Can the OneWheel app be used without accepting this latest update? Or, am I doomed to never opening the app again?
I'm already at this point with the Pints but my grandkids are the only ones using them anyway. It's important to me to get 50% battery warnings on my GT & XRC, miles ridden is an unnecessary bonus.
I am accepting no more changes on my OWs. They operate perfectly for my purposes. OTA updates hold only downsides for me.
If it ain't broke don't fix it!
Alicia and Jon Langenhop's three children were each diagnosed with a rare disorder. A clinical trial was "a no-brainer."
Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz and Donald Tusk are in Ukraine for talks with Zelenskyy
It is the first time the leaders of the four European nations (France, the UK, Germany and Poland) have made a joint visit to Ukraine, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).
“We are clear the bloodshed must end. Russia must stop its illegal invasion,” the leaders said in a joint statement, adding:
Alongside the US, we call on Russia to agree a full and unconditional 30-day ceasefire to create the space for talks on a just and lasting peace.
We will continue to increase our support for Ukraine. Until Russia agrees to an enduring ceasefire, we will ratchet up pressure on Russia’s war machine.
Continue reading...‘Multiple locations’ in India being targeted in retaliatory attacks, says state-run media, after Pakistan says three air bases attacked by Indian missiles
Who is Asim Munir, the army chief leading Pakistan’s military amid the crisis with India?
The general once fell foul of Imran Khan, but since taking the top spot has been quietly amassing power over the government and supreme court, as our profile here says.
Yet even now that the country is out of the clutches of martial law, it is still widely understood that the most powerful man in Pakistan is not the head of the government but instead the chief of the army.
Since Gen Munir took over as Pakistan’s army chief more than two years ago, he has been accused of quietly consolidating greater power without even having to topple the country’s civilian rulers. As he kept himself largely out of the limelight, he consolidated an iron grip over the army’s ranks and bent government policy and even the supreme court to his will.
Continue reading...The iPhone 16E packs plenty of new features but also carries a higher price tag. Here's how the phones stack up.
Leaders of UK, France, Germany and Poland meet Ukrainian president in show of support as US intelligence warns of air threat
The leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Poland have travelled to Kyiv and, together with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, made a joint phone call to Donald Trump to discuss plans for a peace settlement.
Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron and Friedrich Merz arrived in the Ukrainian capital on the same train on Saturday morning, while Donald Tusk travelled on a separate train. The leaders met Zelenskyy for talks in central Kyiv.
Continue reading...US secretary of state urged both sides to de-escalate as he leads efforts to secure a solution to the deepening crisis
US secretary of state Marco Rubio has offered US assistance in starting “constructive talks” to end the conflict between India and Pakistan, as the two states traded heavy missile fire on Saturday, prompting concerns over wider military escalation.
Rubio has been engaged in back-and-forth diplomacy between the two countries in recent days, calling for de-escalation as India and Pakistan have been engaged in daily clashes since Wednesday.
Continue reading...Pakistan’s armed forces said they targeted military sites inside India in response to an Indian missile attack at air bases in Pakistan on Saturday.
Upmarket bucolic area notes big rise in number of US citizens scoping a plan B away from the States
Thanksgiving in the Cotswolds is no small affair. Every November, Americans flock to the English market town of Stow-on-the-Wold to collect glazed turkey breasts, green bean casserole and a traditional sweet potato dish covered in marshmallows.
It is, by Jesse D’Ambrosi’s own admission, “bizarre”. The chef, owner of D’Ambrosi Fine Foods, is one of the many Americans who have made the Cotswolds their home in recent years. Here, her Thanksgiving and Fourth of July food hampers are highly coveted.
Continue reading...White House communications have adopted a Trumpian air that’s ‘either completely malevolent or completely brilliant’
There was a disturbance in the Force. Donald Trump celebrated “Star Wars Day” this week with an AI-generated image of himself as a muscle-bound warrior holding a red lightsaber in front of two US flags and eagles.
It seemed like a bit of fun but appeared on the White House’s official X account with a dark political message: “Happy May the 4th to all, including the Radical Left Lunatics who are fighting so hard to bring Sith Lords, Murderers, Drug Lords, Dangerous Prisoners, & well known MS-13 Gang Members, back into our Galaxy. You’re not the Rebellion – you’re the Empire. May the 4th be with you.”
Continue reading...Legislation would radically ease research restrictions on cannabis and other schedule I substances
A recently introduced bill, if it passes, would allow research on cannabis despite its schedule I status, which some experts say could help policymakers “craft effective” legislation in the future and potentially allow more clinical research on medical cannabis.
Representatives Dina Titus and Ilhan Omar introduced the Evidence-Based Drug Policy Act of 2025 (EBDPA) last week, which would radically ease research restrictions on cannabis and other schedule I substances.
Continue reading...Our experts tested these battery-powered cams around our homes to find out which performed the best.
Plus, we've got the 411 on all of the new lands, rides and experiences coming to both Disneyland and Disney World in 2025 (and beyond).
Doom: The Dark Ages drops in a few days, but you can replay other Doom games now to get in the ripping and tearing mood.
Pep Guardiola's men look to take a step closer to Champions League qualification as they take on the doomed Saints.
The Seagulls look to keep their slim hopes of European qualification alive as they travel to Molineux.
The Cottagers are looking for a win to keep alive their faltering Conference League qualification hopes.
DEI initiatives were dividing a Great Lakes city years before President Donald Trump began targeting the programs.
Palestinian rights group says remarks criticising a Lancet analysis on impact of the conflict are ‘sickening’
A UK-based advocacy group for Israel has been criticised for suggesting a reduction in obesity resulting from the war in Gaza may increase life expectancy there.
The comments by UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI), which came amid warnings of impending famine in Gaza, were condemned as “sickening” by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC).
Continue reading...The Pakistani military said it used medium-range Fateh missiles to target an Indian missile storage facility and airbases in Pathankot and Udhampur.
From the Galaxy S25 series to more affordable options, these are the top Samsung phones we've tested.
These federal agencies use your complaints to aid criminal investigations and educate the public.
World Trade Organization hails ‘constructive step’ as senior figures come together to discuss tariffs
Senior US and Chinese officials held talks early on Saturday in Geneva in a tentative first step towards defusing a trade war that is disrupting the global economy, according to China’s state-owned news agency and people close to the talks.
China’s vice-premier, He Lifeng, and the US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, met after weeks of growing tensions as duties on imports between the world’s two largest economies have risen above 100%.
Continue reading...Startling allegations that the Base’s leader is a Russian spy lend support to claims of a Kremlin ‘long game’
A former Pentagon contractor works with secretive sections of US special forces, then ups and moves to Russia. He gets married, radicalizes and starts popping up on Telegram channels as the leader of a neo-Nazi terrorist group recruiting Americans.
Soon, allegations swirl that he is a Russian spy.
Continue reading...Your library card is a ticket to all the feel-good fun.
Netflix is the best at playing make-believe.
joshuark shares a report from Axios: Bill Gates, once the richest man in the world, vowed to give away "virtually all" of his wealth through the Gates Foundation over the next two decades. Then, the foundation will close its doors on Dec. 31, 2045. [...] Gates wrote in a Thursday Gates Notes essay that the original plan was to sunset the foundation several decades after he and his then-wife died. Now, Gates believes that a "shorter timeline" is feasible. Gates pledged three "key aspirations" to guide the foundation's funding over the next two decades, which center on promoting child and maternal health and fighting infectious diseases and poverty. He emphasized that progress is not possible without government cooperation, as the U.S. and other nations slash their foreign aid budgets. "The reality is, we will not eradicate polio without funding from the United States," Gates wrote. It's unclear whether the world's richest countries will continue to stand up for its poorest people," Gates wrote. He added, "But the one thing we can guarantee is that, in all of our work, the Gates Foundation will support efforts to help people and countries pull themselves out of poverty."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle, No. 1,421, for Saturday, May 10. Bake on!
Here are hints and the answers for Connections for May 10, #699.
China produces many American summer essentials — from swimsuits and flip-flops to beach shades to grills — and this weekend’s trade talks might not avert price rises.
Hi,
i love my half year old XRC. I want to charge my board yesterday and it doesnt work. The charger plug feels so loose in the port.
Any Ideas what i can do?
Regards Ollo
Claims of missile attacks on targets deep inside both countries marks the steepest escalation in confrontation yet
India and Pakistan have accused each other of cross-border missile strikes against major military targets, the most significant escalation so far in the brewing conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.
On Saturday, India accused Pakistan of launching strikes on dozens of airbases and military headquarters across north India, using long-range weapons, drones and fighter aircraft. The accusations came a few hours after Pakistan said India had fired six surface-to-air missiles targeting three of Pakistan’s most important military bases early on Saturday morning.
Continue reading...Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Health and Human Services Secretary, defended President Donald Trump‘s new surgeon...
The post RFK Jr. Backs Unlicensed Trump Surgeon General Nominee Despite Backlash appeared first on News Facts Network.
Julian Wilson’s incredible run from the trial to the title has fallen just short with the Australian surfing veteran beaten in the final of the Gold Coast Pro.
The 36-year-old squared off against Filipe Toledo in the title decider which was a repeat of their 2015 final, also won by the Brazilian, and was edged in a thriller 17.60 to 17.20.
Continue reading...When six young women hired a room to discuss the war in Gaza, the gathering ended with 30 officers storming in to make arrests
When six young women gathered in central London to discuss the climate crisis and the war in Gaza, the setting could not have been more appropriate. The building in which they sat was a Quaker meeting house, the home of a movement whose centuries-long history is rooted in protest and a commitment to social justice. On the table were cups of jasmine tea, ginger biscuits and a selection of vegan cheese straws.
But the events that brought this apparently convivial gathering to an abrupt end have sparked protests of a different kind and raised questions about how justice is administered by the UK’s largest and most embattled police force.
Continue reading...Three types of beans have been more than a decade in the making and hit shelves amid booming interest in legumes
The pan of beans on my cooker have taken a long time to prepare. It’s not just because I soaked them overnight and have now simmered them for about an hour: more than 12 years has gone into the creation and production of these beans. After all that, they had better taste delicious.
These beans are the creation of Prof Eric Holub, a geneticist and researcher at the University of Warwick, who has spent more than a decade developing three new varieties of beans, engineered to be grown in the UK.
Continue reading...Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from Earth.com: McDermitt Caldera in Oregon is attracting attention for what could be one of the largest lithium deposits ever identified in the United States. Many view it as a potential boost for domestic battery production, while local communities voice concern over the impact on wildlife and cultural sites. The excitement stems from estimates that value the deposit at about $1.5 trillion. Some geologists say these ancient volcanic sediments could contain between 20 and 40 million metric tons of lithium. The study is published in the journal Minerals.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Notifications in Chrome are a useful feature to keep up with updates from your favorite sites. However, we know that some notifications may be spammy or even deceptive. We’ve received reports of notifications diverting you to download suspicious software, tricking you into sharing personal information or asking you to make purchases on potentially fraudulent online store fronts.
To defend against these threats, Chrome is launching warnings of unwanted notifications on Android. This new feature uses on-device machine learning to detect and warn you about potentially deceptive or spammy notifications, giving you an extra level of control over the information displayed on your device.
↫ Hannah Buonomo and Sarah Krakowiak Criel on the Chromium Blog
So first web browser makers introduce notifications, a feature nobody asked for and everybody hates, and now they’re using “AI” to combat the spam they themselves enabled and forced onto everyone? Don’t we have a name for a business model where you purport to protect your clients from threats you yourself pose?
Turning off notifications is one of the first things I do after installing a browser. I do not ever want any website sending me a notification, nor do I want any of them to ask me for permission to do so. They’re such an obvious annoyance and massive security threat, and it’s absolutely mindboggling to me we just accept them as a feature we have to live with. I genuinely wish browsers like Firefox, which claim to protect your privacy, would just have the guts to be opinionated and rip shit features like this straight out of their browser.
Using “AI” to combat spam notifications instead of just turning notifications off is peak techbro.
A few months ago I shared my Swift SDK for Darwin, which allows you to build iOS Swift Packages on Linux, amongst other things. I mentioned that a lot of work still needed to be done, such as handling codesigning, packaging, and bundling.
I’m super excited to share that we’ve finally reached the point where all of these things are now possible with cross-platform, open source software. Enter, xtool!
[…]This means it’s finally possible to build and deploy iOS apps from Linux and Windows (WSL). At the same time, xtool is SwiftPM-based and fully declarative, which means you can also use it to replace Xcode on macOS for building iOS software!
↫ kabiroberai
While this is obviously an impressive piece of engineering that’s taken countless years to fully put together, the issue this doesn’t address are Apple’s licensing terms when it comes to Xcode and development for Apple’s platforms. The Apple Developer Program License Agreement clearly forbids installing Xcode and the Apple SDK on non-Apple branded devices, and as this new xtool requires you download Xcode.xip and use it, it seems it violates these terms.
Now, as far as I’m concerned, these terms are idiotic and should be 100% illegal, but if you’re an Apple developer who relies on your Apple developer account to make money, using a tool like this definitely has the potential to put your developer account at risk. For experimentation, sure, this is great, but for any official work I would be quite weary until Apple makes some sort of statement about the matter, which is highly unlikely to happen.
Perhaps the courts can, at some point, have a say here – especially in the EU – but even then, Apple can always find or manufacture some reason to terminate your account if they really want to. If you want to develop on your own terms, perhaps developing for Apple platforms is not what you should be doing.
Donovan Mitchell had 43 points and nine rebounds, and the finally full-strength Cleveland Cavaliers beat Indiana 126-104 on Friday night to cut the Pacers’ lead to 2-1 in the Eastern Conference semi-finals.
The road team has won all three games in the series, and the Pacers will have another chance to break that trend Sunday in Game 4.
Continue reading...Sap-sucking insects top list of queries to gardening charity after causing significant harm to plants
Aphids are plaguing gardeners this spring due to the warm weather, with higher numbers of the rose-killing bugs expected to thrive in the UK as a result of climate breakdown.
The sap-sucking insects have topped the ranking of gardener queries to the Royal Horticultural Society, with many of its 600,000 members having complained of dozens of aphids on their acers, roses and honeysuckle plants.
Continue reading...T&Cs show limitations to the promises of 12 free seat reservations, insurance and monthly access to a sale
Ryanair has become the latest low-cost airline to offer a yearly membership scheme that promises benefits such as free reserved seats and cheap flights – but the consumer group Which? says you should look at the small print before you join.
The low-cost carrier’s Prime membership costs £79 a person a year and promises 12 free seat reservations, travel insurance, and monthly access to a sale. However, the terms and conditions show a number of limitations.
Continue reading...The specifics of the administration’s economic masterplan – from strollers to movies to China – change by the day
Decades of economic orthodoxy failed millions of Americans, according to Donald Trump, who marched back into the White House promising to shred the status quo. But the specifics of his alternative – exactly how his administration claims it will make America great again – change by the day.
The US president declared this week to be a key milestone of his second term, as he unveiled his first major trade deal since returning to office following accelerated talks with the UK.
Continue reading...Experts say that the iPhone is due for a price hike, regardless of what happens with tariffs.
Attacks on the Druze by Islamist gunmen backing the new Syrian government have pushed some in the community to welcome Israeli promises of protection.
TikTok trend is inspiring tourists to seek out cheaper locations such as Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina
It will take more than a TikTok trend to break Britons’ love affair with Mediterranean beaches. But latest figures show travellers are increasingly swapping Málaga for North Macedonia and Benidorm for the Balkans as part of a social media craze for “destination dupes”.
Flights from the UK to Bosnia and Herzegovina soared by 284% in 2024 compared with the previous year, while trips to Montenegro increased by 164%. Getaways to Albania – billed by some as “the new Croatia” – rose by 61%, according to an analysis of Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) data.
Continue reading...The rules-based world order is in retreat and violence is on the rise, forcing countries to rethink their relationships
In a week in which former allies in a redividing globe separately commemorated the 80th anniversary of the end of the second world war, the sense of a runaway descent towards a third world war draws ever closer.
The implosion of Pax Americana, the interconnectedness of conflicts, the new willingness to resort to unbridled state-sponsored violence and the irrelevance of the institutions of the rules-based order have all been on brutal display this week. From Kashmir to Khan Younis, Hodeidah, Port Sudan and Kursk, the only sound is of explosions, and the only lesson is that the old rules no longer apply.
Continue reading...Rightwing opposition party claims some artists will receive benefits having contributed little to the state
Slovenia’s populist opposition has mounted a campaign against “degenerate” artists as it seeks to topple government plans for special pension top-ups for award-winning artists in a referendum on Sunday.
Voters in the central European country will cast their verdict on a government bill that details the conditions and terms under which certain artists can claim an allowance to be added to their pensions.
Continue reading...Ras Baraka’s arrest took place at Delaney Hall, a newly opened immigrant detention facility in New Jersey.
After riding the XR for many years, with many more planned… I’ve decided to expand the family with a new Pint S for those shorter, grab and go commutes.
Oof, what a difference size and tires make on the ride. I’ve got thousands of miles on my XR, so I assumed an easy transition. Nope, I ate shit immediately. 🤣 Kinda like going from a long board cruiser to a penny board. Certainly gonna take some getting used to.
That said, I do have a couple of “things” that I expect will become increasingly annoying in the long term though.
No front grip handle. I’m sure this is a common gripe, but I’ll add to the pile. What a pain in the ass. I didn’t think I’d miss it this much, but man, I really do. Definitely hoping to find a good aftermarket solution soon.
The Lightbar… aka the Eye of Sauron. This thing is fucking intense. It burns through my retinas like it’s trying to access my soul. Probably not a big deal for most folks, but with my light sensitivity, it’s a full-on ocular torture device every time I glance down. Real shame there’s no option to dim it in the settings. So hey, Future Motion, if you’re listening, please let us dial that brightness down. For now, I’ll cover it with some tape or something.
Gripes aside, I’m digging the contoured footpads and smaller profile… genuinely excited to break in the new board and start logging those miles.
Float on, good people.
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested at an ICE facility during a visit with members of New Jersey's congressional delegation.
A federal judge in California ordered the Trump administration Friday to pause mass layoffs of...
The post Judge Temporarily Halts Trump’s Federal Workforce Reduction Order appeared first on News Facts Network.
A judge is blocking the Trump administration and Elon Musk's DOGE from carrying out sweeping layoffs at over a dozen agencies — at least for now.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Using AI can be a double-edged sword, according to new research from Duke University. While generative AI tools may boost productivity for some, they might also secretly damage your professional reputation. On Thursday, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) published a study showing that employees who use AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini at work face negative judgments about their competence and motivation from colleagues and managers. "Our findings reveal a dilemma for people considering adopting AI tools: Although AI can enhance productivity, its use carries social costs," write researchers Jessica A. Reif, Richard P. Larrick, and Jack B. Soll of Duke's Fuqua School of Business. The Duke team conducted four experiments with over 4,400 participants to examine both anticipated and actual evaluations of AI tool users. Their findings, presented in a paper titled "Evidence of a social evaluation penalty for using AI," reveal a consistent pattern of bias against those who receive help from AI. What made this penalty particularly concerning for the researchers was its consistency across demographics. They found that the social stigma against AI use wasn't limited to specific groups. "Testing a broad range of stimuli enabled us to examine whether the target's age, gender, or occupation qualifies the effect of receiving help from Al on these evaluations," the authors wrote in the paper. "We found that none of these target demographic attributes influences the effect of receiving Al help on perceptions of laziness, diligence, competence, independence, or self-assuredness. This suggests that the social stigmatization of AI use is not limited to its use among particular demographic groups. The result appears to be a general one."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The settlement divides the $700 million payment equally between pharmaceutical giants Bristol Myers Squibb and Sanofi.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 10.
Donald Trump said Friday he would accept a “TINY” tax increase on wealthy Americans to...
The post Trump Suggests “Tiny” Tax Increase for Wealthy, But Advises GOP to Reject It appeared first on News Facts Network.
This blog has now closed. Read the latest here
Large institutional investors have massively increased their holdings of Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG) in recent months according to SEC filings, with many enlarging their positions by hundreds of millions of dollars.
The revelations raise further questions about big business’s desire to curry favor with Donald Trump and his administration via the enterprises he has maintained or commenced. TMTG runs the Truth Social social media platform – on which the US president himself posts almost daily – as well as financial services and a film and TV streaming service.
Donald Trump’s refusal to divest from his publicly traded company has predictably prompted huge investments from wealthy special interests that could use a favor from the president.
Institutional Wall Street investors and even a foreign company with business before the administration have effectively offered a form of tribute by bulk purchasing shares in DJT on the open market, which helps juice the value of Trump’s own shares.
Continue reading...Presidential adviser Stephen Miller announces potential move, which US has made only four times in history
The Trump administration is considering suspending the writ of habeas corpus, the legal right to challenge one’s detention, Stephen Miller, a top White House adviser, said on Friday.
“The constitution is clear, and that of course is the supreme law of the land, that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus could be suspended in time of invasion. So that’s an option we’re actively looking at. A lot of it depends on whether the courts do the right thing or not,” Miller said to a group of reporters at the White House.
Continue reading...A spokesperson for Taylor Swift said the subpoena is being used "to draw public interest by creating tabloid clickbait."
So my friend updated his gt today and it suddenly had what i would call power loss. it struggled to get up hills we used to do with ease and would surge like an xr while doing so. he also felt like they had brought the pint firmware to gt. the scariest part was that on drops the board wouldn’t engage and would turn off completely, dumping him off multiple times. He said right after he started the update it stopped because he forgot to plug it in, he reopened the app and did it again with the board plugged in. This is an almost brand new board, is anyone else having these issues with the new update or did something go wrong with the update? (could it be fixed under warranty?)
Elizabeth Holmes has lost her bid to have the appeal of her 2022 fraud conviction reheard by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, leaving the U.S. Supreme Court as her final option. She and former Theranos executive Sunny Balwani remain liable for $452 million in restitution, while Holmes continues serving her 11-year sentence. CNBC reports: The 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals denied Holmes' request for a rehearing before the original three-judge panel that upheld her conviction. At the same time, the court said no judge on the circuit court had asked for a vote on whether to have the full court rehear the appeal. Holmes, 41, was sentenced in January 2023 to 11 years and 3 months in prison after being found guilty of four counts of wire fraud in January 2022. She was found guilty of deceiving investors about the capabilities of Theranos, the blood-testing company she founded in 2003. The company crumbled after a Wall Street Journal story outlined the firm's struggles and shut down in 2018.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Exasperated by turmoil dogging defense secretary, the White House will block his new choice, sources say – key US politics stories from 9 May 2025 at a glance
Exasperated by the turmoil that has dogged Pete Hegseth’s office in recent weeks, the White House will block the US defense secretary’s choice of chief of staff and select a candidate of its own, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Hegseth had suggested giving the chief of staff position to Marine Col Ricky Buria after the first person in the role, Joe Kasper, left last month in the wake of a contentious leak investigation that brought the ouster of three other senior aides. But the White House has made clear to Hegseth that Buria will not be elevated.
Continue reading...Mayor’s wife accuses government of targeting her husband as video shows him being placed in handcuffs by officials
The mayor of Newark, Ras Baraka, was arrested for alleged trespass at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) detention center in New Jersey on Friday and released after several hours.
Baraka was released shortly after 8pm and, after stepping out of an SUV with flashing emergency lights, told waiting supporters: “The reality is this: I didn’t do anything wrong.”
Continue reading...Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) announced she will not challenge Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) for...
The post Marjorie Taylor Greene Confirms She Won’t Run for Georgia Senate Seat appeared first on News Facts Network.
Exclusive: Jay Bratt, who led Mar-a-Lago case, first special prosecutor known to be summoned after Trump vows revenge
The former special counsel prosecutor Jay Bratt is scheduled to appear before the Republican-led House judiciary committee next week as it attempts to find instances of politicization in the federal criminal cases brought against Donald Trump, according to three people familiar with the matter.
The deposition of Bratt, who led the criminal case over Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified documents as a top deputy to the former special counsel Jack Smith, has been scheduled for 10am ET next Wednesday, according to a notice reviewed by the Guardian.
Continue reading... ![]() | Just curious what people ride at. I've been doing a lot of playing with the different metrics and found a good setup for me. I keep turning up the yaw and roll but I'm fearful maybe there's some downsides to that? What are my fellow XRC riders at? Also, GT can chime in too! [link] [comments] |
Huawei has launched its first laptop running HarmonyOS instead of Windows, complete with AI features and support for over 2,000 mostly China-focused apps. The product is largely a result of U.S. sanctions that prevented U.S.-based companies like Google and Microsoft from doing business with Huawei, forcing the company to develop its own in-house solution. Liliputing reports: Early version of HarmonyOS were basically skinned version of Android, but over time Huawei has moved the two operating systems further apart and it now includes Huawei's own kernel, user interface, and other features. The version designed for laptops features a desktop-style operating system with a taskbar and dock on the bottom of the screen and support for multitasking by running multiple applications in movable, resizable windows. Since this is 2025, of course Huawei's demos also heavily emphasize AI features: the company showed how Celia, its AI assistant, can summarize documents, help prepare presentation slides, and more. While the operating system won't support the millions of Windows applications that could run on older Huawei laptops, the company says that at launch it will support more than 2,000 applications including WPS Office (an alternative to Microsoft Office that's developed in China), and a range of Chinese social media applications.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
President Trump opened the door to lowering tariffs on China as U.S. and Chinese officials prepare to meet this weekend.
Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish student, had been held in an ICE detention facility in Louisiana since she was seized by masked federal agents outside her home near Boston.
When Kari and Bill Cox of Culloden, West Virginia, lost their daughter to a car crash, they thought they would never adopt again. But a discovery while going through their late daughter's things changed everything.
![]() | See alot of other people here in san diego with one wheels, place is pretty chill 😎 [link] [comments] |
I absolutely love(d) my Enduro on my GT for my long, cruising pavement rides. Finally gave out.
Is the Street Pro 2 a significant and worthwhile upgrade over another Enduro? Please weigh in and help me decide.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 433 for May 10.
Hints and answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, No. 229, for Saturday, May 10.
Mexico has filed a lawsuit against Google for changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to "Gulf of America" for U.S. users on Google Maps, following a Republican-led House vote on Thursday to codify the name change. President Claudia Sheinbaum argues the U.S. only has authority to rename its portion of the continental shelf and warned of legal action unless Google reversed the change. The Guardian reports: "All we want is for the decree issued by the US government to be complied with," Sheinbaum said. "The US government only calls the portion of the US continental shelf the Gulf of America, not the entire gulf, because it wouldn't have the authority to name the entire gulf," she added. In response to Trump, Sheinbaum has cheekily suggested calling the United States "America Mexicana" -- Mexican America, pointing to a map dating back to before 1848, when one-third of her country was seized by the United States.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
These seven architects hope to show First Nations design and connection to Country at the world’s most prestigious architecture exhibition
Australia’s participation in next year’s Venice Biennale remains under a cloud. With Creative Australia holding fast to its decision to cancel its commission of artist Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino, it’s becoming increasingly likely that the Australian Pavilion might remain dark in 2026.
It is an added weight for the First Nations team who have unveiled their new creation inside the pavilion as part of Venice’s other biennale: the Venice Biennale of Architecture, held every other year in the Giardini.
Continue reading...China's Xi Jinping joined Vladimir Putin for a huge Victory Day parade in Moscow, hoping to reassure Russians of their nation's strength as the Ukraine conflict grinds on.
Watch movies and TV shows and play games just about anywhere with the best portable projectors I've reviewed from Anker, AAXA, TCL, Samsung and others.
The Amtrak Inspector General said it was "the largest employee conspiracy" the office has ever investigated.
PhD student arrested in March for political speech released on Friday after federal judge’s ruling
Rümeysa Öztürk, the Tufts University student arrested in March for her political speech, has been released from the Louisiana detention center where she was being held in what she and her lawyers had argued was a breach of her constitutional rights.
