea, surrounded and monitored by naval and coast guard vessels from European countries as the authorities attempt to unravel a maritime mystery.

    The development arose after two undersea fiber-optic cables were severed under the sea, and investigators from a task force that includes Finland, Sweden and Lithuania are trying to determine if the ship’s crew intentionally cut the cables by dragging the ship’s anchor along the sea floor.

    On Wednesday, the Swedish police announced that the inquiry into the episode had concluded but that an investigation was ongoing. Sweden did not release any initial findings.

    American intelligence officials had assessed that the cables were not cut deliberately, though the authorities in Europe say they have not been able to rule out sabotage.


    9to5Mac: Review: FInd your lost wallet with your iPhone using SwitchBot Wallet Finder Card

    I have an AirTag on my keychain to keep track of my keys, but obviously an AirTag is too big and bulky to fit inside a wallet. That’s what the SwitchBot Wallet Finder is for. (Wallet Finder is currently 30% off for Black Friday [Amazon link], so it’s an even better deal than normal right now.)

    Disguised inside a thin, credit-card form factor, the SwitchBot Wallet Finder connects to the Find My app on your iPhone, so you can follow its location, and it even houses a speaker so you can make it beep to help you find your wallet when it inevitably gets lost somewhere in your home. Read on for my review …


    BBC: Daniel Khalife was a British soldier who spied for Iran and wanted to be a double agent

    At secondary school in south-west London, many of Khalife’s friends came from well-off families and he felt ashamed of his relative poverty. He had struggled to focus at school but managed to get 10 GCSEs.

    Aged 15, Khalife was caught stealing goods from a shop by using a powerful magnet to remove security tags.

    “I have always had a gift for exposing flaws in security,” he told the jury during his recent trial.

    Certainly in other cases people’s need or desire for money has been a significant motivator in their willingness to spy.


    BBC: Israel building new military dividing line across Gaza, satellite images suggest

    Experts disagree over how long the new partition might be intended to remain in place. Dr Hellyer suggested that it could form the basis of plan to expel Palestinians from the area permanently.

    “Personally I think they’re going to settle Jewish settlers in the north, probably in the next 18 months,” he said. “They won’t call them settlements. To begin with they’ll call them outposts or whatever, but that’s what they’ll be and they’ll grow from there.”


    Discover Magazine: Two Different Early Human Species Walked the Same Lake 1.5 Million Years Ago

    About 1.5 million years ago, two different species of early man likely came within hours of passing each other on the shores of what is now known as Lake Turkana in Kenya. Two sets of footprints tracing each hominin’s path represent the first geological record of such an example, according to a report in Science.

    Those footprints are part of a much larger picture that tells a more complete story of life there then.

    “The footprint evidence provides a unique window into the occupation of the landscape over a short period of time,” says Craig Feibel, a geology professor at Rutgers and an author of the study. “We can actually see not only two different species of hominid, but all of these birds and antelope and everything else active on the lake margin 1.5 million years ago.”


    NewsNation: Amazon workers on strike from Black Friday to Cyber Monday

    Amazons workers across 20 countries, including the United States, are striking against what the organizing labor union calls anti-worker and anti-democratic practices.

    This is the fifth year UNI Global Union has spearheaded the “Make Amazon Pay” movement with the aim to hold Amazon accountable for “labor abuses, environmental degradation and threats to democracy.”


    MacRumors: tvOS 18.2 No Longer Expected to Include More Apple TV+ Screen Savers

    The upcoming tvOS 18.2 update adds a rotation of Snoopy screen savers to 2021 and newer Apple TV models, but it seems that an additional “TV and Movies” category of screen savers has been canceled, or at least postponed. These screen savers were expected to be based on various Apple TV+ series and movies.


    PBS: Supreme Court to hear case on crackdown of sweet vapes popular with kids

    Vaping is coming before the Supreme Court next week as federal regulators ask the high court to uphold its block on sweet, flavored products following a spike in youth e-cigarette use.

    The Food and Drug Administration has denied more than a million marketing applications for candy- or fruit-flavored products that appeal to kids, part of a wider crackdown that advocates say helped drive down teen vaping after an “epidemic level” surge in 2019.

    ⋮

    The marketing refusals combined with age-limit enforcement on the federal and state levels have helped drive down youth nicotine use to its lowest level in a decade, said Dennis Henigan, vice president for legal and regulatory affairs at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

    He says the FDA was clear in its requirements and fears a court decision that leads to wider availability for flavored vape products, which are the dominant choice among the 1.6 million high school students who still vape. “We think that would be a real harm to public health,” Henigan said.


    UPI: Stowaway flies aboard Delta flight to Paris from New York City

    The woman was discovered while the Boeing 767-400ER was in midair and was arrested in Paris, the airline told CNN.

    ⋮

    The woman had completed security screening and bypassed two identity verification and boarding status stations before boarding the aircraft, according to a spokesperson for the U.S. Transportation Security Administration.

    Her bags also were scanned for prohibited items before she went to the gate.


    Stuff: High income workers unable to claim unjustifiable dismissal thanks to new policy

    Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Brooke van Velden said the change would enable employers to ensure they have the right fit for their high impact leadership and specialist roles.

    “This policy is about offering workers and employers more choice when negotiating contracts. Employers and employees are free to opt back into unjustified dismissal protection if they choose to or negotiate their own dismissal procedures that work for them,” she said.

    And who wouldn’t negotiate it into their contract, except people people in the middle who don’t have negotiated contracts.


    Stuff: Report: Nissan may have just ‘12 or 14 months’ to survive

    Nissan is really in dire straits, it seems. A new report from The Financial Times has revealed it is urgently looking into a long-term shareholder as its Alliance partner, Renault, considers pulling back its stake.

    “We have 12 or 14 months to survive,” a senior official close to Nissan told the publication. “This is going to be tough. And in the end, we need Japan and the US to be generating cash.”

    When asked for comment by Stuff, a Nissan representative said the brand cannot comment on speculation.


    Last Updated: 28.Nov.2024 23:55 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 3:15 AM, Nov 29
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 27.Nov.2024


    IEEE Spectrum: Researchers Develop VR Lollipop to Simulate Taste

    Lickable devices could make for flavorful extended-reality environments.

    ⋮

    To fill the gap, researchers at the City University of Hong Kong have developed a new interface to simulate taste in virtual and other extended reality (XR). The group previously worked on other systems for wearable interfaces, such as haptic and olfactory feedback. To create a more “immersive VR experience,” they turned to adding taste sensations, says Yiming Liu, a coauthor of the group’s research paper published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


    Kingstonist: Julie Salverson explores her own perception of her father in A Necessary Distance: Confessions of a Scriptwriter’s Daughter

    In her new novel A Necessary Distance: Confessions of a Scriptwriter’s Daughter, local author Julie Salverson brings to life the story of her father, George Salverson, and explores who she thought her father was in comparison to the man she uncovers in his personal journals.

    George Salverson was a radio play scriptwriter for the CBC before becoming the first television drama editor for the corporation. He worked on many documentaries and wrote scripts for many shows, including The Beachcombers and the Littlest Hobo. He taught writing to students at Toronto’s Ryerson Polytechnic University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) for several years, and authored a book, Around the World in 80 Limericks.


    YouTube (oboogie69): Steve Ballmer Sells Windows XP [video]

    Steve Ballmer and Brian Valentine in a Crazy Eddie ad for Windows XP

    You might want to turn the volume down first.

    Also The Nine Cringiest Moments From the Windows 95 Launch.


    Raspberry Pi: Compute Module 5 on sale now from $45

    Today we’re happy to announce the much-anticipated launch of Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5, the modular version of our flagship Raspberry Pi 5 single-board computer, priced from just $45.


    CBC: Health Canada approves Novo Nordisk’s obesity drug to reduce risk of non-fatal heart attack

    Health Canada has approved Novo Nordisk’s weight-loss drug Wegovy to reduce the risk of non-fatal heart attack, the drug maker says.

    Novo Nordisk said Wednesday that Wegovy is the first Health Canada-approved treatment for both chronic weight management and to reduce the risk of non-fatal myocardial infarction.

    The treatment reduces the risk of such incidents in adults with established cardiovascular disease and a body mass index equal to or greater than 27 kilograms per metre squared, according to Health Canada’s approval notice


    CBC: Vote to approve natural gas heating in new homes puts Vancouver councillors on the hot seat

    Since 2016, Vancouver has been on a path to gradually phase out natural gas for space and water heating in most new building types by 2025 because burning natural gas to heat space and water in buildings is the single largest source of carbon pollution in the city, according to materials from City of Vancouver staff.

    In July, councillors voted 6-5, with Mayor Ken Sim casting the tie-breaking vote remotely from vacation in favour of Coun. Brian Montague’s motion seeking the change.

    Montague argued allowing natural gas for space and water heating would reduce barriers to building middle-income and multiplex housing and make Vancouver more affordable.

    ⋮

    “Allowing natural gas for space heating and hot water provides applicants with more choice over fuel source but is not expected to improve affordability or accelerate housing approvals when compared to the low carbon option,” reads the report.


    Last Updated: 27.Nov.2024 23:13 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:01 AM, Nov 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 26.Nov.2024


    CBC: LifeLabs data breach report released after firm loses 4-year bid to keep it quiet

    A long-withheld investigation into a 2019 hacking at LifeLabs Inc. that compromised millions of Canadians' health data has finally been made public after an Ontario court dismissed the company’s appeal to prevent its release.

    A statement from the privacy commissioners of both Ontario and British Columbia says their joint report, completed in June 2020, found that LifeLabs “failed to take reasonable steps” to protect clients' data while collecting more personal health information than was “reasonably necessary.”

    The report ordered LifeLabs to address a number of issues, such as appropriately staffing its security team, and the commissioners' statement says the company complied with all of the orders and recommendations.


    CBC: Sightings of deer wearing high-vis jacket raise questions, quips and concerns in B.C. village

    Arnold said there are people in town who sometimes provide food for deer. But to dress a deer would require someone to get the jacket around the wild animal’s legs and zip it up — and she would like to learn how that happened.

    “I don’t need to know the who,” she said. “I just want to know how.”


    Globe: Cathal Kelly: Maple Leafs’ recent run of success almost makes Auston Matthews look expendable

    On Sunday against Utah, Mitch Marner expanded on his brief for re-admittance into Toronto’s good books.

    Everybody in the city who wanted him strapped to a rocket six months ago is having second thoughts. Fourteen points in eight games during which the team have gone 7-1 will do that.

    More than points, Marner’s case might be helped most by something that isn’t there – his linemate, Auston Matthews.


    Michael Tsai: The End of Delicious Library

    Wil Shipley:

    Amazon has shut off the feed that allowed Delicious Library to look up items, unfortunately limiting the app to what users already have (or enter manually).

    I wasn’t contacted about this.

    I’ve pulled it from the Mac App Store and shut down the website so nobody accidentally buys a non-functional app.


    Raspberry Pi: Pico 2 W on sale now at $7

    Update: In advance of official MicroPython support for Pico 2 W, you can download our unofficial MicroPython build here; you’ll find the README here.

    Today our epic autumn of product launches continues with Raspberry Pi Pico 2 W, the wireless-enabled variant of this summer’s Pico 2. Built around our brand new RP2350 microcontroller, featuring the tried and tested wireless modem from the original Pico W, and priced at just $7, it’s the perfect centrepiece for your connected Internet of Things projects.


    ScienceAlert: Justin Stebbing: Surprise Discovery Finds Severe COVID Infection May Shrink Tumors

    A fascinating new study, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, has revealed an unexpected potential benefit of severe COVID infection: it may help shrink cancer.

    This surprising finding, based on research conducted in mice, opens up new possibilities for cancer treatment and sheds light on the complex interactions between the immune system and cancer cells – but it certainly doesn’t mean people should actively try to catch COVID.

    The data outlining the importance of the immune system in cancer is considerable and many drugs target the immune system, unlocking its potential, an important focus of my own research.

    ⋮

    However, in cancer patients, monocytes can sometimes be hijacked by tumour cells and transformed into cancer-friendly cells that protect the tumour from the immune system.

    What the researchers discovered was that severe COVID infection causes the body to produce a special type of monocyte with unique anti-cancer properties. These “induced” monocytes are specifically trained to target the virus, but they also retain the ability to fight cancer cells.


    Last Updated: 26.Nov.2024 19:50 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:09 AM, Nov 27
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 25.Nov.2024


    Slashdot: Solar Glut: Half of California’s Solar Power Sometimes Goes to Waste, Research Shows

    Some days more than half of California’s available solar power goes to waste, according to research from the California Institute for Energy and Environment. “In the last 12 months, California’s solar farms have curtailed production of more than 3 million megawatt hours of solar energy,” according to a data analysis by the Los Angeles Times – enough to power 518,000 California homes for a year.

    And it was curtailed “either on the orders of the state’s grid operator or because prices had plummeted because of the glut. The waste would have been even larger if California had not paid utilities in other states to take the excess solar energy, documents from the state’s grid operator show.”

    Fortunately this can be fixed in relatively short order, and undoubtedly will be.


    Guardian: At least five dead amid ‘devastating’ flooding as Storm Bert batters UK

    Several people have been killed as Storm Bert battered the UK and a major incident has been declared in south Wales.

    At least five deaths have been reported in England and Wales since the storm hit. Strong winds have been accompanied by flooding caused by heavy rain and thawing snow.

    Thousands of homes have been left without power and flights and train services have been delayed and cancelled because of the weather.

    They must have a photographer in Pontypridd because that’s where almost all the pictures were from.


    NYT: Michelle Goldberg: There Is No Excuse for the Bullying of Sarah McBride

    Donald Trump and his party, having triumphed in an election in which they demonized trans people, seem hellbent on driving them out of public life. Democrats, some of whom blame the party for staking out positions on trans issues that they couldn’t publicly defend, are shellshocked and confused. Democratic leaders have been far too quiet as congressional Republicans, giddy and vengeful in victory, seek to humiliate their new colleague, Representative-elect Sarah McBride, a Democrat from Delaware, by barring her and other trans people from using the appropriate single-sex bathrooms in the Capitol.

    Gift link


    Stuff: Trump promises big tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China on day one

    Trump made the threats in a pair of posts on his Truth Social site Monday evening in which he railed against an influx of illegal migrants, even though southern border crossings have been hovering at a four-year low.

    “On January 20th, as one of my many first Executive Orders, I will sign all necessary documents to charge Mexico and Canada a 25% Tariff on ALL products coming into the United States, and its ridiculous Open Borders,” he wrote, complaining that “thousands of people are pouring through Mexico and Canada, bringing Crime and Drugs at levels never seen before,” even though violent crime is down from pandemic highs.


    Last Updated: 25.Nov.2024 23:56 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:04 AM, Nov 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 24.Nov.2024


    Globe: Andrew Coyne: Canada is far from ready for the chaos coming our way

    Now that the people of the United States have elected a fascist to lead them – a felon to “take care that the laws are faithfully executed,” an insurrectionist to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,” a rapist, a racist, and a narcissistic psychopath to hold the country’s highest position of honour – the question on everyone’s lips, naturally, is: what does it mean for Canada?

    Everything, would be the short answer. Living next to the United States has famously been compared to sleeping with an elephant, but a rogue elephant is something else again. Everything that makes this country what it is, everything that underpins our way of life, is predicated on the existence of a stable, united democracy to our south: a country we can rely on to come to our defence when needed, at the least a country we do not have to be defended from.


    NYT: The Liberal New Yorkers Who Say They’re Tuning Out the News

    Four years ago, a Swiss philosopher and businessman named Rolf Dobelli wrote a book called “Stop Reading the News: A Manifesto for a Happier, Calmer and Wiser Life.” A decade earlier he had eliminated newspapers, television news and related apps from his life, which he later described in a TED Talk as “one of the best decisions” he ever made. In an interview with The Irish Times when his book was published, he lamented that his news-obsessed friends had lost the ability to read more than 10 pages of a book at a time. He remained informed by organizing regular “news lunches” with experts in different fields, which is something he believed, however implausibly, that regular people, without TED Talks, could also do.

    ⋮

    Mr. Toff’s work also revealed that many people avoid the news because they grow frustrated with the lack of resolution — conflict and craziness that go on and on, miseries that seem insurmountable. “None of the stories feel like they come to a conclusion in a satisfying way,” he said. Reality was now subject to the plot structures of narrative television. Streaming, and the practice of binging series in particular, was habituating people toward an impatience. His subjects might complain about the violence and horror in the news as the reason to skip it — but then talk enthusiastically about the crime shows they watched and liked, despite the bloodletting, in part, because everything tied up so neatly.

    Gift link


    Globe: Vass Bednar: Subscriptions are everywhere, and they are ruining our lives

    More and more of our interactions with companies don’t involve owning anything they produce, but rather “renting” goods and services through a subscription — creating annual recurring revenue. They’re starting to overwhelm us: surveys are showing that Canadians are struggling to manage recurring expenses that accumulate over time.

    In the United States, the FTC recently introduced a “one-click rule,” specifying that it needs to be as easy for customers to cancel their subscriptions and memberships as it is to sign up in the first place (this is also referred to as the “click-to-cancel"). After the proposed rule was announced in March, 2023, over 16,000 comments from the public bolstered it.

    This straightforward principle has already come under fire from business groups (including Disney), who are pushing back — hard. That aggression is surreal because the legislation doesn’t say that subscriptions shouldn’t exist, but instead simply takes the stance that they should be far less sticky. But companies don’t want us to be able to exit this perpetual payment pitfall.


    Last Updated: 24.Nov.2024 20:46 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:39 AM, Nov 25
  • Lots of Streaming

    We’ve watched an inordinate amount of television this week. We saw the final episode of the second season of The Responder [IMDb] (very dark but so good). Then it was the final episode of our rewatch of season 1 of Ricky Gervais’ After Life [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8398600/] (a different kind of dark but also so good).

    Tonight we saw the second period and the start of the third period of the HNIC broadcast of the Canucks in Ottawa until it devolved into cheap shots & fights.

    Finally we watched episode 3 of the second season of The Diplomat [IMDb]. It’s wild (a bit too cutesy writing in the dialog occasionally but interesting characters).

    → 12:46 AM, Nov 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 23.Nov.2024


    Globe: ‘Oh, we can do this?’: PWHL players adapt to bodychecking with martial arts and hitting clinics

    The Professional Women’s Hockey League has drawn applause for its fast, physical style of play, prompting conversation about physicality in other levels of women’s and girls hockey.

    Fans find it entertaining. The PWHL’s players enjoy the leeway for more bodychecking than had been allowed in international play. But there were growing pains during the debut season as teams and referees learned to discern what would be penalized in this new league. Players had varying levels of experience with bodychecking. Some had learned to deliver or absorb hits while playing on boys teams when they were young. Some, who came up in girls hockey, say they were learning on the fly.


    TechCrunch: OpenAI accidentally deleted potential evidence in NY Times copyright lawsuit (updated)

    Lawyers for The New York Times and Daily News, which are suingOpenAI for allegedly scraping their works to train its AI models without permission, say OpenAI engineers accidentally deleted data potentially relevant to the case.

    Earlier this fall, OpenAI agreed to provide two virtual machines so that counsel for The Times and Daily News could perform searches for their copyrighted content in its AI training sets. (Virtual machines are software-based computers that exist within another computer’s operating system, often used for the purposes of testing, backing up data, and running apps.) In a letter, attorneys for the publishers say that they and experts they hired have spent over 150 hours since November 1 searching OpenAI’s training data.


    Last Updated: 23.Nov.2024 18:39 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:30 AM, Nov 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 22.Nov.2024


    Electrek: Tesla says Nissan EV drivers now have access to its Supercharger network

    As of the time of writing, Nissan has yet to make an announcement or confirm whether or not it will provide adapters to Ariya owners.

    We specify Ariya owners because the electric SUV is the only Nissan vehicle that with CCS connectors and that can work with NACS adapters to see on the Supercharger network.

    Unfortunately, the Nissan Leaf uses the CHAdeMO standard, which isn’t supported by the Supercharger network.


    ScienceAlert: Lucy Is 50: How a Bombshell 1974 Discovery Redefined Human Origins

    Lucy walked on two legs and is thought to have died aged between 11 and 13 – considered an adult for this species. She was 1.10 metres tall (3.6 feet) and weighed 29 kg (64 pounds).


    Raspberry Pi: Touch Display 2 on sale now at $60

    Way back in 2015, we launched the Raspberry Pi Touch Display, a 7″ 800×480-pixel LCD panel supporting multi-point capacitive touch. It remains one of our most popular accessories, finding a home in countless maker projects and embedded products. Today, we’re excited to announce Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2, at the same low price of $60, offering both a higher 720×1280-pixel resolution and a slimmer form factor.

    Key features of Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 include:

    • 7″ diagonal display
    • 88mm × 155mm active area
    • 720 (RGB) × 1280 pixels
    • True multi-touch capacitive panel, supporting five-finger touch
    • Fully supported by Raspberry Pi OS
    • Powered from the host Raspberry Pi

    Liverpool Echo: Where Scouse words really came from including scran, bizzie and boss

    He believes it is much more likely to have been formed from a wider amalgam of accents and dialects, brought to the city during its time as a major international port.

    As part of his research into his native dialect, Professor Crowley created the Liverpool English Dictionary, which contains more than 2,000 local words and phrases linked to Liverpool and Scousers.

    Published a few years ago by Liverpool University Press, the dictionary purports to be the first scholarly record of Liverpool’s unique language and dialect and the first to do this based on real respect for the city and its culture.


    UPI: Alabama executes Carey Grayson in 3rd death sentence using nitrogen gas

    “I have to wonder how all of this slips through the cracks of the justice system. Because society failed this man as a child and my family suffered because of it,” Debileux’s daughter Jodi Haley told Al.com Thursday.

    ⋮

    “She sensed something was wrong, attempted to escape, but instead, was brutally tortured and murdered. Even after her death, Mr. Grayson’s crimes against Ms. DeBlieux were heinous, unimaginable, without an ounce of regard for human life and just unexplainably mean.”


    Inside Climate: Climate Change Makes Vaccines More Important—While Also Undercutting Them

    Climate change is altering the world’s disease landscape, cultivating conditions ripe for human illness to spread in new places. A growing body of research shows it’s also disrupting one of the most effective tools to protect public health: vaccines.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that global immunization efforts have saved more than 154 million lives over the past five decades. However, extreme weather and global warming can destroy crucial vaccine stocks, impede transport and distribution and reduce effectiveness, according to a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change.

    Meanwhile, hesitancy to accept vaccination rose sharply across the board in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a contingent of global politicians continues to express anti-vaccine rhetoric, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., tapped by President-elect Donald Trump to lead the Department of Health and Human Services during his administration.


    CBC: These rare and mysterious deepsea fish are washing up in California, and no one’s sure why

    A 3.3-metre oarfish — a mysterious deepsea creature shaped like an eel — washed up earlier this month on the shores of California..

    Thanks to the efforts of a keen-eyed PhD student, it will soon be added to Frable’s “fish library,” better known as the marine vertebrate collection at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, Calif.

    ⋮

    In 2013, the last time oarfish were turning up in California, marine biologist Milton Love told As It Happens he suspected a change in ocean currents brought the fish out of the calm deep waters they’re used to, and into more turbulent shallow waters.

    “They’re just very delicate, and I think that they just died from trauma, basically,” he said at the time.

    Nearly a decade later, he told the New York Times that’s still his best guess.


    Electrek: Ørsted’s largest solar farm in the world is now online in Texas

    The Mockingbird Solar Center, Ørsted’s largest solar project globally, is now online, next to protected prairie donated by the renewable energy giant.

    This massive 468-megawatt (MW) solar farm is set to power 80,000 homes and businesses, providing a major boost to the Texas grid.


    BBC: How big is Donald Trump’s mandate?

    His communications director Steven Cheung has called it a “landslide” victory. Yet it emerged this week that his share of the vote has fallen below 50%, as counting continues.


    Last Updated: 22.Nov.2024 23:55 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:49 AM, Nov 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 21.Nov.2024


    CBC: Trudeau government to send $250 cheques to most people, slash GST on some goods

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Thursday a suite of new measures meant to alleviate some of the affordability pressures people have been experiencing in the post-COVID era — including a two-month GST holiday on some goods and services.

    The Liberal government will also send $250 cheques to the 18.7 million people in Canada who worked in 2023 and earned $150,000 or less.

    Those cheques, which the government is calling the “Working Canadians Rebate,” will arrive sometime in “early spring 2025,” Trudeau said.

    The GST/HST holiday will start on Dec. 14 and run through Feb. 15, 2025.

    People will be able to buy the following goods GST-free: …

    ⋮

    The federal debt has doubled over the last nine years to $1.4 trillion. The cost to service that debt is projected to be $54.1 billion in 2024-25.

    When asked whether it’s appropriate to slash the GST on products that could be considered luxury goods, like pricey video game consoles, Trudeau said most of the government’s affordability measures to this point have been more targeted, like GST rebates for low-income people and an OAS boost for seniors. He argued it’s time to give to everyone some relief.

    “It’s time for people to get a bit of a break,” Trudeau said. 

    Taxes pay for government programs. If there’s no change in spending then this is just a tax deferment.


    Globe: Trudeau announces two-month partial GST holiday, $250 cheques for many Canadians

    Christmas trees, kids' toys and restaurant meals are among the items that Canadians will no longer have to pay sales tax on, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Thursday as he also said his government would send many Canadians $250 cheques in the mail next year.

    For two months beginning on Dec. 14 the federal goods and services tax will be lifted on a long list of items, many of which are popular items over the holidays for shopping and party hosting.


    Guardian: Bank of England governor says Brexit has undermined UK economy

    Andrew Bailey calls for relations with EU to be rebuilt as Trump plans US tariffs.


    Last Updated: 21.Nov.2024 13:42 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:45 AM, Nov 22
  • I think the (Canadian) federal Liberals scored an own goal with their announcement of a temporary “GST holiday” today. Apparently they learned nothing from their heating oil carve-out fiasco.

    → 8:31 PM, Nov 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 20.Nov.2024


    Globe: B.C.’s Site C dam comes on stream as new cabinet looks to secure power for AI, critical minerals

    He will be the first cabinet minister to visit the massive construction site in the province’s Peace River region in almost three years. The NDP government approved the project only because it was already partly constructed when it first formed government in 2017, and even today, the government’s website on the project references that the New Democrats believed the project should never have been built.

    The completion of the province’s first major dam in 40 years, however, is timely. The NDP government was reluctant to build Site C seven years ago, but the first of six generating units in the $16-billion project is coming on stream just as the province has set its sights on the economic opportunities in critical minerals and the artificial intelligence sector. Both are energy-intensive enterprises that would create significant new demands on the province’s electricity grid and Mr. Dix has a mandate to deliver that power.


    Slashdot: Thomas E. Kurtz, Co-Inventor of BASIC, Dies At 96

    Slashdot readers damn_registrars and GFS666 share the news of the passing of Thomas E. Kurtz, co-inventor of the BASIC programming language back in the 1960s. He was 96.


    CBC: Rogers Sports & Media lays off dozens of workers in audio business

    Rogers Sports & Media says it has laid off a few dozen employees in its audio business, citing uncertainty in the advertising market.

    “With the radio industry continuing to feel the pressure of an uncertain advertising market, we made some difficult but necessary changes in our audio business impacting roles in several markets,” a spokesperson for Rogers Sports & Media said in an email on Tuesday.

    There will be no station closures and the company has no plans to curtail programming or podcasts, which will continue to serve their audiences, the spokesperson said.


    MacRumors: Apple Announces Shazam Has Identified More Than 100 Billion Songs

    Apple today announced that music recognition tool Shazam has identified more than 100 billion songs since it launched. Shazam started as an SMS service in the U.K. in 2002, and it became one of the first iPhone apps available on the App Store in 2008.

    ⋮

    Apple acquired Shazam in 2018, and it now powers the Music Recognition feature built into iOS, iPadOS, and macOS. Shazam is deeply integrated across Apple’s software platforms, including in Control Center, Siri, as an Action button option on iPhone 15 Pro models and all iPhone 16 models, as a Smart Stack widget on the Apple Watch, and more.


    SMH: US to provide anti-personnel landmines to Ukraine as it battles Russia

    US President Joe Biden approves supply of landmines to Ukraine in bid to halt Russian gains.


    iOS 18.2 Introduces ‘All Rings Closed’ Activity Awards for Apple Watch

    Apple Watch users can earn these awards for closing all three Move, Exercise, and Stand/Roll rings for 100 days, 365 days, 500 days, and 1,000 days, and at every 250-day interval above 1,000 days. One person showed off an impressive 3,250-day award, and tomorrow will be the 3,500-day mark since the Apple Watch launched in 2015, so anyone with a perfect track record of closing their rings should unlock that one very shortly.

    The awards are applied retroactively as necessary, with past dates of completion shown in the Awards section of the Fitness app on the iPhone.


    PBS: Australia’s plan to ban children from social media popular but problematic

    But a vocal assortment of experts in the fields of technology and child welfare have responded with alarm. More than 140 such experts signed an open letter to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemning the 16-year age limit as “too blunt an instrument to address risks effectively.”

    Details of what is proposed and how it will be implemented are scant. More will be known when legislation is introduced into the Parliament next week.


    Electrek: Nuro expands L4 autonomous vehicle operations in three cities

    Autonomous vehicle developer Nuro has announced it is significantly expanding the capabilities of its zero-occupant vehicles. Powered by the company’s AI-enabled Nuro Driver system, these Level 4 autonomous vehicles are now operational in two states, expanding in both deployment and capabilities on the road.

    Nuro is a robotics company founded by two engineers who were former employees of Google’s Waymo project. Since 2016, Nuro has developed and publicly tested its three generations of autonomous last-mile delivery vehicles, the most recent of which debuted in January 2022.

    With autonomous operations in Palo Alto, Nuro has expanded its business model, signing long-term partnerships with companies like Uber Eats to deliver autonomous food orders.


    The Hill: Musk, Ramaswamy lay out plans for ‘mass’ federal layoffs, rule rollbacks under Trump

    Tech entrepreneurs Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy said Wednesday that their brand-new government efficiency panel will identify “thousands” of regulations for President-elect Trump to eliminate, which they argue will justify “mass head-count reductions” across government.

    The pair, who were named co-chairs of the panel last week, laid out their plans for the “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.

    “The two of us will advise DOGE at every step to pursue three major kinds of reform: regulatory rescissions, administrative reductions and cost savings,” they wrote. “We will focus particularly on driving change through executive action based on existing legislation rather than by passing new laws.”


    WashPo: Mandate? Fuller election results increasingly show GOP gains were small.

    And a more holistic look — at races not just for president and the Senate but also for the House and state legislatures — reinforces the reality that voters actually didn’t shift toward Republicans that much.

    We learned a while back that Republicans lost most of the swing-state Senate races – four of five. They flipped the chamber because they won in three red states that Trump carried by double digits.

    Then we learned that Trump didn’t even win a majority of the popular vote, and his popular-vote margin over Vice President Kamala Harris(currently at 1.7 points and falling) ranks on the low side for recent history. He still won — and swept the swing states in a surprisingly decisive electoral-college result — but a majority of voters didn’t support him.

    And now it’s increasingly evident that Republicans could actually lose ground in the House. Democrats' gains in California’s razor-thin 13th District race suggest they could flip that seat and actually wind up with a net gain of one seat. If they did, the likely result (a 220-215 GOP majority) would be the second-smallest House majority in history — not exactly the stuff of overwhelming mandates.


    Last Updated: 20.Nov.2024 23:58 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:17 AM, Nov 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 19.Nov.2024


    Globe: Deciphering the rules of sports is one way to make sense of everything else in life

    In a recent interview with the BBC, tennis great Billie Jean King recycled the old objection.

    “I think [the scoring] should be one, two, three, four. Not 15-love, 30-love,” King said. “I mean, if you’re a kid? I didn’t come from tennis. I’m like, ‘What the heck’s that mean?’”

    King would also like to put the players’ names on the back of their shirts and harmonize the number of sets played by men and women. King’s mission statement: “I want to make it easy for fans.”

    Billie Jean King: some great ideas… And some duds.


    ScienceAlert: Mysterious Signal Preceded The Most Powerful Eruption of Modern Times

    Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai, an underwater volcano in the Tongan archipelago, erupted violently on January 15, 2022. According to a new study though, two faraway monitoring stations recorded a seismic wave some 15 minutes earlier.

    The authors of the study describe the wave as a “seismic precursor” for the subsequent eruption, both of which were triggered by a collapse in a weak section of oceanic crust below the volcano’s caldera wall.


    TechCrunch: Yuka, the app that rates food and makeup, now lets users complain to companies directly

    Launched today, the new “Call-out the Brand” button allows users to challenge companies directly. When a user scans a product that turns out to be marked with Yuka’s red label – which indicates health concerns – they will see an option to email the product’s manufacturer, pushing them to rethink the use of harmful additives. Yuka provides a default message but allows users to personalize it if they wish.

    Additionally, users have the option to publish a post on X to advocate for change publicly. The company is working on adding support for other social media platforms, such as Instagram and others.


    How to Geek: Microsoft’s New Mini PC Can’t Run Apps

    Windows 365 is a subscription-based cloud PC service that provides remote access to high-end Windows 11 virtual machines. Customers can log into their cloud-based Windows machine from any device, be it a crappy laptop, a Chromebook, or an iPad. The Windows 365 platform is expensive, and it’s also limited to business and enterprise customers.

    In the short-term, Microsoft hopes that IT departments will purchase Windows 365 licenses instead of desktop or laptop computers. These licenses may have little or no cost benefit, but they ensures that employees can securely access their “work desktop” from anywhere. Windows 365 also reduces the challenge of running a secure, efficient network, as vulnerable compute tasks are relegated to Microsoft’s secure cloud.

    ⋮

    Priced at $350, the Windows 365 Link boasts dual 4K monitor support, Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 connectivity, Gigabit Ethernet, plus three video output options–USB-C 3.2 (DP Alt Mode), HDMI, and DisplayPort. It can boot up in a matter of seconds, according to Microsoft, and it packs a trio of USB-A 3.2 ports for keyboards, mice, and other peripherals.

    These capabilities are pretty impressive, especially when you consider the Windows 365 Link’s small size. It measures just 4.72 inches wide and 1.18 inches tall. But the fun stops when you realize that Windows 365 Link can’t run local apps. It’s just a portal to the Windows 365 cloud desktop interface.

    NetPC or Network Computer reborn?


    Britannica Money: Larry Ellison | Biography, Oracle, & Facts

    In the mid-1990s Ellison saw an opportunity to compete with Microsoft Corporation by developing a cheap alternative to the desktop personal computer (PC) called the Network Computer (NC). The NC was not as fully equipped as a standard PC and relied on computer servers for its data and software in an early version of what later became known as cloud computing. However, both the continued fall in PC prices and delays in the NC’s development meant that PCs running the Microsoft Windows operating system continued to dominate business users' desktops. Ellison later admitted that the NC was technologically premature.


    York University Computer Museum: Corel NetWinder 275

    The NetWinder was a compact, high-performance, low power computing designed by Corel of Ottawa and released in 1988. It was a RISC-based machine equipped with networking and multimedia capabilities, operated under Linux.  Sold with  keyboard, mouse, and stand.


    USA Today: Trump selects Dr. Mehmet Oz to manage Medicaid and Medicaid services

    “America is facing a healthcare crisis, and there may be no physician more qualified and capable than Dr. Oz to Make America Healthy Again,” Trump said in a statement.

    Ha ha! I wonder which Trump appointment will be booted off the island first?!


    Sportsnet: PWHL announces rule innovations for second season

    The Professional Women’s Hockey League will introduce on-ice tweaks and harsher punishment for some penalties in its second season.


    NYT: House Republicans Target McBride With Capitol Bathroom Bill

    G.O.P. lawmakers whose leaders have pressed to roll back transgender rights around the country moved to bar Sarah McBride, the first transgender member of Congress, from women’s rooms on Capitol Hill.

    They’re such small people.

    “Every day Americans go to work with people who have life journeys different than their own and engage with them respectfully, I hope members of Congress can muster that same kindness,” [McBride] wrote. “This is a blatant attempt from far right-wing extremists to distract from the fact that they have no real solutions to what Americans are facing.”


    Last Updated: 19.Nov.2024 20:38 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:07 AM, Nov 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 18.Nov.2024


    Globe: Complaints about Taylor Swift concert ticket scams under investigation by Toronto-area police forces

    Five of them spoke to The Globe and Mail, saying they individually lost between $2,000 and $16,000, and that they wanted to warn ticket buyers for the remaining three Swift concerts this week in Toronto.


    NYT: Trump Signals a ‘Seismic Shift,’ Shocking the Washington Establishment

    In fact, it is not much of a mandate. While Mr. Trump won the popular vote for the first time in three tries, he garnered just 50.1 percent nationally, according to the latest tabulation by The Times, just 1.8 percentage points ahead of Vice President Kamala Harris. When the slow-counting blue giant of California finally finishes tallying its votes, that margin is likely to shrink a bit more. The Cook Report already calculates that his percentage has fallen below 50 percent, meaning he did not win a majority.

    Wherever it eventually falls, Mr. Trump’s margin of victory in the national popular vote will be one of the smallest in history. Since 1888, only two other presidents who won both the Electoral College and the popular vote had smaller margins of victory: John F. Kennedy in 1960 and Richard M. Nixon in 1968. (Both Mr. Trump in 2016 and George W. Bush in 2000 won the Electoral College, and therefore the presidency, without winning the popular vote.)

    Gift link


    CBC: Newfoundland’s west coast could be getting a new town — the province’s first in 6 years

    The communities are in an area that has been economically depressed for years but has recently gained attention as a region for a wind development project. World Energy GH2 plans to build more than 300 wind turbines on the Port au Port Peninsula and Codroy Valley, as well as a hydrogen-ammonia plant in Stephenville.


    Sportsnet: Alex Ovechkin ties Jaromir Jagr for most goalies scored on in NHL history

    Ovechkin now has 14 goals this season, taking the NHL lead and moving just 28 markers shy of breaking Wayne Gretzky’s all-time record.

    Florida Panthers forward Sam Reinhart and Edmonton Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl entered Monday tied with Ovechkin atop the NHL in goal scoring this season.

    Ovechkin is 39; Gretzky was 38 when he retired.


    Last Updated: 18.Nov.2024 13:16 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:03 AM, Nov 19
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 17.Nov.2024


    UPI: Lawyer: Giuliani turns over Mercedes, watches to defamed election workers

    S. District Judge Lewis Liman last month ordered Giuliani to turn over his property, including the1980 Mercedes-Benz formerly owned by actress Lauren Bacall, watches and other high-value luxury items, to a receivership established by the two women. He owes them $148 million after losing a defamation case over false accusations they stuffed ballot boxes during the 2020 general election.

    The judge has also Giuliani to turn over a luxury apartment on Madison Avenue in New York City and $2 million in legal fees owed to him by Trump and the Republican National Committee.


    CBC: Only hands, feet and guts: Man free-climbs El Capitan in record 8 days

    Gripping tiny slices of sheer rock and hoisting himself up 3,000 feet with only his strength, Adam Ondra quietly inched his way up one of the world’s most challenging rock walls and into the record books, a spokesman for the climber said Tuesday.

    Ondra, a 23-year-old from the Czech Republic, took eight days to finish the free-climb up the Dawn Wall of the famed El Capitan in California’s Yosemite National Park.

    He completed the second-ever free assent up the wall Monday, said John Dicuollo, a spokesman for Black Diamond Equipment, which sponsors Ondra.


    CBC: Connor McDavid scores to become the 4th-fastest NHL player to reach 1,000 points

    Only Wayne Gretzky, Mike Bossy and Mario Lemieux reached the milestone in fewer games.


    Thinking about… (Timothy Snyder): Decapitation Strike

    Imagine that you are a foreign leader who wishes to destroy the United States.  How could you do so?  The easiest way would be to get Americans to do the work themselves, to somehow induce Americans to undo their own health, law, administration, defense, and intelligence.  From this perspective, Trump’s proposed appointments — Kennedy, Jr.; Gaetz; Musk; Ramaswamy; Hegseth; Gabbard — are perfect instruments.  They combine narcissism, incompetence, corruption, sexual incontinence, personal vulnerability, dangerous convictions, and foreign influence as no group before them has done.  These proposed appointments look like a decapitation strike: destroying the American government from the top, leaving the body politic to rot, and the rest of us to suffer.


    NYT: Biden Allows Ukraine to Strike Russia With Long-Range U.S. Missiles

    With two months left in office, the president for the first time authorized the Ukrainian military to use the system known as ATACMS to help defend its forces in the Kursk region of Russia.


    NYT: Are Shellfish Good for You?

    Shellfish — specifically, bivalves like clams, oysters, mussels and scallops — are nutrition-packed and an environmental success story. Sustainable farming of these mollusks has boomed, making them one of the best options for a seafood-hungry world.

    ⋮

    Aquaculture of oysters, clams and other bivalves has doubled over the last two decades, pushing out more destructive fishing methods. Around 90 percent of bivalves are now farmed.

    This is cause for celebration, Dr. Golden said. “If you look at a global scale,” he said, “shellfish are the most sustainably produced type of seafood.”


    UPI: Ben & Jerry’s claims parent company censorship over Gaza

    Ben & Jerry’s, the Vermont-based maker of popular ice creams, has sued its parent company, Unilever, for what it says is censorship over its views supporting Palestinians in the war between Israel and Hamas.


    Last Updated: 17.Nov.2024 23:59 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:04 AM, Nov 18
  • This evening we’ll be watching one of the two football games we watch each year. Looking forward to the Grey Cup, which is usually the better of the two contests!

    → 7:00 PM, Nov 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 16.Nov.2024


    WashPo: Ruth Marcus: Trump is stocking his Cabinet with clowns, amateurs and pranksters

    It took Donald Trump scarcely a week to demonstrate his utter contempt for the government he is about to lead, culminating in his choice of Matt Gaetz to be attorney general. The Senate cannot allow this dangerous man to become the nation’s chief law enforcement officer.


    WashPo: Why you shouldn’t put small plastics into your recycling bin

    Most small plastics don’t get recycled, and putting them in your bins could end up doing more harm than good, said Susan Collins, president of the Container Recycling Institute, a nonprofit group. These tiny items, such as condiment pouches, pill packaging or contact lenses and cases, can fall through the equipment at sorting facilities or end up mixed in with other recyclables, further complicating the recycling process.

    ⋮

    In the case of residential recycling, only things made of No. 1 and 2 plastic, which include bottles and detergent containers, are commonly and dependably recycled in the United States, experts said.

    For other types of disposable plastic, including small things, it’s critical to do what you can to not use those items, Collins said.


    WashPo: How sodium could replace lithium in the batteries of the future

    In the past few years, sodium-ion battery production has increased in the United States. Last month, sodium-ion battery manufacturer Natron Energy announced it would open a “gigafactory” in North Carolina that would produce 24 gigawatt hours of batteries annually, enough energy to charge 24,000 electric vehicles.


    MacRumors: Apple Acknowledges iCloud Notes Disappearing and Explains How to Fix

    Earlier this month, we reported about some iPhone users temporarily losing all of their notes in the Notes app after accepting Apple’s updated iCloud terms and conditions. Apple has now indirectly acknowledged this issue in a new support document that outlines steps to follow if your iCloud notes are not appearing on your iPhone, iPad, or Vision Pro.


    The Desk: PBS to offer local TV streams through Amazon’s Prime Video

    The public broadcaster is also launching two new FAST [Free Advertising-Supported TV]channels exclusively through Prime Video, and will debut pop-up streams over time.


    Guardian: Russian spy ship escorted away from area with critical cables in Irish Sea

    When the Yantar broke away from the Golovko and headed north into the Irish sea, it was shadowed by HMS Cattistock, with the operation becoming public when the ship activated its automatic identification for about four minutes on Thursday when it was south of the Isle of Man.

    According to reports, it switched off its transponders transmitting its position after entering the Irish EEZ but the Irish vessel continued to shadow it.

    They tried to make contact with the ship but Russian personnel did not respond and at about 3am on Friday it left the waters and headed south.


    Last Updated: 16.Nov.2024 23:40 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:12 AM, Nov 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 15.Nov.2024


    Globe: PWHL announces Canadian broadcast plans, Prime Video as new partner

    TSN, RDS and CBC/Radio-Canada return as PWHL broadcast partners, while Prime Video comes aboard, collectively delivering all 90 games of the regular season.

    CBC will have a weekly game on Saturday afternoons — 17 of them. New this year, Prime will have exclusive Canadian coverage of all 16 Tuesday night contests. TSN will broadcast 57 games across its linear channels and digital platforms.


    Crossing the Threshold (David Johnson): We watched My Neighbor Totoro…

    We watched My Neighbor Totoro a couple of nights ago with one of our grandsons. It was the third or fourth time that I have seen the film. I love this Ghibli movie. I find it beautiful to watch. There are pauses throughout the film, sometimes with some sounds playing, sometimes just silence. The audience is left waiting for what will happen next. It is not suspense, but a pause and unless you know what is going to happen next, one is left not knowing when the pause will end. In this day and age pauses can often be filled with noise. In My Neighbor Totoro we simply have to wait in silence. What will happen next will happen in its own time.


    Raspberry Pi: Introducing picamzero: Simplifying Raspberry Pi Camera projects for beginners

    17.Oct.2024

    Thousands of learners worldwide take their first steps into text-based programming using the Python programming language. Python is not only beginner-friendly, but is also used extensively in industry.

    In 2015, Python developer Daniel Pope, who has a keen interest in education, noticed that beginners often have great ideas for creating projects but struggle because the software libraries they need to use are aimed at more confident programmers. To address this, he created Pygame Zero – a simplified version of the popular PyGame software. Since then, various developers have expanded the range of ‘zero’ libraries for Python.

    The Raspberry Pi Foundation has a long history of supporting Python zero libraries. GPIO Zero was launched back in 2015, followed by guizero and then picozero. The goal of all ‘zero’ libraries is the same: to help beginner programmers create amazing projects using simple, understandable code, supported by useful documentation.


    Raspberry Pi: A new release of Raspberry Pi OS

    28.Oct.2024

    Wayland has many advantages over X, particularly performance. Under X, two separate applications help draw a window:

    • the display server creates windows on the screen and gives applications a place to draw their content
    • the window manager positions windows relative to each other and decorates windows with title bars and frames.

    Wayland combines these two functions into a single application called the compositor. Applications running on a Wayland system only need to talk to one thing, instead of two, to display a window. As you might imagine, this is a much more efficient way to draw application windows.

    Wayland also provides a security advantage. Under X, all applications communicated back and forth with the display server; consequently, any application could observe any other application. Wayland isolates applications at the compositor level, so applications cannot observe each other.

    ⋮

    While labwc is the biggest change to the OS in this release, it’s not the only one. We have also significantly improved support for using the Desktop with a touch screen. Specifically, Raspberry Pi Desktop now automatically shows and hides the virtual keyboard, and supports right-click and double-click equivalents for touch displays.

    ⋮

    We’ve had a lot of very positive feedback about Raspberry Pi Connect, our remote access software that allows you to control your Raspberry Pi from any computer anywhere in the world. This release integrates Connect into the Desktop.


    ScienceAlert: Stunningly Preserved Saber-Toothed Kitten Studied in World First

    In 2020, the juvenile’s body was recovered from its grave in the Russian republic of Yakutia and examined by a team of researchers whose excitement is palpable in their recently published report.

    “Findings of frozen mummified remains of the Late Pleistocene mammals are very rare,” the researchers explain.

    ⋮

    This study was published in Scientific Reports.


    NYT: A Surprise at the Federalist Society Gala: Justice Breyer, a Retired Liberal

    The conservative legal group’s annual dinner featured a conversation between Justices Stephen G. Breyer and Neil M. Gorsuch, a conservative. Both stressed the importance of an independent judiciary.

    ⋮

    Their collective message was that the court is a collegial body whose independence must be protected. The court’s approval ratings dropped sharply after its 2022 decision overruling Roe v. Wade and following reporting on some justices’ failures to disclose luxury travel and gifts. Critics called for ethics rules with an enforcement mechanism, term limits and increasing the court’s membership.

    The two justices addressed none of those issues directly on Thursday, but the subtext of their remarks was that some such proposals were misguided.


    Guardian: Mazyouna’s face was ‘ripped off’ when a rocket hit her home. Israel has refused to allow her evacuation

    Since June, the family and FAJR Scientific, a US non-profit organisation providing free medical care to Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, have tried to evacuate Mazyouna for treatment to the US, where they have surgeons waiting to treat her.

    Five times their requests have been denied without explanation by the Israeli military body responsible for humanitarian affairs in Gaza, the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (Cogat).

    Now, five months on, her situation is getting desperate. There is still shrapnel in her neck and she is in agony every time she moves. She cannot eat or speak. The platinum used by surgeons to rebuild her face is coming apart, with little more than a bandage holding her jaw together.


    DIY Solar Power (Will Prowse, YouTube): LiFePO4 Longevity Discussion! Why Charge to 100%?! For Solar??

    LiFePO4 chemistry is not like other lithium ion battery chemistries, so you treat it differently. Charge to 100%, discharge to 0%, and if you need to store it, maintain it at 50%.


    Globe: Canada Post and workers at odds over wages, weekend delivery

    On Friday, more than 55,000 members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers walked off the job, shutting down mail service across the country in the lead-up to the busy holiday shopping period that starts with Black Friday on Nov. 29. The two sides have been negotiating a new collective agreement for more than a year.

    The most contentious issue in the negotiations appears to be seven-day parcel delivery: Canada Post wants to immediately pivot its business to deliver parcels on both weekdays and weekends. To do that, the Crown corporation wants to hire more part-time workers because it would be less expensive than to rely on existing full-time Canada Post employees.

    On The Bridge today, Chantal, Bruce, and Peter remarked on what a big news story this would’ve been 30 years ago, but how it’s greeted with a shrug today.


    TorStar: Ford government promises to support universities

    But overall, Ontario’s universities receive the lowest per-student funding in the country. A report by the Ford government’s own blue-ribbon expert panel, released a year ago, recommended an immediate 10 per cent increase in base funding, as well as allowing schools to raise tuition by five per cent.

    The government cut tuition by 10 per cent in 2019, and has frozen it since.

    Colleges and universities had expected some $2.5 billion over three years based on the panel recommendations; the province added about $1.3 billion.


    InsideEVs: Tesla Tops Fatal Accident Rates In New Study

    Engineering breakthroughs and improved chassis designs have made cars structurally safer than ever. Cars nowadays come loaded with standard safety features like multiple airbags, advanced cameras and sensors that can monitor surroundings and step in during emergencies.

    However, a new report highlights a troubling trend: rising levels of distracted driving undermine these safety gains and Tesla appears to be the most affected.


    Globe: Cathal Kelly: Sports’ eternity movement is coming up against the reality of age

    Three years ago, quarterback Tom Brady was a young 44 coming off his seventh Super Bowl. He could see no end in sight.

    “I could literally play until I’m 50 or 55 if I wanted to,” Brady said. “I don’t think I will obviously … my physical body won’t be the problem. I think it’ll just be, I’m just missing too much of life with my family.”

    Brady’s body turned out to be a problem. While he was coming to terms with that, the family become one, too. Now 47, he lives and works alone.

    Gift link


    Last Updated: 15.Nov.2024 23:08 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:49 AM, Nov 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 14.Nov.2024


    NYT: A Big Climate Goal Is Getting Farther Out of Reach

    Countries have made scant progress in curbing their greenhouse gas emissions over the past year, keeping the planet on track for dangerous levels of warming this century, according to a new report published Thursday.


    NYT: Gavin Schmidt, Zeke Hausfather: Climate Science Can’t Keep Up With the Warming Planet

    The earth has been exceptionally warm of late, with every month from June 2023 until this past September breaking records. It has been considerably hotter even than climate scientists expected. Average temperatures during the past 12 months have also been above the goal set by the Paris climate agreement: to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius over preindustrial levels.

    We know human activities are largely responsible for the long-term temperature increases, as well as sea level rise, increases in extreme rainfall and other consequences of a rapidly changing climate. Yet the unusual jump in global temperatures starting in mid-2023 appears to be higher than our models predicted (even as they generally remain within the expected range).


    Daring Fireball: Bill Atkinson Has Pancreatic Cancer

    A seminal figure in the history of Apple, and the Macintosh in particular. I’ve not yet had the pleasure of meeting him, but I’ve heard stories about Atkinson from several of his former colleagues. In addition to being a genius programmer, he’s by all accounts a kind and generous person. Everyone was (and remains to this day) in awe of his skills, but they remember him best for being a friend.

    This makes me quite sad.


    Autopian: Volkswagen Has A Ticking Time Bomb That Could Hurt It More Than Dieselgate

    In the wake of Dieselgate, Volkswagen made a bunch of investments to try to modernize the company. Most of these deals were made under then-CEO Herbert Diess and, with the benefit of hindsight, most of these were bad bets.

    Fundamentally, the company viewed its mistakes as mistakes, and not as a deeper, almost pathological inability to reform the more existential and fundamental rot at the heart of the company. Volkswagen is an organization run by engineers, and those engineers are great, but when all you have is a hammer everything looks like a nail.


    Last Updated: 14.Nov.2024 22:13 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:10 AM, Nov 15
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 13.Nov.2024


    UPI: Lunchables pulled from school lunch programs due to low demand

    The federally assisted National School Lunch Program, which provides low-cost lunches to nearly 30 million children, showed reduced demand for Lunchables after Consumer Reports found high levels of sodium, lead and cadmium in the kits earlier this year.

    “We’re pleased that Heinz Kraft has pulled Lunchables from the school lunch program,” Brian Ronholm, director of food policy at Consumer Reports, said in a statement.


    Engineering with Rosie (YouTube): How Does Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling Work?

    There’s a Paradox in the way that people talk about battery minerals. On the one hand, we’re convinced there’s not going to be enough critical minerals so there will be shortages and prices will rise sky high. And on the other hand, they also think we won’t be bothered to recycle.

    People always say that we are a “throw it in the rubbish” kind of society but that is such… rubbish. I’ve never seen someone just drive their old car into landfill and walk away, have you? When people think of batteries getting thrown away willy nilly, they’re thinking of small stuff like phones and walkmans. So that’s certainly wasteful, and we shouldn’t do that either, but even if we throw all of that away the amount of battery waste from small products like that is very small compared to the total amount of car and stationary energy batteries that we’re going to have to deal with from say 2030 onwards.

    I personally don’t think we need to be so pessimistic about this. In this video I’m going to run through the technologies we have available to recycle batteries, and the main obstacles to scaling this industry up even faster.


    NYT: Senate Republicans Alarmed by Trump Nominating Matt Gaetz for Attorney General

    Senate Republicans reacted with alarm and dismay to President-elect Donald J. Trump’s decision to nominate Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida, for attorney general, and several said they were skeptical that he would be able to secure enough votes for confirmation.

    “He’s got his work really cut out for him,” Senator Joni Ernst, Republican of Iowa, said, chuckling as she spoke.

    ⋮

    But Mr. Gaetz, who was just re-elected to a fifth term, remains under ethics investigation for his conduct, which includes allegations of sexual misconduct and illicit drug use; sharing inappropriate images or videos on the House floor; misusing state identification records; converting campaign funds to personal use; and accepting impermissible gifts under House rules. Mr. Gaetz has denied the allegations as political payback and said they are built on lies.


    NYT: What Are Seed Oils and Are They Actually Bad For You?

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and others claim they’re harming our health, but the evidence suggests otherwise.

    ⋮

    Decades of research have shown that consuming seed oils is associated with better health, said Christopher Gardner, a professor of medicine at Stanford University.


    Gear Patrol: 6 Simple Tricks to Extend Your Apple Watch’s Battery Life

    In recent years, Apple has given its smartwatches several features to combat this issue, such as faster charging and introducing a low-power mode. However, when compared to other smartwatches, an Apple Watch’s battery life still leaves something to be desired.

    That said, there are a few settings you can change, as well as some best practices, that could help extend the battery life of your Apple Watch. Most aren’t game-changers and some, admittedly, limit what the smartwatch can do.

    But if extending your Apple Watch’s battery life is your ultimate goal, these will definitely help.

    ⋮

    Low Power mode is different from Power Reserve mode because, instead of disabling most features (which turns your Apple Watch into a simple digital timepiece), it simply turns off battery-killing features like always-on display and heart rate detections – so still keeps track of fitness metrics and workouts.


    SMH: Western Green Energy Hub submits plans for world’s biggest renewable project

    Plans for a $100 billion wind and solar project – the biggest of its kind – in the Australian desert have raised hopes that US President-elect Donald Trump’s anti-green agenda could shift major investment from the United States to the rest of the world.

    The Western Green Energy Hub would build 3000 wind turbines and 6 million solar panels in Western Australia, starting at the South Australian border and stretching west for hundreds of kilometres.

    The project would take decades to build and, if completed, would deliver 70 gigawatts of renewable energy generation – about the same capacity as the entire eastern seaboard’s electricity grid.

    It would also produce 3.5 million tonnes a year of green hydrogen via an emissions-free process that uses renewable energy to release hydrogen from water. The fuel could replace fossil fuels in industries such as transport and electricity generation.


    Edmonton Journal: Alberta considering adding citizenship to driver’s licences

    The office for Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally said the move is under consideration and no final decisions have been made.

    ⋮

    “One of the things that we’re looking at is how we can put citizenship on the driver’s licence. So that when people come to vote we can make sure they are a Canadian citizen,” Nally said.

    That comment was teed up by remarks by Smith who cited potential Chinese interference in elections as justification for “us to have more integrity in our elections, more trust in our elections.”

    “We’ll just run it up the flagpole and see who salutes.”


    Last Updated: 13.Nov.2024 23:38 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:13 AM, Nov 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 12.Nov.2024


    MacRumors: Testing the Vision Pro With New Ultrawide Display Option in visionOS 2.2

    The first developer beta of visionOS 2.2 came out yesterday, and it includes a much anticipated new feature for Vision Pro users. When using the Vision Pro as a display for a Mac, there are now options to use wide and ultrawide layouts in addition to the standard virtual display.

    We thought we’d check out the new display settings for those who might be interested in seeing how this changes the Vision Pro Mac workflow.


    ScienceAlert: Sleep Can Actually Help You Make Better Decisions, Research Shows

    The author John Steinbeck said: “It is a common experience that a problem difficult at night is resolved in the morning after the committee of sleep has worked on it.”

    Many others have claimed they formulated breakthroughs and innovations in dreams. Recent studies on the science of sleep suggest these claims are supported by modern science.

    A 2024 study suggests that sleep can help us make more rational, informed decisions, and not be swayed by a misleading first impression. To show this, researchers at Duke University in the US had participants take part in a garage-sale game.


    The Hill: Judge blocks Louisiana law on Ten Commandments in schools

    Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry (R) had said he expected the new law to cause a legal battle after he signed it in June.

    “Look, when the Supreme Court meets, the doors of the Supreme Court on the backside have the Ten Commandments. Moses faces the U.S. Speaker of the House in the House chamber. He is the original giver of law,” Landry said. “Most of our laws in this country are founded on the Ten Commandments, what’s the big problem? And that’s the part I don’t understand.”

    Going from the separation of church & state to a theocracy?

    “I LOVE THE TEN COMMANDMENTS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS, PRIVATE SCHOOLS, AND MANY OTHER PLACES, FOR THAT MATTER. READ IT – HOW CAN WE, AS A NATION, GO WRONG???” Trump said in a social media post after the law was passed.

    “THIS MAY BE, IN FACT, THE FIRST MAJOR STEP IN THE REVIVAL OF RELIGION, WHICH IS DESPERATELY NEEDED, IN OUR COUNTRY,” he added.

    Ironic much?


    ScienceAlert: Ghostly Creature Deep in The Ocean Is Like Nothing We’ve Seen Before

    It’s a nudibranch, recently discovered swimming freely in the water column lit by a bioluminescent glow, adorned with a billowing hood, by researchers from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) in the US.

    This is Bathydevius caudactylus, the first known nudibranch of its kind: living not in shallow waters, or on the seafloor, but more than 2,200 meters (around 7,220 feet) below the surface of the Pacific Ocean in the bathypelagic zone, out in open water.

    ⋮

    The research has been published in Deep-Sea Research Part I.


    CBC: Is it a tenant’s right to charge an EV at their rental?

    One Ottawa man says yes, because electricity is included in rent.

    It sounds like neither the landlord nor the tenant is fully in the right on this.


    NYT: Archbishop of Canterbury Resigns Over U.K. Church Abuse Scandal

    The archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Justin Welby, resigned on Tuesday after a damning report concluded that he had failed to pursue a proper investigation into claims of widespread abuse of boys and young men decades ago at Christian summer camps.

    Pressure had mounted relentlessly on Mr. Welby, who serves as the spiritual leader of 85 million Anglicans worldwide, after the report was published. Helen-Ann Hartley, a senior figure in the church and the bishop of Newcastle, called on him publicly to step aside, while Prime Minister Keir Starmer pointedly declined to back him.


    Stuff: How a simple search for an airline phone number cost a passenger $4k

    “The phone number we called was NOT a Delta number, but was listed as Delta and the people answering the phones represented themselves as Delta Airlines.

    “The scammer called Delta pretending to be us and changed the name AT. NO. CHARGE. Then turned around and charged us $2389.32 for doing so (and remember, tried to get $18K to do so!)”

    ⋮

    They had some simple advice: “NEVER trust a phone number from Google.”

    The hidden danger of using a general search to get a company’s phone number.


    PBS: Top U.S. climate negotiator vows ‘we won’t revert back’ after Trump reelection

    No matter what kind of U-turn President-Elect Donald Trump will make on climate change, America’s clean energy economy won’t reverse into the dirty past, a combative but “bitterly disappointed” top American climate negotiator said Monday.

    During the first day of the U.N. climate talks, COP29, Climate Adviser John Podesta struck a defiant but realistic tone in a press conference. He said Trump will likely pull the United States out of the landmark Paris Agreement and try to roll back many of the Biden Administration’s signature climate moves, including the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act that included $375 billion in climate spending.

    He’s more optimistic than I am.


    CBC: As It Happens: This elephant gives herself nice showers with a hose. But another elephant keeps ruining them

    Scientists aren’t sure if the younger elephant’s hose-kinking behaviour is pettiness or play.


    Last Updated: 12.Nov.2024 23:56 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:10 AM, Nov 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 11.Nov.2024


    The Atlantic: Why America Still Doesn’t Have a Female President

    The events of the past eight years might prompt some to wonder: If Clinton wasn’t good enough, and neither was Harris, will a woman ever be good enough to be president? What kind of a woman would it take? According to interviews I conducted with six researchers who study gender and politics, sexism was a small but significant factor that worked against Harris. And it’s going to be a problem for any woman who runs for president. “American voters tend to believe in the abstract that they support the idea of a woman candidate, but when they get the real women in front of them, they find some other reason not to like the candidate,” Karrin Vasby Anderson, a communications professor at Colorado State University, told me. In 2017, she wrote an article about the long odds faced by women running for president. The title? “Every Woman Is the Wrong Woman.”

    It’s important not to overstate the role that sexism played in Harris’s loss. She’s the vice president of an unpopular incumbent. Although the U.S. economy writ large is objectively strong, many voters feel pinched by high inflation and interest rates. And after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race in July, Harris had less than four months to make her case to the American public. A very small number of people have ever run for president, and, well, someone has to lose.


    The Atlantic: *David Brooks: Why Americans Are So Awful to One Another

    In a culture devoid of moral education, generations are growing up in a morally inarticulate, self-referential world.


    IFL Science: Scientists Dropped Gophers Onto Mount St Helens For 1 Day. 40 Years Later, The Effect Is Astonishing

    Two years after the eruption of Mount St Helens, local gophers were sent to the area in what must have been quite a confusing day trip, even if the animals were not aware of the news. The gophers were placed in enclosed areas for the experiment and spent their day digging around in the pumice.

    Despite only spending one day in the area, the impact they had was remarkable. Six years after their trip, there were over 40,000 plants thriving where the gophers had gotten to work, while the surrounding land remained, for the most part, barren. Studying the area over 40 years later, the team found they had left one hell of a legacy.


    The Atlantic: The Exhibit That Will Change How You See Impressionism

    The National Gallery’s “Paris 1874” explores the movement’s dark origins.

    ⋮

    Its 150th anniversary this year has been celebrated with numerous exhibitions, most notably “Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment,” organized by the Musée d’Orsay, in Paris, and the National Gallery of Art, in Washington, D.C. (where it is on view until January 19, 2025). Given the masterpieces that these museums could choose from, this might have been an easygoing lovefest, but the curators — Sylvie Patry and Anne Robbins in Paris, and Mary Morton and Kimberly A. Jones in Washington — have delivered something far more intriguing and valuable: a chance to see what these artists were being intransigent about, and to survey the unexpected turns that art and politics may take in a polarized, traumatized time and place.


    Last Updated: 11.Nov.2024 23:41 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:05 AM, Nov 12
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 10.Nov.2024


    CleanTechnica: Renewables Gallop Ahead Down Under — A Queensland Sample

    Back to my sunny morning discourse: at present, according to the NEM Watch widget, solar and wind are supplying upwards of 70% of Queensland’s electricity. Remember, this is a live feed. The rest of the power is coming from black coal and a little gas. Queensland’s main export is coal!


    Bernie Goldbach: Taking a Google Selfie

    I need to share these observations with the youngest students in my classrooms because they’re new to the concept of surveillance capitalism.

    Via Jeremy Cherfas


    How to Geek: How I Use Reddit to Stay on Top of The News

    Now we have r/news and r/worldnews that many people know about, but there are tons more:

    r/UpliftingNews: With a lot of news focused on negative and sensationalist headlines, I’d like to take a moment and point out that positive news sources do exist, and r/UpliftingNews describes itself as a place to read and share positive and uplifting, feel-good news stories.

    r/GeoPolitics: Interested in other countries and how geography affects politics and international relations? This sub analyzes local events in terms of the bigger global picture; it’s a mix of discussions on geopolitics, news, and opinions.

    … and more.


    ABC (U.S.): Search underway for suspects in deadly Tuskegee University homecoming shooting

    One person was killed and several others, including students, were injured when a barrage of gunfire erupted early Sunday on the campus of Tuskegee University in Alabama, marring the school’s centennial homecoming festivities, authorities said.

    “Marring”?! That hardly seems sufficient.


    The Atlantic: Bob Woodward’s War Is — I’ll Say It — Good

    At its core, Woodward’s book is about diplomacy. Just past the sundry tidbits about Trump — most horrifying, the former president’s ongoing chumminess with Vladimir Putin, a charge that Trump’s campaign denies — there lies a serious history of the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza. I have reported on these stories myself, and I can’t say that I found any faults in his account. If anything, I’m unashamedly jealous of how he managed to get a few big stories that eluded me. One of the most stunning sections of the book captures Putin mulling the use of a tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine — and all the quiet diplomacy that pushed him back from the brink. Newspapers hinted at this threat at the time, but Woodward reveals the backstory in robust and chilling detail. (Jon Finer, the deputy head of the National Security Council, says that Putin’s decision on whether to deploy the nuke seemed like a “coin flip.”) When Biden frets about the possibilities of nuclear escalation, he’s not just recalling his youth in the earliest days of the Cold War. He’s confronting a very real risk in the present.


    Last Updated: 10.Nov.2024 18:13 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:06 AM, Nov 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 09.Nov.2024


    CNN: 2024 will be the first year on record to smash a warming limit scientists warned about

    New data confirms 2024 will be the hottest year on record and the first calendar year to exceed the Paris Agreement threshold – devastating news for the planet that comes as America chooses a president that has promised to undo its climate progress both at home and abroad.

    Nearly all the world’s countries pledged to strive to keep global warming under 1.5 degrees Celsius in the Paris Agreement, which scientists said would prevent cascading and worsening impacts such as droughts, heat waves and catastrophic sea level rise. They warn at that level, the human-caused climate crisis – fueled by heat-trapping fossil fuel pollution – begins to exceed the ability of humans and the natural world to adapt.


    CBC: Federal government faces potential loss if Trans Mountain pipeline sold: budget watchdog

    The pipeline could be worth between $29.6 billion and $33.4 billion, depending on what happens after the initial 20-year contracts expire, the budget watchdog said in an updated financial assessment of the controversial project.

    Meanwhile, the cost to build the pipeline, which went into service in May, came in at $34.2 billion, dramatically higher than the $7.4 billion estimate in 2017.

    The PBO’s valuation estimate doesn’t factor in sunk costs, such as the $4.5 billion the federal government paid to buy the project in 2018, or capital spending before 2024.


    Manton Reece: Spinning off Strata

    This is an opportunity to both simplify and expand our subscription plans. As an early heads-up, Strata is going to get its own set of pricing tiers.


    OSnews: QNX becomes free for non-commercial use, releases Raspberry Pi 4 image

    Well, it seems the company is trying to reverse course, and has started courting the enthusiast community once again. This time, it’s called QNX Everywhere, and it involves making QNX available for non-commercial use for anyone who wants it. No, it’s not open source, and yes, it requires some hoops to jump through still, but it’s better than nothing. In addition, QNX also put a bunch of open source demos, applications, frameworks, and libraries on GitLab.

    One of the most welcome new efforts is a bootable QNX image for the Raspberry Pi 4 (and only the 4, sadly, which I don’t own). It comes with a basic set of demo application you can run from the command line, including a graphical web browser, but sadly, it does not seem to come with Photon microGUI or any modern equivalent. I’m guessing Photon hasn’t seen a ton of work since its golden days two decades ago, which might explain why it’s not here. There’s also a list of current open source ports, which includes chunks of toolkits like GTK and Qt, and a whole bunch of other stuff.


    WashPo: Are standing desks actually healthy? Here’s what a new study says.

    A large new study of more than 83,000 adults found that standing for more than two hours a day – as many people with standing desks do – didn’t protect against the cardiovascular risks of too much sitting.

    Those hours of standing also turned out to have their own downsides, increasing people’s likelihood of developing serious circulatory problems, including varicose veins, abnormally low blood pressure and blood clots, compared with people who rarely stood.


    Politico: An Overlooked — and Increasingly Important — Clue to How People Vote

    The exit polls did not ask about media consumption, so we need to look for indirect clues. NBC asked the question in April when President Joe Biden was still in the race, and the results were dramatic. Among people who got their news from “newspapers,” Biden was winning 70-21. Among people who got their news from “YouTube/Google,” Trump led 55-39.


    CNN: Trump still hasn’t signed ethics agreement required for presidential transition

    President-elect Donald Trump has not yet submitted a series of transition agreements with the Biden administration, in part because of concerns over the mandatory ethics pledge vowing to avoid conflicts of interest once sworn in to office, CNN has learned.

    As president, Trump repeatedly came under fire from ethics groups for potential conflicts of interest relating to his businesses and brands. Both Trump’s and his family’s foreign business ties have also come under intense scrutiny throughout his time in office and on the campaign trail.

    I don’t know why he’s hesitating to sign it; he doesn’t appear to have ever worried about being bound by contracts before.


    How to Geek: Your Smart TV Might Have a Camera—Here’s What You Can Do With It

    There is no evidence that smart TV cameras track users, but the built-in microphones and cameras are still a big privacy concern for many. Sure, both could be used maliciously to collect data, and there’s always the threat of any camera getting hacked if it’s online, so take that as you will.

    However, the bigger [sic] concern is ACR. Most smart TVs have a technology built-in called “Automatic Content Recognition,” which works in the background. Smart TV ACR can listen to the audio, capture what’s on the screen, and track your watching habits to deliver targeted ads better. Thankfully, you can turn off these features, and some users may go as far as disconnecting their TV from the internet to improve privacy.


    Mashable: An object struck a satellite in Earth’s orbit, leaving a hole

    The satellite company NanoAvionics released images online showing the damage to its MP42 satellite, launched in 2022 and designed to host several instruments for different customers. The source of the hole from a chickpea-sized object is uncertain, but the event underscores the growing risk to spacecraft in orbit around our planet.

    Via SmartNews


    Last Updated: 09.Nov.2024 18:57 EST

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:33 AM, Nov 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 08.Nov.2024


    ScienceAlert: Mars Rover Finds Evidence of an Ancient Ocean on The Red Planet

    A Chinese rover has found new evidence to support the theory that Mars was once home to a vast ocean, including tracing some ancient coastline where water may once have lapped, a study said Thursday.

    The theory that an ocean covered as much as a third of the Red Planet billions of years ago has been a matter of debate between scientists for decades, and one outside researcher expressed some scepticism about the latest findings.


    UPI: Ukraine’s Zelensky confirms first combat engagement with North Korean troops

    The soldiers are wearing Russian uniforms and being passed off as a Mongolian ethnic group from Siberia, Umerov said, making it difficult to identify any casualties or prisoners yet.

    The minister said that Kyiv expects five units of roughly 3,000 North Korean soldiers to be deployed over the next few weeks along a front line stretching more than 900 miles, for a total of 15,000 troops.


    CleanTechnica: Drought Causes Renewable Energy Generation to Drop Again

    Drought keeps growing with climate disruption, and drought reduces hydropower output. But how much? Well, quite a lot this year apparently. “In our latest Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), we forecast that electricity generation from U.S. hydropower plants in 2024 will be 13% less than the 10-year average, the least amount of electricity generated from hydropower since 2001. Extreme and exceptional drought conditions have been affecting different parts of the United States, especially the Pacific Northwest, which is home to most U.S. hydropower capacity,” the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) writes.


    AP: Judge cancels court deadlines in Trump’s 2020 election case after his presidential win

    The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case canceled any remaining court deadlines Friday while prosecutors assess the “the appropriate course going forward” in light of the Republican’s presidential victory.

    Special Counsel Jack Smith charged Trump last year with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and illegally hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate. But Smith’s team has been evaluating how to wind down the two federal cases before the president-elect takes office because of longstanding Justice Department policy that says sitting presidents cannot be prosecuted, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.


    TorStar: Hawaii trip prompts audit of all Ontario school boards

    A spokesperson for the Lambton Kent District School Board said staff members attended an international conference last January in Hawaii, adding “we maintain the quality of our staff by investing in them.”

    The Indigenous education staffers were approved to go to the meeting as it “offers a unique platform for sharing innovative ideas, research findings, and best practices in the field of Indigenous education. In a commitment to our efforts towards truth and reconciliation, and given the ever-evolving landscape of education, it is crucial for professionals on our Indigenous education team to stay updated on the latest trends, strategies and technologies to address the changing needs of students and learners,” public relations officer Caress Lee said in a written statement, noting the cost of the trip came out of a fund specifically for Indigenous education.


    How to Geek: M4 Mac Mini’s Storage Is Modular and Replaceable (but Proprietary)

    Early teardowns reveal that the M4 Mac Mini uses slotted modular SSDs, rather than soldered-on memory. This modular system means that storage upgrades are technically feasible, but Apple’s proprietary SSD design makes upgrades a non-starter for the average customer.

    ⋮

    …they’re upgradable, but only if you source the drive from another Mac or buy a ridiculously overpriced storage module from the Apple Store (the 2TB module costs $1,000, meaning that it’s 10x more expensive than a typical 2TB M.2 SSD).

    Boy, these guys just didn’t get the fixability memo, did they? Seems rather contemptuous.



    Verge: Apple Mac Mini M4 review: a tiny wonder

    Now the best value in Apple’s lineup, the Mac Mini takes its ideal form with an impressively small design that compromises on very little.


    UPI: 1 in 5 Americans might have Long COVID

    These symptoms can occur in a wide range of body systems, and include fatigue, chronic cough, heart problems and “brain fog.” They typically develop weeks or months after a person shakes off their initial COVID-19 infection.


    Last Updated: 08.Nov.2024 16:19 EST

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:32 PM, Nov 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 07.Nov.2024


    Scottish Poetry Library: Going without Saying by Bernard O’Donoghue

    It is a great pity we don’t know
    When the dead are going to die
    So that, over a last companionable
    Drink, we could tell them
    How much we liked them. …

    via @johnjohnston


    Ars Technica: Secondhand EVs will flood the market in 2026, JD Power says

    Used EV supply is set to grow by 230% as 215,000 cars come off lease.


    iPhone in Canada: Bell Stunned by Huge $1.2 Billion Q3 Loss, Slashes Forecast

    BCE, the parent company of Bell, announced a huge third-quarter loss of $1.2 billion, heavily impacted by $2.11 billion in writedowns, mostly related to Bell Media’s TV and radio divisions.

    This result marks a major shift from the over $700 million profit recorded in the same quarter a year earlier. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) dropped to $0.75, down from $0.81 in the previous year. Despite some growth in adjusted EBITDA, overall operating revenues for BCE declined, totaling $5.97 billion, down from $6.08 billion in Q3 of 2023. The company now expects its 2024 revenue to fall about 1.5 percent, a change from its earlier guidance projecting up to four percent growth.


    Timetable (Manton Reese): Episode 133: Freedom

    Two days after the election. Walking to the coffee shop and thinking about politics and the future of Micro.blog.

    Transcript

    I’m glad to see Manton’s short form Timetable podcast back.


    BBC: Earthshot 2024: Prince William announces winners in Cape Town

    It supports sustainable, eco-friendly projects from around the world, with each of the five winners receiving £1m to scale-up their innovative ideas to “repair” the planet.

    There are five ‘Earthshots’ - or goals: Protect and Restore Nature; Clean Our Air; Revive Our Oceans; Build a Waste-free World; and Fix Our Climate.

    Fifteen finalists, from countries including France, Kenya, Indonesia, the UK and Nepal, were competing for their category’s prize pot after being whittled down from 2,500 applicants.

    The article includes a list of the winners.


    NYT: With DNA, Pompeii Narratives Take a Twist

    Now, genomic testing on skeletal remains embedded in the casts has challenged both interpretations. As reported Thursday in the journal Current Biology, the DNA evidence shows that the identities and relationships of the deceased do not match the longstanding assumptions, which had largely been based on physical appearance, the positioning of the casts and romantic notions promoted by literature and Hollywood films.

    The study team, which included David Reich, a geneticist at Harvard University, and David Caramelli, an anthropologist at the University of Florence in Italy, proposed that the adult and the younger child, traditionally viewed as mother and offspring, are genetically an adult male and a boy who were biologically unrelated. Contrary to the established account, the researchers concluded that none of the four people in the grouping were kinfolk.

    Gift link


    Last Updated: 07.Nov.2024 22:40 EST

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:03 AM, Nov 8
  • Got my flu and covid shots today. Not just armouring myself but also helping to protect the immunocompromised & others.

    → 11:49 PM, Nov 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 06.Nov.2024


    ☹️😕😞😟☹️ 😖😣


    NYT: Hate Noisy Restaurants? Stick This in Your Ear.

    Apple earbuds and others can help you hear dining companions. Here’s how to use them.

    ⋮

    Then came the real experiment. Still in Transparency Mode, I burrowed down into the Accessibility settings until I had toggled the Conversation Boost and Ambient Noise Reduction switches to their lime-green On positions. Conversation Boost uses directional microphones to isolate and amplify voices that are directly in front of the listener. Ambient Noise Reduction dampens sound coming from other angles.


    WashPo: Scientists may have solved the mystery of sky-high methane emissions

    Almost two decades ago, the atmosphere’s levels of methane – a dangerous greenhouse gas that is over 80 times as potent as carbon dioxide in the short term – started to climb. And climb.

    Methane concentrations, which had been stable for years, soared by 5 or 6 parts per billion every year from 2007 onward. Then, in 2020, the growth rate nearly doubled.