A federal judge on Friday morning had ordered Öztürk’s return to Vermont, where she was briefly held after being grabbed on the street by masked immigration agents near Boston, for hearings. But the judge decided not to wait for her physical transportation and she appeared remotely from Louisiana at the hearing in Burlington on Friday.
Continue reading...Newark Liberty International Airport suffered another brief air traffic control outage Friday morning, the FAA confirmed.
Rumeysa Ozturk was taken into custody on March 25 after her student visa was revoked by the Trump administration.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Schools across the US are warning parents about an Internet trend that has students purposefully trying to damage their school-issued Chromebooks so that they start smoking or catch fire. Various school districts, including some in Colorado, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Washington, have sent letters to parents warning about the trend that's largely taken off on TikTok. Per reports from school districts and videos that Ars Technica has reviewed online, the so-called Chromebook Challenge includes students sticking things into Chromebook ports to short-circuit the system. Students are using various easily accessible items to do this, including writing utensils, paper clips, gum wrappers, and pushpins. The Chromebook challenge has caused chaos for US schools, leading to laptop fires that have forced school evacuations, early dismissals, and the summoning of first responders. Schools are also warning that damage to school property can result in disciplinary action and, in some states, legal action. In Plainville, Connecticut, a middle schooler allegedly "intentionally stuck scissors into a laptop, causing smoke to emit from it," Superintendent Brian Reas told local news station WFSB. The incident reportedly led to one student going to the hospital due to smoke inhalation and is suspected to be connected to the viral trend. "Although the investigation is ongoing, the student involved will be referred to juvenile court to face criminal charges," Reas said. TikTok recently banned the search term "Chromebook Challenge" and created a safety message that pops up when searching for the term. The social media company notes that the challenge is on other social media platforms, too.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I have an XRV that seems to be operating well.
I’ve been thru the IMU steps and followed the setup guide steps.
It feels like my board may be riding a little ‘nose up’. What would be the easiest way to set the nose angle down 1 degree (for example)?
One revolutionized first-person shooters on consoles, another taught us how to care for a virtual pet, but they all deserve a spot in history.
Hundreds of leading figures from UK creative industries urge prime minister not to ‘give our work away’
Hundreds of leading figures and organisations in the UK’s creative industries, including Coldplay, Paul McCartney, Dua Lipa, Ian McKellen and the Royal Shakespeare Company, have urged the prime minister to protect artists’ copyright and not “give our work away” at the behest of big tech.
In an open letter to Keir Starmer, a host of major artists claim creatives’ livelihoods are under threat as wrangling continues over a government plan to let artificial intelligence companies use copyright-protected work without permission.
Continue reading...The new pope faces a divided church in his home country, as Catholics have split along political lines.
Dutchman, 39, had been working underwater in Sicily during operations to raise British tech tycoon’s vessel
A diver who was working on preliminary operations to raise the late tech tycoon Mike Lynch’s sunken superyacht, Bayesian, has died during underwater work in Sicily.
The 39-year-old Dutch diver died on Friday while working underwater in preparation to cut the ship’s mainmast.
Continue reading...The administration’s plan for Gaza food aid distribution remains in flux, as anticipated major funders and humanitarian groups decline to participate.
We present the formal verification of Apple’s iMessage PQ3, a highly performant, device-to-device messaging protocol offering strong security guarantees even against an adversary with quantum computing capabilities. PQ3 leverages Apple’s identity services together with a custom, post-quantum secure initialization phase and afterwards it employs a double ratchet construction in the style of Signal, extended to provide post-quantum, post-compromise security.
We present a detailed formal model of PQ3, a precise specification of its fine-grained security properties, and machine-checked security proofs using the TAMARIN prover. Particularly novel is the integration of post-quantum secure key encapsulation into the relevant protocol phases and the detailed security claims along with their complete formal analysis. Our analysis covers both key ratchets, including unbounded loops, which was believed by some to be out of scope of symbolic provers like TAMARIN (it is not!).
↫ Felix Linker and Ralf Sasse
Weekend, light reading, you know how this works by now. Light some candles, make some tea, get comfy.
According to The Information (paywalled), Meta is reportedly developing facial recognition capabilities for its Ray-Ban smart glasses -- technology it previously avoided due to privacy concerns. 404 Media's Joseph Cox writes: The move is an obvious about-face from Meta. It's also interesting to me because Meta's PR chewed my ass off when I dared to report in October that a pair of students took Meta's Ray-Ban glasses and combined them with off-the-shelf facial recognition technology. That tool, which the students called I-XRAY, captured a person's face, ran it through an easy to access facial recognition service called Pimeyes, then went a step further and pulled up information about the subject from across the web, including their home address and phone number. When I contacted Meta for comment for that story, Dave Arnold, a spokesperson for the company, said in an email he had one question for me. "That Pimeyes facial recognition technology could be used with ANY camera, correct? In other words, this isn't something that only is possible because of Meta Ray-Bans? If so, I think that's an important point to note in the piece," he wrote. This is true. But entirely misses the point of why the students created the tool with Meta's Ray-Ban glasses. They said themselves in a demonstration video they identified dozens of people without their knowledge. You do that by wearing a pair of glasses that look like any other. Meta's Ray-Ban's do have a light that turns on when it's recording, but according to the new report, Meta is questioning whether new versions of its glasses need this.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The wand developed by Teal Health allows patients to self-collect a vaginal sample and mail it to a lab for testing.
About 60 Afrikaners are set to be routed through Virginia next week, documents show, in a notable exception to President Donald Trump’s suspension of refugee admissions.
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
When the Washington Post reported via anonymous sources that a government intelligence assessment concluded the Venezuelan government was not directing the migration of members of the Trenreport de Aragua gang to the United States, Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, dismissed such reports and said those “behind this illegal leak of classified intelligence” had “twisted and manipulated [the information] to convey the exact opposite finding.”
But a redacted copy of the intelligence memo shows that the Washington Post’s reporting was accurate.
The April 7 intelligence assessment broadly concluded that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s “regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States.”
The six-page memo from the National Intelligence Council, “Venezuela: Examining Regime Ties to Tren de Aragua,” was released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on May 5 in response to a Freedom of Information Act request from the Freedom of the Press Foundation. The foundation provided us a copy of that memo.
The conclusions in the National Intelligence Council memo — the shared assessment of 18 U.S. intelligence organizations — undercut the basis for President Donald Trump’s March 15 invocation of the Alien Enemies Act to summarily deport Venezuelan immigrants suspected of affiliation with Tren de Aragua. In that proclamation, the Trump administration argued that TdA is “conducting irregular warfare” in the U.S. and operating “in conjunction” with the Maduro regime, and in support of “the Maduro regime’s goal of destabilizing democratic nations in the Americas, including the United States.”
As we have written, the Alien Enemies Act is an 18th century law that says that in times of war or during an “invasion or predatory incursion … by any foreign nation or government,” the president can apprehend, restrain, secure and remove any immigrants who came from the enemy country.
Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act hinges on two assertions: that TdA is “perpetrating, attempting, and threatening an invasion or predatory incursion against the territory of the United States” and that it is acting “at the direction, clandestine or otherwise, of the Maduro regime in Venezuela.”
As we said, the National Intelligence Council memorandum broadly contradicted that second statement.
According to the NIC memo, “While Venezuela’s permissive environment enables TDA to operate, the Maduro regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States.”
The NIC memo listed several reasons for its conclusion.
First, it said, “Venezuelan intelligence, military, and police services view TDA as a security threat and operate against it in ways that make it highly unlikely the two sides would cooperate in a strategic or consistent way.” The memo noted that in late January, “at least two Venezuelan National Guard units arrested TDA members in Venezuela in separate operations.”
The memo further noted — citing press reports and redacted sources — that “[s]ince at least 2016, Venezuelan security forces have periodically engaged in armed confrontations with TDA, resulting in the killing of some TDA members.”
The memo stated that the intelligence community “has not observed the regime directing TDA, including to push migrants to the United States, which probably would require extensive coordination, and funding between regime entities and TDA leaders that we would collect.” The memo stated that “the decentralized makeup of TDA … would make such a relationship logistically challenging.” The memo also noted that the IC “recognizes the regime appreciates migration as a safety valve, allowing discontented Venezuelans to leave.”
In her April 21 social media post criticizing press reports about the then unreleased memo, Gabbard contradicted those assessments, saying, “The Office of the Director of National Intelligence fully supports the assessment that the foreign terrorist organization, Tren De Aragua, is acting with the support of the Maduro Regime, and thus subject to arrest, detention and removal as alien enemies of the United States.”
“Illegal immigrant criminals have raped, tortured, and murdered Americans, and still, the propaganda media continues to operate as apologists for them,” Gabbard said in a released statement. “It is outrageous that as President Trump and his administration work hard every day to make America safe by deporting these violent criminals, some in the media remain intent on twisting and manipulating intelligence assessments to undermine the President’s agenda to keep the American people safe.”
But the released NIC memo shows the media reports were not twisting the intelligence assessments. As the Washington Post reported on April 17, “The intelligence product found that although there are some low-level contacts between the Maduro government and Tren de Aragua, or TdA, the gang does not operate at the direction of Venezuela’s leader. The product builds on U.S. intelligence findings in February, first reported by the New York Times, that the gang is not controlled by Venezuela.”
The FBI was the lone agency among the 18 U.S. intelligence organizations on the National Intelligence Council that offered partial dissent. (Other NIC organizations include the CIA, the five Department of Defense armed services, the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence, and the Department of State’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research.)
According to the memo, “While FBI analysts agree with the above assessment, they assess some Venezuelan government officials facilitate TDA members’ migration from Venezuela to the United States and use members as proxies in Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and the United States to advance what they see as the Maduro regime’s goal of destabilizing governments and undermining public safety in these countries, based on DHS [Department of Homeland Security] and FBI reporting as of February 2024.” (The italics are the memo’s emphasis.)
On April 23, Fox News Digital said it talked to an unnamed “senior administration official” who shared unclassified portions of an FBI report in which “[t]he FBI assesses that in the next six to 18 months, Venezuelan government officials likely will attempt to leverage Tren de Aragua members in the United States as proxy actors to threaten, abduct and kill members of the Venezuelan diaspora in the United States who are vocal critics of Maduro and his regime.”
In a speech in Michigan on April 29, Trump referenced that report, saying, “The FBI recently assessed that these vicious gangs have been sent by the foreign regime in Venezuela to foment violence and instability in the United States of America.”
The NIC memo, however, said that “most of the IC” has concluded that “intelligence indicating that regime leaders are directing or enabling TDA migration to the United States is not credible.”
“Some regime officials are probably willing to capitalize on migration for personal financial or other benefits, even though the Maduro regime probably is not systematically directing Venezuelan outflows, such as to sow chaos in receiving countries,” the NIC memo stated. “The intelligence record indicates Venezuelans have migrated voluntarily, often at great personal risk, to flee political instability and near-collapse of Venezuela’s economy. The IC attributes increased migration flows, including the spike in US arrivals from 2021 to 2024 of Venezuelan nationals –which could include some TDA members — to a variety of push and pull factors including socioeconomic conditions, family ties to the United States, and migrants’ perceptions of US and regional enforcement.”
But the NIC said that while Maduro may not have been directing the migration of Venezuelans, neither has he sought to stem it, saying that migration “helped him retain power by having dissidents leave the country.”
“The Maduro regime may have also welcomed the logistical, financial, and political headaches that unregulated migration has caused for the US Government, its perceived principal adversary, even if not a principal intent,” the memo stated.
Even in cases of “limited IC reporting suggesting a link between TDA and some Venezuelan officials aimed at facilitating TDA migration to the United States,” the memo noted that “in some cases, reporting warns that these sources could also be motivated to fabricate information.”
An official in Gabbard’s ODNI, however, said there’s reason to put more credence in the FBI intelligence than the assessment from the umbrella National Intelligence Council. The FBI assessment is based on its domestic law enforcement operations against TdA in the U.S., an ODNI official told us. “This information and intelligence are the most robust and accurate given their focus on domestic security and crimes, versus limited intelligence assessments from other intelligence elements who by law focus solely on foreign intelligence collection, and who until President Trump took office, had very limited resources focused on TdA,” the official said.
The ODNI official argued that the Venezuelan government is “aiding and abetting” TdA by creating conditions in the country that enable it to thrive — much the same way that the Taliban government in Afghanistan was providing sanctuary to al Qaeda, and thereby enabling al Qaeda to carry out its Sept. 11, 2001, attack in the U.S. The official also pointed to comments that José Gustavo Arocha, a former lieutenant colonel in the Venezuelan army, made to Fox News Digital in December. Arocha said that TdA is “a state-sponsored Maduro regime organization. The real boss of the Tren de Aragua is in Caracas, Venezuela. It is the Maduro regime, because they created TdA, and they use the TdA as a blackmail [tool] for any situation.”
The NIC memo acknowledged, “The lack of transparency and accountability in Venezuela has created an environment for widespread corruption and for regime officials to benefit from a variety of illicit activities, an environment fueled by Maduro’s illegitimate and autocratic grip on power. This persistent outflow of migrants probably offers opportunities for some regime officials in capacities to facilitate migration movement to look for and receive personal kickbacks for their services, and to conceal the benefits they receive.”
The memo noted that U.S. law enforcement reports claim members of the regime “have cooperated with TDA by providing financial or material support, but we cannot verify the sources’ access. Even so, these reports do not claim that these figures direct the group.”
And, the NIC memo warned, “Some reports come from people detained for involvement in criminal activity in the United States or for entering the country illegally, which could motivate them to make false allegations about their ties to the Venezuelan regime in an effort to deflect responsibility for their crimes and to lessen punishment by providing exculpatory or otherwise ‘valuable’ information to US prosecutors.”
The question of whether the Maduro regime in Venezuela is coordinating with TdA is central to the Trump administration’s argument for invoking the Alien Enemies Act in order to — as Trump put it — “expel every foreign terrorist from our soil as quickly as possible.” As we said, the act pertains to times of war or an “invasion” by a “foreign nation or government.”
The act has been used three times in U.S. history, during the War of 1812, World War I and World War II.
In his March 15 proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act, Trump declared that “TdA is perpetrating, attempting, and threatening an invasion or predatory incursion against the territory of the United States. TdA is undertaking hostile actions and conducting irregular warfare against the territory of the United States both directly and at the direction, clandestine or otherwise, of the Maduro regime in Venezuela.” And as a result, the proclamation said, “all Venezuelan citizens 14 years of age or older who are members of TdA, are within the United States, and are not actually naturalized or lawful permanent residents of the United States are liable to be apprehended, restrained, secured, and removed as Alien Enemies.”
Trump invoked the act in March to summarily deport 238 Venezuelan migrants alleged to be members of TdA, who were then sent to a mega prison in El Salvador. But the New York Times found no evidence that a vast majority of the men had any connection to Tren de Aragua.
Some federal judges have ruled that the administration can’t use the Alien Enemies Act in this way.
On May 1, a federal district judge in Texas — who was appointed by Trump — concluded that Trump had improperly applied the Alien Enemies Act.
“[T]he historical record renders clear that the President’s invocation of the AEA through the Proclamation exceeds the scope of the statute and is contrary to the plain, ordinary meaning of the statute’s terms,” U.S. District Judge Fernando Rodriguez Jr. wrote. “As a result, the Court concludes that as a matter of law, the Executive Branch cannot rely on the AEA, based on the Proclamation, to detain the Named Petitioners and the certified class, or to remove them from the country.”
In similar cases in other states, two more federal judges have since concurred.
“Since Respondents have not demonstrated the existence of a ‘war,’ ‘invasion’ or ‘predatory incursion,’ the AEA was not validly invoked by the Presidential Proclamation,” Judge Alvin Hellerstein, a federal judge in the Southern District of New York who was appointed by President Bill Clinton, wrote in a May 6 ruling.
“Petitioners have not been given notice of what they allegedly did to join TdA, when they joined, and what they did in the United States, or anywhere else, to share or further the illicit objectives of the TdA,” Hellerstein wrote. “Without such proof, Petitioners are subject to removal by the Executive’s dictate alone, in contravention of the AEA and the Constitutional requirements of due process.”
The same day, a federal district judge in Colorado, an appointee of President Joe Biden, said she found “unpersuasive” the Trump administration’s definition of “invasion” to broadly include “hostile entrance,” or “hostile encroachment.” U.S. District Judge Charlotte Sweeney said she agreed the word “invasion” meant military action against the U.S.
These decisions can all be appealed by the Trump administration, and the question of whether the president can use the Alien Enemies Act may ultimately end up before the Supreme Court.
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The post Intelligence Memo Undercuts Trump’s Immigration Argument appeared first on FactCheck.org.
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The ranking member of the House Oversight Committee is launching an investigation into whether the General Services Administration has given preferential treatment to a technology startup competing for a lucrative government contract. The startup is backed by some of President Donald Trump’s most influential Silicon Valley allies.
The committee’s action follows reporting by ProPublica last month that revealed the GSA was eyeing New York-based payments company Ramp to remake a massive, $700 billion federal credit card program known as SmartPay. Our reporting showed that senior GSA officials met with Ramp executives at least four times before publicly opening up a SmartPay contract opportunity.
Ethics experts flagged the early meetings as unusual and potentially problematic. Insiders at the GSA told ProPublica that, internally, Ramp was seen as the clear favorite for an initial $25 million pilot contract, which could act as an introduction to larger SmartPay work. The contract for the pilot program hasn’t been awarded yet.
A letter sent Friday to the GSA by Rep. Gerald Connolly, D-Va., and reviewed by ProPublica says Democrats on the committee want information about the GSA’s dealings with “Ramp, a company with zero federal contracting experience that is backed by prominent Trump supporters, Trump family connections, and allies of Elon Musk.”
Connolly’s letter demands an array of GSA documents, including “all communications between any GSA official, contractor or subcontractor and any representative of Ramp.”
Ramp did not respond to a request for comment about the investigation.
The GSA did not respond to questions Friday. Asked about Ramp for a previous article, a GSA spokesperson told ProPublica that the agency “refutes any suggestion of unfair or preferential contracting practices” and that the “credit card reform initiative has been well known to the public in an effort to address waste, fraud, and abuse.”
SmartPay, which provides Visa and Mastercard charge cards to government employees, enables the federal workforce to purchase office supplies and equipment, book travel and pay for gas. The cards typically are used for purchases up to $10,000.
Sources within the GSA say Trump appointees at the agency, including acting Administrator Stephen Ehikian and Commissioner Josh Gruenbaum, the nation’s top procurement officer, came into their roles saying SmartPay and other government payment programs were rife with fraud or waste.
Yet both GOP and Democratic budget experts call this view inaccurate, saying SmartPay has implemented effective safeguards and monitoring tools.
SmartPay has been worth hundreds of millions of dollars in fees for the financial institutions that currently operate it, U.S. Bank and Citibank. The GSA will decide by year’s end whether to extend SmartPay with the current contract or to remake the program more fundamentally.
Ramp’s investors include some of Silicon Valley’s most powerful figures, such as Peter Thiel, the billionaire venture capitalist who provided crucial early support to Trump and spent millions on Vice President JD Vance’s Ohio Senate run. Other major backers include Keith Rabois of Khosla Ventures, who sits on Ramp’s board; Thrive Capital, founded by Joshua Kushner, the brother of Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner; and 8VC, a firm run by Musk and Trump allies.
In late April, as the GSA received a flurry of business pitches on the SmartPay pilot program, Ramp’s CEO, Eric Glyman, and Rabois appeared at a high-profile conference in Washington that brings together tech entrepreneurs, lawmakers and other senior government officials.
During a livestreamed panel titled “First Principles for a Smarter, Leaner Government,” the pair touted Ramp as a transformational solution for government payments. Later, during an interview, Rabois pointed to the fact that SmartPay issues more charge cards than there are total government employees as evidence of fraud.
But SmartPay experts say this betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of how the program works. Employees are issued separate cards for different types of purchases and often hold multiple cards at once.
Rabois did not respond to questions from ProPublica on Friday. In his response for an earlier story, Rabois said he had “no involvement in any government-related initiatives for the company.”
In the oversight committee’s letter to the GSA, Connolly writes that “the Trump Administration’s false claims about the SmartPay program may be an attempt to discredit the program to provide a new, Trump-affiliated contractor with a lucrative contract.”
Random thought, but I'm learning development Unreal Engine 5 and came across a onewheel like setup with controls and everything in the asset store and it got me wondering. If a onewheeling game did it exist, what would you want it to be like that isn't like some of the existing titles such as Descenders and Lonely Mountains?
Like would it be a chill trail experience you could practice how fast you could go without falling?
Or maybe a faster pace, possibly downhill, experience like Descenders with interesting obstacles and high skill ceiling type setup?
Just curious if anyone else has ever thought about this.
Numerous coffee establishments across the US are actively restricting internet access and laptop use as they push back against remote workers monopolizing their spaces for hours. New York's Devocion chain limits WiFi to two-hour windows on weekdays and eliminates it entirely on weekends, while Detroit's Alba coffee shop has operated without WiFi since its 2023 opening. Some venues have resorted to physically taping over electrical outlets. DC-based cafe Elle initially launched without WiFi but reversed course after receiving negative Google reviews, implementing a compromise with access restricted to Monday-Thursday, 8am-3pm, with a 90-minute usage cap. The restrictions primarily aim to increase customer turnover, improve sales figures, and restore the community atmosphere that extended laptop sessions often diminish.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Josep Borrell also criticises EU response to what he calls largest ethnic cleansing operation since second world war
The former EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell has launched a blistering attack on Israel, accusing its government of committing genocide in Gaza and “carrying out the largest ethnic-cleansing operation since the end of the second world war in order to create a splendid holiday destination”.
Borrell, a former Spanish foreign minister who served as the EU’s top diplomat from 2019 to 2024, and president of the European parliament from 2004 to 2007, also criticised the bloc’s failure to use all the means at its disposal to influence Israel, saying expressions of regret were simply not enough.
Continue reading...Radar systems at Newark Liberty International Airport stopped working for about 90 seconds Friday morning, the second major outage for the New Jersey airport.
Prevost, who was promoted by Francis and has a knack for management and a zeal for missionary work, was a stronger candidate than many outside the Vatican knew.
Looking to replace, I’ve seen that they should be replaced around 1,000 miles, I bought mine used and they painted their front foot pad blue which I’m not a fan of, I would like black, I am not a fan of the wood surstance OneWheel offers. Will I have to paint it regardless? Or does a 3rd party offer customized/colored sensor pads? Been holding off on buying the kush back foot pad because I don’t want to mismatch.
President Donald Trump keeps saying he doesn’t know what his own administration is up to.
Three times in the last week, Trump responded to questions about his signature policies by expressing ignorance.
Is he truly clueless? Is he fully aware of the answer but using ignorance as a cover? Whatever the case, the White House doesn’t want to talk about it.
“I don’t know. I really don’t.”
The first instance came in comments to NBC News’ Kristen Welker on May 4. Though Trump has twice placed his hand on a bible and sworn, to the best of his ability, to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,” he seemed to have forgotten those oaths on “Meet the Press.” Asked whether everyone in the United States is entitled to due process — the constitutional rights enshrined in both the Fifth and the Fourteenth amendments — Trump was foggy.
“I don’t know. I’m not, I’m not a lawyer,” he said. “I don’t know.”
When reports surfaced May 7 that Trump planned to deport hundreds of immigrants to Libya, a reporter put the question to him: “Is your administration sending migrants to Libya?”
“I don’t know,” Trump replied. “You’ll have to ask the Department of Homeland Security.”
While fielding questions that same day in the Oval Office, Trump was asked whether he agreed with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s comments about potential tariff exemptions for products that families rely on, such as baby car seats. Trump, again, appeared vexed. “I don’t know, I’ll think about it,” the president said. “I don’t know. I really don’t.”
“I don’t know. I’m not, I’m not a lawyer.”
Trump repeatedly cast his predecessor, President Joe Biden, as senile and inept. “He can’t do an interview. He’s incompetent,” Trump said of Biden while he was running for president in 2020. “To be president, you have to be sharp and tough and so many other things.” During last year’s presidential campaign Trump derided Biden’s “hazy memory” and dusted off his “Sleepy Joe” dig from the prior election cycle. “I’m not sure that Biden knows what the hell’s going on,” Trump said last year. “I don’t think he knows he’s alive, actually.”
In 2020, Trump bragged about passing a mental competence test. “I aced it,” he said of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment test, noting it was “very hard,” specifically the last five questions. The test is not, however, supposed to be hard if you aren’t suffering from some form of dementia.
During a press gaggle last month, Trump boasted about the results of a more recent test. “I wanted to be a little different than Biden. I took a cognitive test and I don’t know what to tell you other than I got every answer right,” he boasted. Asked if it was the same one he had taken in 2020, Trump replied: “I think it’s a pretty well-known test. Whatever it is, I got every one.”
A little more than a minute later, Trump was asked about the case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland father sent to a notorious prison in El Salvador for alleged ties to the MS-13 gang.
“How do you plan to respond to the Supreme Court ruling and the other courts about the gentleman who was in Maryland who was put in the El Salvador prison?” asked a reporter.
“Is that the one that was not Tren de Aragua but he was MS-13?” Trump said.
“Just the one that they’ve said needs to come back,” the reporter responded.
“Was he MS-13? ’Cause I only know about that,” Trump offered. “I mean, I don’t know which one.”
The post “I Don’t Know.” Trump’s Go-To Response to All Sorts of Questions appeared first on The Intercept.
Louis Prevost told CBS News that he was "mind blown" after finding out the news that his brother was now Pope Leo XIV.
Habeas corpus entails the constitutional right to appear before a court to challenge detention.
I'm thinking about buying a onewheel, a pint s. I was hoping to test ride one before I made my purchase, but I cannot find a local store anywhere near me. Is there anything that I should know, or look into before purchasing to make sure that I'm prepared?
Also, has anyone bought one, and regretted their purchase?
Over a dozen states are suing the Trump administration over its efforts to fast-track energy projects, claiming the government is bypassing environmental laws.
In a place where civic pride is a way of life, Chicagoans need little help believing the election of Pope Leo shows their city is among God’s favorites.
Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz and Donald Tusk to make symbolic visit day after Putin parade
The leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Poland are due in Kyiv on Saturday for a symbolic visit to Ukraine, a day after Vladimir Putin hosted a set-piece military parade on Red Square. The visit comes as the US warned of intelligence about a big impending air attack on Ukraine.
Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz and Donald Tusk are expected to arrive in Kyiv early on Saturday and will meet the president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in a show of support for Ukraine, Downing Street said in a statement issued late on Friday.
Continue reading...To many, Pope Leo XIV seemed a different sort of American, a man who served the poor of Peru for decades, who spoke Spanish and Italian, and who was close to Pope Francis.
Aler Baldomero Samayoa-Recinos, whose alias is "Chicharra" (Cicada), is accused of leading a group called Los Huistas.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: A Florida bill, which would have required social media companies to provide an encryption backdoor for allowing police to access user accounts and private messages, has failed to pass into law. The Social Media Use by Minors bill was "indefinitely postponed" and "withdrawn from consideration" in the Florida House of Representatives earlier this week. Lawmakers in the Florida Senate had already voted to advance the legislation, but a bill requires both legislative chambers to pass before it can become law. The bill would have required social media firms to "provide a mechanism to decrypt end-to-end encryption when law enforcement obtains a subpoena," which are typically issued by law enforcement agencies and without judicial oversight. Digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation called the bill "dangerous and dumb." Security professionals have long argued that it is impossible to create a secure backdoor that cannot also be maliciously abused, and encryption backdoors put user data at risk of data breaches.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
![]() | I can't get over how much I friggin love this thing. Between the awesome bonding time I've had with my boys on their pint x's, and the mental health escape when I head out for a cruise. Worth every penny and I will recommend it to anyone! Float on, friends!! [link] [comments] |
Amid steep levies, shipments from China to the U.S. plunged in April, with Chinese exports rerouted to other countries.