    ⋮

    It’s difficult for scientists to identify all the sources of methane in the world. It comes from leaking oil and gas operations, from cows belching, from landfills and marshes, and from thawing permafrost in the Arctic. When methane emissions increase, finding the cause is like solving a complicated algebra problem with too many unknowns.


    DPReview: Apple is acquiring a popular Photoshop alternative

    Apple may soon own Pixelmator Pro and Photomator, a pair of popular photo editing apps for Mac, iPhone, and iPad. The Lithuania-based company behind the apps, Pixelmator Team, has “signed an agreement to be acquired by Apple,” according to a blog post on its website.


    DPReview: Over 20 years later, I’m Back realizes one of photography’s greatest ‘What ifs’

    Perhaps the most famous was Silicon Film, whose e-Film EFS-1 digital cartridge got to an advanced state of development before the company collapsed under the weight of development costs, continued engineering challenges, existing patents and insufficient orders. All of which was revealed in the subsequent lawsuit.

    Now, around a quarter of a century later, a Swiss team, funded via Kickstarter, looks like it’s about to deliver on that dream, despite all the challenges.

    I’m Back has partnered with the current owners of the Yashica name to announce that its three crowdfunded projects are now available to order as fully-fledged retail products. The one that really catches our eye is the I’m Back Film, which promises to let you add digital capabilities to a wide range of original SLRs or film rangefinders, by mimicking the Silicon Film concept. Its website lists the unit at 645 Swiss Franks (∼$750).


    Fierce Network: What a Trump win means for the FCC and telecom policy

    Project 2025 aside, Carr has also opposednet neutrality rules adopted by the FCC, as well as rules designed to regulate the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in political ads.

    Additionally, he argued against the FCC’s decision to revoke Starlink’s $885 millionRural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) subsidy award, calling it “regulatory harassment” of Starlink owner Elon Musk.

    via Mitch Wagner (@mitchw@mastodon.social)


    NYT: World Reacts to Donald Trump’s Win in U.S. Presidential Election

    With Donald J. Trump’s sweeping election victory on Tuesday, the world is now preparing for another four years of unpredictability and “America first” protectionism that could reset the ground rules of the global economy, empower autocrats and erase the assurance of American protection for democratic partners.

    Despite a lack of substantive foreign policy debate in the campaign, Mr. Trump has made several statements that – if turned into policy – would transform America’s relationship with both allies and adversaries. He has pledged to end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours, a promise many assume amounts to the withdrawal of American aid for Ukraine, which would benefit Russia.

    More broadly, he has made clear that he intends to make the world’s most powerful country more isolationist, more combative with tariffs, more openly hostile to immigrants, more demanding of its security partners, and less engaged on global challenges such as climate change.

    ⋮

    “He’s crazy, but at least he’s strong,” said Anthony Samrani, the editor in chief of the Lebanese daily L’Orient-Le Jour, summing up what he called the prevailing mind-set toward Mr. Trump in the Middle East.

    *“He’s strong but unfortunately he’s crazy,” is how I might have put it.


    Raspberry Pi: Meet Kari Lawler: Classic computer and retro gaming enthusiast

    Kari Lawler has a passion for retro tech – and despite being 21, her idea of retro fits with just about everyone’s definition, as she collects and restores old Commodore 64s, Amiga A500s, and Atari 2600s. Stuff from before even Features Editor Rob was born, and he’s rapidly approaching 40. Kari has been involved in the tech scene for ten years though, doing much more than make videos on ’80s computers.


    BBC: King Arthur site five times older than thought

    The monument was previously listed as dating back to the medieval period but it is now believed to date back 4,000 years earlier to the Neolithic period by a group of specialists from UK universities.


    Last Updated: 06.Nov.2024 20:33 EST

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:07 AM, Nov 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 05.Nov.2024


    Slashdot: Prime Video Will Let You Summon AI To Recap What You’re Watching

    Amazon’s Prime Video has introduced “X-Ray Recaps,” a generative AI feature that will recap what you’re watching. The new tool can create text summaries of “full seasons of TV shows, single episodes, and even pieces of episodes,” the company says in a blog post. The Verge reports: …


    Defector: The Argonaut Octopus Has Mastered The Free Ride

    Although most octopuses live near the ocean floor and its ample hiding places, argonauts spend their entire lives sailing in the open ocean, just below the surface. This lifestyle has rendered the small cephalopods rather elusive to the scientists who wish to study them. “Most observations on argonauts are opportunistic,” Roger Villanueva, a marine biologist at Spain’s Institute of Marine Sciences (CSIC), wrote in an email.

    via Kottke


    MacRumors: GM Again Attempts to Explain Its Decision to Drop CarPlay in New EVs

    American automaker General Motors (GM) last year announced it would be phasing out support for CarPlay and Android Auto in its new electric vehicles, in favor of its own software platform called Ultifi. The decision has been very controversial, as many drivers consider CarPlay to be a must-have feature in a new vehicle. In 2022, for example, Apple said 79% of U.S. buyers would only consider a vehicle that works with CarPlay.

    To make matters worse, GM’s rollout of Ultifi went rather poorly, with some early reviewers of the Chevrolet Blazer EV last year experiencing technical issues with the platform. Some of those problems have since been resolved, but it is clear that the automaker might not be as effective at developing software as a tech company like Apple.

    Do 79% of US car buyers own an iPhone? I doubt it…


    UPI: Diver off the coast of Barbados finds ring lost in 1977

    Alex Davis said he was diving with his metal detector near Miami Beach in Barbados in mid-October when he found a ring buried underwater.

    The McMaster University ring bore the year 1965 and the initials “FMP,” so Davis contacted the Hamilton school for help finding its owner.

    Karen McQuigge, McMaster’s director of alumni engagement, searched through the database with her team and identified the ring’s likely owner as Morgan Perigo, who had graduated with a math degree in 1965.


    UPI: Amazon starts air drone deliveries in the West Valley of Phoenix

    The air drone delivery service is available to consumers who are located near Amazon Prime’s same-day site Tolleson, Ariz., and who order eligible items weighing no more than 5 pounds.

    An Amazon air drone will deliver the items using MK30 drones that deploy for facilities located next to Amazon’s same-day delivery site in Tolleson.

    The smaller sites combine order-fulfillment and delivery services for Amazon customers to make it faster for Amazon to deliver potentially millions of eligible items by air drone.

    Amazon started its air-drone delivery service in 2022 and last year added pharmacy delivers at its air-delivery facility in College Station, Texas.

    I wonder if the post office is showing any interest in this?


    CleanTechnica: HomeBoost Turns Your Smartphone Into A Home Energy Audit Device

    Consumer research by HomeBoost found that many people viewed home energy auditors like they view car mechanics — professionals trying to upsell them. To counter that impression, the HomeBoost team wanted to create a cheaper, easier way to evaluate a home. The BoostBox’s thermal camera attachment snaps onto a smartphone. Users download an app which guides them through a 30 minute step by step process that takes photos and scans their house. The process includes taking pictures of appliances, water heaters, and thermostats so the app can gauge how much of a difference it would make to swap them out for more environmentally friendly devices.


    The Marginalian: The Pleasure of Being Left Alone

    But despite her surface sociality, Macaulay embodied the true test of an introvert — not whether one engages in social activity, but whether one is charged or drained by it.


    Last Updated: 05.Nov.2024 19:50 EST

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:37 AM, Nov 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 04.Nov.2024


    RadioLab (podcast): The Unpopular Vote

    As the US Presidential election nears, Radiolab covers the closest we ever came to abolishing the Electoral College.

    In the 1960s, then-President Lyndon Johnson approached an ambitious young senator known as the Kennedy of the Midwest to tweak the way Americans elect their president. The more Senator Birch Bayh looked into the electoral college, the more he believed it was a ticking time bomb hidden in the Constitution that someone needed to defuse. With overwhelming support in Congress, the endorsement of multiple presidents, and polling showing that over 80 percentof the American public supported abolishing it, it looked like he might just pull it off. So why do we still have the electoral college? And will we actually ever get rid of it?

    via Patrick Rhone


    Will Prowse (YouTube): $192 Siekon Mini 12V! But are Mini LiFePO4 Worth the Extra $$$? Hmm…

    Battery technology continues to advance.


    Wired: What Are Hall Effect Sensors and How Do They Work?

    More and more keyboards and video game controllers employ Hall effect sensors, but what exactly is this technology? We break it down.

    All you need to know!


    iPhone in Canada: Bell Hits Customers with $5 Price Hike on Popular Plans

    Bell has increased the price of select 5G plans on November 1, 2024.

    According to changes on its website today, entry 5G plans have increased in price by $5 per month. This comes ahead of Black Friday, where most carriers bring on cellphone deals.

    Bell’s wireless pricing as of today, can be seen below. It’s never been more confusing to navigate Bell’s plans and prices on its website (after a $10/month autopay credit): …


    iPhone in Canada: Apple Confirms iPhone 14 Plus Camera Flaw: Check if You Qualify

    Apple is offering free repairs for a small number of iPhone 14 Plus devices that may have a faulty rear camera, and it applies to Canadians as well.

    Some users have reported that the camera preview doesn’t work on these devices, which were made between April 10, 2023, and April 28, 2024.

    If you have an iPhone 14 Plus with this problem, you can use Apple’s serial number checker to see if your device qualifies for the repair program. Only the iPhone 14 Plus is covered, not other iPhone models.


    MacRumors: Find My Gains Option to Share Lost Item Location With an ‘Airline or Trusted Person’ in iOS 18.2

    Apple in iOS 18.2 beta 2 added a new feature to the Find My app, which is designed to allow you to share a lost item’s location with a trusted person. Apple says that the feature is meant to help you locate an item through a third-party, like an airline employee.


    NYT: The Powerful Density of Hypertextual Writing

    The NY Times has had a difficult time covering the 2024 election in a clear, responsible manner. But I wanted to highlight this short opinion piecefrom the paper’s editorial board, which I’m reproducing here in its entirety:

    You already know Donald Trump. He is unfit to lead. Watch him. Listen to those who know him best. He tried to subvert an election and remains a threat to democracy. He helped overturn Roe, with terrible consequences. Mr. Trump’s corruption and lawlessness go beyond elections: It’s his whole ethos. He lieswithout limit. If he’s re-elected, the G.O.P. won’t restrain him. Mr. Trump will use the government to go after opponents. He will pursue a cruel policy of mass deportations. He will wreak havoc on the poor, the middle class and employers. Another Trump term will damage the climate, shatter alliances and strengthen autocrats. Americans should demand better. Vote.


    NYT: A Record Number of States Are Experiencing Drought

    Almost the entire United States faced drought conditions during the last week of October.

    Only Alaska and Kentucky did not have at least moderate drought conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor system.


    NYT: Murray McCory, 80, Dies; JanSport Founder Created the School Backpack

    He brought lightweight packs to millions of students and transformed the way they carried their textbooks to school.


    CleanTechnica: Con Ed And First Student Bring Solar Microgrid To New York

    Recently, Con Ed and First Student started a trial program that will use solar panels to supply some of the electricity needed for those electric school buses. Assuming each bus has at least a 100 kWh battery, that translates to 1 GW of storage for the fleet. That’s a lot of storage capacity that can be used to support a dedicated microgrid for those electric school buses. The economic advantages are self-evident. Con Ed would not have to build new generating capacity and transmission infrastructure to support the bus fleet, and the buses could provide grid stabilization services to Con Ed. The result? Everybody wins, especially the students who do not have to breathe in a miasma of diesel fumes every day as they travel back and forth to school.


    LA Times: Trump campaign gets equal time from NBC after Harris' ‘SNL’ appearance

    According to people familiar with the discussions, campaign officials for Trump contacted the network and asked for time. The request was honored and Trump was given two free 60-second messages that appeared near the end of its telecast of a NASCAR playoff race and during post-game coverage of a “Sunday Night Football” contest in which the Minnesota Vikings defeated the Indianapolis Colts 21-13.


    Last Updated: 04.Nov.2024 22:22 EST

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:45 AM, Nov 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 03.Nov.2024


    Writing Exchange (Cheri Baker): Hate responders

    So there’s a hate preacher harassing people nearby with a megaphone. Someone made a Reddit post asking for help, and before long a guy dressed like Jesus showed up holding a sign that reads “I don’t know him.”

    Someone else arrived and started blowing a loud whistle every time he tries to spout his garbage. This asshat is being drummed off the streets by what is essentially a Monty Python theater troupe.

    Nov 02, 2024 at 08:50 PM


    Daily Beast: Bill Maher Reluctantly Makes His Last Minute Case for Kamala Harris

    But ultimately, Maher begged undecided voters to go for the Democrats next week to avoid “the rule of a mad king.”

    “Do I love everything about Kamala? No, who told you you get to love everything? Do I wish she came up with a better reason to be president than ‘I’m not Trump’? Yeah, it would have been very helpful. But let’s not forget: I’m not Trump is still a really great reason,” he said at the end of his monologue.


    SMH: Renewable energy is roaring back, crushing coal to historic lows

    Stronger winds and heavier rainfall have boosted renewables and pummelled coal to its lowest share of the east-coast grid on record for the past two months.


    Globe: Alberta Premier Danielle Smith receives 91% support in UCP leadership vote

    Alberta Premier Danielle Smith raked in support from 91 per cent of United Conservative Party members who voted in her leadership review Saturday, crushing internal pockets of dissent and solidifying her place as the head of the province’s right-wing.

    The UCP said 6,085 people registered at its annual meeting in Red Deer, and 4,633, or 76 per cent, cast ballots in the leadership review.


    ExplainingComputers (YouTube): Top 5 New SBCs 2024 — plus 12 more contenders!

    The best new single board computers for makers and enthusiasts of the past 12 months. Read this description later if you do not want to know the boards before you watch the video!

    The ExplainingComputers Top 5 New SBCs of 2024, together with the videos in which I first reviewed them, are as follows:

    1. Radxa X4: Radxa X4: An N100 Pi  
    2. Radxa Rock 5 ITX: Arm PC Build (Rock 5 ITX)  
    3. Odroid M1S: Odroid M1S: Great Valu…  
    4. Banana Pi BPI-F3: Banana Pi BPI-F3: Octa…  
    5. Lichee Pi 3A: Lichee Pi 3A: RISC-V S…  

    You can also quickly locate any of my SBC video reviews — Arm, x86 and RISC-V from this page: www.explainingcomputers.com/sbc.html


    Women’s Health: 10,000 Steps Is A Myth. Here’s What Science Says You Should Do Instead.

    A 2019 study for which Dr. Lee was the lead author found that the risk of death dropped by about 40 percent for women in their 70s with as few as 4,400 steps per day, or less than half the recommended number. The risk continued to drop with more steps, but then plateaued at about 7,500 steps. The optimal step count for people younger than 60, though, was about 8,000 to 10,000 a day, per a separate study.

    Other studies have examined how many steps are enough, and suggest that if you’re looking for a good number, 7,500 will do for adults, says Cayla McAvoy, PhD, a senior evaluator for the Florida Department of Health and a research consultant at Tudor-Locke’s walking lab.


    UPI: FCC commissioner blasts Kamala Harris' appearance on ‘SNL’

    Brendan Carr, the senior Republican member of the Federal Communications Commission, has criticized Kamala Harris' appearance on the final Saturday Night Live episode ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

    Carr, writing on social media, called Harris' appearance on the sketch comedy show a “clear and blatant effort to evade the FCC’s Equal Time rule.”

    “The purpose of the rule is to avoid exactly this type of biased and partisan conduct — a licensed broadcaster using the public airwaves to exert its influence for one candidate on the eve of an election,” Carr wrote.

    “Unless the broadcaster offered Equal Time to other qualifying campaigns.”


    MacRumors: Vision Pro With M5 Chip Rumored for 2025, Apple Also ‘Considering’ iPhone-Connected Glasses

    Apple plans to release an updated Vision Pro headset with its as-yet-unannounced M5 chip in 2025, according to Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. The current Vision Pro is equipped with the M2 chip, which debuted in 2022.


    MacRumors: Canon Now Accepting Orders for Spatial Video Lens Previewed at WWDC

    Canon’s new stereoscopic RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL camera lens for spatial video recording recentlybecame available for pre-order. In the U.S., pricing is set at $449.99, and orders are estimated to be delivered in mid-November.

    Apple and Canon announced the lens at WWDC in June. The lens attaches to Canon’s EOS R7, enabling the mirrorless camera to record 3D videos for playback on AR/VR headsets like Apple’s Vision Pro and Meta’s Quest 3. More details about the lens are available on Canon’s website, and in our coverage of the WWDC announcement.


    Last Updated: 03.Nov.2024 23:59 EST

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:05 AM, Nov 4
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 02.Nov.2024

    “Democracy: the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard.” H.L. Mencken


    NYT: Canadian Police Say They Dismantled Country’s Largest Drug Lab

    Canadian authorities have dismantled what they described as the country’s largest drug laboratory, hidden in a rural part of British Columbia, seizing enough chemicals and other material to produce roughly 96 million doses of fentanyl, the country’s leading cause of overdose deaths.

    For the first time in Canada, the police also found evidence of a drug production method used primarily by Mexican cartels to make opioids. The process requires a particular precursor chemical, and is often used to mass produce a potent synthetic drug know as “super meth.”

    The discovery, experts say, suggests that Canadian drug dealers might be taking lessons from the cartels or that Mexican criminal groups might be operating in the country. Canadian authorities would not elaborate on potential links and said that the investigation that uncovered the drug lab was continuing.


    TorStar: Doug Ford wanted cities to ask him to use the notwithstanding clause to end encampments. Twelve mayors just said do it

    The premier said he wanted Ontario’s big city mayors, a group of 29 municipal leaders, to show “backbone” and support using the notwithstanding clause.

    ⋮

    Last year in Waterloo, a judge ruled that it’s a violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms for a municipality to evict those in encampments if there are no shelter spaces available for them. A similar ruling was also handed down in Kingston.

    ⋮

    Burlington Mayor Marianne Meed Ward, chair of the mayors' group, wants to see “one point person, a specific minister or ministry, in charge of solving this” and a province-wide plan including more supports.

    She said the “issue becomes, if you are using the notwithstanding clause to close down encampments, but people have nowhere to go, we’re no farther ahead.”


    Korea Times: How Korean novels are helping a generation find calm amid competition

    If you’ve spent time on Seoul’s subway recently, or indeed public transport in Korea in general, you may have noticed that paper books are back in fashion. Many of these books have a recognizable style of cover — warm, inviting colors and a Jimmy Corrigan-like traditional hanok or otherwise cosy-looking freestanding building on the cover. This is a result of the Korean healing fiction trend, which is slowly taking the nation by storm.

    Apart from those instantly recognizable covers, Korean healing fiction has several distinct traits. The novels are short and written in a highly readable style, which makes them ideal for commuters. Korean healing novels tell of people, burned out by the stresses of hypercompetitive life in the big city, who find new energy and personal growth through joining a community or learning a skill — running a bookshop, learning to cook or some other endeavor that allows for creative expression.

    The Economist reports that Korean healing fiction is being translated and issued by major western publishing companies, and is selling well.


    WashPo: Kamala Harris has slight lead over Donald Trump in Iowa poll

    The poll results, conducted by a well-regarded polling firm, show Kamala Harris’s strength among women, particularly those who are older or politically independent.


    RNZ News: Lower cruise numbers could make tourism industry sweat over summer

    A tourism operator says a drop in cruise passengers could have a significant impact on his bottom line this summer.

    The New Zealand Cruise Association predicts a 20 percent decrease in visitor numbers over the incoming cruise season, driven by increases to port costs and the international visitors levy.


    BBC: DNA-testing site 23andMe fights for survival

    Firstly, it didn’t really have a continuing business model – once you’d paid for your DNA report, there was very little for you to return for.

    Secondly, plans to use an anonymised version of the gathered DNA database for drug research took too long to become profitable, because the drug development process takes so many years.

    That leads him to a blunt conclusion: “If I had a crystal ball, I’d say they will maybe last for a bit longer,” he told the BBC.

    “But as it currently is, in my view, 23andMe is highly unlikely to survive.”


    Last Updated: 02.Nov.2024 22:54 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:48 PM, Nov 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 01.Nov.2024


    NYT: Millions of Movers Reveal American Polarization in Action

    These estimates, based on a New York Times analysis of detailed public voter registration records of more than 3.5 million Americans who moved since the last presidential election, offer a new and extraordinarily detailed glimpse into one of the ways that we segregate from each other – down to the street level.

    Across all movers, Republicans chose neighborhoods Donald J. Trump won by an average of 19 percentage points in 2020, while Democrats chose neighborhoods President Biden won by the opposite margin (also 19 points). In total, movers started in neighborhoods 31 percentage points apart; they ended in neighborhoods 38 points apart. Across the country, the result is a widening gap between blue neighborhoods and red ones.

    Gift link


    NYT: Pennsylvania Voters Worry About the Toxicity of Politics

    In a tight presidential race, Pennsylvania, with its 19 electoral votes, will very likely decide the winner. And the state, which Donald J. Trump won in 2016 and President Biden won in 2020 by narrow margins, is up for grabs.

    That’s clear in Berks County, which lies about 60 miles northwest of Philadelphia where flourishing Democratic suburbs melt into conservative, rural Pennsylvania.

    The mountains and low hills that make up most of the county are sprinkled with small towns and farms, while the county seat, Reading, is Pennsylvania’s fourth-largest city, with a substantial Latino majority. In 2020, Mr. Trump won the county by around 8 percentage points, the narrowest margin of the 54 counties that he won across the state.

    Berks is “a big bag of marbles,” said Matthew Orifice, a longtime resident of Boyertown, Pa., “half of which are blue, half of which are red.”

    Interviews with interesting people with divergent views.


    TorStar: Donald Trump tells Joe Rogan he wants Canadian freshwater

    “You have millions of gallons of water pouring down from the north, with the snow caps and Canada, all pouring down,” Trump said at a press conference in California on Sept 13.

    “And they have a very large faucet,” Trump continued. It’s unclear who “they” are or where the “faucet” is. Requests for clarification from Trump’s team were not answered before publication.

    Trump is likely talking about diverting fresh water from the Columbia River, which forms in the Rocky Mountains and flows through B.C. and into Washington and Oregon — and though ideas proposing as much have been floated in the past, experts told the Star that we’re unlikely to ever see it happen.


    New Scientist: Fresh insights into how we doze off may help tackle sleep conditions

    WHEN he was in need of inspiration, the inventor Thomas Edison used to take a nap in a chair while holding a metal ball in each hand. The moment he dropped off, the balls would drop too and crash to the floor, jolting him awake. Edison claimed that this allowed him to capture creative ideas that had fleetingly bubbled up into his semi-consciousness as he fell asleep.

    The state Edison was chasing is known as the sleep-onset period (SOP), a little-studied phase of the sleep-wake cycle. Once seen as merely a brief interlude between wakefulness and slumber, it is now being recognised as a distinct and important stage in its own right. Not only is it involved in orchestrating the shutdown of consciousness, but it may also play a vital role in many of the functions of sleep, including memory-processing and, of course, creativity.

    via Apple News+


    New Scientist: The science behind lower carbon pigs

    As origin stories go, this is a strange one. Who would have thought that six farmers meeting up in an English pub in the 1950s would have helped to improve the carbon footprint of 21st century pigs?

    It might not have been part of those farmers’ original goal – they simply wanted to use science to improve pig breeding. But it turns out that the application of science is playing a pivotal role in creating credible, measurable carbon reductions in the pork industry. “If we can select more robust, healthy, efficient animals, ultimately we can translate that to improvements in sustainability” says Matt Culbertson, the current chief operating officer of the Pig Improvement Company (PIC), which officially came into being in the White Hart pub in Nettlebed, Oxfordshire in 1962.

    PIC’s business and research have led to the breeding of pigs that not only lower the carbon emissions in the meat supply chain, but carry the first externally-verified measure of the role of genetics in sustainability. Advances in technology, improved computing power, statistical methodology and genetics enable breeders to select animals with the ideal characteristics to be parents of the next generation, and the benefits are accruing for the planet, as well as the consumer.


    Kottke: Letter of Recommendation: DRM-free Audiobooks From Libro.fm

    For the last three years, I’ve been been getting my audiobooks through Libro.fm. You can listen through their app or download DRM-free mp3 or m4b files to listen in the app of your choice. They are a social purpose corporation, 100% employee owned, and partner with local bookstores to offer audiobooks & share profits. They don’t have every title because of Audible’s strategy of locking up exclusives (like Emily Wilson’s translations of The Iliad and the Odyssey), but they have most of what you’d want to read. They also make it easy to gift audiobooks to friends and family (and I suppose, enemies and strangers if you want?)


    Last Updated: 01.Nov.2024 19:59 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:20 AM, Nov 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 31.Oct.2024


    CBC: Alberta woman’s medically assisted death delayed last minute by B.C. judge

    An Alberta woman was denied a medically assisted death in Vancouver this past Sunday after an interim injunction was granted in B.C. Supreme Court barely 24 hours before she was scheduled to die.

    According to court documents, the woman was approved for medical assistance in dying (MAiD) in July by Vancouver MAiD provider Dr. Ellen Wiebe after her own doctors in southern Alberta wouldn’t approve it.


    CleanTechnica: CleanTechnica Tested: Oupes Mega 1 Power Station

    The first thing I noticed was that it has both a good number and a good variety of outputs:

    • Two USB-PD 100W ports
    • Four USB-A quick-charge ports
    • A cigarette lighter plug and two other 12v outputs
    • Four 20-amp 120v outlets

    It also has a decent display (it looks better in person) that shows not only the percentage, but also time remaining at current power usage.

    ⋮

    Speaking of solar power and charging, there are several good inputs to charge it up. For solar, it has standard Anderson Powerpole connectors that are compatible with all sorts of power inputs. As you can see in the featured image at the top of the article, it comes with a cigarette lighter plug and a solar adapter to feed power into this port. But you can put any power source that meets the specifications (12–80 volts, up to 12 amps) to charge it up! There’s also a standard 120V plug to charge it at home or from a generator, as well as a breaker reset.


    How to Geek: How to “Undo” on iPhone: 5 Different Ways

    Three-Finger Tap to Undo (Two Methods)

    There are two tapping gestures you can use to undo text entry mistakes on your iPhone. While typing, double-tap the screen with three fingers. You’ll see an “Undo” notification at the top of the screen, and your last action will be undone.

    Also, in many Apple apps and some third-party apps, you can bring up a formatting bar by single-tapping the screen with three fingers. This opens a widget at the top of the screen that allows you to undo, cut, copy, paste, and redo.

    No longer just the “shake to undo” gesture.


    LA Times: Wendell Pierce slams ‘obnoxious fans’ who spoiled World Series

    In a series of tweets Wednesday, the “Jack Ryan” and “The Wire” actor condemned the unruly behavior and “obnoxious fans” that spoiled his night at Yankee Stadium, where the Los Angeles Dodgers clinched a late-inning victory against the Bronx Bombers. Pierce tweeted that he left Wednesday’s game early, alleging “people were throwing things at me” for speaking to a Dodgers fan. He tweeted about his experience two hours after posting a video of himself sharing his excitement for Game 5, rooting for the Yankees and wearing a hat with the team’s logo.

    Sign of the times?


    MacRumors: PSA: Apple’s New USB-C Accessories Require macOS Sequoia, Don’t Work Properly With macOS 15.2 Beta

    With the launch of new M4 Macs this week, Apple introduced USB-C versions of the Magic Mouse, Magic Trackpad, and Magic Keyboard to continue on with phasing out the Lightning port. Apple users who plan to buy these new accessories should be aware that there are some software limitations currently. …


    Last Updated: 31.Oct.2024 23:58 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:29 AM, Nov 1
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 30.Oct.2024


    Wired: The Eternal Truth of Markdown

    Markdown is not just a piece of software. It’s also a markup language–it’s used to format plaintext, which then appears the way you want it to on, say, the internet. Markdown the markup language was designed to be “as easy-to-read and easy-to-write as is feasible,” according to creator John Gruber’s syntax guide. “A Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain text, without looking like it’s been marked up with tags or formatting instructions.”

    This, I believe, is the cornerstone of Markdown’s success (and why related projects from that era, like reStructuredText and Setext, remain largely unknown): It looked at the world as it actually was and built on the informal conventions people were using. Markdown took common quirks of writing plaintext emails or message-board posts–like wrapping a word in asterisks to emphasize it–and extended those formatting customs. It did not come in and declare an entirely new syntax and ask people to adopt it.

    via John Philpin


    UPI: ‘Weekend warrior’ exercise can cut risk of cognitive decline, study indicates

    Being a “weekend warrior” – engaging in exercise once or twice per week – may be as beneficial as regular sessions in decreasing the risk of cognitive decline that often leads to dementia, a new study concludes.

    The study was published Tuesday online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

    ⋮

    A total of 7,945 respondents said they didn’t exercise at all; 726 met the weekend warrior definition; 1,362 reported exercising several times per week; and 2,088 made up a combined group.

    During an average 16-year monitoring period, researchers identified 2,400 cases of mild dementia. The prevalence was 26% among the no exercisers, 14% among the weekend warriors and 18.5% among the regularly active.

    Hmmm…


    Malcolm Gladwell | TED (YouTube): The Tipping Point I Got Wrong

    In his 2000 bestseller “The Tipping Point,” Malcolm Gladwell told the story of why crime fell in New York City in the 1990s. Now, 25 years later, he’s back with a confession and a mea culpa: “I was wrong,” he says. He shares how his analysis contributed to the rise of the infamous “stop and frisk” policing policy in New York City — and shows why journalists should avoid the trap of imagining a story is ever really over. (Followed by a Q&A with TED’s Monique Ruff-Bell) (Recorded at TEDNext 2024 on October 22, 2024)


    NYT: How Trump and Harris Compare on Climate Change

    If he returns to the White House, former President Donald J. Trump, who last month called climate change “one of the greatest scams of all time,” plans to build on his first-term attacks on the environment when he pulled the United States out of the Paris climate agreement and rolled back more than 100 environmental regulations.

    In a second term, he has promised to end federal support for a clean energy transition and hamstring wind and solar development while expanding oil and gas production — including drilling in the fragile Arctic wilderness. He has said he would again withdraw the country from the Paris accord and potentially go further, blocking the United States from negotiating future global climate agreements.


    MacRumors: Apple Announces MacBook Pro Models With M4 Pro and M4 Max Chips, Thunderbolt 5 Support, and More

    Apple today announced new 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models featuring M4 Pro and M4 Max chips, alongside a new entry-level 14-inch MacBook Pro powered by the M4 chip.

    The new M4 Pro and M4 Max machines come with a minimum of 24GB of Unified Memory as standard, up from 18GB in the previous models. Both models feature three Thunderbolt 5 ports, the newest specification of Thunderbolt that offers speeds of up to 120 Gb/s with Bandwidth Boost, which is triple the maximum bandwidth of Thunderbolt 4.


    The Conversation: Making a Snickers bar is a complex science − a candy engineer explains how to build the airy nougat and chewy caramel of this Halloween favorite

    As a food engineer studying candy and ice cream at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, I now look at candy in a whole different way than I did as a kid. Back then, it was all about shoveling it in as fast as I could.

    Now, as a scientist who has made a career studying and writing books about confections, I have a very different take on candy. I have no trouble sacrificing a piece for the microscope or the texture analyzer to better understand how all the components add up. I don’t work for, own stock in, or receive funding from Mars Wrigley, the company that makes Snickers bars. But in my work, I do study the different components that make up lots of popular candy bars. Snickers has many of the most common elements you’ll find in your Halloween candy.

    via John Brady


    Dodgers won the World Series.


    Last Updated: 30.Oct.2024 16:11 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:56 PM, Oct 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 29.Oct.2024


    Small Good Things (Hollie): Just now… Me: <points to newly …

    Greg: Okay, you have to understand, the containers are a mirage, you have too much stuff, you can’t just get new container. The problem is <waves hands at my desk> too much stuff.


    CBC: Saskatchewan Party wins 5th consecutive majority government

    Some tight races in Saskatoon, Regina, Prince Albert too close to call.

    ⋮

    There were seven ridings in the province still too close for CBC’s decision desk to call as the night drew to a close. CBC will continue populating this page with live results as they come in from Elections Saskatchewan.


    Last Updated: 29.Oct.2024 10:09 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:12 AM, Oct 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 28.Oct.2024


    Guardian: ‘Magicians get emotional about it’: should secrets of magic ever be revealed?

    Study examining highly contested topic of ‘exposure’ looks at when it is acceptable to share tricks of the trade.

    ⋮

    The paper, Towards a Theory of Exposure, is available in the Journal of Performance Magic.


    Verge: Secret service members, maybe don’t set your Strava to public.

    Or you could end up like French President Emannuel Macron’s bodyguards: leaking the location of the one person you’re supposed to protect.

    Le Monde found the names and addresses of roughly a dozen of Macron’s bodyguards… and then found their running routes on Strava. Including routes they ran during recon trips to scout hotels for the president to stay at.

    Semafor.com: Bodyguards inadvertently expose French President Macron’s location on Strava


    CBC: Porter breaks its own rules by kicking deaf woman and her service dog off a flight

    Porter says ‘miscommunication’ between pilot and flight attendant led to incident.

    Every airline has some number of employees who make mistakes or are ill-suited to their jobs. My experience with Porter has been uniformly good, so I don’t think this incident, sad though it is, should be taken as a general indicator of the airline’s services.


    CBC: Porch pirates are getting smarter. Here’s how to protect your parcels [video]

    Montreal police say they’ve noticed more package thefts in certain neighbourhoods. One cybersecurity expert says thieves are getting smarter and planning out their tactics ahead of time.


    NYT: Jeff Bezos Defends Decision to End Washington Post Endorsements

    Jeff Bezos, the billionaire owner of The Washington Post, whose decision to end presidential endorsements at the paper set off a firestorm inside and outside the paper last week, said on Monday in his first comments about the change that it had been done to improve the newsroom’s credibility, not to protect his own personal interests.

    “Presidential endorsements do nothing to tip the scales of an election,” Mr. Bezos wrote in an essay published on The Post’s website. He added: “What presidential endorsements actually do is create a perception of bias. A perception of non-independence. Ending them is a principled decision, and it’s the right one.”


    Last Updated: 28.Oct.2024 22:20 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:48 AM, Oct 29
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 27.Oct.2024


    WashPo: Michigan has big turnout in first day of early voting statewide

    This is the first year of early in-person voting in Michigan, and the one-day numbers on Saturday smashed voter performance during the primaries.

    ⋮

    In addition, more than 1.4 million have cast ballots by mail in the state.


    WashPo: Letters: “Deeply, fundamentally saddened.” “Disappointment, disgust and despair.”: The Post decided not to endorse. Readers have questions.

    Disappointment, disgust and despair are just some of the feelings I had when I read that The Post decided to refrain from making an endorsement for president. I read this just after I read The Post article “How Trump talks: Abrupt shifts, profane insults, confusing sentences.”

    That article describes the former president’s incessant lying, frequent vulgarity, incoherent ramblings and inability to follow through on a thought. The article in effect makes the case for why Donald Trump should not be endorsed, while Vice President Kamala Harris’s behavior continues to make the case for why she should be endorsed.


    Daring Fireball: Joz Teases Mac Announcements Next Week

    Greg Joswiak, on X:

    Mac (😉) your calendars! We have an exciting week of announcements ahead, starting on Monday morning. Stay tuned…

    Presumably these will include M4 refreshes of the MacBook Pro lineup (as foretold by those bizarre leaks to Russian YouTubers two weeks ago), iMac, and Mac Mini. And the Mac Mini, reports Mark Gurman, is set to sport an all-new, much-smaller form factor.


    TorStar: Ford government to ban foreign students from medical schools

    Premier Doug Ford is planning to bar new foreign students in medical schools and offering free tuition to 1,360 Ontarians if they agree to work as doctors in the province for five years after graduating.


    BBC: Abercrombie & Fitch: How my investigation led to sex trafficking charges against ex-boss

    In a federal courtroom in New York, for the first time I’m face to face with Mike Jeffries — the multi-millionaire ex-fashion boss I’ve spent three years investigating for the BBC. He stares at me directly, lips pursed, and chin raised, as he sits before the judge.

    As a result of my reporting, he was arrested this week by the FBI and charged with running an international sex trafficking and prostitution business along with his British partner, Matthew Smith, and their middleman James Jacobson.

    Authorities acted after hearing my podcast series, The Abercrombie Guys, in which I unearthed evidence that Mr Jeffries, 80, and Mr Smith, 61, had been at the centre of a sophisticated global operation involving a network of recruiters and a middleman scouting young men for sex.


    SFChronicle: UC Berkeley chemists develop powder to suck carbon dioxide from air [gift link]

    A team of UC Berkeley chemists have developed a potential solution in the form of yellow crystalline powder, a half-pound of which can absorb as much carbon dioxide annually as a tree.

    ⋮

    Deployed at scale, the material could significantly reduce the amount of carbon in the atmosphere in a way no other technology can, said Omar Yaghi, professor of chemistry and UC Berkeley and lead author of a paper announcing their discovery, which was published Wednesday in the journal Nature.


    *NYT: Trump Rally at Madison Square Garden: Election Live Updates

    Former President Donald J. Trump is speaking now at his Madison Square Garden rally in New York, a gathering that began with a series of warm-up speakers who delivered a litany of racist remarks, vulgar insults and profanity-laden comments.

    Tony Hinchcliffe, a comedian who was one of the early speakers, called Puerto Rico an “island of garbage” in a set that also included derogatory remarks about Latinos generally, African Americans, Palestinians and Jews.


    NYT: Two Students Created Face Recognition Glasses. It Wasn’t Hard.

    A month later, he found out just how strange. He had been an unwitting guinea pig in an experiment meant to show just how easy it was to rig artificial intelligence tools to identify someone and retrieve the person’s biographical information — potentially including a phone number and home address — without the person’s realizing it.

    A friend texted Mr. Hoda, telling him that he was in a video that was going viral. Mr. Nguyen and a fellow Harvard student, Caine Ardayfio, had built glasses used for identifying strangers in real time, and had demonstrated them on two “real people” at the subway station, including Mr. Hoda, …


    Last Updated: 27.Oct.2024 21:42 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:20 AM, Oct 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 26.Oct.2024


    Yahoo: LA Times Planned ‘Case Against Trump’ Series Alongside Kamala Harris Endorsement Before Owner Quashed It | Exclusive

    Alongside its endorsement of Kamala Harris, the Los Angeles Times editorial board had also planned a multi-part series against Donald Trump before the whole thing was quashed by owner Patrick Soon-Shiong, TheWrap has learned.

    According to internal memos viewed by TheWrap, the series, tentatively called “The Case Against Trump,” would have ran throughout this week. The endorsement of Kamala Harris would then have been published on Sunday.

    However, Soon-Shiong ordered the cancellation 0f the series and the endorsement without explanation, current and now former staffers have confirmed, setting off a massive crisis for the 142-year-old paper.


    TorStar: Toronto’s rents are finally falling. Here’s why it’s happening — and how long prices could drop

    Landlords are accepting lower offers as units are sometimes sitting on the market for weeks or months, experts say.

    ⋮

    According to Urbanation and Rentals.ca’s last rent report, Toronto asking rents declined by 8 per cent from September 2023 to September 2024, representing the eighth consecutive year-over-year drop and the largest year-over-year decline in 2024. The report says studio prices were down seven per cent, one-bedroom and two-bedroom units declined by eight per cent, and three-bedroom units decreased six per cent.


    Guardian: My healthy lifestyle is horrific, says Jeremy Clarkson after heart surgery

    The former Top Gear host was recently fitted with two stents, which improve blood flow to the heart.

    Clarkson, 64, who last year recorded the final episode of The Grand Tour for Amazon Prime Video, said he was not fazed by the operation, and that the prospect of abstaining from alcohol, and having to exercise and adopt a healthy diet, was his real fear.

    In his column in the Sun, the broadcaster wrote: “If I go to a party, I must stand in a corner, nursing some refreshing elderflower juice, before going home at about 9.30. That’s terrifying too.”

    Clarkson maintains a packed schedule, despite having retired from his car show with longtime collaborators Richard Hammond and James May. He owns a farm, a brewery and a pub, writes three newspaper columns and hosts the ITV gameshow Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.


    Nate Silver: Silver Bulletin 2024 presidential election forecast

    This is the landing page for the 2024 Silver Bulletin presidential election forecast. It will always contain the most recent data from the model.


    NYT: Michelle Obama Makes a Searing Appeal to Men: ‘Take Our Lives Seriously’

    In her first appearance on the campaign trail during this election, Mrs. Obama, long reluctant to engage in the political arena, described the far-reaching consequences of the 2022 Supreme Court decision overturning the constitutional right to abortion, in the concrete terms of personal tragedy.

    “If your wife is shivering and bleeding on the operating room table during a routine delivery gone bad, her pressure dropping as she loses more and more blood, or some unforeseen infection spreads and her doctors aren’t sure if they can act, you will be the one praying that it’s not too late,” Mrs. Obama said. “You will be the one pleading for somebody, anybody, to do something.”

    ⋮

    With the election 10 days away, Ms. Harris is facing an electorate deeply divided by gender. A majority of women support her. A majority of men are backing Mr. Trump. Her joint appearance with Mrs. Obama in Michigan seemed designed both to energize her female supporters and jolt men into understanding what she believes is at risk.


    Last Updated: 26.Oct.2024 22:15 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:47 AM, Oct 27
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 25.Oct.2024


    iPhone in Canada: Apple Offers $1 Million Bounty for Cracking Private Cloud Security

    Apple is offering a top reward of up to $1 million for those who can demonstrate significant breaches in its Private Cloud Compute (PCC) platform, marking it one of the largest bounties in the industry.

    In a move to enhance transparency and encourage external analysis, Apple has now made the resources for its PCC Virtual Research Environment (VRE) accessible to the public.


    iPhone in Canada: Rogers Rakes in $526M Profit in Q3, Fueled by $5.1B Revenue

    As for Rogers prepaid subscribers, net additions increase 57% to 93,000, with total prepaid wireless subscribers at 1.1 million. In December, Rogers will shutdown its prepaid wireless service, along with Fido..


    NYT: Phil Lesh Made Organ Donation His Personal Cause

    The Grateful Dead and its various successors and offshoots were famous for making sure no two concerts were the same, changing their set lists with each performance. But since the late 1990s, at most every show featuring the original bassist Phil Lesh, who died Friday at 84, there was one thing that kicked off each encore.

    It was not a song, exactly, but a brief monologue from Lesh urging everyone in the audience to declare themselves organ donors. The subject was personal to him: In 1998, at the age of 58 and suffering from chronic hepatitis C, he received a liver transplant.


    NYT: Phil Lesh, Bassist Who Anchored the Grateful Dead, Dies at 84

    Phil Lesh, whose expansive approach to the bass as a charter member of the Grateful Dead made him one of the first performers on that instrument in a rock band to play a lead role rather than a supporting one, died on Friday. He was 84.

    His death was announced on his Instagram account. No further information was provided.

    In addition to providing explorative bass work, Mr. Lesh sang high harmonies for the band and provided the occasional lead vocal. He also co-wrote some of the band’s most noteworthy songs, including ones that inspired adventurous jams, like “St. Stephen” and “Dark Star," as well as more conventional pieces, like “Cumberland Blues,"“Truckin'" and “Box of Rain."


    NYT: NASA Astronaut Hospitalized After SpaceX Return to Earth

    A NASA astronaut experiencing a “medical issue” was hospitalized early Friday after returning from the International Space Station, the space agency said Friday. Citing privacy, NASA did not identify the astronaut or provide details about the medical issue.

    The hospitalized astronaut, who NASA said was “in stable condition under observation as a precautionary measure,” was one of four astronauts who splashed down in the Gulf of Mexico near Pensacola, Fla., at 3:29 a.m. Eastern time at the conclusion of nearly eight months in space.


    Wales Online: Dog owners warned ‘annoying’ thing could cost them a £5,000 fine

    The UK’s top ten neighbour nuisances:

    1. Leaving dogs to bark (53%)
    2. Playing loud music (49%)
    3. Cars taking up road space (40%)
    4. Unkempt property (37%)
    5. Hearing someone having sex (35%)
    6. Overgrown trees (33%)
    7. Smoking in the garden (25%)
    8. Making suggestion to change your property (19%)
    9. Having lots of visitors (17%)
    10. Being asked to join community events (17%)

    Last Updated: 25.Oct.2024 21:25 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:26 AM, Oct 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 24.Oct.2024


    NYT: How Cheerleading Became So Acrobatic, Dangerous and Popular

    Two years ago, at 21, Jennings retired from cheerleading with a chronic hip injury, occasional slurred speech and intermittent headaches that she called “stingers.” She resolved to seek treatment for a traumatic brain injury. It was only when she was out of cheer entirely that she realized her difficult career in the sport was more than just a random string of bad luck. Jennings’s experience — of injury, grueling hours and emotional abuse — is not an uncommon one in the vast world of American cheerleading. “Every day I make more and more pieces click,” she said.

    Nationwide, just over a million children, mostly girls, participate in cheer each year (some estimates are even higher), more than the number who play softball or lacrosse. And almost every part of that world is dominated by a single company: Varsity Spirit. It’s hard to cheer at the youth, high school or collegiate level without putting money in the company’s pocket. Varsity operates summer camps where children learn to do stunts and perform; it hosts events where they compete; it sells pom-poms they shake and uniforms they wear on the sidelines of high school and college football games. Each year, Varsity ships 4.6 million pieces of apparel, from $80 leopard-print “Cheer Mom” fleeces to custom uniforms covered in Swarovski crystals.

    Gift article link


    IMDb: Join or Die

    Centers on America’s civic unraveling through the journey of scientist Robert Putnam, whose research on the decline in American community lights a path out of our democracy’s present crisis.

    via Kottke


    Last Updated: 24.Oct.2024 23:46 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

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    → 1:23 AM, Oct 25
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 23.Oct.2024


    Guardian: Nils Pratley: New Water Commission must create an environmental enforcer that is feared

    An independent commission into the English and Welsh water sector would have been an excellent idea about 20 years ago. It is hard to pinpoint precisely when the industry went seriously off the rails but Ofwat’s infamous price review of 2004 is one starting point. That is when the undoubted gains from higher investment in the decade after privatisation in 1989 started to evaporate and the story turned into one of financial engineering and grossly inadequate regulation.

    The 2004 settlement was wildly generous to the companies and kickstarted the disastrous take-private buyout boom by private equity and global infrastructure funds. Dividend extraction and “whole business securitisations” followed, tolerated by an economic regulator that, absurdly, took the view that sky-high debt levels and Cayman Islands financing vehicles were not its job to worry about.


    Verge: Apple’s AirPods Pro hearing health features are as good as they sound

    Apple announced a trio of major new hearing health features for the AirPods Pro 2 in September, including clinical-grade hearing aid functionality, a hearing test, and more robust hearing protection. All three will roll out next week with the release of iOS 18.1, and they could mark a watershed moment for hearing health awareness. Apple is about to instantly turn the world’s most popular earbuds into an over-the-counter hearing aid.

    ⋮

    With iOS 18.1 and the soon-to-be-released AirPods firmware update, the AirPods Pro 2 will offer hearing protection at all times across noise cancellation, transparency, and adaptive audio modes. There’s no “concert mode” or a specific setting to toggle. You can think of this as an expansion of the loud sound reduction option that was already in place. Hearing protection is on by default, and Apple says “an all-new multiband high dynamic range algorithm” helps to preserve the natural sound of concerts and other live events.

    ⋮

    For those 18 years and older with mild to moderate hearing loss, the AirPods Pro 2 can now serve as a clinical-grade hearing aid. Once enabled, you can also toggle on a “Media Assist” setting that uses your hearing test results to optimize the sound of music, phone calls, and video content.


    Globe: Flight delayed or cancelled? You might want to ask about a business class rebooking

    Air passengers could learn a useful lesson from an Edmonton resident who challenged a carrier’s rebooking of a cancelled flight after he discovered that a much earlier departure had room in business class.

    When Zachary Penner’s flight to Toronto was cancelled just half an hour before it was supposed to take off in mid-July, Air Canada automatically sent him a new ticket in economy class, the same fare he had purchased, for a flight leaving a day later. But a quick web search revealed that a business-class seat remained up for grabs on a similar flight departing just six hours after the cancelled one.

    While Air Canada initially refused to upgrade Mr. Penner to the pricier spot, it eventually re-accommodated him on the earlier flight, saying an economy seat had suddenly become available, he said.

    So they bumped someone from economy to business class, and then told him an economy seat had become available!


    TorStar: Once again, Leafs play down to their opposition in 6-2 loss

    Toronto followed up one of its best games of the young season with one of its worst in a road loss to a young, injury-riddled team.

    ⋮

    The Leafs were playing on back-to-back nights, coming off a complete — almost emotional — effort in beating the Tampa Bay Lightning 5-2 on Monday.

    That led to a lot of pre-game gushing about how good [sic] the Maple Leafs were playing, how they were playing a different version of hockey under Berube, how they physically dominated opponents and how well they defended.

    Year-after-year overconfidence hurts the Leafs repeatedly.


    TorStar: The CBC’s new boss will inherit a ton of challenges. Here’s what observers say she’s up against

    CBC’s new CEO will face a number of challenges as she takes the job, including a new mandate, how to fix English TV, and low morale all while waiting for the next election and whatever surprises that may bring.

    I hope she has a better vision than the previous CEO.


    TorStar: Doug Ford poised to send cheques to every Ontarian

    Premier Doug Ford is poised to send cheques to 16 million Ontarians to offset rising costs as a possible early election looms, the Star has learned.

    Sources say the premier’s gambit will be announced in Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy’s fall economic statement on Oct. 30.

    While the precise amount of the rebate cheques is still being finalized, it should be at least $200 for every adult and child in the province.


    Matt Langford (@matthew@social.lol): Little known Kindle resources

    I’m always surprised how many people who use Kindles (or other e-readers) don’t know about these resources.

    Use these to follow authors and books to find the best deals:

    • bookbub.com
    • ereaderiq.com

    Use these to legally download free ebooks:

    • gutenberg.org
    • standardebooks.org
    • aliceandbooks.com

    Go read.


    MacRumors: Report: Apple May Stop Producing Vision Pro by the End of 2024

    Apple has abruptly reduced production of the Vision Pro headset and could stop making the current version of the device completely by the end of 2024, The Information reports.

    Citing multiple people “directly involved” in making components for the headset, the report says that the scaling back of production began in the early summer. This indicates that Apple now has a sufficient number of Vision Pro units in its inventory to meet demand for the device’s remaining lifespan through to next year.


    TorStar: Peter Khill argues for lesser sentence over judge’s error

    “I am truly discomfited and humbled in bringing this matter to your court’s attention,” Justice Andrew Goodman wrote in a letter explaining his mistake — that he read out the wrong number from an old draft, and didn’t immediately correct himself.

    ⋮

    The appeal panel made up of Justices Gary Trotter, Benjamin Zarnett and Jonathon George will deliver their decision on the conviction and sentence appeals at a later date. Khill remains on bail pending that decision.


    Politico: Poll shows California’s Prop 36 crime initiative poised to pass by large margin

    Nearly three-quarters of the California electorate plans to vote for a high-profile ballot measure that would increase penalties for some theft- and drug-related crimes, according to a new poll released Wednesday.

    Seventy-three percent of likely voters said they would support Proposition 36, the survey from the Public Policy Institute of California found, compared with just 25 percent who plan to oppose it. That’s a slight increase from PPIC’s September poll, which found 71 percent of likely voters in favor of it.


    Last Updated: 23.Oct.2024 23:46 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:41 AM, Oct 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 22.Oct.2024


    On my Om (Om Malik): The Problem with Podcasts

    Will the podcasts give me an ad-free experience with subscriptions? The answer is no. I thought the whole point of podcasts was to free us from the past, aka the “radio,” and its format tyranny. 

    It’s not just podcasts—streaming nowadays is no better than television. Netflix, the company that invented binge-watching, now releases episodes once a week, like old-school TV. Independent blogs and newsletters are less personal and more like old media.


    Last Updated: 22.Oct.2024 15:41 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:37 PM, Oct 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 21.Oct.2024


    CBC: Rogers customers call contracts misleading as fee for TV boxes goes up $7/month

    When Cathy Cooper signed a contract with Rogers Communications four months ago, she says a sales rep told her the monthly price for TV and internet service was guaranteed for two years.

    So she was shocked to see her monthly bill increase just three months later, and called the telco giant to find out what was going on.

    That’s when she learned that the TV boxes in her house were going up $7 apiece, except for one which would still be included in her monthly package.

    Cooper had six TV boxes, because her grown children and a grandchild live at home with her.


    CBC: Watching an NHL game this season may be more complicated than you think

    Now, to watch NHL games this season, you will need to subscribe to Sportsnet, TSN, TVA and Amazon Prime.

    ⋮

    Last year’s Stanley Cup final Game 7 between the Edmonton Oilers and the Florida Panthers became the most-watched broadcast in Sportsnet’s history.


    CBC: Winner of 2024 B.C. election may not be known for another week

    Based on preliminary results, CBC News has not projected the winners of 11 ridings — with the NDP leading in six of those, and the Conservatives in five.

    Two of those ridings will be subject to an automatic recount — which happens in any district where the margin of victory is 100 votes or less. Parties can also request a recount in close ridings.

    The guaranteed recounts will occur in Juan de Fuca-Malahat, which the NDP is leading by 23 votes, and Surrey City Centre, which the NDP is leading by 96 votes.

    The winners of those recounts will be determined during the final counting period between Oct. 26 and 28, according to Elections B.C.


    WashPo: No, McDonald’s didn’t confirm Trump’s baseless claim about Kamala Harris

    In a message to employees obtained by The Washington Post, the fast-food giant made clear that it isn’t saying what Trump says it’s saying.

    ⋮

    But what 2024 is experiencing is very much not a typical presidential campaign. And so Vice President Kamala Harris’s mention of having worked at a California McDonald’s in the summer of 1983 led directly to the unexpected sight of former president Donald Trumpstanding in the drive-through window of a McDonald’s restaurant in Pennsylvania, pretending to fill orders for pretend customers


    TorStar: Ford’s bill to limit bike lanes will ‘review’ existing ones

    In a salvo at Toronto, Ford’s Progressive Conservatives hint at the end of bike lanes on Yonge and Bloor streets and Eglinton and University avenues.

    What a doughead!


    TorStar: Ontario appoints Dr. Jane Philpott to lead primary care team

    In the face of mounting criticism over a worsening shortage of family doctors, Premier Doug Ford‘s government is turning to Queen’s University medical school director Dr. Jane Philpott to solve the problem.

    The former federal Liberal health minister will head a “primary care action team” aimed at connecting every Ontarian to a family doctor within five years. Her appointment takes effect Dec. 1.

    Philpott’s challenge is massive: 2.5 million Ontarians do not have a primary-care physician, a number that is expected to top four million in the next couple of years as the province grows and aging family doctors retire.

    ⋮

    Meanwhile, a switch to a new supplier last month has left home-care patients under the Ontario Health atHome agency without basics like gauze and bandages — or even painkillers and sedatives — for the past month.

    ⋮

    Opposition parties signalled they will pressure the government on health care this fall with Ford seemingly more concerned about bike lanes, building a tunnel under Highway 401 and spending as much as $1 billion to get beer, wine and other alcoholic drinks into convenience stores a year earlier than planned.


    Last Updated: 21.Oct.2024 19:35 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:13 AM, Oct 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 20.Oct.2024


    iPhone in Canada: Ontario is Getting a New Area Code in 2025, Says CRTC

    Starting April 26, 2025, Ontario will debut a new 942 area code to meet the growing demand for phone numbers in the region. Current area codes are 416, 437, and 647 [and 613]. The decision was made to ensure there are enough phone numbers in the province.

    “The introduction of a new area code creates millions of additional telephone numbers without affecting the existing numbers,” said Kelly T. Walsh, Program Manager of the Canadian Numbering Administrator, in a statement. “The new 942 area code will be added to the current area codes already in use in this region and will cover the same geographic area.”


    Inc.: Starbucks' New CEO Only Needed 6 Words to Explain the Company’s Biggest Problem

    Niccol goes on to explain what he means:

    “Many of our customers still experience this magic every day, but in some places — especially in the U.S. — we aren’t always delivering. It can feel transactional, menus can feel overwhelming, product is inconsistent, the wait too long or the handoff too hectic. These moments are opportunities for us to do better.”


    Inc.: Google’s Deal to Develop Small Modular Reactors Is More Good News for the Nuclear Industry

    The next-gen tech is expected to cut down on the cost of reactor development as big companies seek carbon-free power for AI.

    Getting there fast enough is a challenge. So far, SMRs are no cheaper per kW or kWh than the traditional behemoths.


    On my Om (Om Malik): Waiting for Apple’s Intelligence

    This morning, I asked Siri to create a playlist for Eric Hilton on Apple Music. Its response? “Sorry, I don’t understand.” Come on, Siri, this shouldn’t be so difficult.

    And don’t even get me started on the iPhone’s spelling and grammar suggestions. Compared to other AI-powered tools like Google Docs, Apple’s offerings feel practically prehistoric. The suggestions often lack context and sometimes border on nonsensical. It’s like playing grammar roulette every time you type a message.


    Last Updated: 20.Oct.2024 22:05 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:18 AM, Oct 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 19.Oct.2024


    Slashdot: The Analogue 3D Drags the Fondly Remembered N64 Into the 21st Century

    Analogue, a retro gaming company, is releasing a hardware-emulated Nintendo 64 console that can play every N64 game in 4K resolution. TechCrunch reports: …


    CBC: Inuit in Ottawa applaud Google’s latest addition to translation tool

    Google Translate is adding a new language to its platform that could serve thousands of people in Ottawa as well as Canada’s North: Inuktut.

    It’s one of the most widely spoken Indigenous languages across the country, and is the first one spoken in Canada to be included in Google’s translation software.

    The term Inuktut is increasingly used to refer to Inuktitut, the language spoken largely in the Baffin Island regions of Nunavut, and Inuinnaqtun, which is generally spoken in the Western Arctic, among other languages or dialects. Inuinnaqtun’s written form uses qaniujaaqpait, or syllabics, and qaliujaaqpait, based on the Roman alphabet.


    The Verge: Amazon’s Kindle Colorsoft Signature Edition hands-on: color E Ink looks pretty good

    The Kindle Colorsoft’s only new feature is the colors. But it looks like a good start to a color E Ink future.

    via Manton


    NewsNation: 3 killed and 8 injured by gunfire following a Mississippi school’s football game

    Shootings by young men have been an “off and on” problem recently in the county, which has a population of almost 16,000 residents. The young men who talk to the sheriff tell him that it’s often because they have a “beef,” or disagreement with someone.

    “It’s hard to see what they are fighting over. I don’t think they are fighting over turf or drugs,” March said. “These are young men walking around with weapons. I wish I had an answer.”

    Wow.


    NewsNation: Flight attendants in crisis: Stripping, struggling, homeless

    • Flight attendants tell NewsNation they are struggling to make ends meet
    • Some have resorted to eating passengers' leftovers; others are on food stamps
    • Union prez: Flight attendants ‘can’t survive’ on such low wages

    It would have been better if they had identified more of the airlines responsible.


    ScienceAlert: Caffeine in Your Blood May Affect Body Fat And Diabetes Risk, Study Reveals

    “Genetically predicted higher plasma caffeine concentrations were associated with lower BMI and whole body fat mass,” the researchers wrote in their paper, published in March 2023.

    “Furthermore, genetically predicted higher plasma caffeine concentrations were associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes. Approximately half of the effect of caffeine on type 2 diabetes liability was estimated to be mediated through BMI reduction.”


    Last Updated: 19.Oct.2024 22:47 EDT

    Friday’s articles

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    → 12:34 AM, Oct 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 18.Oct.2024


    404Media: Tinkerers Are Taking Old Redbox Kiosks Home and Reverse Engineering Them

    The code that runs Redbox DVD rental machines has been dumped online, and, in the wake of the company’s bankruptcy, a community of tinkerers and reverse engineers are probing the operating system to learn how it works. Naturally, one of the first things people did was make one of the machines run Doom.

    As has been detailed in several great articles elsewhere, the end of Redbox has been a clusterfuck, with pharmacies, grocery stores, and other retailers stuck with very large, heavy, abandoned DVD rental kiosks. To many people’s surprise, many of the kiosks remain operational even with the bankruptcy of Redbox’s parent company, which has led some people to “liberate” DVDs from the abandoned kiosks. Reddit is full of posts by people who say they have taken dozens of DVDs from kiosks all over the country.

    Free DVDs is one thing. But in recent days, people have realized that they can, in some cases, get free Redbox kiosks. In an August filing, Walgreens told the bankruptcy court that it has 5,400 abandoned kiosks at its stores, and that it is spending $184,000 a month keeping them powered. “Walgreens should not be required to continue to ‘store’ and power Redbox kiosks across the country without any form of payment,” the company wrote. And so tinkerers and reverse engineers have begun asking stores whether they can take the devices off their hands.


    Wikipedia: empanada

    An empanada is a type of baked or fried turnover consisting of pastry and filling, common in Spain, other Southern European countries, North African countries, Latin American countries, and the Philippines. The name comes from the Spanish empanar (to bread, i.e., to coat with bread), and translates as ‘breaded’, that is, wrapped or coated in bread. They are made by folding dough over a filling, which may consist of meat, cheese, tomato, corn, or other ingredients, and then cooking the resulting turnover, either by baking or frying.

    For the TIL file.


    NYT: Texas Supreme Court Halts Execution in Shaken Baby Case

    Mr. Roberson’s case has drawn intense national scrutiny because of the role that the shaken baby diagnosis played in his conviction. His lawyers maintain that no crime was committed at all and have presented evidence and expert testimony that his daughter, Nikki, most likely died in 2002 from pneumonia exacerbated by medication that she had been prescribed.


    NYT: Trump Tries to Rewrite History of Jan. 6 in Campaign’s Final Stretch

    Donald J. Trump amplified a conspiracy theory that the federal government had staged the Capitol attack and compared jailed rioters to Japanese Americans in internment camps during World War II.


    BBC: How will weight-loss drugs change our relationship with food?

    Now, let’s look at Semaglutide, which is sold under the brand name Wegovy for weight loss. It mimics a hormone that is released when we eat and tricks the brain into thinking we are full, dialling down our appetite so that we eat less.

    What this means is that by changing only one hormone, “suddenly you change your entire relationship with food”, says Prof Giles Yeo, an obesity scientist at the University of Cambridge.

    And that has all sorts of implications for the way we think about obesity.


    Last Updated: 18.Oct.2024 23:55 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

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    → 12:37 AM, Oct 19
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 17.Oct.2024


    CleanTechnica: Meteorologists Who Connect Hurricanes And The Climate Crisis Are Being Threatened

    A whole bunch of conspiracy theories and disinformation has bombarded social media as a result of the two hurricanes, exacerbating what was already a disturbing trend. “We’re all talking about how much more it’s ramped up,” Marshall Shepherd, who is the director of the University of Georgia’s Atmospheric Sciences Program and a former president of the American Meteorological Society, stated. There has been “a palpable difference in tone and aggression toward people in my field,” he explained.

    Meteorologists and the Need to Demystify Disinformation

    Broadcast meteorologists are highly skilled professionals who work at the intersection between climate scientists and the public. They have a public position in which they can and do educate their viewers about the local impacts of global climate change. When today’s meteorological community shares the same viewpoints and outlooks as most climate scientists about anthropogenic climate change, they are zeroing in on difficult political terrain.


    CleanTechnica: Tesla To Get Into LFP Battery Production — As Max Holland Predicted 4 Years Ago

    “The company is also set to work with Chinese manufacturer Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited (CATL), with an executive from CATL earlier this year hinting at plans to develop low-cost batteries for a large-volume EV from the automaker,” Zachary Visconti adds. “A report from Bloomberg in January also said that Tesla would be buying machinery from CATL to build in-house LFP batteries for its Megapack, though it would be 100-percent operated by Tesla.”

    LFP is a great choice for home batteries.


    Globe: Liberal MPs will present official demand for Trudeau to resign in coming days, sources say

    Earlier rumblings among some Liberal MPs that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should resign appear to be quickly snowballing into a serious effort to force him out, with caucus members expected to present within days an official demand that he step down.

    Three Liberal MPs have told The Globe and Mail that they anticipate the demand to be presented in two steps: first, in writing as soon as this weekend, laying out the fact that constituents are telling MPs that Mr. Trudeau needs to go; and second, in an open microphone session at the party’s next caucus meeting in Ottawa, on Wednesday.

    Unlike past talk of a caucus revolt, which gained no momentum, many Liberals say they believe that this time is different and that since Friday it has become clear that the Prime Minister has a problem on his hands.

    ⋮

    The first official said they are not playing down the frustrations that caucus feels or ignoring the issues raised. They said they expect a frank conversation behind closed doors on Wednesday and that one of the options under consideration is for the Prime Minister to kick his staff out of the meeting to allow MPs to speak more freely.

    I guess that shows us who’s actually in charge.


    Axios: Russian-Ukraine would be ‘world war’ if North Korea joins, Zelensky warns

    Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky warned Thursday that 10,000 North Korean troops are being readied to join Russian forces in their fight against Ukraine, multipleoutlets reported.

    ⋮

    In a podcast interview released on Thursday, former President Trump blamed Zelensky for allowing the war to start, even though Russia invaded Ukraine, the Washington Post reported.


    Wired: SpaceX Has a Plan for Starlink to Hit Gigabit Speeds

    Elon Musk’s satellite internet company told the FCC that a few tweaks to its “orbital configuration and operational parameters” could result in nearly 10 times faster downloads.

    ⋮

    As for actual speeds in 2024, Starlink’s website says “users typically experience download speeds between 25 and 220 Mbps, with a majority of users experiencing speeds over 100 Mbps. Upload speeds are typically between 5 and 20 Mbps. Latency ranges between 25 and 60 ms on land, and 100+ ms in certain remote locations.”


    Global: 4 more Liberal cabinet ministers not seeking re-election: sources

    Filomena Tassi, who serves as minister of economic development for southern Ontario, and Northern Affairs Minister Dan Vandal both confirmed Thursday they have informed Trudeau of their decision not to run again.

    Both ministers were first elected in 2015. Vandal was named northern affairs minister in 2019, while Tassi has served multiple cabinet roles since 2018, including as seniors minister and labour minister.

    As well, a senior government source says National Revenue Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau and Sports Minister Carla Qualtrough — both of whom have been in cabinet since the first Liberal government was elected in 2015 — are also not running for re-election.


    Globe: Passenger trips to take longer in Ontario and Quebec after CN rule change, Via says

    CN last Friday said Via’s recently arrived Siemens train sets running between Montreal and Windsor, Ont., must lower their speed at public crossings.

    The rule – previously in effect only at certain crossings between Montreal and Quebec City – is causing delays of about 30 minutes per train on average, Via said.

    ⋮

    Even before the slowdowns at crossings, delays were not uncommon at Via Rail. Only 59 per cent of Via trains reached their destination on time last year, and 57 per cent the year before.

    Both Via and CN want the government to pony up for new tracks for passenger rail. The best use for the money?


    Last Updated: 17.Oct.2024 18:40 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

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    → 12:16 AM, Oct 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 16.Oct.2024


    NYT: Global Electricity Demand Is Rising Faster Than Expected, I.E.A. Says

    A surge in power use worldwide could make it harder for nations to slash emissions and keep global warming in check.


    On my Om (Om Malik): Minimalissimo, R.I.P.

    “The site is in archival mode,” the founders wrote on the website. “The plan is to keep it up and preserve all the content that was posted throughout the years, but we’re not going to update it further.” It is a wonderful repository of “the finest examples of minimal architecture, art, interior, furniture, lighting and product design.” The site features 4,000 projects and more than 30,000 images.


    Guardian: Russia suspected of planting device on plane that caused UK warehouse fire

    The parcel is believed to have arrived at the DHL warehouse by air, though it is not known if it was a cargo or passenger aircraft, nor where it was destined for. There could have been serious consequences if it had ignited during the flight.

    A similar incident occurred in Germany, also in late July, when a suspect package bound for a flight caught fire at another DHL facility in Leipzig, and investigators are looking at links between the two. German authorities warned this week that had the parcel caught fire mid-air it could have downed the plane.


    Wales Online: An emergency fund is being set up for Welsh universities

    Welsh universities have warned of a possible £100m black hole.


    Globe & Mail: Global oil demand to peak by end of the decade as countries push to electrify their economies

    Demand for crude oil will hit a tipping point before 2030, leading to stiffer competition among producing countries and falling prices, the Paris-based agency said in its annual World Energy Outlook, while cleaner energy sources keep expanding their reach in transport and power generation.

    After the peak, the IEA said, the reduction in oil demand will be gradual through the subsequent decade, based on countries’ current stated policies.

    Peak oil will arrive with nuclear fusion power generation and full carbon sequestration.

    Gift link


    Globe: Kelly Cryderman: David Eby has morphed into a Prairie pragmatist

    With a week to go in British Columbia’s election campaign, BC NDP Leader David Eby is looking like he has won some momentum back. His platform announcements have been prolific, along with his potshots at Conservative Leader John Rustad.

    But the outcome is far from decided, and this is what can’t be lost: Mr. Eby is a different politician than he was early in 2024. He’s now more like his NDP brethren – and one sistren – in the three provinces to the east, and even has some policy alignment with conservative premiers.


    Last Updated: 16.Oct.2024 21:59 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

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    → 11:37 PM, Oct 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 15.Oct.2024


    Guardian: Sleep perfectionists: the exhausting rise of orthosomnia

    The UK sleep-tracker industry is estimated to be worth £270m a year – and forecast to double by 2030. Could all this data be making our insomnia worse?


    CP (MSN): Former Alberta justice minister Kaycee Madu to be sanctioned by law society

    A former Alberta justice minister is to be sanctioned after the provincial law society determined he “undermined respect for the administration of justice” when he phoned Edmonton’s police chief after receiving a traffic ticket.

    The Law Society of Alberta cited Kaycee Madu for the 2021 call last year, and a hearing took place in June.

    In a hearing report, committee members say Madu’s conduct is worthy of sanction, although a punishment has yet to be determined.


    CBS: Georgia judge blocks election rule requiring hand counting of ballots

    After Georgia voters began heading to the polls Tuesday for the first day of early voting in the state, a judge enjoined election officials from moving forward with a controversial new rule that would require the hand counting of ballots when polls close on Nov. 5. 

    Judge Robert McBurney called the rule “too much, too late.”

    The judge expressed concern that the “11th-and-one-half hour implementation of the hand count rule” would lessen public confidence in the election results. Thousands of poll workers would be handling and counting ballots “in a manner unknown and untested in the era of ballot scanning devices,” without time for uniform training, McBurney wrote. 


    Last Updated: 15.Oct.2024 22:45 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 10:14 AM, Oct 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 14.Oct.2024


    ScienceAlert: Mysterious Tick-Borne Virus in China Uncovered by Scientists

    Ticks are responsible for spreading over 25 human and animal diseases. While you may be familiar with some of these — such as Lyme disease — there are many others you’ve probably never heard of, including some that have been discovered only in the past few years, such as wetland virus.


    ScienceAlert: WATCH: Amazing Moment as SpaceX Catches Giant Starship Booster

    For the first time ever, SpaceX has followed through on a Starship test launch by bringing back the Super Heavy booster for an on-target catch in the arms of its “Mechazilla” launch-tower cradle in Texas.


    ScienceAlert: Can’t Hear People When It’s Noisy? A Study Links This to Dementia Risk

    In a 2021 study of over 80,000 adults over the age of 60, those who had trouble hearing speech in noisy environments had a greater risk of dementia, which is an umbrella term for conditions characterized by memory loss and difficulty with language and other thinking skills.

    But there’s an upside, too: The study added to evidence suggesting hearing problems may not just be a symptom of dementia but actually a risk factor of dementia that could possibly alert people, their families, or doctors to its onset before any deterioration begins.


    Atlantic: Charlie Warzel: I’m Running Out of Ways to Explain How Bad This Is

    The truth is, it’s getting harder to describe the extent to which a meaningful percentage of Americans have dissociated from reality. As Hurricane Milton churned across the Gulf of Mexico last night, I saw an onslaught of outright conspiracy theorizing and utter nonsense racking up millions of views across the internet. The posts would be laughable if they weren’t taken by many people as gospel. Among them: Infowars' Alex Jones, who claimed that Hurricanes Milton and Helene were “weather weapons” unleashed on the East Coast by the U.S. government, and “truth seeker” accounts on X that posted photos of condensation trails in the sky to baselessly allege that the government was “spraying Florida ahead of Hurricane Milton” in order to ensure maximum rainfall, “just like they did over Asheville!”


    WashPo: In Iceland, a hunt for Russian submarines and deeper U.S. relations

    KEFLAVIK AIR BASE, Iceland — The Pentagon’s top general strode to a P-8 Poseidon surveillance plane here on Thursday morning, boarding just before a cold rain turned to snow. The aircraft roared to life and ascended over craggy, black lava fields before heading out over the North Atlantic Ocean. U.S. forces aboard walked him through their mission: surveying the chilly waters for Russian submarines.

    The rare visit here by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., came as U.S. forces have observed a rise in Russian submarine activity in the Atlantic. Gen. Christopher Cavoli, the head of U.S. European Command, told the House Armed Services Committee last year that Russian patrols are “at a higher level than we’ve seen in years.”


    NewsNation: Donald Trump leading Kamala Harris with early voters in swing states: Survey

    Former President Trump has a slight edge over Vice President Harris with early voters in battleground states, new polling shows, a promising sign for the Republican in the highly competitive presidential race.

    A Harvard CAPS/Harris poll found 48 percent of voters who said they would cast their ballots early in critical swing states picked Trump, while 47 percent sided with Harris. Another 5 percent of respondents said they went with another choice or had not yet voted.


    Last Updated: 14.Oct.2024 23:50 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:31 AM, Oct 15
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 13.Oct.2024


    Electrek: Elon Musk wants you to believe Tesla is about to deliver self-driving without any data

    Yesterday, Tesla unveiled a cool-looking car, the Cybercab, that is entirely reliant on making Full Self-Driving (FSD) work, which was supposed to happen every year for the past 5 years, according to Elon Musk’s own statements.

    Every year since 2019, Musk said that he expects Tesla to upgrade its supervised FSD into an unsupervised FSD, as promised, by the end of the year.

    At one point, the CEO claimed that his inaccurate timelines were due to achieving “local maximums” in the software, which they couldn’t see until they hit those ceilings. Despite this problem, he keeps giving new timelines and selling the product while Tesla could still be running into local maximums.


    Wikipedia: Pontypridd

    The name Pontypridd derives from the name Pont y tŷ pridd, Welsh for “bridge by the earthen house”, referring singly to successive wooden bridges that once spanned the River Taff at this point.

    Pontypridd is noted for its Old Bridge, a stone construction across the River Taff built in 1756 by William Edwards. This was Edwards’s fourth attempt, and at the time of construction, was the longest single-span stone arch bridge in the world. Rising 35 feet (11 m) above the level of the river, the bridge forms a perfect segment of a circle, the chord of which is 140 feet (43 m). Notable features are the three holes of differing diameters through each end of the bridge, the purpose of which is to reduce weight. On completion, questions were soon raised as to the utility of the bridge, with the steepness of the design making it difficult to get horses and carts across. As a result, a new bridge, the Victoria Bridge, paid for by public subscription, was built adjacent to the old one in 1857. Pontypridd was known as Newbridge from shortly after the construction of the Old Bridge until the 1860s.


    jwz: Mosaic Netscape 0.9 was released 30 years ago today

    According to my notes, it went live shortly after midnight on Oct 13, 1994. We sat in the conference room in the dark and listened to different sound effects fired for each different platform that was downloaded. At some point late that night I wandered off and wrote the first version of the page that loaded when you pressed the “What’s Cool” button in the toolbar. (A couple days later, Jim Clark would go ballistic in a company-wide email because I had included a link to Bianca’s Smut Shack.)

    via Manton


    Wired: Piece by Piece Director Morgan Neville Will Never Use AI Again

    Back in 2021, Morgan Neville thought using AI to recreate the late Anthony Bourdain’s voice would be an interesting Easter egg in his documentary. He ended up being a canary in Hollywood’s AI coal mine.

    Coal & land mines.


    WashPo: How Kamala Harris’s five years in Montreal shaped her life

    For Harris, her education came in what was taught in her classes, but perhaps even more in the political tensions around her. Still, classmates said they had no inkling of her political future.

    “She was an impressive girl – kind, a great singer and comedian,” said Richard Carr, who added that he had a crush on her. “She was a total clown, and usually the one who was actually instigating the pranks on her friends.”


    Last Updated: 13.Oct.2024 23:20 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:27 PM, Oct 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 12.Oct.2024


    InsideEVs:This Brand New Nissan Leaf Has Been Bricked For Two Months

    Nissan has blown its early EV lead. The company was the first to offer a mass-market EV in the United States. It introduced the Leaf in 2010, years before the Tesla Model S hit the street. Yet 14 years later, the company has not capitalized on its early mover advantage. It still sells the Leaf with the ancient CHAdeMO charging plug that’s rapidly being phased out here, and its only other option is the Ariya, an acceptable if not particularly notable EV crossover. And as Kyle Conner explains in the latest Out Of Spec video, the company still hasn’t learned how to properly service EVs.


    ABC: Harris releases her medical report to give Trump’s health and advanced age new scrutiny

    Trump refused to release his medical records during his first campaign in 2016, and despite promising multiple times to release his medical records in this race, he’s not done so yet.


    NZ Herald: America’s Cup: Team NZ take 2-0 lead over Ineos Britannia in Barcelona America’s Cup match

    Team New Zealand have started their America’s Cup defence in fine form.


    BBC: Male domestic abuse victim stopped from using bathroom and toilet

    A man who was kicked and punched, made to sleep on the floor and refused access to a toilet by his abusive ex-girlfriend says he wants to tell his story to help other victims.

    Gareth Jones, 41, says it took more than a year of therapy to begin to recover from months of emotional and physical abuse from a woman he met online in July 2021.

    A charity whose helpline he turned to said male domestic abuse is not as rare as some people may think - and one in six or seven men will be a victim in their lifetime.


    Last Updated: 12.Oct.2024 21:33 EDT

    Friday’s articles

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    → 12:18 AM, Oct 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 11.Oct.2024


    UPI: Film crew says it found possible remains of ‘Sandy’ Irvine on Mount Everest

    “I lifted up the sock and there’s a red label that has “AC Irvine” stitched into it,” documentary film director Jimmy Chin told National Geographic. “We were all literally running in circles dropping f-bombs.”


    BBC: Canada passes bill to cover birth control and diabetes drugs

    The Liberal government said it is the initial phase of a plan that would expand to become a publicly funded national pharmacare programme.

    The government estimates one in five Canadians struggle to pay for prescription drugs.

    The federal government still has to negotiate individual funding commitments with Canada’s provinces and territories.


    Verge: X blocks links to hacked JD Vance dossier

    X is preventing users from posting links to a newsletter containing a hacked documentthat’s alleged to be the Trump campaign’s research into vice presidential candidate JD Vance. The journalist who wrote the newsletter, Ken Klippenstein, has been suspended from the platform. Searches for posts containing a link to the newsletter turn up nothing.


    Last Updated: 11.Oct.2024 15:02 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:35 PM, Oct 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 10.Oct.2024


    Daring Fireball: The New York Times, Finally: ‘Trump’s Rambling Speeches Reinforce Question of Age’

    Peter Baker and Dylan Freedman, reporting for The New York Times, with the conspicuous absence of Maggie Haberman from that shared byline:

    Former President Donald J. Trump vividly recounted how the audience at his climactic debate with Vice President Kamala Harris was on his side. Except that there was no audience. The debate was held in an empty hall. No one “went crazy," as Mr. Trump put it, because no one was there.