President Trump says a new U.S. trade pact with the U.K. can serve as the basis for more trade deals. Economists say that could be a problem.
The so-called "X-date" marks when the government could run out of borrowing power and face an unprecedented default without action from Congress to address the debt limit.
This season's Islanders haven't been announced, but there is a premiere date set.
Stephen Miller, top adviser to President Trump, said the White House is actively considering suspending...
The post White House Weighs Suspending Habeas Corpus Over Immigration Orders appeared first on News Facts Network.
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested Friday after protesting the opening of a new Immigration...
The post Newark Mayor Ras Baraka Arrested During Protest at ICE Detention Facility appeared first on News Facts Network.
Well, this is a bad idea: Kids are jamming metal into their school computer USB ports.
Just days after a radar and communications outage at Newark Liberty International Airport, the FAA confirmed a second incident on May 9 that disrupted radar and radio contact for 90 seconds due to a telecom failure at Philadelphia TRACON. "As of 12:30PM ET, FlightAware stats showed 292 total delays for flights into or out of Newark, which is also experiencing delays due to runway construction," reports The Verge. From the report: After the first outage on April 28th, an air traffic controller who had been on duty that day told CNN it "...was the most dangerous situation you could have." CNN reports that after a change made last July, the airport's radar and radio communication flows over a single data feed from a facility in New York, where controllers used to manage Newark's flights, to Philadelphia. The FAA has announced a plan to replace the current copper connection with fiber, as well as adding "three new, high-bandwidth telecommunications connections between the New York-based STARS and the Philadelphia TRACON," and more air traffic controllers. Until those and other changes are made, the agency also said a new backup system is being deployed in Philadelphia, but it's unclear when that will be available. NBC News reports the Friday outage affected a limited number of sectors, but it's another incident in the string of issues that have highlighted the problems with the airport's aging control system and lack of staffing. [...] A statement from the FAA said, "Frequent equipment and telecommunications outages can be stressful for controllers. Some controllers at the Philadelphia TRACON who work Newark arrivals and departures have taken time off to recover from the stress of multiple recent outages."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Whether you’re gift-wrapping a toy car, or hanging Christmas ornaments, there’s a strong chance you’re handling products made in a Chinese factory.
The day after President Donald Trump said during an interview about his tariff policies that girls in the U.S. don’t need to "have 30 dolls," some political commentators discussed China’s influence over the U.S. toy market. The U.S. currently has a 145% tariff on goods from China.
"China makes 80% of all toys sold in this country and 90% of all Christmas goods sold in this country," former New York Times columnist Charles Blow said during a May 5 appearance on CNN’s "NewsNight with Abby Phillip." "We have a lot of leverage with China. The Christmas and the doll industry is not one of them."
Blow told PolitiFact his source was an April 29 report in The New York Times. It said, "Factories in China produce nearly 80 percent of all toys and 90 percent of Christmas goods sold in America."
Data shows those figures are rounded up, but not far off.
Blow’s statement is "directionally accurate but slightly overstated on toys," said Gilberto Garcia-Vazquez, chief economist at Datawheel, which operates an online economic data platform called the Observatory of Economic Complexity.
He said out of the United States’ $41 billion imports in toys, games and sports equipment in 2024, $30 billion, or about 73.3%, was manufactured in China.
"If you include domestic production — small but non-negligible — China likely supplies closer to 72% of toys actually sold in the U.S., not 80%," Garcia-Vazquez said. The Observatory of Economic Complexity uses data sources from "statistical offices, open data portals or custom union websites."
Claire Huber, spokesperson for the U.S. International Trade Commission, provided PolitiFact with an analysis of 2024 data that showed 78.3% of toy imports and 85% of Christmas-related imports (such as lights, trees and decorations) are manufactured in China. The toy category includes dolls, wheeled toys and scale models.
The data was compiled using the commission’s DataWeb, which cites data published by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Census Bureau, accessed May 9.
Garcia-Vazquez also analyzed 2024 data for Christmas goods and said 90% of U.S. imports in that category came from China.
He said Christmas lights are an exception, because "Cambodia has recently overtaken China as the top source."
The New York Times published an April 27 report that showed 76% of "toys and puzzles" and 87% of "Christmas decorations" come from China. Bloomberg, citing the trade organization Toy Association, said "roughly 80% of toys sold in the U.S. are made in China."
Data show 73% to 78% of toy imports and 85% to 90% of Christmas-related imports in 2024 came from China, supporting Blow’s point that the vast majority of these goods come from China. We rate his statement True.
Hey everyone — I could use some advice from the community. I’m heading to Europe for a semester to study abroad, and I want to bring a Onewheel with me on my weekend trips to different countries.
I know flying with a stock Onewheel can be tricky because of battery restrictions, and I’m hoping to build or mod something that I can travel with — ideally something I can take apart easily, get through airport security without major issues, and reassemble in any country I visit.
Does anyone here have experience traveling internationally with a Onewheel? Or suggestions on builds, parts, or battery setups that would make this a reality? Open to custom builds, aftermarket parts, or creative solutions.
Any advice would be hugely appreciated!
John Siracusa, one third of the excellent ATP podcast, developer of several niche Mac utilities, and author of some of the best operating system reviews of all time, has called for Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, to step down. Now, countless people call for Tim Cook to stand down all the time, but when someone like Siracusa, an ardent Mac user since the release of the very first Macintosh and a staple of the Apple community, makes such a call, it carries a bit more weight.
His main argument is not particularly surprising to anyone who’s been keeping tabs on the Apple community, and the Apple developer community in particular: Apple seems to no longer focus on making great products, but on making money. Every decision made by Apple’s leadership team is focused solely on extracting as much money from consumers and developers, instead of on making the best possible products.
The best leaders can change their minds in response to new information. The best leaders can be persuaded. But we’ve had decades of strife, lawsuits, and regulations, and Apple has stubbornly dug in its heels even further at every turn. It seems clear that there’s only one way to get a different result.
In every healthy entity, whether it’s an organization, an institution, or an organism, the old is replaced by the new: CEOs, sovereigns, or cells. It’s time for new leadership at Apple. The road we’re on now does not lead anywhere good for Apple or its customers. It’s springtime, and I’m choosing to believe in new life. I swear it’s not too late.
↫ John Siracusa
I reached this same point with Apple a long, long time ago. I was an ardent Mac user during the PowerPC G4 and G5 days, lasting into the early Intel days. However, as the iPhone and related services took over as Apple’s primary source of income, I felt that Mac OS X, which I once loved and enjoyed so much, started to languish, and it’s been downhill for Apple’s desktop operating system ever since. Whenever I have to help my parents with their computers – modern M1 and M2 Macs – I am baffled and saddened by just how big of a convoluted, disjointed, and unintuitive mess macOS has become.
I long ago stopped caring about whatever products Apple releases or updates, because I feel like as a user who genuinely cares about his computing experience, Apple simply doesn’t make products for me. I’m not sure replacing Tim Cook with someone else will really change anything about Apple’s priorities; in the end, it’s a publicly traded corporation that thinks it needs to please shareholders, and a focus on great products instead of money isn’t going to help with that.
Apple long ago stopped being the beleaguered company many of its most ardent fans still seem convinced that it is, and it’s now one of those corporate monoliths that can make billions more overnight by squeezing just a bit more out of developers or users, regardless of what that squeezing does to the user experience. Apple is still selling more devices than ever, and it’s still raking in more gambling gains through digital slot machines for children, and as long as that’s the case, replacing Tim Cook won’t do a goddamn thing.
Delving into Pope Leo XIV’s views, including on LGBTQ+ rights, the climate and women in the church.
The order is the latest step in the Trump administration's broad effort to purge so-called diversity, equity and inclusion content from federal agencies.
Adm Sir Ben Key has been asked to ‘step back’ as first sea lord, after MoD said he had departed for ‘private reasons’
The head of the Royal Navy has been suspended pending an investigation.
Adm Sir Ben Key has been asked to “step back” as first sea lord, sources at the MoD confirmed on Friday.
Continue reading...The Trump administration is planning to soon receive the first group of White South Africans it says deserve a safe haven in the U.S.
This free AI tool will help you create Lego designs that actually work.
Wearable startup Whoop just announced its new Whoop 5.0 fitness tracker yesterday, but some existing users are already calling foul. From a report: Previously, Whoop said people who had been members for at least six months would get free upgrades to next-generation hardware. Now, the company says that members hoping to upgrade from a Whoop 4.0 to 5.0 will have to pay up. Whoop is a bit different from other fitness trackers in that it runs entirely on a subscription membership model. Most wearable makers that have subscriptions will charge you for the hardware, and then customers have the option of subscribing to get extra data or features. A good example is the Oura Ring, where you buy the ring and then have the option of paying a monthly $6 subscription. Whoop, however, has until now said that you get the hardware for "free" while paying a heftier annual subscription. Previously, Whoop promised users that whenever new hardware was released, existing members would be able to upgrade free of charge so long as they'd been a member for at least six months.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The team that makes Cockpit, the popular server dashboard software, decided to see if they could improve their PR review processes by adding “AI” into the mix. They decided to test both sourcey.ai and GitHub Copilot PR reviews, and their conclusions are damning.
About half of the AI reviews were noise, a quarter bikeshedding. The rest consisted of about 50% useful little hints and 50% outright wrong comments. Last week we reviewed all our experiences in the team and eventually decided to switch off sourcery.ai again. Instead, we will explicitly ask for Copilot reviews for PRs where the human deems it potentially useful.
This outcome reflects my personal experience with using GitHub Copilot in vim for about 1.5 years – it’s a poisoned gift. Most often it just figured out the correct sequence of
↫ Martin Pitt)
,]
, and}
to close, or automatically generating debug print statements – for that “typing helper” work it was actually quite nice. But for anything more nontrivial, I found it took me more time to validate the code and fix the numerous big and subtle errors than it saved me.
“AI” companies and other proponents of “AI” keep telling us that these tools will save us time and makes things easier, but every time someone actually sits down and does the work of testing “AI” tools out in the field, the end results are almost always the same: they just don’t deliver the time savings and other advantages we’re being promised, and more often than not, they just create more work for people instead of less. Add in the financial costs of using and running these tools, as well as the energy they consume, and the conclusion is clear.
When the lack of effectiveness of “AI” tools our in the real world is brought up, proponents inevitably resort to “yes it sucks now, but just you wait on the next version!” Then that next version comes, people test it out in the field again, and it’s still useless, and those same proponents again resort to “yes it sucks now, but just you wait on the next version!”, like a broken record. We’re several years into the hype, and that mythical “next version” still isn’t here.
We’re several years into the “AI” hype, and I still have seen no evidence it’s not a dead end and a massive con.
The former Cardinal Robert Prevost, known as “Father Bob” in Chicago, is a White Sox fan, a naturalized citizen of Peru and is fluent in five languages.
Trading was mixed Friday as concerns about the U.S. economy offset signs that the Trump administration will de-esclate its trade war.
Rich Trumka says he was fired from the Consumer Product Safety Commission after refusing to allow DOGE into the agency.
The Order of St. Augustine is a centuries-old religious order focused on community and charity.
Providing semaglutide for all those eligible may bring productivity gains as people are able to work more
Giving weight loss jabs to everyone eligible for them could boost the UK economy by £4.5bn, according to research.
Worldwide, about 3.8 billion people over 25 and just under 750 million children and young people are forecast to be overweight or obese by 2050. In England, 26.5% of adults are obese, while across the UK 4.6 million are diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Continue reading...Brothers granted hearing that could lead to freedom but attorneys withdraw bid to remove prosecutors from case
After months of legal battles, Erik and Lyle Menendez, who were convicted of killing their parents in 1989, will finally get a resentencing hearing in Los Angeles court next week, giving the brothers a new chance at freedom.
LA county superior court judge Michael Jesic ruled on Friday that the resentencing hearing can take place, starting next Tuesday.
Continue reading...Each country has accused the other of fresh attacks, while a stream of misinformation on social media has deepened public unease on either side of the border.
Tech giant Google began labeling the Gulf of Mexico with different names depending on a person's location after President Trump's executive action soon after he took office in January.
Newark airport has been experiencing communications issues that have led to 20% of its controllers taking leave. Here's what to do if you're flying in or out of EWR.
The new all-access ESPN app will be different from the ESPN Plus app and include live sports and more.
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A HELOC can be a smart way to borrow money now. Here are three smart ways to pay it off when you do.
The moment it became clear that newly elected Pope Leo XIV, formerly Cardinal Robert Prevost, is an American, internet users circulated statements about his political affiliations and social media habits.
Some of the observations were based in fact. Others were fabricated.
"Wait how woke is this pope," wrote comedian Jeremy Kaplowitz May 8. His X post, which had been viewed about 900,000 times as of mid-afternoon May 9, included a screenshot that appeared to be a headline from The New York Times.
"Pope Leo XIV was a founding member of the 2020 anarchist Portland autonomous zone known as CHAZ," read the purported headline in the Times’ font style. The subhead read: "Robert Francis Prevost spent much of his time in the early COVID-19 pandemic writing an anarchist zine in Portland describing how to best fist-fight police officers."
Screenshot from X.
When commenters asked whether the headline was real, Kaplowitz responded with additional posts insisting it was true. Tagging the New York Times, he also wrote, "CHAZ was in Seattle, not Portland," adding an expletive.
Given that Kaplowitz is a comedian (although his X profile does not clearly state that), it’s possible he intended the posts as a prank, but he never said so and the image stoked confusion as it spread quickly across social media without clarity or disclaimers.
Times spokesperson Maria Case said, "The New York Times did not publish this headline."
Searching the Times’ website for the headline returned no results. A more general search for "Pope Leo XIV" returned 45 results as of about 11 a.m. May 9, but none of those articles linked Prevost to an autonomous zone.
The headline’s details also don’t add up.
Following George Floyd’s murder in 2020, protesters occupied several blocks in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood as part of a Capitol Hill Occupied Protest, or CHOP, which also was called the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone, or CHAZ. The protest began in early June and lasted about three and a half weeks.
Protesters in Portland, Oregon, tried to establish an autonomous zone similar to the Seattle one in the early hours of June 18, 2020, but local news reports said few protesters stayed overnight and law enforcement dispersed it at dawn.
Searching the Nexis news database for "Pope Leo XIV" and "autonomous zone" returned no results. A search for "Robert Prevost" and "autonomous zone" also revealed no results.
We rate claims that a purported headline from The New York Times said "Pope Leo XIV was a founding member of the 2020 anarchist Portland autonomous zone known as CHAZ" False.
RELATED: Is the new pope a ‘registered Republican’? No, but Robert Prevost has voted in GOP primaries
In a review of visuals posted online, The Post verified debris consistent with at least two French-made fighter jets flown by the Indian air force.
Is there and update to the “reinstall original GTV firmware” help
I can’t see where to install the float control xml VESC. My GTV is bricked as I lost my backup. Trying to revert to stock GTV software, followed the downloads but can’t see where to load the float xml as no tab
My board doesn’t engage anymore
So you encountered a problem and need help…
bug?
crash?
weird behavior?
Please include ALL the info if you want useful help. The more obscure your issue the more details we’ll need. There can never be too much info. Basically we need to be able to reproduce it or at least fully understand the circumstances leading up to the issue you’re reporting
controller/motor
firmware version
package version (and name)
configuration details
how often has this happened? single incident? can you reproduce it?
the circumstances leading up to it, when the incident happened what exactly were you doing?
and last but not least: log files / videos - however DO NOT EXPECT that we’ll watch minutes of video or sift thru megabytes of logs to try to figure out what might have happened. Keep the logs and videos short.
I personally ignore any video posted as the primary problem description. Use your words
The pomp, the vestments and the spectacle have always drawn attention, but no previous conclave was quite so online.
Live updates and latest news as the first North American pope steps into his role as the new leader of the Catholic Church.
A U.S. senator introduced a bill on Friday that would direct the Commerce Department to require location verification mechanisms for export-controlled AI chips, in an effort to curb China's access to advanced semiconductor technology. From a report: Called the "Chip Security Act," the bill calls for AI chips under export regulations, and products containing those chips, to be fitted with location-tracking systems to help detect diversion, smuggling or other unauthorized use of the product. "With these enhanced security measures, we can continue to expand access to U.S. technology without compromising our national security," Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas said. The bill also calls for companies exporting the AI chips to report to the Bureau of Industry and Security if their products have been diverted away from their intended location or subject to tampering attempts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
After Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV, was elected pope, genealogists got to work. What they found surprised them.
Senior Vice President, Social Media & Trending Content
Teal Health offers alternative to pap smear tests that need to be undertaken at a doctor’s office, slated for June rollout
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the first at-home test for cervical cancer screening, its maker Teal Health said on Friday, offering an alternative to smear tests that need to be undertaken at a doctor’s office.
Pap smear tests have significantly reduced cancer incidence from when they were first introduced 80 years ago. But they can be uncomfortable and inconvenient owing to the requirement for an in-clinic exam.
Continue reading...Kaja Sokola says disgraced movie mogul forced her to touch his genitals in Manhattan apartment when she was 16
A former model has told a New York court that the disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her when she was 16, calling it the most “horrifying thing I ever experienced”.
Kaja Sokola told jurors at Weinstein’s retrial that he put his hand inside her underwear and made her touch his genitals at his Manhattan apartment in 2002 when she was 16.
Continue reading...A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
At the end of season 2 of the hit CBS series "Tracker," Justin Hartley says his character, Colter Shaw, "kind of crumbles a little bit."
An elevated gold price doesn't mean investors can't find an affordable entry price point. Here are three to know.
The Pentagon has directed all military commands to pull and review books related to diversity,...
The post Pentagon Expands DEI Crackdown, Orders Removal of Books on Race, Gender, and Civil Rights appeared first on News Facts Network.
Conservative activist Laura Loomer is publicly feuding with Calley Means, brother of Trump’s new surgeon...
The post Laura Loomer and Calley Means Clash Over Surgeon General Nomination appeared first on News Facts Network.
Landmark legislation follows local uproar over a Guardian investigation into a major non-profit’s high prices
Indiana’s governor, Mike Braun, has signed a landmark bill that would strip charity hospitals of their non-profit status if they continue to charge high prices.
The legislation, the first of its kind in the United States, followed uproar across the state after a Guardian series in October that investigated how one major Indiana non-profit hospital system bought up its competition, then hiked its prices, leaving businesses and patients struggling to pay their medical costs.
Continue reading...Exclusive: The intervention to marginalize Ricky Buria is aimed at insulating the Pentagon from any more missteps
Exasperated by the turmoil that has dogged Pete Hegseth’s office in recent weeks, the White House will block the US defense secretary’s choice of chief of staff and select a candidate of its own, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Hegseth had suggested giving the chief of staff position to Marine Col Ricky Buria after the first person in the role, Joe Kasper, left last month in the wake of a contentious leak investigation that brought the ouster of three other senior aides.
Continue reading...Officials float idea of compact of free association (Cofa), used by US to keep close ties with Pacific Island nations
US officials are discussing a plan to pull Greenland into America’s sphere of influence using a type of agreement that the United States has used to keep close ties with several Pacific Island nations, according to two US officials and another person familiar with the discussions.
Under the plan being considered, the Trump administration would propose to Greenland’s leaders that the island enter into a so-called compact of free association, or Cofa, with the United States.
Continue reading...Looking to borrow $15,000 worth of home equity right now? Here's how much it could cost you to pay it back monthly.
Software firm 37signals is completing its migration from AWS to on-premises infrastructure, expecting to save $1.3 million annually on storage costs alone. CTO David Heinemeier Hansson announced the company has begun migrating 18 petabytes of data from Amazon S3 to Pure Storage arrays costing $1.5 million upfront but only $200,000 yearly to operate. AWS waived $250,000 in data egress fees for the transition, which will allow 37signals to completely delete its AWS account this summer. The company has already slashed $2 million in annual costs after replacing cloud compute with $700,000 worth of Dell servers in 2024. "Cloud can be a good choice in certain circumstances, but the industry pulled a fast one convincing everyone it's the only way," wrote Hansson, who began the repatriation effort in 2022 after discovering their annual AWS bill exceeded $3.2 million.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Mohsen Mahdawi — who was detained by immigration agents last month during what he was told was his citizenship interview — can remain out of detention.
Move to speed up appeals of people in government-funded hotels could be challenged on discrimination grounds, officials warn
A plan to fast-track the appeals of asylum seekers living in government-funded hotels could face multiple legal challenges on the grounds of discrimination, the government has said.
A 24-week legal deadline on appeal decisions for those staying in hotel rooms is being introduced in an attempt to fulfil a Labour manifesto promise to end a practice that costs the taxpayer billions of pounds a year.
Continue reading...Acting FEMA Administrator David Richardson warns FEMA personnel in first all-hands meeting, saying "I and I alone speak for FEMA."
Former SAS officer led a group of 70 who attempted to overthrow Equatorial Guinea’s president
Simon Mann, an Eton and Sandhurst-educated ex-SAS officer, who led a botched coup involving Margaret Thatcher’s son to overthrow the government of Equatorial Guinea, has died aged 72.
Mann led a group of 70 fellow mercenaries who were arrested in Zimbabwe in 2004 for attempting to topple Equatorial Guinea’s despotic president, Teodoro Obiang.
Continue reading...The Supreme Court announced on Friday that retired Associate Justice David H. Souter has died at the age of 85 at his residence in New Hampshire. Souter left the bench in 2009, and his term was marked by several noteworthy decisions and a perceived shift in his voting patterns.
In a statement, Chief Justice John Roberts said of Justice Souter: “Justice David Souter served our Court with great distinction for nearly twenty years. He brought uncommon wisdom and kindness to a lifetime of public service. After retiring to his beloved New Hampshire in 2009, he continued to render significant service to our branch by sitting regularly on the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit for more than a decade. He will be greatly missed.”
President George H.W. Bush appointed Souter to the Supreme Court in 1990. Souter replaced Justice William J. Brennan. He retired in 2009, after serving more than 19 years on the Court.
Justice Souter’s Opinions
In Washington v. Glucksberg (1997), Souter concurred with the Court’s unanimous opinion in a case about the state of Washington’s ban on physician-assisted suicide, which overturned a lower ruling striking down the law as unconstitutional. “We therefore have a clear question about which institution, a legislature or a court, is relatively more competent to deal with an emerging issue as to which facts currently unknown could be dispositive. The answer has to be, for the reasons already stated, that the legislative process is to be preferred,” Souter wrote in his concurrence.
Souter also clearly delineated the boundaries between church and state in Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Group of Boston (1995). The city of Boston authorized a council to coordinate the St. Patrick’s Day Parade; the council denied approval for the Irish American Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Group of Boston (GLIB) to participate in it. The Massachusetts State Court ordered the council to include GLIB, but a unanimous Supreme Court held that requiring private citizens organizing a public parade to include a group expressing a message the organizers did not want to convey violated the organizer’s First Amendment rights. Writing the Court’s majority opinion, Souter concluded: “Disapproval of a private speaker’s statement does not legitimize use of the Commonwealth’s power to compel the speaker to alter the message by including one more acceptable to others.”
In Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), Souter joined Justices Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy in writing the controlling plurality opinion that upheld Roe v. Wade (1973). And in Bush v. Gore (2000), Souter joined the Court’s 7-2 majority in agreeing that the Florida Supreme Court’s method for recounting ballots in the presidential election was unconstitutional. But Souter disagreed with the 5-4 majority that had held time had run out for another recount. “Unlike the majority, I see no warrant for this Court to assume that Florida could not possibly comply with this requirement before the date set for the meeting of electors, December 18,” he wrote.
Souter was also criticized by conservative observers for voting with the Court’s liberal wing in decisions such as Lee vs. Weisman (1992), which held that clergy offering prayers at official public school ceremonies violated the First Amendment; Kelo v. New London (2005), which held that a city’s taking of private property to sell for private development qualified as a “public use” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment’s takings clause; and McCreary County vs. ACLU of Kentucky (2005), which held that Ten Commandments displays in public schools and courthouses violated the Establishment Clause. However, he wrote the majority opinion in Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker (2008), where Souter joined the Court’s conservative wing to reduce the $2.5 billion verdict in the Exxon Valdez case to $500 million.
Souter received an A.B. degree from Harvard College, and went on to become a Rhodes Scholar at Magdalen College, Oxford University. After attending and graduating from Harvard Law School, he served in private practice briefly, and then in the Attorney General’s office in New Hampshire, eventually becoming Attorney General in 1976. In 1978, he was named an Associate Justice of the Superior Court of New Hampshire, and was appointed to the Supreme Court of New Hampshire as an Associate Justice in 1983. He became a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit on May 25, 1990. After his confirmation to the Supreme Court in 1990, he served on the Court for more than 19 years.
During his retirement, Souter heard cases on the First Circuit, and he participated in civics education curriculum reform efforts.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
NordVPN’s recently released Linux GUI app makes improving privacy on Linux easier and more accessible, especially for beginners.
The newly chosen Roman Catholic pope, Robert Prevost — Pope Leo XIV — is the first U.S.-born pontiff. Is he also a "registered Republican," as social media posts said?
"SCOOP: Our Turning Point Action team pulled the voting history for Pope Leo XIV," conservative influencer Charlie Kirk wrote May 8 on X. "He's a registered Republican who has voted in Republican primaries when not living abroad. Our data shows he's a strong Republican, and he's pro-life."
Many other X posts called Prevost a "registered Republican."
Prevost, 69, is a registered voter in Will County, Illinois, and cast ballots there over the past 13 years. In Illinois, voters do not register by party affiliation. But they declare a party when voting in a primary, according to an April video by the Illinois State Board of Elections.
"However, you are not tied down or formally registered to this party and are free to vote for another party at a subsequent election," the video says.
The Illinois voter registration application does not ask people to provide a party affiliation.
The Will County clerk’s office sent PolitiFact Robert Prevost’s voter information, which lists his party affiliation as "undeclared." It shows that he voted in the 2012, 2014 and 2016 Republican primaries. He voted absentee in the 2024 general election, with an undeclared party affiliation.
The viral screenshots Kirk and others shared on X are from L2, a paywalled database that aggregates consumer and voter data. L2’s profile of Prevost lists "Republican" in its "party" field.
It is unclear how L2 determines a party affiliation for people who live in states such as Illinois where this information is not included in voter registration. L2 did not respond to PolitiFact’s request for comment.
🚨 🚨 🚨 New Pope is a registered REPUBLICAN! pic.twitter.com/bj8MH8H2Qs
— Jared Small 💁🏼♀️ (@jaredsmall) May 8, 2025
Prevost, who was born in 1955, grew up in Dolton, Illinois, a Chicago suburb. He was ordained as a priest in 1982, then moved to Peru, where he lived from 1988 through 1998. In 1999, he returned to Chicago to serve as the Prior Provincial of the Augustian Province of "Mother of Good Counsel," which covers the Midwest and Canada.
Prevost’s voter file lists his address to a house owned by his brother, John Prevost. We were unable to determine Robert Prevost’s address or where he was registered to vote before 2012. In 2014, he returned to Peru and served as Bishop of Chiclayo from 2015 to 2023. He then moved to Rome, where he has lived since.
U.S. citizens who live overseas and meet certain criteria can vote absentee while abroad.
We contacted the clerk’s office in Cook County, Illinois — where Chicago is located — to ask whether Prevost has a voter file in that county. The clerk’s office directed us to submit a Freedom of Information Act request for that information; we did so but did not receive an immediate response.
Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, chair of religious studies and political science professor at Northwestern University in the Chicago suburbs, said Prevost’s voting history doesn’t tell the public "much about his views or positions other than that in that particular primary he was inclined toward one or more of the Republican candidates."
X posts said Prevost is a "registered Republican."
Prevost is registered to vote in Illinois; in that state, voters do not register with a party affiliation. However, they declare a party affiliation when voting in a primary. County records show Prevost voted in three Republican primaries from 2012 through 2016, the most recent records we obtained.