    Wales Online: Dad faces thousands of pounds worth of bills after falling ill abroad and ‘insurance won’t pay out’

    A man who fell ill while on holiday in Greece with his wife is now facing a whopping £38,000 medical bill. Gwyn Elward was two days into his holiday in Zante with his wife of 52 years, Rosalind, when he felt so “shattered” he couldn’t get out of bed.

    Rosalind, 74, insisted that he go to the doctors, and after a few checks an ambulance was called for Gwyn, 73, to be taken to the local hospital. Rosalind explained that on arrival there, she just had to show Gwyn’s UK Global Health Insurance Card, which lets you get necessary state healthcare in the European area.


    Wired: The World’s First Commercial Space Station Looks Like a Luxury Hotel Inside

    Guided by an iconic former Apple designer, the wood panelling, viewing window, and cozy duvets aboard the Vast Haven-1 reimagine space travel for style and comfort.

    When you fly first class…


    WashPo: Obama admonishes Black men for hesitancy in supporting Harris

    “On the one hand, you have somebody who grew up like you, knows you, went to college with you, understands the struggles and pain and joy that comes from those experiences,” Obama said, ticking off a list of Harris’s policy proposals. In Trump, he added, “you have someone who has consistently shown disregard, not just for the communities, but for you as a person …** **And you are thinking about sitting out?”

    ⋮

    During his rally at the University of Pittsburgh, Obama strongly criticized Trump’s character. While he said he understood that many voters were seeking change, particularly after struggling with high prices, he said he could not understand how people could look to Trump and think the former president would offer something better.

    “There is absolutely no evidence that this man thinks about anybody but himself,” Obama said. “I’ve said it before: Donald Trump is a 78-year-old billionaire who has not stopped whining about his problems since he rode down his golden escalator nine years ago.”

    ⋮

    Obama spent much of the rally mocking Trump, accusing him of being a grifter and at one point comparing him with former Cuban president Fidel Castro — “ranting and raving about crazy conspiracy theories, the two-hour speeches, word salad,” Obama said of the supposed similarities.


    Last Updated: 10.Oct.2024 23:17 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:19 PM, Oct 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 09.Oct.2024


    Guardian: Plastic tub gets the snub as Nestlé tests paper container for Quality Street

    Christmas-favourite sweet brand hopes to cut virgin plastic use, but consumers may mourn reusable tub.


    Guardian: Anger at UK’s ‘bonkers’ plan to reach net zero by importing fuel from North Korea

    A plan by the British government to burn biomass imported from countries including North Korea and Afghanistan has been described as “bonkers”, with critics saying** **it undermines the credibility of the UK’s climate strategy.

    A bioenergy resource model, published in late summer, calculates that only a big expansion in the import of energy crops and wood from a surprising list of nations would satisfy the UK’s plan to meet net zero.

    The government wants biomass to play a “significant role” in decarbonising all sectors of the economy in the years leading up to 2050, and has provided more than £20bn to businesses using it in the power and heat sectors over the past two decades.


    Hill Times: Whither the centrist option?

    The state of our politics may have centrist Canadians dreaming of the different electoral system the Trudeau government promised, but ultimately failed to deliver.

    As the election campaign in British Columbia continues to unfold, all signs suggest the provincial map is now essentially a two-party race between the governing BC NDP and the formerly-moribund-but-suddenly-in-contention Conservative Party of BC.

    May require a subscription.


    Guardian: Foreign aid for fossil fuel projects quadrupled in a single year

    Foreign aid for fossil fuel projects quadrupled in a single year, a report has found, rising ​​from $1.2bn in 2021 to $5.4bn in 2022.

    “This shocking increase in aid funding to fossil fuels is a wake-up call,” said Jane Burston, CEO of nonprofit the Clean Air Fund, which conducted the research. “The world cannot continue down this path of propping up polluting practices at the expense of global health and climate stability.”

    ⋮

    The report found the top five funders of fossil fuel projects between 2018 and 2022 were the Islamic Development Bank, Japan International Cooperation Agency, the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the International Finance Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank.


    ScienceDaily: In double breakthrough, mathematician solves two long-standing problems

    Pham Tiep, the Joshua Barlaz Distinguished Professor of Mathematics in the Rutgers School of Arts and Science’s Department of Mathematics, has completed a proof of the 1955 Height Zero Conjecture posed by Richard Brauer, a leading German-American mathematician who died in 1977. Proof of the conjecture — commonly viewed as one of the most outstanding challenges in a field of math known as the representation theory of finite groups — was published in the September issue of the Annals of Mathematics.

    ⋮

    In the second advance, Tiep solved a difficult problem in what is known as the Deligne-Lusztig theory, part of the foundational machinery of representation theory. The breakthrough touches on traces, an important feature of a rectangular array known as a matrix. The trace of a matrix is the sum of its diagonal elements. The work is detailed in two papers, one was published in Inventiones mathematicae, vol. 235 (2024), the second in _Annals, _vol. 200 (2024).


    CleanTechnica: There Is A Reason There Is Only One Ford F-150 Lightning In Denmark So Far

    To make the turn signals work [legally] cost about DKK 20,000 including VAT ($3,000).


    Wired: Internet Archive Breach Exposes 31 Million Users

    The hack exposed the data of 31 million users as the embattled Wayback Machine maker scrambles to stay online and contain the fallout of digital—and legal—attacks.


    Last Updated: 09.Oct.2024 22:55 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:18 AM, Oct 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 08.Oct.2024


    Guardian: Deforestation ‘roaring back’ despite 140-country vow to end destruction

    Demand for beef, soy, palm oil and nickel hindering efforts to halt demolition by 2030, global report finds


    Ars Technica: Artist appeals copyright denial for prize-winning AI-generated work

    Jason Allen — a synthetic media artist whose Midjourney-generated work “Théâtre D’opéra Spatial” went viral and incited backlash after winning a state fair art competition — is not giving up his fight with the US Copyright Office.

    Last fall, the Copyright Office refused to register Allen’s work, claiming that almost the entire work was AI-generated and insisting that copyright registration requires more human authorship than simply plugging a prompt into Midjourney.

    Allen is now appealing that decision, asking for judicial review and alleging that “the negative media attention surrounding the Work may have influenced the Copyright Office Examiner’s perception and judgment.” He claims that the Examiner was biased and considered “improper factors” such as the public backlash when concluding that he had “no control over how the artificial intelligence tool analyzed, interpreted, or responded to these prompts.”

    Lots of squirrley, difficult issues here! What fun!


    Globe: Self-identifying Indigenous group got $74-million in federal cash, Inuit leader wants change

    As millions in federal funding flow into a Labrador group whose claims of Inuit identity have been rejected by Indigenous organizations across Canada, a national Inuit leader worries the Liberal government is putting the rights of Indigenous Peoples at risk.

    Natan Obed, president of an organization representing about 70,000 Inuit across Canada, said he wrote to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over a year ago to express his concern about the NunatuKavut Community Council’s ability to receive federal grants and fisheries allocations based on a “simple self-declaration of Inuit identity.”

    He said he has not received a response.


    Globe: A scientist built this DIY retirement planning app, and there’s a free trial

    There’s been talk for years in the financial industry about do-it-yourself planning, but it hasn’t come together for reasons that include development costs and uncertain potential to generate revenue and profits.

    Elisabeth Tillier’s MoneyReady Appisn’t bound by those constraints. The retired computational biologist developed the app using her own programming expertise and the knowledge she has built up about financial planning.

    “I’ve always been a DIY investor,” Ms. Tillier said in an interview. “And then my dad was sick and I needed to help my mom with financial stuff. I thought, ‘You know, excel spreadsheets are not good enough for this,’ and I programmed it for myself.”


    NYT: Masamitsu Yoshioka, Last Pearl Harbor Bombardier, Dies at 106

    He was 23 years old when he took part in the attack that triggered America’s declaration of war against Japan. He rarely spoke publicly about it.

    ⋮

    “When I met him last year, he spoke many valuable words with a dignified presence,” Mr. Hayasaki wrote. “Have Japanese people forgotten something important since the end of the war? What is war? What is peace? What is life? Rest in peace.”

    ⋮

    Mr. Yoshioka was lucky — on that and several later occasions. He not only survived the stunning attack on America’s Pacific Fleet in Hawaii and returned safely to the aircraft carrier Soryu; he was also on leave in June 1942 when the vessel was sunk in the Battle of Midway. He served in the Palau Islands but was recuperating from malaria in the Philippines in 1944 before the bloody Battle of Peleliu. And by the time Japanese planes were ordered to make kamikaze attacks on Allied ships in the Pacific, his plane had been grounded by a shortage of spare parts.


    PBS: Florida braces for possible worst-case scenario with Hurricane Milton

    Links for video and audio streaming of report.


    Stuff: Elon Musk says it would be ‘pointless’ to try to assassinate Kamala Harris

    Elon Musk, who owns the social media platform X and is a high-profile backer of former president Donald Trump, said in an interview that it would be “pointless” to try to assassinate Vice President Kamala Harris - once again publicly airing questions about why no one has tried to kill her or President Joe Biden during a stretch in which Trump has faced two apparent attempts on his life.

    Musk first raised the issue in a social media post last month that drew the attention of the Secret Service and that he later deleted amid a backlash. But in an interview with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson that was published on social media Monday, the Tesla CEO revisited the topic as the two laughed about the premise of the post.

    Musk seems to be descending into madness.


    The Conversation: An unbroken night’s sleep is a myth. Here’s what good sleep looks like

    Many think when their head hits the pillow, they should fall into a deep and restorative sleep, and emerge after about eight hours feeling refreshed. They’re in good company — many Australians hold the same belief.

    In reality, healthy sleep is cyclic across the night, as you move in and out of the different stages of sleep, often waking up several times. Some people remember one or more of these awakenings, others do not. Let’s consider what a healthy night’s sleep looks like.

    Hugely important topic.


    9to5Mac: iFixit now sells tool to easily remove iPhone 16 battery

    With the iPhone 16, Apple has made a lot of improvements when it comes to making devices more repairable. This includes a new method that uses low-voltage electric current to loosen and remove the battery. And for those working on repairing iPhones, iFixit has now launched a tool designed to help them remove the iPhone 16’s built-in battery.

    The new VoltClip from iFixit is a USB-powered tool that delivers 9-12V of power to detach the battery in the iPhone 16. The tool includes a USB-C adapter for power input and alligator clips to be connected to the device.

    ⋮

    Unfortunately, this new method that uses low-voltage electric current to remove the battery is only available on the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus. Both Pro and Pro Max models still have batteries with stretch-release adhesives.


    Wales Online: Single blood pressure pill could save countless lives with new treatment plan, research finds

    It works by combining several crucial hypertension treatments into one pill with one example being a single tablet that contains telmisartan, amlodipine and indapamide, all of which are currently used individually to treat hypertension. The research showed this combined approach was more effective than standard treatments in the early stages of their condition and patients didn’t suffer from side effects.

    Hypertension is a pervasive disorder.


    Last Updated: 08.Oct.2024 23:07 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:02 AM, Oct 9
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 07.Oct.2024


    NYT: Have We Reached Peak Human Life Span?

    The data suggests that after decades of life expectancy marching upward thanks to medical and technological advancements, humans could be closing in on the limits of what’s possible for average life span.

    “We’re basically suggesting that as long as we live now is about as long as we’re going to live,” said S. Jay Olshansky, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Illinois Chicago, who led the study. He predicted maximum life expectancy will end up around 87 years — approximately 84 for men, and 90 for women — an average age that several countries are already close to achieving.

    ⋮

    But, he added, even if deaths from common diseases or accidents were eliminated, people would die of aging itself. “We still have declining function of internal organs and organ systems that make it virtually impossible for these bodies to live a whole lot longer than they do now,” Dr. Olshansky said.


    How to Geek: Starlink’s Direct-to-Cell Service Temporarily Approved

    A direct-to-cell service based on Starlink’s satellites and T-Mobile’s cellular network has been approved by the United States Federal Communications Commission (FTC).

    The regulator granted SpaceX a temporary clearance for Starlink’s direct-to-cell service, which was realized in partnership with T-Mobile for specific areas affected by Hurricane Helene. The flooding that knocked out traditional communications networks created blackout zones with no cellular coverage, making it more difficult for affected people to contact emergency services and rescue workers to coordinate their efforts.


    UPI: In new term, Supreme Court asked to hear religious liberty cases

    Native Americans trying to protect their sacred land, a Rastafarian prisoner who wants to sue correctional officers for shaving off his dreadlocks and Jewish professors seeking to drop union representation to protest alleged anti-Semitic conduct are among those asking the U.S. Supreme Court to hear an appeal in their cases.


    MacRumors: Apple Adds 9 New Features to iCloud Website

    Apple today updated its iCloud.com website, which is the way you can access your iCloud apps and settings from any web browser. With today’s refresh, iCloud.com supports some of the features that have previously been introduced in iOS.

    Details of improvements now available in the iCloud website.


    NewsNation: Are real estate agents still necessary after recent rule changes?

    Gabrielle Hillman, 30, and her roommate recently sold their Chicago condo without a real estate agent.

    “It’s definitely time-consuming — but all things considered — to save $30,000 we were happy to do it,” she said.

    Historically, agent fees have come from the seller’s proceeds, usually around 5 to 6% of the sale price, which gets split between the buyer’s and seller’s agents. But, due to recent changes in how commissions are advertised and paid, Hillman felt she had more flexibility to go it alone.


    Last Updated: 07.Oct.2024 18:23 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:24 AM, Oct 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 06.Oct.2024


    ScienceAlert: Could a ‘Lucky Fish’ Help Lift Your Iron? An Expert Explains.

    One of the best ways to treat an iron deficiency is through diet. Foods such as meat, fish, shellfish, offal meats, lentils, soya beans and green leafy vegetables (such as broccoli) all contain iron. Many of the foods we regularly consume — such as rice and cereals – have also been fortified with iron.

    But iron absorption is not always a straightforward process — which means that treating a deficiency can be difficult.


    NYT: False Claims Are Disrupting Recovery from Hurricane Helene

    In the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s devastation in western North Carolina, the public meeting in Rutherford County last Wednesday was essential business. Officials from several shellshocked communities convened to talk about the extensive damage and ongoing search-and-rescue efforts.

    But within hours, a conspiracy theory took hold. The meeting, social media posts claimed, was a secret discussion about bulldozing, confiscating or even selling land for profit or to mine lithium.

    Maybe you shouldn’t be allowed access to the Internet without passing a gullibility test?


    CBC: Identifying battlegrounds tough as B.C. election race heats up

    Analysts say emergence of B.C. Conservatives and the reshaping of provincial ridings make forecasting hard.


    Slashdot: Pine64’s Linux-Powered E-Ink Tablet is Making a Return

    “Pine64 has confirmed that its open-source e-ink tablet is returning,” reports the blog OMG Ubuntu:

    The [10.1-inch e-ink display] PineNote was announced in 2021, building on the success of its non-SBC devices like the PinePhone (and later Pro model), the PineTab, and PineBook devices. Like most of Pine64’s devices, software support is largely tackled by the community. But only a small batch of developer units were ever sold, primarily by enthusiasts within the open-source community who had the knowledge and desire to work on getting a modern Linux OS to run on the hardware, and adapt to the e-ink display.

    ⋮

    “I do not (yet) have a launch date target,” according to the blog post, “as behind-the-scenes the Pine Store team are still working on all things production.”


    NYT: Trump’s Rambling Speeches Reinforce Question of Age

    With the passage of time, the 78-year-old former president’s speeches have grown darker, harsher, longer, angrier, less focused, more profane and increasingly fixated on the past, according to a review of his public appearances over the years.


    Last Updated: 06.Oct.2024 23:59 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:41 AM, Oct 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 05.Oct.2024


    Amazon: Get Better at Anything: 12 Maxims for Mastery

    The author of the Wall Street Journal bestseller Ultralearning explores why it’s so difficult for people to learn new skills, arguing that three factors must be met to make advancement possible, and offering 12 maxims to improve the way we learn.

    Life revolves around learning–in school, at our jobs, even in the things we do for fun. Yet learning is often mysterious. Sometimes it comes fairly effortlessly: quickly finding our way around a new neighborhood or picking up the routine at a new job. In other cases, it’s a slog. We may spend hours in the library, yet still not do well on an exam. We may want to switch companies, industries, or even professions, but not feel qualified to make the leap. Decades spent driving a car, typing on a computer, or hitting a tennis ball don’t reliably make us much better at them. Improvement can be fickle, if it comes at all.

    In Get Better At Anything, Scott Young argues that there are three key factors in helping us learn:

    See—Most of what we know comes from other people. The ease of learning from others determines, to a large extent, how quickly we can improve.

    Do—Mastery requires practice. But not just any practice will do. Our brains are fantastic effort-saving machines, which can be both a tremendous advantage and a curse.

    Feedback—Progress requires constant adjustment. Not just the red stroke of a teacher’s pen, but the results of hands-on experience.

    When we’re able to learn from the example of other people, practice extensively ourselves, and get reliable feedback, rapid progress results. Yet, when one, or all, of these factors is inhibited, improvement often becomes impossible. Using research and real-life examples, Young breaks down these elements into twelve simple maxims. Whether you’re a student studying for an exam, an employee facing a new skill at work, or just want to get better at something you’re interested in, his insights will help you do it better.

    via Pratik


    e360.Yale: Why Taiwan and Its Tech Industry Are Facing an Energy Crisis

    As the world’s largest producer of advanced computer chips, Taiwan is struggling to meet demand for electricity. Highly dependent on imported fossil fuels, soon to shutter its last nuclear plant, and slow to build out renewables, the island is heading toward an energy crunch.

    Good article explaining the complexity of the situation.


    TorStar: David Suzuki, Peter Mansbridge, and other prominent ex-broadcasters are calling out CBC. Here’s why

    Five eminent CBC alumni are urging the public broadcaster to deepen its coverage of the climate crisis in the face of an escalating “civilizational threat.”

    “As journalists, members of the CBC family and as Canadians concerned about our future, we ask that the CBC treat the climate breakdown as the existential crisis and civilizational threat that it is,” reads a copy of the letter obtained by the Star.

    Drafted by former broadcasters David Suzuki, Peter Mansbridge, Adrienne Clarkson, Paul Kennedy and Linden MacIntyre, the call to action was delivered to Brodie Fenlon, head of CBC news, on May 1, 2023. Attached were a raft of recommendations, including a “daily climate emergency report” for the broadcaster’s flagship news and current affairs shows.

    via Apple News+


    HowToGeek: Raspberry Pi 4 vs. 5: Which One Should You Choose?

    • Raspberry Pi 5 offers a significant performance boost with faster CPU, GPU, and memory options.
    • The Pi 5 has improved connectivity with more USB ports, HDMI 2.1, Wi-Fi 6, and Bluetooth 5.2.
    • A Pi 5 is ideal for advanced projects like machine learning, 4K streaming, and demanding games.

    HowToGeek: Why I Don’t Buy SD Cards on Amazon

    Amazon might be one of the most popular stores, but it’s far from perfect. It has constant issues with knock-off products, especially in one category: SD cards.

    Amazon allows third-party sellers to list products on the store with little oversight, and even pay for advertising to artificially place them higher in Amazon search results. That means low-quality or outright fake items are common, and even if you specifically purchase something from a reputable brand, you could still end up with a counterfeit.

    ⋮

    Clones of popular products are common on nearly every online store that allows third-party sellers, including Amazon, Temu, and eBay. However, sellers can optionally pay Amazon more money to push their listings higher in search results. That can make the products seem more legitimate, with only a small “Sponsored” text badge differentiating it from actual search results.

    I think some of them are outright counterfeits but it is impossible to prove.


    The Atlantic: We’re Entering Uncharted Territory for Math

    Terence Tao, a mathematics professor at UCLA, is a real-life superintelligence. The “Mozart of Math,” as he is sometimes called, is widely considered the world’s greatest living mathematician. He has won numerous awards, including the equivalent of a Nobel Prize for mathematics, for his advances and proofs. Right now, AI is nowhere close to his level.

    Gift link


    Guardian: Government to fund £120 blood test that could detect 12 most common cancers

    The Mionco screening can identify 50 cancers before producing a false positive and is a form of the PCR test used during the Covid pandemic, according to the scientists involved in its development.

    It checks the 12 most common forms of the disease: lung, breast, prostate, pancreatic, colorectal, ovarian, liver, brain, oesophageal, bladder, bone and soft tissue sarcoma, and gastric.


    Last Updated: 05.Oct.2024 23:32 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:02 AM, Oct 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 04.Oct.2024


    Daily Writing Tips: The Yiddish Handbook: 40 Words You Should Know

    The Yiddish language is a wonderful source of rich expressions, especially terms of endearment (and of course, complaints and insults). This article is a follow up on Ten Yiddish Expressions You Should Know. Jewish scriptwriters introduced many Yiddish words into popular culture, which often changed the original meanings drastically. You might be surprised to learn how much Yiddish you already speak, but also, how many familiar words actually mean something different in real Yiddish.

    There is no universally accepted transliteration or spelling; the standard YIVO version is based on the Eastern European Klal Yiddish dialect, while many Yiddish words found in English came from Southern Yiddish dialects. In the 1930s, Yiddish was spoken by more than 10 million people, but by 1945, 75% of them were gone. Today, Yiddish is the language of over 100 newspapers, magazines, radio broadcasts, and websites.


    Electrek: Tesla shares impressive data point about its Supercharger network

    Tesla has shared an impressive data point about its Supercharger network: 1.4 TWh of energy delivered in a single quarter.

    ⋮

    As for the CO2 offsetting, that’s purely based on how you power these charging stations, and thankfully, the grid is rapidly transitioning to renewable energy.


    NewsNation: Boris Johnson alleges Benjamin Netanyahu may have bugged my bathroom

    Former United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson alleged in an interview with The Telegraph that his staff found a “listening device” in his bathroom after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had used it in 2017.

    Johnson had been a foreign secretary at the time.

    Johnson claimed ahead of the release of his book “Unleashed” that he was told, “Later, when they (security) were doing a regular sweep for bugs, they found a listening device in the thunderbox.”


    NewsNation: Supreme Court declines to block Biden limits on methane, toxic pollution

    The Supreme Court on Friday declined to block Biden administration limits on planet-warming methane from oil and gas production and toxic pollution from coal plants.

    The high court denied requests from red states and the industry to temporarily halt the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations. It did not explain its reasons for doing so, and no dissents were noted.

    The decision leaves two key rules in effect while cases against them play out in lower courts.


    Ars Technica: Thousands of Linux systems infected by stealthy malware since 2021

    Thousands of machines running Linux have been infected by a malware strain that’s notable for its stealth, the number of misconfigurations it can exploit, and the breadth of malicious activities it can perform, researchers reported Thursday.

    The malware has been circulating since at least 2021. It gets installed by exploiting more than 20,000 common misconfigurations, a capability that may make millions of machines connected to the Internet potential targets, researchers from Aqua Security said. It can also exploit CVE-2023-33246, a vulnerability with a severity rating of 10 out of 10 that was patched last year in Apache RocketMQ, a messaging and streaming platform that’s found on many Linux machines. …


    Last Updated: 04.Oct.2024 20:51 EDT

    Wednesday’s and Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:54 AM, Oct 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday–Thursday 02–03.Oct.2024


    Lux.camera: The iPhone 16 Pro Camera Review: Control

    Ben and I have an annual ritual. For the last half decade, around this time of year, we run to the store, hastily unbox the latest iPhone and get shooting. We do this because we’re passionate about finding out everything there is to know about the new camera — not just to make sure things work well with Halide, but also because no other camera has as many changes year over year.

    A byproduct of this ritual? A pretty thorough iPhone review.


    Raspberry Pi: AI Camera on sale now at $70

    The AI Camera is built around a Sony IMX500 image sensor with an integrated AI accelerator. It can run a wide variety of popular neural network models, with low power consumption and low latency, leaving the processor in your Raspberry Pi free to perform other tasks.

    ⋮

    you’ll find instructions on installing the AI Camera hardware, setting up the software environment, and running the examples and neural networks in our model zoo.


    Scientific American: Evidence of ‘Negative Time’ Found in Quantum Physics Experiment

    Quantum physicists are familiar with wonky, seemingly nonsensical phenomena: atoms and molecules sometimes act as particles, sometimes as waves; particles can be connected to one another by a “spooky action at a distance,” even over great distances; and quantum objects can detach themselves from their properties like the Cheshire Cat from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland detaches itself from its grin. Now researchers led by Daniela Angulo of the University of Toronto have revealed another oddball quantum outcome: photons, wave-particles of light, can spend a negative amount of time zipping through a cloud of chilled atoms. In other words, photons can seem to exit a material before entering it.

    via Bill Bennett


    NYT: Vance Dodged a Jan. 6 Question in the Debate, but Said Plenty

    For some 90 minutes, Mr. Vance, a proud Republican ambassador to the online right, had largely tailored his debate-night message to a mass audience, avoiding most detours into conservative fever swamps, as if determined to deliver a rolling rebuttal to Democrats' longstanding suggestion that he was “weird” and out of step.

    But when the debate turned, near its final frames, to the subject of the 2020 election, Mr. Vance faced a choice: He could validate, once more, Donald J. Trump’s relentless lies about his defeat four years ago. Or he could try something else in the spirit of moving forward.


    Entrepreneur: Bill Gates Says He Would Tax The Rich, Including Himself

    Does Bill Gates, the sixth richest person in the world with a net worth of $163 billion, think he’s too rich?

    Gates avoided answering “yes” or “no” in a September episode of the Netflix series “What’s Next? The Future with Bill Gates.” Instead, he stated that it was “kind of wild” that billionaires even existed.

    “It’s a huge amount of wealth, which if you even tried to consume it would be kind of absurd,” he said.

    On a podcast episode of On with Kara Swisher, which aired Monday, Gates specified that he would set up a different tax framework for the ultra-wealthy if he were in charge of tax policies, and set the rate around 62%.


    Thursday 03.Oct.2024


    ScienceAlert: Most Powerful Solar Flare in 7 Years Blasts Earth: Expect Stunning Auroras

    The Sun just unleashed the most powerful flare we’ve seen in seven years.

    On October 3, a flare measured at a strength of X9.0 exploded right in the middle of the solar disk. Even more excitingly, it was accompanied by what is known as a halo coronal mass ejection – one that is ejected straight at Earth.

    It’s the second X-class flare of October 2024, both emitted from the same active sunspot region, and the most powerful since September 2017, when the Sun unleashed a ripper, later determined to clock in at X11.88.

    ⋮

    Electric currents generated high up in the atmosphere can result in power grid fluctuations, and voltage corrections may need to be applied, for example. There is increased drag on satellites, which can require course correction. Satellite communications and GPS can be disrupted.


    Last Updated: 03.Oct.2024 23:43 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:37 PM, Oct 3
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 01.Oct.2024


    ScienceAlert: Doomed Franklin Expedition Ate Their Captain, Bone Study Reveals

    The sailors who died trying to escape the Arctic after their ships Terror and Erebus became frozen and icebound in 1846 are a testament to human endurance — and desperation.

    The bones of James Fitzjames, captain of the Erebus, who led that last desperate push for home, have been identified. And they tell a harrowing tale.


    TechCrunch: Meta won’t say whether it trains AI on smart glasses photos

    Meta’s AI-powered Ray-Bans have a discreet camera on the front, for taking photos not just when you ask them to, but also when their AI features trigger it with certain keywords such as “look.” That means the smart glasses collect a ton of photos, both deliberately taken and otherwise. But the company won’t commit to keeping these images private.

    We asked Meta if it plans to train AI models on the images from Ray-Ban Meta’s users, as it does on images from public social media accounts. The company wouldn’t say.


    Bloomberg: How the US Lost the Solar Power Race to China

    The seven decades since tell the remarkable story of how America squandered its invention of solar photovoltaics, or PV, to the point where it will never recover. As recently as 2010, a small town in central Michigan was the world’s biggest producer of solar polysilicon. Nowadays, the US is barely in the game, and more than 90% of the total comes from China. That country’s clean-technology exports “threaten to significantly harm American workers, businesses and communities,” President Joe Biden said May 14, announcing 50% tariffs on Chinese solar cells.


    NYT: California Bans Artificial Food Dyes From Schools: What to Know

    For decades, researchers have been trying to answer a hotly contested question: Do the synthetic dyes used to add vibrant colors to foods like certain breakfast cereals, candies, snacks and baked goods cause behavioral issues in children?

    California has reignited the debate with a bill banning several food dyes in schools, which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law on Sept. 28. When it goes into effect on Dec. 31, 2027, it will prohibit K-12 public schools in California from offering foods containing six dyes – Blue No. 1, Blue No. 2, Green No. 3, Yellow No. 5, Yellow No. 6 and Red No. 40.

    Between 1963 and 1987, the Food and Drug Administration approved nine synthetic dyes to be used in foods in the United States, and the agency maintains that they are safe.


    Verge: Why Mark Zuckerberg thinks AR glasses will replace your phone

    The first thing that struck me listening to the interview was that Zuckerberg feels like he has control of the next platform shift, that platform shift is going to be glasses, and that he can actually take the fight to Apple and Google in a way that he probably couldn’t when Meta was a younger company, when it was just Facebook.

    via Manton


    MacRumors: Apple’s Next New iPhone to Debut in the Spring: What to Expect

    Apple’s budget-friendly iPhone SE is set for a major overhaul with a fourth generation model expected to launch in spring 2025. The upcoming model will mark a significant departure from its predecessors, adopting several features from higher-end iPhones while maintaining its position as the most affordable new model in Apple’s lineup.

    According to recent reports, the iPhone SE 4 will sport a design reminiscent of the iPhone 14, featuring a larger 6.1-inch OLED display. This marks a substantial increase from the current model’s 4.7-inch LCD screen and brings the SE line in line with Apple’s flagship devices in terms of display technology.


    Guardian: ‘We look to the past to move forward’: the ancient method boosting cuttlefish numbers in the Mediterranean

    Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) are a valuable catch for Spanish fishers and a popular dish, either on their own or as a key ingredient in seafood paella. However, their numbers have declined on the Catalan coast through a combination of pollution and unregulated recreational fishing.

    In 2017, a fortuitous meeting between a local fisherman, Isaac Moya, and a marine biologist, Boris Weitzmann, led to the creation of the Sepia Project, which has the twin objective of reviving stocks and keeping artisanal fishers in business.

    The project fixes tree branches to the shallow sea bed just beyond the Estartit harbour wall, as cuttlefish need somewhere solid to lay their eggs.


    Guardian: Online retailer eBay scraps fees for private sellers in UK

    Online retailer eBay has scrapped fees for private sellers across almost all of its categories as it attempts to keep fast-growing rivals such as Depop and Vinted at arm’s length.

    The move means eBay’s UK sellers no longer have to pay transaction fees, except for cars, motorcycles and other vehicles.

    In April this year, eBay removed fees for private sellers of pre-owned clothes, and the company said it was “now evolving the experience even further”.

    The site said ditching seller fees for fashion had already led to a double-digit increase in listings for popular items such as jeans, shirts and dresses, while at the same time keeping items out of landfill.


    NYT: VP Debate Fact Check: Vance and Walz on the Economy, Abortion and Housing

    Gov. Tim Walz was pressed on his time in China and Senator JD Vance on his assertion that there was a peaceful transfer of power in 2021 in a vice-presidential debate largely focused on policy.

    I found this interesting reading.


    Last Updated: 01.Oct.2024 23:59 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:37 AM, Oct 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 30.Sep.2024


    RNZ News: Greenpeace sues Fonterra over 100 percent grass-fed butter claim

    Fonterra’s own rules allow up to 20 percent of the diet of their dairy cows to be feed that is not grass, while still able to be considered “grass fed”.

    Greenpeace said this was a problem, as imported palm kernel feed was linked to the deforestation of rainforests in Southeast Asia, and customers deserved to know that their products were contributing to demand for it.


    RNZ News: NZ author ‘thrilled’ over UK publisher bidding war

    Catherine Chidgey’s dystopian ninth novel The Book of Guilt is a “sinisterly skewed version” of the UK in 1979. The story follows 13-year-old triplets Vincent, Lawrence and William, who are the last remaining residents of a home that’s part of the government’s ‘Sycamore Scheme’.


    NYT: Ed Conway: Britain Is the First Major Economy to Stop Using Coal. It’s a Risky Experiment.

    Over 100 miles north of London, Britain’s last coal-fired power station, the Ratcliffe-on-Soar plant, will be powered down on Monday, ending Britain’s reliance on coal for power. The plant, outside Nottingham, will cease operations permanently.

    It is a remarkable moment for a country that was the first to exploit coal in vast quantities, using it to make steel and glass and kick-starting the Industrial Revolution in the process. Coal turned the machinery in textile factories; it fueled the locomotives on railways; it replaced wood fireplaces, heating British homes. Most of all, it provided electricity.


    ScienceAlert: Newly Discovered Comet Now Visible. Here’s How to See ‘Comet of The Year’.

    In January 2023, a new comet was discovered. Comets are found regularly, but astronomers quickly realised this one, called C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS), had the potential to be quite bright.

    Some hyperbolic reports have suggested it might be the “comet of the century”, but any astronomer will tell you the brightness of comets is notoriously hard to predict. As I explained last year, we’d have to wait until it arrived to be sure how bright it would become.

    Now, the time has come. Comet C/2023 A3 is currently visible with the naked eye in the morning sky in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand, with its best yet to come in the next few weeks.


    NYT: Pete Rose, Baseball Star Who Earned Glory and Shame, Dies at 83

    One of the sport’s greatest players, he set a record with 4,256 career hits. But his gambling led to a lifetime ban and kept him out of the Hall of Fame.

    ⋮

    For millions of baseball fans, Rose will be known mainly for a number, 4,256, his total of hits, the most for any player in the history of the game. But he was a deeply compromised champion.

    ⋮

    For Giamatti, a former president of Yale who had served as baseball commissioner for only five months, the aftermath was far worse. A heavy smoker, he died at 51 a week after announcing his decision, the stress of the Rose case possibly contributing to the heart attack that killed him.

    Last Updated: 30.Sep.2024 21:00 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:39 AM, Oct 1
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 29.Sep.2024


    Guardian: Catholic Belgian university ‘deplores’ comments by Pope Francis moments after speech

    UCLouvain staff and students express ‘incomprehension and disapproval’ over pope’s views on role of women.


    The Press: Quad bikes on Kaikōura beach questioned after dotterel dies

    Ailsa McGilvary-Howard and her banded dotterel study team have been following the bird since 2018, but on September 21 the bird was found dead, thought to have been run over while she was hatching her chicks.

    Banded dotterels are a threatened endemic bird, with a declining population of about 50,000. Their breeding season is from July to January.


    NYT: Beth Macy: I Grew Up Much Like JD Vance. How Did We End Up So Different?

    I hail from western Ohio, not far from JD Vance’s hometown, Middletown. Like him, I grew up in a family marred by addiction, with a grandmother who was also my rock.

    In the small city of Urbana, many of the mills and factories closed not long after I left for college in the 1980s, the same hollowing out Mr. Vance later witnessed in Middletown, as detailed in his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.” The work my mom did building airplane navigation lights was shipped overseas or replaced by automation, our flagship factory sold to a Cleveland corporation in 1977 and, two mergers later, bought by an international conglomerate. Such moves were cheered by economists and pushed by Democrats and Republicans alike.

    ⋮

    My first clues to the changes taking place in my hometown were the many Confederate flags I spotted flying in a region that was once an important stop on the Underground Railroad and encounters with former classmates who now openly embrace QAnon. In my hometown, I learned, mental-health emergency calls have soared by a factor of nine.


    Apple: Commands for dictating text on iPhone


    Spencer Greenhalgh: 📚 bookblog: ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ for Dark Wire: The Incredible True Story of the Biggest Sting Operation Ever, by Joseph Cox

    This is the story of when the FBI ran an encrypted phone company marketed to criminals. Working with Australian Federal Police and European partners, they had a glimpse into gangsters’ and drug dealers’ conversations for years before they wrapped it up with a series of worldwide arrests.

    It’s a wild story that sounds like fiction but happens to be true. In fact, that’s Cory Doctorow’s blurb on the back—his recommendation on his blog is what got me to check this out. I’m also a fan of 404 Media, so it felt good to support one of its founders.


    The Atlantic: Remember That DNA You Gave 23andMe?

    23andMe is not doing well. Its stock is on the verge of being delisted. It shut down its in-house drug-development unit last month, only the latest in several rounds of layoffs. Last week, the entire board of directors quit, save for Anne Wojcicki, a co-founder and the company’s CEO. Amid this downward spiral, Wojcicki has said she’ll consider selling 23andMe — which means the DNA of 23andMe’s 15 million customers would be up for sale, too.


    Last Updated: 29.Sep.2024 19:59 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:38 AM, Sep 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 28.Sep.2024


    PBS: Inside Georgia’s effort to secure voting machines as experts raise concerns

    Georgia is one of the battlegrounds where local and state officials are grappling with some big changes about certifying the vote and a new requirement to hand-count the total number of ballots.

    Miles O’Brien looks at another concern raised by some experts about a potential vulnerability of the voting machines. State officials say they are more than prepared.

    Here’s his report. …


    Wired: An International Space Station Leak Is Getting Worse—and Keeping NASA Up at Night

    A NASA inspector general report gives new details on a leak that has plagued the ISS for five years, and reveals that the agency considers it the highest-level risk.


    9to5Mac: These five Apple products will likely be discontinued next month

    Apple is expected to hold their next keynote in October, with a focus on the iPad and Mac. However, the introduction of new products also means saying goodbye to older ones. These are some Apple products you probably won’t be able to buy from the Apple Store after that keynote.

    TL;DR:

    • M3 MacBook Pros
    • M2 Mac mini
    • M3 iMac
    • iPad mini 6
    • iPad 10?

    Last Updated: 28.Sep.2024 22:22 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 10:28 PM, Sep 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 27.Sep.2024


    The Atlantic: The Undecided Voters Who Could Decide the 2024 Election

    For most, the big decision is about whether to vote at all.

    ⋮

    How many of these irregular voters are available for the campaign to pursue? Even in the 2020 election, which produced the highest turnout rate since 1900, about one-third of eligible voters didn’t vote. That’s about 80 million people. About two-fifths of both eligible people of color and white people without a college degree didn’t vote last time; neither did nearly half of young people.


    MacRumors: Apple Watch’s New Sleep Apnea Detection Feature Approved in Canada

    Health Canada this week published approval of watchOS 11’s sleep apnea detection feature on the Apple Watch Series 10, Apple Watch Series 9, and Apple Watch Ultra 2. The feature launched in the U.S. and over 150 other countries and regionsearlier this month, and Apple is now permitted to make the feature available in Canada.

    It is unclear when Apple will expand the feature to Canada.


    MacRumors: Apple’s 80% Charging Limit for iPhone: How Much Did It Help After a Year?

    With the iPhone 15 models that came out last year, Apple added an opt-in battery setting that limits maximum charge to 80 percent. The idea is that never charging the iPhone above 80 percent will increase battery longevity, so I kept my ‌iPhone‌ at that 80 percent limit from September 2023 to now, with no cheating.

    My ‌iPhone 15‌ Pro Max battery level is currently at 94 percent with 299 cycles. For a lot of 2024, my battery level stayed above 97 percent, but it started dropping more rapidly over the last couple of months.


    CBC: B.C. beauty brand battles music giant over social media copyright

    Sony Music Entertainment Canada is pursuing Suva for millions allegedly owed for the unauthorized use of music by some of the world’s most popular artists in videos Sony claims Suva produced to build its brand.

    Suva denies the claim, saying Sony doesn’t have the right to assert damages on behalf of performers like Beyoncé and Doja Cat and arguing any music used “did not comprise a substantial, vital or an essential part of the videos.”


    CBC: Basement-free buildings are better for the future climate

    As climate change boosts the risk of extreme rainfall and flooding in many parts of Canada, including Southern Ontario and southern Quebec, some Montreal-area politicians have implemented or proposed bans on basements — the most flood-prone part of a house — in vulnerable parts of the city.

    Research also shows that all the concrete that goes into building basements adds greenhouse gases to the atmosphere and helps speed up climate change. Is it time to stop building them?

    ⋮

    She said the problem has been getting worse. New single-family homes are getting bigger — for example, in Ontario they’re on average 25 per cent bigger than they were in the 1990s, and are more than 50 per cent bigger in some communities. In many cases, so are their basements.


    Brighter Side: Medical researchers discover potential cause of Alzheimer’s Disease

    The research team, led by Dr. Jaime Grutzendler, the Dr. Harry M. Zimmerman and Dr. Nicholas and Viola Spinelli Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience at the Yale School of Medicine, found that swelling caused by a byproduct of amyloid plaques may be the true cause of the disease’s debilitating symptoms. Their findings were published in the journal Nature.

    The researchers discovered that each formation of plaque can cause an accumulation of spheroid-shaped swellings along hundreds of axons, which are the thin cellular wires that connect the brain’s neurons, near amyloid plaque deposits.

    These swellings are caused by the gradual accumulation of organelles within cells known as lysosomes, which digest cellular waste. As the swellings enlarge, they can blunt the transmission of normal electrical signals from one region of the brain to another.


    ProPublica: ExxonMobil Accused of Deceptive Marketing of Plastics Recycling Process

    The California attorney general’s lawsuit, which cites ProPublica reporting, alleges that products made with Exxon’s process contain only a small fraction of the recycled plastic that they claim to have.


    Globe: Gary Bettman swings big as NHL hitches its wagon to Amazon express

    In the great org chart of sports media, Monday’s announcement of a new partnership between the NHL and Amazon should not have been a big deal.

    Starting this year, Amazon will host Monday night NHL games on Amazon Prime Canada. It will also do a whip-around show for Canada on Thursdays.


    Last Updated: 27.Sep.2024 17:57 MDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:50 PM, Sep 27
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 26.Sep.2024


    Global: 48% of new Alberta nurses leave profession before they turn 35: report

    Nearly 48 per cent of nurses in Alberta under the age of 35 left the profession in 2022 and health-care systems right across Canada are struggling to hold onto young nurses, according to a new report.

    The study by the Montreal Economic Institute shows that for every 100 nurses who started working in the field in 2022, 47.7 of them under the age of 35 quit. That’s up four per cent from 2013, according to the study.

    ⋮

    The study suggests that work-life balance is a big contributing factor. Some of the biggest concerns from nurses include lack of control over their work schedules, mandatory overtime and a lack of shift flexibility.

    ⋮

    In comparison with other provinces, Alberta ranks fourth when it comes to the proportion of young nurses leaving the profession, sitting behind New Brunswick (80.2 per cent), Nova scotia (60.4 per cent) and Newfoundland and Labrador (50.3 per cent).

    What the heck is happening in New Brunswick?!


    Manton Reece: Meta Connect 2024

    But in Apple events there is a bunch of wasted time too — time spent on pure marketing, or drone camera shots, instead of substance.

    From the time Mark went on stage to revealing the Meta Quest 3S and its price was 1 minute. Another 45 minutes in, they had already demoed or talked about nearly everything: the Quest, Horizon Worlds, Llama 3.2, Ray-Bans with live translation, and Orion. For an event that didn’t feel that well-rehearsed, they covered a lot of ground.

    The biggest news of the show was Orion, a prototype for holographic AR glasses.


    iPhone in Canada: LG TVs Now Show Screensaver Ads: Here’s How to Disable Them

    In a growing trend that has frustrated TV owners, LG has begun rolling out screensaver ads on its Smart TVs, including their premium OLED models, _FlatpanelsHD_ is reporting.

    The presence of ads on Smart TVs is not new. Over the last decade, television manufacturers have increasingly incorporated advertisements into user interfaces. What started as small, unobtrusive “recommendations” has grown into full-screen ad displays and large carousels that take up prime space on TV home screens.

    This change is now even more apparent on LG Smart TVs, where ads are appearing in places you wouldn’t expect—such as the screensaver.

    ⋮

    In comparison, Apple TV 4K remains one of the few options for viewers who prefer an ad-free experience.

    Don’t buy LG anything! How long before they start putting ads on peoples’ smart phones?


    Wales Online: The wild animal set to be reintroduced to Wales

    A long lost wild animal, hunted to extinction is to be reintroduced to Wales. The Welsh Government has announced that it supports moving towards the managed reintroduction of beavers. Huw Irranca-Davies MS, Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Climate Change and Rural Affairs said in a Written Statement that bringing beavers back could help improve water quality, store more water and create diverse habitats for other wildlife.


    UPI: Like human shoppers, bees have irrational biases when choosing flowers to feed on

    Just like people confronted with a sea of options at the grocery store, bees foraging in meadows encounter many different flowers at once. They must decide which ones to visit for food, but it isn’t always a straightforward choice.


    CNBC: Trump Media shareholder UAV dumped nearly 11 million shares

    • United Atlantic Ventures LLC, a major shareholder in Trump Media, sold nearly 11 million shares in the company, according to a regulatory filing.
    • The move left UAV, a partnership of former “Apprentice” contestants Andrew Litinsky and Wes Moss, owning just 100 shares in Trump Media, which operates the Truth Social app.
    • Former President Donald Trump owns more than 56% of DJT, which trades under the ticker DJT on the Nasdaq.
    • Trump Media operates the Truth Social app.

    Apprentice grifters.


    NYT: Safety Board Warns of Rudder Control Defect in Some Boeing Planes

    The National Transportation Safety Board said it had found a defective part in the system that helps steer the aircraft after investigating an incident at Newark airport.


    SMH: IVF babies ‘significantly more likely’ to have heart defects: European Heart Journal study

    Children conceived through IVF and other reproductive technologies have a significantly higher risk of serious heart abnormalities than naturally conceived children, a large international study has found.

    A study of 7.7 million children in four northern European countries found babies born through assisted reproduction including IVF, intracytoplasmic sperm injection and embryo freezing have a 36 per cent higher risk of serious heart abnormalities.


    Last Updated: 26.Sep.2024 23:23 MDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:25 AM, Sep 27
  • Sigh. Canada Post has “lost” another parcel. Once again it was intended as a surprise gift.

    Maybe Pierre Poilievre should claim he’ll shut it down instead of the CBC!

    → 12:36 AM, Sep 27
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 25.Sep.2024


    RNZ News: Gas industry boasts about killing proposed ban with lobbying

    The New Zealand gas industry went to an international fossil fuel forum and claimed responsibility for killing off a proposed government ban on new gas connections.

    Gas NZ presented its success as a model for avoiding regulation for others in the fossil gas industry.

    The body’s presentation to the World LPG Association says it achieved its goal of stopping what it called the “existential threat” posed by a draft suggestion from the Climate Change Commission that new homes should not connect to the gas network to avoid locking their owners in to rising energy bills.


    WP Tavern: Highlights from Matt Mullenweg’s Spiciest Word Camp Presentation at WordCamp US 2024

    He didn’t mince words, stating, “What WP Engine gives you is not WordPress, it’s something that they’ve chopped up, hacked, butchered to look like WordPress, but actually they’re giving you a cheap knock-off and charging you more for it. This is one of the many reasons they are a cancer to WordPress, and it’s important to remember that unchecked, cancer will spread.”

    “WP Engine is setting a poor standard that others may look at and think is ok to replicate. We must set a higher standard to ensure WordPress is here for the next 100 years.”, he continued. 

    via @Manton


    MacRumors: Apple TV+ to Stream ‘Peanuts’ Holiday Specials for Free Again This Year

    Here is when each special will be available to stream for free in the Apple TV app:

    • “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown”: Saturday, October 19 and Sunday, October 20
    • “A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving”: Saturday, November 23 and Sunday, November 24
    • “A Charlie Brown Christmas”: Saturday, December 14 and Sunday, December 15

    NYT: In Silicon Valley, a Rogue Plan to Alter the Climate

    Some restless entrepreneurs are releasing pollutants in the sky to try to cool the planet.

    ⋮

    But all geoengineering is not created equal. While universities are pouring millions of dollars into research, others, avowing concern about global warming and seeing a business opportunity, are barreling ahead without any scientific study. Mr. Iseman got the idea for Make Sunsets from a sci-fi novel.

    So far, the company is releasing sulfur dioxide on a tiny scale. But some experts say that broader efforts to disrupt the delicate interactions between the Earth’s atmosphere, ocean, land and sea ice could result in catastrophic unintended consequences. For example, blocking sunlight could interfere with the monsoon season, which is critical for agriculture, income and food supply in India.

    Animated by the “move fast and break things” credo that permeates Silicon Valley, the founders of Make Sunsets have no such concerns.

    Sheesh!

    b fagan (Chicago):

    “We’re stealth” - no, that’s not the word starting with ‘st’ that I’d use.


    TorStar: Ford announces proposal for tunnel under Highway 401

    Ford is touting a tunnel under Highway 401, possibly from Brampton all the way to Scarborough, to carry more traffic as GTA roads become increasingly crowded.

    How shortsighted! (And very, very expensive!)


    PBS: Titan sub’s carbon fiber hull showed flaws dating to manufacturing process, NTSB engineer says

    The carbon fiber hull of the experimental submersible that imploded en route to the wreckage of the Titanic had imperfections dating to the manufacturing process and behaved differently after a loud bang was heard on one of the dives the year before the tragedy, an engineer with the National Transportation Safety Board said Wednesday.

    Engineer Don Kramer told a Coast Guard panel there were wrinkles, porosity and voids in the carbon fiber used for the pressure hull of the Titan submersible. Two different types of sensors on Titan recorded the “loud acoustic event” that earlier witnesses testified about hearing on a dive on July 15, 2022, he said.


    ScienceAlert: These 15 Factors Are Linked to Early Dementia Risk, a Major Study Found

    Most previous research in this area has looked at genetics passed down through generations, but here, the team was able to identify 15 different lifestyle and health factors that are associated with YOD risk.

    ⋮

    The research team analyzed data collected on 356,052 people aged under 65 in the UK. Low socioeconomic status, social isolation, hearing impairment, stroke, diabetes, heart disease, and depression were all associated with a higher risk of YOD.

    ⋮

    The research has been published in JAMA Neurology.


    CBC: Paleontologists unearth giant skull of Pachyrhinosaurus in northern Alberta

    When paleontologists eventually got to the site, Bamforth said, they learned “it’s actually one of the densest dinosaur bonebeds in North America.”

    “It contains about 100 to 300 bones per square metre,” she said.


    Last Updated: 25.Sep.2024 22:56 MDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:02 AM, Sep 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 24.Sep.2024


    BBC: Here’s how NASA plans to finally destroy the International Space Station

    Enter Elon Musk, or, more specifically, his now dominant company SpaceX which on 26 June was officially awarded the contract by NASA to develop and deliver the ISS’s undertaker — a job worth an eye-watering $843 million to the private enterprise.

    “Selecting a US Deorbit Vehicle for the International Space Station will help NASA and its international partners ensure a safe and responsible transition in low Earth orbit at the end of station operations,” Ken Bowersox, associate administrator for Space Operations Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington, said in a statement.


    ESPN: Brett Favre reveals Parkinson’s diagnosis at congressional hearing

    Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre disclosed during a congressional hearing on Tuesday that he was recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a degenerative nervous system disorder that causes parts of the brain to deteriorate and affects movement.

    ⋮

    When asked in a 2018 interview how many concussions he suffered, Favre, 54, said he knows of only “three or four” but believed he could have suffered more than 1,000 concussions during his 20-season NFL career.

    “When you have ringing of the ears, seeing stars, that’s a concussion,” Favre told the “Today” show. “And if that is a concussion, I’ve had hundreds, maybe thousands, throughout my career, which is frightening.”


    CleanTechnica: Soaring Sales for Heat Pump Water Heaters in 2023. Let the Party Begin!

    Heat pump water heater sales saw their largest increase ever in 2023, according to the latest data released by ENERGY STAR. Shipments of heat pump water heaters (HPWHs) grew 35% last year to 190,000 units, their largest numerical increase (50,000 units) in history.

    This trend of accelerating shipment growth is great news for fans of decarbonized water heating. It’s also great news for the environment, as HPWHs have energy efficiency levels 2–4 times higher than other types of water heaters, are emission-free during operation, and save one ton of CO2 annually on average compared to gas water heaters. The average gas tank water heater is responsible for 64% more greenhouse gas emissions than a comparable HPWH (factoring in both refrigerant leakage and upstream methane impacts).


    NYT: U.S. Accuses Visa of Monopoly in Debit Cards

    The financial giant, which processes the majority of debit card spending in the United States, unfairly imposed fees on merchants and deterred rivals, the Justice Department said.

    Mastercard ($MA) might be happy.


    The Verge: Caroline Ellison sentenced to two years in jail for role in FTX fraud

    Caroline Ellison, the former CEO of Alameda Research, was sentenced to 24 months in prison for her role in the FTX collapse. She must also forfeit $11 billion.

    Ellison pleaded guilty to two counts of wire fraud and five conspiracy counts in December 2022 as part of a cooperation agreement with the government. Prosecutors had recommended a lenient sentence because of Ellison’s “extraordinary” and “very timely” cooperation. Her own lawyers asked for no jail time, as did the federal Probation Department.


    Fast Company: 3 reasons to transition to sustainable technology

    Countries and organizations that adopt sustainable technology will experience a virtuous cycle—efficiency, stability, reduced geopolitical risks, and a more predictable energy supply. Conversely, those who forestall the transition by appeasing advocates legacy energy infrastructure will find themselves saddled with a more fragile, more expensive, and riskier system.


    PBS: Supreme Court rejects final request to halt execution of Marcellus Williams

    Williams, 55, has long maintained innocence in the 1998 death of Lisha Gayle, a social worker and former newspaper reporter who was repeatedly stabbed during a burglary of her suburban St. Louis home. The execution is opposed both by Gayle’s family and the prosecutor’s office that put Williams on death row – an unprecedented combination.

    “The family defines closure as Marcellus being allowed to live,” the clemency petition stated. “Marcellus' execution is not necessary.”

    Williams is among inmates in five states who are scheduled to be executed in the span of a week – an unusually high number that defies a yearslong decline in the use and support of the death penalty in the U.S. The first was carried out Friday in South Carolina. The others are scheduled to take place in Texas on Tuesday, and in Oklahoma and Alabama on Thursday.


    Last Updated: 24.Sep.2024 22:08 MDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:17 AM, Sep 25
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 23.Sep.2024


    ScienceAlert: This Immortal Creature Can Create a Form of Cancer That’s Contagious

    While tumors are an inevitable risk of being a multicellular being, there are thankfully few examples of cancer that can be passed between individuals. The most well-known are two that affect the Tasmanian devil, another instance affects dogs, and 11 observed in bivalves.


    WashPo: Microsoft deal would reopen Three Mile Island nuclear plant to power AI

    Pennsylvania’s dormant Three Mile Island nuclear plant would be brought back to life to feed the voracious energy needs of Microsoft under an unprecedented deal announced Friday in which the tech giant would buy 100 percent of its power for 20 years.

    The restart of Three Mile Island, the site of the worst nuclear accident in U.S. history, would mark a bold advance in the tech industry’s quest to find enough electric power to support its boom in artificial intelligence. The plant, which Pennsylvanians thought had closed for good in 2019 amid financial strain, would come back online by 2028 under the agreement, according to plant owner Constellation Energy.

    If approved by regulators, Three Mile Island would provide Microsoft with the energy equivalent it takes to power 800,000 homes, or 835 megawatts. Never before has a U.S. nuclear plant come back into service after being decommissioned, and never before has all of a single commercial nuclear power plant’s output been allocated to a single customer.

    Another story about TMI. (AI is not going to be free.)


    Stuff: Philip Polkinghorne trial: Who was Pauline Hanna?

    Larger than life, driven, determined and beautiful. Pauline Hanna was someone who thrived in a high-pressure public health job and loved her family and friends.

    But what exactly happened in the early hours of Easter Monday 2021 inside the Remuera home she shared with Philip Polkinghorne is likely to remain a mystery forever.

    A post-trial summary.


    Stuff: The ‘microscopic coffee stain’ which cost an Australian couple $3000 in new flights

    In March 2022, journalist Bronte Gossling was denied boarding for her $4000 trip to Bali as her passport was deemed too mouldy due to recent high humidity in Sydney.

    And it’s not just to Bali when issues occur.

    A few months ago, a teen in the UK was left counting the cost of a night out after it led to the cancellation of a family holiday to Benidorm in Spain. His passport had a 1cm rip on a page after it was used for ID on a night out. The blunder meant his family lost £1000 (NZ$2130) on flights.


    ScienceAlert: Mysterious Link Between Alzheimer’s And Cancer May Finally Be Explained

    People with Alzheimer’s disease seem to be less likely to develop certain types of cancer, and a new study in rodents hints at why that is.

    Among mice with symptoms of Alzheimer’s, researchers in China noticed a lower incidence of colorectal cancer than is typical.

    When these mice were given a stool transplant from a healthy mouse, however, their rate of cancer in the colon and rectum returned to normal.

    The findings suggest that symptoms of Alzheimer’s are closely linked to the makeup of the gut.


    ScienceAlert: Scientists in Japan Are About to Build a Supercomputer Like No Other

    Japan already has one of the fastest supercomputers in the world with its Fugaku rig, but the country’s scientists are looking at a seriously hefty upgrade in the next few years: a Fugaku Next supercomputer that’s roughly a thousand times faster than current systems.

    It would be the first ‘zetta-class’ supercomputer in the world – a machine capable of reaching speeds at the zettaFLOPS level, the next step up from the exaFLOPS level we’re at today. FLOPS, or floating-point operations per second, indicate how quickly systems can make calculations and solve problems.


    Last Updated: 23.Sep.2024 23:57 MDT

    Sunday’s articles

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    → 1:59 AM, Sep 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 22.Sep.2024


    TorStar: Judge makes rare move, halts US. extradition of Ontario man

    Superior Court Justice Paul Schabas found the man’s Charter rights were violated in “an abuse of process” by police and prosecutors.


    ScienceAlert: Owning a Cat Could Double Your Schizophrenia Risk, Research Suggests

    Having a cat as a pet could potentially double a person’s risk of schizophrenia-related disorders, according to a recent study.

    Australian researchers conducted an analysis of 17 studies published during the last 44 years, from 11 countries including the US and the UK.


    Last Updated: 22.Sep.2024 21:49 MDT

    Saturday’s articles

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    → 2:08 AM, Sep 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 21.Sep.2024


    NYT: Nelson DeMille, Blockbuster Author Who Thrilled Millions, Dies at 81

    Nelson DeMille, a beloved and prolific author whose propulsive thrillers featuring terrorist hijackings, Russian spy schools, gruesome murders, Mafia kingpins, wartime crimes and military malfeasance made him a publishing juggernaut, died on Tuesday in Mineola, N.Y. He was 81.

    His death, in a Long Island hospital near his home in Garden City, was from complications of esophageal cancer, his son Alex said.


    WashPo: Microsoft deal would reopen Three Mile Island nuclear plant to power AI

    The owner of the shuttered Pennsylvania plant plans to bring it online by 2028, with the tech giant buying all the power it produces.

    ⋮

    Pennsylvania’s dormant Three Mile Island nuclear plant would be brought back to life to feed the voracious energy needs of Microsoft under an unprecedented deal announced Friday in which the tech giant would buy 100 percent of its power for 20 years.

    The restart of Three Mile Island, the site of the worst nuclear accident in U.S. history, would mark a bold advance in the tech industry’s quest to find enough electric power to support its boom in artificial intelligence. The plant, which Pennsylvanians thought had closed for good in 2019 amid financial strain, would come back online by 2028 under the agreement, according to plant owner Constellation Energy.

    If approved by regulators, Three Mile Island would provide Microsoft with the energy equivalent it takes to power 800,000 homes, or 835 megawatts. Never before has a U.S. nuclear plant come back into service after being decommissioned, and never before has all of a single commercial nuclear power plant’s output been allocated to a single customer.


    Fortune: Every single member of the board just resigned from DNA tester 23andMe

    Following a monthslong battle over CEO Anne Wojcicki’s plans to take 23andMe private, all seven independent members of its board resigned en masse Tuesday.

    The move is almost certainly the final nail in the coffin for the embattled company known for its mail-order DNA-testing kit. Since going public via merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) in 2021, 23andMe has never turned a profit. Its price on IPO day was $10; so far in 2024, it has yet to reach a $1 valuation. Following the resignation of all its independent directors Tuesday, the stock fell to its rock bottom: $0.30. (As of midday Wednesday, it’s back to $0.36.)


    Daring Fireball: Qualcomm Is Trying to Acquire Intel

    Lauren Thomas, Laura Cooper, and Asa Fitch, reporting for The Wall Street Journal (News+):

    Chip giant Qualcomm made a takeover approach to rival Intel in recent days, according to people familiar with the matter, in what would be one of the largest and most consequential deals in recent years. A deal for Intel, which has a market value of roughly $90 billion, would come as the chip maker has been suffering through one of the most significant crises in its five-decade history.


    Discover Magazine: How We Discovered That People Who Are Colorblind Are Less Likely To Be Picky Eaters

    This journey started when my students and I measured how people vary in their ability to recognize images of prepared food. Over the past 20 years, we and other researchers have learned that people vary more than originally suspected in how well they discriminate and identify objects, like birds, cars, or even faces.

    It seems obvious that some people know more about birds or cars than others. Yet, interestingly, there is as much variation in face recognition ability, even though virtually every sighted person has experience seeing faces.

    Experience with food is also universal. We were curious how much people would vary in their ability to recognize food items. Our tests simply ask people to match images of the same dish among similar ones or to find the oddball dish among others. People vary a great deal on these tasks, and some of this variation is explained by a general ability to recognize objects of any kind.


    Last Updated: 21.Sep.2024 23:27 MDT

    Friday’s articles

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    → 1:27 AM, Sep 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 20.Sep.2024


    Science Daily: Breakthrough study predicts catastrophic river shifts that threaten millions worldwide

    Researchers have uncovered key insights into the dangerous phenomenon of ‘river avulsion,’ offering a way to predict when and where rivers may suddenly and dramatically change course.


    ScienceAlert: SpaceX’s Starlink Satellites Are Leaking More Radio Waves Than Ever

    Satellite swarms orbiting the Earth are leaking more radiation into protected wavelength bands than ever.

    In fact, the second generation of Starlink satellites — known as the v2mini and v2mini Direct-to-Cell versions — are leaking up to 32 times more radiation than their predecessor.

    This is a problem – because some of the radiation they’re leaking is in radio wavelengths that are supposed to be kept clear for the purposes of radio astronomy.

    When the problem was first raised in 2023, SpaceX stated that it was working on a fix. Now, with 6,398 individual satellites in orbit at time of writing, the problem has only worsened.

    ⋮

    SpaceX is just one company. OneWeb has 634 satellites. Amazon has plans for more than 3,000. China’s Spacesail Constellation is aiming for 15,000.


    TorStar: Ford government to restrict new bike lanes to ease gridlock

    Premier Doug Ford’s government is planning to override municipal powers in a controversial effort to ease gridlock.


    Last Updated: 20.Sep.2024 22:22 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

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    → 12:24 AM, Sep 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 19.Sep.2024


    The Record: FTC: Social media and video streaming companies violate user privacy on ‘vast’ scale

    A Federal Trade Commission (FTC) report released Thursday asserts that large social media and video streaming companies are essentially maintaining an all-seeing surveillance apparatus that spies on consumers with few internal controls to regulate how users and non-users' data is collected, stored and sold.

    The report is based on FTC orders for information sent to nine platforms including Meta, Amazon, X, Snap, YouTube and ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok.


    TechCrunch: Karman Industries hopes its SpaceX-inspired heat pumps will replace industrial boilers

    Industrial heat, which is used by companies as diverse as breweries and food processors to chemical manufacturers and paper mills, is one of the last bastions of fossil fuels. After all, it’s pretty hard to beat a flame when you need to heat something up.

    But recently, a slew of startups have started exploring ways to make heat using electricity. Some, like Rondo, Antora, and Fourth Power, rely on cheap wind and solar to heat specialized bricks to thousands of degrees, storing the thermal energy for later use. Others, like Skyven Technologies, have developed industrial-scale heat pumps that use a series of compressors to achieve the desired temperature.


    Pluralistic (Cory Doctorow): There’s no such thing as “shareholder supremacy” (18 Sep 2024)

    The problem is that power is hard to represent faithfully in quantitative models. This may seem like a good reason to you to be skeptical of modeling, but for economism, it’s a reason to pretend that the qualitative doesn’t exist. The method is to incinerate those qualitative factors to produce a dubious quantitative residue and do math on that:

    https://locusmag.com/2021/05/cory-doctorow-qualia/](https://locusmag.com/2021/05/cory-doctorow-qualia/)

    Hence the famous Ely Devons quote: “If economists wished to study the horse, they wouldn’t go and look at horses. They’d sit in their studies and say to themselves, ‘What would I do if I were a horse?'”


    Brighter Side: Common diabetes drug found to significantly slow down aging

    A groundbreaking study from CAS suggests metformin can reduce cellular aging, potentially extending the healthy years of human life by up to 18 years.


    Global: Donald Trump claims B.C.’s ‘very large faucet’ could help California’s water woes

    Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump announced an idea late last week to help alleviate California water shortages — and it involves British Columbia.

    “So you have millions of gallons of water pouring down from the north with the snow caps in Canada and all pouring down,” Trump said at a press conference at his Los Angeles golf course.

    “And they have essentially a very large faucet. And you turn the faucet and it takes one day to turn it. It’s massive.”


    Last Updated: 19.Sep.2024 23:25 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

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    → 2:14 AM, Sep 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 18.Sep.2024


    UPI: Delta flight makes emergency landing after pressure issue makes passengers' noses, ears bleed

    The Boeing 737-900 was carrying 140 passengers when it returned to Salt Lake City and landed at 8:30 a.m. local time on Sunday.


    AP: Not-so-great expectations: Students are reading fewer books in English class

    The National Council of Teachers of English acknowledged the shift in a 2022 statement on media education, saying: “The time has come to decenter book reading and essay-writing as the pinnacles of English language arts education.”


    Last Updated: 18.Sep.2024 23:22 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

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    → 1:24 AM, Sep 19
  • Came across these climbers while hiking in the mountains today.

    A person is rock climbing on a large, rugged cliff with some trees and a belayer bottom.
    → 1:56 AM, Sep 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 17.Sep.2024


    UPI: Growing antibiotic-resistant infections endanger millions worldwide

    “By 2050, resistant infections could be involved in some 8 million deaths each year, either as the direct cause of death or as a contributing factor,” said researcher Dr. Stein Emil Vollset of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health.

    “To prevent this from becoming a deadly reality, we urgently need new strategies to decrease the risk of severe infections through vaccines, new drugs, improved healthcare, better access to existing antibiotics and guidance on how to use them most effectively,” Vollset added in a journal news release.


    SatNews: Telesat’s $2.54 Billion funding agreements with Canadian governments for Telesat Lightspeed satellite constellation

    Telesat (NASDAQ and TSX: TSAT), one of the world’s largest and most innovative satellite operators, today announced the completion of funding agreements with the Government of Canada and the Government of Quebec for its highly advanced Telesat Lightspeed Low Earth Orbit (LEO) broadband satellite constellation. With this milestone completed, Telesat now has all financing sources in place to fund the global Telesat Lightspeed network, including the satellites, launch vehicles to deploy them, an integrated terrestrial network of landing stations and points of presence throughout the world, and the business and operational support systems for the network. All amounts are in Canadian dollars unless otherwise noted.


    CNN: Voyager 1 survives clogged thruster issue billions of miles away

    Engineers at NASA have successfully fired up a set of thrusters Voyager 1 hasn’t used in decades to solve an issue that could keep the 47-year-old spacecraft from communicating with Earth from billions of miles away.

    When Voyager 1 lifted off to space on September 5, 1977, no one expected that the probe would still be operating today.


    Last Updated: 17.Sep.2024 23:58 EDT

    Monday’s articles

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    → 1:26 AM, Sep 18
  • Reflection of mountain in Upper Kananaskis Lake, Alberta.

    Reflection of mountain and pure blue sky in Kananaskis Lake, Alberta.
    → 1:38 PM, Sep 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 16.Sep.2024


    No news Sunday


    Wired: Scientists Crack a 50-Year Mystery to Discover a New Set of Blood Groups

    We now know why some blood is missing a key antigen—leading to the creation of a new blood-grouping system. Experts believe even more discoveries are on the way.

    ⋮

    In the end, it took her and her colleagues 19 more years to discover the genetic basis that causes someone to have blood like this. The results of their work have finally been published in the journal Blood–more than half a century since that first perplexing blood sample was taken. The findings mark the discovery of the 47th blood group system. Each such system refers to whether a person has particular antigens on their red blood cells. You’ll likely have heard of the best known systems, ABO and Rh. But there are now known to be 46 others, though most of them affect a very small number of people. Your blood will have a classification in each of these 47 systems. It’s possible to have type A blood that is also Rh positive, for instance, and so on.


    Last Updated: 16.Sep.2024 10:58 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

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    → 2:26 AM, Sep 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 14.Sep.2024


    CleanTechnica: New Poll: Overwhelming Support for US Clean Energy Incentives (Including Trump Voters)

    87% of Americans support federal incentives to deploy solar and energy storage, including 78% of 2020 Trump voters.


    9to5Mac: End of an era: iPhone 16 won’t include stickers in the box

    In messaging distributed to Apple Store teams this week and seen by 9to5Mac, Apple confirmed that the iPhone 16 will not come with Apple stickers in the box. Instead, the company says that stickers will only be available to iPhone 16 buyers upon request.

    If you buy an iPhone 16 from an Apple Store, you can request an Apple sticker at the time of purchase, but otherwise, you’re out of luck. Third-party retailers and carrier partners do not have Apple stickers to distribute, and you also can’t get them if you order an iPhone 16 for home delivery.


    NYT: Elizabeth Warren: Don’t Be Fooled. Donald Trump Has a Plan.

    He doubled down on getting rid of the A.C.A., saying last year that it “sucks,” and that Republicans should “never give up” on repealing it.

    But at the debate, Mr. Trump displayed a new strategy. He seems to realize that his health-care plans are deeply unpopular, so he simply doesn’t talk about them. Thus, after nine years of railing against the A.C.A. and trying mightily to repeal it, he has moved to “concepts of a plan,” without a single detail that anyone can pin him down on.


    NYT: Is ‘Viewpoint Diversity’ Important for Colleges?

    But amid questions about whether phrases like “From the river to the sea” were permitted was another line of questioning: How many conservatives do you have on your faculty?

    When each president replied that their universities did not gather such data, the congressman who posed the question, Representative Joe Wilson, Republican of South Carolina, was scathing.

    Universities, he said, have been overrun with “intolerance and bigotry.” And the root cause, he said, was “blatant discrimination” against conservatives — something that they might want to “look into” next time they ask for government funding.

    ⋮

    Calls for viewpoint diversity have been written into education laws proposed or passed in at least seven states, including Florida and Texas. In March, Indiana passed a law that curtailed diversity, equity and inclusion programs, while mandating that professors be regularly evaluated on whether their courses promote “intellectual diversity.” Failure to do so can be a firing offense, even for tenured faculty.

    I wonder what they think the purpose of tenure is?


    iFixit: iPhones Are Allergic to Helium

    This is the kind of tale that you don’t hear every day. Erik Wooldridge is a Systems Specialist at Morris Hospital near Chicago. During the installation of a new GE Healthcare MRI machine, he started getting calls that cell phones weren’t working. Then, some Apple Watches started glitching.

    “My immediate thought was that the MRI must have emitted some sort of EMP, in which case we could be in a lot of trouble.” But an electromagnetic pulse would have taken out medical equipment in the facility as well, and they were working fine! He started investigating, and learned that every single impacted device was made by Apple–the technician’s Android phones were fine. And it was a wide-sweeping issue, impacting 40 different devices. What the heck?


    Electrek: There are now more electric cars than gas cars on Norway’s roads

    Norway releases detailed monthly information about auto sales in the country, which has been helpful for those of us tracking the EV market in the most EV-obsessed country in the world. It set another world record with 94% EV new car market share in August.


    Last Updated: 14.Sep.2024 18:39 EDT

    Friday’s articles

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    → 1:48 AM, Sep 15
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 13.Sep.2024


    ScienceAlert: FDA Approves Apple AirPods Pro as Hearing Aids in Industry First

    Apple on Thursday got a green light from US regulators to add a feature that would let upcoming AirPods Pro ear pieces be used as hearing aids, potentially disrupting that market.

    Earlier this week the company updated the AirPods Pro 2, touting a pending software upgrade that will let people test their hearing and then get assisted listening for everyday life as well as streaming online.

    The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Thursday authorized the hearing aid feature for the devices, noting that a study showed users found them as beneficial as professionally fitted ones.


    Variety: Lady Gaga Confronts College Facebook Group That Said She’d Never Be Famous

    Lady Gaga took a look back at her humble roots Wednesday, acknowledging a now-deleted Facebook group created by some of her classmates at New York University titled, “Stefani Germanotta, you will never be famous.” Screenshots of the community, which calls Gaga out by her birth name, have circulated online among fans for several years now.

    Gaga confronted the existence of the group publicly by commenting on a TikTok about it. The original post juxtaposed a screenshot of the 12-member Facebook group with a list of the star’s many accolades, including an Academy Award, two Golden Globes, 13 Grammy Awards, 10 Billboard Music Awards and 18 MTV Music Video Awards.

    Must be sweet.


    Atlantic (MSN): Trump’s New Big Lie

    Musk was retweeting a wildly false post insisting that violent crime is on the rise, by an X user whose avatar is an imperial stormtrooper from Star Wars (red flag!). The account’s previous brush with infamy came when Donald Trump posted a screenshot of the account suggesting that Swifties supported him; Taylor Swift cited that in endorsing Kamala Harris this week. Despite beginning with the words “FACT CHECK” in bold — another red flag — the post is actually a vivid example of a new big lie driven by Donald Trump and his allies, full of easily debunked nonsense.


    Electrek: Toyota bZ3C leaked as new Prius-lookalike electric SUV in China

    A new Toyota electric crossover SUV is about to hit the world’s largest EV market. The Toyota bZ3C leaked in China on Friday, showing a familiar look. The new electric crossover SUV was developed with China’s leading EV maker, BYD.

    Hopefully Toyota can get rolling with all-electric EV’s this year!


    Pope Says Both Trump and Harris Are ‘Against Life’

    He said American Catholic voters had to choose the “lesser of two evils” because of Donald Trump’s cruelty toward immigrants, and Kamala Harris’s support of abortion rights.


    CBC: Stranded astronauts make first public statement since being left behind on ISS

    The two Starliner test pilots — both retired U.S. navy captains and longtime NASA astronauts — will stay at the orbiting laboratory until late February. They have to wait for a SpaceX capsule to bring them back. That spacecraft is due to launch later this month with a reduced crew of two, with two empty seats for Wilmore and Williams for the return leg.


    Last Updated: 13.Sep.2024 19:32 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

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    → 12:58 AM, Sep 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 12.Sep.2024


    NYT: SpaceX Polaris Dawn Spacewalk: How to Watch the Astronauts

    The spacewalk is scheduled to begin at 5:58 a.m. Eastern time, a delay from an earlier announced start time of 2:23 a.m. SpaceX plans to broadcast live coverage starting one hour before the spacewalk begins.

    If needed, a backup opportunity is available on Friday at the same time.


    NYT: French Ship That Sank in 1856 Disaster Is Found Off Massachusetts Coast

    A French passenger steamship that sank in 1856, killing over 100 people, was found last month at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, D/V Tenacious, a New Jersey-based shipwreck hunting group, said.

    The ship, Le Lyonnais, which was built in England in 1855, was traveling from the United States to France when it collided with the Adriatic, an American sailing ship, killing 114 of Le Lyonnais’s 132 total passengers, D/V Tenacious said on Sept. 4. The Adriatic never stopped.


    Discover Magazine: Is Weight Loss as Simple as Calories in, Calories out?

    Recent research indicates that a significant factor influencing people’s variable appetites, digestion, and metabolism are biologically active leftover components of food, known as bioactives. These bioactives play a key role in regulating the body’s metabolic control centers: your brain’s appetite center, the hypothalamus; your gut’s digestive bioreactor, the microbiome; and your cells' metabolic powerhouses, the mitochondria.

    I’m a gastroenterologist who has spent the past 20 years studying the gut microbiome’s role in metabolic disease. I’ll share how dietary bioactives help to explain why some people can eat more but gain less, and I’ll offer some dietary tools to improve metabolism.


    The Conversation: Preparing for a pandemic that never came ended up setting off another − how an accidental virus release triggered 1977’s ‘Russian flu’

    In an epidemiological twist, a new pandemic influenza virus did emerge, but it was not the anticipated H1N1 swine virus.

    In November 1977, health officials in Russia reported that a human – not swine – H1N1 influenza strain had been detected in Moscow. By month’s end, it was reported across the entire USSR and soon throughout the world.


    Business Insider: Meta’s Threads Is Being Taken Over by Engagement Bait

    On a side note, rage bait is having a moment right now. People have discovered that rage baiting is often the most efficient way to get attention online, and on platforms like TikTok, where views can translate to dollars, it’s a cottage industry. I’ve seen rage baiters use it for chaos, like a husband and wife who make TikToks inhabiting the characters of vapid and entitled parenting vloggers who go shoeless on the streets of Cleveland to get the benefits of “grounding” their feet on the earth. I’ve seen an Instagrammer who recommends small businesses in upstate New York purposely pronounce “bagel” as “beggle” to enrage viewers and go viral. The most sublime and purely nihilistic rage bait I’ve seen was someone on X who said Phish is a right-wing band, sending fans, celebrities, and even a member of Phish into a frenzy of angry replies.


    BlogTO: Canadians are torn on tipping culture but many want practice to end for good

    Survey data released in June by Lightspeed Commerce Inc. found that Canada was tied with Belgium for countries feeling the strongest about eliminating the practice of tipping altogether. Compared to customers in other regions, over one-third (34 per cent) of Canadian customers agreed with this sentiment.

    Last year, a report from the Angus Reid Institute found that most Canadians preferred a “service included” model, which would scrap gratuity in exchange for higher base wages for service workers.


    Bloomberg: Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Weighs $1.5 Billion Sale of PE Stakes

    Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan is exploring the sale of a $1.5 billion portfolio of private equity fund stakes in the secondary market to free up cash for other investments, according to people familiar with the matter.

    ⋮

    The pension fund — which manages C$255.8 billion ($188.3 billion) - owned C$58.5 billion of private equity assets as of June 30. The asset class returned 3.6% last year, below the benchmark of 16.3%.


    The Verge: Polaris Dawn sent photos over Starlink laser light.

    After a historic spacewalk, the Polaris Dawn crew sent a message to Earth using Starlink’s laser communication technology. SpaceX has already started selling its “Plug and Plaser” tech to other companies to help improve communication from space.

    More info on the flight from TechCrunch.


    TechCrunch: Australian plan for misinformation law riles Elon Musk

    The Australian government wants to fine social media platforms up to 5% of their global revenue if they fail to stop the spread of misinformation under a revised legislative plan introduced Thursday, Reutersreports.

    The planned law, which looks similar to the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA), drew swift condemnation from X owner Elon Musk, who dubbed Australia’s lawmakers “fascists” in a response posted on X.

    Since December, the EU has been investigating X’s role in spreading disinformation. Its law allows for fines of up to 6% of global annual revenue for confirmed breaches.