Still, the Illinois State Board of Elections says that when voters participate in primaries, they are not formally registered to a party.
No one is registered by party affiliation in Illinois and evidence is scant about Prevost’s voting history over his lifetime.
The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts. We rate it Mostly False.
PolitiFact researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this fact-check.
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In addition to the Whoop 5.0, there is now the Whoop MG. These new wearables can track your pace of aging, heartbeat, blood pressure and more.
Exclusive: PM says he has ambitious plans for partnership and argues Britons have moved on from Brexit
The UK has “ambitious” plans to secure a closer trading partnership with the EU, Keir Starmer has said, as he argued the British public had moved on from Brexit.
Before a UK-EU summit, the prime minister urged people to “look forward, not back” as the country embarked on a new era of its relationship with the bloc.
Continue reading...Can Frank Lampard guide the Sky Blues to Wembley?
A comprehensive analysis in Science Advances reveals that humans have explored less than 0.001% of the deep seafloor -- an area equivalent to merely one-tenth the size of Belgium. Oceanographer Katherine Bell and colleagues at the Ocean Discovery League compiled data from approximately 44,000 deep-sea dives conducted between 1958 and 2024, finding that expeditions have concentrated overwhelmingly around waters near the United States, Japan, and New Zealand. The study exposes significant gaps in ocean exploration, with vast regions -- particularly the Indian Ocean -- remaining virtually untouched by direct observation. Much of the existing dive data remains inaccessible to scientists, locked away by private companies.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
FAA says radar went black due to malfunction at key control facility as officials promise that system will be modernized
Newark airport, one of the main hubs serving the New York City area, suffered another blackout of its air traffic control system, early on Friday morning, according to US aviation regulators – the second in recent weeks of disrupted flights that have become a major concern for passengers.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said that a key air traffic control facility in Philadelphia that guides aircraft in and out of Newark Liberty international airport in New Jersey had a malfunction.
Continue reading...Galdieria extract blue, butterfly pea flower extract and calcium phosphate are three food colors from natural sources the FDA has approved for use in food.
Two addresses in north-west London searched after three other Iranians detained in same investigation last Saturday
A 31-year-old Iranian man has been arrested in north-west London under the National Security Act 2023 as part of a counter-terrorism policing investigation in which three other Iranian men were detained, the Metropolitan police have said.
The man was detained on Friday morning and searches were carried out at two addresses in the area.
Continue reading...In a new interview, the new pope’s brother reveals he ‘knew how to behave’ because he had seen the 2024 hit thriller
Vatican watchers weren’t the only ones consulting the movie Conclave before the pivotal election of a new pope.
The new pontiff himself – Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who took the name Leo XIV – watched the 2024 movie dramatizing the Vatican’s selection process ahead of the sequestration of cardinals that chose him to lead the Catholic church, according to his older brother.
Continue reading...CrowdStrike, the cybersecurity firm that became a household name after causing a massive global IT outage last year, has announced it will cut 5% of its workforce in part due to "AI efficiency." From a report: In a note to staff earlier this week, released in stock market filings in the US, CrowdStrike's chief executive, George Kurtz, announced that 500 positions, or 5% of its workforce, would be cut globally, citing AI efficiencies created in the business. "We're operating in a market and technology inflection point, with AI reshaping every industry, accelerating threats, and evolving customer needs," he said. Kurtz said AI "flattens our hiring curve, and helps us innovate from idea to product faster," adding it "drives efficiencies across both the front and back office. AI is a force multiplier throughout the business," he said. Other reasons for the cuts included market demand for sustained growth and expanding the product offering.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Superfoods are nutrient-dense foods that offer various health benefits. Here is everything you need to know about incorporating them into your diet.
Trump administration understood to have pushed for requirements to be attached to deal in effort to freeze out Chinese steel
The US deal on steel tariffs imposes conditions on the “nature of ownership” of British plants as part of its efforts to freeze out Chinese steel, it has emerged.
It is understood Donald Trump’s administration pushed for requirements to be attached to the steel deal to ensure that the Chinese-owned British Steel plant in Scunthorpe was not used by Beijing as a backdoor to circumvent US tariffs.
Continue reading...Any Trump administration efforts to send non-Libyans to the north African country would violate a prior court order
Immigrants in Texas who were told they would be deported to Libya sat on a military airfield tarmac for hours on Wednesday, unsure of what would happen next, an attorney for one of the men has said.
The attorney, Tin Thanh Nguyen, told the news agency Reuters that his client, a Vietnamese construction worker from Los Angeles, was among the immigrants woken in the early morning hours and bussed from an immigration detention center in Pearsall, Texas, to an airfield where a military aircraft awaited them.
Continue reading...Prog rockers score seventh No 1 album with recording of Italian gig, extending their chart run following final studio album The Endless River in 2014
A recording of Pink Floyd’s eerie and evocative 1972 gig in the ruins of Pompeii, entitled Pink Floyd at Pompeii – MCMLXXII, has become the band’s seventh UK chart-topping album.
The album captures the gig that was documented by director Adrian Maben for one of rock’s most arresting concert films, which has been restored to 4K quality and rereleased in cinemas, including in Imax format. A recording of the gig was previously included as part of a larger Pink Floyd box set, but this is the first standalone version, featuring a new sound mix helmed by prog rock musician Steven Wilson.
Continue reading...Simon Clarke says ‘pipeline of future voters is dead’ as party figures warn Kemi Badenoch her job as leader is in danger
The Conservative party is fighting to justify its existence amid concerns that its pipeline of future voters is “completely dead”, a former cabinet minister and leading thinktank director has said.
Simon Clarke, an ally of Boris Johnson who backed Kemi Badenoch for the leadership last year, was among a string of former Tory ministers and serving MPs to tell the Guardian she faced removal by her party if she did not turn its fortunes around by next year’s local elections.
Continue reading...Pope faced questions about his handling of clerical sexual abuse cases earlier in his career after a survivors group filed a complaint
Groups supporting clergy-molestation survivors say they are gravely concerned and insulted by the election of Pope Leo XIV after he overcame questions about his handling of clerical sexual abuse cases earlier in his career to become the Roman Catholic church’s first-ever US-born leader.
Before Robert Prevost’s ascent to the papacy at age 69, he was leading a chapter of the Augustinian religious order in his home town of Chicago when allegations surfaced that a priest and Catholic high school principal under his jurisdiction had molested at least one student as well as kept child-abuse imagery.
Continue reading...May 9, 2025 — Luxembourg’s Ministry of the Economy and the Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR), together with Luxinnovation, are launching a new joint call for projects in the fields of high-performance computing (HPC) and/or artificial intelligence (AI). This initiative aims to support companies and public research institutions working on projects in these domains.
This call for projects primarily targets private-sector stakeholders with strong R&D capabilities but limited in-house experience in artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC). By encouraging collaborations between public research and industry, the objective of the call is to support these companies in exploring, adopting, and integrating cutting-edge AI and HPC technologies into their operations, thereby accelerating innovation and boosting long-term competitiveness.
It is also a strategic priority of the FNR to turn public research into a competitive advantage for Luxembourg and to give researchers the opportunity to pursue high-impact research strategies while working with the most innovative private actors. The aim is to raise general awareness of the use of AI and HPC in companies’ R&D activities and to support a sustainable evolution towards a relevant and well-developed ecosystem.
The development of innovations along with the broader adoption of digital technologies and the fostering of a collaborative ecosystem, supporting technology and knowledge transfer among private and public actors, are key priorities of the government’s strategy to accelerate digital sovereignty. AI and HPC are the technological backbone of the national ambitions of Luxembourg.
This joint call for projects will be accompanied by a dedicated portfolio of aid schemes offered by the Ministry of the Economy, which takes into account the varying levels of AI and HPC expertise among private actors.
The HPC-AI Joint Call aims to:
Call Topics
This joint call focuses on R&D initiatives in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and High-Performance Computing (HPC), with particular emphasis on the following application areas:
Eligibility criteria and further information about the joint call can be found here.
To facilitate the emergence of projects and to support interested actors in their efforts, Luxinnovation, the national agency for the promotion of innovation, has set up an online platform where companies and public research actors are invited to submit their project outline from now to June 18, 2025 in a first phase.
In a second phase, from July 21 to September 17, full project proposal (FPP) must then be submitted by each project participant either to the Ministry of the Economy (Myguichet platform) for companies and to FNR (FNR Grant system) for accredited research organizations.
A webinar will be organized on May 15, 2025. It will present the objectives of the Joint Call AI – HPC as well as the process of preparing applications, followed by a Q&A session. Information and registration: https://joint-calls.research-industry-collaboration.lu/joint-call-high-performance-computing.
Source: Luxembourg Ministry of the Economy
The post Luxembourg Launches Joint AI-HPC Call to Boost Industry–Research Collaboration appeared first on HPCwire.
The Polish prime minister criticised anyone seen ‘applauding President Putin’ at today’s Moscow parade
Let’s bring you some more pictures from the Moscow parade earlier today, a not very subtle attempt as showing off the Russian military power.
French president Emmanuel Macron posted a social media update on his last night’s phone call with US president Donald Trump.
I spoke several times last night with @POTUS.
I commend his strong call for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire, as did our British and Nordic partners earlier this morning.
Continue reading...Rising tensions resurface Pakistan’s credibility problem– and India’s backfiring policy on Kashmir Expert comment jon.wallace
The Pahalgam terror attack has returned Kashmir to the international agenda. But a history of flawed policy means neither country can claim moral authority on the region.
Tensions between India and Pakistan are fast escalating, following the terrorist attack that killed 26 Indian tourists near Pahalgam in India-administered Kashmir on 22 April – and subsequent military action by India against alleged terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir on 7 May. But two stark realities have emerged as hostilities have grown, exposing the limits of each party’s ability to gain leverage over its rival.
The first pertains to Pakistan’s enduring credibility problem created by allegations that the country has historic connections with acts of terrorism abroad, especially in Indian-administered Kashmir. The second relates to India’s frustrated attempts to ‘marginalize’ Pakistan internationally and – as an extension of that policy – to revoke Kashmir’s special status and de-list it as a disputed territory. Both issues have resurfaced as hostilities have gained momentum.
Within hours of the attack, India announced – without evidence – that the gunmen had ‘cross-border’ links to Pakistan and threatened retaliation. India also suspended its water-sharing agreement with Pakistan under the 1960 Indus Water Treaty (IWT), downgraded its diplomatic representation in Pakistan, revoked Indian visas for Pakistani nationals, and sealed off all border crossings.
The measures triggered strong condemnation in Pakistan, which angrily rejected India’s allegations of involvement in the terrorist attack. Islamabad announced that it was withdrawing from the 1972 Simla Agreement with India, which committed both parties to the bilateral settlement of all outstanding issues, including the Kashmir dispute.
But in a move that was clearly intended to defuse tension, Pakistan subsequently offered to participate in ‘any neutral, transparent and credible investigation’ into the attack at Pahalgam – a proposal that appears to be supported by the United States.
However, the gesture was rejected as a ‘ploy’ by India. New Delhi cited the fate of earlier investigations, notably into the 2008 Mumbai attacks. India believes it provided ‘irrefutable evidence’ of Pakistani involvement to that investigation, only for the findings to be buried and the perpetrators offered protection by Islamabad. Pakistan strongly denied any state involvement in the attack.
But Indian claims that Pakistan has been reluctant to pursue terrorist groups and their leaders operating beyond its borders may have some foundation. Previous links with terror groups have been acknowledged by Pakistani officials:
In an interview with Sky News, Pakistan’s Defence Minister, Khawaja Asif, while insisting that no collusion exists with the group that carried out the Pahalgam attacks, appeared to concede that Pakistan had harboured links to terrorist groups over many decades in the past – albeit in the service of doing the West’s ‘dirty work’.
The senior opposition leader from the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), Bilawal Bhutto, has also acknowledged that Pakistan ‘has a past as far as extremist groups are concerned’.
President Claudia Sheinbaum says lawsuit has been filed after US lawmakers voted on name change
Mexico has sued Google for changing the Gulf of Mexico’s name to “Gulf of America” for Google Maps users in the United States, Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico’s president, said on Friday.
“The lawsuit has already been filed,” Sheinbaum said at her morning news conference, without saying where and when it was submitted.
Continue reading...Enjoy 4K, Ultra HD detail on the biggest of screens with some of the best projectors we've ever tested.
An anonymous reader shares a report: Panasonic will undertake a major restructuring across a range of its business, including consumer electronics, cutting 10,000 jobs globally, as the Japanese company plans to streamline, spinning out struggling divisions in hopes of reversing its dwindling market share and fending off fierce Chinese competition. Panasonic did not say which businesses it intended to shrink. The company expects to book structural reform costs of roughly $900 million this business year. Panasonic ended the fiscal year
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Prince Albert Jacob feels disappointed in continued ignorance of role many non-whites played in war effort
“Most black people went overboard and tried hard to make sure that they did their best for Britain,” says Prince Albert Jacob, a 99-year-old veteran from Trinidad who joined the RAF in 1943.
In a London hotel lobby, after a busy week of VE Day celebrations, Jacob describes feeling disappointed at findings from a recent survey that showed British people remained largely unaware of the black and Asian contribution to the second world war.
Continue reading...The University of North Carolina on Friday denied reports that Jordon Hudson, the girlfriend of head football coach Bill Belichick, has been banned from its football facilities.
“While Jordon Hudson is not an employee at the University or Carolina Athletics, she is welcome to the Carolina Football facilities,” an athletic department spokesperson said in a statement. “Jordon will continue to manage all activities related to Coach Belichick’s personal brand outside of his responsibilities for Carolina Football and the University.”
Continue reading...Moscow stages largest Victory Day parade since start of Ukraine war with Putin using celebrations to justify invasion
Russian troops fighting in Ukraine have marched with Chinese forces on Moscow’s Red Square to mark the 80th anniversary of Nazi Germany’s defeat in a Victory Day celebration marked by greater spectacle than in recent years.
After several scaled-back Victory Days – with reduced military displays and few foreign guests – Vladimir Putin on Friday addressed the largest parade since his 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Continue reading...The bear was one of four cubs that emerged in 2020 with their mother, Grizzly No. 399, who was often called the world's most famous grizzly bear.
CBS News is tracking a outbreak of measles in West Texas that has led to the deaths of two children and a growing number of cases around the country.
Do these things ASAP to use the latest rate decision to your advantage.
Parenthood is becoming a lot more expensive with President Trump's tariffs on China and other countries.
Retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter was a steady member of the high court's liberal wing during his tenure despite being appointed by a Republican president.
Pope Leo XIV gave a homily at a Mass a day after he was chosen to lead the Catholic Church. Here's what the new pontiff said, and what he's up to in the coming days.
On the high court from 1990 to 2009, he saw his role as one of quiet resistance against excess and dramatic change.
The firings are his administration’s latest test to the limits of presidential power over independent agencies.
The Trump administration has raised the idea of privatizing the nearly 250-year-old Postal Service.
An anonymous reader shares a report: Major tech companies lobbying to salvage a tax deduction for research and development are warning they may pull back from high-profile pledges of new US investments if Congress doesn't fully reinstate the break. Big tech companies have pledged more than $1.6 trillion in investments in the US since Donald Trump took office, promising to build factories and data centers in alignment with Trump's push to build in America. But industry representatives are signaling those promises will be imperiled if Congress doesn't fully reinstate the R&D tax deduction, which was pared back to help offset the massive cost of President Donald Trump's 2017 bill. At the time, it was estimated that limiting the provision would temporarily raise about $120 billion from 2018 to 2027. "A lot of those announcements are predicated on an expectation the administration and Congress will partner together on reinstating those R&D provisions," said Jason Oxman, president of the Information Technology Industry Council, a trade group that includes among its members Amazon, Apple, Anthropic, Alphabet, and IBM. Lobbyists representing tech companies that announced US investments have made similar claims to congressional aides and lawmakers, according to people familiar with the conversations.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Washington state and Oregon forest and fire officials say Trump funding cuts make wildfire prevention planning a challenge.
The United States has granted refugee status to 54 white Afrikaner South Africans, with their...
The post U.S. Grants Refugee Status to 54 White Afrikaner South Africans Under Trump Executive Order appeared first on News Facts Network.
Dubbed the "Butcher of Lyon" for his wartime torture of prisoners, former Gestapo chief Klaus Barbi fled to South America after the end of World War II.
The FDA is warning the public about "gas station heroin," or products that contain tianeptine, an opioid alternative prescribed as an antidepressant in some countries.
Robert Fico and Aleksandar Vučić accept Vladimir Putin’s invitation to attend Victory Day celebrations
Despite warnings from European Union officials, Slovakia’s Moscow-friendly prime minister, Robert Fico, shook hands with Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin before becoming the only EU leader to attend Russia’s 9 May parade of military forces waging war on Ukraine.
The Serbian president, Aleksandar Vučić, whose country aspires to join the 27-nation union, also accepted the Russian president’s invitation to attend the annual Victory Day celebrations marking the defeat of Nazi Germany in the second world war.
Continue reading...Pocketpair says it's continuing to evolve its monster-collecting game, even as it strips out features that may be too similar to the Pokemon franchise it parodies.
Dylan Tippetts of Plymouth resigns from party ‘that does not support my fundamental rights’
One of Labour’s only transgender councillors has resigned from the party, accusing it of “throwing trans people under the bus”.
In a post on X on Friday morning, Dylan Tippetts, who has represented Compton ward on Plymouth city council since 2022, wrote: “I cannot continue to represent a party that does not support my fundamental rights. I cannot as a trans person continue to support the Labour party.”
Continue reading...Do these things ASAP to use the Fed's latest decision to your advantage.
If you redeem your bonus for travel, you're looking at an extra $1,250 off your next trip.
Explosions heard in Indian Kashmir as witnesses say attacks are heavier than those reported on Thursday
Pakistan has been accused of launching a fresh wave of drone strikes against India, with projectiles reported over the states of Indian-administered Kashmir and Punjab.
Early on Saturday morning, a spokesperson for the Pakistan army said India had fired ballistic missiles that fell in Indian territory, making the claim in an unscheduled television broadcast at 1.50am local time.
Continue reading...The specialized role of prompt engineering, not long ago heralded as a promising new career path in AI, has virtually disappeared just two years after its emergence. Many companies are now considering strong AI prompting a standard skill rather than a dedicated position, Fast Company reports, with some firms even deploying AI systems to generate optimal prompts for other AI tools. "AI is already eating its own," Malcolm Frank, CEO of TalentGenius, told the publication. "Prompt engineering has become something that's embedded in almost every role, and people know how to do it. It's turned from a job into a task very, very quickly." The prompt engineer's decline serves as a case study for the broader AI job market, where evidence suggests AI is primarily reshaping existing careers rather than creating entirely new ones. Further reading: 'AI Prompt Engineering Is Dead.'
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
ISS and Glass Lewis concerned new long-term bonus could reward bosses regardless of performance
Metro Bank is at risk of a shareholder backlash, after two influential shareholder advisers warned over a complex bonus scheme that could hand chief executive Daniel Frumkin a £60m windfall.
ISS and Glass Lewis – both prominent proxy advisory services that suggest how shareholders should vote on company policies at annual meetings – are concerned that the new long-term bonus will be linked to the bank’s share price, which may climb regardless of how well bosses run the lender.
Continue reading...The White House is expected to send Congress a rescissions package in the coming days, looking to claw back congressionally approved funding.
John Prevost told "CBS Mornings" he found out his brother was the next pope with everyone else – after hearing his name announced on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica on TV.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy tells "CBS Mornings" it will take months to restore normal operations at Newark Liberty International Airport.
Teal Health, the maker of an at-home cervical cancer screening test, says it will give patients an alternative to in-clinic pap smears.
Exclusive: Act found to be failing as hostile immigration policies deter trafficking victims from seeking help
Modern slavery victims are choosing to stay with their exploiters rather than access government support designed to protect them for fear of immigration enforcement, research has found.
The independent anti-slavery commissioner, Eleanor Lyons, said the system was “deeply broken”.
Continue reading...The Denmark prime minister's comments come a day after the top American diplomat in the country was summoned for an explanation of reports of U.S. intelligence gathering in Greenland.
Games like Roblox are played by millions of children globally – but some researchers warn dark design patterns embedded in them are difficult to avoid
Over the last decade, Dean has amassed a healthy collection of video games, from smash hits to cult classics. His digital library is like a modern day Blockbuster, all readily accessible with just a click or two. But his son, Sam, has eyes for only one video game: Roblox, the behemoth virtual universe-slash-video game that’s among the most popular on the planet.
The company reports that more than 97 million people log on to Roblox every day. Around 40% of those are, like Sam, under 13 years of age. In 2024, Roblox generated around A$5.6bn (US$3.6bn) in revenue, largely through purchases of “Robux”, its virtual currency, with the average user dropping around A$25 per month.
Continue reading...Already vulnerable from the pandemic and gentrification, Chinatown’s immigrant-run businesses now face a trade war
On a balmy afternoon last month, Amy Tran unboxed a delivery at Yue Wa Market, a small grocery and herbal medicine shop in Los Angeles’s Chinatown that she opened 17 years ago.
The package contained two dozen units of Shou Wu Chih, a Chinese herbal concoction known to rebuild kidney function and promote hair health. The shipment arrived two weeks after the US implemented new tariffs on Chinese imports, so her distributor charged her $115, a $35 markup from her previous order.
Continue reading...See how Factor's prepared meal delivery fared in a taste test at our New York office.
Souter was a New Hampshire Republican who became a darling of liberals during his nearly 20 years on the bench
Retired supreme court Justice David H Souter, the ascetic bachelor and New Hampshire Republican who became a darling of liberals during his nearly 20 years on the bench, has died. He was 85.
Souter died on Thursday at his home in New Hampshire, the court said in a statement Friday. John Roberts, the chief justice, said Souter, who retired from the court in 2009, “brought uncommon wisdom and kindness to a lifetime of public service”.
Continue reading...Ukrainian security services claimed to have uncovered a Hungarian spy ring gathering information about military activities in Ukraine’s western Transcarpathia region.
Struggling with unpaid medical bills? There may be strategies you can use to help erase what you owe.
Site likely to create 1,000-plus jobs as AESC wins £680m from UK government plus £320m in private finance and equity
The owner of the UK’s only operating gigafactory has secured £1bn in funding for a new electric car battery plant in Sunderland, in a government-backed deal that secures the future of a key project for the struggling British car industry.
The funding will allow Japan’s AESC to install tooling and start production of batteries at the site, which is being built to serve Nissan’s car factory down the road. More than 1,000 people are expected to be employed there.
Continue reading...Our tech expert is back with an updated guide to the top-tier Android phones, from budget buys to the best for battery life
Need an Android phone, but not sure which to go for, or whether to buy new or refurbished? With lots to consider, view me as your guide as you trek through the process of picking the best handset for you.
The latest flagship Android phones come in various sizes, at different prices, and with varying hardware and software features, all powered by the fastest chips. Whether your priority is battery life, camera, screen size, software support or value for money, there is more to choose from than ever. But if you’re thinking of buying Apple instead, we have a guide for iPhones, too.
Best Android for most people:
Google Pixel 9
£621.96 at Amazon
Best Android for camera:
Google Pixel 9 Pro
From £999 at Carphone Warehouse
Best Android for battery life and big screen:
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra
From £1,099 at Samsung
Best small Android:
Samsung Galaxy S25
From £699 at Samsung
Best value Android:
Google Pixel 9a
£499 at John Lewis
Caught in the middle: Iraq’s positioning in US-Iran tensions 5 June 2025 — 6:00PM TO 7:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
A panel of experts examine Iraq’s balancing act amid changing US-Iran dynamics.
A panel of experts and policymakers (if Hickey joins especially) examine Iraq’s balancing act amid changing US-Iran dynamics.
In recent years, Iraq has managed to maintain a degree of insulation from turbulence in the Middle East. Despite ongoing US-Iran tensions, the fallout of Israel’s war in Gaza and against the axis of resistance, regime change in Syria, and global economic upheavals, Iraq has maintained a precarious stability. But a convergence of challenges is testing Iraq’s ability to safeguard this fragile balance.
With US-Iran negotiations at a critical juncture, Baghdad once again finds itself caught between two strategic partners whose competition frequently plays out on Iraqi soil. Meanwhile, the cancellation of US energy waivers could severely impact Iraq’s electricity imports from Iran, threatening widespread blackouts just as summer temperatures soar – an unwelcome backdrop to brewing public discontent and looming national parliamentary elections.
Externally, Iraq’s rentier economic model – heavily reliant on oil exports – faces new pressure from shifting global trade dynamics and the rise of protectionist policies. Compounding this, the impact of regime change in Syria creates potential for militant groups to regroup and re-enter Iraq’s porous western border, threatening a hard-won security equilibrium.
This session will explore key questions including:
By registering for this event, attendees agree to our Code of Conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.
The Minnesota Timberwolves were stewing over their rough start in Game 1 against Golden State, a reaction coach Chris Finch was pleased to see.
Julius Randle had 24 points and 11 assists to help the Timberwolves capitalize on Warriors star Stephen Curry’s absence in a 117-93 victory Thursday that tied the second-round series at a game apiece.
Continue reading...While Putin hosted several world leaders, European ministers gathered in Ukraine to announce the formation of a war crimes tribunal targeting Russian officials.
Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang has served up another blunt take on the job market as AI permeates society. From a report: "You will not lose your job to AI, but will lose it to someone who uses it," Huang said at the Milken Institute Conference. Added Huang, "I recommend 100% take advantage of AI, don't be that person."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
PALO ALTO, Calif., May 9, 2025 — D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS), a leader in commercial quantum computing systems, software, and services, today announced financial results for its first quarter ended March 31, 2025.
“The first quarter of 2025 was arguably the most significant in D-Wave’s history, especially in terms of our unique ability to deliver quantum value today to our customers and the scientific community,” said Dr. Alan Baratz, CEO of D-Wave. “We recognized revenue on our first Advantage system sale to a major research institution, moved an additional customer application into commercial production, and became the first to demonstrate quantum supremacy over classical computing on a useful real-world problem. The end result was a record revenue and gross profit quarter.”
First Quarter Fiscal 2025 Financial Highlights
Balance Sheet and Liquidity
As of March 31, 2025, D-Wave’s consolidated cash balance totaled a record $304.3 million. During the first fiscal quarter of 2025, the Company raised $146.2 million in net proceeds through its third At-The-Market (ATM) program.
As of March 31, 2025, the Company had $37.8 million in available issuance capacity under the Equity Line of Credit (the “ELOC”) with Lincoln Park Capital Fund, LLC, with the investment commitment running through October 2025. D-Wave’s ability to raise additional funds under the ELOC is subject to a number of conditions including having a sufficient number of registered shares and D-Wave’s stock price being above $1.00 per share.
About D-Wave Quantum Inc.
D-Wave is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum computing systems, software, and services. We are the world’s first commercial supplier of quantum computers, and the only company building both annealing and gate-model quantum computers. Our mission is to help customers realize the value of quantum, today. Our 5,000+ qubit Advantage quantum computers, the world’s largest, are available on-premises or via the cloud, supported by 99.9% availability and uptime. More than 100 organizations trust D-Wave with their toughest computational challenges. With over 200 million problems submitted to our Advantage systems and Advantage2 prototypes to date, our customers apply our technology to address use cases spanning optimization, artificial intelligence, research and more.
Source: D-Wave Quantum
The post D-Wave Reports 1st Quarter 2025 Results appeared first on HPCwire.
Hey all trying to get ready to do a empty Hub on my pint V and trying to get everything ready because I'm doing a lot of upgrades all at the same time. Does the Hub come with a valve stem or do I need to purchase it separately? Already have my stator pulled from my old hub and have a new tire for the new Hub on the way as well. Getting new bearings pressed in at the float life prior to shipping. Also got some leak stop shipping as well. Anything else I'm missing or should worry about?