    CBC: Details emerge of accused, buyer in Churchill portrait heist

    Unwitting buyer of stolen ‘Roaring Lion’ says he’ll return it to rightful owners.


    VanSun: David Eby says B.C. will scrap carbon tax if Ottawa drops its legal requirement

    Premier David Eby dropped a bombshell on Thursday, announcing he will get rid of B.C.’s consumer carbon tax if Ottawa also drops the federal tax that would take over if there wasn’t a provincial tax.

    Opposition critics were quick to jump on the decision, with B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad claiming victory after months of promising that one of the first things he would do if elected would be to scrap the carbon tax.


    Last Updated: 12.Sep.2024 23:20 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:02 AM, Sep 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 11.Sep.2024


    Scientific American: Nicotine Analogs Pose Possible Health Risks Yet Evade Regulation

    The company Charlie’s Holdings, Inc. launched the new line of vaping products called Spree Bar which contain Metatine, a trademarked name for its synthetic nicotine analog, 6-methylnicotine. Because of the narrow definition of nicotine in U.S. law, the addition of one chemical structure called a methyl group allows the company to market Metatine as indistinguishable from traditional vaping products’ nicotine while also avoiding any regulatory scrutiny. Other companies are doing the same with similar nicotine analogs in vaping liquids and oral pouches.

    “As I see it, this is just the latest chapter in the industry’s very long and nefarious history of evading or trying to evade laws that were enacted and intended to protect the health and well-being of not only adults but children in the United States,” says Lauren Kass Lempert, a public health researcher at the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California, San Francisco.


    NYT: Trump Says He Had a Great Debate. His Allies Privately Say Otherwise.

    President Donald J. Trump went into sales-pitch mode immediately after Tuesday night’s debate, walking into the spin room to extol his own performance, crowing on Fox News and going on a late-night posting spree to hype unscientific online polls that he said showed he had crushed Vice President Kamala Harris.

    “That was my best Debate, EVER, especially since it was THREE ON ONE!” Mr. Trump posted on Truth Social, minutes after the debate ended, referring to the two ABC News moderators.

    Mr. Trump was insisting the same things privately to advisers and allies in the hours after the debate, according to three people with direct knowledge who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the private conversations. Mr. Trump appeared jubilant, as if he truly believed what he was telling them, the three people said.

    But Mr. Trump’s actions after the debate told another story.


    Kingstonist: ‘No Respite’: hospital unions' report says without change ‘It’s going to get worse’

    A new report finds that Ontario needs five times more hospital beds than the provincial government has planned — and that the province faces a 13,800-bed shortfall by 2032.

    ⋮

    He said the PCs' central election promise in 2018 “was that they would end hallway health care, and instead it’s doubled… We’re close to 2,000 patients being treated in unconventional hospital spaces.” Also, Allan said, “there are long waits to get surgeries. There are also very high bed occupancy levels, which are unsafe and help drive that emergency room crisis because that’s where they back up” — in other words, a bottleneck occurs when no beds are available in the hospital to allow emergency room patients who need admission to actually be admitted.


    WashPo: Officer who ignored NYPD’s ‘courtesy cards’ receives $175K settlement

    In fact, all three of them had the cards issued by the New York Police Department’s biggest union to officers who then give them to family, friends and anyone else they want to be able to get out of low-level encounters with law enforcement, Bianchi told The Washington Post.

    Different rules.


    Last Updated: 11.Sep.2024 23:24 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:29 AM, Sep 12
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 10.Sep.2024


    CNBC: Apple must pay 13 billion euros in back taxes, EU’s top court rules

    • Europe’s top court on Tuesday ruled against Apple in the tech giant’s 10-year court battle over its tax affairs in Ireland.
    • The case stems back to 2016 when the European Commission ordered Ireland to recover up to 13 billion euros ($14.4 billion) in back taxes from Apple.
    • The Commission said at the time Apple had received “illegal” tax benefits from Ireland over the course of two decades

    CNBC: Bill Gates on what keeps him up at night: war, another pandemic

    The political divisions many believe hampered the world’s response to Covid-19 are still standing in the way of preparing appropriately for the next outbreak, Gates adds: “Getting our thoughts together about what [we did] well, what we didn’t do well, is still not happening …. Perhaps, in the next five years, that’ll get better. But, so far, it’s quite surprising.”

    Preventing widespread disease is the focus of an episode in the upcoming Netflix docuseries “What’s Next? The Future with Bill Gates,” set to premiere September 18.


    Electrek: Vessev unveils VS–9 electric hydrofoil boat inside and out (including video)

    Just over three months after coming out of stealth mode, young electric hydrofoil boat builder Vessev has shared a closer look at its flagship vessel — the VS–9. Today, the boatbuilder shared fresh images of a completed VS–9 vessel and a detailed video below.

    Vessev, formerly known as Seachange, is a young, eco-friendly boat builder founded a few years ago in Auckland, New Zealand. That is where the company currently operates and is conducting sea trials of its flagship vessel, an electric hydrofoil boat called the VS–9.

    ⋮

    With ten passengers aboard, the VS-9 can reach a cruising speed of 25 knots (~29 mph) and has a range of 50 nautical miles (57 miles/92.6km). It can recharge its batteries at any marina plug, but that area has a DC fast charger; the VS–9 can recoup 0.8 nautical miles of range per minute.


    Electrek: EV sales have not fallen, cooled, slowed or slumped. Stop lying in headlines.

    Here’s what’s actually happening: Over the course of the last year or so, sales of battery electric vehicles, while continuing to grow, have posted lower year-over-year percentage growth rates than they had in previous years.

    This alone is not particularly remarkable – it is inevitable that any growing product or category will show slower percentage growth rates as sales rise, particularly one that has been growing at such a fast rate for so long.


    Last Updated: 10.Sep.2024 16:48 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 9:57 PM, Sep 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 09.Sep.2024


    MacRumors: Apple Event Live Blog: iPhone 16, Apple Watch 10, and New AirPods Expected

    Transcript of today’s Apple Event.


    Wikipedia: Marc Randolph

    Marc Bernays Randolph (born April 29, 1958) is an American tech entrepreneur, advisor and speaker. He is the cofounder and first CEO of Netflix.

    A serial entrepreneur who is said to have helped found the U.S. edition of Macworld magazine and the Ordinal computer mail-order businesses MacWarehouse and MicroWarehouse, Randolph now serves on the boards of Looker Data Sciences and Chubbies Shorts. He previously served on the boards of Getable, Rafter, ReadyForce.

    Heard him tell a great story about how he flew to Blockbuster’s corporate headquarters on short notice and gave them the plan to dominate the industry and they laughed him out of the room.


    Nunatsiaq: Poilievre promises more homes and Arctic spending, less taxes in Iqaluit visit

    Impact of carbon ‘tax’ is ‘far worse’ than in rest of Canada says Conservative leader.


    9to5Mac: Apple discontinues iPhone 13 following iPhone 16 launch

    Following the launch of the iPhone 16 lineup, Apple has now discontinued one of the oldest iPhones at the bottom of their lineup, barring the iPhone SE, which should get its refresh in the spring.

    The iPhone lineup now consists of the following models, each serving a unique position in the pricing ladder:

    • iPhone SE 3 – $429
    • iPhone 14 – $599
    • iPhone 14 Plus – $699
    • iPhone 15 – $699
    • iPhone 15 Plus – $799
    • iPhone 16 – $799
    • iPhone 16 Plus – $899
    • iPhone 16 Pro – $999
    • iPhone 16 Pro Max – $1199

    This now means the majority of Apple’s iPhone lineup comes with USB-C.

    I think Apple may have finally priced itself out of my interest range.


    PC Gamer: 8 years after declaring it took ‘courage’ to remove the iPhone’s headphone jack, Apple has finally decided buttons and ports are cool again

    While Apple is still lagging far, far behind the geniuses at Teenage Engineering who know how to employ buttons and knobs to astonishing effect, at least Apple’s hardware isn’t going even further down the path of EVs like Tesla’s, replacing perfectly useful tactile functions that were once on a knob to touch screens you have to take your eyes off the road just to use. I guess we should be thankful there’s no Full Self-Driving upsell package for the iPhone. Let’s enjoy Apple’s new button era while we can.


    9to5mac: Apple Watch Series 10 vs. Ultra 2 battery life: Here’s the key difference

    By contrast, the Apple Watch Ultra 2 remains the king of battery life.

    Here are Apple’s estimates, which users often say are conservative:

    • Normal use: up to 36 hours
    • Low Power Mode: up to 72 hours

    The only battery-related area where the Ultra comes up short of the Series 10 is in fast charging. It takes about 1 hour to fast charge from 0-80%. But that’s understandable considering the larger battery size.


    Last Updated: 09.Sep.2024 22:41 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 3:57 AM, Sep 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 08.Sep.2024


    CleanTechnica: A Geothermal Energy Solution For Harris’s Fracking Dilemma

    By the time former President Obama took office in 2009, all hell was breaking loose as the fracking boom took off, including stress on water resources, earthquakes related to wastewater disposal and to the operation itself, and significant public health impacts in local communities (see more fracking background here).

    Somewhat ironically, oil and gas stakeholders have geothermal energy researchers to thank for the fracking boom. On the heels of the 1970’s oil crisis, engineers at the US Department of Energy’s Sandia National Laboratories were tasked with applying their experience in the geothermal field to lend a hand to domestic oil and gas producers.

    ⋮

    Still, geothermal energy researchers were undeterred. Naturally occurring geothermal hotspots are limited to locations where fluid and porosity are present along with heat. In contrast, fracking technology enables the creation of new, enhanced geothermal systems anywhere suitable hot rocks are present, by introducing the fluid and creating the porosity.

    If proven cost-effective in the market, enhanced geothermal systems would expand the US geothermal energy footprint by a wide margin, from a handful of gigawatts to more than 100 gigawatts according to a 2006 calculation by MIT.


    InsideEVs: Every Car Should Have This Simple Feature

    One of the best tech examples is Blind-Spot View Monitor from the Hyundai Motor Group. You’ll find it on cars from Kia, Hyundai and Genesis. Every time I get in a vehicle that has it — most recently, the Kia EV9 I’m reviewing right now — I’m left stunned that it isn’t more common. Truly, this should be on every new vehicle.

    Blind-Spot View Monitor is, I’ll admit, not the sexiest or most inspiring name. But it’s extremely useful. Here’s how it works. When you flick the turn signal, a live camera feed of the relevant blind spot pops up right in front of you in the digital gauge cluster. Signal left, and you get a real-time view of what’s in your left blind spot in a circle on the left side of the screen. Signal right, and the same thing happens, but on the other side.

    Something to add to your new car purchase checklist.


    Solar Goat (YouTube): Why I Remove Solar Panels

    Misleading title, but I enjoyed following along as he removed someone’s solar panels for a roof replacement. He made some interesting comments about the installation as he went.


    Last Updated: 08.Sep.2024 16:14 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:21 AM, Sep 9
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 07.Sep.2024


    Mastodon: Kagi HQ: “Do you know about Kagi Small Web?"

    We also have a Kagi Small Web website, a platform designed to bring recent content from the small web to the forefront—content that often gets overlooked by traditional search engines: https://kagi.com/smallweb

    Here is some more context on how this came about: blog.kagi.com/small-web


    NBC: Father of Georgia shooting suspect gave son an AR-15 style rifle as a gift, sources say

    The father of the 14-year-old charged with murder in the shooting at a high school in Georgia bought his son an AR-15 style rifle as a gift, according to two law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation.

    The father gave his son the firearm at some point after the two had been interviewed by law enforcement in connection with threats to carry out a school shooting, the sources said.

    Law enforcement officials did not arrest the teenager after that May 2023 interview because they could not tie him to an online account that had made the threats, according to newly released documents.

    The teen, Colt Gray, fatally shot four people – two teachers and two students — on Wednesday at Apalachee High School in Winder on his first full day as a new student there, authorities said. He has been charged as an adult and was due to appear in court Friday morning.


    CBC: Quebec to approve advance requests for MAID as of Oct. 30

    Justice Minister intervenes to shield doctors and nurses from potential prosecution

    The Quebec government is following through on its promise last month to authorize certain early requests for medical assistance in dying, starting this fall.

    As of October 30, patients can make advance requests for the procedure before their condition renders them incapable of giving consent.

    Quebec adopted a law in June 2023 allowing requests from people with serious and incurable illnesses, such as Alzheimer’s disease.

    ⋮

    A spokesperson for the justice minister had said that the federal government refused to change the Criminal Code despite multiple requests from the province.


    Platformer: Marissa Mayer’s eternal Sunshine

    For a brief moment in the tech world last week, it felt like 2012 again: a new photo sharing app had just launched, and everyone was talking about Marissa Mayer.

    Mayer, a prominent early Google employee who created its famed associate product manager program before leaving to become CEO of Yahoo, had returned with a new app from the startup studio she co-founded six years ago. Shine, an app designed to let people automatically share photos taken at events they attend together, was announced March 27 — and was immediately mocked by commentators for its bare-bones design and anachronistic feature set.

    via Manton


    RMI: The Battery Mineral Loop

    In The Battery Mineral Loop, RMI lays out a comprehensive strategy to address the rising demand for battery minerals. Battery minerals are not the new oil. Even as battery demand surges, the combined forces of efficiency, innovation, and circularity will drive peak demand for mined minerals within a decade — and may even avoid mineral extraction altogether by 2050. These advancements enable us to transition from linear extraction to a circular loop, with compounding benefits for our climate, security, equity, health, and wealth.

    ⋮

    Accelerating the trend along six key solutions — deploying new battery chemistries, making batteries more energy-dense, recycling their mineral content, extending their lifetime, improving vehicle efficiency, and improving mobility efficiency — means we can reach net-zero mineral demand in the 2040s.

    TL; DR: while fossil fuels are extracted and used once, batteries are highly recyclable so many current projections of the need for mining new material are way off the mark.


    Last Updated: 07.Sep.2024 23:57 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:31 AM, Sep 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 06.Sep.2024


    NYT: Are Pacific Islands a ‘Dumping Ground’ for Accused Priests?

    Over a decades-long period, more than 30 Catholic priests and missionaries moved to remote island nations after they had allegedly abused children in the West, or had been found to do so.

    Hmmm…


    Electrek: Toyota slashes EV production plans by 30% after notifying suppliers

    According to _Nikkei_, Toyota notified suppliers of the changes on Friday, citing a slowing global EV market.

    Japan’s largest automaker is lowering its global EV production goal to 1 million by 2026. The update comes after Toyota announced plans last May to sell 1.5 million EVs by 2026.

    The new plans call for building 400,000 electric cars in 2025, doubling that number to 1 million by the following year.

    Although Toyota is cutting EV production, it still expects a big jump in sales from the 104,018 electric cars sold in 2023. Through the first seven months of 2024, Toyota has sold about 80,000 EVs.


    Time to Say Goodbye to the B.M.I.?

    The body mass index has long been criticized as a flawed indicator of health. A replacement has been gaining support: the body roundness index.

    ⋮

    “Based on B.M.I., Arnold Schwarzenegger when he was a bodybuilder would have been categorized as obese and needing to lose weight,” said Dr. Wajahat Mehal, director of the Metabolic Health and Weight Loss Program at Yale University.

    “But as soon as you measured his waist, you’d see, ‘Oh, it’s 32 inches.'”

    ⋮

    A paper published in JAMA Network Open in June was the latest in a string of studies to report that B.R.I. is a promising predictor of mortality. B.R.I. scores generally run from 1 to 15; most people rank between 1 and 10. Among a nationally representative sample of 33,000 Americans, B.R.I. scores rose between 1999 and 2018, the new study found.


    NYT: There Are Only Two Shakers Left. They’ve Still Got Utopia in Their Sights.

    Out of the tens of thousands of Shakers who have lived out their faith in the last quarter-millennium, these two remain.

    ⋮

    Because of Sister June’s age and health, her role in the community is a private one, and it is Brother Arnold who serves as the head of the religion, the village leader, the farmer, gardener, shepherd, printer, housekeeper, cook, baker, author, editor, historian, spokesman and elder. This, he admits, is not what he imagined when he became a Shaker at age 21. He never wanted to lead a religion. When he arrived, he’d never dealt with sheep.

    In case you were wondering…


    Globe: Ukrainian group plans legal challenge if Ottawa decides to release names of alleged Nazi war criminals

    Ukrainian community leaders are planning a legal challenge to keep secret the names of alleged Nazi war criminals who came to Canada after the Second World War.

    They have started to raise funds for a Federal Court action to be triggered if Ottawa decides to release a report naming hundreds of alleged Nazi war criminals who settled in Canada, including those who fought in a Ukrainian SS division.


    Globe: Ukrainian officials call for documentary on Russian soldiers to be removed from TIFF

    Ukrainian officials are urging the Toronto International Film Festival to cancel screenings of a documentary that follows Russian soldiers fighting against Ukraine, saying the film is propaganda that whitewashes their war crimes.

    The film, Russians at War, by Russian-Canadian documentary filmmaker Anastasia Trofimova, screened at the Venice Film Festival, and is set to be shown for the first time in North America at TIFF next week.

    ⋮

    Ms. Trofimova issued a statement on Friday in response to what she described as attacks and accusations being directed toward her and the film.

    “I want to be clear that this Canada-France co-production is an anti-war film made at great risk to all involved, myself especially,” she said. “I unequivocally believe that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is unjustified, illegal and acknowledge the validity of the International Criminal Court investigation of war crimes in Ukraine.”


    Globe: How the running shoe industry has gone wild with innovation this year once again

    A running shoe and apparel company recently launched a cutting-edge, laceless, robot-made racing sneaker; Olympians wore them in Paris, and soon, for a crisp $450, you will be able to don them, too.

    The Swiss brand On made the sports world gasp in July when it released its latest running shoe, the Cloudboom Strike LS (short for Light Spray). The upper of the shoe is made from a single piece of stringy material which is sprayed and woven into the shape of a foot by a robot arm at the company’s headquarters in Zurich, and then thermally fused onto a bouncy midsole. The sneaker takes three minutes to make, weighs a feather-light 170 grams, and has no shoelaces, because the material is malleable and moulds itself into the shape of the wearer’s foot without need for extra tightening. As an added bonus, the localized manufacturing process emits 75 per cent less CO2 than is emitted making a regular shoe upper.

    I’m sure they still have room to make a more expensive shoe.


    Globe: Norway’s high-stakes gamble on sustainable salmon farming

    If you’ve eaten salmon in the past few decades, chances are it was farmed: 70 per cent of this type of fish comes from farms.

    Transforming salmo salar into salmo domesticus took around a decade — lightning fast as far as animal husbandry is concerned. It started in the 1960s with two brothers on a windswept island in the Norwegian Sea, who suspended juvenile salmon in nets and fed them chopped-up herring. When the fish grew fat and ready for consumption, the brothers sold them for a healthy profit — just as wild stocks were dwindling. Within a little more than a decade, domesticated salmon was a going concern, and the basis for a growing global industry.

    There are now countless salmon farms around the world, engaged in breeding that selects for animals that quickly gain fat. Wild salmon will eat roughly 10 pounds of food for every one pound they gain. Because of genetic breeding, the farmed salmon aboard the ocean farm eat just 1.22 pounds for every pound gained, according to Nordlaks. This makes salmon one of the most efficient of the farmed meats; for context, a cow’s feed conversion ratio hovers around 6 to 1.


    Globe: Two astronauts are left behind in space as Boeing’s troubled capsule returns to Earth empty

    Boeing’s first astronaut mission ended Friday night with an empty capsule landing and two test pilots still in space, left behind until next year because NASA judged their return too risky.

    Six hours after departing the International Space Station, Starliner parachuted into New Mexico’s White Sands Missile Range, descending on autopilot through the desert darkness.

    It was an uneventful close to a drama that began with the June launch of Starliner’s long-delayed crew debut and quickly escalated into a dragged-out cliffhanger of a mission stricken by thruster failures and helium leaks.


    Last Updated: 06.Sep.2024 23:44 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:40 AM, Sep 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 05.Sep.2024


    ScienceAlert: Four Key Nutrients Are Shockingly Lacking in Over 60% of People’s Diets

    The researchers behind the study, from the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), and the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), say it’s a wake-up call for global health.

    Using a combination of data collected from the Global Dietary Database and statistical models developed by the researchers, the team estimated micronutrient levels in diets for 99.3 percent of the world’s population, across 185 countries.

    TL;DR: iodine, vitamin E, iron, calcium


    Guardian: A new flashpoint has emerged at Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea – and a new danger

    Over recent weeks, Manila has accused Chinese personnel of ramming its boats, blasting them with water canon and firing flares at its aircraft, with incidents often centred on a new location, an atoll called Sabina Shoal. It comes as tensions in the South China Sea, a strategically important waterway that links the Indian and Pacific Oceans, were already at their highest in a decade.

    ⋮

    Sabina Shoal is important to the Philippines because it is close to Reed Bank, which is believed to be rich in oil and gas, and because it is the main staging ground for resupply missions to Second Thomas Shoal. Were China to take control of it, it could cut off resupplies from reaching Second Thomas, and potentially stop vessels reaching Thitu Island, a Philippine island in the South China Sea that is inhabited by about 400 civilians, said Collin Koh, senior fellow at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, of the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies.



    The Bridge: Your Turn, and The Random Ranter Takes on Jagmeet Singh

    First week back and lots of thoughts from the Bridge listeners on what the summer meant for them and their families. And the Random Ranter starts off all wound up about Jagmeet Singh as the NDP leader pulls the plug on his party’s deal to keep the LIberals propped up until next year. Lots to ponder on this week’s Your Turn.

    First week back for one of the most popular podcasts in Canada.


    CBC: 10 years after Franklin shipwreck site was located in Nunavut, Inuit involvement is still strong

    The wreck site of the HMS Erebus was located in 2014, while the site of the HMS Terror was identified in 2016 – both with the help of Inuit oral history. They are located near Gjoa Haven, Nunavut, a hamlet of about 1,350 people on King William Island, north of the Arctic Circle.

    Gjoa Haven Mayor Raymond Quqshuun Sr. says Inuit involvement in the ongoing project with Parks Canada – which has included retrieving 1,500 artifacts from the Erebus site – is proving successful.

    Inuit guardians working under the hamlet’s Nattilik Heritage Society guard the areas of the shipwrecks and also contribute to research, he said.


    New Yorker: The Hidden-Pregnancy Experiment

    We are increasingly trading our privacy for a sense of security. Becoming a parent showed me how tempting, and how dangerous, that exchange can be.


    AP News: JD Vance says he laments that school shootings are a ‘fact of life’ and calls for better security

    Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance said Thursday that he lamented that school shootings are a “fact of life” and argued the U.S. needs to harden security to prevent more carnage like the shooting this week that left four dead in Georgia.

    “If these psychos are going to go after our kids we’ve got to be prepared for it,” Vance said at a rally in Phoenix. “We don’t have to like the reality that we live in, but it is the reality we live in. We’ve got to deal with it.”

    The Ohio senator was asked by a journalist what can be done to stop school shootings. He said further restricting access to guns, as many Democrats advocate, won’t end them, noting they happen in states with both lax and strict gun laws. He touted efforts in Congress to give schools more money for security.


    NYT: David Brooks: The Junkification of American Life

    Gioia wrote: “The tech platforms aren’t like the Medici in Florence, or those other rich patrons of the arts. They don’t want to find the next Michelangelo or Mozart. They want to create a world of junkies — because they will be the dealers.”

    ⋮

    Even journalism has found ways to trigger dopamine for profit. We journalists go into this business to inform and provoke, but many outlets have found they can generate clicks by telling partisan viewers how right they are about everything. Minute after minute they’re rubbing their audience’s pleasure centers, which feels like a somewhat older profession.


    NYT: Paul Krugman: Bacon Prices and the Windmills of Trump’s Mind

    Lately I’ve become obsessed with bacon — or, more accurately, with Donald Trump’s obsession with the price of bacon, which has long been his favorite gauge of inflation. For it seems to me that Trump’s false claims about bacon prices, and his assertions about what’s driving them, offer a window into his judgment. And the view isn’t pretty.

    It probably won’t surprise you to hear that nothing Trump says about bacon prices is true. It would be an exaggeration to say that he lies as easily as he breathes; adults normally breathe 12 to 18 times each minute, whereas Trump, during his recent Mar-a-Lago news conference, uttered around only two lies or distortions a minute. But he does lie a lot — although to be fair I’m not sure whether he’s knowingly lying about bacon or merely willfully ignorant.

    Nor should it surprise you that he keeps saying that bacon costs four or five times more than it did a few years ago, even though this claim has been thoroughly debunked. That is, as Daniel Dale of CNN points out, the candidate’s standard practice: “By virtue of shameless perseverance, Trump often manages to outlast most of the media’s willingness to correct any particular falsehood.”


    Last Updated: 05.Sep.2024 23:52 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:08 AM, Sep 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 04.Sep.2024


    CleanTechnica: California To Begin Hydrogen-Powered Passenger Train Service In San Bernardino

    The California Department of Transportation, otherwise known as Caltrans, plans to convert its full fleet of intercity locomotives to zero emission, or ZE, technology by 2035. To achieve that goal, trains operated by local transportation agencies will be powered by hydrogen, which is considered a sustainable, less polluting, and potentially cost effective alternative to fossil fuels and other sources of energy. Hydrogen power will put California’s passenger train fleet on the fastest track toward a zero emission future, the agency says.

    The Guardian reports that a new train powered by a hydrogen fuel cell will begin operating between the cities of Redlands and San Bernardino, near Los Angeles, early next year. Test runs are being conducted today. From the outside, it looks like any other commuter train, but inside, it is unlike anything the region – or the country – has ever seen before. The $20 million Zero Emission Multiple Unit train, known fondly as Zemu, uses a hydrogen fuel cell and battery system to power the electric traction motors and run the onboard electrical systems. The only byproduct of the fuel cell is water vapor, which is a welcome change in an area that suffers from some of the worst air quality rates in the country.

    ⋮

    My colleague Michael Barnard is not a believer in hydrogen fuel cells for cars, trucks, and trains. Although, he might be persuaded to change his mind if more green hydrogen was available and if it didn’t suck up every bit of renewable energy available in the process of making it. Caltrans may be over the moon about trains and trucks powered by hydrogen, but until it is produced commercially without creating its own cloud of pollution, its promise will remain largely illusory.


    The Verge: New VWs will answer some of your questions with ChatGPT

    The company previously announced its ChatGPT integration plan at CES in January. At the time, it wasn’t clear how it would all work. Volkswagen says that OpenAI’s chatbot along with a “multitude” of other models are provided by automotive chatbot company Cerence, which will take over for IDA when requests are more complex than tweaking your air conditioning settings. For instance, the company says when drivers ask for things like restaurant recommendations or for the chatbot to tell you a story, that will go to the cloud.


    Manton Reece: xAI rush in Memphis

    It sounds like there were good reasons for choosing Memphis. Elon Musk’s companies are scattered… San Francisco, Austin, somewhere in Nevada, the bottom tip of Texas. Those all seem reasonable locations for each office or factory.

    Today I caught up reading about how it has been going since then in Memphis, now that the AI cluster is up and running with 100,000 Nvidia H100s. The scale is sort of hard to imagine for those of who run only a handful of servers.

    A good post from Manton about the impact of Musk’s new AI center.


    Wales Online: Three ways to protect your bank account as scams hit record level

    More than half were in relation to customer-approved online bank transfers, also known as authorised push payment (APP) scams. The quarterly scam complaints total is the highest since the FOS started tracking the data from the first quarter of the 2018/19 financial year.

    ⋮

    The ombudsman is also seeing more cases of multi-stage fraud where funds pass through several banks before reaching the fraudster. This is particularly prevalent in cryptocurrency investment scams as well as “safe account” scams — where people are cold called by fraudsters posing as a trusted entity, such as their bank, and persuaded to transfer money to another account.


    ScienceAlert: Bacteria in Your Mouth Reproduce in a Strange, Rare Way, Scientists Discover

    Thanks to this strange process, a colony of C. matruchotii can grow very fast indeed, up to half a millimeter per day — which might help explain why plaque starts to return to your teeth within hours, no matter how strenuously you clean them.

    “These biofilms are like microscopic rainforests. The bacteria in these biofilms interact as they grow and divide. We think that the unusual C. matruchotii cell cycle enables this species to form these very dense networks at the core of the biofilm,” Chimileski says.


    Guardian: Canada: New Democratic party withdraws support for Trudeau’s Liberals

    Canada’s New Democratic party says it has “ripped up” a key agreement with prime minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government, sowing uncertainty into the country’s politics as party leaders brace for a possible election.

    NDP leader Jagmeet Singh made the surprise announcement on social media on Wednesday afternoon, accusing Trudeau of “caving” to corporate greed. “The Liberals have let people down. They don’t deserve another chance from Canadians,” he said.

    ⋮

    In exchange for supporting the Liberals, the NDP was able to push through a new dental care program for low-income Canadians, plans for a national pharmacare programme and legislation to ban the use of replacement workers during a lockout or strike.


    Guardian: Volkswagen has ‘a year, maybe two to turn around’, financial chief warns

    Carmaker defends plan to close German plants as Volvo ditches target to sell only electric cars by 2030.


    Guardian: Kamala Harris now leads in US polls but state-level data puts race on knife-edge

    Analysis of 2024 polling and previous elections involving Donald Trump suggests race is still too close to call.


    Guardian: Stock plunge wipes out Trump Media’s extraordinary market gains

    Shares in Trump Media & Technology Group, owner of Truth Social, closed below $17 on Wednesday, reversing all their gains since the company’s rapid rise took hold in January.

    The former president has been prohibited by a lock-up agreement from starting to sell shares in the firm until late September. While his majority stake in the firm is still worth some $2bn on paper, its value has fallen dramatically from $4.9bn in March.


    PBS News: Trump and Harris say they’ll kill taxes on tips. How would that work?

    It’s an idea that sounds broadly appealing, experts say, but may not affect workers substantially, if at all, since many low-wage employees don’t make enough to pay taxes.

    ⋮

    And in some cases, eliminating taxation on tips could potentially change behaviors in ways that actually harm laborers.


    ScienceAlert: 60% of Earth’s Food Crops Aren’t Being Visited by Enough Pollinators

    Some of our favorite food crops around the world aren’t reaching their full potential because of fewer visits from the insects that pollinate them, a new study has found.

    Insects that provide the crucial service of pollination are declining en masse, and that has serious consequences for the world’s food crops, 75 percent of which depend at least partially – if not entirely – on insect pollination.

    ⋮

    This open-source database, CropPol, is an international effort that has so far captured three decades' worth of data on crop pollinators, flower visits, and pollinations.

    Within this detailed picture, Turo and colleagues found that up to 60 percent of global crop systems are being limited by insufficient pollination. The phenomenon is affecting 25 of the 49 different crop species analyzed, with blueberry, coffee, and apple crops being the worst affected.

    Pollinator limitation is occurring in 85 percent of the countries in this database, spanning all six continents represented.


    Last Updated: 04.Sep.2024 20:07 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:11 AM, Sep 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 03.Sep.2024


    Guardian: Sort out your life! 100 tiny tricks to help with everything from digital overwhelm to lumpy sugar and unpaid bills

    \3. Try a triple list

    The first of several list suggestions on this, er, list. “Every day I list three things I must do: one annoying task (eg, post letter), one uncomfortable one (eg, attend gym class) and one painful one (eg, no sugar). Having three of varying discomfort means I am more likely to do the lesser ones as a way to productively procrastinate on the bigger one.” Fionnula, reader

    Well, I liked this one. That’s not saying I will necessarily do it…


    HuffPo: ‘Are You Seriously This Stupid?': Legal Minds Nail Trump After Fox News ‘Confession’

    The former president’s latest defense backfires on social media.

    Some of the tweets included in the article are hilarious.


    NYT: James Carville: Kamala Harris’s Best Strategy to Defeat Trump

    But what’s not simple: We have an incumbent vice president running against a former president in a change election. From Labor Day to Election Day, to clinch victory and drive a nail into Mr. Trump’s political career, there are three imperatives Ms. Harris must pursue successfully to become the certified fresh candidate at the ballot box in November.

    1. Help Mr. Trump hurt himself in the debate(s). …

    2. Break from President Biden on policy. …

    3. Display a clear growth mind-set from the 2020 Democratic primaries. …

    James Carville has an interesting perspective and was a key figure in The War Room, a documentary on Bill Clinton’s successful 1992 campaign.


    CBC: Oilers’ Draisaitl will be NHL’s highest-paid player in history when 8-year, $112M US extension kicks in

    New contract begins with the 2025-26 season and runs through 2033.

    I hope they’ve left themselves enough wiggle room under the salary cap for upcoming negotiations. However, the NHL’s revenue has been doing well, so they are probably banking on the cap rising.


    MacRumors: Apple Seeds Ninth visionOS 2 Beta to Developers

    visionOS 2‌ is able to take the depth information from 2D photos and turn them into 3D photos using advanced machine learning. Apple says that the feature is meant to add depth to photos to make memories more immersive.

    There are new hand gestures for activating the Home View and Control Center, and the Home View is also now customizable with apps able to be rearranged. Travel Mode now includes support for trains, and Guest User profiles are now saved for 30 days so guests don’t have to do the setup process every time they try out the headset.

    more…


    MacRumors: Microsoft Says Apple’s 30% Fee Makes Xbox Cloud Gaming iOS App ‘Impossible’

    Microsoft’s chief complaint is that the ‌App Store‌ rules require subscriptions and features to be made available on iOS devices with in-app purchase, which is “not feasible.” A consumption-only situation where content is purchased on another platform and played on iOS is not allowed for cloud gaming apps.

    Apple’s 30 percent commission fee “makes it impossible” for Microsoft to monetize its cloud gaming service, and it is neither “economically sustainable nor justifiable.”

    Microsoft also complains about Apple’s lack of support for alternative app stores and the limitations of web apps, such as an inability to access device hardware features.


    BBC: Canada’s 2023 wildfires emitted more carbon than most countries

    Only China, the US and India produced more carbon emissions than the 2023 Canadian fires.

    Unusually high temperatures and drought helped fuel the worst wildfire season in the country’s history, burning 15m hectares (37m acres) of land - an area roughly the size of Florida.

    Scientists worry the exceptional burning of Canada’s boreal forest could affect global climate change projections, as the forests play a major role in capturing planet-warming carbon.


    404Media: This Is Doom Running on a Diffusion Model

    Is it possible that in the future all video game engines would just be different diffusion models? Maybe, I don’t know. As the researchers note, “important questions remain,” such as, how do you make a diffusion model version of Doom without training on an already existing version of Doom, or as is the problem with all generative AI, how do you make games that are not directly derived from existing games, and if you do, are you just stealing from all the game developers who created that training data?


    Last Updated: 03.Sep.2024 23:59 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:27 AM, Sep 4
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 02.Sep.2024


    ScienceAlert: Mysterious ‘Donut’ Structure Found Hidden Inside Earth’s Core

    About 2,890 kilometres beneath our feet lies a gigantic ball of liquid metal: our planet’s core. Scientists like me use the seismic waves created by earthquakes as a kind of ultrasound to “see” the shape and structure of the core.

    Using a new way of studying these waves, my colleague Xiaolong Ma and I have made a surprising discovery: there is a large donut-shaped region of the core around the Equator, a few hundred kilometres thick, where seismic waves travel about 2% slower than in the rest of the core.

    We think this region contains more lighter elements such as silicon and oxygen, and may play a crucial role in the vast currents of liquid metal running through the core that generate Earth’s magnetic field. Our results are published today in Science Advances.


    Guardian: ‘The new digital flex’: the airport tray trend stirring outrage and delight

    They might be grey, plastic and reportedly very dirty, but airport security trays are in demand. Online, a new trend called the “airport tray aesthetic” sees people carefully curating the contents of a tray, showcasing their shoes, scents, accessories, headphones, hats and reading material against a backdrop of polypropylene — and then photographing it to share with their followers.

    Sometimes called “TSA tray aesthetic”, referencing the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA), some of the compositions are understated and minimalist, featuring neatly placed flasks and hair clips. Others are more chaotic.


    How to Geek: Why I’m Switching from Google to Proton

    The many revelations concerning Google’s privacy practices have had me–and possibly you, too–looking for an alternative to Google Workspace. I found it in Proton’s suite of apps, and I’ll explain why I made the switch.

    Note that I’ll only be talking about Google’s productivity suite, [not] Google Drive, Gmail, and other related services. For web search, you should check out alternative search engines.


    InsideEVs: The Ultimate ‘Connected Car’ Nightmare Is Playing Out In China

    What happens to your connected, software-driven car when the company behind it fails, and driving features go “offline” too?

    ⋮

    Rest of World: …

    He tried to drive his compact EX5 SUV as he normally would, but discovered that he could no longer log into WM Motor’s smartphone app, which remotely controlled the car lock and air conditioner. He also couldn’t see his car’s mileage and charging status on the dashboard.

    Qian was not alone. Other WM Motor owners reported that the smartphone app was unusable, and the built-in car stereo, which required an internet connection, had stopped working.


    CultOfMac: Photoshop Elements sale: $99.99 for life (with Adobe Premiere Elements)

    The good news is that Adobe finally offers a lifetime license available for Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements, on sale now for just $99.99 (regularly $149).

    If you’re on the hunt for apps that can handle everything from tweaking photos to crafting digital art and polishing up videos, you’re in luck. Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements are definitely worth checking out.


    Benzinga: Bill Gates Is Bringing ‘The Most Advanced Nuclear Facility In The World’ To A Small City With Only 2,000 People

    The TerraPower project in Kemmerer is notable for its advanced technology and cost efficiency compared to recent projects. For example, Georgia’s Plant Vogtle, which recently expanded from two to four reactors, cost nearly $35 billion, including $11 billion in overruns. In contrast, the TerraPower project is expected to cost up to $4 billion, with half funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. 

    ⋮

    But Gates isn’t stopping at nuclear power. His energy investment firm, Breakthrough Energy Ventures, backed by other big names like Jeff Bezos, Michael Bloomberg, and Richard Branson, has just raised $839 million for a new climate fund called BEV III. This fund is part of Gates' bigger plan to invest in technologies that can drastically cut greenhouse gas emissions. The fund will focus on five main areas: electricity, transportation, manufacturing, buildings, and food and agriculture.


    UPI: Brazil’s Supreme Court upholds nationwide ban of Elon Musk’s X

    The five-justice panel approved the decision. The court consists of 11 justices appointed by the president.

    X, owned by billionaire Elon Musk, has been suspended in Brazil since Saturday after the platform failed to appoint a new legal representative in the country before a court-imposed deadline.

    ⋮

    Chief Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the suspension Friday.

    On Wednesday, he had given companies, including Apple and Google, a five-day deadline to remove X from its app stores and block its use on iOS and Android devices. Individuals or businesses found to still be accessing X by using virtual private networks, or VPNs, could be fined $8,910.


    BBC: South Korea: The deepfake crisis engulfing hundreds of schools

    At the heart of this scandal is the messaging app Telegram. Unlike public websites, which the authorities can access easily, and then request for images be removed, Telegram is a private, encrypted messaging app.

    Users are often anonymous, rooms can be set to “secret” mode, and their contents quickly deleted without a trace. This has made it a prime space for criminal behaviour to flourish.


    BBC: ‘A tech firm stole our voices - then cloned and sold them’

    That night they spent hours online, searching for clues until they came across the site of text-to-speech platform Lovo. Once there, Ms Sage said she found a copy of her voice as well.

    “I was stunned,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it.”

    “A tech company stole our voices, made AI clones of them, and sold them possibly hundreds of thousands of times.”

    ⋮

    They allege anonymous Lovo employees contacted them to record audio assets on Fiverr, the popular freelance talent website, where they were selling their services to provide audio for television, radio, video games, and other media.


    Last Updated: 02.Sep.2024 23:18 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:16 AM, Sep 3
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 01.Sep.2024


    GitHub: AboutRSS/ALL-about-RSS: A list of RSS related stuff: tools, services, communities and tutorials, etc.

    A list of RSS related stuff: tools, services, communities and tutorials, etc.


    Johan Rockström, TED (YouTube): The Tipping Points of Climate Change — and Where We Stand

    We’re nearly halfway through the 2020s, dubbed the most decisive decade for action on climate change. Where exactly do things stand? Climate impact scholar Johan Rockström offers the most up-to-date scientific assessment of the state of the planet and explains what must be done to preserve Earth’s resilience to human pressure.

    If you watch one video about the state of climate change, this is the one to watch today.


    *WalesOnline newsletter (Substack): Why Cardiff is so at risk from climate change

    Cardiff is actually one of the most at risk cities in the world when it comes to climate change. A few years back research looked at the cities which were most vulnerable to global warming.


    Christopher Barnatt – Explaining Computers (YouTube): Switching to Linux: A Beginner’s Guide

    How to switch from Windows to Linux, including reasons to switch, applications, distros, testing, installation and broader migration.


    NYT: America Must Free Itself from the Tyranny of the Penny

    A conservative estimate holds that there are 240 billion pennies lying around the United States – about 724 ($7.24) for every man, woman and child there residing, and enough to hand two pennies to every bewildered human born since the dawn of man. (To distribute them all, in fact, we’d have to double back to the beginning and give our first six billion ancestors a third American penny.) These are but a fraction of the several hundreds of billions of pennies issued since 1793, most of which have suffered a mysterious fate sometimes described in government records, with a hint of supernaturality generally undesirable in bookkeeping, as “disappearance.” As far as anyone knows, the American cent is the most produced coin in the history of civilization, its portrait of Lincoln the most reproduced piece of art on Earth. Although pennies are almost never used for their ostensible purpose (to make purchases), right now one out of every two circulating coins minted in the United States has a face value of 1 cent. A majority of the ones that have not yet disappeared are, according to a 2022 report, “sitting in consumers' coin jars in their homes.”


    Globe: Investigative journalist Stevie Cameron dies at home in Toronto, age 80

    Stevie Cameron, author of On The Take, a book on the Mulroney Airbus affair, … died Saturday at home in Toronto from Parkinson’s, her daughter Amy Cameron said, noting her mother also had dementia. She was 80.


    Last Updated: 01.Sep.2024 23:44 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:06 AM, Sep 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 31.Aug.2024


    CNN: The NFL embraced soft-shell helmet covers to protect players from concussions. Here’s what the science says about them

    Intuitively, putting more padding around a football player’s head might sound like a good idea, but there’s little independent research showing that it reduces the force of blows to the head or that it prevents head injuries.

    Lab studies in which researchers simulate hits to the head have shown that the caps can reduce impact forces. But the handful of published studies that have tested the caps on college football players running drills have failed to find any benefit compared with helmets alone. There are no published independent studies that have tried to measure whether Guardian Caps reduce concussions or head injuries in players and no testing to see if they might work for younger players.

    Guardian Caps have gotten a big boost from the NFL, which now allows all players to wear them during regular-season games. The league also mandates them for most players during every preseason practice, as well as regular and postseason practices with contact.


    CleanTechnica: Hundreds of Volkswagen Staff at Xpeng Offices — Where Is This Heading?

    Well, back from the start, it was indicated that this partnership would lead to two new Volkswagen models for China that are based on the same platform as the Xpeng G9 uses. This would modernize Volkswagen vehicles for China, improve their tech, and make them much more palatable for Chinese buyers, who have evolved a ton in recent years and expect the best and newest technology. By many accounts, Xpeng is at the front of the market for the “smart” side of what they call “smart electric vehicles” now. So, providing the brains and muscle of new Volkswagen EVs should be a big step forward for them. Presumably, that’s the key thing “hundreds” of Volkswagen staff have been working on in Xpeng offices. After all, if it’s based on the G9 platform, it’s really more of an Xpeng than a Volkswagen, but then Volkswagen’s got to get its imprint and design on there.


    BBC: Ozempic weight loss: Jabs could slow ageing, researchers say

    Semaglutide, better known as Ozempic, “has far-reaching benefits beyond what we initially imagined,” Prof Harlan Krumholz, from the Yale School of Medicine, said following the publication of several new studies.

    They found that the drug could be used to treat a wide range of illnesses linked to heart failure, arthritis, Alzheimer’s and even cancer.

    “It wouldn’t surprise me that improving people’s health this way actually slows down the ageing process,” Prof Krumholz was quoted on Friday as telling the European Society of Cardiology Conference 2024, where the studies were presented.


    AppleInsider: Canada’s Digital Services tax on tech giants faces US pushback

    Canada’s new Digital Services tax could cost iPhone maker Apple billions, but the US says the fees are discriminating against American tech companies — and is pushing for a delay.

    Canada first proposed the legislation in 2021 as an interim measure, following a statement from the G20 allowing for international digital service tax (DST) reform. The G20 countries have been working together to create a multilateral tax on profits made by global tech companies through services, but progress has been slow.

    Canada and other countries want to be able to impose taxes on profits made from online marketplace services, advertising services, social media services, and revenue made from selling user data. To qualify under the Canadian law, a tech company would have to have made $750 million or more in qualifying revenue per year, of which at least $20 million would have come directly from Canadian users.


    Futurism: Boeing Execs Yelled at NASA Leaders When They Didn’t Get What They Wanted

    “The thinking around here was that Boeing was being wildly irresponsible.”


    Futurism: NASA’s Moon Launcher Is in Big Trouble

    Building the tower won’t come cheap, with NASA estimating that it’ll cost a whopping $1.8 billion and be delivered by September 2027.

    Now, according to a scathing new report by NASA’s Office of Inspector General (OIG), the tower may end up being even more expensive than initially thought. The office projects that the “total cost could reach $2.7 billion” – a bewildering price tag that could greatly undermine NASA’s continued efforts to build out a more permanent presence on and around the Moon.


    Baltimore Sun: Residents applaud downzoning of Lutherville Station

    The council, at Councilman Wade Kach’s request, voted Tuesday to zone a property next to a light rail station in Lutherville for single-family housing, which caps the number of apartments that can be built at 16 units per acre and bars buildings higher than 60 feet. Kach, a Timonium Republican, had previously said he wanted residents and the developer, Mark Renbaum, to reach a compromise. Residents had fiercely protested the proposal.

    “We are currently reviewing last night’s downzoning decision by Councilman Kach and the implications for the project,” Renbaum said Wednesday via spokesperson Rick Abbruzzese. “On its face, the downzoning appears to be an unreasonable limitation to a state transit-oriented development under House Bill 538. Lutherville Station is the first real test case for this important legislation.”

    via Jason Becker


    Slashdot: Tech Worker Builds Free AI-Powered Tool For Fighting US Health Insurance Denials

    “A Fight Health Insurance user can scan their insurance denial, and the system will craft several appeal letters to choose from and modify.” With the slogan “Make your health insurance company cry too,” [San Francisco tech worker Holden Karau’s site] makes filing appeals faster and easier. A recent study found that Affordable Care Act patients appeal only about 0.1% of rejected claims, and she hopes her platform will encourage more people to fight back…

    The “dirty secret” of the insurance industry is that most denials can be successfully appealed, according to Dr. Harley Schultz, a patient advocate in the Bay Area. “Very few people know about the process, and even fewer take advantage of it, because it’s rather cumbersome, arcane, and confusing, by design,” he said. “But if you fight hard enough and long enough, most denials get overturned…."_


    ScienceAlert: This Stunning Image Is The Highest Resolution We’ve Ever Seen Atoms

    The image you see above was made back in 2021 by a team led by physicist Zhen Chen, formerly of Cornell University and now at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Those dots are the atoms in the crystal lattice of a piece ofpraseodymium orthoscandate (PrScO3), at a magnification of 100 million.

    The only reason the image looks a little fuzzy around the edges is not because the resolution is poor, but because atoms don’t stop jiggling about, which results in a little thermal motion blur.

    ⋮

    You can find the team’s full paper in Science.


    Last Updated: 31.Aug.2024 22:50 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:32 AM, Sep 1
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 30.Aug.2024


    NYT: 7 Takeaways From Kamala Harris’s CNN Interview

    Kamala Harris showed her tendency toward winding answers in the CNN interview, but said nothing likely to cause her serious political trouble.


    NYT: 6 Exercises to Help You Move Easier

    Practicing these movements can make everyday tasks — like carrying groceries and walking up stairs — easier.


    ScienceAlert: Intermittent Fasting Could Trigger Cancer Risks, Study in Mice Shows

    While previous studies have linked intermittent fasting to benefits such as reductions in weight and dementia risk, new research in mice points to a potential downside of periodic food abstinences: an increase in the risk of cancer.

    The discovery follows a previous study that found fasting in mice led to a boost in the regenerative capabilities of their intestinal stem cells, protecting against injury and inflammation.

    Now an international team of researchers have determined this increase in stem cell production accelerates as mice refeed after fasting. What’s more, eating can introduce mutagens — compounds like the heterocyclic amines in burned meats, which can cause genetic mutations — that increase the risk of triggering cancerous tumors.

    Let’s admit it: nothing is “safe”! Everything is a trade-off.


    Globe: editorial: The high cost of real estate commissions

    The buying and selling of real estate in the U.S. is undergoing a similar reckoning. People in the U.S. (as in Canada) pay some of the highest real estate transaction fees in the world. Last October, a U.S. jury ruled against the National Association of Realtors in a class-action lawsuit case over high fees paid on housing deals, often around 6 per cent. The decision found the industry conspired to inflate fees. Instead of appealing, the real estate agents this March settled for a lower penalty and agreed to change industry rules around how fees are decided.

    The deal went into effect in mid-August but industry continues to fight against change. Academic research published last year shows agents – who are supposed to be working on behalf of their clients – routinely steer people away from deals with lower fees. Such homes take longer to sell, the research found, as agents for buyers tended to avoid them.


    Times of London (Apple.news): Tudor explorer who began the Arctic quest

    On a spring morning in 1554, a group of Laplanders fishing off Russia’s desolate northwest coast spotted two mighty English galleons floating at anchor, with no one on deck.

    On board, the fishermen encountered a grim sight. The entire crew had perished during the long Arctic winter, along with their captain, the Tudor adventurer Sir Hugh Willoughby — a heroic failure who, like John Franklin and Robert Scott after him, had set off on a great feat of exploration and perished in the attempt.


    CBC: Abortion issue returns to haunt Trump’s campaign

    It was laid bare this week when Trump was asked about his state’s referendum on the issue this November: Would he vote for Amendment 4, which would undo Florida’s six-week abortion ban and, in effect, restore the pre-2022 status quo, allowing abortion until fetal viability, and even afterward if deemed necessary by a doctor?

    Trump appeared to tell NBC News he would support it, which triggered a swift backlash from elements of his base. Within 24 hours, he performed a backflip, telling Fox News he’d, in fact, vote no on the amendment.


    Globe: Johnny Gaudreau’s unusual superstardom was a testament to humble beginnings

    The daily news is so full of awfulness that a sensitive person is hard-pressed to get to the end of the A-section without feeling some level of despair. But whether you knew of Johnny Gaudreau or care one iota about sport, this one feels especially unfair.

    That’s because not everyone can imagine the horror of war, but they can picture two brothers on a bike ride. Chirping each other. One daring the other to keep up, and then vice versa. This scene is a shorthand of movies meant to signal the bonds of family.

    And a day before a family wedding. All they had to do was make it home.


    Last Updated: 30.Aug.2024 19:51 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:03 AM, Aug 31
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 29.Aug.2024


    Daily Mail: Trump insists there are signs Fidel Castro could be Justin Trudeau’s father in new book

    Former President Donald Trump once again stokes rumors about Justin Trudeau in his new book by claiming that Fidel Castro could be the Canadian prime minister’s father.

    Trump put the rumor in print, weeks after saying in a podcast interview that ‘they say he’s the son of Fidel Castro, and could be.’

    ⋮

    [AP] also reported that Trudeau was born four years before Margaret made her first trip to Cuba, in a voyage that drew international attention.


    9to5Mac: New Super Bowl LVIII Immersive Video and more coming soon to Vision Pro

    More Apple Immersive Video content will launch to Vision Pro users over the coming weeks. Perhaps most exciting for many users, Apple is debuting a new 4 Minutes Inside Super Bowl LVIII short film next Friday. This will take fans back to Allegiant Stadium for the matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers.

    4 Minutes Inside Super Bowl LVIII will be available on Apple Vision Pro worldwide on Friday, September 6. Apple hasn’t shared further details about what to expect from this Apple Immersive Video short film.

    Plus other 3D TV plus video games.


    Last Updated: 29.Aug.2024 22:58 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:46 AM, Aug 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 28.Aug.2024


    9to5Mac: Apple is redesigning its least popular Mac, but who is actually buying it?

    Following the news that an updated Mac mini with M4 and M4 Pro chip is in the works, CIRP is out with its latest report on Apple’s most affordable computer. With Mac mini market share as low as <1% of total Mac sales, the new data looks to answer the question, “Who buys a Mac mini?”

    CIRP highlights with such a tiny fraction of customers opting for the machine “We’ve long wondered why Apple continues to make this thing.”

    ⋮

    41% of Mac mini owners are “under 24 years old or over 65 years old.” And that number jumps to 69% for those under 34 years old or over 65 years old.


    Jeff Geerling (YouTube): I replaced my Apple TV—with a Raspberry Pi

    31.May.2024

    If you want a TV box that’s more flexible than Apple TV, Nvidia SHIELD, Roku Ultra, or any of the regular Android-based TV set-top boxes, this Pi build’s for you! I built a Raspberry Pi 5 media center using LibreELEC and Kodi, and I’ll show you how you can do it, too. It’s good enough for almost any modern content, up to 4K60, but there are a few caveats.


    Cabel Sasser: My GDC ’24 Talk: The Playdate Story

    19.May.2024

    In January, I was invited to GDC, the Game Developers Conference, to give a talk about Playdate.

    That talk — “The Playdate Story: What Was it Like to Make Handheld Video Game System Hardware?” — has been made available free for all to view.

    Now, it’s been 10 years since my last talk at XOXO here in Portland (I was maybe 12% less nervous for this one! Progress), and really this talk feels like a sequel to me. It covers a lot of our adventures since then, and I did my best to again give an honest look at the many ups and downs that come from trying something totally new.

    So, so good!


    Last Updated: 28.Aug.2024 23:59 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:59 AM, Aug 29
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 27.Aug.2024


    UPI: Judge blocks Biden rule to give residency to some spouses of U.S. citizens

    The new rule is known as parole in place and is part of the Biden administration’s Keeping Families Together program that was announced by the Department of Homeland Security mid-June and was implemented Aug. 19.

    To be eligible, an applicant must be married to a U.S. citizen and have resided in the United States for at least 10 years. The federal government estimates that some 500,000 spouses could be eligible for the program. It said that of the potentially eligible spouses, on average they have resided in the United States for 23 years.

    Conservatives and Republicans have criticized the rule for unlawfully creating a pathway to citizenship, and 16 GOP Republican attorneys general sued the Biden administration on Friday, asking a federal district judge in Texas for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to stop the federal government from enforcing it.


    The Atlantic: America Is Doubling Down on Sewer Surveillance

    Not long ago, tracking the spread of a virus by sampling wastewater counted as a novelty in the United States. Today, wastewater monitoring offers one of the most comprehensive pictures anyone has of COVID-19’s summer surge. This type of surveillance has been so effective at forecasting the risks of the virus’s rise and fall that local governments are now looking for other ways to use it. That has meant turning from tracking infections to tracking illicit and high-risk drug use.


    LA Times: Police brushed him off. So he exposed an international bike theft ring on his own

    Cyclist Bryan Hance, a cybersecurity engineer in Portland, Ore., has used his tech savvy to expose a scheme to traffic stolen bikes from California to Mexico.


    Globe: Trudeau says he plans to lead Liberals into next federal election, dismisses comparisons to Biden

    Mr. Trudeau has been adamant that he will stay on as Liberal Leader and ask Canadians in 2025 to give him a rare fourth consecutive mandate – something no prime minister has achieved since Sir Wilfrid Laurier more than a century ago.

    Amid a cost-of-living crisis driven by inflation, Mr. Trudeau has frequently pointed to programs such as child care and dental care as proof his government has responded to Canadians’ needs and on Monday also defended his economic record.

    He clearly doesn’t get it, but if he keeps promoting those programs it will be good for the NDP.


    InsideEVs: You Don’t Really Need DC Fast Charging

    Yet, Adams finds herself somewhat frustrated with the overemphasis on DC fast charging. She asserts that most of the federal National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI)  funding—some $5 billion allotted for all charging infrastructure—is going toward DCFC charging stations. Although noble, it’s not necessarily the right use case for EV drivers. “My goal is to make charging reliable, accessible and affordable… and Level 2 is the answer for a lot of that,” Adams said.

    [via @briandigital](https://briandigital.com/2024/08/27/224327.html)


    *BlogTO: New boutique hotel in Toronto will have pipes stretching 700 feet underground

    Drilling activity to support a geothermal energy system technically marked the first step in construction for this site in 2023.

    Permits were issued by the City for the drilling of 40 boreholes going down a staggering 700 feet below the street, which will be used as part of the building’s energy-efficient geothermal heating/cooling system.


    Discover Magazine: Propulsion and Parachute Systems Delay Starliner’s Crewed Return

    The propulsion and parachute systems are the Starliner’s main issues. The propulsion system controls the spacecraft’s movements in space, using puffs of volatile gas, or propellant, to make minute changes in orientation. It’s a crucial system during docking with the ISS and when re-entering Earth’s atmosphere. Unfortunately, some of the thrusters haven’t been firing as expected, predominantly due to leaks in the helium tanks.

    This is problematic for the craft, as the helium gas pressure is used to push the propellant out of the ship. Imagine trying to steer a car, but the steering wheel only works part of the time, and unpredictably so. That’s the nature of many of Starliner’s issues.

    But beyond gas leaks, there’s also the parachute system. The parachutes are designed to deploy during re-entry to slow the spacecraft down using atmospheric drag. Nonetheless, there’s been concern through simulations and ground testing that the mechanism might not work correctly, either deploying at the wrong time or simply breaking apart altogether.


    Last Updated: 27.Aug.2024 23:50 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:47 PM, Aug 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 26.Aug.2024


    RNZ News: Court dismisses Uber’s appeal arguing drivers are employees, not contractors

    Court of Appeal justices Goddard, Ellis and Wylie said a critical point is that while a driver is logged into the driver app, they have no opportunity to establish any business goodwill of their own.

    “Or to influence the quantity of work they receive, the quality of the work they receive, or their revenue from that work except to the extent that Uber agrees to give them some preference in relation to access to ride requests, information about rides, or supplementary payments,” they said.

    Adding that the drivers have no opportunity to bargain with Uber for any of these.

    “We do not consider that drivers can, in reality, be said to be carrying on transport service businesses on their own account at times when they are logged into the driver app, providing services to riders referred to them by Uber for the remuneration determined by Uber, and subject to the high level of control and direction that Uber exercises over the provision of services by drivers while logged in,” they said.

    ⋮

    However, in June this year the Workplace Relations and Safety Minister, Brooke van Velden, began working on law changes that could prevent workers misclassified as contractors from challenging their employment status in the courts.

    FIRST Union and E tū Union are now calling for the minister to immediately drop her expedited plans.


    ArtLung (Joe Crawford): Post-XOXO Ramble on Websites and Freedom: Everybody Comes To Ricks ~ 25 Aug 2024

    I am writing this from IndieWeb Camp 2024 Portland. It’s the day after the 2024 XOXO Festival. It was the last XOXO.


    In 2023, the boy billionaire Musk purchased Twitter, on credit. The enthusiasm for moving to Mastodon (started 2016) took off. Right now there’s a zeal to join Blue Sky. People are desperate for something better. People hate censorship, shadow-banning, “the algorithm.” Twitter is full of hate speech. The Trust & Safety team was gutted. Bad actors were reinstated in the name of free speech.

    During XOXO, Andy Baio said “Every one of you should have a home on the web not controlled by a billionaire." Cabel Sasser recommended that we all “put up the dang portfolio." Molly White asked us to think back to “when was the first time you thought the web was magic?" She cited her young-kid self writing on her Neopets “user lookup page” as the moment when she realized the world wide web wasn’t just “a book she could read” but also a “canvas she could paint on.” That young kid kept painting. In May she shared We can have a different web…

    via Manton


    CBC: Trudeau says Canada will slap big tariffs on Chinese EVs

    100% surtax to be levied on all Chinese-made EVs, effective Oct. 1.

    ⋮

    Volpe addressed the climate concerns saying Chinese-made EVs — built in factories largely powered by coal-fired power plants — are not as green as those made elsewhere.

    Because Canada is such a beacon to the world on green manufacturing!


    Last Updated: 26.Aug.2024 12:30 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:26 AM, Aug 27
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 25.Aug.2024


    Guardian: Men with long hair – the derision and glory in 1964

    Long-haired life wasn’t easy: you were regarded with suspicion by the police, gawped at by tourists and rejected by employers. ‘You go for an interview with, say, 12in of hair and, no matter how capable you might be, they just ask you to leave,’ complained one; another recommended wearing a hat.

    Thank goodness we’re over such shallow judgements. 🙄


    HowToGeek: 7 Reasons to Get a Travel Router

    • Ease of Connection During Travel
    • Adding a Layer of Security
    • Getting Around Arbitrary Device Limits
    • Creating a Mobile Shared Network
    • Travel Routers Can Serve as Wireless Extenders
    • Wired to Wireless Connectivity
    • Travel Routers Can Serve as Mobile Hotspots

    Wired: Klaris Clear Ice Maker Review: A Worthy Investment to Up Your Home Bartending Game

    TYPICALLY, IF ICE makes your drink cold, we’re good to go. But some bartenders will tell you that it’s arguably the most important element of creating a perfect cocktail. Whether for shaking, stirring, or the final product, clear rocks of ice will elevate a cocktail compared with standard ice made in your freezer.

    The Klaris Clear Ice Maker simplifies the process of making craft ice in your own home. It makes four clear ice cubes, each 2 x 2 inches, in less than 12 hours. If that sounds ridiculous to you, then it’s probably not for you. But given how tedious and time-consuming making clear ice is otherwise, this is a great product for the home bartender.

    It’s probably not for us.


    Wikipedia: Grant Study

    The Grant Study is an 85-year continuing longitudinal study from the Study of Adult Development at Harvard Medical School, started in 1938. It has followed 268 Harvard-educated men, the majority of whom were members of the undergraduate classes of 1942, 1943 and 1944. It has run in tandem with a study called “The Glueck Study,” which included a second cohort of 456 disadvantaged, non-delinquent inner-city youths who grew up in Boston neighborhoods between 1940 and 1945. The subjects were all white males and of American nationality. As of 2024, the men continue to be studied. They were evaluated at least every two years by questionnaires through information from their physicians and by personal interviews. Information was gathered about their mental and physical health, career enjoyment, retirement experience and marital quality. The goal of the study was to identify predictors of healthy aging.


    SMH: How Flat-Pack Homes Could Help Solve the Housing Crisis

    The hi-tech process was designed in Japan and, together with computers and equipment sent to SHAWOOD’s single factory in Australia, in Ingleburn, it’s producing homes according to designs created here and sent back to Japan to be translated into digital blueprints.

    In the factory, these guide the machinery to cut beams and posts exactly to size, giving each a code, and then directing the workers on how to assemble some into roof trusses and wall frames before taking them, carefully wrapped in waterproof plastic, to site.


    Last Updated: 25.Aug.2024 22:22 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:36 AM, Aug 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 24.Aug.2024


    Reuters: SpaceX to return Boeing’s Starliner astronauts from space next year, NASA says

    Two NASA astronauts who flew to the International Space Station in June aboard Boeing’s (BA.N) faulty Starliner capsule will need to return to Earth on a SpaceX vehicle early next year, NASA said on Saturday, deeming issues with Starliner’s propulsion system too risky to carry its first crew home.

    The agency’s decision, tapping Boeing’s top space rival to return the astronauts, is one of NASA’s most consequential in years. Boeing had hoped the test mission would redeem the Starliner program after years of development problems and over $1.6 billion in budget overruns since 2016.


    TechCrunch: Google just made a $250M deal with California to support journalism — here’s what it means

    While the deal offers a much-needed cash infusion for an industry that’s seen crippling layoffs this year, the deal’s been criticized by some as a half-measure — and a cop-out.

    By agreeing to this deal, Google averts bills that would have forced it and other tech companies to pay news providers when they run ads alongside news content on their platforms.

    California didn’t mess it up totally, unlike the Canadian federal government. Thank goodness.


    Last Updated: 24.Aug.2024 13:50 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:55 AM, Aug 25
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 23.Aug.2024


    CleanTechnica: Why Did Tesla Stock Crash Today?

    • Tesla Finance & Business Operations Exec Resigns
    • Tesla Semi Battery Fire

    UPI: Trump’s New Jersey club to host ‘awards gala’ for people involved in Jan. 6 riot

    Former President Donald Trump’s club in New Jersey is planning to host an “awards gala” for people incarcerated for their role in a riot on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, including 20 choir members who contributed to the Justice for All charity song.

    ⋮

    General admission tickets are $1,500 and a single VIP ticket costs $2,500. All donations were listed as tax deductible.

    Trump is doubling down on support from people who thought January 6 was a good idea.


    Business Insider: Tesla Job Pays You to Wear Motion-Capture Suit to Train Optimus Robot

    • Tesla is hiring Data Collection Operators for up to $48 per hour to train its humanoid robot.
    • The role involves wearing motion-capture suits and VR headsets to perform tasks for data collection.
    • Experts say Tesla aims to gather vast amounts of data to train the robot for generalized tasks.

    WashPo: Bill Clinton and the wide gap in job gains by presidential party

    “You’re going to have a hard time believing this, but so help me, I triple-checked it,” Clinton began. “Since the end of the Cold War in 1989, America has created about 51 million new jobs. I swear I checked this three times. Even I couldn’t believe it. What’s the score? Democrats 50, Republicans one.”


    Undecided (YouTube): How This New Battery is Changing the Game

    Nothing lasts forever, and batteries are no exception. But what if we could somehow create a battery that didn’t degrade…at least for a little while? The China-based company CATL, might have just done that. The selling point of its latest battery, the TENER, is its ability to go five years with no power degradation or loss of capacity. How is this possible? Are we on the way to battery immortality?


    9to5Mac: Apple Podcasts now offers auto-generated transcripts in iOS 17.4

    25.Jan.2024

    Apple says that podcast transcripts will be available “shortly after” you publish the podcast episode itself. The company explains:

    Apple automatically generates transcripts after a new episode is published. Your episode will be available for listening right away, and the transcript will be available shortly afterwards. There will be a short delay while we process your transcript. If portions of your episode change with dynamically inserted audio, Apple Podcasts will not display the segments of the audio that have changed since the original transcription. Music lyrics are also not displayed in the transcripts.

    On the “Now Playing” screen in the Apple Podcasts app, there’s a new “quote” icon in the bottom toolbar that you can tap to view that episode’s transcript. “As an episode plays, each word is highlighted, making it easy to follow along,” Apple says. You can tap anywhere in the live transcript to start listening at that specific point.

    Apple limits the size of text that you can copy from the transcript to about a single screen’s worth. I was unable to get the tap to move the player to the same location in the audio.


    The Hill: Kennedy siblings rip RFK Jr. for endorsing Trump: ‘A betrayal’ of family values

    “We want an America filled with hope and bound together by a shared vision of a brighter future,” Kerry Kennedy wrote in a [Twitter] statement alongside four of Kennedy’s siblings. “We believe in Harris and Walz. Our brother Bobby’s decision to endorse Trump today is a betrayal of the values that our father and our family hold most dear.”

    “It is a sad ending to a sad story,” they added.

    ⋮

    Kerry Kennedy, who leads the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organization, wrote the statement alongside four siblings — Courtney Kennedy, Chris Kennedy, Rory Kennedy and former Maryland Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend (D).


    Last Updated: 23.Aug.2024 19:23 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:48 AM, Aug 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 22.Aug.2024


    CBC: Podcasts: Front Burner: New Canadian ‘centrist’ party accuses rivals of extremism

    A new federal political party, the Canadian Future Party, is pitching itself as a centrist alternative for voters disillusioned with the Conservatives and Liberals.

    It’s already announced candidates for two upcoming byelections.

    Front Burner host Jayme Poisson spoke with the party’s interim leader, Dominic Cardy, about why he believes voters are so dissatisfied with the major parties, how he says there’s a “drive towards more and more extremism” among the Liberals and Conservatives, and why he thinks centrism can satisfy Canadians looking for change.

    Ignore the terrible clickbaity title, and listen to the acting leader of the new party discuss why they exist, and what their policy directions are.


    Slashdot: 110K Domains Targeted in ‘Sophisticated’ AWS Cloud Extortion Campaign

    A sophisticated extortion campaign has targeted 110,000 domains by exploiting misconfigured AWS environment files, security firm Cyble reports. The attackers scanned for exposed .env files containing cloud access keys and other sensitive data. Organizations that failed to secure their AWS environments found their S3-stored data replaced with ransom notes.

    The attackers used a series of API calls to verify data, enumerate IAM users, and locate S3 buckets. Though initial access lacked admin privileges, they created new IAM roles to escalate permissions. Cyble researchers noted the attackers' use of AWS Lambda functions for automated scanning operations.


    Globe: Doug Ford calls supervised consumption sites ‘worst things’ to happen to communities

    “We haven’t seen it get better. This was supposed to be the greatest thing since sliced bread. It’s the worst thing that could ever happen to a community, to have one of these safe-injection sites in their neighbourhood,” Mr. Ford said at an unrelated news conference about shipbuilding on Wednesday in St. Catharines, Ont.

    “Dougma Ford” may not know the research results but he knows what he believes.


    Globe: André Picard: Supervised drug consumption sites may have earned political and public wrath, but they are more helpful than harmful

    Ten of the province’s 23 sites will close, and they won’t be allowed to reopen elsewhere. In other words, the proximity to schools/daycares business is just a ruse.

    Ontario is also prohibiting municipalities and organizations from opening new sites, from participating in safer supply initiatives, or requesting decriminalization exemptions from the federal government.

    ⋮

    But as much as some measures may make us uncomfortable, harm reduction is effective. These sites have a very limited goal: To keep people alive a little longer in the hope they will seek treatment. They’re not a panacea.

    Ending harm reduction measures like supervised consumption, access to safer supply, decriminalization of drug possession, and access to clean needles is not going to end the triple crisis that so many cities and towns are living through today. Homelessness, toxic drugs and untreated mental illness also exist in municipalities that don’t have supervised consumption sites, too.


    Globe: Opinion: Misuse of the temporary foreign worker program is a business racket

    This is not really shocking. The use, or misuse, of the temporary foreign worker program is not a Liberal or Conservative thing; as Brian Lilley wrote in the Toronto Sun last week, a land-surveying company owned by Liberal MP Sukh Dhaliwal hired “legal administrative assistants” through the program in 2023. Rather, it is a business thing, aided by whichever government is in power at the time.

    In 2014, a guy named Justin Trudeau wrote an op-ed in the Toronto Star lamenting that under then-prime minister Stephen Harper, “the number of short-term foreign workers in Canada has more than doubled.” He prescribed that the program needed to be “scaled back dramatically over time, and refocused on its original purpose: to fill jobs on a limited basis when no Canadian workers can be found,” and that Canada should refocus on bringing in people with a permanent path to citizenship.

    The primary effect of the program is to depress wages for unskilled workers. Great for businesses and self-interested consumers but not so great for society.


    Vanity Fair: Donald Trump Has Jumped The Shark

    The sense one gets listening to all this is of a man out of ideas, reaching into an old bag of tricks that aren’t as interesting as they used to be. This isn’t to say Democrats should get overconfident: There’s still a big market for what Trump is selling—and powerful interests, embodied by Musk, are seeking to propel him back to power. But the candidate appears capable only of doing the same things he’s done a million times before, except now much worse. He had hoped to regain his footing Monday night with Musk, who has become one of his most prominent backers. Instead, he underscored the personal “weirdness” Harris’s campaign has sought to highlight—and the extremism of his agenda, as seen in his praise of Musk firing striking workers, his vow to shutter the Department of Education, and his comments in support of climate change because, he said, global warming will mean “more oceanfront property.”


    HowToGeek: A Windows Update is Breaking Dual-booting PCs

    an error message that reads “Something has gone seriously wrong.” Microsoft has investigated the issue and released a statement.

    ⋮

    But according to Ars Technica, this update was installed on Windows devices dual-booting with new releases of Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and others. Booting from ISO files loaded on bootable drives is failing too.


    CleanTechnica: Morrow Batteries Begins LFP Production In Norway

    Morrow Batteries has begun pilot production of its LFP prismatic batteries at its new factory in Arendal in southern Norway. It expects that factory, which will have an annual capacity of 1 GWh, and be in full production by the end of this year. Three companion factories in Arendal are also planned. Jonas Gahr Støre, Prime Minister of Norway, was on hand to inaugurate the new factory, which is Europe’s first gigawatt-scale factory for LFP batteries.

    ⋮

    It will be interesting to see how things shake out with Northvolt, Morrow, and Varta, among others. Right now, CATL and BYD are leading the field and getting further ahead, thanks in part to massive encouragement from the Chinese government. It is uncertain whether the EU, Canada, and the United States are ready, willing, and able to match what China is doing to support the battery manufacturing sector.

    Both battery technology and production are roaring ahead!


    UPI: Report says 2023 set new records on heat, other climate-change factors

    A new report released Thursday confirms that 2023 marked a string of new highs in climate change — from greenhouse gas concentrations and global temperatures, to a rise in sea and ocean levels, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    The NOAA said the new figures come from the State of the Climate report, an international review of climate data that was published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, involving scientists from 60 countries.

    “This report documents and shares a startling but well-established picture: We are experiencing a warming world as I speak and the indicators and impacts are seen throughout the planet,” Derek Arndt, director of the National Centers for Environmental Information, said in a statement. “The report is another signpost to current and future generations.”


    BBC: Starbucks new boss under fire for 1,000-mile commute

    The newly-announced boss of Starbucks, Brian Niccol, has come under fire after it was revealed he will commute almost 1,000 miles (1,600km) from his family home in Newport Beach, California, to the firm’s headquarters in Seattle on a corporate jet.

    Critics have noted what they see as a discrepancy between the company’s public stance on green issues and the lifestyles of its top executives.

    ⋮

    A report published by the United Nations in 2021 showed that the world’s wealthiest 1% of people produced double the combined carbon emissions of the poorest 50%.

    Starbucks announced this month that Mr Niccol would be replacing Laxman Narasimhan as its chief executive.

    The announcement came as the coffee chain looks to boost flagging sales.

    This probably won’t help.


    CBC: Imitation Inuit artifacts are everywhere, but a new treaty is trying to change that

    A quick search for an ulu on Amazon, for example, brings up dozens of knives which claim to be the real thing.

    One such knife that Bernice Kootoo Clarke, owner of Kuutuu Cultural Consulting, points out is from a company called Dalstrong.

    The Toronto-based company markets them as “traditional Alaskan fish knives” manufactured in China, as stated on its website.


    Last Updated: 22.Aug.2024 18:46 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:11 AM, Aug 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 21.Aug.2024


    iPhone Photography Awards: 2024 Winners

    Great photos need great photographers more than fancy equipment.


    Daring Fireball: Monument Valley 3 Will Be a Netflix Game — Perhaps a Dead Canary in the Apple Arcade Coal Mine

    But in the meantime, I think Netflix is doing what Apple claimed they were doing with Apple Arcade — except Netflix didn’t lose focus five minutes into the initiative. I know for a fact, knowing them personally, that there are game developers who are repulsed by casino-style pay-to-win monetization, who are basically desperate for a monetization path that is up-front and completely healthy to all players. And they realize that such paths go through mainstream subscription services.

    Apple Arcade, on the surface, sounds like exactly what they’re asking for. And it would give Apple device exclusivity. But Apple has botched this. It’s hard to believe, but they have. The general gist among game developers is that Apple is a hard-driving partner with whom, mostly likely, you’ll break even at best. The hard-driving part is to be expected. That’s Apple. It would be really weird and alarming if they weren’t demanding. But the “break even at best” part is not.


    Last Updated: 21.Aug.2024 23:53 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:18 AM, Aug 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 20.Aug.2024


    CBC: Former U.S. congressman George Santos pleads guilty to wire fraud, identity theft

    Former U.S. congressman George Santos pleaded guilty on Monday to wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, short-circuiting the federal fraud case that led to his expulsion from Congress just weeks before it was set to go to trial.

    ⋮

    U.S. District Judge Joanna Seybert scheduled Santos’s sentencing for Feb. 7, 2025.

    Santos was indicted on felony charges that he stole from political donors, used campaign contributions to pay for personal expenses, lied to Congress about his wealth and collected unemployment benefits while actually working.

    I hope this is the beginning of the end of this ugly saga.


    Wikipedia: Tree-sitter (parser generator)

    In computing, Tree-sitter is a parser generator and incremental parsing library.

    It is used to parse source code into concrete syntax trees usable in compilers, interpreters, text editors, and static analyzers. It is specialized for use in text editors, as it supports incremental parsing for updating parse trees while code is edited in real time, and provides a built-in S-expression query system for analyzing code.

    Text editors which have official integrations with Tree-sitter include Atom, GNU Emacs, Neovim, Lapce, Zed, and Helix. Language bindings allow it to be used from programming languages including Go, Haskell, Java, JavaScript (with Node.js and WASM), Kotlin, Lua, OCaml, Perl, Python, Ruby, Rust, and Swift. Tree-sitter parsers have been written for these languages and many others. GitHub uses Tree-sitter to support in-browser symbolic code navigation in Git repositories.

    Tree-sitter uses a GLR parser, a type of LR parser.

    Topic of discussion on this week’s Core Intuition (Episode 609: Accidentally Opt-In).


    U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA): U.S. power grid added 20.2 GW of generating capacity in the first half of 2024

    According to our latest Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory, developers and power plant owners added 20.2 gigawatts (GW) of utility-scale electric generating capacity in the United States during the first half of 2024. This new capacity is 3.6 GW (21%) more than the capacity added during the first six months of 2023. Based on the most recently reported data, developers and owners expect to add another 42.6 GW of capacity in the second half of the year.

    This is good news. There are still issues (for example, not all the additional power is going to replacing existing coal and gas plants; much is supplying the growing demand for large energy consumption such as AI servers, increased space cooling, etc.) but it is nice to see things moving in the right direction.


    Outside: How Your Genetics Impact Your Athletic Performance

    …a new study finds that, of all fitness domains, flexibility is the one most determined by your genes. The study, which is published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, uses data from twin pairs to tease out the respective contributions of genes and environment — talent and training, you might say — for fifteen different fitness tests. Overall, the results support the notion that picking your parents well is a crucial step on the road to athletic stardom, but they also reveal some surprising nuances about how nature and nurture interact.


    Guardian: Science podcast: Summer picks: what does the science say about birth order and personality?

    We all know the cliches about older siblings being responsible, younger ones creative, and middle children being peacemakers. But is there any evidence our position in the family affects our personality? In this episode from March 2024, Madeleine Finlay meets Dr Julia Rohrer, a personality psychologist at the University of Leipzig, to unpick the science behind birth order.

    “Larger families are just very different from smaller families.”

    “There is a real danger of confusing birth order effects with age effects.”

    The “big five” personality traits are: extroversion, emotional stability, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openess to new experience.

    Re-broadcast from earlier this season.


    The Hockey News: NHL vs. PWHL: Here Are 5 Reasons Why The PWHL Is Better

    The NHL has been around for more than a century, and there is a lot to love about the top men’s league in the world, but the PWHL has already managed to outdo the NHL on other fronts. Here are five.

    I find the women’s league far more entertaining than the NHL during the regular season now.


    Financial Post: Electra gets $20 million from US DoD for Ontario cobalt refinery

    The United States Department of Defense says it’s giving US$20 million to Toronto-based Electra Battery Materials Corp. to kickstart construction of what would be North America’s first battery-grade cobalt refinery.

    Electra is trying to restart a mothballed refinery near the town of Cobalt, Ont., but has struggled to raise the remaining estimated US$60 million needed to cover the cost of machinery and equipment.

    ⋮

    Last week, the federal government’s Next Generation Manufacturing Canada announced a $2.8-million grant to Burnaby, B.C.-based Nano One Materials Corp. to further develop its patented “one-pot” process for making cathodes with Worley Chemetics Inc., a Canadian subsidiary of the Australian-based engineering firm.

    This past spring, the U.S. DoD made two grants to Canadian critical mineral exploration companies totalling US$14.7 million.


    Xerox Alto Demo: Xerox Alto Restoration Part 17

    We take you through a demo of our restored Xerox Alto. We go through the Neptune file browser, the Bravo text editor, the Draw and SIL programs, network booting, ftp, telnet, Smalltalk, some games and new programs we have made for the Alto. This demo was developed to be presented live at VCF West 2017. And I mispelled Ken’s last name, it’s Ken Shirriff.

    Xerox PARC must have been a dream to work at!


    Last Updated: 20.Aug.2024 20:55 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:13 AM, Aug 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 19.Aug.2024


    NYT: Peter Marshall, Longtime Host of ‘The Hollywood Squares,’ Dies at 98

    He played straight man to all manner of celebrities, asking questions on what was for many years the most popular game show on television.


    NewsNation: Pesticides cannot be removed by washing fruit: Study

    According to a new study, merely washing fruit is not sufficient to remove residual pesticides and toxic chemicals.

    “Cleaning operations cannot wholly remove pesticides,” the study published this month in American Chemical Society’s journal Nano Letters said.

    The research revealed that pesticides penetrated the apple peel and pulp layers, thus outlining that washing is inadequate.

    Although, once the peel and initial pulp layer were removed; pesticides decreased significantly.


    ScienceAlert: Surprise Alzheimer’s Finding: Brain’s Support Cells May Be Fueling Disease

    Max Planck neurogeneticist Andrew Octavian Sasmita and colleagues demonstrated the involvement of neuron support cells, oligodendrocytes, in abnormal brain plaque formation by removing their ability to create amyloid beta.

    ⋮

    They did this by knocking out the gene behind beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1). As its name suggests, BACE cleaves amyloid-beta precursor protein (APP), which is involved in producing amyloid beta.

    “Oligodendrocytes lacking BACE1 developed about 30 percent fewer plaques,” explains Max Planck neurogeneticist Constanze Depp.

    While inhibiting BACE1 generally has a far greater reduction in plaque formation (over 95 percent) in mice, BACE inhibition appears to cause other debilitating problems including worsening memory and brain volume declines in human clinical trials.


    Manton Reece: Micro.blog server names for 2024

    I like having a theme for naming computers. For the last dozen years, all of my personal computers and hard drives have been named for characters in Hayao Miyazaki films. For servers, I’ve used Disney train-related names. …

    I enjoyed this little diversion.


    Globe: Canadian, U.K. tech entrepreneur among six missing after luxury superyacht sinks off coast of Sicily

    One man died and six people were missing, including British tech entrepreneur Mike Lynch, after a luxury yacht was struck by an unexpectedly violent storm and sank off Sicily early on Monday.

    The British-flagged “Bayesian”, a 56-metre-long (184-ft) sailboat, was carrying 22 people and was anchored just off shore near the port of Porticello when it was hit by ferocious weather, the Italian coast guard said in a statement.

    ⋮

    “We managed to keep the ship in position and after the storm was over, we noticed that the ship behind us was gone,” Karsten Borner told journalists. The other boat “went flat on the water, and then down,” he added.

    CBC:

    Rescuers later recovered the body of the ship’s cook, who was born in Canada and lived in Antigua.


    CNN: SpaceX’s Polaris Dawn mission will put four private citizens in the vacuum of space

    While prior missions to space that were funded by wealthy businesspeople may have conjured images of self-indulgent joy rides, Polaris Dawn is a test mission designed to push boundaries.

    Isaacman, Menon, Gillis and Poteet will spend five days aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule that will soar to altitudes higher than any human has traveled since NASA’s Apollo program ended in the 1970s. Their orbital path will extend high enough to plunge the vehicle and crew into a radiation belt, adding another element of peril to the already treacherous experience of spaceflight.

    This crew of private citizens will also open the hatch of their spacecraft and expose themselves to the vacuum of space, marking the first time such a feat has been attempted by non-government astronauts. During this endeavor, the astronauts will be protected solely by brand-new Extra-Vehicular Activity (EVA) suits, which SpaceX designed and developed in just two and a half years.

    Trying to overlook the overly-exuberant writing style.


    Globe: TD Bank’s dirty laundry: Inside the cultural shift that seeded a money-laundering crisis, succession woes and a leadership exodus

    Inside the cultural shift that seeded a money laundering crisis, succession woes and a leadership exodus.


    Globe: Tories delete Canadian dream video featuring what Liberals say are Russian jets

    “They’re doing a training mission in the sky, getting ready to defend our home and native land,” Poilievre said.

    The two jets that appeared in the video as Poilievre delivered that line were Russian Su-17 and Su-27 jets, according to Defence Minister Bill Blair’s spokesman.


    *CBC: Doug Ford shifts direction on wind power in Ontario

    One of Doug Ford’s first acts as premier of Ontario, just days after taking office in 2018, was cancelling more than 750 renewable energy projects, including a large wind farm that was already partially built. 

    Fast forward to today, and Ford’s Progressive Conservative government is poised to oversee the biggest expansion of green energy that the province has seen in nearly a decade. 

    Ontario has laid out plans to procure an additional 5,000 megawatts of renewable energy by 2034. By comparison: the capacity of all wind power projects currently installed across the province plans about 4,900 megawatts.

    Six lost years.

    Oh, and refurbishing Pickering is not “renewable power”, even though it’s carbon emission free (but extremely slow and financially risky to build and expensive).


    How to Geek: Why You Should Install Python Apps With pipx (and How to Get Started)

    • Installing Python apps can be challenging due to potential conflicts with system packages, but pipx makes it easy by creating virtual environments and managing dependencies for you.
    • Pipx is a user-friendly alternative to pip that installs apps system-wide without requiring sudo privileges, and it helps you add, upgrade, or remove Python apps effortlessly.
    • With pipx, you can install Python CLI apps, run them just like standard Linux commands, and even uninstall them easily. It’s a convenient tool for managing and expanding your app library.

    ⋮

    I strongly discourage installing software at a system level with sudo pip install because this can cause conflicts with your system’s package manager and result in broken functionality, or in the worst case situation, a non-booting system. I’m not alone in this, either, as RealPython and the virtualenv documentation recommend this, and even the official Python docs call out the issue.


    CBC: Trump posts image of fake Taylor Swift endorsement

    Former U.S. president Donald Trump has posted a fake social media image of pop superstar Taylor Swift asking people to vote for him in the November election.

    A Sunday entry by the Republican candidate on Truth Social showed Swift dressed in red, white and blue with a caption that said, “Taylor Swift Wants You To Vote For Donald Trump.”

    “I accept!” Trump wrote.

    Do most Americans want this man as their president?


    Last Updated: 19.Aug.2024 23:23 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:40 AM, Aug 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 18.Aug.2024


    Guardian: Is the hydrogen vehicle dream over? Australian car buyers are making their choice clear

    Experts worry hydrogen cars will delay electrification of transport – but only five were sold in Australia in the last quarter, while EVs sell steadily.

    There is a role for hydrogen, but probably not in consumer automobiles.


    CleanTechnica: Those Denying Climate Crisis Ignore that Moderate Climate Migration Is Freaking Them Out

    It’s the #1 issue for many Americans — stopping immigration from Latin America. However, as Mike Barnard points out, a lot of this immigration is the result of climate disruption where the immigrants are coming from (including the societal problems that come from climate disruption), but many of those same people don’t believe in the findings of thousands of climate scientists and don’t see that climate disruption is going to continue growing the number of people escaping horrible situations and trying to find refuge in the United States.

    In actuality, one of the best ways to combat high levels of immigration from Latin America (if that’s what you want) would be to make countries south of the US safer, more climate resilient, and more economically stable. However, that doesn’t fit into simplistic logic that is much easier to understand (even if wrongly) and support. “Why can’t we just build a massive wall on our southern border? Doesn’t that solve our problem?”


    NewsNation: Pesticides cannot be removed by washing fruit: Study

    According to a new study, merely washing fruit is not sufficient to remove residual pesticides and toxic chemicals.

    “Cleaning operations cannot wholly remove pesticides,” the study published this month in American Chemical Society’s journal Nano Letters said.

    The research revealed that pesticides penetrated the apple peel and pulp layers, thus outlining that washing is inadequate.

    Although, once the peel and initial pulp layer were removed; pesticides decreased significantly.


    Last Updated: 18.Aug.2024 19:23 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:31 AM, Aug 19
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 17.Aug.2024


    Stuff: Rocket Lab ships two satellites to Cape Canaveral launch site for Nasa Mars mission

    Fast Facts

    • Space company Rocket Lab has shipped two Mars-bound spacecraft to Cape Canaveral for launch.
    • The twin spacecraft, known as Blue and Gold, are designed for a mission that will help study the Mars magnetosphere.
    • The mission would measure plasma and magnetic fields around Mars.

    ⋮

    Rocket Lab is an American company with a subsidiary and head office in Auckland.


    Stuff: Ten things I’ll never understand about the US

    Never mind serious issues such as politics and gun-control: as travellers in America, we have a host of more immediate, minor headscratchers to deal with.


    CleanTechnica: Archer Gets Two Big Orders For Its Electric Aircraft

    I wrote the other day about Archer Aviationpreparing for electric air taxi service in Los Angeles and San Francisco for the 2026 World Cup and the 2028 Olympics. A month prior, we wrote about Stellantis (the giant automaker) investing $55 million into Archer. But news from Archer is moving on quickly. The latest announcements from the past few days are that Archer has landed two big orders — one big in volume, and one big because of who the buyer is and what that could mean down the line.

    Future Flight Global signed an agreement with Archer and plans to buy 116 electric “Midnight” aircraft from Archer. That’s a planned purchase totaling $580 million.


    Wikipedia: Canadian Future Party

    The Canadian Future Party (CFP; French: Parti avenir canadien, PAC) is a minor federal political party in Canada that was officially launched in 2024. It describes itself as being politically centrist. It is currently led by interim leader Dominic Cardy.


    The Canadian Future Party: Home

    More than two thirds of Canadians feel politically homeless. They’re worried about growing extremism on the left and right, worried our institutions are growing weaker, even as government gets bigger. The Canadian Future Party has a message for those Canadians: we may have been politically homeless but we are not helpless. Together, we can create a Canada with sensible, bold solutions to the problems our country faces – from health care to housing to the climate crisis.


    WashPo: Jennifer Rubin: Trump’s decline: His interviews and lies get worse

    Trump seems unable to handle reality. His opponent is beating him by multiple metrics, especially crowd size. In response, he posted several obvious lies on Truth Social, claiming that “nobody was there” and that photos and video of Vice President Kamala Harris’s crowds were AI-generated (our own reporters were eyewitnesses to the event). As lawyer and anti-Trump commentator George Conway said on MSNBC, “He has completely lost it. This post is, beyond question, delusional. But is was also inevitable because he realizes … he’s not just running for the presidency, he’s running for his freedom.”

    ⋮

    A glitch-plagued X interview (unable to start for 45 minutes) with Elon Musk, owner of the social media site, only made things worse. People on social media reflected shock at hearing him slur and ramble his way through a softball interview. His obsession with President Joe Biden, who is no longer running, sounds like Trump cannot cope with his actual opponents. A much less alarming performance in the debate effectively ended President Biden’s campaign.

    via Dave Winer


    NYT: Another North Carolina House Collapses Amid Hurricane Ernesto’s Waves

    In Rodanthe, N.C., seven homes have been lost to the ocean in the last four years, as rising sea levels erode shorelines and put more buildings at risk.


    NYT: The Painkiller Used for Just About Anything

    All three are taking the non-opioid pain drug for off-label uses. The only conditions for which gabapentin has been approved for adult use by the Food and Drug Administration are epileptic seizures, in 1993, and postherpetic neuralgia, the nerve pain that can linger after a bout of shingles, in 2002.


    Last Updated: 17.Aug.2024 23:58 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:37 AM, Aug 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 16.Aug.2024


    Wikipedia: Thermoelectric (Peltier) Cooling

    Thermoelectric cooling uses the Peltier effect to create a heat flux at the junction of two different types of materials. A Peltier cooler, heater, or thermoelectric heat pump is a solid-state active heat pump which transfers heat from one side of the device to the other, with consumption of electrical energy, depending on the direction of the current. Such an instrument is also called a Peltier device, Peltier heat pump, solid state refrigerator, or thermoelectric cooler (TEC) and occasionally a thermoelectric battery. It can be used either for heating or for cooling, although in practice the main application is cooling. It can also be used as a temperature controller that either heats or cools.

    This technology is far less commonly applied to refrigeration than vapor-compression refrigeration is. The primary advantages of a Peltier cooler compared to a vapor-compression refrigerator are its lack of moving parts or circulating liquid, very long life, invulnerability to leaks, small size, and flexible shape. Its main disadvantages are high cost for a given cooling capacity and poor power efficiency (a low coefficient of performance or COP). Many researchers and companies are trying to develop Peltier coolers that are cheap and efficient. (See Thermoelectric materials.)


    NYT: Hot Summer Threatens Efficacy of Mail-Order Medications

    The temperatures inside delivery trucks can reach twice the recommended threshold, but federal rules on drug storage conditions do not apply to the booming world of mail-order delivery.

    ⋮

    Mail-order pharmacies say that their packaging is weather resistantand that they take special precautions when medication “requires specific temperature control.” But in a study published last year, independent pharmaceutical researchers who embedded data-logging thermometers inside simulated shipments found that the packages had spent more than two-thirds of their transit time outside the appropriate temperature range, “regardless of the shipping method, carrier, or season.”


    TorStar: Education Minister Todd Smith resigns suddenly

    Veteran Progressive Conservative MPP Todd Smith has resigned suddenly as Premier Doug Ford‘s education minister after just 10 weeks on the job.

    Smith, who has represented Bay of Quinte since 2011, stepped down Friday in a surprise move that will trigger a byelection within six months.

    The unexpected departure will force Ford to appoint a new education minister later Friday afternoon with schools set to reopen in a fortnight.

    Nobody was saying what company or role Smith was moving to.


    TorStar: Court rejects Jacob Hoggard sex assault appeal

    Hoggard was convicted by a jury of sexual assault causing bodily harm in relation to an Ottawa woman who testified he raped her over several hours in a Toronto hotel room in 2016 when she was in her early 20s. She said Hoggard also slapped and choked her, and described bleeding afterward. The jury acquitted Hoggard of raping and groping another complainant, a teenage fan.

    His lawyers argued on appeal that Superior Court Justice Gillian Roberts' decision to allow clinical psychologist Lori Haskell to testify for the Crown about the “neurobiology of trauma” tainted the trial’s fairness. The judge said she believed Haskell’s testimony would help the jury better understand her instructions on avoiding myths and stereotypes in sexual assault cases.


    TorStar: Former Tory is launching a new political party

    A new political party will appear on the ballot in two upcoming by-elections as the Canadian Future Party seeks to introduce itself officially as a centrist option for voters it argues are growing weary of an increasingly polarized environment.

    ⋮

    “It turns out that in the last couple of years there are things worse than having 338 root canals, which is watching as our current political system continues to fight about things that don’t matter and ignore existential threats against Canada,” Cardy said, citing defence, trade and foreign policy as examples.

    Cardy also accused those on the left and right of twisting facts and evidence to suit their political narratives, arguing they are taking Canada to a place where the country can’t even agree on its basic challenges.

    I wonder if the time is right?


    TorStar/CP: New Brunswick’s Point Lepreau nuclear power plant down until mid-November

    New Brunswick’s electrical utility says its sole nuclear generating station will remain shut down until at least mid-November.

    The station at Point Lepreau, N.B., has been off-line since April 6, while NB Power carried out a planned 100-day maintenance outage.

    In a news release Thursday, the utility said that during startup a “critical issue” related to the 660-megawatt power plant’s main generator was identified and needs to be addressed before the station can return to service.


    CBC: Government still hasn’t decided whether CBC CEO should receive a bonus

    The Liberal government said today it has not yet made a decision on whether it will grant a bonus to the head of CBC after the public broadcaster eliminated hundreds of jobs.

    Because of the Privacy Act, it will likely be up to CEO Catherine Tait to publicly disclose it if she does receive one, as she did for the 2021-22 fiscal year at a Canadian Heritage committee hearing. No one has stated publicly whether she was granted a bonus the following year.

    My guess is that they’ll wait for the buzz to die down, and then they’ll grant it.


    Wired: What Is Gemini Live and How Do You Use It?

    Google is rolling out this new voice assistant, and now you can have real-time, natural conversations with its chatbot. Here’s what it’s like.


    howtogeek: How to Play DOS Games on Your iPad

    Apple has been lifting restrictions on game emulation on iOS and iPadOS for months now, and finally it’s possible to get DOS emulation on your mobile Apple devices without jailbreaking. One of the first DOS emulation tools on the App Store is iDOS 3, and here’s how you can get a game running in no time.

    … or Eudora?


    Electrek: This startup’s heat pump water heater syncs with your solar

    Cala’s efficient and intelligent heat pump system heats water based on the patterns of hot water use in the home, as well as homeowner preferences.

    By understanding a home’s hot water patterns, Cala improves hot water availability during times of high demand and minimizes costs. Homeowners can also tailor water heating to their home and priorities, including synchronizing water heating with their rooftop solar system’s power output.

    That gives the homeowner the ability to coordinate water heating with clean electricity production, decrease costs for homes with variable electric rates, and preheat water before potential power disruptions.


    AP: Election 2024: Trump is putting mass deportations at the heart of his campaign

    “Mass Deportation Now!” declared the signs at the Republican National Convention, giving a full embrace to Donald Trump’s pledge to expel millions of migrants in the largest deportation program in American history.

    ⋮

    But Trump and his advisers have other plans. He is putting immigration at the heart of his campaignto retake the White House and pushing the Republican Party towards a bellicose strategy that hearkens back to the 1950s when former President Dwight D. Eisenhower launched a deportation policy known by a racial slur -— “Operation Wetback.”


    The Military Times: Trump belittles Medal of Honor award in campaign speech

    “It’s the equivalent of the congressional Medal of Honor,” Trump said of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. “But the civilian version, it’s actually much better because everyone that gets the Congressional Medal of Honor, they’re soldiers.”

    “They’re either in very bad shape because they’ve been hit so many times by bullets or they’re dead,” he said. “[Adelson] gets it, and she’s a healthy, beautiful woman, and they’re rated equal, but she got the Presidential Medal of Freedom.”

    Trump’s antipathy to service members is well-documented. How can any veteran support him? It’s beyond me.


    CleanTechnica: How I Love My Battery-Electric Chevy Bolt - Let Me Count The Ways

    For those of you who follow my writing, you remember how I struggled last summer about whether to keep my Honda Si with its delightful 6-speed transmission or to switch to an environmentally-friendly electric vehicle for my summer cabin in the CT woods. Ultimately, I decided to trade it in for a used EV, and I purchased a used 2017 Chevy Bolt. I’ve learned a lot about the Bolt over two summers of driving it, and I absolutely love the vehicle. The Bolt has been affordable to own, maintain, insure, and run.

    All Bolts feature a 65 kWh battery pack, affording the EV a 259-mile range. The Bolt EV returns a 120 MPGe or 28 kWh per 100 miles combined energy consumption estimate. Here’s an overview that might convince you too, to add a used Chevy Bolt to your fleet.


    Last Updated: 16.Aug.2024 23:42 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:13 AM, Aug 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 15.Aug.2024


    ScienceAlert: First Major Study Links Cannabis Use Disorder to Deadly Cancers

    A new investigation from the American Head and Neck Society finds that excessive cannabis use disorder may increase the risk of developing any head or neck cancer, including oral, oropharyngeal, nasopharyngeal, salivary gland, and laryngeal cancer.

    The study’s authors, led by epidemiologist Tyler Gallagher from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, say their results should be “interpreted cautiously”, as there is a chance they did not fully control for alcohol and tobacco use, as well as HPV status – all of which can contribute to the risk of developing head or neck cancers.


    Hamilton Spectator: Philanthropist Heidi Balsillie’s heart never left Hamilton

    15.April.2016

    Her philanthropic foundation recently committed millions of dollars to the Abacus educational initiative.

    ⋮

    Meanwhile, she had already long been meeting with the CEO of the Hamilton Community Foundation (HCF) about an education initiative they had in the works called Abacus.

    Abacus is now an established part of the Hamilton Community Foundation.


    Globe: Going off the grid on the rugged Faroe Islands

    The Faroe Islands are as off-the-grid as you can get. Located between Scotland and Iceland, the archipelago of 18 islands may not be as well known as other parts of Scandinavia, but the small nation of 54,000 boasts panoramic views of the North Atlantic ocean and picturesque landscapes framed by majestic cliffs and mountains.

    Even the temperamental weather – they say you can experience all four seasons in a day – adds to the rugged charm of the Faroe Islands.

    The far-flung Danish territory’s unscathed beauty is an ideal destination for visitors searching for remote experiences and foodies who want fresh dining, especially fish. But its reputation only came to fruition in recent years, after the territory bounced back from a population decline.

    Gift link


    Stuff: Study to better understand impact of wind turbines on marine mammals

    “So, say during construction they can look at techniques like creating bubble curtains, air bubble curtains, around the construction area and what that does is it attenuates the noise, so it stops the noise propagating nearly as far.

    “And you could have active listing devices in the water at the time [of construction] and that would detect if whales or dolphins were approaching the area, so then work on the site could be slowed or shut down.”


    Last Updated: 15.Aug.2024 23:53 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:43 AM, Aug 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 14.Aug.2024


    USA Today: Who let Trump, Musk interview happen? X wasn’t the only one glitching

    Forget the glitches, Trump’s X interview got worse when he started talking.

    Of course, things didn’t get better for Trump once the interview was able to proceed.

    He was rambling, babbling on about crowd sizes and immigration and President Joe Biden and whatever else seemed to pass through his mind. He was also badly slurring his words, raising questions about his health, and doing nothing to knock down rising concerns about his age and well-being.

    He sounded like a disoriented, racist Daffy Duck.


    pv magazine: Dutch manufacturer unveils gel lead-acid battery for residential use

    The battery is a gel lead-acid implementation, developed in collaboration with VDL Groep, a diversified Dutch manufacturer in energy, mobility, tech, and more. It features an integrated charging system designed by ESS4U, which optimizes battery life and performance.

    A Qurmit system can store 17.6 kWh of energy, discharging at 2.4 kW and charging at 2 kW. The downside is the weight: the system weighs 550kg, versus a more common home battery, such as the Tesla Powerwall 3, for example, which stores 13.5 kWh and weighs 130kg, using lithium iron phosphate (LFP) chemistry.

    Still, the advantages of the Qurmit are that the batteries operate between -40 C to 55 C, beating LFP batteries at the low and high end, have no such thermal runaway or fire risk, and components are sourced entirely from Europe, claims the company, and made in Eindhoven.

    In addition, recycling is far simpler, and the system can be used indoors. The company claims a lifespan of 20-25 years.


    Guardian: Scientists find humans age dramatically in two bursts – at 44, then 60

    If you have noticed a sudden accumulation of wrinkles, aches and pains or a general sensation of having grown older almost overnight, there may be a scientific explanation. Research suggests that rather than being a slow and steady process, aging occurs in at least two accelerated bursts.

    The study, which tracked thousands of different molecules in people aged 25 to 75, detected two major waves of age-related changes at around ages 44 and again at 60. The findings could explain why spikes in certain health issues including musculoskeletal problems and cardiovascular disease occur at certain ages.

    “We’re not just changing gradually over time. There are some really dramatic changes,” said Prof Michael Snyder, a geneticist and director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Stanford University and senior author of the study.


    Guardian: Flaming out? Burning Man festival fails to sell out for first time in a decade

    For more than a decade, tickets to Burning Man have sold out almost immediately – sometimes in a matter of minutes.

    But this year, less than two weeks before the festival kicks off, tickets are still available – raising questions about the future of the annual desert revelry in the face of the climate crisis and economic instability.

    Burning Man takes place each year in Nevada’s remote Black Rock desert and began on a San Francisco beach in 1986. It has has sold out each year since 2011, said Alysia Dynamik, executive director of the Generator, a maker space in Reno, Nevada, who has attended the festival since 2010.


    TorStar: A historic Hamilton radio station has shut down. Here are other local stations that are closing or being sold

    At least seven Bell stations were sold off to various companies in February, including:

    • CKLY, Lindsay, Ont. to Durham Radio
    • CKPT, Peterborough, Ont. to Durham Radio
    • CKQM, Peterborough, Ont. to Durham Radio
    • CFJR, Brockville, Ont. to My Broadcasting Corporation
    • CJPT, Brockville, Ont. to My Broadcasting Corporation
    • CFLY, Kingston, Ont. to My Broadcasting Corporation
    • CKLC, Kingston, Ont. to My Broadcasting Corporation

    “Our priorities are to aggressively cut costs and manage our liabilities,” John Gossling, co-CEO of Corus, said in a conference earnings call in July.


    Globe: Editorial: How Minnesota is winning – and Alberta is losing – the competition for clean power cash

    Finally, there’s the how-not-to guide, authored by Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. It was two summers ago when this space highlighted Alberta’s perhaps unexpected position as Canada’s capital of wind and solar power. But Alberta is squandering its position with ill-considered political interference, an attack on free enterprise. Last year’s shutdown of wind and solar approvals, alongside a newly erected thicket of red tape, has led to the scrapping of more than four dozen projects. Meanwhile, Ms. Smith’s main focus remains fossil fuels. In January, she suggested a desire to double oil and gas output from current record levels.


    Lux.camera: Process Zero: The Anti-Intelligent Camera

    Process Zero is a new mode in Halide that skips over the standard iPhone image processing system. It produces photos with more detail and allows the photographer greater control over lighting and exposure. This is not a photo filter– it really develops photos at the raw, sensor-data level.

    Just like film, Process Zero photos come with (digital) negatives, affording incredible control to change exposure after the fact. Much like film, it has grain. It works best in daytime or mixed lighting, rather than nighttime shots. Thankfully, unlike film, you don’t need any chemicals to develop these negatives. We give you one dial.

    via Pedro Corá


    Last Updated: 14.Aug.2024 19:43 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:24 AM, Aug 15
  • Strong wind this evening was pushing hard on the cotton grass.

    Soft, white cottongrass blown horizontal amidst the grass.
    → 11:03 PM, Aug 14
  • I recommend the biopic Rather on Netflix. I thought I’d watch 10 minutes and it would be too laudatory to stomach but it drew me in.

    → 10:44 PM, Aug 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 13.Aug.2024


    SportsNet: What to expect next in Oilers-Blues offer-sheet drama

    A double offer sheet deployed against a cash-strapped contender. This hook is going to be hard for the Edmonton Oilers to wriggle off.

    An Oilers roster without many young, cheap players just lost its two primary candidates, as defenceman Philip Broberg and forward Dylan Holloway accepted offer sheets from the St. Louis Blues for significantly more than their market value.

    But are the numbers — $4,580,917 for Broberg, $2,290,457 for Holloway, both on two-year contracts — so far out of whack that Edmonton will simply say goodbye to one or both players, the way the Montreal Canadiens did when Carolina gave Jesperi Kotkaniemi that $6.1 million deal back in 2021?


    UPI: Red meat contains type of iron linked to diabetes risk

    People who ate the most foods high in heme iron — red meat and other animal products, mainly — had a 26% higher risk of Type 2 diabetes than those who ate the least, researchers reported Tuesday in the journal Nature Metabolism.

    In fact, heme iron accounted for more than half of the Type 2 diabetes risk associated with unprocessed red meat, researchers found.

    But non-heme iron, which is found in plant-based foods, had no link at all with Type 2 diabetes, results show.


    Electrek: VW electric Golf may come sooner than expected with Rivian’s help

    Thanks to Rivian’s software expertise, the long-awaited electric VW Golf could hit the market sooner than expected. Volkswagen is reportedly considering pulling forward the Golf EV launch despite delaying its Tesla-rivaling Trinity EV again.


    TorStar: As drama erupted over the Green Party’s leadership, Elizabeth May wrote a letter to say she would step down

    Elizabeth May considered stepping down as leader of the Green Party to make way for former deputy leader Jonathan Pedneault to be appointed as her successor before Pedneault ultimately quit last month, the Star has learned.

    It was one of several options discussed at a private meeting of the party’s federal council the night before Pedneault resigned and left the party, May confirmed after the Star obtained a draft of an email she was preparing to send to party members had the leadership been transferred.

    The party is tearing itself apart with these petty distractions. In the end, they’re losing all credibility as a choice to govern.


    TorStar: Artificial sweetener erythritol linked to blood clots: study

    The new study adds to mounting evidence that artificial sweeteners like erythritol, often used in low-calorie and low-sugar food and drinks, can increase the risk of heart disease.

    A new study from researchers at the Cleveland Clinic – a non-profit medical institute based in Ohio – and published in Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, found that erythritol, a sugar substitute often blended with stevia, was linked to an increased risk of heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular events.

    The study builds upon a growing body of research that has found dangers in consuming large amounts of sugar-alternatives.

    Nearly a year ago, the World Health Organization warned that artificial sweeteners like aspartame and stevia (which is often blended with erythritol) – often found in diet sodas – were linked to a greater risk of type-2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and death in adults. Aspartame was also deemed a “possible” cause of cancer by the World Health Organization. New regulations in Canada published in 2022 mean manufacturers are no longer required to label some artificial sweeteners, like aspartame, on the front of packaging and do not have to disclose the miligram per serving in the list of ingredients.


    Electrek: Biden doubles tariff-free solar cell import quota set by Trump

    A White House proclamation released late yesterday increased the volume of silicon solar cells that can enter the US tariff-free from 5 gigawatts (GW) to 12.5 GW. The tariff is currently set at 14.25%.

    Donald Trump imposed the tariff-rate quota (TRQ) on solar cells under Sec. 201 of the 1974 Trade Act in 2018 to protect the US solar manufacturing sector against cheaper Asian (mainly Chinese) imports. Biden indicated in May that he would consider raising the TRQ if solar cell imports approached the 5 GW level.


    ScienceAlert: Oropouche Virus Outbreak Hits Europe as First Deaths Confirmed in Brazil

    Health officials have issued a warning to travellers after 19 cases of the insect-borne illness Oropouche virus were confirmed for the first time ever in Europe. Those who had tested positive for the virus had recently returned from holiday in Cuba and Brazil.

    Parts of South America and Cuba are currently in the midst of an ongoing outbreak of Oropouche virus, with cases many times higher than normal. The first ever deaths from Oropouche virus were also confirmed recently in Brazil, adding to concerns about the current outbreak.

    Oropouche virus is an arthropod-borne virus – meaning it’s transmitted to humans if they’re bitten by infected midges or mosquitoes. It’s the most prevalent arthropod-borne viral disease in south America after dengue virus.


    Last Updated: 13.Aug.2024 23:08 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:11 AM, Aug 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 12.Aug.2024


    WashPo: Elon Musk’s embrace of Trump turns off some Tesla fans

    The entrepreneur’s provocative online posts repel some EV buyers, but he may be winning over some conservatives, analysts and consumers say.

    Drivers who have bought or considered buying Tesla vehicles are now eyeing EVs from competitors, partially because of Musk’s polarizing persona or recent endorsement of former president Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign.

    The backlash comes as Tesla is encountering more competition in the EV market as the biggest automakers electrify their lineups. The company has pioneered and dominated sales of electric vehicles in the United States and has an unrivaled charging network. But in the second quarter, Tesla saw its share of new EV sales drop below 50 percent for the first time, according to Cox Automotive, a 10 percentage point decline from a year earlier. Market-research firms have said Tesla’s reputation among consumers has been slipping in recent years, and the company’s stock price has declined 19.5 percent this year.


    Guardian: Justice review calls for end to child imprisonment in England

    In a review, they argue that child imprisonment is beyond reform and that responsibility for children who have to be deprived of their liberty should be transferred from the Ministry of Justice to the Department for Education.

    The review is published 20 years after the deaths of 14-year-old Adam Rickwood and 15-year-old Gareth Myatt in children’s prisons.

    Rickwood killed himself after being restrained at Hassockfield secure training centre (STC); Myatt, who weighed less than seven stone (44kg), died after being restrained by three G4S officers at Rainsbrook STC.


    CBC: Travellers accuse screening officers at Ottawa airport of ‘unprofessional’ behaviour

    CATSA says complaints represent ‘very small fraction’ of number of passengers screened.


    HowToGeek: Tesla’s Cybertruck Is Now Even More Expensive

    • Rear-Wheel Drive was $60,990 but is no longer offered
    • All-Wheel Drive was $79,990 but is now $99,990
    • Cyberbeast was $99,990 but is now $119,990

    Cult of Mac: Patreon iPhone app forced to charge Apple’s 30% App Store fee

    Patreon, a service that many authors, artists, etc. use to get funding from fans, has to switch its iPhone/iPad application to Apple’s in-app purchase system by November. The company criticized the requirement on Monday, and pointed out this will add Apple’s 30% App Store fee to all new memberships purchased through the iOS software.

    But Patreon isn’t being singled out — Apple makes virtually all applications use its purchasing system. Not that’s everyone is happy about it.


    Guardian: Editorial: The Guardian view on nature-friendly farming: England’s green subsidies are working

    Unlike the common agricultural policy, which mainly subsidises landowners on the basis of acreage farmed, Elms payments were designed to promote nature. Wildlife has been massively depleted in recent decades due to intensified agriculture and the use of chemicals. Measures that qualify for this new form of support include hedgerow and peat conservation, the creation of landscapes for skylarks and organic fruit-growing.

    The research, which included arable, grassland and hill farmers, showed that moths, butterflies and bats have all grown more numerous in the places where farmers had adopted new methods. In total, 1,358 species were recorded. In lowland areas, the study pointed to the importance for butterflies of habitat diversity, with features including woodland and hedgerows.


    Discover Magazine: Prehistoric Humans Had ADHD, Too, But the Trait Hasn’t Adapted to Modern Life

    Research shows that people with ADHD are better at foraging, an essential skill for prehistoric Homo sapiens.


    CBC: CBC paid out $18.4 million in bonuses in 2024 after it eliminated hundreds of jobs

    More than $3.3 million of that sum was paid to 45 executives.

    That means those executives got an average bonus of over $73,000, which is more than the median family income after taxes in 2022, according to Statistics Canada.


    Ottawa Citizen: Here’s what the pay of an Ontario family doctor looks like

    By any measure, Ontario is in the midst of a full-blown family doctor crisis as a growing number of physicians flee the practice, leaving millions of people without access to primary care. There are multiple reasons for the exodus, but doctors say the key ones include poor pay, the rising cost of business, burdensome paperwork and high workloads.

    But there is more to it than that. Family doctors say everything about the practice today is so stressful that the job is no longer as fulfilling as it once was. “Even though I really love it, I can see how if I was at the other end of the spectrum as a graduate, I may not choose it knowing what I know now,” says Ottawa family doctor Michael Yachnin, a 40-year veteran.

    “Family practice is more challenging and less satisfying today. Some of the things that provide superior care are not possible.”


    Daring Fireball: ‘Objects of Our Life’ — Steve Jobs at the 1983 International Design Conference in Aspen

    New from the Steve Jobs Archive: an hourlong video of young Steve Jobs delivering a talk on design in 1983. Jony Ive wrote a splendid introduction:

    The revolution Steve described over 40 years ago did of course happen, partly because of his profound commitment to a kind of civic responsibility. He cared, way beyond any sort of functional imperative. His was a victory for beauty, for purity and, as he would say, for giving a damn. He truly believed that by making something useful, empowering and beautiful, we express our love for humanity.


    Last Updated: 12.Aug.2024 22:01 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 10:33 PM, Aug 12
  • The NYT WordleBot apparently lies when it says there was only one possibility left.

    There was only one possible solution left - and this wasn’t it. ([redacted] is a valid guess, but it’s unlikely to be a solution based on what I’ve learned from playing Wordle.) But there’s still only one solution remaining. You should solve the puzzle on your next turn.

    → 3:01 PM, Aug 12
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 11.Aug.2024


    Saturday did not happen. There was no Internet. (And “boo” to the NYT Wordle developers who don’t allow for not everyone having ubiquitous 24-7 Internet access in their streak calculations.)


    NewsNation: Almost 70 swing state officials are pro-Trump election deniers: Report

    • Journalist penned list of swing state officials who are election deniers
    • Officials part of ‘a decentralized network of pro-Trump Republicans’
    • Biden shared concerns about local officials in sit-down CBS interview

    Cult of Mac: Apple unlikely to charge for Apple Intelligence anytime soon

    Apple does not plan to charge for Apple Intelligence in the next three years. Apparently, the company wants to add more advanced AI features before charging for it.

    ⋮

    Some analysts recently claimed Apple could charge as much as $20 per month for Apple Intelligence. Given the billions of dollars tech giants are investing in their AI features, it’s not surprising that they eventually want to charge for them.

    Samsung has already revealed that its Galaxy AI suite features are free until the end of 2025. After that, it will become a paid service, though there’s no word on its pricing yet.


    Last Updated: 12.Aug.2024 01:10 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:10 AM, Aug 12
  • A serene river winds through a lush green landscape under a mixed blue & cloudy sky.
    → 6:38 PM, Aug 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 09.Aug.2024


    Wikipedia: List of generic and genericized trademarks

    The following three lists of generic and genericized trademarks are:
    • marks which were originally legally protected trademarks, but have been genericized and have lost their legal status due to becoming generic terms,
    • marks which have been abandoned and are now generic terms
    • marks which are still legally protected as trademarks, at least in some jurisdictions

    via Dave Winer


    CleanTechnica: EV Skeptics Clinging to Anything to Try to Deny Obvious Tech Transition

    It’s funny – this article idea came to mind just before I saw Steve Hanley’s latest piece. That article was focused on a survey of US auto dealerships showing that they are not particularly eager or excited to sell EVs. I wasn’t specifically thinking about auto dealerships, but something has been irking me for several months and a recent conversation helped me to pinpoint the issue a little better and create a story about it, and auto dealerships are definitely part of that story.

    Let’s start with the core story: the auto world is transitioning to electric vehicles. That’s happening, and it will keep happening, and there’s no reason why EVs wouldn’t replace gas cars just as cars replaced horses about 100 years ago.

    ⋮

    And it wasn’t all about Tesla. As the EV market grew, more and more competitive models came out, more and more auto brands got serious about EVs, and EV market share grew more and more. EV market share grew steadily in the US, but it exploded in Europe and China. In fact, we just got news that more than 50% of new car sales were electric cars in China in July. Europe has reached 22% share of the market.


    Last Updated: 11.Aug.2024 17:00 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 5:03 PM, Aug 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 08.Aug.2024


    NYT: Tim Walz’s Rise in the Democratic Party Was No Accident

    More than a year ago, Tim Walz and his aides decided to be ready in case an irresistible opportunity arose. Their tightly held strategy helped them catch political lightning in a bottle.


    Raspberry Pi: Raspberry Pi Pico 2, our new $5 microcontroller board, on sale now

    We’re happy to announce the launch of Raspberry Pi Pico 2, our second-generation microcontroller board, built on RP2350: a new high-performance, secure microcontroller designed here at Raspberry Pi.

    With a higher core clock speed, twice the memory, more powerful Arm cores, new security features, and upgraded interfacing capabilities, Pico 2 delivers a significant performance and feature uplift, while retaining hardware and software compatibility with earlier members of the Pico series.

    ⋮

    We’ve seen some amazing demonstrations of that power: from our very own Graham Sanderson’s port of DOOM; to Dmitry Grinberg’s port of PalmOS; to Kevin Vance’s “CPU-less” Commodore 64 cartridge.

    ⋮

    While there is relatively little stock in channel today, Pico 2 is in full-rate production with our friends at Sony. Many of our Approved Reseller partners are operating backorder and reservation schemes, and we will be shipping units to them on a regular basis over the next few weeks.

    Before the end of the year, we expect to ship a wireless-enabled Pico 2 W, using the same Infineon 43439 modem as Pico W, and versions of both Pico 2 and Pico 2 W with pre-installed 0.1-inch headers.


    Last Updated: 08.Aug.2024 23:59 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:33 AM, Aug 9
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 07.Aug.2024


    Guardian: Kamala Harris introduces running mate Tim Walz at raucous Philadelphia rally

    06.Aug.2024

    Harris announced the 60-year-old governor as her running mate on Tuesday morning, hours after she formally secured the Democratic nomination, becoming the first woman of color to lead a major party ticket. With the governor’s selection, Democrats capped one of the wildest periods in American political life that led Biden to abandon his re-election bid and endorse his vice-president last month.

    Arriving on stage to Beyoncé’s Freedom, the newly minted Democratic ticket rode a weeks-long wave of momentum from an unusually exuberant party happy to be looking forward.


    Guardian: Polls show Kamala Harris moving ahead of Donald Trump in 2024 US election

    Among recent national head-to-head polls, SurveyUSA put Harris up three points ahead of Trump, 48%-45%; Morning Consult put her up four points, 48%-44%; YouGov and CBS News made it a one-point Harris lead, 50%-49%; and University of Massachusetts Amherst put Harris up three, 46%-43%.

    Those results were mostly within the margin of error.

    But Tatishe Nteta, provost professor of political science at UMass Amherst and director of its poll, pointed to a key finding: a seven-point swing to the Democrat since January, when Trump led Joe Biden by four.


    UPI: SpaceX delays Crew-9 astronaut launch amid uncertainty over Boeing Starliner

    SpaceX has delayed this month’s Crew-9 astronaut launch to Sept. 24, to accommodate a traffic jam at the International Space Station as Boeing’s Starliner remains stalled at the orbiting laboratory.


    Kansas Reflector: Spyware turned this Kansas high school into a ‘red zone’ of dystopian surveillance

    I’m convinced of this because I’ve been following the news coverage of Lawrence High School. Just imagine you’re a student at Lawrence High (go Chesty the Lion!) and every homework assignment, email, photo, and chat on your school-supplied device is being monitored by artificial intelligence for indicators of drug and alcohol use, anti-social behavior, and suicidal inclinations.

    That’s been the reality since last November, when the district began a $162,000 contract with Gaggle, a Dallas-based student safety technology company to provide around-the-clock surveillance. If a word or an image triggers an alert in the AI software, the result could range from the student being sent to an administrator to being referred to online counseling to getting a visit from local police.


    LapCat: Deluge of Fake Mac App Store Reviews

    Yesterday I discovered a deluge of recent fake customer reviews for a number of top paid apps in the United States Mac App Store. (Each country has its own version of the App Store with separate reviews.) I’ve now checked the reviews for all of the current top 40 paid apps in the Mac App Store, and 8 of those apps have a large number of fake reviews during the period of June 11 through July 19. What the 8 apps have in common, besides the top paid list and the fake reviews, is that they’re all relatively cheap, from $1.99 to $4.99 USD in price. Note that only buyers can leave App Store ratings and reviews for upfront paid apps, which makes this deluge of fake reviews especially odd. (Recipients of promo codes from the developer cannot leave ratings and reviews.) Here’s the list of apps I found: …


    On my Om (Om Malik): Google Is Mind-Bogglingly Bad

    A few days ago I wondered aloud, “What would happen if Google CEO Sundar Pichai decided to sign up for Google Cloud using a secret identity, without getting help from any of his staff?” I added, “Every single CEO should try to use their service as if they were a new customer that the company is going to try and win over. That alone will be a 10x boost in tech products!”

    It’s too bad Sundar isn’t going to do this, because if anything his company needs a real kick in the pants. It makes so many bad product decisions that it’s mind-boggling.

    My most common under-my-breath muttering these days: “Do they even use their own product?!”


    CBC: Trump repeats conspiracy theory that PM Trudeau ‘could be’ son of Fidel Castro

    Former U.S. president Donald Trump repeated a baseless claim about Justin Trudeau’s parentage in an interview on Monday, suggesting that the prime minister “could be” the son of former Cuban president Fidel Castro.

    The current Republican presidential candidate sat down for an interview with streamer Adin Ross and was asked to react to photos of various U.S. and world leaders.

    When shown a photo of the prime minister, Trump immediately brought up the conspiracy theory, citing an unnamed “they” as his source.

    Of course, the Trudeaus didn’t visit Cuba until four years after Justin was born!

    “Pay no attention to the Kamala behind the curtain!”


    MacRumors: Apple to Address ‘0.0.0.0’ Security Vulnerability in Safari 18

    This decision comes after researchers from Israeli cybersecurity startup Oligo Security said they discovered a zero-day security vulnerability that allows a malicious actor to access private data on a user’s internal private network. The researchers will present their findings this weekend at the DEF CON hacking conference in Las Vegas.

    “Exploiting 0.0.0.0-day can let the attacker access the internal private network of the victim, opening a wide range of attack vectors,” said Avi Lumelsky, a researcher at Oligo Security.

    The researchers responsibly disclosed the vulnerability to Apple, Google, and Mozilla. More details are available on the AppSec Village website.


    9to5Mac: Apple releases iOS 17.6.1 for iPhone with ‘important bug fixes’

    Apple’s release notes for iOS 17.6.1 and iPadOS 17.6.1 say: “This update includes important bug fixes and addresses an issue that prevents enabling or disabling Advanced Data Protection.”

    Advanced Data Protection is an optional feature that expands end-to-end encryption to a number of additional iCloud services, including iCloud device backups, Messages backups, Photos, and much more.


    Last Updated: 07.Aug.2024 13:24 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:40 AM, Aug 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 06.Aug.2024


    CleanTechnica: EV Battery Pack Costs 90% Lower in 2023 Than in 2008

    The Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Vehicle Technologies Office estimates the cost of a electric vehicle lithium-ion battery pack for a light-duty vehicle declined 90% between 2008 and 2023 (using 2023 constant dollars). The 2023 estimate is $139/kWh on a usable-energy basis for production at scale of at least 100,000 units per year. That compares to $1,415/kWh in 2008. The decline in cost is due to improvements in battery technologies and chemistries, as well as improvements in manufacturing and increases in production volume.

    Pretty cool. What a time we live in!


    Electrek: The real story behind EV charger-reported uptime vs. actual uptime

    Los Angeles-based EV supply equipment (EVSE) O&M service provider ChargerHelp examined what’s causing reliability issues for EV public charging infrastructure. The findings are in a new report, “ChargerHelp Annual Reliability Report: The State of EV Charging and the Driver Experience,” which was reviewed and endorsed by Professor Gil Tal, director of the Electric Vehicle Research Center at UC Davis.

    ⋮

    The report explored three interrelated categories: the discrepancy between reported uptime and true uptime; how reliability varies by EV charging infrastructure’s age, state, and network; and what drives downtime and what it takes to improve uptime.


    Wikipedia: POSSE (disambiguation)

    POSSE, a social web and IndieWeb abbreviation for “Publish (on your) Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere”, a strategy for content producers.

    TIL!


    dtinth (GitHub): Comic Mono | comic-mono-font

    A legible monospace font… the very typeface you’ve been trained to recognize since childhood. This font is a fork of Shannon Miwa’s Comic Shanns (version 1).

    Download

    • ComicMono.ttf
    • ComicMono-Bold.ttf

    via Otávio (@otaviocc)


    Matt Birchler: Shout out to the best way to make a cup of coffee

    This is a simple appreciation post for the AeroPresscoffee maker. If I want to make a single cup of coffee and I want it to be as good as possible, I’ll reach for the AeroPress every time.

    … since I happen to have a mug of AeroPress-made coffee sitting beside me.


    Electrek: SunPower files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

    Solar developer SunPower has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the US, and it’s selling parts of its business to Complete Solaria for $45 million in cash.


    Bloomberg (Yahoo): Stumbles for Embattled Solar Firm SunPower End in Bankruptcy

    Over the course of less than two years, the once-darling of the industry was forced to fire workers to cut costs, restate earnings and default on a credit agreement. In 2024, the firm replaced its chief executive officer, restructured its operations and lost its accountant.

    ⋮

    “SunPower’s travails are emphatically a company-specific issue and should not be seen as a comment on the underlying demand for US residential solar,” Pavel Molchanov, an analyst with Raymond James, said by email. “It has been a difficult six months for SunPower.”


    Electrek: Tesla sues EV charging accessory aimed at preventing carjacking

    Some EV owners are afraid of carjacking at public charging stations due to the fact that if you are in your vehicle while charging, you are a somewhat easy target because if some people rush your car, you’d have to get out to unplug before you can escape with your vehicle.

    It’s not a very common problem in the EV industry, but it’s apparently big enough that a company, EVject, decided to build a product around it.

    The $299 EVject Escape Connector is designed to be able to separate itself from the charge connector by driving away.

    ⋮

    Tesla is now suing the company in California court, claiming that the connector can reach dangerous temperatures, which creates a safety risk. Tesla wrote in the complaint (via Jalopnik):

    In the event of an over-temperature condition in the Connector, the lack of overtemperature protection creates a safety risk. Testing of high-current simulated charging through the Connector, utilized in conjunction with a Tesla Supercharger cable and Tesla EV charge port, demonstrated that surface temperatures of the Connector may reach as high as 100C, after 30 minutes of charging at 420 ADC.


    Electrek: This anodeless, compressionless solid-state battery could be the next big thing [Update]

    Maryland-based ION Storage Systems is about to dramatically accelerate the commercialization of its unique solid-state batteries (SSBs).


    Kottke: Amazing stat about the disappearance of bands from the UK music charts

    Amazing stat about the disappearance of bands from the UK music charts (29:40 mark): in the first half of the 80s, bands were #1 for 146 weeks; the first half of the 90s, it was 141 weeks. In the 20s so far: 3 weeks that songs by bands were #1. 🤯


    NYT: Kennedy Fights to Stay on Ballot, but Everyone’s Talking About the Bear

    Mr. Kennedy has a home in Los Angeles he shares with his wife, actress Cheryl Hines and — occasionally — some ravens. Mr. Kennedy’s federal filings for president list a California address, and California is also the home of his running mate, Nicole Shanahan. Under a constitutional oddity, presidential and vice-presidential candidates who come from the same state are ineligible to receive its electoral votes. And California is the nation’s richest electoral prize.

    But Mr. Kennedy’s New York petitions listed an address in Katonah, N.Y. Lawyers for the voters trying to bounce him from the ballot say that address is not his home but that of a friend, arguing that Mr. Kennedy “does not, and has never, resided” there.


    Last Updated: 06.Aug.2024 21:49 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:31 AM, Aug 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 05.Aug.2024


    Guardian: The dead hang delight: how this quick, surprisingly simple exercise can change your life

    Would you like to strengthen your upper body and core muscles, while improving your flexibility and breathing? Here’s how to do it, in the time it takes to boil a kettle.


    TorStar: Tiny particles linked to deaths in Toronto

    Ultrafine — and unregulated — air particles from vehicle emissions and industries in Canada’s two largest cities are linked to an estimated 1,100 premature deaths each year, a new study found, with 600 of those deaths in Toronto.

    In Toronto and Montreal neighbourhoods near airports or heavy traffic, nanosized particles from burning fuels such as diesel are so small they have escaped significant research and oversight, said a “first-of-its kind” study, published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

    ⋮

    “Where you live determines how much of this exposure you have. And people who are more exposed to these kinds of particles die sooner from non-accidental mortality but also cardiovascular mortality, respiratory mortality and cancer mortality,” he said.


    TorStar: Letters: Predictable consequences of the Online News Act

    re: Canadians are encountering fewer legitimate news sources on social media, study finds, Aug. 1

    When the government introduced the Online News Act, we knew Meta would stop carrying news on Facebook, Instagram and other platforms, and that this would hurt local journalism and allow misinformation to go unchallenged. A year later, this is exactly what has happened. Ottawa seems to believe that Facebook has committed an act of aggression against Canada. Can the government not accept responsibility for the direct consequences of its own law?

    David Arthur, Cambridge, Ont.


    Canadaland podcast 5.Aug.2024: The Astonishing Failure of Trudeau’s Media Bailout

    Justin Ling has kind of had it.

    While the veteran political journalist has endless patience for people in power trying to do the right thing, he can’t stand when a government refuses to see reality. So when Canada’s Heritage Minister reacted with surprise to the suggestion that, despite everything her government’s done for it, the country’s news media is still worse off than ever — well, that’s enough to radicalize a fella.

    On this week’s show, Karyn and Jonathan talk to Justin about his dispiriting interview with Pascale St-Onge, why he believes the Trudeau government’s efforts to save the media have been across-the-board failures, and what it would take to actually turn things around for this industry before it finally collapses and takes Canada’s democracy down with it. [Pocket Casts]

    Also has links to:

    • Justin Trudeau tried to save journalism. This is why he failed — Toronto Star
    • The Local News Research Project
    • Old News, New Reality: A Year of Meta’s News Ban in Canada — Media Ecosystem Observatory

    TorStar: Is college prof employed between terms? Immigration says no

    In her submissions, John provided a letter from her employer, listing the duties she was required to perform between semesters as well as her union’s collective agreement to explain how the wage was structured and why pay stubs only covered the dates of the academic semester. She maintained continuous employment benefits, including health and dental insurance, between semesters, as proof that she was deemed employed during school breaks. 

    By refusing to accept that John was paid to work during school breaks, the Immigration Department is essentially suggesting that her employer “unfairly and illegally” had her perform unpaid work between semesters, said the woman’s lawyer Luke McRae. 


    Last Updated: 05.Aug.2024 19:48 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:58 AM, Aug 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 04.Aug.2024


    Stuff: From the bottom of a lake, a Russian plane lands at the Smithsonian

    Eighty years after it was downed in World War II and 4,000 miles from where it helped drive back the German invasion of Soviet Russia, the Smithsonian said, the Ilyushin IL-2 is being readied for a historic debut at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington.

    ⋮

    The front half of the body is steel. “Every time you try to do something, it hurts you,” said Hare. “This plane bites you constantly. I’ve got so many scars and dings. I even got one today.”

    The steel was to protect the pilot. “The pilot was surrounded in armour,” Hare said, adding, “but the poor gunner in the back didn’t have anything.” The rear wooden section provided little protection.


    Bloomberg: Why CVS and Target Locking Up Products Is Backfiring

    CVS, Target and other chains have barricaded everything from toiletries to cleaning supplies. It’s backfired in almost every way.


    NBC: FDA approves blood test to screen for colon cancer

    The Food and Drug Administration on Monday approved Guardant Health’s blood test, called Shield, to screen for colon cancer. The test isn’t meant to replace colonoscopies, but is generating enthusiasm among doctors who say it has the potential to boost the dismal rate of screenings for the second-highest cause of cancer death in the United States.

    Shield has previously been available to doctors as a screening tool, at an out-of-pocket cost of $895. With the FDA approval, Medicare and private insurance companies are much more likely to cover the cost of the blood test, making it more widely accessible for patients.

    ⋮

    This is the second blood test to screen for colon cancer; Epigenomics' Epi proColon was approved in 2016. But it’s rarely used, Smith said, because of concerns about its accuracy. It’s also not covered by Medicare or private insurance.


    Guardian: ‘Not stranded in space’: how Nasa lost control of Boeing Starliner narrative

    Stone said it was probably a mistake for Boeing and Nasa to have announced an expected end date for Starliner’s first human mission instead of adopting an “it takes as long as it takes” approach.

    “The expected reaction, particularly from the public, is something has gone wrong and they can’t get back. And yes, something has gone wrong. But the statement that they can’t get back is most definitely incorrect.”


    538: Harris and Trump are tied in 538’s new polling averages

    Good news, polling fans: 538 now has polling averages for the new presidential matchup between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. As of Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern, our average of national polls says Harris has the support of 45.0 percent of voters, while Trump garners 43.5 percent.


    Last Updated: 04.Aug.2024 16:50 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:57 AM, Aug 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 03.Aug.2024


    NYT: Aerosmith Retires From Touring, Citing Steven Tyler’s Vocal Injury

    Last year, the band’s frontman, Steven Tyler, suffered a vocal injury during a show, and the farewell tour was postponed. The band announced its retirement on Friday, saying a full recovery was not possible.


    NYT: Billy Joel Brings Madison Square Garden Residency to an End

    The singer and songwriter, 75, wrapped his decade-long residency at Madison Square Garden on Thursday night. Up next? A new era in his live career.


    PBS News: Unemployment rise shakes stock markets, yet recession signals have been wrong — so far

    A surprising rise in the U.S. unemployment rate last month has rattled financial markets and set off new worries about the threat of a recession — but it could also prove to be a false alarm.

    Friday’s jobs report, which also showed hiring slowed last month, coincides with other signs the economy is cooling amid high prices and elevated interest rates. A survey of manufacturing firms showed activity weakened noticeably in July. Hurricane Beryl, however, hit Texas during the same week the government compiles its job data and could have held back job gains.


    9to5Mac: Warren Buffett sells nearly half of Berkshire’s stake in Apple

    According to filings published today, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sold nearly 50% of its stake in Apple during the second quarter of 2024, after the firm already trimmed their stake by around 13% in the first quarter. Berkshire Hathaway has been rapidly building up its cash reserves in recent months, trimming positions in some of its major holdings.

    When Berkshire Hathaway initially sold 13% of its stake in Apple in Q1 of 2024, they suggested that the move was primarily for tax purposes on an earnings call. Warren Buffett also reassured investors that Apple would remain their biggest holding, unless “something dramatic happens that really changes capital allocation”. They also trimmed their position by around 1% in Q4 of 2023.

    However, this much larger sell seems to suggest some form of uncertainty around Apple and the overall market. Berkshire Hathaway’s cash reserves have now reached a total of $277 billion, up $88 billion from the previous quarter. At one point, Berkshire Hathaway’s stake in AAPL was around half of its entire portfolio.


    Wealth of Geeks: I Bought a 2024 Tesla EV — Here’s 14 Things They Don’t Tell You

    Before you think I’m some early adopter with extra funds to blow, let me share that my husband and I are an average, two-income American couple with two toddler boys and another on the way. We value practicality and affordability because we, too, feel the pressure of inflation. We also like to have fun when we can and aren’t afraid to try out the latest and greatest technology.

    A Tesla Model Y starts at $39,000 US.


    Last Updated: 03.Aug.2024 16:11 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:09 AM, Aug 4
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 02.Aug.2024


    Move the Way You Want 🚙


    Edmonton Journal: Former Royal Alberta Museum to be converted to green space

    It’s the end of an era in Edmonton, as the site of the former Royal Alberta Museum (RAM) is to be demolished to make way for a new green space.

    The site, which was the home of the RAM from 1967-2015, will be converted into a green space where “families can gather again,” according to a release from Alberta Infrastructure. The plan is to demolish the main building of the RAM while maintaining the Government House and Carriage House buildings.


    WashPo: $10M cash withdrawal drove secret probe into whether Trump took money from Egypt

    Political appointees rejected efforts to search for additional evidence investigators believed might provide answers, then closed the case.

    Five days before Donald Trump became president in January 2017, a manager at a bank branch in Cairo received an unusual letter from an organization linked to the Egyptian intelligence service. It asked the bank to “kindly withdraw” nearly $10 million from the organization’s account — all in cash.

    Inside the state-run National Bank of Egypt, employees were soon busy placing bundles of $100 bills into two large bags, according to records from the bank. Four men arrived and carried away the bags, which U.S. officials later described in sealed court filings as weighing a combined 200 pounds and containing what was then a sizable share of Egypt’s reserve of U.S. currency.

    Developing story…


    WashPo: An Indiana cop abused a teen in his police car. How will he be punished?

    She was 16 years old when South Bend police officer Timothy Barber showed up at the Chick-fil-A where she worked in the summer of 2021. Barber, who was 20 years older, knew the girl wanted to be a police officer. He offered to give her rides home in his patrol car.

    Instead, what Barber did to her in that patrol car led to him being charged with child seduction, official misconduct, public indecency and public nudity.

    Very disturbing. It’s impossible to understand the position of the DA.


    Tony Kahn: Morning Stories

    In 2004 I heard about a new development called “podcasting” and decided to take advantage of it to put the show on the web — and it changed everything. Almost overnight our audience of 20,000 grew to hundreds of thousands of listeners around the world (over half of them from China!) eager not only to hear our stories but to tell us stories of their own.

    Lots of (relatively short) interesting podcast episodes from a pioneer of the format.

    It was nice to hear Oliver Sacks’ voice again in one.

    [via Dave Winer]


    MacRumors: Apple Says iOS 18’s ChatGPT Integration on Track for Later This Year

    Apple CEO Tim Cook on Thursday said that ChatGPT will be integrated across iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia “by the end of the calendar year.” He shared this timeframe during Apple’s quarterly earnings call with analysts.

    ⋮

    With user permission, Siri will be able to show ChatGPT answers directly in response to questions and other prompts. ChatGPT will also be an option for Apple’s system-wide Writing Tools feature, allowing users to generate text and images. Apple said ChatGPT will be powered by OpenAI’s latest GPT-4o model on its platforms.

    iPhone, iPad, and Mac users will be able to use ChatGPT for free, without creating an account, and ChatGPT Plus subscribers will be able to connect their accounts to access paid features on these devices. Apple said OpenAI will not store ChatGPT requests made from its devices, and it said users' IP addresses will be obscured.


    Business Insider: Judge Casts Doubt on Restoration of Elon Musk’s Tesla Pay Package

    The Delaware judge who previously threw out Elon Musk’s $55 billion Tesla pay package has cast new doubts on whether the CEO’s massive benefits package should be reinstated despite approval from the company’s shareholders.

    Tesla lawyers on Friday argued the pay should be reinstated following a June shareholder vote approving it.


    Last Updated: 02.Aug.2024 23:06 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:05 AM, Aug 3
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 01.Aug.2024


    That Was Easy 🔅


    Wikipedia: Volkswagen XL1

    The Volkswagen XL1 (VW 1-litre) is a two-person limited production diesel-powered plug-in hybrid produced by Volkswagen. The XL1 car was designed to be able to travel 100 km on 1 litre of diesel (280 mpg‑imp; 240 mpg‑US), with a fully charged battery, while being both roadworthy and practical. Without using electric, the XL is able to travel 100 km on 2 litres of diesel. To achieve such economy, it was produced with lightweight materials, a streamlined body and an engine and transmission designed and tuned for economy. The concept car was modified first in 2009 as the L1 and again in 2011 as the XL1.

    If you ever get a chance to pick up one of these cheaply, do it.


    Guardian: Weatherwatch: Space rockets helping trigger noctilucent clouds

    Noctilucent clouds are a rare and special sight. Only visible at latitudes between 45° and 80°, these shimmering wispy silvery-blue clouds can occasionally be seen high in the sky on a clear summer’s night. But in recent decades they have been making more frequent appearances and now a new study reveals that space launches are helping to spawn them.


    Can Gouda’s Cheesemakers Stall a Sinking Future?

    The cheese industry in the region [accounts] for about 60 percent of the national cheese production, with an export value of $1.7 billion annually, according to ZuivelNL, which represents the Dutch dairy sector.

    But it’s unlikely the cheese market will be here in 50 to 100 years because of a confluence of a few factors, experts say: The city, built on peat marsh, has always been vulnerable to sinking, and that risk is now greater because increased rainfall and rising sea levels — a consequence of climate change — threaten to flood the river delta in which it sits.

    This is no Gouda.


    pv magazine: ClearVue integrated solar window tech cracks Middle East construction market

    Western Australia-based integrated solar glazing technology company Clearvue Technologies has added Aluminium Technology Auxiliary Industries (Alutec), Qatar to its growing global list of licensed manufacturers and distributors.

    Under the agreement, Alutec will manufacture and distribute ClearvuePV Solar Vision Glass, a product that integrates solar technology into building façades to enhance energy efficiency and sustainability and be distribution rights to Clearvue’s building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) solutions which incorporate solar technology into building façades.


    The Trace: The Secret Operation to Dismantle America’s Gun Laws

    Sutherland is much less public about the CDF, which in the half-decade since its rechristening has evolved from spreading the good news to facilitating a far-reaching, multimillion-dollar legal campaign to dismantle America’s gun laws. From 2020 to 2022, the CDF collected $12 million in cash and funneled nearly $10 million to two connected gun rights groups and a D.C. law firm, Cooper & Kirk, which together have filed at least 21 lawsuits since 2020 that challenged gun restrictions. These lawsuits, aimed at getting an eventual Supreme Court hearing, concern bans on AR-15-style rifles and high-capacity magazines, as well as restrictions on young adults buying and carrying handguns. During its next term, which begins in October, the court will hear one of the suits, a challenge to the government’s ability to check the spread of home-produced, unserialized “ghost guns.”


    Cult of Mac: Apple Arcade game developers complain about the service

    Frustrated game developers continue to vent about working on Apple Arcade titles, in a new report citing anonymous sources. In the story, a follow-up to one from earlier this year that noted “the smell of death around the service,” devs complain about poor communication with Apple, slow payouts, and big problems working on Vision Pro games.

    The opinions expressed in the new story aren’t entirely negative, but they paint a pretty ugly portrait of Apple Arcade from some developers’ perspectives.


    Cult of Mac: Strong iPad sales help return Apple to revenue growth

    Apple broke a string a weak quarters by announcing a 5% year-over-year increase in revenue for the June quarter Thursday, setting a new record for the quarter. iPad had an especially strong quarter, up 24%, and company’s services sector also grew by double digits.


    InsideEVs: Which EV Has The Best User Experience?

    Earlier today, Porsche’s head of style, Michael Mauer, said that the German luxury sports car maker will steer clear of tacky, tablet-like displays glued on top of the dashboard. That’s not to say future Porsche vehicles won’t have any screens–that would be a bit too analog for what is considered a luxury brand. Instead, the company will stick to smaller displays and, probably more importantly, physical buttons.

    Hear, hear!


    Stuff: ‘I have never felt a punch like this’: The 46 seconds that rocked the Paris Olympics

    After 46 seconds, two blows to the head and a busted nose, Italian Angela Carini left the ring as the most talked-about athlete on the planet after withdrawing from her bout with a fighter who had previously failed gender eligibility tests.

    Carini’s bout against Algeria’s Imane Khelif had attracted the attention of the world’s media, due to the North African being allowed to compete in Paris despite having been disqualified from the world championship in New Delhi in 2023 for failing a gender eligibility test.

    ⋮

    Neither Khelif nor Lin has publicly identified as transgender or as having “differences in sexual development” (DSD).

    Transgender women athletes who have transitioned after going through male puberty are different from DSD athletes.

    In the context of the Olympics, DSD covers athletes who were assigned female gender at birth but have naturally occurring testosterone levels high enough to suggest internal sexual characteristics that are not typically male or female.


    PBS News: Crews struggle to contain rapidly spreading Park Fire in California

    An especially active fire season is exacting a huge toll across several Western states.

    A series of fires have turned deadly in Colorado, where at least one person was found dead. In California, more than 5,800 personnel, 500 fire trucks and 40 helicopters are battling a fire that’s larger than all of Los Angeles. The Park Fire, as it’s known, is the country’s largest and has ballooned to historic proportions in just over a week.


    Stuff: The Trial (podcast)

    On Easter Monday 2021, police were called to the home of a successful professional couple in the affluent Auckland suburb of Remuera. They found the body of Pauline Hanna.

    In his emergency call, her husband, Philip Polkinghorne, said she killed herself. Sixteen months later he was charged with her murder. As this podcast is released, he’s currently on trial at the High Court in Auckland.

    Stuff’s groundbreaking series returns to take you inside the Polkinghorne trial: Hear the witnesses, follow the evidence, wait for the verdict.

    The trial is continuing in New Zealand.


    Last Updated: 01.Aug.2024 22:52 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 3:10 AM, Aug 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 31.Jul.2024


    Every Kiss Begins with Kay 💍


    NYT: Teenager Accused of Derailing Train and Posting Crash Video on YouTube

    The teenager approached an investigator at the crash scene and asked what had happened, according to the affidavit. The investigator said the cause of the derailment had not been identified, to which the teenager replied, “Obviously, a switch was flipped the wrong way.”

    The investigator also asked the teenager about railroad switches and the teenager was able to describe how they work.

    ⋮

    A few days later, investigators reviewed security footage from the area and saw a person walking toward the railroad switch and out of view of the camera, according to the affidavit.

    A few minutes later, the person can be seen “running and walking back” to a car. A security video taken from a different angle showed the same car, with the teenager seen parking the car and then setting up a tripod.


    Guardian: Boeing names Robert ‘Kelly’ Ortberg as new president and CEO

    Boeing has named the aerospace industry veteran Robert “Kelly” Ortberg as its new president and CEO as the struggling planemaker fights to repair its reputation and shore up its business.

    A terrifying cabin panel blowout in January sparked the company’s biggest safety crisis since two fatal crashes in 2018 and 2019, which killed 346 people.

    Unveiling its new boss on Wednesday, Boeing posted a $1.4bn loss for the second quarter. It has spent months scrambling to reassure regulators, airlines and passengers.

    Ortberg, 64, led the aerospace supplier Rockwell Collins before it became part of the aerospace and defence giant RTX. He will assume his duties on 8 August, Boeing said. He will replace Dave Calhoun, the current CEO, who announced he would step down earlier this year.


    SdTv (YouTube): Graham Norton Show: 31.May.2019

    Michael Sheen, David Tennant, Chris Helmsley (& Donald Trump)

    The usual pleasant banter.


    Verge: Arc’teryx’s new powered pants could make hikers feel 30 pounds lighter

    Strength-boosting exoskeleton suits can help make jobs with physical labor feel less strenuous, but Arc’teryx has partnered with Skip, a spinoff of Google’s X Labs, to bring the technology to leisure time. The powered MO/GO pants feature a lightweight electric motor at the knee that can boost a hiker’s leg strength when going uphill while also absorbing the impact of steps during a descent.

    The MO/GO (which is short for mountain goat) pants weigh around seven pounds with the power-boosting module and three-hour rechargeable batteries attached. That module snaps onto the hiker using a pair of carbon fiber braces for each leg hidden beneath a pair of Arc’teryx Gamma hiking pants to make the apparatus easy to get on and off.

    ⋮

    It does take some time to get used to walking with an extra pair of mechanical muscles, according to Fast Company, which spent some time testing the MO/GO pants. For consumers who’d also rather test them first, Skip and Arc’teryx are offering eight-hour rentals of the exoskeleton on select trails in the Western US and Canada for $80.


    NYT: Heavy Metals, Including Lead, Found in Many Dark Chocolate Products

    New research published Wednesday found heavy metals in dark chocolate, the latest in a string of studies to raise concerns about toxins in cocoa products.

    The researchers tested 72 dark chocolate bars, cocoa powders and nibs to see if they were contaminated with heavy metals in concentrations higher than those deemed safe by California’s Proposition 65, one of the nation’s strictest chemical regulations.

    Among the products tested, 43 percent contained higher levels of lead than the law considers safe, and 35 percent had higher concentrations of cadmium. Both metals are considered toxic and have been associated with a range of health issues. The study did not name specific brands, but found that organic products were more likely to have higher concentrations. Products certified as “fair trade” did not have lower levels of heavy metals.

    But on the whole, the levels were not so high that the average consumer should be concerned about eating dark chocolate in moderation, said Jacob Hands, the lead author on the paper and a medical student at George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.


    NYT: Opinion: The Mystery of JD Vance Is Unraveling

    But, Nichols continued, “what makes Vance so awful is that he knows better. His intentional distancing from his earlier views shows that he is fully cognizant of what a gigantic fraud he’s become.”


    TorStar: This homeowner ended his natural gas service. Months later, Enbridge charged him hundreds of dollars in surprise fees

    After receiving the surprise bill, he called Enbridge to follow up. Dowsett said the company agent asked if he had specifically requested to “lock-off” his meter or have it removed when he closed his account.

    Not only was this the first time he’d heard of either procedure, Dowsett said he was surprised that a customer would be expected to ask for such things unprompted when closing their account.

    “The onus should be on Enbridge, not on the customer, to know the secret code that they need to say to get this done,” he said.

    The agent then explained that Enbridge opened an account for his property because it still had a meter and no one had taken over the account.


    TorStar: Blood glucose tool recalled over faulty measurement readings

    Health Canada has issued a recall for some Accu-Chek Guide devices due to inaccurate blood glucose readings.

    Certain units of the medical measurement device incorrectly display blood glucose levels, according to a safety alert from the federal organization.

    ⋮

    Four lot and serial numbers associated with the medical device are affected by the recall and include lot number 406670, and serial numbers 93040301566, 93040300107 and 93040304746.

    Consumers who have one of the faulty devices can contact Accu-Chek at 1-800-363-7949 or fill out an online form (https://www.accu-chek.ca/en/contact-us) to arrange for a replacement device.


    Last Updated: 31.Jul.2024 23:58 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:13 AM, Aug 1
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 30.Jul.2024


    Refresh Everything 🥤


    NYT: William Calley, Convicted of Mass Murder in My Lai Massacre, Dies at 80

    In March 1971, Lieutenant Calley was convicted of the premeditated murder of “not less than” 22 Vietnamese and sentenced to life in prison. Americans, long divided over Vietnam, were overwhelmingly outraged, calling him a scapegoat for a long chain of command that had gone unpunished. Many blamed the war itself, or said the lieutenant was only doing his duty.

    ⋮

    In 1974, a federal judge in Georgia, J. Robert Elliott, overturned the conviction, saying Mr. Calley had been denied a fair trial because of prejudicial publicity. The Army appealed, and Mr. Calley was confined to barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kans., for three months. He was then released on bail and never returned to custody.

    A good refresher on a chilling event.


    Ars Technica: Google halts its 4-plus-year plan to turn off tracking cookies by default in Chrome

    Most people who just use the Chrome browser, rather than develop for it or try to serve ads to it, are not going to know what “A new path for Privacy Sandbox on the web” could possibly mean. The very short version is that Google had a “path,” first announced in January 2020, to turn off third-party (i.e., tracking) cookies in the most-used browser on Earth, bringing it in line with Safari, Firefox, and many other browsers. Google has proposed several alternatives to the cookies that follow you from page to page, constantly pitching you on that space heater you looked at three days ago. Each of these alternatives has met varying amounts of resistance from privacy and open web advocates, trade regulators, and the advertising industry.

    So rather than turn off third-party cookies by default and implement new solutions inside the Privacy Sandbox, Chrome will “introduce a new experience” that lets users choose their tracking preferences when they update or first use Chrome. Google will also keep working on its Privacy Sandbox APIs but in a way that recognizes the “impact on publishers, advertisers, and everyone involved in online advertising.” Google also did not fail to mention it was “discussing this new path with regulators.”


    Daily Mail: [Scientists finally solve mystery of how Egypt’s pyramids were built](https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-13687527/mystery-pyramids-built-egypt-solved.html?source =RSS)

    Once the underground water reached the centre of the pyramid, it flushed upwards through the central shaft like magma in a volcano.

    This powerful jet of water would have pushed up a floating elevator – a level platform likely made of wood – that could carry up to 100 tonnes of stone at a time thanks to the force of the water.

    According to the experts, the jet of water could be controlled so that the shaft could be emptied, ready to be reused for another load of stone.

    This article should probably be titled “Scientists propose a new theory of how some pyramids were built.”


    PureWow: [14 McDonald’s Secret Menu Items Every Fast Food Lover Should Try]( flip.it/nNbuj1

    You’re aware of all the ins and outs of eating keto at McDonald’s, as well as the fast food chain’s little-known stash of ice. But how familiar are you with the McDonald’s secret menu? There are plenty of modified drinks, sides and sandwiches — some invented by fans, some former mashups that were on the menu for a limited time — to sink your teeth into. Here are 14 of my favorite options, ranging from towering burger combos to a play on affogato. All of these should be available nationwide and year-round at nearly all McDonald’s locations.

    I’m not recommending any of these (except maybe adding a double espresso to a vanilla shake) but it sure is interesting what people are eating!


    Business Insider: Stop the crackdown on coffee-badging — here’s the real problem

    You can’t go a day in 2024 without hearing about another workplace trend. The latest one: Coffee badging.

    Coffee badging is what employees do when employers ask them to work from an office, even when their work can be done remotely. Employees briefly show up at the office, “badge in,” grab a coffee — and then leave and complete their work elsewhere.

    Why are people doing this? Well, often because there’s no great rationale for why they need to be in an office — and they’re actually more productive at home.


    Politico: Harris, fracking and Shapiro: Dem campaign looks for Pennsylvania breakthrough

    Vice President Kamala Harris’ decision to reverse her support for a fracking ban is doing little to ease concerns among the fossil fuel industry and its workers — and cheerleaders for Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro see an opening.

    Some Democratic Party allies fear Harris’ flip on fracking has still left her particularly vulnerable in Pennsylvania. What Harris needs now, the party’s boosters say, is someone like Shapiro — who has carved a middle ground in the country’s No. 2 natural gas-producing state — in the vice presidential slot.


    I, Cringely: Apple’s Vision Pro headset is a hobby. Why won’t Tim Cook say that?

    16.Jun.2023

    Which is why I wish Apple had been honest and called it a hobby. Maybe they are hoping it isn’t a hobby, but that would be a mistake. The Vision Pro’s trajectory is clear to me. It will lose money for years until it finds a vertical market where the price doesn’t matter. Along the way two important effects will also have happened: 1) third-party developers will fall in love with the Vision Pro and make good applications for it, and; 2) eventually Moore’s Law – and Moore’s Law alone – will drive down the Vision Pro’s price enough for some later version to be declared an overnight success.

    Apple’s unstated strategy here is obvious. Just look at the company’s previous hobby – Apple TV – which eventually broke even and then begat Apple TV+, a completely separate and different business that needed such a hardware platform to succeed. Along the way Apple TV and the broad success of streaming video on actual televisions helped Apple as a whole to sell production computers and copies of Final Cut Pro, enabling the very different video market of today.


    Stuff (WashPo): Apple says Safari protects your privacy. We fact-checked those claims

    Using the handy “Cover Your Tracks” privacy test (coveryourtracks.eff.org) from the consumer privacy nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation, my iPhone using the Safari browser showed I had partial protection from common types of data tracking.


    Last Updated: 30.Jul.2024 23:58 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:44 AM, Jul 31
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 29.Jul.2024


    The World on Time 📦


    CoinDesk: Trump Backs U.S. Bitcoin Reserve and Says Democrat Win Will Be Disaster for Crypto: ‘Every One of You Will Be Gone’

    Thousands of bitcoiners camped out for hours to see crypto’s self-declared candidate on Saturday at the Bitcoin Conference in Nashville.

    Is this a significant voting block?

    via John Philpin


    Guardian: Japan cracks down on use of rideable electric suitcases amid tourist boom

    As record numbers of tourists flock to Japan to take advantage of the weakness of the Japanese yen, some are running into trouble with authorities thanks to the growing popularity of motorised, rideable suitcases.

    Two major Japanese airports have already asked travellers not to ride motorised suitcases within their facilities, according to Kyodo news agency, while police are urging domestic retailers to warn customers of the strict laws concerning their use.