Move comes after US president withdraws nomination of Ed Martin, GOP loyalist who supported January 6 pardons
Donald Trump said on Thursday he would name Jeanine Pirro, a Fox News host and former local prosecutor, to be the interim US attorney for the District of Columbia after a key Republican senator said he would not support the candidate initially selected for the job.
Pirro, who spent more than a decade as district attorney of Westchester county, New York, is a diehard Trump supporter and supporter of his baseless claim that the 2020 election was rigged. Dominion Voting Systems cited false statements she made on air in their lawsuit against the network.
Continue reading...Analysts say the news boosts business confidence, helps an EU trade reset and shows the UK is a good place to invest – but it’s unlikely to turbo-charge GDP
You wait three years for a trade deal and then two come along at once.
As of Monday, the UK had not announced a free trade agreement since 2022, when Boris Johnson’s government signed one with New Zealand, ranked 52nd among global economies.
Continue reading...So I probably shoulda asked when I got the board cuz I already have a few hundred miles on it. Is there a way to reset the miles on your board? I got a GT last month with about 900 miles on it. And I always know when I want my miles I just gotta do math but is there anyway to reset the miles so I could just start from Zero. I guess either way I have to do math now but still thought I should ask.
Meetings between President Donald Trump and foreign leaders can be tense or bruising affairs. But when Trump invited Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele to the White House in April, it was all smiles as they joked about mass incarceration.
“Sometimes they say that we imprisoned thousands — I like to say that we actually liberated millions,” Bukele told reporters, referring to his so-called war on gangs in El Salvador.
Trump responded glowingly to Bukele’s remarks. “Who gave him that line?” he said. “You think I could use that?” — which drew scattered laughter from the room.
“And in fact, Mr. President, you have 350 million people to liberate,” Bukele responded, in reference to the U.S. population. “To liberate 350 million people, you have to imprison some.”
In Bukele, Trump has found a partner for his anti-immigrant agenda — and also a world leader similarly willing to not just normalize the deprivation of rights and suspension of the rule of law, but also celebrate it. As Trump flouts court orders and floats ideas like reopening San Francisco’s Alcatraz, the former prison island, for “the dregs of society, who will never contribute anything other than Misery and Suffering,” it’s hard not to see Bukele’s influence.
Bukele, in March 2022, declared a state of emergency in El Salvador, suspending most civil rights, including due process to imprison at least 85,000 people who the government accused of being gang members. While the crackdown greatly reduced homicide rates and the decadeslong grip of gangs on Salvadorans, thousands who had no association with gangs were dragged into custody. Many have been beaten, tortured, or even killed. Even so, Bukele’s popularity soared. He has used this moment to further erode El Salvador’s democratic institutions, expanding his grip on power. In 2024, Salvadorans reelected Bukele to an unconstitutional second term.
Central to Bukele’s ability to justify his war on gangs to the public has been the opening of the Terrorism Confinement Center, a megaprison in Tecoluca, El Salvador, with an inmate capacity of 40,000. When the prison, known by its Spanish acronym CECOT, received its first 2,000 inmates in 2023, Bukele released polished promotional videos of guards rushing shirtless, shackled, tattooed men into the megaprison’s massive cell blocks. Once imprisoned, people incarcerated there are denied any access to the outside world.
On March 15, the Trump administration used a wartime powers law, the Alien Enemies Act, to deny due process rights for more than 250 Venezuelan and Salvadoran immigrants, flying them to El Salvador to be imprisoned in CECOT. Both Trump and Bukele have claimed the men are members of gangs Tren de Aragua and MS-13.
The move drew widespread outrage with criticism coalescing around the case of one of the disappeared men, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland resident and father of three, who the Trump administration had accidentally sent to El Salvador because of an apparent administrative error. The Supreme Court ordered Abrego Garcia’s return to the U.S. in a rare 9-0 ruling. Democratic lawmakers conducted trips to El Salvador to push for his release, including Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who was granted an unlikely one-hour meeting with Abrego Garcia last month.
Trump doubled down, promising that Abrego Garcia would never be allowed a return to the U.S., making the dubious claim that Abrego Garcia is a member of MS-13, despite having fled El Salvador as a teenager out of fear of violence from the gang. The Trump administration said it still hopes to imprison immigrants in CECOT and has even floated the idea of incarcerating U.S. citizens there.
Bukele has framed his $6 million deal with the White House to imprison immigrants in CECOT as a way to help a strong ally in the U.S. But he has also seized the moment for his own political gain, continuing to champion his anti-gang narrative within El Salvador.
Hours after the transfer, Bukele once again promoted his megaprison with a similarly dramatized video documenting the men’s arrival from the U.S. “This will help us finalize intelligence gathering and go after the last remnants of MS-13,” Bukele wrote alongside the video. “As always, we continue advancing in the fight against organized crime.”
“Not unlike Trump, he starts a fire to distract you from the fire he just started.”
Like other megaprisons, such as the U.S. government’s Guantánamo Bay detention center where 9/11 suspects have been abused and tortured for more than two decades, Bukele uses CECOT to project power over Salvadorans. Unlike at American black sites, however, Bukele eagerly shares images of prison guards dehumanizing men incarcerated there. But what the public can see — men covered head to toe in tattoos forced into tight rows with their heads bowed — are intended as a distraction from the more everyday cruelty of disappearing thousands of innocent civilians into El Salvador’s shadowy prisons, said Salvadoran human rights activists and journalists who have documented and opposed Bukele’s rise to authoritarian power.
Bukele has referred to the men incarcerated in CECOT as “terrorists” pulled from El Salvador’s streets, even as many of those shown in government images of the prison were likely arrested prior to Bukele’s presidency, rights activists said. They said that while Abrego Garcia’s case and the cases of those transferred from the U.S. to CECOT deserves attention, they are just a small slice of an unfathomable number of people deprived of due process and disappeared within El Salvador’s prison system.
While CECOT has been the most visible prison in the country, the majority of those arrested in the past three years under the state of emergency have been imprisoned at other facilities, according to human rights groups. CECOT is one of 22 facilities within the country’s vast network of prisons that have been expanding over the past decade. While the government has opened up CECOT to international media and American conservative lawmakers, Bukele has kept most of his prisons out of sight.
“CECOT is what the Bukele regime wants you to see, because they will not show you the images of Mariona, they will not show you the images of Izalco, they will not show you the images of Apanteos,” said Salvadoran journalist Nelson Rauda Zablah, listing the country’s older prisons rife with documented cases of torture, abuse, and death.
“When you’re paying attention to his narrative, that’s not a game you want to be playing, because, not unlike Trump, he starts a fire to distract you from the fire he just started,” he added.
In 2021, Bukele upended El Salvador’s judicial system by replacing top Supreme Court judges and hundreds of lower court judges with loyalists and ousted the country’s attorney general who had opposed his policies. To the public, Bukele framed the moves as anti-corruption measures, referring to the governmental system as “Los mismos de siempre,” or, “The same as always,” reminiscent of Trump’s “Drain the swamp” slogan of his first term.
In March 2022, an apparent pact with the country’s gang leaders collapsed, leading to a surge in gang-related homicides. Around that time, pro-democracy opposition groups began to show force with mass protests against Bukele. No longer with judicial constraints, Bukele responded by shepherding a new law through the country’s legislature that declared a state of emergency. The law, known as the State of Exception, suspended many civil rights, including due process, legal representation, and freedom of assembly. He then mobilized police and military into largely low-income neighborhoods controlled by gangs.
Among those caught in the police and military forces’ wide dragnet have been family members of alleged gang members, charged as accomplices, along with many others who have no gang ties and were wrongfully charged, according to human rights groups. Most arrests took place without a warrant. In jail, detainees take part in group hearings where hundreds are charged at once with no ability to speak with a lawyer beforehand.
Police, often operating on quotas, arrested hundreds based on appearance, social class, or vague grounds, such as “suspicious appearance,” “nervous appearance,” or “anonymous reports,” according to an investigation by El Faro, the country’s foremost investigative news outlet.
Much like the case of Abrego Garcia and the others illegally transferred from the U.S., the majority of those arrested during the State of Exception, have been without communication with attorneys or family members.
At least 378 in-custody deaths have been recorded since the start of the State of Exception, according to Salvadoran human rights group Cristosal, largely due to lack of medical care and the denial of food, water, or hygiene. At times, such deaths have been combined with physical signs of assault.
“There’s a fixation on Kilmar Abrego, but the Bukele model is built upon Kilmar Abregos — there are thousands of them, and we’ve told their stories,” said Rauda Zablah, the digital editor of El Faro, which has published accounts of torture inside El Salvador’s prisons.
Among such stories is the case of 64-year-old businessman Francisco Huezo López, who was imprisoned in the early days of the State of Exception in 2022. López, who spent much of his life in the U.S., disappeared after police called him into a station for an interview, according to El Faro. Police arrested López because of a previous charge that accused him of being associated with a gang, for which he was acquitted in 2021. Two months later, his body — which had signs of trauma wounds to the cheekbone, arms, feet, and head — was returned to his family from Mariona prison. A forensic investigation listed the cause of death as pulmonary edema, a commonly cited cause in prison deaths where signs of abuse or torture were present.
During the first year of the State of Exception, Cristosal documented 159 deaths in prison in a 2023 report. Among those, 28 were considered violent, due to signs of torture, beatings, asphyxiation by strangulation, and other injuries.
El Salvador’s director of prisons Osiris Luna Meza spoke openly about making people “suffer” in prisons, such as withholding meals and preventing people from getting sunlight.
Cristosal recorded the death of a 23-year-old man whose body showed signs of beatings, such as broken feet and hands, the report said, as well as sores on his back in an elongated burn-like shape, a possible sign of torture. His body was delivered to family in a closed casket.
A 24-year-old fisherman died in an ambulance while on the way from Mariona prison to a hospital. His body had a perforation through one of his shoulders and lacerations on his knees, though the official cause of death was “pulmonary edema.” His wife, who was five months pregnant at the time of his death, suffered a miscarriage while grieving.
Some individuals died of medical neglect, such as a 42-year-old woman who died of “septic shock due to immunosuppression caused by nasal carcinoma” — her family said they were unaware that she had cancer. “Her body was unrecognizable, she had lost approximately 40 pounds,” the report said. She had been arrested due to an anonymous complaint.
A 24-year-old man who had no history of illnesses called his family from Mariona prison, seven months after he was detained. Except now, he complained of stomachaches. At a hospital, physicians said the man was malnourished, dehydrated, and deeply anemic. After family members petitioned on his behalf, he was allowed to return home but was diagnosed with terminal kidney failure. He died several days later at home. He had told a relative that the water at Mariona was hot and tasted like chlorine, and that detainees were only fed once a day — when guards would strike them on the back. “So I stopped going out to eat so they wouldn’t hit me, because those blows hurt,” the man recalled.
The 2023 report also included accounts of collective torture, such as guards beating people who had recently arrived to prisons. Guards also reportedly used electric shocks as another form of torture. Some recalled being forced to watch as guards beat another individual to death.
A separate 2022 report by Humans Rights Watch recorded a case of Marcelo Gómez, a taxi driver detained by police who assured him it was for a routine check and that he would be released in a few days. The 39-year-old Gómez ended up being jailed at Izalco for two weeks, during which he was placed in a barrel filled with cold water while guards interrogated him for hours about alleged gang ties. During some points, guards forced his head underwater.
Those who were incarcerated also spoke of extreme overcrowding, with many forced to take turns sleeping. Cells in Mariona and Izalco prisons are known to be small with covered windows, preventing airflow amid 90-degree temperatures, causing some to faint.
In an apparent effort to sell the ongoing State of Exception to the world, last year, the Salvadoran government opened up CECOT to international mainstream media outlets and social media influencers (requests by Salvadoran journalists critical of Bukele have been rejected). Among its early visitors was former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, Trump’s original pick for head of the Department of Justice.
The prison’s director walks reporters and influencers through the same choreographed tours, showing CECOT’s thick layers of security, its armory, a solitary confinement cell, the meager meal given to inmates, and the main cell block itself. The CECOT director often repeats the ominous line that once an inmate enters CECOT, they never leave. Visitors walk out of the prison with footage of cells packed with dozens of men, most with visible tattoos across their bodies.
When CNN visited CECOT in November, the first major U.S. news organization allowed inside, reporter David Culver repeated government lines, referring to those incarcerated there as “the worst of the worst,” or the country’s “most dangerous criminals.” The network’s 6-minute segment featured an interview with a former MS-13 member, Marvin Vásquez, imprisoned at CECOT — the same inmate interviewed in most tours. The man lifted his shirt to reveal “MS” tattooed on his stomach and “CC” on his lower back for the “Crazy Criminals” clique Vásquez said he founded in 2011. “You made the clique? You are a gang leader?” Culver said, his eyes widening.
But the vast majority of those incarcerated in CECOT were not among those arrested under Bukele’s recent crackdowns, said Noah Bullock, executive director of Cristosal. Gangs in El Salvador have largely done away with tattooing their members. Cristosal did an analysis of 1,200 people arrested in the State of Exception: 54 had tattoos, and only nine were related to gangs.
“There’s an intentionality to making all the fixation on CECOT,” Bullock said, referring to the tattooed men in CECOT. “The reason for that is to eliminate any shadow of doubt about who is being punished under this, creating the image of the enemy, the monsters, and that plays into the narrative of this is how strongmen deal with ‘the worst of the worst,’ when in fact those are people who were in prison probably even before Bukele was the president.”
After Noticias Telemundo published its own report on CECOT in October 2023, Bukele retweeted the news segment and wrote, “In El Salvador, unlike most Latin American countries, our prisons are clean and orderly; there is no abuse, no unhealthiness, no beatings, no murders.”
“How many people would it have taken for the international community to be concerned about their arbitrary detentions, disappearances, suffering of torture and killings in prisons?”
Over the past month, Bullock has taken dozens of interviews with U.S. and international media outlets eager for a quick translation of CECOT, El Salvador, and Bukele.
Bullock said he has been encouraged that Abrego Garcia’s case has increased the spotlight on Bukele’s authoritarian rule, but he noted that among human rights groups in El Salvador, including organizations founded by family members of people who remain incarcerated under the State of Exception, there is also a sense of frustration.
“It’s hard to help people see that [Abrego Garcia’s] case is symptomatic of a scenario of mass and systematic human rights violations that’s affecting tens of thousands of Salvadorans, and frustration because where was the help before? Where was the interest before?” Bullock said. “How many people would it have taken for the international community to be concerned about their arbitrary detentions, disappearances, suffering of torture and killings in prisons?”
The U.S. media attention that El Salvador received throughout the State of Exception often focused on the security rather than the government’s suspension of rights, Bullock said. The country’s homicide rate fell by 70 percent within the first year of the state of emergency, according to the Salvadoran government. A recent Gallup poll showed that Bukele boasts an approval rating of 83 percent.
The November CNN segment also included footage of military sweeps through a residential community. It highlighted interviews with residents who spoke in favor of Bukele’s crackdowns. The segment failed to mention allegations of human rights violations by the government. For Salvadorans, CECOT is “a symbol of newfound freedom, the ‘new El Salvador,’” Culver said to end the segment. Even when Culver and CNN returned to CECOT in April after the transfer of Abrego Garcia and other immigrants from the U.S., he again closed his segment by repeating the sentiment of “newfound freedom” among Salvadorans.
Such narratives that suggest it was necessary for the government to strip people’s rights in order to create a safer El Salvador, Bullock said, only justifies Bukele’s broader governmental takeover.
The U.S. media isn’t alone in condoning Bukele’s regime. After decrying Bukele’s erosion of democracy, President Joe Biden flipped and began voicing support for El Salvador leading up to Bukele’s unlawful reelection. In June 2024, Biden sent a delegation to Bukele’s inauguration, including his Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. Also present were members of Trump’s circle, including Gaetz, Donald Trump Jr., Utah Sen. Mike Lee, and Kimberly Guilfoyle.
“It’s true that the gangs committed horrific abuses and and those members of gangs who did so need to be held accountable, and it’s a fact that Bukele is very popular, but by allowing him to create this space where there’s no protection of the law, not only Salvadorans are at risk, now Venezuelan migrants are also at risk and U.S. citizens can soon be at risk as well,” said Juan Pappier, the Americas deputy director at Human Rights Watch, who helped write the organization’s recent reports on abuses throughout the State of Exception.
For Lya Cuéllar, a freelance journalist who co-founded Salvadoran feminist publication Alharaca, she has noted the sudden shift among U.S. media in recent weeks, from implicit support for Bukele’s gang war, largely ignoring criticisms from local journalists, to denouncing Bukele’s role in Trump’s deportation machine.
“The framing has always been, ‘This guy managed to make the most homicidal country in the world into one of the most peaceful countries in the world,’” Cuéllar said. “Then I’m seeing this turn around again — ‘When it’s happening to us, when the carceral state that is El Salvador is touching us, we realize that it’s really bad, actually.’ Sorry if I sound a little bitter, but it’s just been a little crazy to me to watch, because it’s something we’ve been warning about the entire time.”
Salvadoran journalists like Cuéllar and Rauda Zablah helped chart Bukele’s rise to power, which was heavily waged through effective disinformation campaigns online with young voters. Bukele and his millionaire father owned advertising agencies that prompted campaigns for the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, or FMLN, the country’s leftist party. With such political and public relations savvy, Bukele relied on social media to boost his popularity. His administration ran a network of government-hired trolls to advocate for his policies, tear down critics, and spread pro-Bukele narratives based on propaganda, according to a Reuters investigation.
While boosting state-owned media, Bukele has targeted privately owned media outlets in the country, launching lawsuits, costly audits, and threats of criminal investigation, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Salvadoran journalists have been surveilled, and at least one journalist has been jailed. Among those targeted has been El Faro, which in 2023 moved its headquarters to Costa Rica to avoid further government attacks, such as accusations of tax evasion. El Faro leadership dismissed the allegations as government fabrications meant to discredit their work that has been adversarial toward Bukele’s policies — from his embrace of bitcoin to corruption and misuse of Covid relief funds.
On Saturday, El Faro’s director of news announced that the attorney general is preparing arrest warrants for some of the publication’s journalists.
“We’re trying to tell people a message that they don’t want to hear.”
“We’re trying to tell people a message that they don’t want to hear — we’re trying to tell them we’ve gone down this route before and it didn’t go well for the people,” Rauda Zablah said. He recalled the last time a Salvadoran leader was reelected was in 1935 with the rise of dictator Maximiliano Hernández Martínez, who committed a genocide against the country’s indigenous peoples.
“You feel safer in the street, which is true,” said Rauda Zablah who lives in San Salvador, “Until you run into some soldier or some police, that you were in the wrong place in the wrong time, and then you realize that there’s no constitutional court independent that you can go to anymore — it’s too late for Salvadorans to worry about checks and balances, that ship has sailed.”
Bukele has used such arrests to silence his critics, which have also included the targeting of human rights advocates, such as the recent arrest of activist Fidel Zavala. He was previously detained under Bukele’s State of Exception for 13 months before he was acquitted. After his release in 2023, Zavala became an outspoken critic of the abuse and torture he witnessed while imprisoned at Mariona prison. Last year, he filed a complaint against Bukele’s director of prisons. Zavala was then arrested in February and in early April transferred to Mariona, where rights groups have warned he may be exposed to retaliation by prison guards.
Perhaps the most significant revelation from Abrego Garcia’s unlikely meeting with Sen. Chris Van Hollen last month, aside from confirming his well-being, was that after several weeks of imprisonment in CECOT, officials had transferred him a two-hour drive northwest to the lesser-known prison Centro Industrial in Santa Ana. In recent years, Bukele’s prison director has propped up Centro Industrial as a manufacturing hub where incarcerated men build school desks and vegetable market display racks, a form of slave labor.
Abrego Garcia’s transfer out of CECOT, the first documented case of its kind, has raised questions of the whereabouts of the other men who were forcibly disappeared from the U.S. to El Salvador.
Even so, the Trump administration has said it wants to continue such illegal transfers. U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem visited CECOT a week after the transfer, recording a message while standing in front of a cell packed with incarcerated men who stood by in silence: “If you come to this country illegally, this is one of the consequences you may face.”
“Know that this facility is one of the tools in our tool kit that we will use if you commit crimes against the American people,” she continued.
DHS has also used footage of CECOT in a new commercial for the department’s Customs and Border Protection “Home” app. The ad featured Noem threatening undocumented immigrants who failed to use the app’s “self-deport” option with $1,000 daily fines and deportation, set with images of prisoners shackled in CECOT.
Last weekend, Trump cast further doubt on constitutional rights for immigrants facing deportation, telling NBC News “I don’t know,” when asked whether he believes such immigrants should receive due process rights. Stephen Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff and architect of the administration’s anti-immigrant policies, said in more certain terms that due process is “not to protect foreign trespassers from removal.” On Monday, Trump laid out his vision for constructing his own CECOT within the U.S., announcing that he wants to rebuild and reopen Alcatraz Island in the San Francisco Bay, arguing the notorious prison would help him go around “judges that are afraid to do their job.” Bukele has previously called the judicial backlash to Trump’s policies “a judicial coup” and has encouraged Republicans to “remove corrupt judges.”
For those still jailed under the Alien Enemies Act in the U.S., the fear of possibly being forcibly disappeared into CECOT hangs heavy over their heads. Such fear has been most palpably embodied by the 31 men jailed at the Bluebonnet Detention Facility in west Texas who used their bodies to spell “SOS” from a dirt courtyard for a drone photo published by Reuters. The men expressed concern, according to Reuters, of being forced onto planes bound for El Salvador.
Bullock’s organization Cristosal has been in touch with at least 144 families of Venezuelan men who the Trump administration has already illegally transferred from the U.S. into El Salvador’s prison system. Cristosal has filed at least 25 habeas corpus claims, requesting their release within El Salvador’s judicial system, despite the unlikeliness of a judge challenging Bukele. When interviewing the relatives of the Venezuelan men, he is reminded of the interviews with Salvadoran families arrested under Bukele’s State of Exception.
“We are hearing in their voices the echoes of the Salvadoran families, saying things like, ‘I don’t know if he’s dead or alive.’ ‘I feel like he’s been disappeared off the face of the earth,’” Bullock recalled. “There’s a specific type of pain of not knowing.”
The post CECOT Is What the Bukele Regime Wants You to See appeared first on The Intercept.
Katrin Ivanova’s barrister says her sentence should reflect her admin duties and not equate her with ‘classic spy cases’
A woman said to be “chief minion” in a ring of Bulgarians convicted of spying for Russia in Britain should not be treated like George Blake, the double agent sentenced to four decades in jail in the 1960s, the Old Bailey has heard.
Katrin Ivanova was said by her barrister, Rupert Bowers KC, to have been manipulated by her partner, Biser Dzhambazov, and to then have endured the discovery of his affair with a fellow member of the spy ring while in prison.
Continue reading...Former Rep. George Santos (R-N.Y.), who recently pleaded guilty to wire fraud and identity theft,...
The post George Santos Seeks Clemency From Trump After Guilty Plea in Fraud Case appeared first on News Facts Network.
The Dark Ages switches up some of the fundamental mechanics from Doom 2016 and Doom Eternal. Here's how to get your footing in the latest installment.
Guns and heavy metal weren't enough this time around.
JENI NANCE
Co-Managing Mosaic Editor
I’m not sure if this is a niche experience (which I was fully prepared to take to the grave), but I was an iPad kid. And not just any iPad kid – I was a Minecraft junkie. I’d spend hours sitting in front of a big screen that I could barely hold up with my tiny hands.
There was something therapeutic about building your own world and testing your survival skills against zombies, skeletons and creepers. Sometimes, I’d just work in creative mode, building full-fledged farms and villages.
When I was in middle school, I got even more into it. I downloaded a step-by-step guide on how to build different types of buildings. I flipped through it daily and built the most intricate structures. If I wasn’t playing Minecraft, I was on YouTube watching streams of other people playing Minecraft.
Based on the trailers and memes I saw about the movie, I knew it was going to be terrible. But terrible “haha,” not terrible “ew.” I knew that I had to go into the movie with the right state of mind, so prior to the movie starting, I decided to take part in some recreational activities (chill, it’s legal).
I wholeheartedly believe that pre-gaming before the movie is half of the experience. This is a movie that was made for kids and stoners. There was a scene in the movie that had my brain itching, and for a minute, I thought I greened. But seeing it in the state I was in was a whole other worldly experience.
This is by far the best bad movie I’ve ever seen.
And the best part was being able to experience it in a nearly sold-out theater surrounded by college students cheering and shouting “Chicken jockey!” It was definitely an experience I wouldn’t trade for anything.
The crowd cheered for the one and only Jack Black, who played Steve, and everyone was fully engaged in the beautifully terrible film. Being surrounded by fellow Minecraft fans who also lacked a few functioning brain cells was comforting.
My favorite part of the film was watching the tension between Steve and Garrett “Garbage Man” Garrison, played by Jason Momoa. I’m talking about hot and steamy tension. I’m sorry, but you can’t convince me it wasn’t love at first sight between the two of them.
“Relax, let my hips guide you,” Garbage Man said. “It’s the only way, we’re too chunky. We’re going to have to go nose to toes – full man sandwich.”
Case in point.
I also loved the Gen-Z references. General Chungus, voiced by Director Jared Hess, is the absolute epitome of Gen-Z. He’s so oblivious and gives absolutely zero [REDACTED]. He was just along for the ride, like most of us are, until he got turned into a porkchop – and I’m here for it.
“I’m really sorry, but I have to unalive you and stuff,” General Chungus says casually. I love him because he’s just a big bucket of sass and had me rolling with his one-liners.
While Jennifer Coolidge’s character had little significance in the overall plot, I found her presence quite humorous. Despite doing absolutely nothing to save the overworld and destroy the evil pig Malgosha, voiced by Rachel House, Coolidge’s added comedy was essential to the film.
As I mentioned before, as a kid I used to watch a lot of Minecraft streamers. While I frequently watched Aphmau’s channel, I also watched Technoblade, who passed away a couple of years ago. As his animated skin crossed the screen, the crowd began to cheer, “Technoblade never dies!”
Henry, played by Sebastian Hansen, turns to Steve and says “Wow, is he some kind of king?” to which Steve replies, “No. That’s a legend.” That moment sent chills down my spine. It warmed my heart to see a tribute to the legendary streamer. That was one of my favorite parts of the movie – second to the cute little panda bears dancing and making baby pandas.
I personally wasn’t planning on staying past the end credits, but I had lost my keys (are we surprised?) which ended up working out in my favor. Now, I’m not sure if it was my lack of working brain cells in that moment or if I’m just an idiot, but up until that point I hadn’t put two and two together that Steve is the name of the original skin created for the Minecraft game and this was his story.
There’s a fun little post-credit scene where Steve returns back to his house in the human world to discover someone moved in – a spunky redhead with a braid draped over her shoulder. Anyone who’s played the game before will recognize her as Alex, a skin that was added in 2014, five years after the game’s initial release in 2009.
Yes, this film has its unserious moments, but it also has an overarching lesson about finding joy in the world around you; and if you can’t find it, build it. Never settle. As a kid who struggled to express herself, it was nice to see the value put on creative minds.
Overall, it was a super fun movie and absolutely reached its target audience as intended. I would recommend this movie to anyone who has an affinity for the renowned creative building game or just needs a good laugh. So I say to you fellow nerds, “First we mine. Then we craft. Let’s Minecraft!”
Researchers are sounding alarms about the proliferation of AI-generated content -- dubbed "slop" -- that may be overwhelming the internet's human-created material. Fil Menczer, distinguished professor of informatics at Indiana University, who has studied social bots since the early 2010s, is now expressing serious concern about generative AI's impact. "Am I worried? Yes, I'm very worried," he told Bloomberg. Another research from Georgetown University found over 100 Facebook pages with millions of followers using AI-generated images for scams. According to Tollbit, a company that helps publishers get compensated when their sites are scraped, web scraping volume doubled from Q3 to Q4 2024, causing significant strain on sites like Wikipedia during high-traffic events. The situation creates a dangerous feedback loop where AI content is generated to please AI recommendation systems, potentially marginalizing human creators. Jeff Allen of the Integrity Institute told Bloomberg this resembles "the algae bloom that can blow up and suffocate the life you would want to have in a healthy ecosystem."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Clint Curtis, who once claimed to build vote-flipping software, will now lead elections in a conservative county
Clint Curtis is a familiar face among election skeptics in the United States. The Florida-based lawyer and former computer programmer has said he once developed a software that could change votes. He opposes the use of voting machines and highlights his connection to proponents of election conspiracy theories, including Mike Lindell and Steve Bannon.
Soon he is slated to start overseeing elections in Shasta county, California, a conservative region of 180,000 people in the state’s far north where Republicans vastly outnumber Democrats.
Continue reading...A judge made it clear there wasn't enough evidence to prove the jet fuel spill directly caused plaintiffs' medical problems.
Groups say plan to resume limited humanitarian assistance under strict Israeli rules ‘risks enabling war crimes’
Aid groups have voiced alarm at US moves to pressure them into accepting an Israeli proposal to resume limited humanitarian assistance to the war-ravaged territory under strictly controlled conditions.
The Trump administration has attempted to strong-arm international agencies – including the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP) – into accepting Israel’s stringent rules for resuming deliveries, according to sources familiar with the discussions and news reports.
Continue reading...Oscar nominee warns ‘truth itself is under revision’ while receiving award at Smithsonian American history museum
Ava DuVernay, an Oscar-nominated and Emmy-winning director, has urged artists and historians to hold the line against a “criminal” US president at a time when “truth itself is under revision”.
DuVernay, whose films include Selma, which chronicles Martin Luther King’s campaign for voting rights, issued the rallying cry while receiving an award at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington.
Continue reading... ![]() | Hey, I've got a question about tire pressure on a pintx. I recently got some great feedback/help on how to get more confident on a onewheel, and someone said to lower the tire pressure a little. The tire says 4 bars, which is about 60 PSI, but from what I've read here, the tire pressure should be between 15 and 20 psi. So, what does 4 bars mean in this regard? I want to try lowering the tire pressure, but I don't want to f-up and cause the tire to explode or something 😅 [link] [comments] |
Donald Trump has directed officials to grant refugee status to Afrikaners who he claims suffer discrimination
The US has granted refugee status to 54 white Afrikaner South Africans, who could arrive as soon as Monday in Washington DC, where they will be welcomed by government officials, according to media reports.
Donald Trump suspended the US refugee settlement programme in January on his first day in office, leaving more than 100,000 people approved for resettlement stranded, having fled war and persecution in countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and Afghanistan.
Continue reading...The topic of President Donald Trump’s desire for Canada to become part of the United States is very much in the news, but about 249 years ago a similar discussion was under way.
For a five-year period at the American Revolution’s start, including Canada into the newly formed nation was a priority for the founding era’s leaders as part of the conflict with Great Britain. There was even an open invitation made to Canada to join the United States in the Articles of Confederation. That quest ended in 1779 when Canada became less of a priority during the conflict.
A series of events and conflicts put Canada’s role in the American Revolution very much in the forefront. In a 1952 article in the American Historical Review, Murray G. Lawson detailed a very fluid situation as the founders of the United States struggled with the idea of Canada as a friend or foe.
The passage of the Quebec Act of 1774 by the English Parliament angered the colonists who had formed the First Continental Congress two weeks earlier. The British had acquired all of the territory in Canada controlled by France at the end of the Seven Years’ War in 1763. The crown then created a new province of Quebec in the inhabited areas of the former New France within Canada.
The Quebec Act of 1774 extended the boundaries of the province of Quebec to the Ohio River, and gave French-speaking residents religious freedoms and a French civil law system. The colonial leaders of Virginia opposed the Quebec Act since they had land claims in the Ohio River area and New Englanders were concerned with the return of Catholic leadership in Quebec.
Initial Outreach to Canada
On the last day of the First Continental Congress on Oct. 26, 1774, a long letter written by John Dickinson, Richard Henry Lee, and Thomas Cushing was addressed to the French-Canadian residents of Quebec. Prepared in French, it warned them their British rulers did not have their best interests at heart, and they should send French-Canadian delegates to the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia on May 10, 1775.
According to Lawson’s account, the French Canadians wanted to remain neutral, but they were also offended by various comments of American leaders denouncing Catholicism, including statements in a letter sent from the Continental Congress to “the people of Great Britain” that called Catholicism “a religion that has deluged your island in blood, and dispersed bigotry, persecution, murder and rebellion through every part of the world.”
As the Second Continental Congress opened in Philadelphia in May 1775, American forces had captured Fort Ticonderoga and Crown Point and raided a fort in southern Quebec. Congress sent a second letter to “the people of Canada” written by Samuel Adams, Silas Deane, and John Jay that called the Canadians “friends” that hoped they would join the Americans “in defense of our common liberty.”
Instead, Guy Carleton, the British governor of Quebec, declared martial law and hostilities soon ensued. American forces led by first General Philip Schuyler and then General Richard Montgomery took Montreal on Nov. 13, 1775, and then attacked Quebec City. However, the British forces successfully defended the city and Mongomery was killed in battle. On Jan. 24, 1776, a third letter from the Continental Congress, written in part by James Wilson, was sent to the Canadian people, asking them to send delegates to Philadelphia to attend Congress. But according to Lawson’s research, the French clergy and leaders in Canada had lobbied heavily against the Americans with the local population.
Franklin, Canada and the Articles of Confederation
On April 29, 1776, a diplomatic commission authorized by the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia arrived in Montreal with several goals in mind. Acting on instructions drafted by a committee that included John Adams, the commission sought the participation of Canada in the new United Colonies of North America.
None other than Benjamin Franklin led the commission, along with Samuel Chase and Charles Carroll. They also sought military volunteers in Canada for their cause and the cooperation of Native American tribes living at the border between Canada and the United States.
Franklin’s commission arrived in Montreal in late April 1776. Prior to the commission’s journey, John Adams in his private correspondence wrote ,“the unanimous voice of the continent is Canada must be ours. … In the Hands of our Enemies, it would enable them to influence all the Indians upon the Continent.” Robert Morris made similar comments, noting Canada “must be ours at all Events. Should it fall into the hands of The Enemy they will soon raise a Nest of Hornets on our backs that will Sting us to the quick.”
Franklin’s stay in Montreal was brief and met with little success. He departed on May 10, 1776, as the American forces began to withdraw over the next six weeks. One highlight from his trip to Canada was that Franklin acquired a marten fur cap he later wore in France, which quickly became a sensation in Europe.
Special Online Town Hall (May 12): Constitutional Meaning in the Shadow of the Articles of Confederation
But the quest to add Canada to the newly formed United States did not end there. After the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress drew up a draft of the Articles of Confederation on July 12, 1776, that included a provision for Canada to join new nation. The final version approved in November 1777 and ratified by the states in 1781 became Article XI of the Articles of Confederation:
“Canada acceding to this confederation, and adjoining in the measures of the United States, shall be admitted into, and entitled to all the advantages of this Union; but no other colony shall be admitted into the same, unless such admission be agreed to by nine States,” the document read.
During 1778, the Continental Congress considered a second adventure into Canada under the leadership of the Marquis de Lafayette. Congress also told its envoy in France, Benjamin Franklin, to ask the French government if it would provide arms for the invasion. Among the objectors to the scheme was George Washington, who feared the presence of a large French military force in Canada, and the plan was abandoned in January 1779. Congress formally decided that Canada was no longer “an object of last importance to the welfare of the United Colonies” in August 1779.
During the era when the Articles of Confederation served as the first constitution for the nascent United States, the inclusion of Canada into the new nation was no longer a prominent issue, and it was not mentioned during the known debates at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia. The new Constitution replaced Articles of Confederation and it included in Article IV, Section 3 a provision for Congress to add new states to the union.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
Government sources say some of company’s 30,000 UK staff were at risk before agreement to cut car tariffs
The UK’s limited trade deal with the US has immediately prevented job losses at Jaguar Land Rover’s plant in the West Midlands, Britain’s ambassador to the US has said.
“This deal has saved those jobs,” Peter Mandelson said in an interview on CNN. “That’s a pretty big achievement, in my view, and I’m very pleased that the president has signed it.”
Continue reading...May 9, 2025 — SEGGER has announced a partnership with Quintauris to support the growing RISC-V ecosystem through new development tools and hardware for automotive, industrial, and IoT markets.
Quintauris was founded in 2023 by leading semiconductor players Robert Bosch GmbH, Infineon Technologies AG, Nordic Semiconductor, NXP Semiconductors, ST Microelectronics, and Qualcomm Technologies. It was created to serve as a single source for enabling compatible RISC-V-based products, and its aim is to both advance the adoption of RISC-V and facilitate development of next-generation processors for automotive, industrial, and IoT applications.
The focus of the SEGGER and Quintauris partnership is primarily to develop advanced hardware and enable mass deployment of RISC-V products and technology in the automotive, health, Internet of Things, and high-performance computer markets.
Quintauris will work to bridge RISC-V innovations and commercial solutions, as well as specify reference architectures for those solutions. SEGGER will provide debug and tracing support and tools, such as its J-Link and J-Trace debug probes, SystemView real-time recording and visualization tool, and Embedded Studio integrated development environment. It will also collaborate on technical aspects for setting up a reference RISC-V platform for the automotive industry.
“We are excited to collaborate with SEGGER as we work to drive the commercial adoption of RISC-V forward,” said Pedro Lopez, Head of Market Strategy, Quintauris. “SEGGER’s expertise in high-quality development and debugging tools is instrumental for ensuring the reliability and scalability required for mass deployment, as well as facilitating the needed level of maturity — particularly in automotive and other safety-critical areas. Together, we aim to accelerate the availability of reference platforms and contribute to a robust RISC-V ecosystem.”
“RISC-V represents a growing, evolving, and fast-moving market in Europe and the rest of the world,” said Hendrik Sawukajtis, Managing Director, SEGGER. “We moved into the market early and continue to be excited to play our part in cultivating RISC-V and related products, as well as further cement SEGGER as a leading global company in advanced firmware-development tools and libraries for embedded systems.”
A complete list of supported devices for J-Link and J-Trace is available here. More information on RISC-V is available here.
About Segger
SEGGER Microcontroller has been active in embedded systems for more than 30 years. SEGGER has extensive experience producing cutting-edge real-time operating systems and software libraries. Furthermore, it also offers a full set of development- and production-oriented hardware tools, as well as software tools. Embedded systems are a growing part of everyday life, and SEGGER is passionate about its work in this rapidly changing field.
About Quintauris
Quintauris is advancing the adoption of RISC-V globally by enabling next-generation hardware development and will specify reference architectures for RISC-V processor classes. With initial focus in automotive, Quintauris’ commitment is to expand to other markets such as IoT, AI or Data Centers.
Source: Segger
The post Quintauris and SEGGER Collaborate on RISC-V Development appeared first on HPCwire.
President Donald Trump suggested Friday that his administration could lower the 145% tariff on Chinese...
The post Trump Signals Possible Reduction of China Tariff from 145% to 80% Ahead of Trade Talks appeared first on News Facts Network.
Airline assesses options but there is no automatic form of recovery from insurers or the airport
The power outage that closed Heathrow airport for a day in March cost British Airways £40m, the national carrier has revealed.
The airline said it was “assessing options” but said it had no recourse to compensation from Heathrow.
Continue reading...If your loans are in default and you received a letter that your account will be transferred to collections, here's what to do.
Are antivirus software applications spying on you? Here’s what the researchers have to say about potential security concerns.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from BleepingComputer: Education giant Pearson suffered a cyberattack, allowing threat actors to steal corporate data and customer information, BleepingComputer has learned. Pearson is a UK-based education company and one of the world's largest providers of academic publishing, digital learning tools, and standardized assessments. The company works with schools, universities, and individuals in over 70 countries through its print and online services. In a statement to BleepingComputer, Pearson confirmed they suffered a cyberattack and that data was stolen, but stated it was mostly "legacy data." "We recently discovered that an unauthorized actor gained access to a portion of our systems," a Pearson representative confirmed to BleepingComputer. "Once we identified the activity, we took steps to stop it and investigate what happened and what data was affected with forensics experts. We also supported law enforcement's investigation. We have taken steps to deploy additional safeguards onto our systems, including enhancing security monitoring and authentication. We are continuing to investigate, but at this time we believe the actor downloaded largely legacy data. We will be sharing additional information directly with customers and partners as appropriate." Pearson also confirmed that the stolen data did not include employee information. The education company previously disclosed in January that they were investigating a breach of one of their subsidiaries, PDRI, which is believed to be related to this attack. BleepingComputer also notes that threat actors breached Pearson's developer environment in January 2025 using an exposed GitLab access token, gaining access to source code and hard-coded credentials. Terabytes of sensitive data was stolen from cloud platforms and internal systems. Despite the potential impact on millions of individuals, Pearson has declined to answer key questions about the breach or its response.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
When C.C. Opanowski of Hudson Falls, New York, was a teenager, she survived a terrifying attack at the hands of her ex-boyfriend, Shawn Doyle. Years later, he would kill Lori Leonard, a mother of two young sons in Chittenango, New York.
Two Ukrainians arrested as authorities claim operation had one eye on a possible future military incursion
Ukrainian authorities claim to have busted a Hungarian spy ring operating on its territory, alleging that Budapest was collecting sensitive military data with one eye on a possible future incursion into the west of the country.
Hungary’s foreign minister dismissed the accusations as “propaganda” and announced the expulsion of two Ukrainians described as “spies working under diplomatic cover” at the Ukrainian embassy in Budapest.
Continue reading...Meeting aimed at de-escalating trade war after Chinese exports beat expectations despite slump in trade
Donald Trump has floated cutting tariffs on China from 145% to 80% before a weekend meeting as he looks to de-escalate the trade war.
Top US officials are expected to meet a high-level Chinese delegation this weekend in Switzerland in the first significant talks between the two nations since Trump provoked a trade war with stiff tariffs on imports.
Continue reading...COLLEGE PARK, Md., May 9, 2025 — IonQ (NYSE: IONQ), a leading commercial quantum computing and networking company, has announced financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2025.
“I am pleased with the strong start to the year at IonQ, including revenue above the midpoint of guidance for the first quarter and almost $700 million in cash equivalents as of March 31. We delivered important commercialization and expansion milestones for both our quantum computing and quantum networking businesses,” said Niccolo de Masi, CEO of IonQ. “We’re delivering real-world value for our customers today, including a recent demonstration of a 12% speed improvement over classical computing in a simulation of a heart pump using quantum processed data and a production product by our partner Ansys.”
“We look forward to adding a unique accelerant to both our quantum networking and quantum computing roadmaps, via the announced acquisition of Lightsynq. Lightsynq’s unique quantum memory technology, IP, and Harvard-research pedigree is expected to accelerate IonQ’s commercial systems to tens-of-thousands, and someday millions of qubits. In addition, we expect that Lightsynq’s quantum memory will also power the future quantum internet by allowing repeaters to ultimately be spaced over one hundred kilometers apart.”
de Masi continued, “We also announced the first-ever quantum computing and networking hub, in partnership with EPB. This groundbreaking deal includes the sale of a new Forte Enterprise system and the establishment of a permanent IonQ office focused on jointly creating algorithms designed for energy grid optimization. The global availability of our new Europe-based Forte Enterprise system will deliver value to our international customers with access over Amazon Braket, QuantumBasel’s IonQ cloud offering, and our own IonQ Quantum Cloud by adding compute capacity and fault tolerance from our Tennessee location.
“Further, the closure of our acquisition of a controlling stake of ID Quantique, and agreement to acquire Capella, solidifies our global quantum networking position, which now includes offices in South Korea, Switzerland, and the US. We believe IonQ is well positioned to capitalize on both technical and commercial advances in quantum computing and quantum networking.”
Financial Highlights
2025 Financial Outlook
For the full year 2025, IonQ expects organic and inorganic revenue to be between $75 million and $95 million, with between $16 million and $18 million for the second quarter.
About IonQ
IonQ, Inc. is a leader in the quantum computing and networking industries, delivering high-performance systems aimed at solving the world’s largest and most complex commercial and research use cases. IonQ’s current generation quantum computers, IonQ Forte and IonQ Forte Enterprise, are the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems, boasting 36 algorithmic qubits. The company’s innovative technology and rapid growth were recognized in Newsweek’s 2025 Excellence Index 1000, Forbes’ 2025 Most Successful Mid-Cap Companies list, and Built In’s 2025 100 Best Midsize Places to Work in Washington DC and Seattle, respectively. Available through all major cloud providers, IonQ is making quantum computing more accessible and impactful than ever before.
Source: IonQ
The post IonQ Announces 1st Quarter Financial Results appeared first on HPCwire.
Carla Hayden, first woman and first African American to hold post, dismissed in terse email on Thursday night
Donald Trump abruptly fired the librarian of Congress, Carla Hayden, on Thursday as the White House continues to purge the federal government of those perceived to oppose the Republican US president and his agenda.
Hayden was notified in an email late on Thursday from the White House’s presidential personnel office, according to an email obtained by the Associated Press. Confirmed by the Senate to the job in 2016, Hayden was the first woman and the first African American to be librarian of Congress.
Continue reading...This 50% discount on these popular headphones is incredible -- but it's only a limited-time deal, so don't miss out.
Neighbors India and Pakistan have a long history of military clashes, but this is why the nuclear-armed neighbors are fighting now.
The group of House and Senate Democrats say Trump's designation of Latin American cartels as foreign terrorist organizations unlocks legal tools that will help address the flow of U.S.-made guns across the border with Mexico.
Grace Marsceau promised to pack A Million Lives event. Authors arrived to empty rooms, unpaid bills and no decor
In the days leading up to the A Million Lives book festival, things already seemed amiss. Grace Marsceau, the event organizer, messaged an attending author that the DJ was in the hospital and the company had no replacement. She owed the hotel “six figures” because the room block hadn’t sold out, according to messages.
“Oh my gosh that’s awful!” author Sarah Zane responded. The excuses seemed unusual, but as a veteran of book events, Zane expected to deal with some mismanagement.
Continue reading...Apple will likely announce the next iOS software at WWDC in June.
Pope held mass for cardinals in the Sistine Chapel on Friday morning
China has sent congratulations to newly elected Pope Leo XIV and hopes the Vatican under the new pontiff will continue dialogue with China “in a constructive spirit”, Reuters reports a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said on Friday at a regular press conference.
Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis, strained relations between the Vatican and China in 2020 when he described China’s Muslim Uyghurs as a “persecuted” people, listing them alongside the Rohingya, the Yazidi, and persecuted Christians in Islamic countries.
Continue reading...Hot start to May gives way to significant rainfall, with egg-sized hailstones reportedly hitting Slavonski Brod in Croatia
Southern and south-eastern Europe have experienced a spate of thunderstorms that have resulted in significant rainfall and hail across parts of the Balkans. After a hot start to May in the area took temperatures into the high 20s celsius, thunderstorms widely developed from Monday.
One particular thunderstorm, which developed over Slavonski Brod in Croatia, reportedly brought egg-sized hail, with 38.2mm of rain being recorded.
Continue reading...A woman and a girl were arrested after a large crowd tried to stop ICE agents from taking a woman into custody in Worcester.
Daniel Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, found to have criminally damaged tree and Hadrian’s Wall
Two friends who embarked on a “moronic mission” to fell the Sycamore Gap tree with a chainsaw have been found guilty of “mindless” criminal damage.
Daniel Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, cut down the cherished tree, next to Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland, as Storm Agnes raged in the early hours of 28 September 2023.
Continue reading...Crowning of country’s first world champion set to give fresh boost to sport that has boomed in popularity in China
Chain smoking under the fluorescent lights of a cavernous billiards hall in Beijing, Brother Yuan can’t stop smiling. The previous day, along with 150 million other people across China, he had been at home watching the snooker world championships final. Now he’s with his fellow cue-heads, celebrating the win of China’s first snooker world champion, Zhao Xintong.
“He’s a great role model for young people in China,” Yuan, 55, says of the generation Z upstart who on Monday claimed snooker’s top prize. “He’s bringing the excitement back.”
Continue reading...Jim Mackey says state of public finances means country can no longer afford big spending rises
Ministers have “maxed out” the amount of money they can give the NHS and it will no longer get big increases in its funding because of tight public finances, the health service’s new boss in England has said.
Sir Jim Mackey, who took over as NHS England’s chief executive last month, said the state of the public finances meant the country could no longer afford big increases in spending.
Continue reading...Keen could be following other companies in sticking customers with higher prices as tariffs hit. Here's why it's not.
New leader says he wants a Catholic church that ‘illuminates the dark nights of this world’
Pope Leo XIV said he hoped to lead a Roman Catholic church “that illuminates the dark nights of this world” as he held his first mass as pontiff under Michelangelo’s ceiling frescoes in the Sistine Chapel.
The surprise election of Robert Francis Prevost, the first US pope, came after a conclave that lasted less than 26 hours, one of the shortest in modern Catholic history.
Continue reading...Supplier says deal is its cheapest fixed tariff since 2021 amid ongoing volatility in the gas and electricity market
Households in Great Britain have been grappling with high energy bills for four years but attractive fixed deals that are £300 cheaper than the current price cap are now available.
This week, EDF launched its “cheapest fixed tariff since 2021”, describing it as the best energy-only deal available from a “big six” supplier. The 12-month tariff, Simply Fixed Direct May26, is priced at £1,549 for an average dual-fuel customer paying by direct debit. This is £300 below the regulator Ofgem’s latest price cap.
Continue reading...SEC filing revelations raise questions about big business’s desire to curry favor with Trump and his administration
Large institutional investors have massively increased their holdings of Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG) in recent months according to SEC filings, with many enlarging their positions by hundreds of millions of dollars.
The revelations raise further questions about big business’s desire to curry favor with Donald Trump and his administration via the enterprises he has maintained or commenced. TMTG runs the Truth Social social media platform – on which the US president himself posts almost daily – as well as financial services and a film and TV streaming service.
Continue reading...Looking for fast and reliable speeds? You'll likely find it with fiber internet.
Hello, I’m Spanish, sorry, translate with Google, I have Thor 300 in an XR, the engine detection works well, in one direction and the other, but then in the forward and reverse spin test, it works jerkily, it doesn’t turn, it jerks… is this normal?
Facing deep staffing cuts, the IRS plans to lean heavily on AI to maintain tax collection efforts, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stating that smarter IT and the "AI boom" will offset reductions in revenue enforcement staff. The Register reports: When asked by Congressman Steny Hoyer (D-MD) whether proposed reductions in the IRS's IT budget, along with plans to cut additional staff, would affect the agencies ability to collect tax revenue, Bessent said it wouldn't, thanks to the current "AI boom." "I believe through smarter IT, through this AI boom, that we can use that to enhance collections," Bessent told Hoyer and the Committee (24:29 into the video linked [here]). "I expect collections would continue to be very robust as they were this year." Bessent's comments didn't explain how the IRS intends to deploy AI. Given how much it has slashed its enforcement staff since Trump took office, the agency definitely needs to do something. [...] Bessent's comments didn't explain how the IRS intends to deploy AI. Given how much it has slashed its enforcement staff since Trump took office, the agency definitely needs to do something. "There is nothing that shows historically that bringing in unseasoned collections agents will result in more collections," Bessent told the Committee. "IRS already uses AI for business functions including operational efficiency, compliance and fraud detection, and taxpayer services," the agency told The Register. "AI use cases must follow all relevant IRS privacy and security policies."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Authorities found 69 living cats, many of which had medical ailments including respiratory infections and eye disease, and 28 dead cats at the man's home.
Pope says ‘evil will not prevail’ as he addresses worshippers. Plus, the man who walked the length of the UK with a donkey
Good morning.
Robert Francis Prevost, the first US cleric to lead the Roman Catholic church, has said “evil will not prevail” as he addressed a crowd of 100,000 pilgrims and tourists in his first speech as Pope Leo XIV from the central balcony of St Peter’s Basilica.
Why choose the name Leo? That Prevost has decided to become Leo XIV will make Catholics think of the previous Leo – Leo XIII – and his 1891 encyclical or teaching document, Rerum Novarum, which outlined workers’ rights to a fair wage, safe working conditions and the rights of workers to belong to trade unions.
What does it mean for LGBTQ+ Catholics? After years of sympathetic and inclusive comments from Pope Francis, LGBTQ+ Catholics expressed concern on Thursday about hostile remarks Pope Leo XIV made more than a decade ago in which he condemned “the homosexual lifestyle” and “redefinition of marriage” as “at odds with the gospel”.
Who said they wouldn’t back Martin? Thom Tillis, the Republican North Carolina senator, said he would not support his nomination – and Martin also lacked allies at the justice department.
Why was he unpopular? He was seen as too aggressive with his threats to prosecute Trump’s political adversaries, including Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader. Republican senators were concerned about the risk of a Democratic appointee to act similarly in the future.
Where does Pirro stand? She is a diehard Trump ally whose false claim that the 2020 election was rigged by Dominion Voting Systems was used against Fox in court. Fox settled in the defamation case and acknowledged her statements were false.
Continue reading...Steve Carell’s mouth outshines even Tina Fey in Netflix comedy while billionaire Barry Diller comes out
More by happenstance than planning, perhaps, the Met Gala, which took place in New York on Monday night, struck a note that seemed stridently to oppose Donald Trump. The theme of the evening, devised to advertise the Costume Institute’s new exhibition, Superfine: Tailoring Black Style, was Black dandyism – an apparently defiant push back against Trump’s executive order removing initiatives to promote, “so called ‘under-represented groups’”. Even if the theme had been planned before Trump’s re-election, it was surely great to see.
Continue reading... ![]() | We hit the streets with two Onewheel XRs and a Floatwheel ADV for a chill city ride and this is how it went down. [link] [comments] |
Kareem’s Daily Quote: When we beat the odds in life, it isn’t a metaphysical commentary on our value.
Trump says he will reopen Alcatraz prison: He won’t, of course. But his limp reasoning and suspicious timing should scare us all.
Jewish faculty decry Republican panel members ahead of antisemitism hearing: Antisemitism is the default bias of the smugly irrational. Some of the GOP members of this panel investigating antisemitism are clearly bigots.
Kareem’s Kvetching Korner: People Miss the Point about Trump’s Pope Picture: It’s not about how offensive he is, it’s about the fact that he can’t recognize why it’s offensive—or admit that many Catholics don’t like it.
What I’m Watching at the Movies: The Accountant 2 and Thunderbolts* are both highly entertaining movies that are funny and suspenseful. You’ll have a good time watching them.
Kareem’s Video Break: This horse made my day. I may have to watch this every day for the next four years.
What I’m Following: Kathy Griffin’s Substack: This is a new feature in which I mention social media sites that I follow.
Kareem’s Sports Moments: One of the most amazing catches I have ever seen—in any sport.
Donald O'Connor Sings and Dances to “Make 'Em Laugh”: I’ve watched this scene from Singin’ in the Rain for most of my life. It still makes me laugh.
“Doctors gave me a one percent chance to live.”
British soldier after being caught in an IED explosion in Afghanistan
I was watching an interview with the above-mentioned British soldier, and when he uttered that line, it immediately reminded me of the numerous times I’ve seen people interviewed or heard people I know say a variation of that line: “The doctors said I’d never walk again, yet I won an Olympic gold medal in the decathlon.” Or, “The doctors said grandpa would never come out of the coma, but here he is paddle boarding every day.”
I am skeptical. It’s more likely that a single doctor (though when retold, people tend to multiply the number to imply a cohort of doctors) was giving the patient or family a complete scenario of possibilities: “If we don’t do this procedure, there’s a strong possibility your legs will (insert medical jargon) and you may never walk again. However, we have several avenues of treatment to explore.” People who tell the story of surviving overwhelming odds aren’t lying, they are recounting the story the way they heard it. But why do so many people hear it in such movie-ready distortion?