    In recent years motorised luggage, similar to children’s scooters but powered by lithium-ion batteries, have become more common among travellers, while also being popularised by celebrities like Paris Hilton and Shilpa Shetty.


    CBC: She lost 200,000 bees to bandits — and is now one of many paying thousands on surveillance

    A beekeeper since 2011, this is the first time she’s had hives stolen. But as vice-president of Quebec’s beekeeping association, she says theft and vandalism have been affecting producers across the province for years. It’s forced some to invest thousands of dollars in cameras and other surveillance methods, she says.


    ScienceAlert: This New Blood Test Identifies Alzheimer’s Memory Loss With 90% Accuracy

    In addition to the blood test, most patients also received a lumbar puncture for spinal fluid. The few who couldn’t underwent a radionuclide-tagged PET scan instead to assess abnormal aggregations of proteins in the brain.

    Comparing the results, both forms of assessment fared just as well, predicting Alzheimer’s with a 90 percent accuracy.

    The convenience of a blood test means more patients can receive an accurate diagnosis sooner, allowing them to receive the healthcare they require without delay.


    Globe: The U.S. Supreme Court’s historic term has done much more than boost Donald Trump

    4/5.Jul.2024

    The U.S. Supreme Court made history this week with a ruling that bestowed broad immunity from criminal prosecution on Donald Trump for his official acts as president. But that decision was just one of many consequential moves by the court at the end of its most recent term.

    The court’s other rulings, which culminated in the release of the immunity decision on Monday, reshaped the way U.S. law applies to areas that include environmental protection, white-collar crime and public corruption.

    In decisions that were nearly all 6-3, with the court’s conservative wing in the majority, the Supreme Court’s justices overturned a 40-year precedent about deference to the expertise of regulatory agencies. It ruled that municipalities can seek criminal sanctions against homeless people, weakened a criminal bribery law, and gutted the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to combat cross-state pollution.

    ⋮

    In the Environmental Protection Agency case, known as Ohio v. EPA, the court’s majority put on hold the EPA’s power to enforce a rule related to cross-state emissions of nitrogen oxide. (The majority opinion had to be corrected and reissued because Justice Neil Gorsuch confused nitrogen oxide with nitrous oxide, which is colloquially known as laughing gas.)

    ha ha

    The case involved a former mayor of an Indiana city. The city had awarded a US$1.1-million garbage truck contract to a local company. Afterward, the mayor approached the owners and told them, “I need money.” He asked for US$15,000, but received US$13,000. He was later convicted of bribery.

    The Supreme Court overturned the conviction, and Justice Kavanaugh explained that an after-the-fact gift is a “gratuity,” and not covered by federal bribery law. He warned that otherwise many people could face prosecution for receiving gifts.

    Which Supreme Court justices might be covered by this new ruling?


    The Verge: Elon Musk posts deepfake of Kamala Harris that violates X policy

    The platform’s owner posted a digitally altered campaign ad of the vice president without context that it was not real.

    Freedom of speech does not mean freedom to say anything.

    Chance of buying a Tesla now: 0% (That’s a substantial drop.)


    Seeking Alpha: Robotaxi jolt: Tesla autonomous driving test goes poorly for Truist Securities

    Analyst William Stein said the new version was impressive, but does not solve autonomy. “The shortcomings that we observed make it challenging to imagine what TSLA will reveal in its RoboTaxi event in October,” highlighted Stein. He wrote in detail on some of the positive advancements included in FSD V12.3.6, while also highlighting some notable problems on the test drive.

    “For example, the Model Y accelerated through an intersection as the car in front of us had only partly completed a right-turn. My quick intervention was absolutely required to avoid an otherwise certain accident. Another intervention was required when a police officer used hand motions to signal to us to pull to the side of the road to allow a funeral procession to pass. A third intervention was less of a requirement and more of a convenience. Finally, in a section of our route, the highway was curvy and narrow, and had a solid white line separating lanes, signaling a prohibition against lane changes. Still, the Model Y switched lanes twice under that condition.”

    Yeah, they’re a long way off!


    Universe Today: Kepler Sketched the Sun in 1607. Astronomers Pinpointed the Solar Cycle

    Johannes Kepler is probably most well known for developing the laws of planetary motion. He was also a keen solar observer and in 1607 made some wonderful observations of our nearest star using a camera obscura. His drawings were wonderfully precise and enabled astronomers to pinpoint where the Sun was in its 11-year cycle. Having taken into account Kepler’s location and the location of sunspots, a team of researchers have identified the Sun was nearing the end of solar cycle-13.


    Guardian: Indonesia president begins working from new capital despite construction delays

    Indonesian President Joko Widodo has begun working from the presidential palace in the country’s ambitious new administrative capital, the flagship project of his two terms in office but which has been plagued by delays.

    The capital is due to move from traffic-clogged and sinking Jakarta to the planned city of Nusantara in East Kalimantan province on Borneo, but the $33bn project announced in 2019 is months – even years – behind schedule.


    SMH: Trump backs away from debating Harris, defends Vance’s ‘childless cat lady’ comments

    Donald Trump seemed to back away from his earlier commitment to debate Vice President Kamala Harris, questioning the value of a meetup and saying he “probably” will debate but he “can also make a case for not doing it.”

    Trump, in an interview with Fox News Channel that aired Monday night (Tuesday AEST), was pressed several times about committing to debating Harris before giving a squishier answer than he had in recent days.

    ⋮

    In the same interview, Trump also backed his running mate, Senator JD Vance, over past comments about “childless cat ladies” that have gone viral and become a political headache for their White House campaign.

    Vance’s 2021 comments criticising Harris and other Democrats as “a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives” resurfaced after Trump selected the Ohio senator as his running mate earlier this month.


    NYT: ‘The Interview’: Melinda French Gates Is Ready to Take Sides](https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/28/magazine/melinda-french-gates-interview.html)

    The act of walking away from all that would have been surprising enough. But French Gates also did something she never did while at the Gates Foundation: entered the political fray, saying she would focus her resources on supporting women’s rights in the United States, including abortion rights. And in June she endorsed President Biden.

    When we spoke this month, she told me why she feels so much urgency to get involved in these issues now. (We talked before Biden dropped out of the presidential race; she has since endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris.) We also talked about life after divorce, raising rich children, her new YouTube series, called Moments That Make Us, and her evolving views on how to use her own money.


    Last Updated: 29.Jul.2024 23:58 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:14 AM, Jul 30
  • I was very surprised today to learn from WordleBot that there are apparently hidden rules in the NYT Wordle puzzle’s selection of words!

    → 10:28 PM, Jul 29
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 28.Jul.2024


    What’s in Your Wallet? 💳


    TechCrunch: Ghostery’s CEO says regulation won’t save us from ad trackers

    I want to talk about both of those categories, Big Tech and regulation. You mentioned that with GDPR, there was a fork where there’s a little bit of a decrease in tracking, and then it went up again. Is that because companies realized they can just make people say yes and consent to tracking?

    What happened is that in the U.S., it continued to grow, and in Europe, it went down massively. But then the companies started to get these consent layers done. And as they figured it out, the tracking went back up. Is there more tracking in the U.S. than there is in Europe? For sure.

    So it had an impact, but it didn’t necessarily change the trajectory?

    It had an impact, but it’s not sufficient. Because these constant layers are basically meant to trick you in saying yes. And then once you say yes, they never ask again, whereas if you say no, they keep asking.


    NYT: Gunman at Trump Rally Often One Step Ahead of Secret Service

    Text messages, obtained exclusively by The Times, indicate that some law enforcement officers were aware of Thomas Crooks earlier than previously known. And he was aware of them.

    Slowly they are piecing the day together.

    Free link


    Last Updated: 28.Jul.2024 17:33 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:29 AM, Jul 29
  • Fresh, sweet corn on the cob: what a treat!

    → 6:42 PM, Jul 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 27.Jul.2024


    Where’s the Beef? 🍔


    Guardian: Sad last days of Harold Wilson revealed by Cabinet Office archives

    Former politicians pay tribute after files show ‘Labour’s most successful leader’ was forced to consider selling legacy to pay for his dementia care.


    pv magazine: Data center power loads threaten corporate net-zero goals

    The world’s reliance on the internet, the shift to cloud computing, and the emergence of AI all fuel demand for more and more data centers. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that by 2026, data centers will consume more than 800 TWh annually, more than double their consumption in 2022. Tristan Rayner takes a look at the role that renewable generation plays in powering a digital world.

    ⋮

    Microsoft says its CO2 emissions are now up 30% from when it set its 2030 net-zero target, in 2020, and mainly because of data centers.

    “The rise in our scope 3 emissions [from third-party, supply chain companies] primarily comes from the construction of more data centers and the associated embodied carbon in building materials as well as hardware components such as semiconductors, servers, and racks,” said Microsoft, adding that the 10.5 GW renewables PPA [Power Purchase Agreement] is on top of a 19.8 GW clean power portfolio.


    PBS News: Israeli strike on school sheltering people in central Gaza kills at least 30, including children

    Israeli airstrikes hit a school being used by displaced Palestinians in central Gaza on Saturday, killing at least 30 people including several children, as the country’s negotiators prepared to meet international mediators to discuss a proposed cease-fire.

    At least seven children and seven women were among the dead taken from the girls’ school in Deir al-Balah to Al Aqsa Hospital. Israel’s military said it targeted a Hamas command center used to direct attacks against Israeli troops and develop and store “large quantities of weapons.” Hamas in a statement called the military’s claim false.

    Civil defense workers in Gaza said thousands had been sheltering in the school, which also contained a medical site.


    PBS News: Philippine supply ship reaches disputed shoal without incident a week after deal with China

    Philippine government personnel transported food and other supplies Saturday to a fiercely disputed shoal occupied by a Filipino navy contingent but closely guarded by Beijing’s forces in the South China Sea and no confrontations were reported, Philippine officials said.

    It was the first Philippine government supply trip to the Second Thomas Shoal, which has been the scene of increasingly violent confrontations between Chinese and Philippine forces, since the Philippines and China reached a deal a week ago to prevent clashes, the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila said in a statement.


    Snopes: No, JD Vance Did Not Say He Had Sex with Couch Cushions

    A false online rumor about former U.S. President Donald Trump’s running mate, a latex glove and couch cushions spawned a number of jokes and memes.


    Wikipedia: WebP (image file format)

    On 18 November 2011, Google announced a new lossless compression mode, and support for transparency (alpha channel) in both lossless and lossy modes; support was enabled by default in libwebp 0.2.0 (16 August 2012). According to Google’s measurements in November 2011, a conversion from PNG to WebP resulted in a 45% reduction in file size when starting with PNGs found on the web, and a 28% reduction compared to PNGs that are recompressed with pngcrush and PNGOUT.

    ⋮

    In 2019, the Alliance for Open Media published the AVIF standard, intending it to be a successor to WebP. Since 2024, AVIF and WebP have similar levels of support in web browsers.

    Manton has expressed an interest in this image file format. I’m not sure how broadly it is used though. My iPhone occasionally produces .AVIF format files, and they cause all kinds of problems when I send them to others, so I’m cautious.


    NYT: Why Is It So Hard for Olympic Host Cities to Control Costs?

    An Oxford study estimates that despite cost-cutting efforts, Paris is spending more than $1 billion above the Games’ historical median cost.

    ⋮

    The tab for the Games in Paris, the first city to fully test cost-cutting reforms that the International Olympic Committee introduced in 2019, is at least $8.87 billion. That isn’t an eye-popping bill compared with the $17 billion that London spent in 2012, the estimated $28 billion that Tokyo spent in 2021 or the $24 billion that Rio de Janeiro spent in 2016 — the three most expensive Summer Games to date.


    HockeyFeed: Shocking report leads to demand for Gary Bettman’s firing!

    Walsh spoke about this issue in an interview with concussion specialist Chris Nowinski in which he berated Bettman and his denial of a connection to CTE, found after a player’s death, and after a life of severe neurological issues associated. CTE can also mimic some symptoms of Dementia, including memory loss and sporadic behavioral changes.

    Johnson became another victim of CTE as public records show that “the brains of 17 of 18 NHL players studied in the U.S. and Canada have now been diagnosed with CTE, including Ralph Backstrom, Henri Richard, Stan Mikita, Bob Probert, Steve Montador, and Bob Murdoch. CTE has also been diagnosed in amateur players.” It has been proved that CTE can cause physical and physiological impairments, and many athletes found to have the disease have died from suicide. Other notable deaths of past enforcers in the NHL include Rick Rypien, Wade Belak and Derek Boogard. 



    The Beaverton: Danielle Smith: The loss of Jasper is tragic, but we can all take comfort in how much money the oil industry is still making

    Premier Danielle Smith fought back tears today as she announced that at least 30-50% of the town of Jasper, Alberta has been severely damaged by wildfires but she was adamant that all is not lost, because the Alberta oil industry is still going strong.


    Last Updated: 27.Jul.2024 22:25 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:34 AM, Jul 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 26.Jul.2024


    Live in Your World, Play in Ours 🎮


    BBC: Paris 2024: Canada suspend Beverly Priestman over drone incident

    Canada Soccer said it took the action because “over the past 24 hours, additional information has come to our attention regarding previous drone use against opponents, predating the Paris 2024 Olympic Games”.

    English-born Priestman, 38, had “voluntarily”withdrew from her side’s opening 2-0 victory over the Kiwis on Thursday, while Jasmine Mander, Priestman’s assistant, was sent home along with “unaccredited analyst” Joseph Lombardi.

    On Thursday a French court said Lombardi had been handed an eight-month suspended jail sentence after pleading guilty to flying a drone in an urban area without a licence.

    Well, this is embarrassing…


    BBC: Gracehill: Unesco World Heritage status for NI Moravian village

    The village was founded 264 years ago and is home to the only complete Moravian settlement in Ireland.

    The Moravian Church, one of the earliest Protestant denominations, arrived in the UK and Ireland from Eastern Europe in the early 18th century.

    Gracehill continues to have an active Moravian community with its own bishop.

    ⋮

    It becomes the first site in Northern Ireland to be granted cultural World Heritage status.


    CBC: Canada men’s soccer team attempted drone spying at Copa America, Canada Soccer CEO says

    The CEO of Canada Soccer says the men’s national soccer team “attempted drone usage” during the Copa America tournament that wrapped earlier this month.

    Kevin Blue said that it was his understanding it didn’t affect competitive integrity but would not offer details as he spoke with media from Paris on Friday.

    Asked whether Jesse Marsch, the head coach of the men’s national team, was aware of possible drone usage at that tournament in the United States, Blue said he was aware after the fact.

    It sounds like they are not being entirely forthright.


    Guardian: Alberta premier fights tears over Canada wildfires despite climate crisis denial

    Last year, Smith trimmed funding to the province’s wildfire response unit. The premier said it would allow for a “more nimble” force to respond quickly to fires, but critics pointed out her decision followed a string of cuts by the United Conservative Party, including scrapping Alberta’s elite aerial fire service team and cutting the number of fire watch towers. The leftwing New Democratic party also cut funding for wildfire services, but cuts under the governing UCP have been deeper.

    Smith has spent her tenure as premier casting herself as Ottawa’s greatest foe, focusing her efforts on opposition to Canada’s federal carbon tax, which she argues hurt ordinary Albertans, as well as a nationwide plan to decarbonize the electrical grid.


    Guardian: Stephen Reicher: Donald Trump is a misogynistic, billionaire felon. Here’s why Americans can’t stop voting for him

    But perhaps the greatest enigma of contemporary politics concerns Donald Trump – a man who elicits messianic fever and revulsion in equal measure. A liar and serial philanderer championed by evangelists; a felon supported by “law and order” enthusiasts; a man who boasts of groping women and yet was elected with a majority of white women voters; a billionaire who likes posing in the golden lift of his New York skyscraper while also posing as the champion of the working class. How on earth does any of this make sense? Yet, at the same time, how can Kamala Harris – if, as is near-certain, she is crowned the Democratic nominee – hope to win in November unless she is able to make sense of it?

    The problem is that this is the perspective of outsiders. They presuppose the groups and identities (religion, gender, class) through which people view Trump. They assume, for instance, that women vote as women on the basis of women’s interests rather than explore the perspectives and identities through which Trump’s followers and Trump himself define their interests. That is, how they divide the world into “us” and “them”.

    For skilled leaders don’t just represent groups. They play a key part in defining the groups they seek to lead and then in representing themselves as being “of” the group, working for the group and delivering to the group.


    CBC: Company halts construction of $2.7B battery project in Loyalist Twp

    After breaking ground in 2023, the company building a plant to produce battery components for electric vehicles in a municipality near Kingston, Ont., says it’s delaying construction of the plant citing a slowdown in EV sales.

    In a statement to CBC News, Umicore Rechargeable Battery Materials Inc. said Friday that its project in Loyalist Township is impacted by the “significant worsening of the EV market context and the impacts this has on the entire supply chain.”

    The project carried a total price tag of up to $2.76 billion and was projected to create 600 jobs in the region back in 2023. According to a news release at the time from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, the federal government was slated to invest up to $551.3 million.

    The province was to pay up to $424.6 million, but a source familiar with the project said that as of Friday, no provincial money has flowed to Umicore.

    I wonder what the real reason is.


    NYT: Firefighters From Around the World Headed to Canada to Battle Wildfires

    Fast-moving fires may have destroyed as much as half of the picturesque town of Jasper, Alberta, and have ravaged Jasper National Park.

    ⋮

    At a news conference on Thursday, Danielle Smith, the premier of Alberta, fought back tears when describing the scenic beauty of the town and park. “We don’t know particularly which structures have been damaged and which ones have been destroyed, but that is going to be a significant rebuild,” she said.

    Yeah, that’s the same Danielle Smith whose government cut the firefighting budget! The same Danielle Smith who opposes measures to fight climate change. That Danielle Smith.

    Over 400 firefighters from as far away as South Africa, Australia and New Zealand were headed to help battle the fires, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a statement on Thursday.


    Electrek: Elon Musk signals reaching limit of Tesla’s HW3 despite self-driving promise

    This is fairly clear from the facts that Tesla needs to optimize the code to run on HW3 [Hardware 3] while HW4 seemingly still has a lot of room to grow and that it reversed its plan to have HW4 code lag behind HW3 as it focuses on getting everything running on HW3 first as the people who own these vehicles have been waiting longer.

    At this point, it’s highly likely that Tesla will never be able to deliver on its self-driving promise on the HW3 car.


    Yahoo Sports: 2024 Paris Olympics: Olympic flag raised upside down during Opening ceremony

    Members of the French military raised the flag during the ceremony, but appear to have raised it upside down

    There is no truth to the rumour that the flag was prepped by a certain US Supreme Court justice’s wife.


    Daily Mail: Trump launches brutal attack on Kamala Harris as he brands her with shock new nickname: ‘I couldn’t care less if I mispronounce it’

    [8-year-old] Donald Trump labeled Kamala Harris ‘a bum’ and joked about mispronouncing her name at a speech in Florida Friday night.

    Trump is among many Republicans who have deliberately mispronounced Vice President Kamala Harris’s name, …

    ⋮

    And in a 2019 memoir, Harris wrote: ‘[M]y name is pronounced ‘comma-la,’ like the punctuation mark. It means ‘lotus flower,’ which is a symbol of significance in Indian culture.’

    via SmartNews


    Last Updated: 26.Jul.2024 22:55 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:10 AM, Jul 27
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 25.Jul.2024


    They’re G-r-r-reat! 🐅 🥣


    Guardian: Moderate drinking not better for health than abstaining, analysis suggests

    For the regular boozer it is a source of great comfort: the fat pile of studies that say a daily tipple is better for a longer life than avoiding alcohol completely.

    But a new analysis challenges the thinking and blames the rosy message on flawed research that compares drinkers with people who are sick and sober.

    Scientists in Canada delved into 107 published studies on people’s drinking habits and how long they lived. In most cases, they found that drinkers were compared with people who abstained or consumed very little alcohol, without taking into account that some had cut down or quit through ill health.

    ⋮

    England’s former chief medical officer, Dame Sally Davies, has said there is no safe level of alcohol intake. A major study published in 2018 supported the view. It found that alcohol led to 2.8 million deaths in 2016 and was the leading risk factor for premature death and disability in 15- to 49-year-olds. Among the over 50s, about 27% of global cancer deaths in women and 19% in men were linked to their drinking habits.


    Guardian: Joe Biden explains decision to drop out of the election: ‘Best way to unite our nation’

    “I believe my record as president, my leadership in the world, my vision for America’s future all merited a second term, but nothing – nothing – can come in the way of saving our democracy. That includes personal ambition,” Biden said in the Oval Office.

    “So I’ve decided the best way forward is to pass the torch to a new generation. It’s the best way to unite our nation. You know, there is a time and a place for long years of experience in public life. There’s also a time and a place for new voices, fresh voices – yes, younger voices. And that time and place is now.”


    Matt Langford: Introducing Sumo Theme for Micro.blog

    Today, I’m excited to introduce a new theme called Sumo. It uses a lot of the codebase of Tiny Theme, supports many of the same features, but is significantly more opinionated than Tiny Theme.

    • Documentation and Demo
    • Install on Micro.blog

    Wales Online: Police issue update as anger over disturbing Manchester Airport video sees hundreds gather to protest

    The video is said to have been filmed at the airport’s terminal two on Tuesday showing an officer, with a taser in his hand, appearing to kick and then stamp on the head of a man who is lying face down on the floor, with a woman kneeling beside him. A second man also appears to be struck by the officer.

    A force spokesman said: “Whilst attempting to arrest one of the suspects of the earlier altercation, three officers were subject to a violent assault, where they were punched to the ground. A female officer suffered a broken nose and all three were taken to hospital for treatment.

    “As the attending officers were firearms officers, there was a clear risk during this assault of their firearms being taken from them. Four men were arrested at the scene for affray and assault on emergency service workers. We acknowledge the concerns of the conduct within the video and our Professional Standards Directorate are assessing this.”


    pv magazine: VoltStorage advances its iron-salt battery technology

    The next development phase will involve a 20-fold increase in performance, the implementation of fully automated test systems, an expanded battery health management system, a defined form factor concept and a higher technology readiness level (TRL), says the company. In addition, the start of product definition is now planned for the next stage.


    pv magazine How long do residential solar panels last?

    Residential solar panels are often sold with long-term loans or leases, with homeowners entering contracts of 20 years or more. But how long do panels last, and how resilient are they?

    Panel life depends on several factors, including climate, module type, and the racking system used, among others. While there isn’t a specific “end date” for a panel per se, loss of production over time often forces equipment retirements.

    When deciding whether to keep your panel running 20-30 years in the future, or to look for an upgrade at that time, monitoring output levels is the best way to make an informed decision.


    NYT: The Murdoch Family Is Battling Over the Future of the Fox Empire

    Though the trust is irrevocable, it contains a narrow provision allowing for changes done in good faith and with the sole purpose of benefiting all of its members. Mr. Murdoch’s lawyers have argued that he is trying to protect James, Elisabeth and Prudence by ensuring that they won’t be able to moderate Fox’s politics or disrupt its operations with constant fights over leadership.

    According to the court’s decision, Mr. Murdoch was concerned that the “lack of consensus” among his children “would impact the strategic direction at both companies including a potential reorientation of editorial policy and content.” It states that his intention was to “consolidate decision-making power in Lachlan’s hands and give him permanent, exclusive control” over the company.


    UPI: NASA continues to delay return of Boeing Starliner, astronauts from ISS

    NASA Commercial Crew Program Manager Steve Stich in a conference call Thursday morning said the agency has made significant progress in assessing the Starliner’s return capability but there is no official plan to bring the astronauts home.

    “We don’t have a major announcement today relative to a return date. We’re making great progress, but we’re just not quite ready to do that,” he said.

    ⋮

    It has now been almost two months since astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams docked to the ISS on June 5 for what was supposed to be a weeklong mission to test Boeing’s long-delayed Starliner spacecraft.

    But they are NOT marooned!


    UPI: OpenAI tests AI search engine prototype SearchGPT

    Open AI said Thursday it has created a prototype AI search engine called SearchGPT. After more development, the search engine will be integrated into its chatbot ChatGPT.

    Watch out Google!


    DuPPa: Pico QwiicReset Addon

    Meet your new best friend for faster prototyping and smoother iterations. This cute little guy is packed with features you didn’t know you needed but won’t be able to live without:

    • Instant Reset: A single button press does the trick.
    • Flash Mode: Just press both buttons simultaneously.
    • Compact design: No added bulk—just more functionality packed into your existing Pico setup.
    • Plug-and-Play Prototyping: Equipped with a Qwiic/Stemma QT connector, say goodbye to soldering and hello to an expansive ecosystem of modules.

    Reuters: US arrests Mexican drug lord ‘El Mayo’ and El Chapo’s son in Texas

    Mexican drug lord Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada and the son of his former partner, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, were arrested on Thursday in El Paso, Texas, in a major coup for U.S. authorities that may also reshape the Mexican criminal landscape.

    Zambada is one of the most consequential traffickers in Mexico’s history and co-founded the Sinaloa Cartel with El Chapo, who was extradited to the United States in 2017 and is serving a life sentence in a maximum security prison.

    Both Zambada and Joaquin Guzman Lopez, the son of El Chapo, face multiple charges in the U.S. for funneling huge quantities of drugs to U.S. streets, including fentanyl, which has surged to become the leading cause of death for Americans between the ages of 18 and 45.

    Zambada, who is believed to be in his 70s, and Guzman Lopez, who is in his 30s, were detained after landing in a private plane in El Paso, two U.S. officials told Reuters.


    Guardian: ‘I did it as quietly as I could’: the navy chief who wrecked his ship to scupper China’s ambitions

    More than 25 years ago, the BRP Sierra Madre was sent off for one final, secret voyage. In the darkness of night, the Philippine navy ship sailed from Manila Bay into the remote waters of the South China Sea. Then, to the surprise of many, it ran aground, and hasn’t moved since.

    “I did it as quietly as I could, so I would not raise any hackles among anybody,” says retired Vice Adm Eduardo Santos, who was chief of the navy at the time. To him, it was a case of mission accomplished. His plan had been to run the ship on to a small reef known as Second Thomas Shoal, one of the world’s most fiercely contested maritime sites, without China knowing. The move would help the Philippines defend the area for decades to come.


    Last Updated: 25.Jul.2024 23:21 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:50 AM, Jul 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 24.Jul.2024


    The Best Part of Waking Up is Folgers in Your Cup ☕️


    Reuters: New Zealand inquiry finds 200,000 children and vulnerable adults abused in care

    After Luxon spoke, likening the abuse against children at one of the state care facilities, Lake Alice, to torture, many stood and sang an Indigenous Maori song about love and unity.

    The report by Royal Commission of Inquiry spoke to over 2,300 survivors of abuse in New Zealand, which has a population of 5.3 million. The inquiry detailed a litany of abuses in state and faith-based care, including rape, sterilisation and electric shocks, which peaked in the 1970s.

    Those from the Indigenous Maori community were especially vulnerable to abuse, the report found, as well as those with mental or physical disabilities.

    Civil and faith leaders fought to cover up abuse by moving abusers to other locations and denying culpability, with many victims dying before seeing justice, the report added.

    Too similar to Canada!


    iChris: Faraway, So Micro

    I saw a tiktok where the person referenced an Epstein related person as a “PDF file”, presumably to get around the algorithm punishing them if they said pedophile and now I just want to think of it as that: he’s a PDF file. 😂


    Guardian: My family and other Nazis

    My father did terrible things during the second world war, and my other relatives were equally unrepentant. But it wasn’t until I was in my late 50s that I started to confront this dark past.

    “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” — Edmund Burke (attributed)


    Guardian: Oregon wildfire creates its own weather as it becomes largest active blaze in US

    “That can happen when a fire becomes plume-dominated,” Parker said. “It’s like a thunderstorm on top of the fire, generated by the heat of the fire.”

    The pyrocumulus cloud allows the smoke and ash from the fire to travel much higher in the air than it would typically go, he said. If there is enough moisture in the air above the fire, the pyrocumulus cloud can also generate rain and lightning, potentially causing new fire starts in the region.


    Last Updated: 24.Jul.2024 14:39 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:53 AM, Jul 25
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 23.Jul.2024


    See the USA in Your Chevrolet 🚘


    ScienceAlert: Natural Compound in Olives May Help Fight Obesity And Type 2 Diabetes

    A naturally occurring compound in olives, elenolic acid, has shown promise as a potential treatment for obesity and type 2 diabetes.

    In mouse models of the health conditions, researchers from Virginia Tech in the US discovered that after one week of treatment, elenolic acid reduced blood sugar levels as well as, or even better than, two leading medications.

    ⋮

    Chemical signals play major roles in orchestrating messages from our gut. In a previous study on mice from Liu’s lab, the team found that elenolic acid prompts the release of two metabolic hormones that help us sense when to stop eating, by signaling fullness to the brain.

    One of those hormones is glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), which Ozempic and similar drugs mimic in order to regulate blood sugars and satiety. The other is the less well-known peptide YY (PYY), which is released by cells in the gut to reign in your appetite at the end of a meal.



    AdaFruit: Feather of the Day: Adafruit RP2040 Feather ThinkInk for 24-pin E-Paper Displays

    Easy e-paper _and _RP2040 finally come to your Feather with this Adafruit RP2040 Feather Think Ink that’s designed to make it a breeze to add almost any common e-Ink/e-Paper display. Chances are you’ve seen one of those new-fangled ‘e-readers’ like the Kindle or Nook. They have gigantic electronic paper ‘static’ displays – that means the image stays on the display even when power is completely disconnected. The image is also high contrast and very daylight readable. It really does look just like printed paper!

    We’ve liked these displays for a long time, and we’ve got Arduino/CircuitPython drivers for tons of the various display chipsets, so wouldn’t an e-paper RP2040 Feather make a ton of sense? Luckily for us, just about every small-medium size eInk display made these days has a standard 24-pin connection. This Feather will add all the power supply support circuitry and level shifting so you can attach your favorite display – we’ve tested it with up to 5.6″ sized 7-color ACeP displays.


    CNN: The planet saw its hottest day on record

    July 21 clocked in at 17.09 degrees Celsius, or 62.76 Fahrenheit, and was the hottest day on Earth since at least 1940, according to the preliminary data from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

    ⋮

    Sunday’s record came as many countries endure prolonged and brutal heat waves. Around a hundred cities across the US are experiencing their hottest start to summer on record, and swaths of southern Europe have been grappling with triple-digit temperatures.

    Despite being based on data from the mid-20th century, the temperature records represent the warmest period the planet has seen in at least 100,000 years, scientists have found from many millennia of climate data extracted from ice cores and coral reefs.


    UPI: Study shows shift in GLP-1 drug use for obesity, not diabetes

    New prescriptions for these drugs have doubled among people who have obesity but not diabetes, investigators found.

    As a result, drug shortages have triggered a drop in new prescriptions for Type 2 diabetes, even though Ozempic and Mounjaro were initially developed as diabetes drugs, the researchers said.

    Both drugs were later approved for weight loss under different brand names, Wegovy and Zepbound.


    Last Updated: 23.Jul.2024 15:15 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:46 AM, Jul 24
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 22.Jul.2024


    Once You Pop, You Can’t Stop 🥠


    WashPo: What hotel towels are made of and why some are so thin

    In a Hilton survey conducted in 2022 and 2023, towels ranked as the top request made to front desks, with guests addressing their quality and quantity. The company responded with a six-month product review that involved nearly 60 vendors and washing its test towels at least 120 times. After concluding its research, Hilton started rolling out 40 million new units of towels and noticed an uptick in guest satisfaction.

    ⋮

    While some hotels are making progress, towels at many budget and mid-tier properties can still be as abrasive as a cat’s tongue. Here is what’s going on with hotel towels and what’s coming soon.


    WashPo: Returned Amazon packages create a retail nightmare for workers at Staples, UPS, Kohl’s

    “There’s a reason why they shopped on Amazon and went online to begin with: They’re not brick-and-mortar shoppers,” he said. “And having a hot deal for Charmin toilet paper for $18.99 marked down from $21.99 isn’t going to turn them into a Staples shopper.”


    RNZ News: A New Zealand sheep milk company scores a big win in China

    A New Zealand sheep milk company has scored a big win in China - gaining brand registration for its infant milk formula.

    It is only the second international sheep milk brand in the world to achieve this direct market access.

    The deal allows Waikato-based Spring Sheep to directly import and distribute infant formula to China - which long term will increase export volumes - and following two very challenging seasons, chief executive Nick Hammon said this deal was “highly significant and exciting”.


    RNZ News: Coroner finds four self-inflicted deaths linked to Canadian man

    A Coroner has found four New Zealanders have died after buying packages online from a Canadian man awaiting trial for multiple charges of first-degree murder.

    Kenneth Law, 58, has had 28 charges brought against him in the state of Ontario for murder and aiding suicide.

    More than 1200 of his packages were believed to have made their way to over 40 countries, including New Zealand.


    UPI: Polls show some Americans accept political violence, many fear it

    Despite the many public voices saying there is no place for political violence in America after the attempted assassination of Trump, the poll, conducted by the Chicago Project on Security and Threats at the University of Chicago weeks before the shooting, showed a different sentiment from some Americans.

    The survey showed 10% of respondents thought violence to stop Trump from becoming president was acceptable, while 7% agreed that violence to restore him to the presidency was justifiable.

    The numbers expecting civil violence though, were much higher.


    Brighter Side: Groundbreaking research study identifies the cause of ADHD

    Israeli scientists have successfully pinpointed a particular gene, CDH2, which seems to be significantly involved in the progression of ADHD. The CDH2 gene encodes N-cadherin, a protein crucial for facilitating brain synapse activity and formation.

    Through their investigation, the researchers discovered that a mutation in CDH2 disrupts this activity, influencing molecular pathways and dopamine levels within two specific brain regions associated with ADHD: the ventral midbrain and the prefrontal cortex.


    Brighter Side: Vesuvius eruption was even more deadly than scientists previously thought

    “These complexities are like a jigsaw puzzle in which all the pieces must fit together to unravel the complete picture,” said Dr. Domenico Sparice, a volcanologist at INGV-Osservatorio Vesuviano and first author of the study published in Frontiers in Earth Science. According to Sparice, seismicity during the eruption played a significant role in Pompeii’s destruction and possibly influenced the decisions of its residents.

    Recognizing the cause-effect relationship between these phenomena is crucial for understanding their combined impact on structures and people. Dr. Fabrizio Galadini, a senior researcher at INGV, emphasized this point, adding that it is essential for reconstructing the interplay between volcanic and seismic events.

    During excavations in the ‘Casa dei Pittori al Lavoro,’ the team noticed peculiar features in the collapsed buildings that didn’t align with volcanic effects documented in literature. “There had to be a different explanation,” said Dr. Mauro Di Vito, director of INGV-Osservatorio Vesuviano. The discovery of two skeletons with severe fractures further motivated the researchers to uncover the cause.


    New Republic: Trump’s Desperate Move Shows He’s Terrified of Kamala Harris Debate

    Now that Joe Biden is dropping out of the race, Donald Trump is suddenly incredibly concerned about the possibility of debating Kamala Harris.

    ⋮

    “My debate with Crooked Joe Biden, the Worst President in the history of the United States, was slated to be broadcast on Fake News ABC, the home of George Slopadopolus, sometime in September,” Trump ranted on Truth Social Sunday night. “Now that Joe has, not surprisingly, has quit the race, I think the Debate, with whomever the Radical Left Democrats choose, should be held on FoxNews, rather than very biased ABC. Thank you! DJT”

    Trump also complained about being “forced to spend time and money on fighting Crooked Joe Biden.”

    “Shouldn’t the Republican Party be reimbursed for fraud in that everybody around Joe, including his doctors and the Fake News Media, knew he was not capable of running for, or being, President? Just askin'?” Trump lamented.

    I’ll be surprised if there’s actually another debate.


    Yale Climate Connections: How Kamala Harris and Donald Trump compare on climate change

    If elected president, Harris is “widely expected to try to protect the climate achievements of the Biden administration,” according to the New York Times.

    In contrast, Trump has falsely called climate change a hoax. During his term as president, as Grady reported, “he overturned an estimated 100 environmental regulations and pulled the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement. He shrank the EPA and required that the words ‘climate change’ be removed from its website. On the campaign trail this time, he has repeatedly said one of his top priorities is to boost oil and gas production and free up more public land to ‘Drill, baby, drill.'”

    If Trump wins a second term as president, he and his allies say they aim to repeal the Inflation Reduction Act and downsize the EPA.

    Project 2025, a 992-page conservative plan for a second Trump term, calls for elimination of the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, gutting of the National Weather Service, repeal of Biden’s clean energy subsidies, and axing the National Flood Insurance Program.

    Trump: a multiple threat.

    via Denny


    TheStreet: Verizon sounds the alarm on a trend that is hurting its pockets

    During an earnings call that discussed the report, Verizon Chief Financial Officer Tony Skiadas revealed that total upgrades during the second quarter declined by roughly 13% year-over-year.

    Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg claimed during the call that the amount of customers upgrading phones has been “a bit low for a while,” and that the increased quality of phones is partially to blame.

    “We are going to see what’s going to happen in this cycle, I don’t feel very worried about it,” said Vestberg during the call. “I feel that we are in a great position to handle it.”

    ⋮

    “This was in-line with our expectations as we recently implemented several price increases that are expected to generate well over $1 billion in annualized wireless service revenue,” said Skiadas during the call. “We believe the majority of the pricing churn is now behind us and we continue to expect full-year consumer postpaid phone churn to be flat or slightly better than last year.”


    Last Updated: 22.Jul.2024 22:34 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:12 AM, Jul 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 21.Jul.2024


    It Takes a Licking and Keeps on Ticking ⌚️


    Reuters: Biden, 81, pulls out of presidential race

    July 21, 1:52 PM • Updated 4 mins ago
    By Jeff Mason, Jarrett Renshaw and Kanishka Singh

    U.S. President Joe Biden ended his reelection campaign on Sunday after fellow Democrats lost faith in his mental acuity and ability to beat Donald Trump, leaving the presidential race in uncharted territory.


    Guardian: Sonia Sodha: Yes, five years in jail is too harsh, but the Just Stop Oil Five shouldn’t have done it

    Their champions say that the urgency of their crusade — to stop the world from extracting and burning fossil fuels by 2030 — justifies their planned actions. Roger Hallam, the ringleader who received the five-year sentence, has lauded himself as the most influential environmentalist since David Attenborough and compared himself to Martin Luther King. There is a legal precedent for allowing protesters to plead conscience as a defence against charges, and to treat it as a mitigating factor in sentencing, but in this case the judge declined to do both. The courts have been clear that leniency is conditional: “A sense of proportion on the part of the offenders in avoiding excessive damage or inconvenience is matched by a relatively benign approach to sentencing.” The judge argued that their conspiracy to cause extreme disruption, and the risk of harm including to the emergency services, excluded them from consideration for reduced culpability or lower sentencing. He also pointed to other aggravating factors including the fact all were on bail for other charges when they committed the offence. (All have previous convictions.)


    Guardian: Labour urged to follow through on Tories’ promised £100m gambling levy

    The Conservatives published a white paper on reform of gambling regulation last year but many of its proposals have been left up in the air by Labour’s election victory.

    One significant measure yet to be finalised is a statutory levy on gambling companies' revenues to fund research into problem gambling, education and treatment.


    InsideEVs: Tesla Is Losing Ground In The U.S. And Europe: Here’s Why

    It doesn’t seem to be a good year for Tesla. After the record results of 2023—when it was the most popular EV manufacturer with the best-selling vehicle in the world—2024 isn’t nearly as robust. The latest data collected by JATO Dynamics for the first half of this year shows Tesla losing ground in both the United States and Europe, where sales fell by 8 percent and 13 percent respectively.


    WashPo: How Barbie’s creator made a lewd doll into a toy that inspired a movie

    25.May.2023

    The real transformation, however, was in the doll’s personality. With the help of a market researcher, Mattel transformed the doll from a vaguely pornographic male fantasy — “a high heel away from being prostitute,” as Robin Gerber, the author of “Barbie and Ruth,” put it — into the middle-class, girl-next-door fashion genius we know today.

    Mattel finally bought all patents and copyrights to Bild Lilli in 1964, completing the doll’s transformation.


    Last Updated: 21.Jul.2024 14:53 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:08 AM, Jul 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 20.Jul.2024


    Let Your Fingers Do the Walking 🤳


    Daring Fireball: Google Is Shutting Down Its URL Shortener, Breaking All Links

    How much money could it possible cost to just keep this service running in perpetuity? Tim Berners-Lee wrote his seminal essay, “Cool URIs Don’t Change” back in 1998. It’s bad enough when companies go out of business, taking their web servers down with them. But Google isn’t struggling financially. In fact, they’re thriving.

    Google continues to make a mockery of “Don’t be evil.”


    Kottke: Watch 1969’s Apollo 11 Moon Landing “Live!”

    55 years ago today, on July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong & Buzz Aldrin landed on the Moon and went for a little walk. For the 16th year in a row, you can watch the original CBS News coverage of Walter Cronkite reporting on the Moon landing and the first Moon walk on a small B&W television, synced to the present-day time. Just open this page in your browser today, July 20th, and the coverage will start playing at the proper time. Here’s the schedule (all times EDT):

    4:10:30 pm: Moon landing broadcast starts …


    eoPortal: Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission (ASBM)

    The Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission (ASBM) of Space Norway’s HEOSAT is a dual satellite mission that aims to provide internet connectivity to the Arctic. The pair of satellites will together provide constant broadband coverage over the North Pole and high-latitude regions that existing satellites do not pass over. The satellites are constructed by US-based company Northrop Grumman. A growing interest in the Arctic is being cultivated through economic benefits and changes in climate, which calls for the development of better infrastructure.


    Globe: Supreme Court rules governments cannot shield themselves from lawsuits prompted by bad legislation

    But he encountered laws passed by Stephen Harper’s Conservative government that made convicts of some criminal offences permanently ineligible for pardons. These laws were later deemed unconstitutional and overturned by the courts. Mr. Power then claimed he was personally owed damages for Parliament having passed such laws in the first place.


    Globe: Corus Entertainment announces layoffs at Global News

    Corus Entertainment Inc. is cutting jobs at its Global News division as it seeks efficiencies across the company and battles adverse trends in the media industry.

    The cuts came a few days after Corus said it stands to lose programming next year due to an arrangement struck between Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. and Rogers Communications Inc., which will see Rogers pick up rights to content such as HGTV and Food Network.

    “As part of our ongoing evaluation of our business and continued enterprise efficiency review across Corus, we have made some changes at Global News today, and as a result, certain roles have been impacted,” Corus spokesperson Anna Arnone said in a statement.

    “These changes correlate with the current economic and regulatory reality we, and other media organizations, find ourselves in. We are continuously working to improve the way we gather, produce and deliver award winning content.”


    Last Updated: 20.Jul.2024 16:18 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:17 AM, Jul 21
  • Kottke: Watch 1969’s Apollo 11 Moon Landing “Live!”

    55 years ago today, on July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong & Buzz Aldrin landed on the Moon and went for a little walk. For the 16th year in a row, you can watch the original CBS News coverage of Walter Cronkite reporting on the Moon landing and the first Moon walk on a small B&W television, synced to the present-day time. Just open this page in your browser today, July 20th, and the coverage will start playing at the proper time. Here’s the schedule (all times EDT):

    4:10:30 pm: Moon landing broadcast starts …

    → 1:22 PM, Jul 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 19.Jul.2024


    Solutions for a Small Planet ♻️


    MacRumors: Eve Launches Matter-Enabled Eve Weather Smart Station

    Smart home company Eve Systems today announced the launch of a new version of the Eve Weather that offers Matter support. With Matter, the new Eve Weather can be added to HomeKit or smart home setups from other companies.

    Eve Weather is a small cube-shaped accessory that is designed to provide outdoor weather temperature, humidity, and the local 12-hour weather trend. A display at the front allows you to see temperature and humidity at a glance, but the data also syncs to the Eve app.

    With ‌HomeKit‌ integration, Siri can be used to provide details on the outdoor weather conditions, and the data can be used to trigger ‌HomeKit‌ automations. Eve Weather offers IPX4 water resistance so it can be kept outdoors year-round and displayed anywhere.


    pv magazine: Optimizing grid-scale battery placement via quantum computing

    Spanish energy giant Iberdrola has tested quantum computing for optimizing the placement of large-scale batteries into the grid for cost, voltage control, and reliability. Accurately modeling large-scale grids and the elements of renewables and storage are notoriously strenuous tasks for classical computing.

    ⋮

    Multiverse Computing adapted algorithms to run on a quantum annealer, a type of quantum computer, and on classic hardware, to test optimization solutions. The focus, of the company’s report, was to achieve improvements in grid batteries across three key areas: initial cost, voltage control, and reliability.


    ScienceAlert: Curiosity Cracked Open a Rock on Mars And Found a Huge Surprise

    When the rover rolled its 899-kilogram (1,982-pound) body over the rock, the rock broke open, revealing yellow crystals of elemental sulfur: brimstone. Although sulfates are fairly common on Mars, this is the first time sulfur has been found on the red planet in its pure elemental form.

    What’s even more exciting is that the Gediz Vallis Channel, where Curiosity found the rock, is littered with rocks that look suspiciously similar to the sulfur rock before it got fortuitously crushed — suggesting that, somehow, elemental sulfur may be abundant there in some places.


    Guardian: ‘It was magical’: hidden self-portrait by English artist Norman Cornish found at museum

    An unseen self-portrait of one of the most popular northern English artists of his generation has been discovered hidden on the back of another painting.

    The discovery of a new work by Norman Cornish – arguably the most famous artist to emerge from the north-east of England in the 20th century – was made during preparations for a big show of works by him and another titan of northern art, LS Lowry.

    The exhibition, at the Bowes Museum in Barnard Castle, County Durham, aims to celebrate the two artists as “extraordinary storytellers of everyday life” in northern England.


    WashPo: Covid summer wave spreads across U.S., even infecting Biden

    Coronavirus activity in wastewater reached levels considered “high” or “very high” in 26 states, according to the most recent CDC data.


    The MacRumors Show: Episode 110: Talking Vision Pro and iOS 18 Beta

    On this week’s episode of The MacRumors Show, we revisit the experience of using Apple Vision Pro and talk through our first impressions of the iOS 18 public beta.

    One of the hosts (Hartley?) just got an Apple Vision Pro. He talks about how awful he finds the weight and fit of it. He basically doesn’t want to wear it for more than 15 minutes, which is about how long I could bear his unrelenting negativity. He may go on to praise other aspects but I just couldn’t get there.

    Commenter re-cycle said:

    Hartley should try the Annapro Vision Pro head strap. I’m in the UK and bought one of those to have ready for when my Vision Pro arrived and it has made the experience SO much better.


    PBS News: What we know about the massive tech outage causing worldwide disruptions

    Much of the world faced online disarray Friday as a widespread technology outage affected companies and services across industries — grounding flights, knocking banks and hospital systems offline and media outlets off air.

    At the heart of the massive disruption is CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm that provides software to scores of companies worldwide. The company says the problem occurred when it deployed a faulty update to computers running Microsoft Windows, noting that the issue behind the outage was not a security incident or cyberattack.


    RNZ News: Teenager’s dream lands him a historic home: ‘Three years of my free time and my weekends’

    For a growing number of young people, home ownership seems like an out of reach dream.

    But at just 19 years old, Taylor Henderson bucked the trend by buying his own house - and he renovated it himself as well.

    The once-rundown character cottage that used to sit in Lower Hutt is now in Featherston.


    Fortune (MSN): Trump ‘betrayed’ Elon Musk with ‘EV-bashing’ RNC speech even after his $180 million pledge, GOP strategist says

    After Tesla CEO Elon Musk reportedly pledged $180 million ($45 million per month) to Trump’s campaign—which would be the largest financial commitment in this presidential race by a tune of $130 million—some thought the billionaire could change Trump’s mind on electric vehicles (EVs), which he hates.

    ⋮

    On Thursday evening, Trump said his presidency would reverse the “green new scam,” particularly by ending “the electric-vehicle mandate on day one,” thereby saving “the U.S auto industry from complete obliteration,” and “U.S. customers thousands and thousands per car.”

    It isn’t clear exactly what the “electric-vehicle mandate” is. Murphy, who is an expert on EVs, didn’t know either, but suggested it could refer to the Biden administration’s subsidies for the vehicles, which he says has led to larger growth of manufacturing jobs currently than under Trump.

    “And then Trump says, ‘Well, it’s all government boondoggle.’ Well, that’s what the Chinese are doing,” Murphy said. “The Chinese have written much bigger checks to build a huge EV industry that loses money to come in and unfairly compete and put Americans out of work. So Trump doesn’t have the policy heft to understand the issues, he just does applause lines that are based on complete ignorance.”


    NYT: She Danced Naked at Woodstock. She Dated Serpico. At 93, She’s Not Done.

    Betty Gordon came to New York to become an actress (and have a good time). But her greatest talent may have been helping others.

    She’s lived an interesting life.


    Discover: As Wildfires Explode, Smoke Billows Across a Vast Expanse of North America

    Dramatic remote sensing imagery reveals the large-scale impact of wildfires, which also are raging in the United States and the Siberian Arctic.


    Electrek: Solar + wind now make up more than 20% of US electrical generating capacity

    Solar and wind now make up more than 20% of total US electrical generating capacity, according to new data from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).

    The renewable energy mix – biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, and wind – is now nearly 30% of total US electrical generating capacity.

    Odd that they chose to list them in alphabetical order, not by generating capacity.


    Last Updated: 19.Jul.2024 20:29 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:08 AM, Jul 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 18.Jul.2024


    Stronger than Dirt 🫧


    NYT (Yahoo): Biden Circle Shrinks as Democrats Fear Election Wipeout

    In the nearly three weeks since President Joe Biden took the debate stage in Atlanta and plunged his reelection campaign into chaos, his closest consultations have been not with his White House chief of staff, his top communications strategist or even the leader of his campaign.

    Instead, he is relying on members of his family — a tight-knit clan that includes his son, Hunter, and the first lady, Jill Biden — along with a tiny group of loyalists to steer him through a self-created crisis and quell a rising rebellion against his candidacy from within his own party.

    Biden has not consulted directly with the pollsters on his 500-person campaign team about the state of the race against Donald Trump but has instead relied on Mike Donilon, a longtime friend, former pollster and Biden campaign messaging guru, to summarize the numbers, with regular memos and numerous daily phone calls.


    CBS Austin: Houston linemen face threats as they repair outages caused by Hurricane Beryl

    Drawn guns. Thrown rocks. Threatening messages. Houston’s prolonged outages following Hurricane Beryl has some fed-up and frustrated residents taking out their anger on repair workers who are trying to restore power across the city.

    The threats and confrontations have prompted police escorts, charges in at least two cases, and pleas from authorities and local officials to leave the linemen alone so they can work.

    ⋮

    “Linemen are our friends and are doing their job. Do not threaten them. I understand you’re angry and mad and frustrated, but let’s get through this together,” Mayor John Whitmire said during a news conference on Monday.

    I doubt logic will work on these guys.

    via MitchW


    NYT: Pelosi Tells Biden She Is Pessimistic About His Re-election Chances

    The former speaker has been marshaling her knowledge of the political map, polling data and fund-raising information to press her case with President Biden that his re-election is in serious doubt.


    NYT: Bob Newhart, Soft-Spoken Everyman Who Became a Comedy Star, Dies at 94

    He was a show-business neophyte when he stammered his way to fame in 1960. He went on to star in two of TV’s most memorable sitcoms.


    Manton Reece: coffee photos

    That is all.


    NYT: Jamie Raskin, a Key Democrat, Urged Biden to Reconsider Campaign

    Mr. Raskin, a congressman from Maryland, was a key member of the panel that investigated the Capitol riot. In a lengthy letter, he compared President Biden to a tiring baseball pitcher.

    Great analogy.


    Josh Barro: Now Sonia Sotomayor Really Needs to Retire

    It’s not just Democratic elected officials who think about elderly public servants through a frame of what we owe them for all they’ve done for us. Many Democratic voters seem to look at it this way, too. It is alarming how little reputational damage Ruth Bader Ginsburg has suffered for her choice to remain on the court in 2014, when she could have retired to be replaced by a younger Obama appointee. That is, Saint Ruth of the Devotional Candle did so much for us with her fiery dissents, and so if her failure to retire followed by her tragic death led to a permanent rightward shift in the court, we can’t blame her for that. Similarly, if Sotomayor doesn’t retire, and then dies in office in 20343 before Democrats have an opportunity to replace her, and gets replaced by a young judge nominated by President J.D. Vance, resulting in a 7-2 conservative majority on the court? Her reputation among MSNBC viewers will probably remain intact, too.


    Wikipedia: Someone You Loved

    As of 2023, “Someone You Loved” is the 3rd most streamed song on Spotify, with over 3 billion streams on the platform.

    In case you were wondering…


    Last Updated: 18.Jul.2024 23:59 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:49 AM, Jul 19
  • Aargh, Bob Newhart died! One of my favourite stand-up & sitcom comedians.

    → 4:09 PM, Jul 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 17.Jul.2024


    Taste So Good, Cats Ask for It by Name 🐈🐈‍⬛


    NYT: The Best and Worst Habits for Your Teeth

    The secret to healthy teeth and gums isn’t much of a secret: Brush twice a day, floss once a day and visit a dentist regularly for cleanings.

    “It’s not sexy or surprising, but this is what works if you want to avoid cavities and gum disease,” said Dr. Matthew Messina, a clinical director and assistant professor at Ohio State University College of Dentistry.

    But dentists say there’s more we could be doing in the name of oral health. Here are some good and bad habits they suggest starting — or stopping.


    Guardian: Rattlesnake ‘mega den’ with as many as 2,000 snakes livestreaming from Colorado

    Researchers from California Polytechnic State University have set up a webcam to observe a ‘mega den’ of as many as 2,000 rattlesnakes. Emily Taylor, the Cal Poly biology professor leading the Project RattleCam research, says the exact location in Colorado is being kept secret to keep snake lovers – or haters – away

    If this interests you, skip right to the next article.


    Cal Poly: New Livestream Video of Wild Rattlesnake Den Now Available as Part of Community Service Project Led by Cal Poly

    Live footage of Colorado mega-den is available to the public online, and the project’s California camera is live again

    SAN LUIS OBISPO — Cal Poly rattlesnake researchers have installed a new camera system at a large den, or “mega-den,” of rattlesnakes in Colorado that livestreams footage to YouTube. The den is a rare habitat attracting hundreds of rattlesnakes because of its geologic features that provide snakes with hiding places and shelter from the elements.

    A fuller article and a link to the rattle-cam.


    Om Malik: Taboola + Apple News? No thanks.

    I’ve been a happy Apple One customer. It made perfect sense signing up for the package considering I was paying for Apple TV+, Apple Music and iCloud storage. For an extra couple of dollars, I could get Apple News+, so I thought why not. That ended today, when I learned that Apple had struck a deal with Taboola, a company known for serving low-quality ads next to web content. I decided to cut bait.

    ⋮

    For over a decade, I have been critical of Taboola (and its one time rival, Outbrain), equating them to the internet’s venereal disease that never goes away. In 2017, when the two companies merged, it became clear that what was the herpes of the internet was mutating into a super bug. I said as much on Twitter. Well, that day has come, and even Apple is now infected.

    No way I want to pay to let Taboola and its terrible advertising re-enter my information streams. Apple’s decision to strike a deal with Taboola is shocking and off-brand – so much so that I have started to question the company’s long-term commitment to good customer experience, including its commitment to privacy. As it chases more and more revenue to appease Wall Street, it’s clear Apple will become one of those companies that prioritize shareholders over paying customers and their experience.


    NHL Trade Talk: Maple Leafs Philippe Myers: More than Meets the Eye?

    When Philippe Myers signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs just after July 1, it was generally perceived as a move for defensive depth and insurance. However, could there be more to Myers than meets the eye? Does he have the potential to make a significant impact on the roster?

    Here are three reasons why Myers could be a surprise addition to the team.

    Reason One: Myers Brings Size and Physicality …

    Reason Two: Myers Brings Defensive Skill Set and Penalty-Killing Expertise …

    Reason Three: Myers Brings Affordable Depth with Potential Upside …


    Wikipedia: Edna O’Brien

    Josephine Edna O’Brien DBE (born 15 December 1930) is an Irish novelist, memoirist, playwright, poet and short-story writer. Elected to Aosdána by her fellow artists, she was honoured with the title Saoi in 2015 and the biennial “UK and Ireland Nobel” David Cohen Prize in 2019, whilst France made her Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 2021.

    O’Brien’s works often revolve around the inner feelings of women, and their problems in relating to men, and to society as a whole. Her first novel, The Country Girls (1960), is often credited with breaking silence on sexual matters and social issues during a repressive period in Ireland following the Second World War. The book was banned, burned and denounced from the pulpit. Faber and Faber published her memoir, Country Girl, in 2012. O’Brien lives in London.


    Paris Review: The Art of Fiction No. 82

    Interview with Edna O’Brien from 1984.


    CBC: Writers and Company: Edna O’Brien discusses her journey from Ireland’s outcast to celebrated icon [audio]

    O’Brien spoke with Eleanor Wachtel in 2009.

    “It’s been said that growing up in Ireland, you learn about sin from priests, Latin from nuns, and about passion from Edna O’Brien.”


    CBC: Trudeau outlines details of $30B, 10-year fund for public transit

    Applications opened Wednesday for two streams in the federal government’s new $30-billion public transit fund, even though the money won’t start flowing for another two years, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.

    Unfortunately this means that it probably won’t survive the upcoming federal election.


    UPI: President Joe Biden to self-isolate at home after showing COVID-19 symptoms

    The doctor’s message said Biden displayed upper respiratory symptoms Wednesday afternoon, including a runny nose and cough. The message said Biden “felt OK for his first event of the day, but given that he was not feeling better, point of care testing for COVID-19 was conducted, and the results were positive for the COVID-19 virus.”

    The note said the president’s respiratory rate, temperature and pulse was normal, and it said Biden already has received his first dose of Paxlovid.


    Last Updated: 17.Jul.2024 23:08 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:09 AM, Jul 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 16.Jul.2024


    Look Sharp, Feel Sharp 🪒


    TechCrunch: Presti uses generative AI to improve product photography in the furniture industry

    If you’ve ever bought a sofa on an online store, have you thought about the homes that you can see in the background? When it’s time to release a new collection, furniture brands usually spend a small fortune on photo shoots. It’s a cumbersome and expensive process as it’s not easy to move furniture around.

    That’s why a French startup called Presti is using generative AI to turn a single product image into a realistic photo. The company has already raised a $3.5 million seed round led by Partech with several business angels also participating.


    Guardian: ‘Lo and behold’: world’s rarest whale may have washed up on New Zealand beach

    Spade-toothed whales are a type of beaked whale named for their teeth resembling the spade-like “flensing” blade once used to strip whales of their blubber. Knowledge of their existence is mostly based on a series of bones and tissue discovered decades apart and later sequenced, showing a new, shared DNA.

    But scientists in New Zealand believe that a whole specimen may just have been found in Taiari Mouth, Otago. It is the proverbial white whale of whale species, and it looks a lot like a very big dolphin.

    “Spade-toothed whales are one of the most poorly known large mammalian species of modern times,” Gabe Davies, operations manager at New Zealand’s Department of Conservation (DOC), said in a press release. He said the finding was “huge”.


    BBC: Second homes: Gwynedd council playing Russian roulette - claim

    Second home owners in Gwynedd already pay a 250% council tax rate.

    ⋮

    To try to manage the impact of second homes and holiday lets on communities, planning changes have been introduced in Wales.

    This means planning authorities like councils and national parks can introduce what is known as an Article 4 direction to manage housing.

    In Gwynedd, if means a homeowner will need planning permission to use a main home as a second home or short-term holiday let; to use a second home as a holiday let; or to use a holiday let as a second home.


    OK magazine: ‘I Am Mortified’: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Issues Apology After Phone Call With Donald Trump Was Leaked

    In the clip, which was a phone call that took place after Trump’s attempted assassination attempt, Trump spoke to Kennedy about vaccines, how he’s going to win the election and how President Joe Biden called him and asked him how he knew to turn his head as he was being shot. Trump also described that the bullet that hit his ear was like “the world’s largest mosquito.” This morning, Kennedy issued an apology for the video being shared on X: “When President Trump called me I was taping with an in-house videographer. I should have ordered the videographer to stop recording immediately. I am mortified that this was posted. I apologize to the president.”

    I wonder where that “in-house videographer” is working now?


    Axios: Taboola to sell ads for Apple

    Ad tech giant Taboola has struck a deal with Apple to power native advertising within the Apple News and Apple Stocks apps, Taboolafounder and CEO Adam Singolda told Axios.

    Why it matters: The deal provides new validation for Taboola’s business, which has ballooned to over $1.4 billion in annual revenue as of 2023.

    Apple is starting to get desperate to grow revenues. Will they go the route of Google and sell their soul?


    Fast Company: The chumbox is still the dirty design secret of the internet

    These chumbox advertisements — so-called for the way they lure in curious readers, akin to dumping junk bait into the ocean to capture bigger fish — are, of course, a form of clickbait. The outlandish headlines, which once seemed the highest form of absurdity, have given way to a visual language that borders on the abstract, and one that is wholly native to the internet. 

    Like most things, chumboxes were designed to sell a product, either directly or indirectly. The scale of the “native advertising” industry, the preferred term for advertising that mimics the look and feel of the traditional media outlets where it’s placed, is immense. One of the biggest purveyors, Taboola, boasts 9,000 “digital property partners” and 400 billion content recommendations every month. MGID, which claims the title of “the first platform to introduce content discovery through a native widget,” reaches more than 32,000 publishers and serves up an excess of 185 billion monthly impressions.


    Ars Technica: YouTube creators surprised to find Apple and others trained AI on their videos

    AI models at Apple, Salesforce, Anthropic, and other major technology players were trained on tens of thousands of YouTube videos without the creators' consent and potentially in violation of YouTube’s terms, according to a new report appearing in both Proof News and Wired.

    The companies trained their models in part by using “the Pile,” a collection by nonprofit EleutherAI that was put together as a way to offer a useful dataset to individuals or companies that don’t have the resources to compete with Big Tech, though it has also since been used by those bigger companies.

    The Pile includes books, Wikipedia articles, and much more. That includes YouTube captions collected by YouTube’s captions API, scraped from 173,536 YouTube videos across more than 48,000 channels. That includes videos from big YouTubers like MrBeast, PewDiePie, and popular tech commentator Marques Brownlee. On X, Brownlee called out Apple’s usage of the dataset, but acknowledged that assigning blame is complex when Apple did not collect the data itself.


    Last Updated: 16.Jul.2024 23:58 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:04 AM, Jul 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 15.Jul.2024


    Think Outside the Bun 🌮


    Wales Online: ‘I quit home and job to live in car and I’ve never been happier’

    After working “a lot” of different jobs in 10 years, losing his dad, in 2017 and struggling to hold down a relationship - he realised he wanted a change. He took a job as an UberEats rider earning £300-400-a-week - and drove on a whim to Penzance, Cornwall, on the night of June 1, 2023.

    Since then, he’s not had to pay a penny in rent by moving into his Fiat 500 - which he parks up on side roads and car parks. He still works as an UberEats driver wherever he goes - earning “enough to pay for his needs.”

    All his possessions are stored in the boot of his car - while his pay goes on car insurance, food and a £45 gym membership, just so he can use the shower. He mostly eats takeaways - for “convenience” - but also buys bread to make sandwiches.

    Long-term security matters too, but happiness is pretty important.


    TechCrunch: Mitti Labs aims to make rice farming less harmful to the climate, starting in India

    Rice is the staple crop of more than half of the world’s population. Demand is growing with the rising population in South and Southeast Asia. However, a significant portion of rice farming still relies on traditional cultivation methods that lead to substantial methane emissions, which are a major contributor to climate change – methane is nearly 30 times as potent as carbon dioxide when it comes to warming the atmosphere, although it dissipates faster. Growing rice also requires a considerable amount of freshwater, around 3,000 liters for every kilogram of rice, or 20 million liters for every hectare of a rice farm.

    Mitti Labs aims to limit methane emissions and water wastage in rice farming using its technology solutions.


    NYT: This Street Was Clogged With Traffic. Now It Belongs to Ping-Pong.

    A neighborhood in Queens, New York, turned 1.3 miles of a regular road into an open street for pedestrians, cyclists and playing children, with aims to make some of it into a park.

    ⋮

    … just three blocks north, running parallel to Roosevelt, is 34th Avenue, where a stretch of 26 blocks, running east to west, has been closed to cars from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day since 2020.


    NYT: At the Republican National Convention, Climate Change Isn’t a Problem

    As the event opens with a focus on energy, former President Trump and other leaders are calling for more oil, gas and coal development.

    The United States is experiencing scorching new levels of heat fueled by climate change this summer, with dozens of people dying in the West, millions sweating under heat advisories and nearly three-quarters of Americans saying the government must prioritize global warming.

    But as the Republican Party opens its national convention in Milwaukee with a prime-time focus on energy on Monday night, the party has no plan to address climate change.

    Free link.


    Ars Technica: Dirty diaper resold on Amazon ruined a family business, report says

    A feces-encrusted swim diaper tanked a family business after Amazon re-sold it as new, Bloomberg reported, triggering a bad review that quickly turned a million-dollar mom-and-pop shop into a $600,000 pile of debt.

    Paul and Rachelle Baron, owners of Beau & Belle Littles, told Bloomberg that Amazon is supposed to inspect returned items before reselling them. But the company failed to detect the poop stains before reselling a damaged item that triggered a one-star review in 2020 that the couple says doomed their business after more than 100 buyers flagged it as “helpful.”

    Isn’t reselling a returned item as “new” fraudulent?


    CBC: Why the Ford government nixed deposit on soft drink cans, bottles

    Ontario has the worst recycling rates in Canada for cans, plastic bottles and cartons of non-alcoholic beverages, with billions of these containers going to landfills and incinerators annually.

    But for more than a year, momentum was building toward a key shift to try to improve things. Premier Doug Ford’s government was seriously consideringcreating a deposit-return system for soft drink containers, a system that’s already in place in eight other provinces and that already exists for beer, wine and spirits in Ontario.

    ⋮

    Then suddenly, with zero advance notice and no public announcement — and with a potential LCBO strike dominating the news —  senior government officials phoned the participants on the afternoon of July 4 to tell them the working group was being shut down, and plans for the deposit-return system scrapped.


    Last Updated: 15.Jul.2024 17:22 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:28 AM, Jul 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 14.Jul.2024


    Be All You Can Be 👩‍🏭🧑‍🏭


    Guardian: Five doctors on the supplements they swear by, from Vitamin D to lion’s mane

    Which vitamins does a GP specialising in hormones take to help her mood? And what does a medic reach for when someone they live with has a cold?

    fwiw.


    Wales Online: Drivers given ‘£1,000 fine and points on licence’ dash cam warning

    Dash cams have become increasingly popular with drivers in recent years. They can be very useful - particularly if you are involved in a crash and want to prove what happened.

    But there are also rules that have to be stuck to in relation to their installation and use. For example, insurers must generally be informed if you are using one.


    Stuff.co.nz: Secret Service investigating how a gunman who shot at Trump was able to get so close

    An Associated Press analysis of more than a dozen videos and photos taken at the Trump rally, as well as satellite imagery of the site, shows the shooter was able to get astonishingly close to the stage where the former president was speaking. A video posted to social media and geolocated by the AP shows the body of a man wearing gray camouflage lying motionless on the roof of a manufacturing plant just north of the Butler Farm Show grounds, where Trump’s rally was held.

    The roof was less than 150 meters (yards) from where Trump was speaking, a distance from which a decent marksman could reasonably hit a human-sized target. For reference, 150 meters is a distance at which U.S. Army recruits must hit a scaled human-sized silhouette to qualify with the M16 assault rifle in basic training. The AR-15, like the shooter at the Trump rally had, is the semi-automatic civilian version of the military M16.


    PC Gamer: Las Vegas' dystopia-sphere, powered by 150 Nvidia GPUs and drawing up to 28,000,000 watts, is both a testament to the hubris of humanity and an admittedly impressive technical feat

    Now Nvidia has revealed that the displays of the now-iconic Las Vegas Sphere—a gigantic spherical entertainment arena sitting at the heart of Sin City—are powered by 150 of its RTX A6000 desktop workstation GPUs.

    For those that like big numbers, well, hold onto your hats. Each of those GPUs feature over 10,752 cores, 48 GB of memory and have a 300 W TDP, for a grand total of 1,612,800 cores, 7,200 GB of GDDR6 memory, and a potential maximum power draw of 45,000 W at full tilt (via Wccftech).

    ⋮

    it’s estimated that the Sphere is capable of drawing 28,000,000 watts of power. For reference, 1,000,000 watts, or 1 megawatt, is said to be enough to satisfy the instantaneous demand of 750 homes at once in the California/Nevada area, meaning that 28 megawatts would be equivalent to the power necessary for 21,000 homes.

    A draw of 28 MW of power!


    AppleInsider: Apple Watch saves Australian swimmer from ocean riptides

    Byron Bay resident Rick Shearman had been out for his usual morning body surf at Tallow Beach when he got deluged by strong breaking waves that were carrying him further away from land. He was eventually carried out a kilometer (0.6 miles) offshore, trying to find a channel to get back to land.

    “I copped a couple of big ones on the head and was held under for a while, I started to panic a bit and cramp up under water there,” Shearman later told an ABC North Coast reporter. “It became clear after about 20 minutes that I wasn’t going to make it back in and I needed some assistance.”

    Fatigued by the effort to avoid breaking waves and unable to get back to the beach, Shearman remembered the emergency function of his Apple Watch. While treading water, he located the SOS function on the device and called the Australian emergency number, 0-0-0.


    NewsNation: Trump rally shooting witnesses saw suspect climb on roof with rifle

    Another witness, named Greg Smith, told BBC News the suspected shooter had crawled on top of the building located just outside the event. He said he pointed the gunman out to police.

    “I’m thinking to myself, ‘Why is Trump still speaking, why have they not pulled him off the stage’… the next thing you know, five shots ring out.”

    Smith was listening from outside the rally and said he saw the gunman around five minutes into Trump’s speech.

    “We noticed the guy bear-crawling up the roof of the building beside us, 50 feet away,” he said. “He had a rifle; we could clearly see a rifle.”


    Just Have a Think (YouTube): America’s grid battery revolution. [video]

    China is often held up as leading the way in renewable energy, but it’s actually the USA that has most enthusiastically embraced battery energy storage to help stabilize the electricity grid, and in some surprising locations. But is it all about the noble effort of decarbonisation or are we seeing some market profiteering here?

    A good overview of what’s going on with industrial-sized batteries around the world.


    BlogTO: Man quits job after 9 years to open one of Ontario’s most unique candy stores

    After spending just under nine years working at an Indigo location (five of which he spent as a manager) in London, Ontario, Josh Stern felt it was time to make a big change.

    Taking stock of all he had learned and where he wanted to go next, the idea for All The Candy, Richmond Hill’s newest and only exotic candy store was born.

    I wonder if any candy store workers have decided to quit selling sugar to open a bookstore?


    NYT: Photo Appears to Capture Path of Bullet Used in Assassination Attempt

    Michael Harrigan, a retired F.B.I. special agent, said the image captured by Doug Mills, a New York Times photographer, seems to show a bullet streaking past former President Donald J. Trump.


    CleanTechnica: The Duck Curve & Solutions For It

    Normally, in the past, fast generation responses were made by simple gas turbines, which have cheap initial cost, are fast starting and ramping, have some running costs and some fuel costs, and for the most part are ideal for sudden loads. Their overall marginal cost was usually higher than other generation, but nothing else would do that job so cheaply and so well … until batteries came along. Now battery energy storage is cheaper than natural gas plants and BESS are replacing gas turbines progressively in California. This started as far back as 2018 and has spread to other parts of the US as battery energy storage prices have plummeted.


    Last Updated: 14.Jul.2024 23:43 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:08 AM, Jul 15
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 13.Jul.2024


    Don’t be evil. 👿 🔎


    NZ Herald: SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket’s engine fails during satellite launch

    SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket suffered an upper-stage engine failure yesterday after lifting off from Vandenberg Space Force Base, a setback on a mission without astronauts on board that will likely delay upcoming human spaceflight launches while the company investigates what went wrong.

    The problem occurred during the launch of a batch of Starlink satellites, used to beam the internet to ground stations and cellphones. The company said that since the “second stage engine did not complete its second burn” the satellites “were deployed into a lower than intended orbit.”

    SpaceX CEO Elon Musk wrote on X that the engine failed “for reasons currently unknown. Team is reviewing data tonight to understand root cause.”


    Wikipedia: PixelFed service

    Pixelfed is a free and open-source image sharing social network service. The platform uses a decentralized architecture which is roughly comparable to e-mail providers, meaning user data is not stored on one central server. It uses the ActivityPub protocol, allowing users to interact with other social networks within the protocol, such as Mastodon, PeerTube, and Friendica. Pixelfed and other platforms utilizing this protocol are considered to be part of the Fediverse.

    ⋮

    Pixelfed has photo sharing features similar to Instagram and is sometimes considered as an “ethical” alternative to Instagram. Users can post photos, stories and collections via an independent, distributed and federating photo community in the form of connected Pixelfed instances. Posts made in the same Pixelfed instance as the user will appear on Local Feed, while posts from other Fediverse instances will be available on Global Feed. The Home Feed, however, will show posts of followed users. The discover page displays images that may be of interest to users.

    Each post allows for a maximum of 10 photos or videos attached. Pixelfed also shares some of Mastodon’s features, including an emphasis on discovery feeds and content warnings.

    See also PixelFed home

    via Numeric Citizen


    US News & World Report: Ozempic Linked With Lower Dementia Risk, Nicotine Use, British Study Finds

    The study, published in the Lancet’s eClinicalMedicine journal on Thursday, explored more than 100 million medical records of U.S. patients to see if Ozempic increased the risk of several neurological and psychiatric conditions in the first year of use compared with three common antidiabetic drugs.

    The study found Ozempic, or semaglutide, was not tied to a higher risk of any of the neurological or psychiatric conditions studied, such as anxiety or depression, and patients taking Ozempic had lower rates of cognitive decline and nicotine use.


    Stuff: Freeze-dried woolly mammoths share their genetic secrets with scientists

    A study published Thursday (local time) in the journal Cell about mammoths inspires a new way of looking at ancient DNA samples that may hold more information about the past than previously thought.

    ⋮

    The authors suggest that the mammoth was found in such a well-preserved state because of the dry and cold winters of Siberia, where it was found. In those conditions, the mammoth probably entered a dehydrated stated shortly after death, protecting it from being colonized by fungi and bacteria.

    Originally from the Washington Post.


    New Yorker: I’m Not an A••hole. I’m an Introvert

    I can be loud at times, and I’m not shy, so a lot of people assume that I’m an extrovert. But I’m not. I’m an introvert. When I explain this to people, they ask me, “Well, if you’re such an introvert, why are you talking to a group of strangers in an elevator? This is a social interaction that you initiated and could have easily avoided.” I don’t answer them. I just shake my head at how misunderstood the word “introvert” is these days.

    As with all humour, some people will not enjoy this but it’s impossible to know whom. It may be you.


    TorStar: Why 2026 mortgage renewals could make or break the economy

    The mortgage crisis has hit Toronto homeowners hard. Household debt is near record levels and unemployment is inching upward, creating a precarious environment for over-leveraged homeowners.

    Already, some are losing their homes. Mortgage delinquencies and defaults are expected to continue trending upwards as homeowners face mortgage renewals in 2025 and 2026. Canada’s banking regulator recently named mortgage renewal as one of the top financial risks facing the country. And the six major banks are bracing for more defaults, setting aside $4.36 billion in provisions for credit losses in the second quarter of 2024 — an increase of $1.6 billion from the same time last year.

    The low interest rate mortgage trap is snapping shut.


    Guardian: Goats of gold: Australia’s feral goat problem has become a $235m export trade

    Feral goats are found all over Australia, but western NSW is where they are most prevalent, with the last count, in 2020, estimating a population of 4.9 million. According to Meat and Livestock Australia 2,364,307 goats, worth $235m, were slaughtered in 2023.

    That’s only 0.4% of global production, and domestically, the market is small. Just 9% of Australian goat meat is consumed onshore. The rest is exported: Australia produces 35% of all goat meat exports, and accounts for 44% of the global export value of goat meat. Most is exported as frozen whole carcasses.


    The Guardian: What we know about the shooting at a Donald Trump rally

    Suspected shooter and one rally attendee dead, says Butler county district attorney – here’s what else we know about the situation.


    Last Updated: 13.Jul.2024 22:39 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:31 AM, Jul 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 12.Jul.2024


    Reach Out and Touch Someone 📞


    NYT: Paul Krugman: What Does the G.O.P. Have Against America?

    While Democrats tear themselves apart over President Biden’s disastrous debate performance and his refusal to consider stepping aside, the Republican National Committee, without much fanfare, has released its 2024 platform.

    Compared with previous platforms, it dials back references to abortion — downplaying what is, for Republicans, a losing issue. That choice goes along with Donald Trump’s recent attempt to distance himself from the extremist Project 2025 — even though that blueprint was concocted by some of his close political allies. Here, Trump is clearly employing sleight of hand in an effort not to be seen as autocratically inclined. But at this point, if you believe that, I have a degree from Trump University I’d like to sell you.


    NYT: He Was Sent to Prison for Killing His Baby. What if He Didn’t Do It?

    The case did not look like the abuse cases she saw as a public defender; rather than hiding their son away, the Mazes put him in front of doctors again and again. But Eaton knew that once investigators and then prosecutors settle on the theory of a case, the state’s narrative calcifies, and D.A.s will go to great lengths to defend it. District attorney’s offices often reflexively reject innocence claims and even block defendants' efforts to have the courts consider potentially exonerating evidence. Their faith in the underlying police work, and their certainty about a defendant’s guilt, can make prosecutors resist acknowledging a mistake. So, too, can the political pressure to protect the office’s record and to appear tough on crime. “It’s ingrained in some prosecutors to fight for the sake of fighting,” says Jason Gichner, the Tennessee Innocence Project’s deputy director, who now represents Russell Maze.


    NYT: Biden’s News Conference Answered Many Questions. But Not the Big One.

    On a national TV stage, Mr. Biden answered the individual questions, often comfortably, sometimes defensively, with depth and engagement and flashes of passion. As for the uber-question, the answer was incomplete. He was not the uncomfortable, lost presence of the debate, but he didn’t erase the memory of that version of himself either. He came across as the president he wants to be, but not necessarily the candidate his critics have said he needs to be.

    ⋮

    The telecast had the daredevil feel of a live walk through a minefield.

    I watched the whole press conference. That pretty much sums up how I felt.


    Downtown Bedford IN: Limestone Heritage Festival

    I don’t want to forget this.

    via jabel


    NYT: Alec Baldwin’s Trial Pauses as Unexamined Rounds Are Brought Into Court

    The trial of Alec Baldwin took a dramatic turn on Friday when a manila envelope of previously unexamined evidence was brought into the courtroom, prompting the judge to put on blue latex gloves, cut it open with a pair of scissors and then get down from the bench to examine ammunition in the well of the courtroom.

    And she does not look happy.


    Daring Fireball: AT&T Only Learned of Massive 2022 Data Breach This April; Delayed Revealing It at the Request of U.S. Law Enforcement

    In a written statement shared with KrebsOnSecurity, the FBI confirmed that it asked AT&T to delay notifying affected customers.