Overcoming great odds is the basis for our favorite movies, from Rudy to Rocky to all the Marvel movies. When we do it in real life, we become the hero in our own story. It’s proof that we are somehow special, selected by the gods for greatness. We are supernaturally enhanced to rise above the relentlessness of Nature.
The reason the recounting of the story generally mentions doctors rather than a single doctor is that the teller is no longer referring to a doctor who may have made a mistake in the diagnosis, but to experts in general. To Science as a faulty pursuit that doesn’t take into account the magic of supernatural forces. We want to believe in miracles, which are events that occur against the odds. Ironically, the odds are that a certain number of “miracles” will occur. The difference is when we give them supernatural intent, meaning that the person was somehow chosen to win by an otherworldly being.
So many times I’ve heard people say things like, “Doctors told me to quit smoking or I’d die, yet here I am at 85 still enjoying a pack a day.” Let me interpret: What they said was that smoking increases your chances of dying younger. But even if you live longer, it will probably worsen your general health and make those years more uncomfortable. Though you may live to 87, without smoking, you might have lived to 97.
Undoubtedly, people will beat the odds, the same way they do in Las Vegas or with the lottery. Eventually, those odds catch up with us all. Sometimes experts get it wrong—they aren’t infallible, they’re just humans doing their best—but mostly they get it right. We should celebrate when they get it wrong in our favor, but not elevate our good fortune into a philosophy of our personal exceptionalism.
As Hamlet says, “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” I would hope so, but that doesn’t mean that the “more” is supernatural. If you beat the odds on occasion, be happy at your good fortune. But don’t turn it into a metaphysical philosophy about your worth to the universe. Remember, no one beats the odds forever.
Xbox recently saw two major releases of role-playing games. But which to tackle? Here's what to know in order to decide.
Dr. Casey Means, President Trump's nominee to serve as U.S. surgeon general, has largely focused on metabolic dysfunction in her work — but what is it?
This is Public Service Recognition Week, but the feds President Donald Trump has celebrated are the ones leading his assault on federal employees and agencies.
This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up for The Brief Weekly to get up to speed on their essential coverage of Texas issues.
Two years ago, Texas lawmakers quietly cut millions of dollars in funding for kits intended to help track down missing kids, after ProPublica and The Texas Tribune revealed there was no evidence they had aided law enforcement in finding lost children.
The company that made the kits had used outdated and exaggerated statistics on missing children to bolster their sales and charged for the materials when similar products were available for less or for free.
Now, some Texas legislators are again pushing to spend millions more in taxpayer dollars to purchase such kits, slipping the funding into a 1,000-page budget proposal.
Although the proposal does not designate which company would supply them, a 2021 bill introduced by Republican state Sen. Donna Campbell all but guarantees Texas will contract with the same vendor, the National Child Identification Program. Back then, Campbell made clear that her intent was to enshrine into law a long-standing partnership between the state and NCIDP that goes back more than two decades. Her legislation, signed into law that June, also specified that whenever the state allocated funding for such materials, the Texas Education Agency must purchase identification kits that are “inkless,” a technology that NCIDP has patented.
The Waco-based company is led by former NFL player Kenny Hansmire, who ProPublica and the Tribune found had a history of failed businesses and financial troubles, including millions of dollars in federal tax liens and a ban from conducting certain finance-related business in Connecticut due to his role in an alleged scheme to defraud investors.
Hansmire cultivated relationships with powerful Texas legislators who went on to support his initiatives. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who oversees the Senate, championed Campbell’s legislation funding the kits and later told the news organizations that the state should prioritize anything that can speed up the return of a missing child. Campbell told lawmakers in a hearing that the bipartisan measure, which was brought to her by Hansmire and Patrick, was important to “protect our children.”
Patrick, Campbell and Hansmire did not respond to interview requests for this story. Hansmire previously told the newsrooms that his debts and other financial issues had been resolved. He also defended his company’s kits, saying they have helped find multiple missing children, and instructed reporters to ask “any policeman” about the kits’ usefulness. However, none of the dozen Texas law enforcement agencies that the news organizations reached — including three that Hansmire specifically named — could recall any examples.
Stacey Pearson, a child safety consultant and former Louisiana State Police sergeant who oversaw that state’s Clearinghouse for Missing and Exploited Children, said she has never seen any cases demonstrating that these kits work, including in the last two years since lawmakers discontinued the funding.
“I don’t understand why we’re going back to this,” said Pearson, who spoke with the newsrooms recently and for their previous investigation. “It wasn’t a good idea in 2023 and it’s not a good idea now.”
Despite the lack of evidence, Pearson said companies like NCIDP are able to profit off the kits by marketing them as part of a larger child safety program, a strategy that makes opposing lawmakers look as if they are against protecting children. Texas allocated nearly $6 million for the kits between 2021 and 2023.
Lawmakers did not explain their reasoning when they decided to stop paying for the kits in 2023. Republican state Sen. Joan Huffman, who chairs the high chamber’s Finance Committee, told the newsrooms at the time that both the House and the Senate had agreed to remove the funding “after review and consideration.”
During this year’s budgeting process, Democratic state Rep. Armando Martinez proposed adding $2 million to the House’s budget to provide kits to families with children in kindergarten through second grade.
Martinez did not respond to an interview request.
State Rep. Greg Bonnen, who chairs the House Appropriations Committee, did not respond to interview requests or written questions.
Bonnen was among the 33 lawmakers who voted against Campbell’s bill that established the child identification kit funding four years ago. The newsrooms attempted to reach a handful of those legislators, but none responded.
Huffman and the Senate have so far chosen not to restore the program’s funding. Huffman declined the newsrooms’ interview requests.
“The entire budget process is ongoing,” she wrote in an emailed statement. “No final decisions have been made on most issues.”
Legislators from the two chambers will continue hashing out the differences between their budget proposals in a joint committee that operates behind closed doors. There’s no guarantee that the funding will make it into the final budget, which lawmakers must pass before the legislative session ends in early June.
Pearson cautioned legislators to question whether the kits are the best use of state funding, given the absence of documented success.
“My advice would be for lawmakers to ask themselves, ‘If this was your personal money and not the taxpayers’, would you spend it on this program?’” Pearson said. “And the answer is going to be no.”
Matthew David Hughes found guilty after breaking into rapper’s Detroit home, following 2020 incident in which he allegedly threatened to kill him and 2019 break-in
A stalker who broke into Eminem’s home in Michigan for a second time has been convicted of first-degree home invasion and aggravated stalking.
Matthew David Hughes was arrested in August 2024 after being seen at the rapper’s home in Clinton Township, a suburb in north-eastern Detroit. He didn’t meet bail conditions and has been jailed since his arrest.
Continue reading...Oghenochuko Ojiri, who has appeared on BBC show, pleads guilty to eight offences under Terrorism Act
An art dealer who has appeared as an expert on the BBC programme Bargain Hunt has admitted failing to report his dealings with a suspected Hezbollah financier.
The court heard that Oghenochuko Ojiri sold artwork to Nazem Ahmad but did not tell the authorities despite knowing Ahmad had been under US sanctions over links to the proscribed organisation.
Continue reading...Many saw the beloved tree that Adam Carruthers and Daniel Graham cut down as a part of north-east England’s DNA
“It was just a tree,” said a mystified Adam Carruthers, one of the two men who illegally cut down the tree at Sycamore Gap in the early hours of a stormy night nearly two years ago. “It was almost as if someone had been murdered.”
Carruthers was right about the reaction to the felling. Many likened its loss to that of a good friend or relative. Its destruction prompted feelings of sadness, grief and then blind fury. Some people wept.
Continue reading...Instagram's AI chatbots are masquerading as licensed therapists, complete with fabricated credentials and license numbers, according to an investigation by 404 Media. When questioned, these user-created bots from Meta's AI Studio platform provide detailed but entirely fictional qualifications, including nonexistent license numbers, accreditations, and practice information. Unlike Character.AI, which displays clear disclaimers that its therapy bots aren't real professionals, Meta's chatbots feature only a generic notice stating "Messages are generated by AI and may be inaccurate or inappropriate" at the bottom of conversations.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Indian Premier League has been suspended, initially for a week, because of concerns about the security situation in the country amid rising tensions along its border with Pakistan. The news came hours after the decision was taken to relocate the final fixtures in the Pakistan Super League to United Arab Emirates because of safety concerns. Foreign-based players in India and all teams in Pakistan are expected to leave the countries over the next 24 hours.
“Further updates regarding the new schedule and venues of the tournament will be announced in due course after a comprehensive assessment of the situation in consultation with relevant authorities and stakeholders,” Devajit Saikia, the secretary of the Board for Control of Cricket in India (BCCI), said in a statement. “The decision was taken by the IPL governing council after due consultation with all key stakeholders following the representations from most of the franchisees, who conveyed the concern and sentiments of their players, and also the views of the broadcaster, sponsors and fans; while the BCCI reposes full faith in the strength and preparedness of our armed forces, the board considered it prudent to act in the collective interest of all stakeholders.”
Continue reading...The coach is stepping away from a role in which he won five championships with the Spurs. He will be hard to replace, on and off the court
Raise a glass to Gregg Popovich, the gruff teddy bear who lifted the San Antonio Spurs into the NBA’s elite. After three decades on the Spurs’ sideline, he is stepping back from coaching to become the team’s president of basketball operations. It’s a back-to-the-future move for the 76-year-old: he was the Spurs’ general manager for eight years before he became the team’s coach. (“I’m no longer the coach, I’m El Jefe,” Popovich jokingly declared this week before unveiling a T-shirt with that Spanish title.) Altogether, Pop won five NBA championships from 1999 through 2014, a run that puts him among the greatest coaches in league history. But when it came to being the NBA’s unflinching statesman, he was in a league all by himself.
Popovich wasn’t just the NBA’s backbone. He was, perhaps, the most fearless truth teller in all of sport. Certainly no one was bolder when it came to taking on Donald Trump – whom Popovich has described as a “soulless coward,” a “pathological liar” and a “deranged idiot”. Popovich told beat reporters he was “sick to my stomach” after Trump’s 2016 presidential election win, a tipping point he likened to the fall of Rome. He slammed Steve Bannon’s appointment as chief White House strategist as a fear-mongering exercise. During the Spurs’ 2017 media day, Popovich launched into a 21-minute condemnation of Trump and the Maga movement after the president attacked NFL players and Nascar’s Bubba Wallace for their national anthem protests. “Our country is an embarrassment to the world,” Popovich said. “This is an individual that when people held arms during games, [he thought] that they were doing it to [dis]honor the flag. That’s delusional. But it’s what we have to live with.”
Continue reading...Here are the hints and answers for Connections for May 9, No. 698.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle No. 1,420 for May 9. Guess what? The new pope plays, too.
The Trump administration is facing a May 12 deadline to declare if it will defend Biden-era regulations that aim to enforce laws requiring parity in insurance coverage of mental and physical health care.
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In the U.S., the price of Revlimid, a brand-name cancer drug, has been increasing for two decades. It now sells for nearly $1,000 a pill. In Europe, the price has been consistently lower — in some countries by two-thirds.
I started reporting on Revlimid after I was prescribed the drug following a diagnosis of multiple myeloma, an incurable blood cancer. Stunned by the high price, I found that the drugmaker, Celgene, had used Revlimid as its own personal piggy bank for more than a decade, raising the price in the U.S. whenever it saw fit.
Even with lower prices in Europe, Celgene still made a profit there, a former executive told Congress. That added to the more than $21 billion in net earnings the company made after Revlimid was introduced in 2005.
Of course, Revlimid isn’t the only drug with a price disparity. Americans pay more in general for prescription drugs than people in other wealthy countries. And costs keep going up, saddling patients with crippling debt or forcing them to choose between filling prescriptions or buying groceries. So why do we pay so much more? And is anything being done about it?
In most other wealthy countries, governments set a single price for a drug that is usually based on analysis of the therapeutic benefit of the medicine and what other countries pay. In the U.S., drug companies determine what to charge for their products with few restraints. Insurance companies can refuse to cover a drug to try to negotiate a lower price, but for some diseases like cancer, that poses a risk of public backlash. Cancer is a “very politically charged disease,” said Dr. Aaron Kesselheim, a Harvard Medical School professor who studies drug pricing and regulation. Some states also mandate that insurers cover certain cancer drugs.
Pharmaceutical companies have consistently argued that American drug prices reflect the cost of research and development. Americans may pay more, but they also benefit from having first-line access to cutting-edge treatments. (Celgene has since been acquired by Bristol Myers Squibb, which says its price for Revlimid, which it increased in the U.S. last year by 7%, “reflects the continued clinical benefit Revlimid brings to patients, along with other economic factors.”)
Dr. Hagop Kantarjian, a leukemia specialist at MD Anderson Cancer Center who studies drug pricing, said that pharmaceutical companies often overstate the cost of developing drugs and that many drug discoveries originate in hospital and academic labs funded through government grants. Funding from the U.S. National Institutes of Health contributed to all but two of the 356 drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration from 2010 to 2019, according to a Bentley University study. Companies also don’t spend all their profits on innovation: The 14 largest drug companies in the world spent more on stock buybacks and dividend payments to investors than on research and development, according to a 2021 analysis by the U.S. House Oversight Committee.
One possible solution to bring down costs: tie American prices to what drugmakers charge in other wealthy countries. The Congressional Budget Office found last year that this would have the biggest impact on reducing costs of seven proposals it studied. It’s an idea with bipartisan support.
Sens. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Peter Welch, D-Vt., introduced a bill this week that would penalize pharmaceutical companies that sell their drugs at higher prices than the average of the prices in Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Italy and the United Kingdom. Companies that sell above the average would face civil penalties equal to 10 times the difference between the U.S. list price and the average price in those other countries.
President Donald Trump has advocated for similar actions. During his first term, he issued an executive order directing the Medicare program to employ a “most favored nation” approach in paying for drugs. The administration later developed a rule directing Medicare to select the lowest price from a basket of similar countries and make that the maximum amount the agency would pay for 50 drugs administered by doctors. A court blocked the rule from being implemented in the last days of the first administration.
Now, according to reports this week, the administration is pushing plans to tie Medicaid and Medicare prices to lower prices charged in other countries.
Linking U.S. prices to those in other countries is opposed by industry groups who say it would leave decisions on medications to the government rather than doctors and patients.
“Government price setting in any form is bad for American patients,” said Alex Schriver, a spokesperson for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, an industry group. He said efforts should be focused on fixing “the flaws in the U.S. system,” including money that flows to intermediaries such as pharmacy benefit managers.
Some critics also warn so-called international reference pricing can be gamed and allows foreign governments to essentially set the value of medicines sold in the U.S.
The Trump administration is expected to announce drug pricing plans as early as next week, according to a report. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
After US talks, Andrew Bailey says Britain must do everything it can to improve trading relations with bloc
The governor of the Bank of England has said that the UK now needs to do everything it can to rebuild its long-term trade relationship with the EU, after a breakthrough agreement with the US to reduce some of Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Andrew Bailey said that, while he would not pass judgment on the UK’s exit from the EU in early 2020, reversing the trade impact of Brexit would be “beneficial”.
Continue reading...Does anyone know the screw size for the flight fin fender screws? They are wicked easy to strip and i striped one tightening it in place and will have to drill it out later when its time to upgrade anything.
The replacements are only 5 bucks but the shipping to Hawaii is $55. So 60 bucks it would cost me for 8 screws.
China’s strong export growth in April, despite sky-high U.S. tariffs, will give Beijing a boost as its officials head to trade talks this weekend.
Hey all
I hope everyone is doing well
We have a 72V 6kW 70-pole PMSM. We recently purchased a sine-wave motor controller from Golden Motors (EZkontrol motor controller model: EZ-B144400) and it was not able to run the motor. It finished the “self-learning” and even during that it wasn’t able to drive the motor with enough power. After the self-learning phase, upon giving throttle, the motor would just rotate very slowly, and produce a lot of noise. Their team couldn’t really help much. We can’t really do much with the controller either, there’s no firmware support - they just have an android app with a few parameters exposed. I will attach a document with all the parameters so you can have an idea.
Our motor is not damaged of course, it runs fine with open-loop ESCs such as the FLAME ESC. We are assuming that these off-the-shelf controllers are built specifically for the more popularly used 4-pole brushless motors. We have an old 48V 4-pole BLDC and the EZkontrol motor controller from Golden Motors was able to run it easily, on the very first go.
We concluded that it could be to do with the high pole-pairs of our motor - 35, i.e. 70 poles, that caused this incompatibility.
Now I am looking into VESC-based ESCs and the Flipksy 75200 Pro seems quiet promising. I have this lingering doubt though, if even that may fail. With the EZkontrol controller, we still don’t exactly know what didn’t work and given how it’s just a black box at this point, there’s no way to find out either.
I hope someone here can give some helpful suggestions. Here are the motor details:
If someone has ran a high pole-pair motor using a similar VESC-based controller, do share your experience as well!
Here’s a link to the document I have created that lists all the EZ-Tune app parameters. And here’s the EZkontrol controller’s User Manual, for more context.
Thanks for taking the time to read! I hope I get some good insights!
Best Regards!!
CrowdStrike CEO announces 5% of workforce to be slashed globally, citing artificial intelligence efficiencies created in the business
The cybersecurity company that became a household name after causing a massive global IT outage last year has announced it will cut 5% of its workforce in part due to “AI efficiency”.
In a note to staff earlier this week, released in stock market filings in the US, CrowdStrike’s chief executive, George Kurtz, announced that 500 positions, or 5% of its workforce, would be cut globally, citing AI efficiencies created in the business.
Continue reading...Independent Thinking: Can India and Pakistan step back from the brink? Audio john.pollock
Marion Messmer, Chietigj Bajpaee and Stephen Farrell join the podcast to discuss the cross-border strikes between India and Pakistan.
Tensions between India and Pakistan have surged following a deadly attack in Kashmir and air strikes by India inside Pakistan. With nuclear risks, regional diplomacy, and rising domestic pressures in play, what could prevent this crisis from spiralling further?
In this episode, Bronwen Maddox discusses what this means for South Asia and the world with Marion Messmer, a senior research fellow with our International Security Programme; Chietigj Bajpaee, the senior research fellow for South Asia with our Asia-Pacific Programme; and Stephen Farrell, our head of News and Comment.
Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.
More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts, Spotify.
Previous negative remarks by Pope Leo XIV about ‘homosexual lifestyle’ at odds with papacy of Pope Francis
After years of sympathetic and inclusive comments from Pope Francis, LGBTQ+ Catholics expressed concern on Thursday about hostile remarks made more than a decade ago by Father Robert Prevost, the new Pope Leo XIV, in which he condemned what he called the “homosexual lifestyle” and “the redefinition of marriage” as “at odds with the Gospel”.
In a 2012 address to the world synod of bishops, the man who now leads the church said that “Western mass media is extraordinarily effective in fostering within the general public enormous sympathy for beliefs and practices that are at odds with the Gospel – for example abortion, homosexual lifestyle, euthanasia”.
Continue reading...schwit1 shares a report from Behind The Black: Almost immediately after India's government issued this week new tightened regulations for allowing private satellite constellations to sell their services in India, it also apparently completed negotiations with SpaceX to allow it to sell Starlink in India based on these rules. Business Today reports: "According to sources, the DoT [Department of Transportation] granted the LoI [Letter of Intent] after Starlink accepted 29 strict security conditions, including requirements for real-time terminal tracking, mandatory local data processing, legal interception capabilities, and localisation of at least 20% of its ground segment infrastructure within the first few years of operation. Starlink's nod came amid heightened national security sensitivities, coinciding with India's pre-dawn Operation Sindoor strikes on terror camps across the border in response to the Pahalgam massacre. However, DoT officials clarified that the decision to approve Starlink was independent of these military developments." At the moment SpaceX's chief competitors, OneWeb and Amazon's Kuiper constellation, have not yet obtained the same permissions. This allows SpaceX to grab a large portion of the market share in India before either of these other companies.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Vatican conclave elected Cardinal Prevost as a successor to Pope Francis to lead the Catholic Church.
He also saw the movie Conclave, plays Words with Friends and is a Chicago White Sox fan.
Alexander Mashinsky, the former CEO of Celsius Network, was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Thursday after pleading guilty to two counts of fraud, a dramatic fall for the leader of a company once hailed as the "bank" of the crypto industry. From a report: Standing before U.S. District Judge John G. Koeltl in Manhattan's Southern District, Mashinsky faced the consequences of what prosecutors described as a sweeping scheme to defraud investors. In December he pleaded guilty to commodities fraud and a scheme to manipulate the Celsius token. His sentencing took place in courtroom 14A at 500 Pearl Street -- a venue that has seen several crypto executives-turned-felons. Mashinsky's legal troubles began in 2023 when he was arrested on charges of securities, commodities, and wire fraud, just as Celsius reached a $4.7 billion settlement with the Federal Trade Commission -- one of the largest in the FTC's history.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
This blog has now closed. Our live updates coverage on Pope Leo XIV’s first full day in office has moved here.
Historically, some of the conclaves were really drawn out: in 13th century, they needed three years, over 1,000 days, to choose Gregory X.
There was also one that ended on the first day, when Julius II in 1503 was elected after just 10 hours.
Continue reading...Researchers say AI could give every developing country a vital early warning system of extreme events
Weather forecasting has gradually been getting more and more sophisticated. It has also got far more important as the climate gets more unpredictable and extreme events threaten to cause massive economic damage and loss of life. So an early warning system is vital.
Ever larger computer systems making millions of calculations over many hours are now part of the daily forecasting in most developed countries. Sadly large parts of the world, many very vulnerable to dangerous climate events, do not have the money, personnel or computing power to develop the 10-day forecasting system they need.
Continue reading...Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) announced Thursday he will introduce legislation requiring retailers to disclose how...
The post Democrats Introduce Bill Requiring Retailers to Show Price Impact of Trump’s Tariffs appeared first on News Facts Network.
Construction is set to begin on two seven-story apartment buildings at the University of Delaware’s STAR Campus, fulfilling the university’s longtime goal of bringing a residential component to the ever-growing science and technology campus.
With construction of the new Newark Free Library set to begin soon, New Castle County officials are already looking ahead to what could be the next major project: building a new library in the Glasgow area.
![]() | I was afraid as a new rider I would mess up any customization when bailing and learning. But at 800 I went all in.. how did I do? Now my GTV looks as good as it feels! [link] [comments] |
Washington needed an off-ramp, but the group can still imperil the global economy.
Trump’s outreach to Putin has shifted Russian opinion—but failed to end the war.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday announced the Trump administration will begin discharging transgender service...
The post Trump admin moves to oust 1,000 trans people from the military after Supreme Court ruling appeared first on News Facts Network.
The Trump administration’s efforts to deport unwanted immigrants to countries including Libya, Ukraine and Rwanda has similarities to a failed British plan.
Connections are tight, not sure that’s the problem
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Thursday its well-known "billion-dollar weather and climate disasters" database "will be retired," a move that will make it next to impossible for the public to track the cost of extreme weather and climate events. The weather, climate and oceans agency is also ending other products, it has recently announced, due in large part to staffing reductions. NOAA is narrowing the array of services it provides, with climate-related programs scrutinized especially closely. The disasters database, which will be archived but no longer updated beyond 2024, has allowed taxpayers, media and researchers to track the cost of natural disasters -- spanning extreme events from hurricanes to hailstorms -- since 1980. Its discontinuation is another Trump-administration blow to the public's view into how fossil fuel pollution is changing the world around them and making extreme weather more costly. [...] The database vacuums loss information from throughout the insurance industry, among other public and private sources. According to the database, there were 403 weather and climate disasters totally at least $1 billion in the United States since 1980, totaling more than $2.945 trillion. As of April 8, there had not been any confirmed billion-dollar disasters so far in 2025, but it lists four events as having the potential to make the tally, including the Los Angeles-area wildfires in January. Between 1980 and 2024, there were nine such disasters on average each year, though in the past five years, that annual average has jumped to 24. The record for one year was 28 events in 2023. "What makes this resource uniquely valuable is not just its standardized methodology across decades, but the fact that it draws from proprietary and non-public data sources (such as reinsurance loss estimates, localized government reports, and private claims databases) that are otherwise inaccessible to most researchers," Jeremy Porter, head of climate implications for and co-founder of First Street, a climate risk financial modeling firm, told CNN via email. "Without it, replicating or extending damage trend analyses, especially at regional scales or across hazard types, is nearly impossible without significant funding or institutional access to commercial catastrophe models."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Carla Hayden has been the Librarian of Congress since 2016. She was the first woman and African American to hold the position.
![]() | Got my Onewheel Pint X last week. Been riding for a week. Just hit 108 miles today and have loved every bit of it. I’ve never been on any board before so it was about of a learning curve but the learning experienced has been great in itself. [link] [comments] |
Almost five dozen criminal cases will no longer be prosecuted because they were tainted by rampant corruption in a northern Alabama police department.
"He's Sox, and then the radio announced Cubs, and that's not true," the pope's older brother, John Prevost, told CBS News Chicago.
American faithful celebrated the announcement of Cardinal Robert Prevost as Pope Leo XIV, the first pontiff from the United States. The Chicago native is also a Peruvian citizen and lived for years in Peru, first as a missionary and then as an archbishop
‘Deep dish eucharist’: internet reacts to US pope with jokes and Chicago pride
Chicago reacts to hometown Pope Leo: ‘Like the Cubs winning the World Series’
‘The pope is Peruvian’: elation in country where pontiff served as bishop
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 9.
Hints as to what postures Pope Leo XIV, formerly Cardinal Robert Prevost, might take on some of the most controversial issues roiling the U.S. may come from his recent activity on social media.
This blog is now closed. You can read our latest story here
The winners and losers of Trump’s first tariff war strongly suggest that bankruptcies and farm consolidation could surge during his second term, with major corporations best placed to benefit from his polices at the expense of independent farmers.
New analysis by the non-profit research advocacy group Food and Water Watch (FWW), shared exclusively with the Guardian, shows that Trump’s first-term tariffs were particularly devastating for farmers in the Maga rural heartlands.
Continue reading...A federal court ruled Thursday that Alabama’s Republican-controlled legislature intentionally discriminated against Black voters when...
The post Federal Court Rules Alabama’s Congressional Map Intentionally Discriminated Against Black Voters appeared first on News Facts Network.
President Donald Trump abruptly fired Carla Hayden, the nation’s first Black and first female Librarian...
The post Trump Removes Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden Following Conservative Criticism of “Woke” Library Content appeared first on News Facts Network.
Alibaba Group researchers have developed "ZeroSearch," a technique that enables large language models to acquire search capabilities without using external search engines during training. The approach transforms LLMs into retrieval modules through supervised fine-tuning and employs a "curriculum-based rollout strategy" that gradually degrades generated document quality. In tests across seven question-answering datasets, ZeroSearch matched or exceeded the performance [PDF] of models trained with real search engines. A 7B-parameter retrieval module achieved results comparable to Google Search, while a 14B-parameter version outperformed it. The cost savings are substantial: training with 64,000 search queries using Google Search via SerpAPI would cost approximately $586.70, compared to just $70.80 using a 14B-parameter simulation LLM on four A100 GPUs -- an 88% reduction. The technique works with multiple model families including Qwen-2.5 and LLaMA-3.2. Researchers have released their code, datasets, and pre-trained models on GitHub and Hugging Face, potentially lowering barriers to entry for smaller AI companies developing sophisticated assistants.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Buoyed by supreme court ruling, Pentagon will remove as many as 1,000 service members. Key US politics stories from Thursday 8 May at a glance
“No More Trans @ DoD,” Pete Hegseth, the US defense secretary, posted after the supreme court allowed the Trump administration’s ousting of transgender troops to go forward. As of Thursday, the orders have been issued to identify and involuntarily force trans people out of service.