    “Shortly after identifying a potential breach to customer data and before making its materiality decision, AT&T contacted the FBI to report the incident,” the FBI statement reads. “In assessing the nature of the breach, all parties discussed a potential delay to public reporting under Item 1.05(c) of the SEC Rule, due to potential risks to national security and/or public safety. AT&T, FBI, and DOJ worked collaboratively through the first and second delay process, all while sharing key threat intelligence to bolster FBI investigative equities and to assist AT&T’s incident response work.”

    ⋮

    It remains unclear why so many major corporations persist in the belief that it is somehow acceptable to store so much sensitive customer data with so few security protections. For example, Advance Auto Parts said the data exposed included full names, Social Security numbers, drivers licenses and government issued ID numbers on 2.3 million people who were former employees or job applicants.


    Daring Fireball: Google Chrome, Along With Other Popular Chromium Browsers, Grants System Monitoring Privileges to *.google.com Domains

    Luca Casonato:

    So, Google Chrome gives all *.google.com sites full access to system / tab CPU usage, GPU usage, and memory usage. It also gives access to detailed processor information, and provides a logging backchannel.

    This API is not exposed to other sites - only to *.google.com.

    This is interesting because it is a clear violation of the idea that browser vendors should not give preference to their websites over anyone else’s.

    Tell me again what happened to Google’s motto, “Don’t be evil”?


    LA Times (Yahoo): Former top LAPD official found guilty of tracking a fellow officer with AirTag

    Former Los Angeles assistant police chief Alfred “Al” Labrada has retired from the department after a disciplinary board found that he secretly tracked a fellow officer he was romantically involved with and then tried to cover his tracks, according to three sources familiar with the case.

    The board found Labrada guilty Monday of all seven counts he faced, including that he lied to internal affairs detectives and tried to persuade a witness not to testify in a department investigation into the matter, according to a source who requested anonymity to discuss the normally secret proceedings.

    The three-member panel was supposed to reconvene in October to decide on an appropriate penalty for Labrada, who faced termination. But Labrada confirmed through a spokesperson Friday that he was leaving the department; his retirement is retroactive to July 1, the spokesperson said.

    The woman who was targeted by Labrada is suing the department, and well she should.


    Wales Online: Having these foods in your kitchen ‘can add 13 years to your life’

    The findings came from a study by researchers at the University of Bergen in Norway found life expectancy could be increased by up to 13 years for those aged 20 who made sustained diet changes. By contrast, a person aged 60 could lengthen their life by around eight-and-a-half years and even 80-year-olds could boost their lifespan by an average of 3.4 years if they changed their eating habits.

    TL;DR: Leafy greens, nuts, berries, whole grains, avocados, fatty fish, legumes, cruciferous vegetables, garlic, green tea (but they have lots of specific examples).


    BBC: East Anglian fishermen vow to fight new medical requirements

    5.Apr.2023

    Fishermen will need a doctor-approved medical certificate to work at sea from November onward.

    An ML5 medical certificate asks patients to declare whether they have a body mass index (BMI) above 35.

    The government said it was important fishermen did not cause a risk to themselves or others.

    A 6 foot tall (18 hands, 1.83 m) fisher with a weight of 260 lb (18.6 stone, 118 kg) would be over the BMI limit. However, such a person could be very fit or unfit. The goal is laudable, but I think BMI is poorly suited to the task.


    NYT: Judge Dismisses Alec Baldwin Case in ‘Rust’ Shooting: What to Know

    The actor was accused of involuntary manslaughter in the fatal shooting of the cinematographer on the film “Rust.” The judge dismissed the case after ruling that the state had withheld evidence.


    Last Updated: 12.Jul.2024 23:59 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:19 AM, Jul 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 11.Jul.2024


    Quality Never Goes Out of Style 👖


    pv magazine: Battery storage deployment in Canada kicks into gear

    The deployment of battery energy storage systems (BESS) in Canada is picking up the pace, with the announcement of a 705 MWh battery storage system delivery to Nova Scotia by Canadian Solar’s e-Storage and various other projects in provinces across the country. However, this surge cannot come quickly enough says Energy Storage Canada.


    NYT: Las Vegas Heat Breaks Records and Stuns Even the Forecasters

    In southeast Texas, where Hurricane Beryl left millions of residents without power on Monday, people sweltered without air-conditioning and hospitals were “backed up” because doctors were wary of discharging patients to homes without power, officials said Wednesday.

    By Thursday morning, more than 1.1 million CenterPoint Energy customers were still without electricity. The company said that it hoped to get the lights back on for 400,000 customers by the end of Friday, but that about 500,000 customers would probably still be without power into next week.


    CBC: Canada confirms plan to replace submarine fleet at NATO summit

    Up to now, the government has spoken only about the possibility of replacing the aging Victoria-class boats. But in the face of mounting criticism of Canada’s defence spending by allies — notably the United States — Ottawa has given the proposal the green light.

    A senior government official, speaking on background, said they could not confirm how much the plan will cost, how many boats will be purchased or when they will arrive.

    Sounds like another knee-jerk reaction.


    CBC: Canada, U.S. and Finland form pact to build icebreakers for Arctic

    The United States, Canada and Finland have entered into a trilateral pact to build icebreakers for the Arctic region, the three countries said in a joint statement Thursday on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Washington.

    The agreement also involves the sharing of expertise, information and capabilities among the partner countries.

    “This partnership will strengthen the shipbuilding industries in each nation with the goal of creating good-paying jobs in shipyards, marine equipment manufacturers and many other related services across all three countries,” the statement said.

    Announcements galore!


    NYT: Why Your Covid Symptoms Could Feel Different This Time

    By this point in the Covid-19 pandemic, most people have had at least one brush with the virus. Those of us who have been infected again (and again) may think we know the drill.

    But symptoms can vary from one infection to the next. The virus has felt like an entirely different illness each time I’ve tested positive: The first go-round, a fever flattened me. Once, I had barely any symptoms. The worst infection left me wrung-out on my couch, so exhausted I had to strain to pay attention to a podcast.

    Article subhead says infection rates are rising in the US.


    CleanTechnica: Tesla’s Cybertruck Defies the Naysayers & Becomes Best-Selling Electric Truck

    It’s official — Tesla’s Cybertruck was the the best selling EV pickup truck in the US during Q2, and is among the fastest production ramps in Tesla’s history.

    After the first deliveries in just November of last year, the Cybertruck was able to sell 8,755 units in the US during Q2, compared to 7,902 Ford F-150 Lightnings, 3,261 Rivian R1Ts, 2,929 Hummer EVs, and 2,196 Chevrolet Silverado EVs.

    ⋮

    Next, the Cybertruck is likely to get cheaper as Tesla ends the Foundation series, which is priced $100,000–$120,000 and includes all of the extra options. Tesla will then offer trims priced at $80,000–$100,000, and, eventually, a rear-wheel-drive trim for $61,000 as they ramp towards their current production capacity of 125,000 Cybertrucks per year. At the most recent Tesla shareholders meeting, Elon Musk mentioned Tesla could transition off the more expensive Foundation series this quarter. This will likely drive sales even higher as Tesla cuts out cost from the production process to enable the lower-priced trims.


    iPhone in Canada: New on BritBox: August 2024

    New BritBox titles are coming in August 2024. Highlights include Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh in Killing Eve, with seasons 3 and 4 arriving on August 6 and 13, respectively.

    Bridget Christie’s new comedy-drama, The Change, debuts on August 1. The BritBox Original crime series, Granite Harbour, returns for a second season on August 15. Also, the platform adds royal-themed programs: The White Princess, also starring Jodie Comer, and the documentary My King Charles.

    Check out the full list of what’s new on Britbox in August 2024 below: …

    Currently our favourite source for interesting viewing. (If Netflix really does hit us with a significant pricing increase, then we will cancel Netflix.)


    NYT: He Was Sent to Prison for Killing His Baby. What if He Didn’t Do It?

    Sunny Eaton never imagined herself working at the district attorney’s office. A former public defender, she once represented Nashville’s least powerful people, and she liked being the only person in a room willing to stand by someone when no one else would. She spent a decade building her own private practice, but in 2020, she took an unusual job as the director of the conviction-review unit in the Nashville D.A.’s office. Her assignment was to investigate past cases her office had prosecuted and identify convictions for which there was new evidence of innocence.

    The enormousness of the task struck her on her first day on the job, when she stood in the unit’s storage room and took in the view: Three-ring binders, each holding a case flagged for evaluation, stretched from floor to ceiling. The sheer number of cases reflected how much the world had changed over the previous 30 years. DNA analysis and scientific research had exposed the deficiencies of evidence that had, for decades, helped prosecutors win convictions. Many forensic disciplines — from hair and fiber comparison to the analysis of blood spatter, bite marks, burn patterns, shoe and tire impressions and handwriting — were revealed to lack a strong scientific foundation, with some amounting to quackery. Eyewitness identification turned out to be unreliable. Confessions could be elicited from innocent people.


    AppleInsider: MacBook Air M3 review three months later: The best Mac for nearly everyone

    So, it was time to rethink things again. In the spring of 2024, I bought the M3 MacBook Air shortly after release, and have been using it ever since. Specifically, I got the 8GB RAM, 256GB storage configuration, because I have a powerhouse in the home office.


    Last Updated: 11.Jul.2024 21:18 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:04 AM, Jul 12
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 10.Jul.2024


    Fly the Friendly Skies ✈️


    BBC: Shackleton: Famed explorer’s Endurance ship gets extra protection

    A protection perimeter drawn around Endurance, one of the world’s greatest shipwrecks, is being widened from a radius of 500m to 1,500m.

    The extended zone will further limit activities close to the vessel, which sank in 1915 during an ill-fated Antarctic expedition led by celebrated polar explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton.


    BBC: Le Câtillon II Coin Hoard: £90,000 set aside for research

    More than £90,000 of funding has been allocated to support research into the Le Câtillon II coin hoard.

    The 2,000-year-old discovery, containing the world’s largest Celtic coin hoard, was uncovered by two local amateur metal detectorists in 2012.


    BBC: Ariane-6 first launch: Europe’s rocket blasts off for first time

    Europe’s big new rocket, Ariane-6, has blasted off on its maiden flight.

    The vehicle set off from a launchpad in French Guiana at 16:00 local time (19:00 GMT) on a demonstration mission to put a clutch of satellites in orbit.

    Crews on the ground in Kourou applauded as the rocket - developed at a cost of €4bn (£3.4bn) - soared into the sky.

    But after climbing smoothly to the desired altitude, and correctly releasing a number of small satellites, the upper-stage of the rocket experienced an anomaly right at the end of the flight.


    Nunatsiaq: Canadian Coast Guard icebreaking season begins

    Ships started leaving ports in southern Canada June 16 and are expected to trace through the Arctic until November.


    The Tennessean: Former Nashville Predators captain Greg Johnson had CTE when he died in 2019

    Former Nashville Predators captain Greg Johnson had chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) when he died at age 48, according to family members and the Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF).

    Johnson died at his home in Detroit from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on July 7, 2019. His brain was analyzed by Dr. Ann McKee of the Boston University CTE Center, who diagnosed Johnson with CTE.


    TechCrunch: FTC study finds ‘dark patterns’ used by a majority of subscription apps and websites

    The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC), along with two other international consumer protection networks, announced on Thursday the results of a study into the use of “dark patterns” — or manipulative design techniques — that can put users' privacy at risk or push them to buy products or services or take other actions they otherwise wouldn’t have. In an analysis of 642 websites and apps offering subscription services, the study found that the majority (nearly 76%) used at least one dark pattern and nearly 67% used more than one.

    Dark patterns refer to a range of design techniques that can subtly encourage users to take some sort of action or put their privacy at risk. They’re particularly popular among subscription websites and apps and have been an area of focus for the FTC in previous years. For instance, the FTC sued dating app giant Match for fraudulent practices, which included making it difficult to cancel a subscription through its use of dark patterns.


    NYT: Bruce Bastian, a Founder of WordPerfect, Is Dead at 76

    A favorite of early personal computer users, his company was eventually overtaken by Microsoft Word. He later came out as gay and became an L.G.B.T.Q. activist.

    Paywall-free link


    NYT: James Carville: Biden Won’t Win. Democrats Need a Plan. Here’s One.

    Mark my words: Joe Biden is going to be out of the 2024 presidential race. Whether he is ready to admit it or not. His pleas on Monday to congressional Democrats for support will not unite the party behind him. Mr. Biden says he’s staying in the race, but it’s only a matter of time before Democratic pressure and public and private polling lead him to exit the race. The jig is up, and the sooner Mr. Biden and Democratic leaders accept this, the better. We need to move forward.

    But it can’t be by anointing Vice President Kamala Harris or anyone else as the presumptive Democratic nominee. We’ve got to do it out in the open — the exact opposite of what Donald Trump wants us to do.

    For the first time in his life, Mr. Trump is praying. To win the White House and increase his chances of avoiding an orange jumpsuit, he needs Democrats to make the wrong moves in the coming days — namely, to appear to rig the nomination for a fading president or the sitting vice president or some other heir apparent. He needs to be able to type ALL CAPS posts about power brokers and big donors putting the fix in. He needs, in other words, for Democrats to blow it.


    Last Updated: 10.Jul.2024 18:32 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:14 PM, Jul 11
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 09.Jul.2024


    Good to the Last Drop ☕️


    TorStar: Pedneault stepping down from bid to co-lead Green Party

    Jonathan Pedneault is stepping down from his bid to co-lead the federal Green Party after internal debate and numerous delays impeded those plans.

    ⋮

    The Green Party has operated under a de-facto co-leadership since November 2022 when May won on a ticket to co-lead with Pedneault in hopes of reviving the party. That followed a tumultuous period that included allegations of racism, antisemitism, misogyny and poor leadership, and led to the ouster of Annamie Paul, the first Black leader of a federal political party.


    Wired: How to Take a Long, Scrolling Screenshot on Android, iOS, and Desktop

    You can capture scrolling screenshots on iOS too. The standard button shortcut combination for a screen capture is Power+Volume Up if your iPhone has Face ID or Power+Home if your iPhone has Touch ID.

    That takes care of a standard screenshot, but if you want a scrolling one, you need to tap on the thumbnail that pops up in the lower left corner. The next screen will show the capture, and if there’s content that stretches beyond the display (like a webpage or long document), you’ll be able to switch between Screen and Full Page views.


    UPI: Noninvasive urine test might help detect cervical cancer

    “Our new urine test can detect HPV16 E7 proteins, which are critical markers of cervical cancer risk, at extremely low levels,” said lead researcher Etsuro Ito, a professor of biology at Waseda University in Japan. “This means that women may be able to screen for cervical cancer without the discomfort and inconvenience of a traditional Pap test.”


    TechCrunch: Alexa co-creator gives first glimpse of Unlikely AI’s tech strategy

    TechCrunch can exclusively reveal Unlikely is taking a “neuro-symbolic” approach to its AI. In an additional development, it’s announcing two senior hires — including the former CTO of Stability AI, Tom Mason.

    Neuro-symbolic AI is a type of artificial intelligence that, as the name suggests, integrates both the modern neural network approaches to AI — as used by large language models (LLMs), like OpenAI’s GPT — and earlier Symbolic AI architectures to address the weaknesses of each.


    TechCrunch: Watch: What happens when you shoot down a delivery drone?

    Florida man is back with a vengeance, and this time, he’s going after Walmart delivery drones.

    Yes, really. Walmart was demonstrating its delivery drone technology in Clermont, Florida — about 25 miles outside of Orlando — and a man allegedly shot the drone out of the sky when it flew near his house. Apparently, he thought it was spying on him.

    But he doesn’t shoot at cars that drive by a second time?


    SportBible: Novak Djokovic storms out of BBC interview after snapping at reporter over question

    But the third question about the crowd, quizzing Djokovic on his mindset when the crowd are disrespecting, was not received well and the seven-time Wimbledon champ had enough.

    He fired back: “Do you have any other questions other than the crowd? I mean, are you focused only on that or do you have any questions about the match or something like that, or is it solely focused on that?”.


    Daily Mail: Suspect is shot by Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s bodyguards in DC

    Flowers, 18, was arrested and charged with armed carjacking, carrying a pistol without a license, and possession of a large capacity ammunition feeding device.

    He attempted to carjack the bodyguards’ vehicle?!


    pv magazine: The Hydrogen Stream: Hydrogen power plants feasible but inefficient, says CATF

    The Clean Air Task Force (CATF) says in a new report that dedicated clean hydrogen production and use is often a costly, inefficient decarbonization strategy for the power sector, while American Airlines says it has signed a deal with ZeroAvia for 100 hydrogen-electric engines.


    Last Updated: 09.Jul.2024 17:04 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:15 AM, Jul 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 08.Jul.2024


    Keeps On Going


    Guardian: Ukraine war briefing: Chinese troops hold military exercises with Belarus on Polish border

    Chinese military personnel are to begin joint “anti-terrorist training” with their counterparts in Belarus on Monday, close to the border with Poland. The “Eagle Assault” exercises by the two Russian allies amid the war in Ukraine will be held over 11 days in the border city of Brest, Belarus, and will involve tasks such as hostage rescue and anti-terrorism operations, China’s Ministry of National Defence said. It comes days after Belarus officially joined the Shanghai Cooperation Organization led by China and Russia, deepening their coordination on military, economic and political matters. The Belarusian leader, Alexander Lukashenko has been a key ally of Vladimir Putin since the invasion of Ukraine, holding tactical nuclear drills with Russia last year and agreeing to store tactical nuclear warheads for Moscow on its soil.


    Guardian: Motorcyclist dies from heat exposure in Death Valley as temperature reaches 128F (53.3C)

    A visitor to Death Valley national park died Sunday from heat exposure and another person was hospitalized as the temperature reached 128F (53.3C) in eastern California, officials said.

    The two visitors were part of a group of six motorcyclists riding through the Badwater Basin area amid scorching weather, the park said.

    The person who died was not identified. The other motorcyclist was hospitalized in Las Vegas for “severe heat illness”, the statement said. The other four members of the party were treated at the scene.


    HowToGeek: Paramount+ and Pluto TV to Be Acquired By Skydance

    Despite its strong presence in the media industry, Paramount’s balance sheet has grown increasingly bleak. Paramount only makes money on old-fashioned television and cable. It barely breaks even at the box office, and its streaming ventures are a consistent source of losses. As of September 2023, Paramount was $15 billion in debt and had just $1.8 billion cash on hand.

    I wondered how long it would be before Paramount+ either folded or was otherwise dealt. Streaming is a bit of a mess right now and smaller players are going to find it tough going.


    UPI: President Biden rejects calls to step down in letter to Democrats

    President Joe Biden said that he is not stepping down as the Democratic nominee in a letter to congressional Democrats on Monday.


    Articles for Mon 08.Jul.2024 [daily news items] ⋮

    Guardian: Ukraine war briefing: Chinese troops hold military exercises with Belarus on Polish border

    Chinese military personnel are to begin joint “anti-terrorist training” with their counterparts in Belarus on Monday, close to the border with Poland. The “Eagle Assault” exercises by the two Russian allies amid the war in Ukraine will be held over 11 days in the border city of Brest, Belarus, and will involve tasks such as hostage rescue and anti-terrorism operations, China’s Ministry of National Defence said. It comes days after Belarus officially joined the Shanghai Cooperation Organization led by China and Russia, deepening their coordination on military, economic and political matters. The Belarusian leader, Alexander Lukashenko has been a key ally of Vladimir Putin since the invasion of Ukraine, holding tactical nuclear drills with Russia last year and agreeing to store tactical nuclear warheads for Moscow on its soil.


    Guardian: Motorcyclist dies from heat exposure in Death Valley as temperature reaches 128F (53.3C)

    A visitor to Death Valley national park died Sunday from heat exposure and another person was hospitalized as the temperature reached 128F (53.3C) in eastern California, officials said.

    The two visitors were part of a group of six motorcyclists riding through the Badwater Basin area amid scorching weather, the park said.

    The person who died was not identified. The other motorcyclist was hospitalized in Las Vegas for “severe heat illness”, the statement said. The other four members of the party were treated at the scene.



    HowToGeek: Paramount+ and Pluto TV to Be Acquired By Skydance

    Despite its strong presence in the media industry, Paramount’s balance sheet has grown increasingly bleak. Paramount only makes money on old-fashioned television and cable. It barely breaks even at the box office, and its streaming ventures are a consistent source of losses. As of September 2023, Paramount was $15 billion in debt and had just $1.8 billion cash on hand.

    I wondered how long it would be before Paramount+ either folded or was otherwise dealt. Streaming is a bit of a mess right now and smaller players are going to find it tough going.


    UPI: President Biden rejects calls to step down in letter to Democrats

    President Joe Biden said that he is not stepping down as the Democratic nominee in a letter to congressional Democrats on Monday.


    LA Times: California Proposition 4 voter guide: Climate bond

    The Safe Drinking Water, Wildfire Prevention, Drought Preparedness, and Clean Air Bond Act of 2024 would have the state borrow $10 billion to pay for climate and environmental projects — including some that were axed from the budget because of an unprecedented deficit.

    California taxpayers would pay the bond back with interest. A legislative analyst estimated it would cost the state $650 million a year for the next 30 years or more than $19 billion.


    TorStar: Andrea Robin Skinner: My mother, Alice Munro, stayed with my abuser

    In the shadow of my mother, a literary icon, my family and I have hidden a secret for decades. It’s time to tell my story.


    Last Updated: 08.Jul.2024 15:18 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:05 AM, Jul 9
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 07.Jul.2024


    When It Rains, It Pours


    Guardian: Blockade Australia plans more climate protests disrupting Newcastle trains, saying disobedience is the only option

    Planned by Blockade Australia, whose protest at a major port in Sydney in 2022 prompted the NSW government to introduce new anti-protest laws, the group says the daily climate protests are calling for change at the heart of the issue.

    “We are drawing focus on the political and economic system of this continent … we believe that is the core of the problem,” says Brad Homewood, a spokesperson for Blockade Australia.

    ⋮

    Fox travelled from South Australia to take part as he says he is frustrated by the government continuing to approve fossil fuel projects.

    “The system we are living under is not going to take the action we need on the climate catastrophe,” Fox says. “I’m prepared to step in front of that system and say enough.

    The reasons for protesting are valid, but I think trains seem like a poorly chosen target!


    Guardian: Naomi Alderman: ‘Whatever happened to talking? We’ve lost the ability to swap ideas’

    The internet has caused the biggest crisis in human communication since the arrival of the printing press, the award-winning dystopian author Naomi Alderman has said.

    The writer of The Power, a 2016 feminist science fiction novel, said we are living through the “third information crisis”, in which digital communications have eroded in-person communication and entrenched disagreement.

    “If you have a person in front of you, you can have a conversation and, ideally, through sharing experience and empathy, you may come to some new position that recognises what you’re both bringing to that conversation,” she said. “This can never happen with a book, TV show, tweet, someone’s ranty YouTube video. Increasingly, I think that leads us to be vulnerable to a kind of fundamentalism, to ‘I’ve got my view and I’m sticking to it’.”

    Alderman is exploring the impact of the internet on human communication for a new five-part documentary series for BBC Radio 4, The Third Information Crisis, which begins tomorrow.


    Guardian: Royal Mail goes ahead with cuts to UK flights despite takeover

    Royal Mail shifted the mail from the air to roads in part through an overhaul that has included later shift times of up to 90 minutes in delivery offices, meaning it can move mail by road over longer journey times and still meet next-day delivery targets.

    “We have more time to push the mail through the network by road, enabling us to take the flights out,” said Seidenberg, adding that the change meant some customers such as online retailers could now hand over parcels as late as 1am for delivery that day.


    Last Updated: 07.Jul.2024 20:48 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:31 AM, Jul 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 06.Jul.2024


    The Quicker Picker Upper


    HuffPo: This Unexpected Laundry Habit Is A Potential Sign Of ADHD

    Do you ever delay putting away clean laundry or unworn outfits from a vacation and instead keep those clothes in a pile on the floor or draped over a chair for many days on end? What about items you’ve only worn once and don’t want to wash but also don’t want to return to your closet because you think you’ll wear them again in the near future?

    If that sounds familiar, you might have what some call a “floordrobe.” And this manifestation of laundry clutter is quite common among people with ADHD.


    NPR: Robert Towne, screenwriter of ‘Chinatown,’ ‘Shampoo,’ dies

    2.July.2024

    Robert Towne, the Oscar-winning screenplay writer of Shampoo, _The Last Detail_and other films, whose script for _Chinatown_became a model of the art form and helped define the jaded allure of his native Los Angeles, has died. He was 89.

    Towne died Monday surrounded by family at his home in Los Angeles, said publicist Carri McClure. She declined to comment on any cause of death.


    Business Insider: Hidden AirTags Are Helping Politicians Find Campaign Poster Thieves

    • People are hiding AirTags in campaign posters to stop thieves, The Wall Street Journal reports.
    • The tracking devices are helping recover signs and charge those who took them.
    • In some cases, those charged included political opponents, WSJ said.

    Last Updated: 06.Jul.2024 14:10 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:48 AM, Jul 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 05.Jul.2024


    Don’t Leave Home Without It 💳


    ScienceAlert: A New Pathway Found in The Brain Could Help Spell The End of Migraines

    A newly discovered communication pathway linking far-flung nerve centers within the brain and skull, and the body beyond, could provide a new target to stop migraine pain in its tracks.


    TorStar: The Conservatives are conducting a war on expertise

    Experts whose research and opinions don’t dovetail with the policies of Pierre Poilievre’s Tories are becoming political targets, Bruce Arthur writes.

    ⋮

    “There were, like (400) economists that signed that letter, but (the CPC) specifically singled out (11),” says economist Mike Moffatt, who was also on the list. “I mean, it’s clear that they’re trying to silence people. That is highly, highly problematic. I don’t think (the involvement of CPC-aligned academics, or media) is collusion, or anything like that. But I think there’s just this cultural understanding on parts of the right that this is part of the playbook.”


    CBC: Liberal government enacts controversial digital services tax, raising trade concerns

    The federal government has enacted a controversial digital services tax that will bring in billions of dollars while threatening Canada’s trading relationships by taxing the revenue international firms earn in Canada.

    The Liberal government proposed the tax in its 2019 election platform. It later agreed to delay implementing the measure until the end of 2023 in the hopes it could reach a deal with other OECD countries on how multinational digital companies should be taxed.

    Negotiations on an international deal continued to drag on past that date and the federal government issued an order in council on June 28 to enact the digital services tax (DST), which received royal assent June 20.


    Jason Fried (Hey.com): Introducing Writebook

    You know, it’s really easy to publish short form content on a variety of social platforms. And individual blog posts on a number of other platforms. These are solved problems.

    But it’s surprisingly challenging to publish books on the web in nice, cohesive, tight, easy-to-navigate HTML format. A collection of 20 essays can be a book. Or a company’s handbook can be a book. Or an actual book like Shape Up can be a book.

    ⋮

    So we did something about it. Introducing Writebook. It’s a dead simple platform to publish web-based books. They have covers, they can have title pages, they can have picture pages, and they can have text pages. Each book gets its own URL, and navigating and keeping track of your progress is all built right in.

    Writebook isn’t a service — it’s software you download and install on your own server. We’ve made it incredibly easy to get going — it just takes a few minutes. Even non-technical folks can get it all set up. We’ll email you a single command you paste into a terminal and it takes care of the rest. No maintenance required either, it takes care of itself, auto-updates, etc.


    WriteBook: Can I charge for the books I publish using Writebook?

    We don’t offer a way to sell your books through Writebook, but if you want to put a paywall in front of your copy of Writebook, that’s up to you. However, the software license “does not include the rights to publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, source code or products derived from it.” Further, you can not, for example, sell a separate hosted service on top of Writebook using Writebook code.


    BBC: Liz Truss and Jacob Rees-Mogg among big-name Conservative losses

    Former prime minister Liz Truss has lost her seat in Labour’s landslide election victory, as the Conservatives slump to a historic defeat.

    She lost her South West Norfolk constituency to Labour by 630 votes, having previously held a huge 24,180 majority.

    ⋮

    Speaking after her defeat, Ms Truss said her party had not “delivered sufficiently” in areas such as “keeping taxes low” and reducing immigration.

    ⋮

    Speaking earlier, before his defeat, Sir Jacob said it was “clearly a terrible night” for his party, that had come to take its “core vote for granted”.

    “We need to win voters at every single election. If you take your base for granted… your voters will look to other parties.”

    There is a lesson here for the Liberals.


    CleanTechnica: Fossil Fuel Advocates Ask Supreme Court To Protect Them From CARB

    The question of whether California may set greenhouse gas emissions for itself and other states “is undeniably major,” the plaintiffs said, especially since California has asked the EPA for a waiver for its plan to end sales of gasoline-only vehicles by 2035. “The waiver and authority claimed here are the key parts of a coordinated agency strategy to convert the Nation from liquid fuel powered vehicles to electric vehicles,” the filing said, pointing out that doing so would hurt demand for petroleum fuels and biofuels. Other parties to the suit include the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, the Kansas Corn Growers Association, and the National Association of Convenience Stores.

    There’s a lot to unpack in this editorial.


    iPhone in Canada: Netflix, Disney and More Take CRTC to Court Over Streaming Tax

    Netflix, Disney, and other U.S. streaming companies have filed a legal challenge against last month’s CRTC decision to mandate foreign streaming services to pay 5% of Canadian revenues towards Canadian news and content.

    The Motion Picture Association-Canada argues that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission exceeded its authority with this order and overlooked the significant investments these companies already make in Canada.


    CBC: CRTC announces $272M conditional funding for fibre link to 4 Nunavut communities

    Iqaluit, Kinngait, Coral Harbour and Kimmirut all to get high-speed internet.

    Still talking about it 10 years on…


    Wales Online: Dentist warns one type of toothpaste could be damaging your mouth

    A dentist has warned that a particular type of toothpaste could be damaging people’s oral health. Dr Ferakh Hamid said it could be leading to symptoms such as ulcers and allergic reactions.

    Dr Hamid, from Aesthetique Dental Care, said: “SLS (Sodium lauryl sulfate) is a common ingredient in toothpaste, but it can cause irritation, especially for those with sensitive mouths. Research has shown a link between SLS and more frequent mouth ulcers. Using SLS-free toothpaste can help patients with oral sensitivities.

    “Most toothpastes use SLS to create foam, which helps clean teeth. However, patients with taste issues or discomfort after brushing might benefit from SLS-free toothpaste. These alternatives are especially good for people with dry mouth or sensitivity.


    Just Have a Think (YouTube): How China is winning the GREEN ENERGY race.

    China’s perceived march towards global domination appears to be ruffling some feathers here in the Western world. Their version of the industrial revolution has lifted hundreds of millions out of abject poverty, but it is still held up by some as the greatest modern sin against humanity and our climate. So, how accurate is that allegation?

    A somewhat different view of China’s march into modern energy production and consumption technologies.


    NYT: Masoud Pezeshkian Wins Iran Election

    Mr. Pezeshkian, 69, a cardiac surgeon, got 16.3 million votes to defeat the hard-line candidate, Saeed Jalili, delivering a blow to the conservative faction and a major victory for the reformist faction that had been sidelined from politics for the past few years. Mr. Jalili received 13.5 million votes.

    After polls closed at midnight, turnout stood at 50 percent, about 10 percentage points higher than in the first round of the election with about 30.5 million ballots cast in total, according to Iran’s interior ministry. The first round saw a record-low turnout because many Iranians had boycotted the vote as an act of protest.

    However, the prospect of a hard-line administration that would double down on strict social rules, including enforcing mandatory hijab on women, and remain defiant in negotiations to lift sanctions, apparently spurred Iranians to turn up at the polls in slightly larger numbers.

    Next year, could Iran be less of a theocracy than the US?


    Last Updated: 05.Jul.2024 23:56 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:25 AM, Jul 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 04.Jul.2024


    The King of Beers 🍺


    NYT: What Makes the U.K. Exit Poll Special

    In the past five British general elections, the exit poll has predicted how many of the 650 or more parliamentary seats would be claimed by the winning party to within an average of four seats. Last time, in 2019, it had the winning party’s total just three seats out.

    Here’s a guide to what to expect, and how it works.


    NewsNation: Satellite images from CSIS show Chinese military bases in Cuba

    The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)published these satellite images, showing the latest upgrade to the country’s surveillance capabilities that are believed to be linked to China. The report focuses on the fact China has access to multiple spy facilities in Cuba — pinpointing four sites across the island.

    Why’s that such a big deal? Well, the CSIS says it could allow China to scoop up sensitive electronic communications from American military bases, keep an eye on rocket launches from Cape Canaveral and NASA’s Kennedy Space Center and spy on American’s sensitive information, too.


    NewsNation: New credit card skimmers discovered in the Midwest. How to spot them

    A picture of a compromised system shows how hard it is to detect. In one example, you can see a slot in the back where criminals hide a pinhole camera. The camera allows them to record you entering your PIN.

    “After going through different video, coordinating with different agencies all over the country, we found that it was a Romanian crime family,” Nikolov said.


    Puzzmo: Games

    Play is why we’re here.

    — Zach and the Puzzmo team

    via Maique


    Axios: July 4 holiday heat alerts sweep U.S.: Record temperatures likely

    With July 4 holiday travel expected to hit an all-time high, record-breaking temperatures are set to continue for up to two weeks across the U.S. West — where 15 large fires are burning. “Dangerous” heat is expected across the South and Mid-Atlantic into the weekend.

    Threat level: “Dozens of record highs are possible, expressing the rarity of this early-July heatwave,” per the National Weather Service, which noted the searing heat impacting California is expected to spread further along the West Coast by the end of the week.


    InsideEVs: How Much Of A Fire Risk Are Electric Cars?

    Consider the “EVs are more prone to catch fire” myth busted, and the proof is all right here.


    InsideEVs: The Polestar 4 Is Good. Too Bad The Zeekr 001 Is Better

    The Zeekr 001s sold outside of China are pre-facelift models without the megacast rear end or the 800-volt architecture. If Polestar managed to bring those upgrades to the 4, it’d be the fastest-charging electric crossover on sale in the United States. The updated Zeekr 001 can charge from 10-80% in less than 12 minutes, peaking at speeds of over 500 kW.


    Guardian: Editorial: The Guardian view on Hurricane Beryl: the west can’t sit this out

    Caribbean leaders have not held back in pointing to climate change as the probable cause. Attribution studies, which use computer models to calculate the contribution made by global heating to specific weather events, have not yet been carried out, so it is not possible to be precise. But the greenhouse effect is heating the oceans as well as the air. And warmer seas provide additional energy to tropical storms, making them stronger. Ralph Gonsalves, the prime minister of St Vincent and the Grenadines, said that he hoped the severity of this hurricane, so early in a season that runs from June until November, would alert rich countries to the danger that states like his are facing.

    Unfortunately, don’t hold your breath, Ralph.


    Guardian: UK election live news: Mordaunt, Shapps, Coffey and Keegan out in Tory bloodbath as Starmer says it’s time for Labour ‘to deliver’

    Starmer set to enter No 10 with commanding majority as senior Tories beaten but Labour’s Ashworth and Debbonaire lose seats.


    Last Updated: 04.Jul.2024 23:41 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:04 AM, Jul 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 03.Jul.2024


    Taste the Rainbow 🌈


    UPI: U.S. conducts first ‘large’ removal flight of Chinese migrants since 2018

    The announcement comes after President Joe Biden issued a proclamation June 4 temporarily suspending the entry of migrants into the country at the southern border when the daily average is more than 2,500 over a seven-day period.

    The Biden administration has been plagued by GOP criticism over its handling of the border, which saw record encounters in December but has seen a drop since, seemingly in response to actions Biden as taken to address the surge.


    TCD: Video shows new hybrid aircraft complete mind-blowing test flight with ‘almost no runway’: ‘An incredible achievement’

    The next-gen aerospace company Electra has achieved a remarkable milestone with its hybrid-electric test aircraft, which took off in under 170 feet on its first test flight – around 10% of the typical length of conventional airplane runways.

    In a company news release, Electra said that test flights of its hybrid-electric short takeoff and landing (eSTOL) aircraft, the EL-2 Goldfinch, took place earlier this year at several Virginia airports. Although the vehicle is designed to take off and land on airstrips about the size of a soccer field (300 feet by 100 feet), as New Atlas described, it needed “almost no runway” to take flight.


    MacRumors: Netflix Starts Booting Subscribers Off Cheapest Basic Ads-Free Plan

    Netflix is proceeding with its plan to discontinue its cheapest ad-free subscription tier, starting with the UK and Canada, with more countries inevitably to follow.

    The streaming giant has reportedly begun notifying users via on-screen messages about the last day they can access the service unless they upgrade. One Reddit user shared a notification they had received from the Netflix app, saying: “Your last day to watch Netflix is July 13th. Choose a new plan to keep watching.” Customers are being prompted to instead choose the cheaper Standard with ads, or the more expensive Standard or Premium 4K plans.

    ⋮

    Canadian subscribers are also receiving notifications about the last viewing day for their Basic plan. In Canada, the price increase is more significant, rising from $9.99 for the Basic plan to $16.49 for the Standard plan. Alternatively, users can save $4 by going with the Standard with Ads plan ($5.99).


    UPI: Polls suggest Fourth of July landslide for Labor Party in Britain’s general election

    The Yougov MRP poll predicts Keir Starmer’s party could win 431 seats for a majority of 212. If the poll is accurate, it would be the larger single-party majority than Tony Blair’s majority of 179 seats in 1997.

    According to final Telegraph poll, Labor will win 39% of the vote, almost twice the 20% of poll respondents who said they will support Conservatives.


    Atlantic: The Supreme Court Puts Trump Above the Law

    The Court writes that presidents cannot be prosecuted for “use” of their official powers, but what it actually means is they cannot be prosecuted for the flagrant abuse of them. That renders the plain disclaimer on which the opinion rests — that the president is not above the law — a lie. More significant, this opinion depends on an implicit belief that the only person who would act so brazenly is Trump, and that because the majority of the justices on the Court support Trump and want him to be president, he must be shielded from prosecution. In this backhanded manner, Trump’s justices acknowledge that he poses a unique threat to constitutional government, one they just happen to support because he is their guy. These are not justices; these are Trump cronies. This is not legal reasoning; this is vandalism.


    Last Updated: 03.Jul.2024 20:21 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:04 AM, Jul 4
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 02.Jul.2024


    The Ultimate Driving Machine


    Micro.blog Help: Email newsletter subscriptions

    Micro.blog can manage letting readers subscribe to your blog and receive emails for new blog posts. It’s deeply integrated into Micro.blog and works great for collecting multiple microblog posts together automatically.

    Micro.blog’s email newsletters are like Micro.blog’s cross-posting: designed to start with your blog first and be effortless to maintain. You can enable it and forget about it. Micro.blog will create newsletter drafts from your blog posts automatically. You can edit a newsletter if you want, or ignore it and Micro.blog will queue it to send to your subscribers.


    United States Courts: Excerpts from Chief Justice Roberts Statement

    Read excerpts from the opening statement of John G. Roberts, Jr., at his confirmation hearing for Chief Justice of the United States.

    ⋮

    I will be open to the considered views of my colleagues on the bench, and I will decide every case based on the record, according to the rule of law, without fear or favor, to the best of my ability, and I will remember that it’s my job to call balls and strikes, and not to pitch or bat.

    via Dave Winer


    Dave Winer (Scripting News): Plan for Biden re Supreme Court

    I understand why the Dems don’t want to be the first to use the new rule passed by the Supreme Court, but I think they should consider this plan: …


    PBS News: Giuliani disbarred in New York as court finds he repeatedly lied about Trump’s 2020 election loss

    Giuliani’s attorney Arthur Aidala said they were “obviously disappointed” but not surprised by the decision. He said they “put up a valiant effort” to prevent the disbarment but “We saw the writing on the wall.”

    The court said in its decision that Giuliani “essentially conceded” most of the facts supporting the alleged acts of misconduct.

    ⋮

    Lies around the election results helped push an angry mob of pro-Trump rioters to storm the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 in an effort to stop the certification of Biden’s victory.


    CBC: The Netherlands generates way more solar power than Canada. Here’s how they do it

    One in three homes has rooftop solar, commercial ventures are grabbing up space on waterways, and even old landfill sites are finding a second life as energy generators.

    “I want to be a myth buster,” says European solar strategist Kahya Engler when asked about the financial burden of transitioning to solar. “The cost to invest in solar energy has come down a lot.”

    ⋮

    But key to continued growth, says Engler, is consistent government policies that encourage solar — something that’s faltered in Canada, and may be at risk in Europe too.


    Ember: Electricity Data Explorer: Open Source Global Electricity Data

    The latest electricity demand, generation, capacity and CO2 data by country, available freely and easily to help others speed up the electricity transition.

    Canada’s generation per capita is about ⅓ the US’s.


    Last Updated: 02.Jul.2024 15:21 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:55 PM, Jul 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 01.Jul.2024


    There Are Some Things Money Can’t Buy. For Everything Else, There’s …


    Bloomberg: Boeing to Buy Spirit Aero for $4.7 Billion in Stock Deal

    Boeing Co. agreed to buy back Spirit AeroSystems Holdings Inc. for $37.25 a share in an all-stock deal that values the supplier at $4.7 billion, unwinding a two-decade separation as the embattled US planemaker tries to fix is manufacturing defects.

    The total transaction value is about $8.3 billion, including Spirit’s last reported net debt, according to a statement early on Monday. Rival Airbus SE will also take over parts of Spirit that make parts for its operations, and the European planemaker will pay a nominal price of $1 for the assets, while receiving $559 million in compensation, according to a separate release.


    Daring Fireball: Wavelength Is Shutting Down at the End of July

    We’re sad to announce that we’re shutting down Wavelength. We’re so grateful to our users and community — you’ve been amazing.

    On July 31st we’ll turn off our servers, which means that you’ll no longer be able to sign in, create a group, or send messages. You will continue to have access to your message history as long as you keep the app installed on your device, but we recommend saving or copying anything important out of the app as soon as you can.

    Your Wavelength account data will be deleted from our servers at the time of the shutdown. Rest assured that we will not retain, sell, or transfer any user information, and that your messages remain end-to-end encrypted and secure.


    CleanTechnica: Mercury Marine Goes Electric With Its New Family Of Avator Motors

    What’s beautiful about Mercury’s electric lineup is that most marinas are already equipped with shore power today. That fact alone makes it easy for a boat owner to simply plug their Avator-equipped boat into shore power and keep it charged up at all times. No more worries about old gas, refueling, or even maintenance.


    NYT: Trump Moves to Overturn Hush-Money Conviction, Citing Immunity Decision

    Former President Donald J. Trump took the action hours after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling granted him immunity for official acts committed in office.

    Interesting idea of what an “official act” is.


    Last Updated: 01.Jul.2024 23:00 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:23 AM, Jul 2
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 30.Jun.2024


    I Like Ike.


    EditorialBoard: Why are we assuming Trump is trying to win the election?

    Everything about this election presumes something so big that it’s invisible to the naked eye, which is that Donald Trump is trying to win. But why would an authoritarian, who refuses to concede that Biden win, try to win the current one? There is no point when you never lost the last one. Why prepare for a debate when you’re going to declare yourself the winner? Preparation is for suckers and losers.


    NZ Herald: Private call of top Democrats fuels more insider anger about Biden’s debate performance

    A sense of concern is growing inside the top ranks of the Democratic Party that leaders of US President Joe Biden’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee are not taking seriously enough the impact of the president’s troubling debate performance earlier in the week.

    DNC chairman Jaime Harrison and Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez held a call with dozens of committee members across the country, a group of some of the most influential members of the party. They largely ignored Biden’s weak showing and the avalanche of criticism that followed.

    Multiple committee members on the call, most granted anonymity to talk about the private discussion, described feeling like they were being gaslit - that they were being asked to ignore the dire nature of the party’s predicament. The call, they said, may have worsened a widespread sense of panic among elected officials, donors and other stakeholders.


    WashPo: See how this green hydrogen plant converts water into clean fuel

    Turning hydrogen into liquid fuel could help slash planet-warming pollution from heavy vehicles, cutting a key source of emissions that contribute to climate change. But to fulfill that promise, companies will have to build massive numbers of wind turbines and solar panels to power the energy-hungry process. Regulators will have to make sure hydrogen production doesn’t siphon green energy that could go towards cleaning up other sources of global warming gases, such as homes or factories.

    ⋮

    To wean machines off oil, companies like Infinium, the owner of this plant, are starting to churn out hydrogen-based fuels that – in the best case – produce close to net zero emissions. They could also pave the way for a new technology, hydrogen fuel cells, to power planes, ships and trucks in the second half of this century. For now, these fuels are expensive and almost no one makes them, so the U.S. government, businesses and philanthropists including Bill Gates are investing billions of dollars to build up a hydrogen industry that could cut eventually some of the most stubborn, hard-to-remove carbon pollution.

    ⋮

    Those carbon atoms arrive at the plant in the form of carbon dioxide pumped in from six nearby oil refineries. Typically, those facilities would let that CO2 — released when distilling crude oil into gasoline, jet fuel, diesel and other products — waft into the air.

    That last bit is a problem: what they are doing is delaying the release of carbon from the refineries not reducing it. They get more consumable energy from each barrel of refined oil, but it’s still ends up in the atmosphere.

    via Manton


    ERCOT: Generation

    This page provides current information on Generation Resources, including forecast and actual generation for Wind and PhotoVoltaic (Solar) Generation Resources; Resource Outages; Reliability Unit Commitment (RUC) constraints; Reliability Must Run (RMR) Resource deployments; Fuel Type; and aggregate High and Low Dispatch Limits (HDL, LDL) in the ERCOT region. The Key Documents section provides links to supporting documents related to resource asset registration, Outage scheduling, and monthly ERCOT Wind Integration Reports.

    ERCOT = Electric Reliability Council of Texas


    How to Geek: All of the macOS Sequoia Features Supported on Intel Macs

    Despite several rumors to the contrary, Apple’s macOS Sequoia update will be supported by a range of older Intel-based Mac computers. And while Intel Macs won’t gain any Apple Intelligence AI functionality, they’ll still get plenty of great new features in macOS Sequoia.

    All Intel Macs that received the macOS Sonoma update are eligible for macOS Sequoia. The only exceptions are the 2018 and 2019 models of MacBook Air.


    LA Times: Too much screen time harms children, experts agree. So why do parents ignore them?

    Valree is among the legions of parents who by choice or necessity allow their babies and preschoolers to watch several times more than the limit recommended by experts, creating a vast disconnect between the troubling predictions of harm and the reality of digital life for American families.

    But her feelings of guilt may put Valree in the minority. Directives to limit the time young children spend on digital devices may not be taking root because many parents simply don’t believe their child’s screen time is a problem in the first place.


    Wikipedia: List of Martin Gardner Mathematical Games columns

    Nov 1973: Fantastic patterns traced by programmed “worms”


    Wikipedia: Paterson’s worms

    Paterson’s worms are a family of cellular automata devised in 1971 by Mike Paterson and John Horton Conway to model the behaviour and feeding patterns of certain prehistoric worms. In the model, a worm moves between points on a triangular grid along line segments, representing food. Its turnings are determined by the configuration of eaten and uneaten line segments adjacent to the point at which the worm currently is. Despite being governed by simple rules the behaviour of the worms can be extremely complex, and the ultimate fate of one variant is still unknown.


    LA Times: SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell is the mind behind Elon Musk’s vision

    Billionaire Elon Musk may be the visionary behind SpaceX’s multi-planetary ambitions, but Shotwell, 60, is the steady hand behind the company’s earthly success.

    As president and chief operating officer, Shotwell runs the Hawthorne company’s day-to-day operations and manages finances, customer negotiations, human resources and relationships with government entities — in short, all of the people-focused parts of a business that help it thrive.

    She’s a rarity at a Musk company — an executive, the second-in-command, no less, who has lasted for more than two decades. More than that, she has Musk’s ear and his trust.


    Guardian: Daily multivitamins do not help people live longer, major study finds

    Researchers in the US analysed health records from nearly 400,000 adults with no major long-term diseases to see whether daily multivitamins reduced their risk of death over the next two decades.

    Rather than living longer, people who consumed daily multivitamins were marginally more likely than non-users to die in the study period, prompting the government researchers to comment that “multivitamin use to improve longevity is not supported”.


    Guardian: Canadian woman gets three years’ jail in first ever sentencing for a ‘Pretendian’

    Karima Manji, whose daughters accessed more than C$150,000 in benefits intended for Inuit, was sentenced on Thursday, after pleading guilty to fraud in February.

    Nunavut justice Mia Manocchio said the case “must serve as a signal to any future Indigenous pretender that the false appropriation of Indigenous identity in a criminal context will draw a significant penalty”.


    Guardian: Chinese space rocket crashes in flames after accidental launch

    Company Space Pioneer says first stage of its Tianlong-3 launched during test after ‘structural failure’ and crashed in hills near city of Gongyi.

    Like something out of The Simpsons!


    Guardian: Caribbean prepares as Hurricane Beryl becomes earliest category 4 on record

    It took Beryl only 42 hours to strengthen from a tropical depression to a major hurricane – a feat accomplished only six other times in Atlantic hurricane history, and with 1 September as the earliest date, according to hurricane expert Sam Lillo.

    Beryl is now the earliest category 4 Atlantic hurricane on record, besting Hurricane Dennis, which became a category 4 storm on 8 July 2005, hurricane specialist and storm surge expert Michael Lowry said.

    “Beryl is an extremely dangerous and rare hurricane for this time of year in this area,” he said in a phone interview. “Unusual is an understatement. Beryl is already a historic hurricane and it hasn’t struck yet.”


    Guardian: AI drive brings Microsoft’s ‘green moonshot’ down to earth in west London

    In the short term, AI has been problematic for Microsoft’s green goals. Brad Smith, Microsoft’s outspoken president, once called its carbon ambitions a “moonshot”. In May, stretching that metaphor to breaking point, he admitted that because of its AI strategy, “the moon has moved”. It plans to spend £2.5bn over the next three years on growing its AI datacentre infrastructure in the UK and this year has announced new datacentre projects around the world including in the US, Japan, Spain and Germany.

    ⋮

    The International Energy Agency estimates that datacentres' total electricity consumption could double from 2022 levels to 1,000 TWh (terawatt hours) in 2026, equivalent to the energy demand of Japan. AI will result in datacentres using 4.5% of global energy generation by 2030, according to calculations by research firm SemiAnalysis.


    Last Updated: 30.Jun.2024 23:30 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:33 PM, Jun 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 29.Jun.2024


    Yes We Can.


    James Burke (YouTube): After the Warming (1989)

    Chilling to think this was out 35 years ago.


    Six Colors: Apple’s Vision platform needs to do more than get cheaper

    The Vision Pro isn’t a product many people should buy today, and that’s not really surprising. It’s an example of Apple playing a long game, trying to build a wearable computing platform over many years. You have to start somewhere.

    Right now, it’s a development kit for developers who are willing to gamble or experiment with a platform that’s not going to be broadly adopted for a while, if ever. It’s a pretty intriguing niche entertainment product, but it’s desperately in need of more content. And it’s a productivity product for people with very specific use cases and work methods. Still, most people should _not_consider buying one — especially not at $3500 — and most people are definitely not!

    I was considering it until they turned it into the Lisa. Now it’s going to take a lot more consideration.

    via Manton


    Metro News: Neolithic-era standing stones dating back to 5480BC removed to make way for DIY shop

    A French mayor has been criticised after planning permission was granted to remove 39 ancient stones — to build a DIY shop.

    The site in Carnac, in France’s Brittany region, is well known for its extensive fields of Neolithic-era stones, known as ‘menhir’.

    Carnac the not-so-magnificent.


    BBC: General election: Five takeaways from the BBC Wales debate

    21.Jun.2024

    Welsh Labour leader and Wales' first minister Vaughan Gething, Conservative David TC Davies, Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth, Jane Dodds for the Lib Dems and Oliver Lewis for Reform UK traded blows and took questions from a live studio audience.

    With less than two weeks to go until polling day, here is what we learnt.

    No questions on climate change!


    NYT: Maureen Dowd: The Ghastly vs. the Ghostly

    Biden was a buoyant soul who had been told he should be president since he was elected to the Senate at 29. And he wasn’t going to let the plagiarism scandal, or his pursuant health problems, stop him. He had two aneurysms in 1988 and later said his doctors told him he wouldn’t be alive if his campaign had continued, and he kidded me that I’d saved his life. He also did not let the other tragedies that scarred his life drag him down.

    I marveled at the fact that Biden forgave me. He told me that it was better that we stay on good terms. He did not get mad, even when I joked that his new hair plugs looked like a field of okra during the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings. He called to chastise me, with good humor, but I hid under my desk, afraid to take the call.

    An interesting perspective.


    Last Updated: 29.Jun.2024 21:58 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:20 AM, Jun 30
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 28.Jun.2024


    We try harder.


    NYT: Takeaways From the First Biden-Trump Presidential Debate

    In a testy, personal clash, President Biden failed to ease worries about his age, Donald Trump forcefully made his case (with wild claims and exaggerations) and the moderators held their fact-checking fire.


    NYT: Frank Bruni: Biden Cannot Go On Like This

    I’m not sure I’d ever watched Donald Trump lie so incessantly, extravagantly and unabashedly, and that’s saying something. On Thursday night he lied about the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He lied about the violence in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017. He lied about his relationship with the military, about his concern for the environment — about pretty much any and every subject that came up. He lied with a smile. He lied with a shrug. He lied with a sneer.

    That should have been the main, maybe even the only, story of the debate, and it should have made him easy, pitiable prey for his opponent. But President Biden failed to take advantage of it. He seemed — there’s no getting around this — incapable of doing so. And that’s its own big story, one that will only grow over the hours and days ahead.


    NYT: How the New York Times Made Its Newest Word Search Game, Strands

    As of June 26, Strands has been officially added to the New York Times Games portfolio.

    ⋮

    Strands is also a game that solvers can come back to after their first attempt. “It’s a slightly deeper, longer game than our other ones,” Ms. Bell said.

    Updated article.


    Guardian: Dozens of Just Stop Oil activists arrested on suspicion of planning to disrupt airports

    Twenty-seven Just Stop Oil supporters have been arrested on suspicion of planning to disrupt airports this summer, the Metropolitan police have said.

    Arrests were made in London, Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Devon, Essex, Manchester, Surrey, Sussex, Norfolk and West Yorkshire, the force said.

    ⋮

    In a statement, Just Stop Oil said: “Supporters are deeply committed to protecting their families and communities from the tyranny of fossil fuels. If our government refuses to do what is right to protect humanity, then people will step up to do what needs to be done. We refuse to die for fossil fuels and we refuse to stand by while millions are murdered.

    “We demand that our government stops the extraction and burning of oil, gas and coal by 2030 and that they support and finance other countries to make a fast, fair and just transition.”

    Protests will eventually, maybe soon, become violent.


    NYT: Jonathan Alter: How the Democrats Should Replace Biden

    Two weeks ago, a pillar of the Democratic leadership on Capitol Hill told me that if President Biden performed poorly in Thursday night’s debate, Democrats would yank him as a candidate. They simply cannot let him pull down the entire ticket and turn the country over to a would-be dictator.

    That fear, as viewers saw on national television, was borne out, and now panicking senior Democrats have a decent shot at prevailing upon the president to withdraw. He should do so gracefully and instruct his delegates to vote for whoever is chosen in Chicago, where the Democratic convention opens on Aug. 19.


    CBC: Astronauts to stay on ISS for weeks longer amid probe into Boeing Starliner’s thruster issue

    Two NASA astronauts will stay longer at the International Space Station as engineers troubleshoot problems on Boeing’s new space capsule that cropped up on the trip there.

    The National Aeronautics and Space Administration on Friday did not set a return date until testing on the ground was complete and said the astronauts were safe.

    ⋮

    As the Starliner closed in on the space station a day after launch, last-minute thruster failures almost derailed the docking. Five of the capsule’s 28 thrusters went down during docking; all but one thruster was restarted.

    The Starliner already had one small helium leak when it rocketed into orbit, and several more leaks sprung up during the flight.


    Last Updated: 28.Jun.2024 20:45 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:09 AM, Jun 29
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 27.Jun.2024


    Snap! Crackle! Pop!


    UPI: Russian hacker indicted for aiding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

    According to prosecutors, Amin Timovich Stigal, 22, conspired with Russian intelligence to attack dozens of Ukrainian government networks a month before Moscow invaded the European country, infecting their computers with malware called WhisperGate that was designed to destroy the devices and related data.

    Conspirators in the plan exfiltrated sensitive data, including health records, from targeted computer systems while defacing websites with the message, “Ukrainians! All information about you has become public be afraid and expect the worst,” according to the indictment that said the stolen information was then put up for sale online.


    Guardian: The diabolical rise of ‘dine and dash’: ‘It feels like a betrayal’

    Beattie refers to the “dark triad” of personality traits – non‑clinical psychopathy, narcissism and machiavellianism – that he believes operates in many “dine and dash” cases. “They all work together,” he says. “Psychopaths don’t really care about other people’s feelings or empathise with them; machiavellians will do whatever they have to do to get their ends; and narcissists like to be the centre of attention and get affirmation all the time.”

    It’s easy to see why harbouring such traits may make it easier to leave without picking up the bill. People with the “dark triad” don’t tend to experience the emotions that most of us would feel when cheating a restaurant, such as shame, guilt, anxiety and the fear of being caught. Instead, they get a pleasure from it known as “duping delight”, which is amplified by being in face-to-face contact with the person they are deceiving.

    I have my doubts about the “1 in 20” figure but the rest is interesting.


    NYT: North Korea Says It Tested Multi-Warhead Missile Technology

    The test on Wednesday was “aimed at securing the MIRV capability,” the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency reported. MIRV stands for “multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicle,” a missile payload containing several warheads, each of which can be sent to a different target. The report said the test had involved part of a MIRV system, not a full-fledged multiple-warhead missile.


    Wales Online: One change now has biggest success at lowering risk of dementia

    Heart health could be the biggest risk factor for future dementia rates, new research suggests. Compared with factors such as smoking and having less education, dementia risk factors associated with heart health may have increased over time, according to the study.

    The findings indicate that action targeted more towards cardiovascular health may help to prevent future cases of dementia. An estimated 944,000 people in the UK live with dementia and data suggests more than half of the adult population knows someone who has been diagnosed with a form of the disease.

    That means that improving your heart health now - with better diet and exercise - will do more than anything else to lower your risk of dementia


    Pixel Envy: European Commission Finds Apple Is in Breach of DMA Rules

    Separately, earlier this month — the weekend before WWDC, in fact — Apple rejected an emulator after holding it in review for two months.

    Benjamin Mayo, 9to5Mac:

    App Review has rejected a submission from the developers of UTM, a generic PC system emulator for iPhone and iPad.

    The open source app was submitted to the store, given the recent rule change that allows retro game console emulators, like Delta or Folium. App Review rejected UTM, deciding that a “PC is not a console”. What is more surprising, is the fact that UTM says that Apple is also blocking the app from being listed in third-party app stores in the EU.

    Apple is wriggling around like a freshly caught fish on a dock.


    Globe: Andrew Coyne: Dumping Trudeau won’t save the Liberals

    It wasn’t so much a matter of ideology, I think, as culture: The generation of Conservatives that grew out of the old Reform Party – harsher, less compromising, more populist – was almost literally incomprehensible to the genteel professional classes that populated these ridings. If they are now willing to give them a look, something genuinely is up.

    It isn’t the Conservatives that have changed – under Pierre Poilievre they are if anything more remote from metropolitan sensibilities than they were under Stephen Harper. It is the growing disaffection of these voters with the governing Liberals.


    NYT: Patrick Healy: I’m Hearing High Anxiety From Democrats Over Biden’s Debate Performance

    Thirty minutes into the presidential debate, I’ve heard from three veteran Democratic presidential campaign officials, and all of them had the same reaction to President Biden’s performance: This is a disaster.

    It wasn’t just that Biden wasn’t landing a glove on Donald Trump on the economy, the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Covid, taxes, temperament or anything else that was coming up in the questioning. It was Biden’s voice (low and weak) and facial expression (frozen, mouth open, few smirks) with answers that were rambling or vague or ended in confusion. He gave remarks about health care and abortion that didn’t make a strong point, giving Trump a chance to say lines like, “I really don’t know what he said at the end of that sentence. I don’t think he knows what he said, either.”


    WashPo: Democrats panic over Biden’s debate performance, doubt his future

    His voice was soft and raspy, and he repeatedly tried, and failed, to clear his throat. His answers, at times, were rambling, and at one point he froze up. At another, he began an answer on abortion, before suddenly segueing into immigration. When Trump spoke, Biden often watched with his mouth agape and eyes flared wide — a split screen that gave off the impression of the aging grandfather that he is, not the swashbuckling leader he hoped to project.

    Before the debate had even ended, and in the immediate aftermath, the concern pinged across social media and in private text messages.

    ⋮

    Still, officials quickly moved to attacking Trump for his torrent of falsehoods and expressed frustration that CNN did not fact check the former president during the debate.

    Biden’s stumbles, however, proved good for his rival, overshadowing a debate performance by Trump that was riddled with mistruths and grew more erratic as the evening went on.


    PBS News: Supreme Court blocks Purdue settlement in major blow to local governments fighting opioids

    The Supreme Court ripped up a controversial bankruptcy deal that would have provided billions of dollars to states devastated by the opioid epidemic and shielded the controversial family accused of pushing pharmaceutical painkillers in search of profit. Amna Nawaz explored the details and impact of the Purdue Pharma case with Brian Mann.


    Last Updated: 27.Jun.2024 23:59 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:58 AM, Jun 28
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 25.Jun.2024


    Where’s the beef?


    ScienceAlert: Cashless Payments Are Changing Our Spending Behavior, Study Reveals

    It seems that tapping a phone or card on a terminal leads to us being less strict with our budget, compared to picking notes or coins out – perhaps because there’s no physical representation of how much is being spent.

    “To prevent spending more than planned, we recommend consumers carry cash instead of cards whenever they can, as it acts as a self-control method,” says marketing researcher Lachlan Schomburgk from the University of Adelaide.


    UPI: Florida Panthers avoid collapse, win first Stanley Cup

    The Panthers carried that edge into the third period. Star forward Connor McDavid and the Oilers proceeded to desperately deke and unleash endless assaults on the Panthers' defense, but Bobrovsky and his teammates stood strong, diving on the ice and throwing their sticks in the way to prevent a game-tying score.


    NYT: China Prepares to Land Moon Rocks From Lunar Far Side to Earth

    On Tuesday, a capsule carrying soil from the far side of the moon will parachute into the desert in China’s Inner Mongolia region.

    The sample, retrieved by the Chinese National Space Administration’s Chang’e-6 lander, is expected to be the latest accomplishment in a series of near-flawless executions of Chinese lunar exploration missions since 2007.


    NYT: ‘Tiny Crime Fighters With Wings’: Bees Go to Work on a Virginia ‘Body Farm’

    Deep in the woods in Northern Virginia last month, two human bodies were carried to a remote spot among the trees and left to decompose. As nature takes its course, the bodies will exude organic compounds into the air and soil. Flowers growing nearby will absorb traces of the decay, which pollinating bees will carry to hives.

    Forensics researchers at George Mason University plan to study the bees, their honey and the hives near the burial site, a new “body farm” in Manassas, Va., about 25 miles southwest of Washington, D.C. Because bees forage within a close range of their hives, the researchers hope to draw up a formula for human decomposition that investigators can use when searching wide expanses of land for the hidden dead.


    TorStar: How Scotland started to kick its alcohol problem — and what Ontario could learn from it

    Alongside its pricing strategy, Scotland reduced the legal limit of alcohol for drivers to 50 mg per 100 mL of blood from 80 mg — the level in Ontario. This change was bolstered by a forceful media campaign that increased public opposition to drinking and driving. “It’s not one for the road,” a campaign slogan ran. “It’s none for the road.”

    Scotland was also the first country to introduce “alcohol brief interventions.” This involves training medical professionals to have short, structured conversations with people who abuse alcohol about their habits and how to access help.

    Scotland still tolerates wide alcohol availability in supermarkets and small stores, something that flies in the face of what experts say is second only to pricing on the list of most important ways to reduce alcohol harms: reducing access.


    CBC: Conservatives win longtime Liberal stronghold Toronto-St. Paul’s in shock byelection result

    Stunning result raises questions about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s future.


    pv magazine: The Hydrogen Stream: Rolls-Royce unveils hydrogen combustion engine for CHP

    Rolls-Royce has started developing a hydrogen combustion engine for combined heat and power (CHP) systems in Germany, while Lhyfe has installed a 1 MW electrolyzer for Deutsche Bahn.

    ⋮

    Canada has enacted the first four Clean Economy Investment Tax Credits, which include the Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) ITC and the Clean Hydrogen ITC. The Canadian government said the CCUS ITC supports taxable Canadian corporations that incur eligible expenditures for qualified CCUS projects. The Clean Hydrogen ITC provides a 15 to 40 percent refundable tax credit for investments in hydrogen production projects, prioritizing those that produce the cleanest hydrogen. Eligibility may extend to equipment converting hydrogen into ammonia for transport purposes.


    MacRumors: OpenAI’s ChatGPT App for Mac Now Available to All Users

    The ChatGPT app for Mac is now available to all users, OpenAI announced today. The app first came out in mid-May, but it saw a slow rollout that was limited to ChatGPT Plus subscribers until now.

    ⋮

    There’s a built-in Voice Mode for having voice conversations with ChatGPT, a search feature for looking through past conversations, and more. With the wider rollout, no subscription plan is necessary for using ChatGPT on the Mac. OpenAI has made the latest version of ChatGPT, GPT-4o, available for free, but for a limited number of requests.


    Time: The Coming Great Conflict

    Pick a Side and Fight for It, Keep Your Head Down, or Flee

    I believe we now have to face the fact that fighting for democracy as we know it–with thoughtful disagreement and compromises governed by rule of law–is unlikely to work. People like me who had a long shot hope for the emergence of strong middle that fights against the extremists to bring the country together and makes major reforms to improve the system must recognize that the differences are becoming too irreconcilable for this to happen.

    Based on the lessons I learned from studying history about how things typically transpire under similar circumstances, I believe that what we are now seeing is the parties increasingly moving to greater extremism and a fight-to-win at all cost mode. This is threatening the rule of law as we know it and is bringing us closer to some form of civil war. (As I will explain below, this is not necessarily a violent conflict, though that is possible).


    NYT: Bowman Falls to Latimer in House Primary in New York

    Representative Jamaal Bowman of New York, one of Congress’s most outspoken progressives, suffered a stinging primary defeat on Tuesday, according to The Associated Press, unable to overcome a record-shattering campaign from pro-Israel groups and a slate of self-inflicted blunders.

    Mr. Bowman was defeated by George Latimer, the Westchester County executive, in a race that became the year’s ugliest intraparty brawl and the most expensive House primary in history.

    A super PAC affiliated with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a pro-Israel lobby, dumped $15 million into defeating him, more than any outside group has ever spent on a House race.

    This is going to be one very interesting election.


    Last Updated: 25.Jun.2024 23:58 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:15 AM, Jun 26
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 24.Jun.2024


    When you care enough to send the very best.


    NYT: Pilgrim Deaths in Mecca Put Spotlight on Underworld Hajj Industry

    More than 1,300 people died, and a Saudi official said most of them were not registered for the pilgrimage. That left them with little protection from the heat.


    BBC: Missing hiker survives by drinking one gallon of water a day

    A California hiker has been rescued after being stranded in the mountains for 10 days, surviving on little but wild berries and water that he collected in his boot.

    Lukas McClish, 34, went out for what was supposed to be a three-hour hike in the Santa Cruz Mountains on 11 June.

    But he soon lost his way, in part due to the destruction of landmarks by recent wildfires in the area.

    His family reported him missing on 16 June after he did not show up for Father’s Day, triggering a multi-day search and rescue effort.

    Dad goes for a hike. 5 days later: “Is Dad still downstairs watching football? Go ask him to light the BBQ.”


    Last Updated: 24.Jun.2024 14:01 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:33 AM, Jun 25
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 23.Jun.2024


    Good to the last drop.


    NYT: Michelle Cottle: Lauren Boebert Is Feeling the Heat in Colorado

    These are rocky political times for Ms. Boebert. She rode into office in 2020 on the give-’em-the-finger, burn-the-place-down attitude that defines Trumpism, promptly getting lumped in with other outrage artists, such as Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene. But over the next two years, she behaved so outrageously that she turned off many of the folks back home.

    In 2022, she came within around 500 votes of losing her Republican district to a Democrat no one had ever heard of. Then, last September, things went totally off the rails. Ms. Boebert, in the midst of a rough divorce, got tossed out of a Denver theater after vaping and getting handsy with her date during a performance of “Beetlejuice.”


    WashPo: Tech firms look for a miracle solution as AI exhausts the power grid

    As power needs of AI push emissions up and put big tech in a bind, companies put their faith in elusive — some say improbable — technologies.

    ⋮

    Left unmentioned are the heavily polluting fossil fuel plants that become necessary to stabilize the power grid overall because of these purchases, making sure everyone has enough electricity.


    iPhone in Canada: SpaceX Launches Starlink Mini: Ultra Portable Antenna

    SpaceX has recently introduced a compact version of its Starlink antennas, aimed at providing a portable satellite internet solution for users.

    The “Starlink Mini,” as described in a customer email obtained by _CNBC (via Tesla North)_, is a lightweight and easily portable device designed to offer high-speed, low-latency internet access on the go.

    The Starlink Mini antennas are available for early access at a price of $599 USD each, which is $100 more than the standard “Residential” antenna. SpaceX has plans to reduce this cost in the future.


    Guardian: Nearly 19,000 NHS patients left waiting for three days in A&E over 12 months

    Almost 19,000 NHS patients were left waiting in A&E for three days over a 12-month period, an investigation has revealed.

    Between April 2023 and March 2024, nearly 400,000 people were left waiting more than 24 hours across A&E departments, a 5% rise on the previous year. Channel 4’s Dispatches programme also found that 54,000 people had to wait more than two days, a freedom of information request to NHS England found.


    Guardian: ‘100% penalty’: Clarke criticises referee after Scotland crash out of Euro 2024

    “It was 100% a penalty,” Clarke said. “Somebody, somewhere has to explain to me why that is not a penalty. It was, 100%. It was a one-goal game; if we get the penalty it can be a different night. I have other words but I am not going to use them.”

    Clarke was pressed on the rare use of a referee from another continent. This has happened before in the European Championship but is unusual. “European competition, might have been better to have a European ­referee,” the manager said. “But we had European VAR [Video Assistant Referee]. Maybe the referee didn’t see the challenge clearly on the pitch so what’s the purpose of VAR if they are not going to come in on something like that? It was a penalty.”


    Last Updated: 23.Jun.2024 23:36 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:39 PM, Jun 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 22.Jun.2024


    You’re in good hands


    WashPo: Cyberattacks crippled thousands of car dealers. Here’s what to know.

    Thousands of car dealers are struggling to do business this week because of two cyberattacks on an industry software provider.

    The cyberattacks on CDK Global, which provides software to nearly 15,000 car dealerships in the United States and Canada, led to a shutdown of sales, financing and payroll systems for many dealers. That has forced some car sellers to do business the old fashioned way.

    With a mask & gun?


    Globe: Boomer activism is on the rise as retirees return to their protest-movement youth

    23.Aug.2022

    “I felt the need to take up this issue because it’s so urgent,” says Mr. De Carlo, co-chairperson of Ontario-based Seniors for Climate Action Now (SCAN). “Governments, not just in Canada but around the world, are not taking the type of action that’s needed. There’s going to have to be a movement similar to the movements that happened in the 60s and similar to other movements that have happened since to force that change and we see ourselves as part of that movement.”

    Founded in January 2021, SCAN has grown to 175 members who range in age from their 50s to 80s. It is one of the dozens of climate action groups for seniors that have sprung up across the country.


    Fast Company: Bye, Google Maps: This AI mapmaking app blew me away

    Hey, Google: PamPam is how custom mapmaking should be done.

    ⋮

    Now, first things first: This tool isn’t meant to be a full-fledged replacement for Google Maps or whatever manner of mapping app you usually use when it comes to navigation, directions, and other such tasks.

    ➜ Nope–it’s a specific tool for the very particular purpose of helping you share a series of locations with other people.


    UPI: DA asks judge to keep gag order in Trump hush money case because of threats

    According to prosecutors, Trump “has not exempted the jurors from his alarming rhetoric that he would have ‘every right’ to seek retribution as president against the participants in this trial as a consequence of his conviction because ‘sometimes revenge can be justified.”

    ⋮

    “Defendant’s supporters, following his lead, have attempted to identify jurors and threatened violence against them,” the filing read.

    How can people even contemplate voting for this thug?


    NYT: New Book Paints Trump as Wounded, Forgetful and Hung Up on Hollywood

    In the dark months following the Jan. 6 attack, Donald J. Trump opened up to an entertainment journalist, revealing his fixation with celebrity, acceptance and the TV show that made him.


    9to5Mac: No Vision Pro 2? Apple, give us this one upgrade and call it a day

    Here’s what Apple can do to upgrade the Vision Pro without needing to offer a true Vision Pro 2.


    CBC: The newest New Democrat won leadership easily. Nenshi’s next moves? Likely harder.

    The provincial opposition party is now led by a devoutly non-partisan former mayor.

    ⋮

    The 62,746 members who selected him, more than 86 per cent of party voters, represents nearly quadruple the number of active New Democrats before Notley announced her departure.

    The expectations are high, but I guess that’s good.


    CBC: B.C. strata fines owner more than $11K for installing heat pump

    A Richmond, B.C., man who was fined more than $11,000 for installing a heat pump in his strata lot will have to pay significantly less, thanks to a tribunal decision.


    newsNation: Significant energy source found under U.S.-Mexico border on Rio Grande

    “There’s a thin, 10- to 15-mile-wide region that runs parallel or along the Rio Grande that has very high heat by at least by most standards, and even in the interior part of the county, which is probably two-thirds of the county,” Ken Wisian, head of the research team, told NewsNation. 


    Last Updated: 22.Jun.2024 20:40 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:19 AM, Jun 23
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 21.Jun.2024


    The Ultimate Driving Machine


    Guardian: ‘It felt like bad news after bad news’: why record numbers are leaving New Zealand

    Now, record numbers of people are leaving the country as cost-of-living pressures increase and residents grapple with limited job opportunities. Provisional figures from Statistics NZ show a net loss of 56,500 citizens in the year to April – up 12,000 from the previous record.

    Separate figures indicated that half of those who left New Zealand recently moved to Australia. Now, experts are worrying that a grim economic picture means departing Kiwis may not come back.

    “We can’t compete with the salaries in Australia,” says David Cooper, director of immigration firm Malcolm Pacific. “Some people view that New Zealand has gone backwards, and so they’re voting with their feet.”

    I find this surprising.


    Guardian: Pepsi lost the cola wars to Coke. Why is it struggling to hold on to second place?

    This month, the astonishing news broke that, after more than a century of pitched battle — including ad skirmishes, frantic marketing, and taste tests on both Earth and in space — the cola wars were officially over. Coca-Cola had always been the winner, but its longtime rival, Pepsi, was no longer No 2. Instead, a new challenger had climbed into second place: Dr Pepper.

    The coup de grace was delivered by Beverage Digest, an Atlanta-based trade publication that, in late May, released an updated ranking of the top 10 US carbonated soft drink brands in 2023 based on sales volume. There, at the top, was Coca-Cola Classic, with a 19.2% volume share of the market, followed by Dr Pepper, which squeaked by Pepsi, 8.34% to 8.31%. What a comedown for Pepsi, which had enjoyed a 15% share back in the glory days of 1995.

    ⋮

    Beverage Digest didn’t just rank soda brands in 2023. It also ranked every category of non-alcoholic drink on the market. At the very top, with 35.4% of the volume share of the market, was bottled water. Soft drinks followed at 33.9%, followed at a much greater distance by juice, tea, sports drinks, energy drinks, and coffee.


    CNN: Justices uphold Trump tax on overseas investments in win for Biden

    At issue in the closely watched tax case was whether the government could levy a tax on investment proceeds that had not yet been received. Charles and Kathleen Moore, a Washington state couple, challenged a $15,000 tax bill they received because of their investment in an India-based company. The profit at issue, the Moores claimed, were reinvested and never distributed to them.

    The tax involved was enacted by Congress in 2017 as part of a larger package signed by then-President Donald Trump. The one-time mandatory repatriation tax was levied on shareholders on undistributed profits accrued between 1986 and the end of 2017 by certain foreign corporations that are majority owned by Americans. The provision was expected to raise $340 billion over a decade.


    CNN: A popular tourist destination in China has installed toilet timers. Reactions are mixed

    A video recently shared on various Chinese news and social media sites shows a set of timers installed above a row of toilet cubicles in a female washroom, with each stall getting its own digital counter.

    When a stall is unoccupied, the pixelated LED screen displays the word “empty” in green. If in use, it shows the number of minutes and seconds the door has been locked.


    WashPo: U.S. bans sales of Kaspersky anti-virus software, citing ties to Russia

    The Biden administration announced Thursday that it will ban Kaspersky Lab from distributing its anti-virus software and cybersecurity products in the United States, pointing to national security concerns related to the Russian company.

    Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters that the decision was made following an “extremely thorough investigation,” and that Kaspersky has “long raised national security concerns.” The United States in 2017 banned federal agencies from using those products.

    “Russia has shown it has the capacity — and even more than that, the intent — to exploit Russian companies like Kaspersky to collect and weaponize the personal information of Americans, and that’s why we are compelled to take the action we are taking today,” Raimondo said.


    Globe: New Brunswick business giant James Kenneth Irving dies at age 96

    James Kenneth (J.K.) Irving, who was the last living son of New Brunswick industrialist K.C. Irving, has died at the age of 96.

    Chairman of J.D. Irving Limited, a family-owned Saint John-based company that spanned the forestry, pulp and paper, tissue, lumber, building supplies, frozen food, transportation, shipping and ship-building industries, Mr. Irving was a giant even among the biggest names in Canadian business.


    Last Updated: 21.Jun.2024 18:54 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:25 AM, Jun 22
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 20.Jun.2024


    Nothing runs like a Deere


    New Yorker: The Strange Journey of John Lennon’s Stolen Patek Philippe Watch

    “Mystery solved!” was the gist of the message that ricocheted around the watch world. But, to me, the mystery had only deepened. The basic itinerary of the Patek’s odyssey and its current location had been discovered, but the human detail of how it had passed from wrist to wrist, hiding place to hiding place, still hadn’t been reported. What’s more, where had Ono ever got the idea of giving a guy like John Lennon—eater of carob-coated peanuts, singer of a song about imagining no possessions, peacenik—a watch that was a status symbol of lockjawed good taste? And what was its famously secret inscription?


    New Yorker: Defending the Unabomber

    The ending—abrupt, unsatisfying, badly understood—befitted the strange, unhappy saga of Theodore J. Kaczynski. He was spared a gruelling trial, the judgment of an elaborately chosen, “death qualified” jury, and a strong chance of being condemned to death, but he was saved from all this by a bizarre alliance of lawyers he was trying to fire, a family he had renounced, psychiatrists he did not trust or respect (and in some cases had never met), a federal judge who had drastically restricted his right to counsel and seemed to fear (with reason) the trial to come, a press convinced that he was a paranoid schizophrenic, and, finally, a legendary death-penalty opponent skilled at “client management” (management, that is, of Kaczynski). Much of the story took place entirely out of public view. Kaczynski pleaded guilty, in late January, to all charges, and forswore all appeals, in exchange for a life sentence. In our overburdened courts, defendants are often left with little choice but to plead guilty, forfeiting their right to a trial in exchange for a lesser sentence. But Ted Kaczynski was not just another defendant denied his day in court.

    ⋮

    This clash of wills and world views eventually erupted into open court. But before he was yanked offstage Kaczynski’s quietly fierce performance raised fundamental questions about a defendant’s right to participate in his own defense, the role of psychiatry in the courts, and the pathologizing of radical dissent in both the courts and the press.


    Sandofsky: Fast Crimes at Lambda School

    Austen [Allred] co-founded Lambda School, one of the largest educational startups of all time. It promised to teach you to code in a matter of months, a common claim in 2017, a time when code bootcamps were commodities you could find in any strip mall. But you don’t score $120 million in funding from the biggest names in venture capital by building a better boot camp. He took on college.

    An underdog with a story as fascinating as his company, Austen went from Mormon missionary to college dropout — at one point homeless and living out of his Honda Civic — to the founder of the hottest startup in the valley.


    Globe: Ottawa’s move to fine companies over deceptive green claims triggers wave of website disclaimers in energy sector

    Several Canadian oil companies and lobby groups have added disclaimers to their websites and social-media feeds – in one case, scrubbing all content – in response to new federal legislation that aims to stamp out false or exaggerated environmental claims.

    ⋮

    On Wednesday, Pathways Alliance, a coalition of oil sands producers proposing a multibillion-dollar carbon capture and storage project, replaced its website and social-media content with a disclaimer it said is in response to the C-59 anti-greenwashing measure.


    Globe: B.C. company gives used electric vehicle batteries a second life boosting Canada’s aging power grid

    Moment Energy, headquartered in Coquitlam, B.C., is repurposing used EV batteries into moveable power units that are being installed across the country to support buckling infrastructure. Since the start of 2024, the company has made a series of promising deals with partners such as the Vancouver International Airport and the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

    In a satisfying full-circle business model, Moment Energy purchases used EV batteries from automakers and puts them together to create larger, rechargeable energy storage systems that can be plugged into local power grids to support new EV chargers. Co-founder Sumreen Rattan said when an EV battery is replaced, it typically has around 80 per cent of its capacity left.

    Interesting to compare this approach to that of LiCycle.


    Last Updated: 20.Jun.2024 23:59 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:26 AM, Jun 21
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 19.Jun.2024


    I❤️NY


    NewsNation: Willie Mays, Giants’ electrifying ‘Say Hey Kid,’ has died at 93

    Most of the time, he was happy just being on the field, especially when the sun went down.

    “I mean, you had the lights out there and all you do is go out there, and you’re out there by yourself in center field,” he told the achievement academy. “And, I just felt that it was such a beautiful game that I just wanted to play it forever, you know.”


    UPI: Nebraska Republican blocks Democrats' attempt to fast-track bump stocks ban

    A lone dissenting vote by Republican Sen. Pete Ricketts, R-Neb., halted the attempt to fast-track the measure through a unanimous consent vote in the Senate.

    Ricketts said the proposed measure goes beyond a simple ban on bump stocks and would enable the federal government to target common firearm accessories, not just bump stocks.


    CBC: Ontario judge ‘very reluctantly’ agrees to once again delay Peter Nygard’s sentencing on sex assaults

    An Ontario judge “very reluctantly” agreed to postpone the sentencing of disgraced fashion mogul Peter Nygard on Monday in a case that has dragged on since the convicted sex offender was found guilty of four counts of sexual assault last fall.

    In recent days, Nygard hired his third lawyer in the case, Winnipeg-based Gerri Wiebe, who requested the sentencing be pushed back for 30 to 60 days so she could get up to speed on her new client’s case.

    Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert Goldstein agreed to the request “very, very reluctantly,” he said, but expressed reservations given several delays in the high-profile case have occurred since Nygard was convicted of four counts of sexual assault on Nov. 12.


    9to5Mac: Report: Apple halts work on Vision Pro, aims to release cheaper Vision headset next year

    Apple is reportedly working on a cheaper, cut-down version of the Apple Vision Pro, scheduled to arrive by the end of 2025, according to The Information. At the same time, the publication says development work on a second-generation high-end model of the Vision Pro has been shelved, seemingly to prioritize the cheaper hardware path.

    Although it’s unclear at what price point the cheaper Apple Vision headset would hit, anything less than the $3,500 starting price of Vision Pro will help the company compete with the likes of the Meta Quest. The Information suggests Apple is aiming for a price around $1500, similar to the cost of a high-end iPhone.


    NYT: How Heat Affects the Brain

    High temperatures can make us miserable. Research shows they also make us aggressive, impulsive and dumb.


    ProPublica: How 3M Execs Convinced a Scientist the Forever Chemicals She Found in Human Blood Were Safe

    Decades ago, Kris Hansen showed 3M that its PFAS chemicals were in people’s bodies. Her bosses halted her work. As the EPA now forces the removal of the chemicals from drinking water, she wrestles with the secrets that 3M kept from her and the world.


    New Yorker: How Will Nanomachines Change the World?

    She read in Nature that scientists at Rice, led by the chemist James Tour, had developed “molecular machines” that spun like microscopic drills and were roughly ten thousand times smaller than the width of a human hair—small enough to puncture and kill individual cells. Shortly thereafter, Santos moved to Houston to join Tour’s lab.


    Last Updated: 19.Jun.2024 21:17 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 6:01 PM, Jun 20
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 18.Jun.2024


    Can you hear me now?


    Globe: New Brunswick seafood plant shutting down after repeated complaints about unbearable stench

    Coastal Shell Products suspended its operations this weekend, laying off 20 staff owing to what the company says are provincial government limitations that have made it financially impossible to continue.

    For the last two years, the province has restricted the company from running its propane-burning dryer during the day after complaints from residents about the putrid smell that some said was ruining their lives in the Acadian fishing town of Beaurivage, formerly Richibucto.


    Globe: World’s first weekly insulin injection coming to Canada in two weeks, manufacturer says

    Many people with diabetes in Canada will soon be able to take insulin once a week instead of daily, drug manufacturer Novo Nordisk announced on Monday.

    Insulin icodec, which will be sold under the brand name Awiqli, is the first once-a-week basal insulin injection in the world and it will be available across the country starting June 30, the company told The Canadian Press ahead of the announcement.

    Canada is the first country to get the product, which was approved by Health Canada in March for the treatment of adults with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.


    Globe: Here are three great books about maritime history

    If, like me, you’re one of the many people who felt a sense of deflation after reading David Grann’s enthralling book The Wager last year, knowing that it would be nigh impossible to find a worthy follow-up, then I have good news for you. Hampton Sides’s The Wide Wide Sea (Knopf Doubleday, 432 pages), about Captain James Cook’s third and final expedition, is, like Grann’s book, an epic, magisterial, morally complex work about the Age of Sail that reads better than any thriller.

    ⋮

    Personal and political dynamics are also at the heart of Eric Jay Dolin’s Left for Dead (Norton, 320 pages), a Robinson Crusoe-level tale of survival shot through with mind-boggling, Russian-doll levels of treachery and betrayal. Massachusetts-based Dolin does an excellent job of bringing clarity to a story with permutations as complex as the coastline of the Falkland Islands, where the chance encounter that drives it takes place, shortly after the events of The Wide Wide Sea, in the early 19th century.

    ⋮

    Unlike the previous two books, David Gibbins’s informative A History of the World in Twelve Shipwrecks (St. Martin’s Press, 304 pages) reads more like a straight work of history, the maritime archeologist using each wreck as a springboard into the civilization from which it hearkened.


    UPI: Indian national accused of murder-for-hire plot pleads not guilty in New York court

    Nikhil Gupta is charged with engaging a hitman to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a member of a banned Sikh movement that advocates for an independent Sikh state in India’s Punjab region and a U.S. citizen. Gupta also faces a charge of conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire.

    According to prosecutors, unbeknownst to Gupta the “hitman” was an undercover U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency officer.


    UPI: North Korean soldiers briefly cross DMZ border as South fires warning shots

    North Korean soldiers briefly crossed the border on Tuesday morning and were sent back by warning shots, the South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said, adding that landmine explosions have caused numerous casualties to Northern troops working along frontline areas.

    ⋮

    A JCS official told reporters Tuesday that the crossing appeared to be accidental, as the North has been ramping up activity in frontline areas of the DMZ since withdrawing from an inter-Korean military agreement in November.

    “Various types of work are being carried out as part of strengthening security forces, such as clearing land, laying mines, reinforcing tactical roads and installing unknown structures that appear to be anti-tank barriers,” the official said in a background briefing.


    TorStar: The Liberals and Conservatives are having a hockey fight

    The Conservatives began blasting CBC for what it said was the broadcaster’s failure to offer enough playoff coverage to Canadians.

    And the Liberals claimed it was Stephen Harper-era defunding that led to CBC showing fewer games.

    Here’s what both sides are saying, what they’re getting right, and what they’re getting wrong. …


    TorStar: Olivia Chow says workers returning to office would help city

    Toronto’s mayor has been meeting with the CEOs of some of Canada’s largest companies to discuss how to get workers back in the office at least four days a week — and they’re calling on her to set the example.

    This seems very wrongheaded to me. Forcing people back into a 1950s model when the world has changed. And employees will bear the cost, not the city.


    CP (Globe): Zero-emission vehicle registrations jump 53 per cent in the first quarter: StatCan

    The federal agency says 46,744 new zero-emission vehicles were registered in the first quarter, making up 11.3 per cent of total new vehicle registrations.

    The agency says battery electric cars made up 73 per cent of total zero-emission vehicle registrations, while plug-in hybrids were at 27 per cent. [Hybrids are not zero-emission vehicles, even plug-ins.]

    Overall, the agency says new vehicle registrations were up 16.6 per cent year-over-year in the first quarter, but were down 3.1 per cent compared with the fourth quarter of 2023.

    It also adds pickup truck registrations fell just over eight per cent, the first year-over-year quarterly decrease for the category after seven consecutive increases.


    The Art Of Not Asking Why (@jtr): Stop or I shoot!

    I don’t remember much of my time in the army. There are days I don’t even remember my personal number. Other days, like yesterday, I wake up from a nap and that number is on my lips as if I just used it to identify myself at the base’s gate.


    Last Updated: 18.Jun.2024 23:57 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:58 PM, Jun 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 17.Jun.2024


    I want my MTV.


    CleanTechnica: Juan Diego Celemín Mojica: A Window Of Opportunity Is Opening For General Motors

    There’s no other way to put it: GM has struggled badly in its transition to EVs. But recent developments have led me to believe that GM may be better positioned than it appears to be: if I’m right, and if GM does not mess up, it may well be one of the winners in this transition and recover lost ground by the latter part of this decade. Let’s look at the factors that prompt me to say this.

    Extensive article.


    Last Updated: 17.Jun.2024 01:30 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:44 AM, Jun 18
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 16.Jun.2024


    Taste the rainbow.


    CleanTechnica: Ford Revises Dealer Requirements To Sell Electric Cars

    According to Business Insider, Ford has walked back its requirements for its dealers. Now, instead of DC fast chargers, Level 2 chargers will be required. Instead of several tiers of dealerships with different access to electric cars, now all Ford dealers will be welcome to sell EVs, according to a statement from Ford’s chief operating officer Marin Gjaja last week. Ford dealers will no longer be required to invest in certification to get EVs on their lot, which will open the sales of electric cars to the entire dealership network. Gjaja said the change in plans is designed to grow EV sales for the company.


    Wikipedia: Malcolm Bricklin

    At the meeting, Bricklin saw Fuji’s Subaru 360 mini-car, which got up to 60 miles to a gallon of gas and did not require federalizing in the United States because it weighed under 1,000 pounds. He was able to secure an exclusive contract with Fuji Heavy Industries to import Subaru cars and trucks into the United States, forming Subaru of America. Despite the car’s ill fit for American roads and traffic, Bricklin was described as “one of the first auto industry mavericks to recognize that thrifty, inexpensive Japanese cars could be big in the United States.”

    The first Subarus to enter the US were the 1968-1969 Subaru 360 and the 1970 Subaru FF-1 Star.

    Less than six months after the company formed, it became a public company and has been from 1968. Subaru of America became the only import car company that was publicly traded, making small fortunes for Bricklin and COO Harvey Lamm.

    Yeah, that Bricklin.


    NewsNation: Kansas may consider tax incentives to lure the Royals and Chiefs out of Missouri

    • Kansas legislature may consider stadium deals during special session
    • Missouri voters rejected stadium-linked tax hike in April

    Daring Fireball: DetailsPro (sponsor)

    DetailsPro brings SwiftUI to designers working on Apple platforms. (What a perfect week for a developer/designer tool to sponsor DF.) Without writing a line of code, you can bring your next idea to life in SwiftUI right from your iPhone. Design apps for the iPhone, on your iPhone. Or use it on your iPad or Mac.

    DetailsPro has an easy, approachable interface, built-in templates, and a community of designers who share files. It is very easily to get started — you’ll be up and running in minutes. Designs in DetailsPro are 1:1 SwiftUI, so you can export to Xcode at any time. Intuitive features like side-by-side Dark Mode preview and Repeating Elements — a huge timesaver — use the smarts of SwiftUI to make the process enjoyable.

    DetailsPro is available for iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Vision Pro. DetailsPro is so good and so fun it makes me want to come up with ideas for new apps just to have an excuse to use it. Download it now and give it a try — it’s free forever up to five files, and very reasonably priced for a professional tool.

    DetailsPro AppStore link

    DetailsPro website link


    ScienceAlert: Scientists Create The Thinnest Lens on Earth Using Quantum Physics

    A quantum phenomenon has allowed scientists to develop a lens just three atoms thick, qualifying as the thinnest ever made.

    ⋮

    The technology, known as a Fresnel lensor zone plate lens, has been used for centuries in the manufacture of thin, light-weight lenses, like those used in lighthouses.

    To give the technique a quantum boost, the research team etched concentric rings into a thin layer of a semiconductor called tungsten disulfide (WS2). When WS2 absorbs light, its electrons move in a precise manner that leaves a gap that can be considered as a kind of particle in its own right.

    Together, the electron and its ‘hole’ isform what’s known as an exciton, which has properties that assist in the focussing efficiency of very specific wavelengths of light while letting other wavelengths pass through unaltered.


    Los Angeles Times: Elon Musk, SpaceX sued by engineers who cite juvenile, crude X posts

    SpaceX and its billionaire owner, Elon Musk, are being sued by eight former employees who allege they were fired after asking the company to address a toxic work culture they say is rife with sexual harassment and discrimination.

    The former employees say Musk encouraged an inappropriate work environment in the spacecraft company with his social media posts, where he often announced important company news including launch dates and accomplishments, but mixed in memes and jokes filled with sexual innuendo.


    Last Updated: 16.Jun.2024 22:12 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:18 AM, Jun 17
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 15.Jun.2024


    Keep hunger locked up til lunch.


    UPI: NASA delays return of Starliner astronauts from space station

    Starliner’s return to Earth is now delayed to June 22 or later, NASA announced Friday.

    ⋮

    Both astronauts were originally set to complete a full assessment of the Starliner on board the ISS in just under a week, but the mission was lengthened due to a need to collect more information about the spacecraft.


    BBC: Las Vegas shooting survivors stunned by Supreme Court gun ruling

    In the aftermath of the massacre, then-President Donald Trump banned bump stocks, a modification that allows a rifle to fire like a machine gun. It was a rare example of the US making a change to its gun policies in the wake of a mass shooting, and it was a reform that survivors of the attack welcomed.

    The ban was all the more extraordinary because it was instituted by a Republican president and supported by the National Rifle Association, figures that would normally oppose a gun control proposal.

    On Friday, the US Supreme Court struck down the ban, deciding in a 6-3 opinion that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives had overstepped its authority to outlaw the device.

    ⋮

    “Who has ever used a bump stock for good?” she told the BBC. “There’s no reason for a civilian to use a mass shooting machine.”


    Globe: Lack of interest in Stanley Cup final suggests hockey isn’t what it used to be for Canadians

    The divide between what hockey was (a prismatic expression of Canadianness) and what it is (a flagging business struggling to engage its customer base) is most obvious during a Stanley Cup final.

    No one has to love either of the teams involved, but if a plurality of Canadians can’t even be bothered to tell a fib and say they have a passing interest, that’s worse than bad news. That means whatever nostalgic hold the game had on our national imagination is in the midst of being let go.


    Reuters: UK polls point to ‘electoral extinction’ for Prime Minister Sunak’s Conservatives

    The polls come just over halfway through the election campaign, after a week in which both the Conservatives and Labour set out their manifestos, and shortly before voters begin to receive postal ballots.

    Sunak surprised many in his own party by announcing an early election on May 22, against widespread expectations that he would wait until later in the year to allow more time for living standards to recover after the highest inflation in 40 years.


    TechRadar: Apple quietly released a new operating system that almost nobody noticed — unnamed OS surfaces in Private Cloud Compute blog as Apple goes ballistic on AI

    After stating, “The root of trust for Private Cloud Compute is our compute node: custom-built server hardware that brings the power and security of Apple silicon to the data center, with the same hardware security technologies used in iPhone, including the Secure Enclave and Secure Boot,” the company added, “We paired this hardware with a new operating system: a hardened subset of the foundations of iOS and macOS tailored to support Large Language Model (LLM) inference workloads while presenting an extremely narrow attack surface.”

    While we don’t know too much about the new OS that Apple designed for PCC, we soon will. The company says, “When we launch Private Cloud Compute, we’ll take the extraordinary step of making software images of every production build of PCC publicly available for security research.” That includes every application and relevant executable, and the OS itself. Apple adds, “Software will be published within 90 days of inclusion in the log, or after relevant software updates are available, whichever is sooner.”


    Hollywood Reporter: Inside Out 2 Heads for Historic $140M-$150M Box Office Opening

    Pixar’s tentpole earned a massive $62 million on Friday, well ahead of expectations and putting the movie on course to open in the $140 million to $150 million range domestically over Father’s Day weekend, one of the top three starts ever for an animated film and the second-best for Pixar. Rival studios believe it could climb as high as $155 million to $160 million, but Disney is being more circumspect. Friday’s haul includes a huge $13 million in Thursday previews.


    NYT: How a ‘Committed Partisan Warrior’ Came to Rethink the Political Wars

    “How do we make the politics better?” [Bob Bauer] asked. “How do we uphold our democratic norms by focusing on choices that people in positions of public responsibility have to make? And how do we make them in a way that is respectful of those norms and respectful of those institutions — as opposed to politics as blood sport, whatever it takes?”

    This has become an era of blood sport in politics, put on steroids by former President Donald J. Trump, who accuses opponents of treason, suggests executing a general he deems disloyal, promises to pardon the violent marauders of Jan. 6, 2021, and vows to make “retribution” the mission of a second term if he wins. Just last week, he sent out a fund-raising email with the subject line “My plan for revenge.”


    Last Updated: 15.Jun.2024 23:43 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:25 AM, Jun 16
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 14.Jun.2024


    All the News That’s Fit to Print.


    MacRumors: The Talk Show Live From WWDC 2024 Now Available on YouTube

    The Talk Show Live From WWDC 2024 is now available to watch on YouTube. Daring Fireball’s John Gruber discussed Apple Intelligence and other WWDC announcements with Apple’s software engineering chief Craig Federighi, marketing chief Greg Joswiak, and AI/machine learning head John Giannandrea in front of a live audience.


    NYT: Opinion: The Supreme Court’s Bump Stock Decision Will Prove Fatal

    There was nothing abstract about the 6-to-3 decision issued Friday morning by the Supreme Court to permit bump stocks to be used on semiautomatic rifles. It is one of the most astonishingly dangerous decisions ever issued by the court, and it will almost surely result in a loss of American lives in another mass shooting.

    Bump stocks attach to the back of a rifle and use the gun’s recoil to enable shooting hundreds of bullets at a very rapid pace, far faster than anyone could shoot by pressing the trigger multiple times. The device is the reason the Las Vegas shooter in 2017 was able to kill 60 people and wound more than 400 others so quickly in the nation’s worst mass shooting in modern history.

    Bump stock devices were banned the next year, just as all fully automatic machine guns are banned for public use, but the six conservative members of the court seemed entirely unbothered by their deadly potential. The opinion, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, parses in a ridiculous level of detail whether bump stocks truly fit the precise mechanical definition of a machine gun. Because the court feels the need to give the greatest possible deference to the ownership of guns, however they might be used, the court concluded that they are not really machine guns, as they do not allow firing multiple rounds “by a single function of the trigger.”

    Perhaps not surprising, but sadly disappointing.


    MacRumors: Apple Redesigning TestFlight App in iOS 18

    Apple plans to overhaul the design of its TestFlight app that is available to developers for beta testing their apps, and the updated design was highlighted in a WWDC session on App Store Connect.

    TestFlight in iOS 18 features a new invitation experience that will better showcase the app by highlighting key information including app name and icon, screenshots, developer name, build expiration date, and app description.

    The refreshed design looks much more similar to the App Store than the current TestFlight interface, which provides little in the way of app data beyond the features that are being tested. Apple’s current design assumes that testers are familiar with an app that they’re invited to test, while the refresh provides key information to testers who might not be in tune with what an app is designed to do.


    Wired: I Spent a Week Eating Discarded Restaurant Food. But Was It Really Going to Waste?

    Food app Too Good To Go promises to cut waste by directing hungry bargain hunters to leftover restaurant food. But the week I spent living off the app had me wondering if Too Good To Go is too good to be true.

    Author tried it out in London, England.


    Last Updated: 14.Jun.2024 21:24 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:37 AM, Jun 15
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 13.Jun.2024


    When it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight.


    CBC: NDP MP rarely on Parliament Hill billed taxpayers for travel with family over Christmas

    An NDP MP who frequently joins parliamentary proceedings remotely from her riding billed the House of Commons for a trip she took to reportedly meet with “stakeholders” over the Christmas holidays in Quebec — travel that included bringing her husband and kids along at taxpayers' expense.

    Parliamentary travel records indicate NDP MP Niki Ashton was only in Ottawa on one occasion for four days during the fall 2022 sitting.


    CBC: Trudeau says he considered stepping down during marriage difficulties

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a recent podcast that he considered walking away from the job last year as his marriage began to fracture.


    PBS NewsHour: Siding with Starbucks, Supreme Court makes it harder for NLRB to win legal protections for unionizing workers

    The Supreme Court on Thursday made it harder for the federal government to win court orders when it suspects a company of interfering in unionization campaigns in a case that stemmed from a labor dispute with Starbucks.

    The justices tightened the standards for when a federal court should issue an order to protect the jobs of workers during a union organizing campaign.


    Guardian: Will I need to spend a lot insulating my home to get a heat pump?

    Heat pumps could be the single largest step a household can take to reduce their carbon emissions while saving money on their bills. But many in Britain fear that, even though millions of homes across Europe have benefited from the shift away from gas or oil boilers, the UK’s draughty old homes could prove too great a challenge for the technology.

    The concern is unsurprising given that the UK has some of the least energy efficient homes in Europe. A study by the smart home company tado° monitored 80,000 users across Europe to find how quickly properties lose heat when outdoor temperatures fall to zero. It found that UK homes lost on average 3C after five hours without heating, compared with just 1C in Germany and 0.9C in Norway.


    Last Updated: 13.Jun.2024 23:59 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:54 AM, Jun 14
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 12.Jun.2024


    Can you hear me now?.


    ScienceAlert: Caffeine Has an Intriguing Effect on The Brains of Parkinson’s Patients

    A new study highlights how drinking more than three cups of coffee a day affects dopamine levels in the brains of people with Parkinson’s, a finding that potentially influence how we monitor and perhaps one day treat the disease.


    Wired: AI Is Apple’s Best Shot at Getting You to Upgrade Your iPhone

    Apple’s new AI strategy might also play a key role in its upgrade-your-iPhone strategy.

    ⋮

    Apple’s approach is an additive one, relying on the influence and footprint of its existing apps rather than spinning up a new chatbot or search engine that spits out humanlike responses. Once Apple Intelligence rolls out to iPhones, Macs, and iPads later this year, it’s supposed to turn sketches into images, sort through photos and videos, rewrite emails, change the tone of messages, and allow the voice assistant Siri to tap into different apps to string together smarter responses.

    There’s just one catch: It won’t work on your old iPhone.

    Apple is limiting these AI features to the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, which run on Apple’s A17 Pro chip; the iPads Pro and Air, which run on Apple’s M1 chip or later versions; and various Mac computers that run on the M1 chip or later.


    Dave Winer (Scripting News): MySQL and ChatGPT

    A very simple example where ChatGPT saves programmer time. MySQL has awful error messages. Rather than try to figure out what they mean, I paste the message into ChatGPT and say nothing. It tells me what the error was and even fixes it for me. I copy the result, paste it into MySQL and I’m back on the road. One can imagine where they build that into the MySQL app and I converse with it instead of the app with the awful error messages.


    Ask a Manager: update: I was rejected because I told my interviewer I never make mistakes

    Remember the letter-writer who wondered if he was rejected because he told his interviewer he never makes mistakes? Here’s the update.

    via Kottke


    NYT: Thomas B. Edsall: Trump Would Be Long Gone if Only We Could…

    A central predicament of President Biden’s campaign is how to persuade voters to abandon Donald Trump.

    “In 2012 the Obama campaign turned a nice guy, Mitt Romney, into a piece of crap,” Steve Murphy, a co-founder of the Democratic media firm MVAR Media, told me. “You can’t do that to Trump because everybody already knows he’s a piece of crap.”


    Canadian Geographic: Wreck of Quest, famed Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton’s last ship, found in Labrador Sea

    A Royal Canadian Geographical Society-led expedition has discovered the wreck of the famed exploration vessel Quest in the Labrador Sea. Celebrated polar explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton died aboard Quest in 1922 while en route to Antarctica, marking the end of what some historians call the Heroic Age of Antarctic exploration. The wreck lies upright and intact on the seabed in 390 metres of water northwest of St. John’s and east of Battle Harbour, Labrador.

    Quest was damaged by ice while on a seal hunt off the Labrador coast in the traditional waters of the Mi’kmaq, Innu and Inuit, and sank on May 5, 1962. The vessel’s ultimate resting place is poignant given that Shackleton originally intended to use Quest for a Canadian Arctic expedition before the government of then-Prime Minister Arthur Meighen pulled the plug. Forced to change plans at the eleventh hour, Shackleton then headed south to Antarctica. The find creates a tangible link between Canada and a towering figure in polar exploration.


    Big Nerd Ranch: Finding New Pastures: Big Nerd Ranch’s Next Chapter

    It is with a mix of emotions that we announce the upcoming sunsetting of some key aspects of Big Nerd Ranch and the transition of others. For over 23 years, we’ve had the privilege of empowering aspiring programmers through our immersive bootcamps and books. From the iconic ranch in south Georgia to the late-night coding sessions, Big Nerd Ranch has fostered a unique and beloved community for anyone looking to grow and learn new technology.This decision hasn’t been an easy one. The landscape of tech education has evolved significantly since our inception. While Big Nerd Ranch has always strived to adapt, the current environment necessitates a more substantial shift.


    NYT: Southern Baptists Vote to Oppose Use of I.V.F.

    Southern Baptists, the country’s largest Protestant denomination, voted on Wednesday to oppose the use of in vitro fertilization. The vote was an indication that evangelicals are increasingly open to arguments that equate embryos with human life, and that two years after the overturning of Roe v. Wade, “fetal personhood” may be the next front for the anti-abortion movement.

    More than 10,000 delegates, called “messengers,” have gathered in Indianapolis for the denomination’s annual meeting, which is closely watched as a barometer of evangelical sentiment on a variety of cultural and political issues. The vote on Wednesday was the first time that attendees at the Southern Baptist meeting have addressed the ethics of in vitro fertilization directly.

    The resolution proposed on Wednesday called on Southern Baptists “to reaffirm the unconditional value and right to life of every human being, including those in an embryonic stage, and to only utilize reproductive technologies consistent with that affirmation, especially in the number of embryos generated in the I.V.F. process.”


    9to5Mac: Fan of House of the Dragon? Time to buy a Vision Pro

    This Sunday, June 16, HBO’s House of the Dragon season two debuts. Apple Vision Pro owners may be unaware that there’s a immersive environment available inside the visionOS Max app that’s perfectly suited for all things Game of Thrones—and it just got updated in time for the big premiere.

    Since the launch of the Vision Pro back in February, one way that video streaming apps have been able to offer unique experiences on visionOS is through immersive environments.

    The Max app offers an immersive environment that’s ideal for watching House of the Dragon. It takes you out of your living room or bedroom and drops you—for better or worse—into the Iron Throne Room from Game of Thrones.


    SMH: Health minister intervenes in chiropractors' decision to allow spinal manipulation of babies

    Mark Butler is seeking an urgent explanation from the Chiropractic Board of Australia about its controversial decision to allow practitioners to recommence spinal manipulations on babies.


    ScienceAlert: Emergency on The ISS? Leaked Audio of Training Exercise Triggers Brief Earth Panic

    Audio of a flight surgeon dealing with an emergency on the International Space Station while she was stuck in traffic triggered a brief panic on the evening of June 12 CDT.

    The unnamed speaker appeared to be conducting a phone call with an unheard conversant, discussing a situation in which an unnamed commander would require hyperbaric treatment after an event that left them with decompression sickness.


    SMH: Monster utes: Wait, they’re making parking spaces bigger? I say shrink the cars!

    I love Harris Farm Drummoyne, but the car park terrifies me. Each visit, I drive around it praying to the parking gods that all the SUVs have left so I don’t have to shoehorn my car into the narrow gap between two three-tonne megafauna.

    In the past, sandwiched between two Balmain tanks, I’ve often had to open the door a crack and wriggle one arm and leg out of the car before levering my torso through the space. Then, like a re-enactment of the Thai cave rescue, I slide along the door panel, shut the door and flick in the side mirror in order to squeeze out. And my car is a tiny Kia Picanto. Anything bigger, and I’d have to grease its sides to make it fit.


    NYT: Hitler and the Nazis Review: Building a Case for Alarm

    Hitler’s project: “Making Germany great again.” The Nazis’ characterization of criticism from the media: “Fake news.” Hitler’s mountain retreat in Berchtesgaden: “It’s sort of like Hitler’s Mar-a-Lago, if you will.”

    Donald Trump’s name is not mentioned in the six episodes of “Hitler and the Nazis: Evil on Trial,” a new historical documentary series on Netflix. But it dances just beneath the surface, and occasionally, as in the examples above, the production’s cadre of scholars, popular historians and biographers can barely stop themselves from giving the game away.


    Last Updated: 12.Jun.2024 23:59 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:16 AM, Jun 13
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 11.Jun.2024


    Have It Your Way.


    Apple (YouTube) 18 things from WWDC24

    Here’s [Apple’s] guide to the big announcements from this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference.

    Watch the full keynote here: apple.co/3RjCPkA


    MacRumors: Apple and Canon Announce Mirrorless Camera Lens Designed for Spatial Video Capture

    Canon’s RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL lens is specifically intended to capture spatial video content, tailored for use with Apple’s Vision Pro headset. The new lens is designed for the Canon EOS R7 camera and features dual optics, mimicking the human field of view.

    The RF-S7.8mm F4 STM DUAL lens features a high-speed autofocus mechanism, ensuring that even in challenging lighting conditions, videographers can capture clear spatial video. After recording, the footage can be processed using Canon’s EOS VR Utility app, which transforms the video into spatial content optimized for the Vision Pro.


    MacStories: Apple Intelligence: The MacStories Overview

    But what can Apple Intelligence actually do? The features offered by the system are broken down into three categories: language, images, and Siri.


    The Verge: Apple’s AI leaders talk Siri, Apple Intelligence, and more

    The WWDC keynote may be over, but we still have lots of questions about the state and future of Apple Intelligence. And in a somewhat unusual move, Apple is here to answer some of them: Craig Federighi and John Giannandrea, two of the executives in charge of all of Apple’s AI efforts, are taking the stage in the Steve Jobs Theater to talk about everything Apple announced on Monday.


    Wired: The Top New Features in Apple’s iOS 18 and iPadOS 18

    Good news! Every iPhone that was capable of installing iOS 17 can run iOS 18. Apple did not drop any iPhones from the list of supported devices this year.


    The Verge: Apple announces visionOS 2 with 3D photo transformations and an ultrawide Mac display

    Apple has announced visionOS 2, the second version of the Vision Pro’s operating system. When the update comes out in the fall, it will start to bring with it some much-needed changes, including what could be a much better virtual display experience, an updated homescreen and hand gestures, and new Photos app features.

    First, Apple has some deeply needed improvements coming to the visionOS interface, like the ability, at long last, to rearrange apps on your homescreen — and that includes iPad and iPhone apps. Not only that, but there will be new gestures for summoning the homescreen, viewing Control Center, and even just checking your battery life or the time (using a very clever wrist roll that’s not dissimilar from looking at your watch). And if you have family or friends that you want to share the headset with, Apple says it will save guest users’ hand and eye data for 30 days. That should make it much easier to share the Vision Pro.

    The most significant update, for all the productivity heads out there, is a new ultrawide virtual display feature. Apple says that in visionOS 2, you’ll be able to connect a Vision Pro to a Mac to generate a dual 4K-equivalent curved ultrawide display. Right now, the virtual display feature only does a single up to 5K one.

    Also, the company will finally add mouse support to the Vision Pro — at launch, the headset could work with trackpads like the one on a MacBook Air or the standalone Magic Trackpad 2 but oddly left out mouse support. You can still use one inside a mirrored display in the Vision Pro, but not outside of that screen in, say, an iPad or Vision Pro app. And if you like working in a fully immersed space but you’re tired of pawing around to find your keyboard, I have great news: the company says the Vision Pro “will now reveal the user’s physical keyboard.”


    Last Updated: 11.Jun.2024 20:31 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 1:06 AM, Jun 12
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 10.Jun.2024


    Got Milk?


    ScienceAlert: Daycares in Finland Grew Forests, And It Changed Kids' Immune Systems

    Playing through the greenery and litter of a mini forest’s undergrowth for just one month may be enough to change a child’s immune system, according to an experiment in Finland.

    When daycare workers rolled out a lawn, planted forest undergrowth (such as dwarf heather and blueberries), and allowed children to care for crops in planter boxes, the diversity of microbes in the guts and on the skin of the young kids appeared healthier in a very short space of time.

    Compared to other city kids who play in standard urban daycares with yards of pavement, tile, and gravel, 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds at these greened-up daycare centers in Finland showed increased T-cells and other important immune markers in their blood within 28 days.

    I wonder if gardening would have a similar effect?


    Guardian: Adverts for UK bookmakers and online casinos ‘need smoking-style warnings’

    Adverts for bookmakers and online casinos should carry smoking-style warnings, the UK’s leading gambling charity has said, as it warned that a marketing surge during the Euro 2024 football tournament could make it harder for people to cut down or quit.

    GambleAware called for an end to the industry-approved “Take Time To Think” slogan, which appears on gambling adverts, labelling the message “inadequate”.

    Instead, the charity has drawn up its own guidelines spurred by research suggesting that wall-to-wall betting adverts, which typically increase significantly during major football tournaments, make it harder for people with a gambling problem to stop.


    Guardian: EU expected to impose import tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles

    Experts believe Beijing will retaliate with measures that could hit European exports from cheese to cognac.


    Guardian: UK unemployment rising at fastest pace of OECD countries, analysis shows

    Every region of the UK was affected by rising unemployment and a falling number of job vacancies, the TUC said, illustrating the dislocation in the labour market between employers who cannot find workers with the right skills and rising joblessness.

    Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) to be published on Tuesday are expected to show a further rise in unemployment in recent months in a blow to Rishi Sunak’s message that the economy is growing robustly.


    9to5Mac: watchOS 11 will reportedly drop support for these Apple Watch models

    Apple has some big changes in store for Apple Watch device compatibility this year. According to a new report today, watchOS 11 will drop support for the Apple Watch Series 4, Apple Watch Series 5, and the original Apple Watch SE.

    The rumor was shared on Twitter by a private account with an accurate track record predicting device compatibility for iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and macOS software updates.

    The Apple Watch Series 4 was first released in 2018, followed by the Apple Watch Series 5 in 2019. The first-generation Apple Watch SE was released in 2020.


    9to5Mac: Apple Vision Pro goes on sale in eight new countries in the next few weeks

    Apple today announced that the Apple Vision Pro headset will be expanding beyond the US for the first time. The headset will go on sale in eight additional countries, in two batches.

    Firstly, on June 28, Apple Vision Pro will be available in China, Japan and Singapore. On July 12, Apple Vision Pro will also launch in Australia, Canada, France, Germany and the United Kingdom.


    MacRumors: iMessage on iOS 18: Bold, Underline, Italics, Emoji Tapbacks, and More

    iMessage is finally getting bold, italics, underline, and strikeout options, along with all-new text effects that allow you to animate individual words in a message.

    Best announcement of the day.


    Scientific American: Why Are Bears ‘Friend-Shaped’?

    There’s a meme about bears floating around the Internet: “If not friend, why friend-shaped?”

    This is an intriguing question if you decide to take it seriously. Most deadly apex predators have a certain ferocity to them that doesn’t scream “friend”—think lions, wolves and crocodiles. So why do bears seem so cute and cuddly? Have we just been conditioned by teddy bears and Paddington to find them safe and comforting, or is there something else going on? It turns out that evolution and human psychology might help us understand their friend-shaped nature.

    via Kottke


    Scientific American: New ‘FLiRT’ COVID Variants Could Be Driving an Uptick in Cases. Here’s How to Avoid Them

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s wastewater surveillance program currently reports low levels of viral activity–a combined measurement of the presence of the COVID-causing virus SARS-CoV-2 in samples from sewage collection sites nationwide. (A higher measurement at a wastewater site can suggest a potential increased risk of infection in the community, which would be reflected in clinical cases approximately four to six days later.) But that may be changing: national levels reported on May 25 increased approximately 7 percent from the previous week’s data collection period. Meanwhile WastewaterSCAN, a separate wastewater dataset that is monitored by researchers at Stanford University and Emory University, indicates that SARS-CoV-2 levels have been high and continuing to rise in the past 21 days. Some states, particularly in the West, have been reporting even greater increases in COVID wastewater concentrations. California has been seeing levels creep up since early May.

    Meanwhile in Ontario, Premier and Science Skeptic in Chief Doug Ford has cancelled waste water screenings. 🤷🏻‍♂️


    The Hill: Martha-Ann Alito vows revenge for flag controversy in secret recording

    The wife of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito said that she wants to get back at people who raised a controversy after she and the justice were criticized last month for flying politically affiliated flags at their homes.

    “You come after me, I’m gonna give it back to you,” Martha-Ann Alito said in the recording of a private conversation at the Supreme Court Historical Society’s annual dinner on June 3.

    “There will be a way, it doesn’t have to be now, but there will be a way they know,” she added. “Don’t worry about it.”

    Hewing to Christian principles, of course.


    MacRumors: HomeKit in iOS 18 Includes Guest Access, Hands-Free Unlock, Electricity Usage Integration and More

    Apple is adding electricity usage integration into the Home app, but it’s only available to select Pacific Gas and Electric Company customers in the United States to begin. With this feature, users can see their home electricity usage from the Home app, along with rate plan.

    Electricity usage integration is coming later in 2024, and Apple also plans to add other providers in the future.


    Last Updated: 10.Jun.2024 23:52 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 11:55 PM, Jun 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Sunday 09.Jun.2024


    M’m! M’m! Good!


    Globe: A bottle of blood serum from the 1940s gives researchers hope to save lives on battlefields of the 2020s

    The product was made by putting whole blood through a centrifuge to separate out red blood cells, platelets and proteins known as clotting factors.

    What remains is blood serum, a yellowish fluid containing additional proteins, such as albumin and other beneficial constituents. When the clotting factors are not removed, the result is blood plasma.

    Both serum and plasma can be freeze-dried – or lyophilized – to remove its water content. This enables long-term storage and easy transportation.

    “What you’re left with is a powder,” said Dr. Singh. “Essentially, it’s like whey protein.”


    SMH: ‘Junk science’ is being used in courtrooms across Australia. We should all be worried

    The handling of expert opinion evidence by Australian courts is in a crisis. Curiously, our courts appear oblivious. They use forensic science evidence without regard for the best scientific advice.

    Australian courts ignore criteria recommended by peak scientific organisations such as the United States National Academy of Sciences and the Australian Academy of Science. The chief executive of the AAS, Anna-Maria Arabia, has warned that our courts are susceptible to “junk science”. Why is this happening, and what can we do?

    The conviction of Robert Farquharson for the murder of his three sons on Father’s Day 2005 is being questioned in the media, with doubts raised about the reliability of prosecution’s medical, traffic reconstruction and sinking vehicle evidence.

    This case has echoes of Henry Keogh, David Eastman and Lindy Chamberlain. Their murder convictions were overturned when scientific and medical testimony from their trials was eventually found to be unreliable.

    ⋮

    In 2009, the US National Academy of Sciences concluded that apart from DNA, no forensic method has been rigorously shown to consistently, and with a high degree of certainty, demonstrate a connection between evidence and a specific individual or source.

    The academy expressed concerns about the accuracy of expert comparisons of fingerprints, ballistics, hairs, handwriting, bite marks, explosives, paints and blood stains.


    9to5Mac: Apple refused to pay bounty to Kaspersky for uncovering vulnerability in ‘Operation Triangulation’

    Kaspersky, the renowned Russian cybersecurity firm, made headlines at this time last year after uncovering an attack chain using four iOS zero-day vulnerabilities to create a zero-click exploit. Kaspersky was able to identify and report one of the vulnerabilities to Apple. However, in a bizarre update, Apple reportedly refuses to pay the security bounty for the firm’s contribution.


    Globe: French President Emmanuel Macron calls snap legislative election after defeat in EU vote

    French President Emmanuel Macron said Sunday he was dissolving the National Assembly and calling a snap legislative election after his party suffered a heavy defeat in elections for the European Parliament.

    In an address to the nation from the Elysee presidential palace, Macron said: “I’ve decided to give you back the choice of our parliamentary future through the vote. I am therefore dissolving the National Assembly.” The vote will take place in two rounds on June 30 and July 7, he said.


    The Athletic: Inside Natalie Darwitz’s ousting from PWHL Minnesota: Rift with the coach, players taking sides

    The celebration was barely a week old, however, when the league decided to make a major and unexpected change at the top.

    According to multiple team and league sources, on Tuesday the PWHL — which owns all six teams — informed Darwitz that she would no longer be the GM of the franchise.

    On Thursday morning, during a meeting with league officials, Darwitz was offered multiple options, per the sources: Take a position in the PWHL hockey operations department, issue a joint statement in which she would announce she had achieved everything she wanted in the first year of the franchise and was moving on to a new challenge or sit at Minnesota’s table for Monday’s PWHL draft but with no authority.


    24/7 Wall St.: Price Prediction: NVIDIA Will Hit $150 By the End of Summer After Its Stock Split

    09.Jun.2024 $NVDA

    On the other hand, NVIDIA just posted a quarter where revenue grew 262% and profits grew 628%. That’s an even more stunning development than a company its size adding a trillion in value in a month. I went through some earnings of other large tech and growth companies to find their highest sales growth across the past decade and nothing comes even close to what NVIDIA is currently experiencing: …


    Just Havre a Think (YouTube): High voltage electrons from Morocco to the UK. The blueprint for a global ‘internet of energy’?

    Electrifying everything with renewable technologies like solar PV, wind turbines and battery energy storage is a ‘holy grail’ that energy transition naysayers tell us is an impossible dream. In 2021, an ambitious UK start-up called Xlinks set out to prove that theory wrong, embarking upon a multi-billion dollar project to install 16.5GW of solar, wind and battery capacity in Morocco that will provide enough energy to run 7 million British homes for more than 20 hours a day, all year round, via four 4,000km subsea HVDC cables. In 2024 they received the seal of approval and a multi-million pound cash injection from Britain’s largest electricity provider. We talk directly to the Chief Executives of both companies.


    Eric Topol: Tom Cech: RNA Takes Center Stage

    Well, hello, this is Eric Topol from Ground Truths, and it’s really a delight for me to welcome Tom Cech who just wrote a book, the Catalyst, and who is a Nobel laureate for his work in RNA. And is at the University of Colorado Boulder as an extraordinary chemist and welcome Tom.


    Last Updated: 09.Jun.2024 16:19 EDT

    Saturday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:10 AM, Jun 10
  • 🔗 Articles: Saturday 08.Jun.2024


    Trix are for kids!


    NYT: Republican Election Clerk Takes on Trump and His Supporters

    “Name of public officer for whom recall is sought: Cindy Elgan.”

    “Reasons why: Cindy Elgan has run interference in our elections.”

    It was an outcome she’d feared for the last three and a half years, ever since former President Donald J. Trump lost the 2020 election, and his denials and distortions spread outward from the White House to even the country’s most remote places, like Esmeralda County. It had neither a stoplight nor a high school, and Elgan knew most of the 620 voters on sight. Trump won the county with 82 percent of the vote despite losing Nevada. In the days after the election, some residents began to suspect that he should have won by even more, and they parroted Trump’s talking points and brought their complaints to the county’s monthly commissioner meetings.

    Gift link


    Globe: Andrew Coyne: Eighteen years and $46-billion later, the CPP admits it could have earned more just by buying index funds

    The Canada Pension Plan Fund had a bad year last year. You’d never know it to read the latest annual report from the fund’s managers, the CPP Investment Board, which spends much of its nearly 80,000 words boasting how, thanks to the herculean efforts of its employees and the sophisticated investment stratagems of its managers, it eked out an 8-per-cent return on investment for the CPP’s beneficiaries.

    But of course it did: asset markets generally were up wildly last year. As an investment manager, you’d have to have gone pretty far out of your way not to have earned a sizable return. Indeed, the fund’s benchmark “reference portfolio,” a composite of global equity and bond indexes, gained 19.9 per cent on the year.

    What does that mean? It means that if the fund’s managers had stopped trying to pick stocks and just bought index-linked ETFs like the rest of us — a strategy, known as passive management, that could be executed by your average high-school student — they would have earned more than twice as much on their investments last year as they in fact did.

    That’s not the news, however. The news is not that the fund trailed its benchmark in its most recent fiscal year. The news is that it is now trailing it, on average, over the entire 18-year period since the fund, until then a small, low-cost outfit that mostly just bought the indexes, went all in on active management.

    ⋮

    The fund’s staffing levels, consequently, exploded: from roughly 150 employees in 2006 to more than 2,100 today. So did its costs, particularly the fees paid to external investment managers: from $36-million in 2006 to $3.5-billion in 2024, a near hundredfold increase.


    The Conversation: Records of Pompeii’s survivors have been found – and archaeologists are starting to understand how they rebuilt their lives

    But recent research has shifted the narrative. The story of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius is no longer one about annihilation; it also includes the stories of those who survived the eruption and went on to rebuild their lives.

    The search for survivors and their stories has dominated the past decade of my archaeological fieldwork, as I’ve tried to figure out who might have escaped the eruption. Some of my findings are featured in an episode of the new PBS documentary, “Pompeii: The New Dig.”


    SMH: ‘All those people can suck it’: Daniel Ricciardo hits back at Formula 1 great’s ‘go home’ comments after qualifying fifth for Canadian Grand Prix

    Daniel Ricciardo answered criticism from retired Formula 1 champion Jacques Villeneuve by qualifying fifth for the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday morning, AEST.

    Villeneuve, the 1997 champion now working as a television pundit, had questioned on Sky Sports why the 34-year-old Australian was still in Formula 1.

    “We’re hearing the same thing for the last five years. ‘We have to make the car better for him, poor him’. No. You’re in F1. If you can’t cut it, go home. There’ll be someone else to take your place,” the Canadian previously said.

    “I think his image has kept him in F1 more than his actual results.”


    SMH: ‘All those people can suck it’: Daniel Ricciardo hits back at Formula 1 great’s ‘go home’ comments after qualifying fifth for Canadian Grand Prix

    Daniel Ricciardo answered criticism from retired Formula 1 champion Jacques Villeneuve by qualifying fifth for the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday morning, AEST.

    Villeneuve, the 1997 champion now working as a television pundit, had questioned on Sky Sports why the 34-year-old Australian was still in Formula 1.

    “We’re hearing the same thing for the last five years. ‘We have to make the car better for him, poor him’. No. You’re in F1. If you can’t cut it, go home. There’ll be someone else to take your place,” the Canadian previously said.

    “I think his image has kept him in F1 more than his actual results.”


    NewsNation: Aid is delivered to Gaza from newly repaired US-built pier, US military says

    The first aid from an American-built pier arrived in Gaza on Saturday since storm damage required repairs to the project, the U.S. military said, relaunching an effort to bring supplies to Palestinians by sea that had been plagued with problems.

    About 1.1 million pounds (492 metric tons) of humanitarian aid was delivered to Gaza through the pier on Saturday, U.S. Central Command said in a statement. It reiterated that no U.S. military personnel went ashore in Gaza. The U.S. Agency for International Development works with the U.N. World Food Program and their humanitarian partners in Gaza to distribute food and other aid coming from the U.S.-operated pier.


    Last Updated: 08.Jun.2024 23:28 EDT

    Friday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:23 AM, Jun 9
  • 🔗 Articles: Friday 07.Jun.2024


    It Keeps Going, and Going, and Going


    NYT: Costco Plans to Stop Selling Books Year-Round

    In a blow to publishers and authors, Costco plans to stop selling books regularly at stores around the United States, four publishing executives who had been informed of the warehouse retailer’s plans said on Wednesday.

    Beginning in January 2025, the company will stop stocking books regularly, and will instead sell them only during the holiday shopping period, from September through December. During the rest of the year, some books may be sold at Costco stores from time to time, but not in a consistent manner, according to the executives, who spoke anonymously in order to discuss a confidential business matter that has not yet been publicly announced.

    Costco’s shift away from books came largely because of the labor required to stock books, the executives said. Copies have to be laid out by hand, rather than just rolled out on a pallet as other products often are at Costco. The constant turnaround of books — new ones come out every Tuesday and the ones that have not sold need to be returned — also created more work.


    UPI: Stealth gas contracts awarded amid high-profile crewed Starliner mission

    NASA will use almost 657 tons, or nearly 30.4 million gallons, of liquid nitrogen for pressurizing, cooling and other functions, and 243,000 tons, or about 2.1 million gallons, of liquid oxygen, which is mostly used as an oxidizer in cryogenic engines.


    Mirkin: Bill Walton’s Multiple Injuries: Why RICE May Not Work

    Ice may be used as short-term treatment to help injured athletes get back into a game (Sports Med, Nov 28, 2011), and the cooling may help to decrease pain, but it interferes with the athlete’s strength, speed, endurance and coordination.


    Mirkin: Study to Find Out if Diabetes Drug, Metformin, Will Prolong Lives of Healthy People

    Many studies have shown that metformin helps to treat the life-shortening diseases that are the leading causes of death in North America today – diabetes, heart disease, several types of cancers, kidney disease, liver disease, obesity and others (Front Endocrinol, August 4, 2021;12). A review of 53 studies found that metformin is associated with a reduction of the death rate from these diseases, but at this time, metformin cannot be prescribed to slow aging because we do not have studies to show that metformin helps to prevent aging, not just symptoms of specific diseases (Ageing Res Rev, 2017;40(37):31-44). The TAME trial wants to change this by investigating whether metformin can delay aging overall, instead of just treating specific age-related diseases individually. If the TAME trial can show that it does have anti-aging effects, the organizers hope to gain FDA approval for metformin to treat aging.

    ⋮

    Metformin helps to prevent tissue damage by blocking inflammation and oxidation that accelerate aging,and even helps damaged tissue to heal. It lowers high blood sugar levels by increasing insulin’s effects on lowering high blood sugar levels, decreasing the amount of sugar released by the liver into the bloodstream, decreasing the amount of sugar absorbed from the intestines and increasing the amount of sugar excreted in the urine (Medicine in Drug Discovery, Dec 2020;8:100062).


    CTV: Frank Stronach charged in sexual assault investigation

    Canadian businessman Frank Stronach has been charged in connection with alleged sexual assaults that spanned over four decades, police west of Toronto announced on Friday.

    Peel Regional Police released few details about the investigation but said in a news release(opens in a new tab) that the alleged incidents occurred between the 1980s and 2023.

    The 91-year-old billionaire from Aurora, Ont., was arrested on Friday and charged with rape, indecent assault on a female, forcible confinement and two counts of sexual assault.


    CTV: Former astronaut William Anders dies in plane crash

    Retired Maj. Gen. William Anders, the former Apollo 8 astronaut who took the iconic “Earthrise” photo showing the planet as a shadowed blue marble from space in 1968, was killed Friday when the plane he was piloting alone plummeted into the waters off the San Juan Islands in Washington state. He was 90. His son, Greg Anders, confirmed the death to The Associated Press.


    Last Updated: 07.Jun.2024 23:58 EDT

    Thursday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:01 AM, Jun 8
  • 🔗 Articles: Thursday 06.Jun.2024


    The Happiest Place On Earth


    Cult of Mac: ‘What If…?’ Vision Pro app shows promise of spatial gaming

    Marvel Studios' new What If…? An Immersive Story is a free app for Apple’s Vision Pro headset that combines interactivity with storytelling in a brand-new way. Is it a game? Is it an episode of the What If…? animated TV series? It’s not entirely either. It’s an hour-long story where you’re the main character, casting spells with your hands and collecting the Infinity Stones.

    If you aren’t a Marvel fan, you’ll find the story a bit drab. But if you want to see the bleeding edge of what’s possible in gaming when you can seamlessly switch between VR and AR with natural hand controls, you need to check it out.


    Reuters: Boeing Starliner capsule nears first crewed ISS docking as new issues arise

    Boeing’s (BA.N) new Starliner capsule and its inaugural two-member NASA crew neared final approach to the International Space Station for docking on Thursday, a key test in proving the vessel’s flight-worthiness and sharpening Boeing’s competition with Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

    The spacecraft was proceeding to its planned rendezvous despite an earlier loss of some of its guidance thrusters due to a helium propulsion leak, which NASA and Boeing said should not compromise the mission.


    Reuters: SpaceX’s Starship survives return to Earth, achieves landing test on fourth try

    SpaceX’s Starship rocket survived a fiery, hypersonic return from space and achieved a breakthrough landing demonstration in the Indian Ocean on Thursday, completing a full test mission around the globe on the rocket’s fourth try.


    Scripting News (Dave Winer): Thursday, June 6, 2024

    I used the ChatGPT “upload an image” feature today while debugging some software. I could show it what wasn’t working with a screen shot. Amazingly it understood and made the connection to the software we were working on, and suggested a modification that made it work properly. This was an important missing bit of functionality, previously you had to explain in words what wasn’t working visually. That worked too, but was cumbersome. Much easier to just show it was wrong. And the UI couldn’t be simpler. Take the screen shot at paste it into the box where you normally type. It starts analyzing before you press Enter.

    It’s a new world.


    pv magazine: IEA urges countries to accelerate renewables deployment

    A new report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) suggests that the world could miss out on a target of 11,000 GW of global renewables capacity by the end of the decade, as agreed at COP28. It also predicts that solar will become the world’s largest source of installed renewable capacity, surpassing hydropower.


    NYT: The Rise and Fall of BNN Breaking, an AI-Generated News Outlet

    BNN Breaking had millions of readers, an international team of journalists and a publishing deal with Microsoft. But it was full of error-ridden content.

    The news was featured on MSN.com: “Prominent Irish broadcaster faces trial over alleged sexual misconduct.” At the top of the story was a photo of Dave Fanning.

    But Mr. Fanning, an Irish D.J. and talk-show host famed for his discovery of the rock band U2, was not the broadcaster in question.


    MacRumors: Apple to Launch Standalone ‘Passwords’ App in iOS 18 and macOS 15

    Apple plans to introduce a new Passwords app in iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS 15, reports Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. The Passwords app, which will serve as an alternative to third-party apps like 1Password and LastPass, will provide a simpler way for iPhone, iPad, and Mac users to access their stored login information.


    NYT: Boeing’s Starliner Overcomes Malfunctioning Thrusters to Dock at Space Station

    There were glitches with its propulsion system, but Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft and the two NASA astronauts it carried successfully docked at the International Space Station on Thursday afternoon.

    The docking, at 1:34 p.m. Eastern time, was more than an hour later than planned, after the troubleshooting of several malfunctioning thrusters.


    NYT: Have Wine for Breakfast, Put On a 51-Pound Suit and Get to the Battlefield

    They had been recruited for a study to determine if the Dendra panoply, a suit of armor from 3,500 years ago considered to be one of the oldest known from the Bronze Age in Europe, could be worn in battle. Or if it was only ceremonial, as some scholars have previously argued.

    The soldiers wore a replica of the suit, and scientists tracked their blood-glucose levels, heart rates and other physiological measures, finding that the men’s bodies could handle the strain of the armor, according to a paper published in the journal PLOS One on May 22.


    NYT: This Was Village Life in Britain 3,000 Years Ago

    Three millenniums ago, a small, prosperous farming community briefly flourished in the freshwater marshes of eastern England. The inhabitants lived in a clutch of thatched roundhouses built on wooden stilts above a channel of the River Nene, which empties into the North Sea. They wore clothes of fine flax linen, with pleats and tasseled hems; bartered for glass and amber beads imported from places as far-flung as present-day Iran; drank from delicate clay poppyhead cups; dined on leg of boar and honey-glazed venison, and fed table scraps to their dogs.

    Within a year of its construction, this prehistoric idyll met a dramatic end. A catastrophic fire tore through the compound; the buildings collapsed and the villagers fled, abandoning their garments, tools and weapons. Everything, including the porridge left in cooking pots, crashed through the burning wicker floors into the thick, sticky reed beds below and stayed there. Eventually, the objects sank, hidden and entombed, in more than six feet of oozing peat and silt. The river gradually moved course away from the encampment, but the debris remained intact for nearly 3,000 years, preserving a record of daily life at the end of Britain’s Bronze Age, from 2500 B.C. to 800 B.C.


    Jon Mitchell: On mobile games

    @jon@wears.tigerpajamas.com (Mastodon):

    Nothing makes me feel more neurodivergent than downloading literally any mobile game and not being able to figure out how anyone could even bother wanting to learn how to play it.


    Gizmodo: Wallace & Gromit’s New Movie Will Bring Back the Greatest Villain In Animation History

    In Vengeance Most Fowl, somehow, Feathers McGraw returns.

    via Spencer Greenhalgh (@spgreenhalgh)


    NPR: Bans on ranked choice voting are now law in many GOP states

    Five states have banned ranked choice voting in the last two months, bringing the total number of Republican-leaning states now prohibiting the voting method to 10.

    Missouri could soon join them.

    ⋮

    If Missourians approve the ranked choice voting ban, the state will join Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Kentucky in barring the voting system this year. Alaska, where voters approved ranked choice voting in 2020, could see the practice repealed.

    Meanwhile in other states, including Nevada and Oregon, voters will decide whether to adopt ranked choice voting later this year.

    via Spencer Greenhalgh (@spgreenhalgh)


    NYT: This Florida Neighborhood Is Always Bracing for the Next Flood

    Mr. Batdorf, a real estate broker, said people were still buying in the neighborhood, even if only to demolish and rebuild. He likened the situation to when Tropical Storm Josephine flooded Shore Acres in 1996. Mr. Batdorf walked through knee-deep water back then to make sure a house his clients wanted had not flooded. The flooding did not detract the buyers.

    “I wrote the contract that day, in the water,” he said. “People love living here. It’s the convenience of where it is. It’s paradise.”


    Fast Company: What is the Cara app, and why are artists deleting Instagram for it?

    In the last few months, Meta started to sneakily train its generative AI tool on Instagram posts. Now, some artists are jumping ship to a lesser-known portfolio app, Cara, to protect their work from AI data scrapers.


    Saule Technologies: Inkjet-Printed Perovskite Solar Cells

    Perovskite PV is the newest and the most exciting solar technology.

    It broadens possible applications of traditional photovoltaics, and it can transform the products we use every day.

    Printable broad spectrum solar cells!


    Last Updated: 06.Jun.2024 22:07 EDT

    Wednesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:10 AM, Jun 7
  • 🔗 Articles: Wednesday 05.Jun.2024


    The Quicker Picker Upper


    The Guardian: From beef noodles to bots: Taiwan’s factcheckers on fighting Chinese disinformation and ‘unstoppable’ AI

    Taiwan is the target of more disinformation from abroad than any other democracy, according to University of Gothenburg study.


    Globe: Ottawa declines to release secret internal analysis of economic effects of carbon pricing

    The Liberal government is declining to release its internal analysis of the economic impacts of carbon pricing and refusing to say why it is keeping the data secret, even as it criticizes the federal budget watchdog for an error in its analysis of the policy.

    Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux disclosed to a House of Commons committee on Monday that the government has internal analysis of the economic impacts of its consumer and industrial carbon pricing programs that it is keeping under wraps. He said the federal government’s findings are largely in line with those of his office: that there is overall a net negative impact from the pricing regimes.

    Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault’s office has repeatedly declined Globe and Mail requests to explain why it is keeping its internal analysis secret. It also did not respond to a request for the documents.


    WashPo: He went viral for driving on a suspended license. The case is complicated.

    Last week, Corey Harris became an internet meme after he attended a court hearing about his suspended license via Zoom while driving. The clip, featuring a befuddled judge and Harris sighing as he said, “Oh, my God,” quickly went viral.

    But the case that made Harris famous online — which was covered by The Washington Post, the New York Times, CNN and Fox News, among others — is more complicated than it first appeared. As local ABC affiliate WXYZ first reported, the 44-year-old Michigander’s license suspension, which was tied to a child-support case, had already been lifted by a judge in 2022, court records show.

    To get his license back though, Harris had to pay a fee, according to the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office, which acts as the state’s motor vehicles regulator. Harris only paid the $125 fee required for license reinstatement on Monday, a spokesperson told The Post.

    Well, that isn’t nearly as fun, is it?


    TechCrunch: Boeing’s Starliner astronaut capsule is en route to the ISS

    Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft is officially on its way to the International Space Station, marking a historic first for the long-delayed astronaut transportation program. Inside the spacecraft are two [still nervous] NASA astronauts — spaceflight veterans Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams — who are set to arrive to the station on Thursday.

    ⋮

    If all goes to plan, Boeing will become NASA’s second astronaut transportation provider, joining Elon Musk’s SpaceX. Both companies were awarded multi-billion-dollar NASA contracts to develop a crewed taxi service a decade ago, but Boeing’s program has been beset by technical delays that have run the company more than $1.5 billion over budget. Boeing did execute a successful uncrewed mission to the ISS in May 2022, but this is the first time the spacecraft has carried humans.

    While Boeing has struggled, SpaceX has soared: Using its Crew Dragon capsule, SpaceX has been providing astronaut transportation to and from the ISS since 2020.


    InsideEVs: Driving An EV In The U.S. Is Now One-Third Cleaner Than A Gasoline Car

    Now, a new UCS study says the area where driving EVs produces fewer emissions than driving an efficient combustion car has expanded to include 93% of the entire US territory. They also changed the theoretical efficiency of the gas car they were comparing EVs against to 57 mpg, so the bar is even higher.


    TorStar: UN chief warns of ‘highway to climate hell’ as temps rack up

    As the planet notched a new hot streak and scientists predicted another grim milestone on the horizon, the secretary-general of the UN warned Wednesday that the world needs “an exit ramp off the highway to climate hell.”

    Europe’s climate agency announced that May marked the 12th consecutive month of record-breaking global temperatures, a fevered year that startled many scientists because of the dramatic margins by which old records were broken. At the same time, the World Meteorological Organization predicted that at least one of the next five years is likely to temporarily break the 1.5 C warming threshold.


    AppleInsider: How to use Dexcom G7 CGM with Apple Watch

    On Wednesday, medical device manufacturer Dexcom finally delivered its direct-to-Apple Watch functionality for the G7 CGM. Here’s how it works.

    A constant glucose monitor (CGM) has historically worked by using your iPhone as a middleman. The sensor gets implanted under the skin, generally behind the arm contained in a white plastic enclosure. That enclosure then relays readings in near-real time to a companion iPhone.


    NYT: Prosecutors Use Menendez Couple’s Texts to Depict Them as Collaborators

    In January 2019, Senator Robert Menendez placed a seven-minute call to New Jersey’s attorney general, Gurbir Grewal, in what prosecutors say was an effort to quash an insurance fraud case.

    A New Jersey businessman, Jose Uribe, had been desperate to make the fraud charges disappear, prosecutors say. He had turned to Nadine Menendez — who married the senator the next year — for help.

    In the hours and days before the senator’s call, there was a flurry of communication between Ms. Menendez, Mr. Uribe and a second businessman who is charged with the senator and his wife in an elaborate bribery scheme. Ms. Menendez would often contact the senator soon after texting with the men, sometimes using an alternate phone that the couple referred to as her “007” phone.


    NYT: Hochul Halts Congestion Pricing in a Stunning 11th-Hour Shift

    Weeks before New York was to charge motorists to enter Manhattan’s business district, Gov. Kathy Hochul postponed the program citing economic concerns.


    NYT: Clash Over Phone Hacking Article Preceded Exit of Washington Post Editor

    At a contentious staff meeting on Monday, Mr. Lewis defended his business strategy, telling the newsroom that The Post had lost $77 million the previous year, had seen a 50 percent audience decline since 2020 and needed to make radical changes to succeed.


    Guardian: Biden: ‘every reason’ to believe Netanyahu is prolonging Gaza war for political gain

    Joe Biden has said that there is “every reason” to draw the conclusion that Benjamin Netanyahu is prolonging the war in Gaza for his own political self-preservation.

    Biden made the remarks about the Israeli prime minister in an interview with Time magazine published on Tuesday morning, drawing a sharp response from the Israeli government, which accused the US president of straying from diplomatic norms.

    Netanyahu’s popularity plummeted after the 7 October attack by Hamas, which exposed serious flaws in Israeli security. Most political observers say Netanyahu would lose elections if they were held now, and would be forced into opposition, facing court hearings on corruption charges. But elections have been put off until the war is over, or at least until major military operations are deemed to have been completed.


    Guardian:Bowel disease breakthrough as researchers make ‘holy grail’ discovery

    Researchers have discovered a major driver of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and several other immune disorders that affect the spine, liver and arteries, raising hopes for millions of people worldwide.

    The breakthrough is particularly exciting because the newly found biological pathway can be targeted by drugs that are already used, with work under way to adapt them to patients with IBD and other conditions.

    “What we have found is one of the very central pathways that goes wrong when people get inflammatory bowel disease and this has been something of a holy grail,” said Dr James Lee, the group leader of the genetic mechanisms of disease laboratory at the Francis Crick Institute in London.

    Lee added: “Even for pure, fundamental immunology this is a really exciting discovery. But to show this is dysregulated in people who get disease not only gives us a better understanding of the disease, it tells us this is something we can treat.”


    Last Updated: 05.Jun.2024 22:31 EDT

    Tuesday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:18 AM, Jun 6
  • 🔗 Articles: Tuesday 04.Jun.2024


    The Ultimate Driving Machine


    pv magazine: Qcells to deploy Lumet’s fine-line metallization tech

    Qcells says it will use Lumet’s fine-line metallization technology for its solar cells, for higher efficiency and lower production costs.

    Qcells has agreed to deploy Israel-headquartered Lumet’s ultrafine-line metallization technology for its solar cell line.

    The metallization step, which screen-prints conductive silver fingers onto the surface of solar cells, is widely considered the biggest cost in cell production. Efforts to reduce finger widths from the industry standard of 20 microns are aimed at cutting silver consumption, costs, and light shading, while also increasing efficiency.

    This should result in significant cost savings.


    The Nation: The Canadian Wildfires Are Once Again Sounding the Alarm About What’s to Come

    Following the last Canadian wildfire season, as I watched smoke from hundreds of miles away blow over my home city of New York and turn the sky orange, I wrote for The Nation about the importance of learning from the precarious reality these fires reflected and of the imminent need for governments to promote serious climate policies. Today, I am astounded to see how governments learned nothing from that crisis. Having failed to agree to phase out fossil fuels at COP28, nations continue to lag behind on—and even outright contradict—their espoused climate goals.

    via @Denny


    TorStar: Grassy Narrows sues Canada, Ontario over mercury pollution

    Grassy Narrows First Nation is suing the federal and provincial governments, alleging Canadian and Ontarian officials have consistently put the profits of industry ahead of an Indigenous community poisoned by dumped mercury waste.

    The lawsuit accuses the governments of allowing the Wabigoon River to be polluted, then neglecting to remediate it, while simultaneously authorizing industrial production and prospecting. In doing so, Canada and Ontario violated their treaty obligations by failing to ensure the Indigenous community could safely practice its right to fish, the lawsuit alleges.

    “Time and again the government has chosen to prioritize corporate profits at our expense. Our mercury nightmare should have ended long ago, but it has been longer and worse because of the government’s failure to live up to its obligations,” said Grassy Narrows Chief Rudy Turtle.


    Guardian: ‘Enormous potential’: weight-loss drugs cut cancer risk by a fifth, research shows

    Blockbuster injections such as Wegovy have revolutionised the treatment of obesity, and recently been approved for use in other areas of medicine, including reducing the risk of heart attacks, strokes and cardiovascular-related deaths.

    ⋮

    A study presented at the world’s largest cancer conference found patients taking the drugs were 19% less likely to develop 13 obesity-related cancers, including ovarian, liver, colorectal, pancreatic, bowel and breast cancer.

    The research involving 34,000 people, led by the Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, also found patients were half as likely to die over 15 years compared with patients not taking the jabs, also known as GLP-1 receptor agonists (RA).

    ⋮

    A study published last December showed they were associated with a 50% reduced risk of bowel cancer in people with type 2 diabetes. “Individuals with diabetes who were prescribed a GLP-1 RA had a lower risk of colorectal cancer as compared with individuals who were not prescribed one of these drugs,” Ligibel said.


    Reuters: Canada says online streaming services must hand over 5% of their domestic revenues

    Major online streaming services operating in Canada will be required to contribute 5% of their Canadian revenues to support the domestic broadcasting system, the country’s telecoms regulator said on Tuesday.

    The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) said the money would be used to boost funding for local and aboriginal broadcasting. The measure would raise roughly C$200 million ($146 million) a year, they said.


    Electrek: BYD opens shop in Caribbean with 10 new markets coming soon

    BYD’s Seagull (Dolphin Mini) is expected to launch in Europe next year as one of the most affordable EVs on the market.

    Despite potential tariffs, BYD still expects the low-cost EV to start at less than 20,000 euros ($21,500), still thousands lower than its rivals. With two plants planned in the region, BYD doesn’t expect any significant impacts from the potential tariffs on EVs made in China.

    ⋮

    According to CarNewsChina, BYD plans to expand to 10 more countries by the end of 2024. BYD plans to open shops in Jamaica, Barbados, and the Cayman Islands.


    MIT Technology Review: Making an image with generative AI uses as much energy as charging your phone

    In fact, generating an image using a powerful AI model takes as much energy as fully charging your smartphone, according to a new study by researchers at the AI startup Hugging Face and Carnegie Mellon University. However, they found that using an AI model to generate text is significantly less energy-intensive. Creating text 1,000 times only uses as much energy as 16% of a full smartphone charge.


    DoublePulsar (Kevin Beaumont): Stealing everything you’ve ever typed or viewed on your own Windows PC is now possible with two lines of code — inside the Copilot+ Recall disaster.

    Q. Did Microsoft mislead the BBC about the security of Copilot?

    A. Yes.

    Q. Have Microsoft misled customers about the security of Copilot?

    A. Yes. For example, they describe it as an optional experience — but it is enabled by default and people can optionally disable it. That’s wordsmithing.


    Last Updated: 04.Jun.2024 21:05 EDT

    Monday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 12:49 AM, Jun 5
  • 🔗 Articles: Monday 03.Jun.2024


    Snap! Crackle! Pop!


    The Guardian: European and Canadian central banks expected to cut interest rates this week

    New lower rates of 3.75% and 4.75% respectively are likely to be introduced this week after drops in inflation.


    WashPo: Claudia Sheinbaum elected Mexico’s first female president

    The historic vote Sunday underscored the nation’s progress on gender equity but the Morena victory highlighted concerns about the weakening of its democratic institutions.


    NYT: MicroStrategy and Its Founder to Pay $40 Million in Tax Fraud Lawsuit

    Michael Saylor did not pay any income taxes to Washington despite living there from 2005 through 2020, the attorney general for the District of Columbia said.

    The attorney general for the District of Columbia reached a $40 million settlement with Michael Saylor and the software company he founded, MicroStrategy, in what the attorney general’s office said was the largest income tax fraud recovery in Washington history, The New York Times has learned.

    The settlement, which is expected to be announced on Monday, stems from lawsuits filed in 2021 and 2022 accusing Mr. Saylor of evading more than $25 million in income taxes in Washington. Mr. Saylor enlisted MicroStrategy’s help to file fraudulent forms from 2005 through 2020 claiming that he lived in either Virginia or Florida, states with significantly lower income tax rates, and he did not pay any income taxes to the district during that period, the attorney general’s office said.

    ⋮

    “Michael Saylor and his company, MicroStrategy, defrauded the district and all of its residents for years,” Brian L. Schwalb, the attorney general, said in a statement. “Indeed, Saylor openly bragged about his tax-evasion scheme, encouraging his friends to follow his example and contending that anyone who paid taxes to the district was stupid.”

    ⋮

    This is not the first time that Mr. Saylor or MicroStrategy has been accused of committing fraud: In 2000, Mr. Saylor and two other MicroStratgy executives settled accounting fraud charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission for about $11 million.


    NYT: Abnormally Dry Canada Taps U.S. Energy, Reversing Usual Flow

    In February, the United States did something that it had not done in many years — the country sent more electricity to Canada than it received from its northern neighbor. Then, in March, U.S. electricity exports to Canada climbed even more, reaching their highest level since at least 2010.

    The increasing flow of power north is part of a worrying trend for North America: Demand for energy is growing robustly everywhere, but the supply of power — in Canada’s case from giant hydroelectric dams — and the ability to get the energy to where it’s needed are increasingly under strain.

    Meanwhile in Ontario, Doug Ford tore down windmills!


    Reuters: UK’s Labour Party set for 194-seat majority in general election - YouGov poll

    Britain’s main opposition Labour Party is set to win next month’s general election in a landslide victory with a 194-seat majority, YouGov said on Monday.

    The multilevel regression and post-stratification (MRP) poll predicted that Labour would win 422 seats, with the governing Conservatives expected to win 140 seats.

    A previous YouGov’s MRP poll published in early April showed Labour winning 403 seats nationwide if a general election was held then. A party would need to win more than 320 seats to secure a majority in parliament.

    This is going to be a huge change! Of course, there will be lots of mistakes with so many rookie MPs and MPs who have never been in power.


    TechRadar: I watched Nvidia’s Computex 2024 keynote and it made my blood run cold

    There was something that Huang said during the keynote that shocked me into a mild panic. Nvidia’s Blackwell cluster, which will come with eight GPUs, pulls down 15kW of power. That’s 15,000 watts of power. Divided by eight, that’s 1,875 watts per GPU.

    Our house averages less than 0.5 kW!


    MacRumors: Apple Readies WWDC Stream on YouTube Ahead of Keynote Next Week

    WWDC 2024 will kick off with Apple’s keynote on June 10 at 10 a.m. Pacific Time, and the page where the presentation will be live streamed is now available on YouTube. On the page, you can set a reminder to be notified before the keynote begins.


    NYT: Elon Musk’s Starlink Connects and Divides Brazil’s Marubo People

    Elon Musk’s Starlink has connected an isolated tribe to the outside world — and divided it from within.

    Gift link


    NYT: The 25 Photos That Defined the Modern Age

    In 1966, Ruscha photographed both sides of the Strip by securing a motorized camera to the bed of a pickup truck. The result was “Every Building on the Sunset Strip,” a nearly 25-foot accordion-fold, self-published artist’s book.


    NYT: EVs Are Suddenly Becoming Affordable

    More efficient manufacturing, falling battery costs and intense competition are lowering sticker prices for battery-powered models to within striking distance of gasoline cars.

    The most accurate way to compare cars is by their total lifetime cost (TLC), in which case electric cars are now actually cheaper than carbon cars!


    CNN: Claudia Sheinbaum profile: Who is the veteran politician set to be Mexico’s first female president?

    The 61-year-old is set to replace the outgoing President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, her longtime ally whose social welfare programs lifted many Mexicans out of poverty, making their leftist Morena party favorite in the polls.

    “Our duty is and will always be to look after every single Mexican without distinction,” Sheinbaum said in a speech early Monday morning. “Even though many Mexicans do not fully agree with our project, we will have to walk in peace and harmony to continue building a fair and more prosperous Mexico.”


    Baffler: The Insulin Empire

    But if a patient is so lucky as to be diagnosed with diabetes in time to prevent or ameliorate DKA, they are immediately faced with another disconcerting problem: accessing the treatment, which happens to be one of the most lucrative pharmaceutical products in human history. Just past the centennial of insulin’s discovery, the lack of insulin access and affordability continues to run rampant globally. Of the 537 million people living with diabetes worldwide, around 70 million require insulin. At the same time, more than three in four adults with diabetes reside in low- and middle-income countries where a combination of poverty and predatory pharmaceutical regimes make acquiring sufficient insulin difficult or impossible. Even in higher-income countries, pharmaceutical consortiums control who gets access to insulin, and for how much.

    Take the United States: about 38.4 million Americans–including children–have diabetes, and among them, 8.4 million rely on insulin. A 2019 Yale study found that one in four insulin-dependent diabetics have resorted to rationing their insulin supplies: using less insulin than prescribed, stopping insulin therapy, delaying the start of insulin therapy, not filling prescriptions, and engaging in other underuse behaviors related to cost. Many who need insulin not only require adequate dosages but different types of insulins, alongside a suite of devices to monitor and stabilize blood sugar levels as health complications can emerge if they drift too far in either direction. Forgoing adequate insulin dosing can have devastating consequences for type 1 and many type 2 diabetics, and the practice is a substantial driver of the hundreds of thousands of deaths attributable to diabetes complications in the United States each year. With global diabetes rates expected to double by 2050, insulin accessibility and affordability will continue to be a matter of life and death for people with the disease.

    The potential for insulin’s market exploitation was almost presciently understood by Banting and his team at the University of Toronto, so in 1923, when Banting and Best were awarded the U.S. patents for insulin and the method for making it, they swiftly sold them to the university for $1 each. “Insulin does not belong to me, it belongs to the world,” Banting explained, believing that profiting off such an essential treatment was not only immoral but detrimental to ensuring universal affordability and access.

    ⋮

    Some of the commonly used forms of insulin have long been exponentially more expensive in the United States than in the rest of the OECD; for years, caravans have taken Americans across the border to Canada, where they can buy insulin for a tenth of its U.S. price. Stateside, insulin prices have consistently seen hikes that are eye-watering for patients and mouth-watering for executives and investors. A vial of Eli Lilly’s rapid-acting Humalog (insulin lispro) cost $21 in 1996 but increased to $332 by 2018.


    Last Updated: 03.Jun.2024 22:29 EDT

    Sunday’s articles

    Follow along as new links are added to today’s list

    → 2:18 PM, Jun 4
  • The new home for my daily link list.

    → 2:02 PM, Jun 4
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