Department officials have said it is difficult to determine exactly how many transgender service members there are, but medical records will show those who have been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, show symptoms or are being treated. Those troops would then be forced out.
Continue reading...Pentagon will give other trans service members 30 days to self-identify while it enforces recently approved ban
The Pentagon is removing the 1,000 members of the military who openly identify as trans, and giving those who have yet to openly identify as transgender 30 days to remove themselves, according to a new directive issued on Thursday.
The memo is fueled by Tuesday’s supreme court decision allowing the Trump administration to enforce a ban on trans military members. The defense department has said it will follow up by going through medical records to identify others who have not come forward.
Continue reading...Hints and answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, No. 228, for May 9.
Residents – Catholic and non-Catholic – celebrate a ‘moment of joy’ as native son Robert Prevost becomes new pontiff
As white smoke billowed from the Vatican in Rome, yellow papal flags whipped in the crisp Lake Michigan breeze in front of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Academy on Chicago’s North Side.
Screams of “Habemus Papam!” echoed throughout the cafeteria at the Catholic school on Thursday afternoon, when news broke that Chicago’s Robert Prevost had become Pope Leo XIV.
Continue reading... ![]() | Literally invisible if you’re not paying attention [link] [comments] |
It's slick, comfortable and clever, but you pay a premium for it.
President Trump on Thursday attacked a law signed by President Joe Biden aimed at expanding high-speed internet access, calling the effort "racist" and "totally unconstitutional" and threatening to end it "immediately." The New York TimesL: Mr. Trump's statement was one of the starkest examples yet of his slash-and-burn approach to dismantling the legacy of his immediate predecessor in this term in office. The Digital Equity Act, a little-known effort to improve high-speed internet access in communities with poor access, was tucked into the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill that Mr. Biden signed into law early in his presidency. The act was written to help many different groups, including veterans, older people and disabled and rural communities. But Mr. Trump, using the incendiary language that has been a trademark of his political career, denounced the law on Thursday for also seeking to improve internet access for ethnic and racial minorities, raging in a social media post that it amounted to providing "woke handouts based on race."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
![]() | Trail riding to the fishing spot is by far my favorite spring activity. [link] [comments] |
![]() | I got a secondhand pint X off of Facebook and have been absolutely loving it. I just moved to an area with a ton of trails so it’s been a blast. I am wanting something a bit more powerful and capable of going offroad (Light to medium unpacked trails). I’m looking for recommendations on next steps… do I upgrade,or mod, or both? Any info on tires/ components would be appreciated!Thanks! [link] [comments] |
![]() | Ordered me a Kush wide pad on 4/20 sale. Just got here last evening. Only went for a shot ride in the hood. I "think" they are more comfortable could be a placebo. Added rea-lestate is nice (only wear 11.5). Definitely worth it for $42. [link] [comments] |
We got this XRV growler and decided to give FloatHub a try. Here's our unfiltered experience
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 432 for May 9.
Was that a gunshot? A new AI update to the Arlo home-security subscription service aims to alert its customers to worrisome sounds.
The new pope, formerly Robert F. Prevost, has a mixed voting history, casting ballots in both GOP and Democratic primaries.
The 2025 papal conclave at the Vatican ended with the election of American-born Cardinal Robert Prevost as Pope Leo XIV. Here's what to know about him.
The Department of Health and Human Services will effectively block the payout of overdue bonuses to many of its laid-off employees, multiple health officials say.
President Donald Trump on Thursday named Fox News host Jeanine Pirro as interim U.S. Attorney...
The post Jeanine Pirro Tapped as Interim U.S. Attorney for D.C. in Latest Move From Trump’s Fox News Pipeline appeared first on News Facts Network.
Immigrants make up a higher share of business owners than of the population and the workforce.
My Bluetooth stopped working. Can anyone walk me through the process of replacing it on the Little FOCer v3.1? Is that the chip that has the incorporated IMU as well and is there programming involved other than the normal float package?
The Fox News host will serve as the top prosecutor in the nation's capital for the time being.
Acting U.S. attorney Ed Martin was a "Stop the Steal" activist and he defended Jan. 6 rioters.
I'm in my 40s now. Am i too old for this shit? I am a decent snowboarder in terms of getting down the mountain safely, but I don't hit huge jumps or tricks for the most part just goof around and carve down. I plan to use the OW to walk my dog on secluded camping areas / public campgrounds. I do occasionally mountain bike so I'm curious if I'll end up wanting to ride those trails with the OW too. Primarily its just to help me exercise my energetic 2 year old cattle dog. I walked 60 miles a few weeks back trying to wear her out lol.
EDIT: WOW! I didn't expect such a huge and supportive response from this community. Appreciate every single one of you who took the time to add your 2-cents and thoughts. I'll definitely be wearing a helmet and gloves when I ride, but I've never used wrist guards before so I'll have to order a pair of those. I really had no idea this device had such a huge and supportive and enthusiastic community. Especially surprised to see that I'm not anywhere near the oldest person interested in riding one of these. My favorite movie by far growing up was Back to the future and I always dreamed of the day I'd get to ride a hoverboard. This seems like the closest we'll ever get!
Announcement makes UK the first country to agree deal with US since Trump imposed sweeping tariffs in April
The UK and US have agreed a “breakthrough” trade deal slashing some of Donald Trump’s tariffs on cars, aluminium and steel and that the prime minister said would save thousands of British jobs.
Keir Starmer said it was a “fantastic, historic day” as he announced the agreement, the first by the White House since Trump announced sweeping global tariffs last month.
Continue reading...The election of a first North American pontiff came after the death of the first Latin American pope and signaled a relinquishing of papal authority from Europe.
About a year ago, we talked about the fact that Android 15 became page size-agnostic, supporting both 4 KB and 16 KB page sizes. Google was already pushing developers to get their applications ready for 16 KB page sizes, which means recompiling for 16 KB alignment and testing on a 16 KB version of an Android device or simulator. Google is taking the next step now, requiring that every application targeting Android 15 or higher submitted to Google Play after 1 November 2025 must support a page size of 16 KB.
This is a key technical requirement to ensure your users can benefit from the performance enhancements on newer devices and prepares your apps for the platform’s future direction of improved performance on newer hardware. Without recompiling to support 16 KB pages, your app might not function correctly on these devices when they become more widely available in future Android releases.
↫ Dan Brown on the Android Developers Blog
This is mostly only relevant for developers instead of users, but in the extremely unlikely scenario that one of your favourite applications cannot be made to work with 16 KB page sizes for some weird reason, or the developer refuses to support it or some even weirder reason, you might have to say goodbye to that applications if you use Android 15 or higher. This is absurdly unlikely, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it happens to at least one application.
If that happens, I want to know which application that is, and ask the developer for their story.
Robert Prevost’s election as pope stunned many Catholics skeptical that an American would ever be elevated to that role.
The Trump administration filed an emergency appeal Thursday asking the Supreme Court to allow it...
The post Trump Seeks to Revoke Legal Status of 532,000 Migrants, Urges Supreme Court to Override Lower Ruling appeared first on News Facts Network.
Trusts having to ‘think the previously unthinkable’ to make savings demanded by new NHS England boss
Hospitals in England are cutting staff, closing services and planning to ration care in order to make “eye-watering” savings demanded by NHS bosses.
Rehabilitation centres face being shut, talking therapies services cut and beds for end-of-life care reduced as part of efforts by England’s 215 NHS trusts to comply with a “financial reset”.
47% were cutting services and another 43% were considering doing so.
37% were cutting clinical posts and a further 40% may follow suit.
26% were closing some services and 55% more may do so.
Continue reading...A new Corning Gorilla Glass Ceramic 2 cover brings a "sleek yet strong design," according to Samsung.
In an interview with "The View," former President Joe Biden said he took some responsibility for President Trump's 2024 win because he was "in charge."
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Democratic House members on Thursday blasted the Trump administration’s moves to shrink the Department of Veterans Affairs and demanded more transparency from its leaders after a ProPublica investigation revealed widespread disruptions across the agency’s health care system.
“There are real-life dangerous impacts for veterans,” said Rep. Chris Deluzio of Pennsylvania, citing the news organization’s work.
This week, ProPublica reported on dozens of emails sent from staff at VA hospitals and clinics across the country to headquarters warning how cuts could, and in some cases are, degrading the agency’s ability to provide for the roughly 9 million veterans who rely on it.
Hiring freezes and other edicts from the White House have left medical providers scrambling and short-staffed amid an ever-shifting series of policy moves, including the cancellation of contracts with companies that maintain cancer registries, the emails said. Staffers at VA centers in Pennsylvania warned the cuts were causing “severe and immediate impacts,” including to “life-saving cancer trials.”
“Enrollment in clinical trials is stopping,” one wrote, “meaning veterans lose access to therapies.” Staffers at the hospital warned more than 1,000 veterans would lose access to treatment for diseases ranging from metastatic head and neck cancers, to kidney disease, to traumatic brain injuries.
On Thursday, the House members, several of whom are veterans, demanded VA leadership provide more details on how cuts are affecting such work, in which service members often receive treatment they would not otherwise have access to.
“We all want to cut waste, fraud and abuse, but what we see today is when you cancel a contract, it means the end of a clinical trial that’s going to save someone’s life,” Rep. Maggie Goodlander of New Hampshire said.
Notably, Deluzio, an Iraq War veteran whose Pittsburgh-area district includes a VA facility, and other lawmakers said they had learned about the impact for the first time from ProPublica’s reporting. On Thursday, they accused agency Secretary Doug Collins of stonewalling their efforts to find out what positions have been laid off, what contracts have been canceled and what future cuts will look like.
“We want the country to understand that this administration is hiding what they are doing, not just from us and the Congress, but from veterans and the American people,” Deluzio said.
“And the worst part is, we don’t know if anyone has died,” he added.
President Donald Trump has long said his administration will prioritize veterans and not compromise their care.
The disruptions at the VA have come even as the department has laid off just a few thousand staffers — a small fraction of the employees it said it ultimately plans to remove. Collins has said the agency is developing plans with Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to cut at least 70,000 employees — a number that he has underscored is a “goal.” “Could be more, could be less,” he told lawmakers this week.
On Thursday, in a post on X, Collins pushed back on criticism, calling ProPublica’s reporting “misleading” and saying it was based on “some outdated reports from the internal system VA uses to quickly identify and fix issues across the department.”
In a statement, VA press secretary Pete Kasperowicz said that Collins was working to fix a “broken bureaucracy” that has long had problems with patient safety and access to care, among other issues. “Unfortunately, many in the media, government union bosses and some in Congress are fighting to keep in place the broken status quo,” he said. “Our message to Veterans is simple: Despite major opposition from those who don’t want to change a thing at VA, we will reform the department to make it work better for Veterans, families, caregivers and survivors.”
Kasperowicz previously told the news organization that the issues in Pennsylvania have been resolved, though locals there with knowledge of the issues said that’s not the case and that the impact is ongoing. Kasperowicz also said in regard to the contracts to maintain the cancer registries that there had been “no effect on patients.” He added that the VA is moving to create a national contract to administer them.
According to some providers, even the temporary disruptions have hurt the care of veterans. One clinical trial to treat veterans for opioid addiction was hobbled by temporary layoffs. “We couldn’t give veterans a tool that could save their lives,” said Ellie Gordon, the CEO of the startup Behavior, which is testing biosensors to alert veterans to the risk of relapse.
Collins touted the cuts in a sometimes-contentious hearing on Tuesday before the U.S Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
“We’re going to maintain VA’s mission-essential jobs like doctors, nurses and claims processors, while phasing out non-mission essential roles like interior designers and DEI officers,” he said in an opening statement. The funds saved will be rerouted into direct health care and benefits for veterans, he added.
Some Republicans at the hearing defended the administration’s proposed cuts. “The VA has become a bloated bureaucracy,” said Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who represents Alabama. “I think most of us will agree with that.”
But Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., pushed back on Collins’ statements, saying that laying off such a large portion of the staff will inevitably involve letting go of health care workers, like nurses and doctors. “You cannot slash and trash the VA without eliminating those essential positions which provide access and availability of health care,” he said. “It simply cannot be done.”
Others at the hearing took Collins to task for a lack of transparency. Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, admonished the secretary for refusing to provide a list of the 538 canceled contracts since his appointment. Collins said he would provide the information, but only after it’s finalized.
“We’re looking at every step we can, but also, I’m not going to play it out in a public arena,” he said.
J. David McSwane contributed reporting.
![]() | Sprained my ankle pretty bad from practicing curb nudges in a parking lot. I tried hopping a curb into a grassy patch they put in the middle of parking lots and oh boy that was a stupid idea. When I got over the curb and dropped to the grass my ankle rolled bad. Can’t put any weight on my foot, but I got x rays and nothings broken. I’ve got over 400+ miles on my XR. My question is are curb nudges an actual good skill to know on a OW? I have a full time job, wife, and a 1 year old. This ankle sprain is gonna set me back for a bit. I want to learn tricks, but I can’t help but think that I should just stick to cruising and light trail riding for the sake of protecting my body from future injuries and being able to help provide for my family. Also not being able to ride blows chunks. Thanks 🤙🏻 [link] [comments] |
A three-judge panel permanently blocked Alabama from using a state-drawn map that they said flouted their directive to draw a plan that was fair to Black voters.
According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple has "made progress" on a chip for a product that could rival the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses. The company is also reportedly working on glasses that use augmented reality. The Verge reports: The chip is apparently based on the chips Apple uses for the Apple Watch, though the company has removed parts and is being designed in such a way that it can handle the "multiple cameras" that the smart glasses might have, Bloomberg reports. Apple wants mass production of the chip to start by the end of 2026 or sometime in 2027, so the glasses themselves could come out within that timeframe. [...] Apple is developing chips for camera-equipped Apple Watch and Airpods as well, and the goal is for those chips to be ready "by around 2027," Bloomberg says. The company is also developing new M-series chips and dedicated AI server chips, per the report.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
The national average price of a gallon of regular gasoline is still over $3, and no state has an average price below $2.60. But since mid-April, President Donald Trump has falsely claimed, repeatedly, that gasoline prices “hit $1.98 a gallon” in multiple states. Now we may know his source.
Before publishing our April 24 story about the president’s inaccurate claims of much lower gasoline prices, we asked the White House for supporting evidence. Officials didn’t provide any.
After Trump made the $1.98 gasoline claim again, on social media May 2, CNBC reported that Trump was likely referring to the trading price for RBOB, a form of gasoline called reformulated blendstock for oxygenate blending. That price isn’t what drivers pay at the pump.
“When asked by CNBC whether the president was referencing RBOB, Trump administration officials pointed to the contract’s recent price action [dropping below $2 per gallon],” Spencer Kimball, a CNBC energy reporter, wrote in a May 5 article.
We contacted the White House to confirm the report, but we received no reply.
RBOB is an unfinished gasoline product that is “intended for blending with oxygenates,” such as ethanol, “to produce finished reformulated gasoline,” according to the Energy Information Administration. Before it’s mixed to make gasoline that goes in vehicles, RBOB is traded as a commodity.
For example, contracts for RBOB futures traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange sold for between $1.96 per gallon and $1.99 per gallon for a few days in April, down from about $2.11 when Trump took office on Jan. 20.
EIA says: “In addition to trading physical quantities of petroleum products, market participants can also use futures contracts to buy or sell gasoline and distillate for future delivery, or to hedge or speculate on future price movements.”
Prior to Trump’s inauguration, the RBOB trading price on the NYMEX was most recently below $2 per gallon in December, when Joe Biden was president. As of May 7, the price was roughly $2.06.
But the cost for RBOB is considered to be a kind of wholesale price. It excludes state and federal taxes, as well as other manufacturing, distribution and marketing costs that go into determining the final fuel price that consumers see at gas stations.
“It does not come anywhere near explaining what consumers are paying,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, which tracks fuel prices, told CNBC about the RBOB trading price.
“It would be irrelevant to the consumer to know what the price of RBOB is because they’re not paying the wholesale price of RBOB,” he said.
If Trump has been referring to the price for RBOB all along, he has misled the public by comparing it with previously high gasoline prices paid by drivers. (Trump has also misleadingly referred to wholesale prices, instead of retail prices, when claiming that the cost of eggs is down significantly.)
“Prices are down at tremendous numbers for gasoline,” Trump said in a “Meet the Press” interview that aired May 4. “It went up to $3.90, even $4. And in California, $5 and $6. Right? Okay. I have it down to $1.98 in many states right now.”
We’d also note, as we’ve written before, that presidents don’t control gasoline prices, as Trump’s comment suggested. The price is mainly determined by the cost of crude oil, which is set on the global market based largely on supply and demand.
Furthermore, for consumers nationwide, the average price of regular grade gasoline was $3.15 per gallon the week ending May 5, according to EIA data. That was up from about $3.11 per gallon when Trump began his second term earlier this year. Prices had been as high as $5 a gallon in 2022.
As for individual states, AAA said the lowest average price on May 7 was roughly $2.65 per gallon in Mississippi.
GasBuddy figures show similar national and state average prices.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post The Possible Source of Trump’s False $2 Gasoline Claim appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Vice-president says US will seek to de-escalate but cannot force either nuclear power to ‘lay down their arms’
JD Vance has said that the US will not intervene in the conflict between Pakistan and India, calling fighting between the two nuclear powers “fundamentally none of our business”.
The remarks came during an interview with Fox News, where the US vice-president said that the US would seek to de-escalate the conflict but could force neither side to “lay down their arms”.
Continue reading...It's a 49-inch desk-hogging QD-OLED at an attractive price but I'm also generally underwhelmed by it.
The students of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Academy, who earlier this week held a mock conclave, were overjoyed Thursday when Chicago-born Cardinal Robert Prevost was elected the new pope.
In a recent interview with the Council on Foreign Relations, Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince warned that AI is breaking the economic model of the web by decoupling content creation from value, with platforms like Google and OpenAI increasingly providing answers without driving traffic to original sources. He argued that unless AI companies start compensating creators, the web's content ecosystem will collapse -- calling most current AI investment a "money fire" with only a small fraction holding long-term value. Search Engine Land reports: Google's value exchange with content creators has collapsed, Prince said: "Ten years ago... for every two pages of a website that Google scraped, they would send you one visitor. ... That was the trade. ... Now, it takes six pages scraped to get one visitor." That drop reflects the rise of zero-click searches, which happen when searchers get answers directly on Google's search page. "Today, 75 percent of the queries... get answered without you leaving Google." This trend, long criticized by publishers and SEOs, is part of a broader concern: AI companies are using original content to generate answers that rarely/never drive traffic back to creators. AI makes the problem worse. Large language models (LLMs) are accelerating the crisis, Prince said. AI companies scrape far more content per user interaction than Google ever has -- with even less return to creators. "What do you think it is for OpenAI? 250 to one. What do you think it is for Anthropic? Six thousand to one." "More and more the answers... won't lead you to the original source, it will be some derivative of that source." This situation threatens the sustainability of the web as we know it, Prince said: "If content creators can't derive value... then they're not going to create original content." The modern web is breaking. AI companies are aware of the problem, and the business model of the web can't survive unless there's some change, Prince said: "Sam Altman at OpenAI and others get that. But... he can't be the only one paying for content when everyone else gets it for free." Cloudflare's right in the middle of this problem -- it powers 80% of AI companies and a 20-30% of the web. Cloudfaire is now trying to figure out how to help fix what's broken, Prince said. AI = money fire. Prince is not against AI. However, he said he is skeptical of the investment frenzy. "I would guess that 99% of the money that people are spending on these projects today is just getting lit on fire. But 1% is going to be incredibly valuable." "And so maybe we've all got a light, you know, $100 on fire to find that $1 that matters." You can watch a recording of the interview and read the full transcript here.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Lai Ching-te says ‘message of history is clear’ as Taiwan for first time officially commemorates end of second world war
Taiwan’s president, Lai Ching-te, has compared his nation to the European countries heading for conflict with Nazi Germany in the 1930s, in a punchy speech commemorating the end of the second world war in Europe.
“Eighty years after the end of the European war, the message of history is clear. Today, 80 years later, we share the same values and face similar challenges as many of the democracies that participated in the European war,” Lai said to a group of foreign dignitaries gathered in Taipei.
Continue reading...Pope Leo XIV has been known as the “Latin Yankee” in Rome for the decades he worked in Peru, ministering to the dispossessed and marginalized.
Leo XIV celebrated as second Latin American pope having spent many years in Peru’s church
The election of Pope Leo XIV has been celebrated across Latin America, where many hailed him as the second pontiff from the region, after his Argentinian predecessor, Francis.
The news prompted particular elation in Peru, where he lived and worked for more than 20 years and was granted citizenship in 2015. In the capital, Lima, the bells of the cathedral rang in celebration.
In his first appearance from the Vatican balcony, Leo XIV briefly switched from Italian to Spanish to address the faithful “from my beloved diocese of Chiclayo, in Peru”, where he served as bishop for more than a decade.
President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent have both said numerous trade agreements could come as soon as this week.
Charles says sacrifice of second world war heroes must not be in vain
King Charles called for a renewal of “global commitments to restoring a just peace where there is war, to diplomacy and to the prevention of conflict”, as the UK marked the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day.
Westminster Abbey was the focal point for national commemorations with a service of thanksgiving weaving poignant reminders of wartime deprivation and loss with the hopes for the future that historic day had promised.
Continue reading...The themes of Pope Leo XIV's speech seemed to suggest he would have continuity with his predecessor Pope Francis.
The CEO of the private prison firm CoreCivic told investors on a Thursday call that his company has a value proposition for the federal government: American prison profiteers are less likely to draw legal challenges than foreign alternatives — an apparent reference to the infamous El Salvador prison housing immigrants who were illegally deported from the U.S.
CoreCivic is among the biggest players in the immigration detention business — and they’re looking to capitalize on contracts for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities under President Donald Trump.
Even as the companies celebrated profit opportunities on earnings calls this week, however, pushback is building in communities tapped to host their lockups.
Newark, New Jersey’s mayor rallied protesters outside a newly reactivated facility in his city. Leavenworth, Kansas, sued CoreCivic for reopening a facility there. Leaders in the San Francisco Bay Area are girding themselves for a fight against the use of an Air Force base for deportation. And two House representatives from Florida recently criticized conditions in ICE facilities in their state.
The Trump administration’s aggressive deportation push has spurred an increase in immigration detention. ICE facilities throughout the country are at or over capacity, and the federal government is making desperate attempts to expand its detention network. According to federal contracting documents, the agency wants to spend billions more for immigration detention.
The pushback is growing — but so is the Trump administration’s determination to feed the deportation pipeline. A tally by The Intercept shows that, since Trump took office, at least 10 facilities owned or operated by the two largest private prison companies — CoreCivic and GEO Group — have had their contracts created, renewed, or modified to detain immigrants. Other private prison companies and federal contractors have signed contracts for further immigration detention, including an expansion of tent detention facilities.
“These companies are working with ICE to spend money that they haven’t even been given yet.”
On an earnings call Wednesday, GEO Group CEO J. David Donahue sounded a cautious but optimistic note about what is to come under Trump. He said the ongoing budget reconciliation discussions in Congress were a “key element” in how much and how fast ICE can build up its privately run detention capacity.
“The bottom line right now is that private prison companies are waiting with bated breath for Congress to give ICE $45 billion through the reconciliation process,” said Setareh Ghandehari, the advocacy director at Detention Watch Network. “It’s horrific and we’ve been sounding the alarm about this for months — but right now that alarm is blaring and it’s clear how closely these companies are working with ICE to spend money that they haven’t even been given yet.”
Outside of detention, the company hopes to bulk up the number of people covered by an electronic surveillance contract called the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program from a current number of 185,000 to “millions if called upon,” Donahue said.
“This is a unique moment in our company’s history,” he said, “and we believe we are well-positioned to meet this unprecedented opportunity.”
On a quarterly earnings call Thursday, CoreCivic executives touted their steps to reopen two separate facilities: one in California City, California, and a facility in Leavenworth, Kansas. What they did not mention was the growing opposition from local officials in Leavenworth.
In late March, the city of Leavenworth filed a lawsuit against CoreCivic to try to prevent its use of one of their facilities to detain immigrants. Despite Leavenworth being surrounded by penitentiaries, the conservative city is concerned about the detention of immigrants at the Midwest Regional Reception Center.
For nearly 30 years, CoreCivic operated the facility, primarily holding pre-trial detainees in the custody of U.S. Marshals. Conditions were so bad that a federal judge called it “an absolute hell hole.” The facility was shuttered in 2021 by the Biden administration when it curtailed the federal government’s use of private prisons.
Under the Trump administration, ICE’s rush to expand detention capacity led to a “letter agreement” with CoreCivic, authorizing the private prison company to begin revamping the Leavenworth facility so they could quickly begin detaining immigrants. This agreement is not a formal contract but covers a six-month period while CoreCivic works to “negotiate and execute a long-term contract,” the company said in a document distributed to shareholders.
In its lawsuit, the city of Leavenworth claims that CoreCivic did not engage with the proper permit process with the city to begin operating the detention center. In the process of making that central claim, the city lawsuit drags CoreCivic and the prior conditions at the facility.
The fight over private immigration detention is playing out along similar lines in New Jersey, as local officials battle the White House. In 2021, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed a law barring immigration detention in the state. CoreCivic sued — with the Biden administration’s support — and a federal judge ruled in favor of the company. Last week, an appeals court finally heard arguments for the case.
Despite the ongoing litigation, ICE extended a detention center contract to CoreCivic. GEO Group also got in on the action earlier this year, when ICE gave it a contract to run the Delaney Hall facility in Newark. In response, the city of Newark sued GEO Group, in an attempt to stop the facility from opening. The lawsuit is ongoing, with GEO Group saying it’s an attempt by New Jersey officials to “cripple federal immigration enforcement in the state.”
This week, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka joined advocates to protest the proposed GEO Group facility, prompting a company spokesperson to dismiss him as an “open-borders politician.” Immigrant advocates thanked Baraka, who is running for governor.
“Imposing the reopening of a detention center in a city and state that has gone lengths to protect New Jersey communities is a form of federal overreach,” Li Adorno, of the group Movimiento Cosecha New Jersey, said in a statement. “The battle in the courts has begun to spill into Newark’s toxic corridor and the gritty scrappy city is ready to brawl.”
Even as the local opposition multiplies, private prison executives told investors on two calls this week that they remained certain the second Trump era will be good for them.
To win more contracts, they will have to vie against several alternative options that have been floated by Trump’s inner circle, ranging from proposals for tent cities at the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay to the notorious Terrorism Confinement Center, known as CECOT, that is already being used at the invitation of El Salvador’s strongman President Nayib Bukele.
Damon Hininger, the CEO of CoreCivic, told investors Thursday that he thinks his company will win out against alternatives.
“Private sector beds are the least likely to be legally challenged, particularly relative to some international options,” he said.
Still, company officials made clear that they are hedging their bets. Executives on a Thursday quarterly earnings call said they were ready to partner with the government should it follow through with a scheme to hold immigrants on U.S. military bases across the country, even if it involved a more limited role as a transportation contractor.
“We’ve got the capability to provide something very quickly that they’re anticipating on some of these military reservations,” Hininger said.
The company is also deploying resources nationwide to closed facilities for general upkeep for further ICE expansion, with company executives interested in pitching their facilities in Colorado, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.
The past few years have provided many opportunities for private prison companies — including under the Biden administration. During President Joe Biden’s last year in office, his administration extended at least 14 ICE jail contracts with private prison companies and sought options to expand the immigration detention network.
With company executives predicting more contracts to come this week, immigrant rights activists decried the celebration of profits from immigration detention.
Ghandehari, the Detention Watch Network official, said, “It’s frankly disturbing to hear people so giddy about making money off of the caging and abuse of their fellow human beings.”
The post Private Prison CEO on ICE Contracts: We’re a Better Deal Than El Salvador’s CECOT appeared first on The Intercept.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: RIP, 486 processor. You've had a long run since Intel released you back in 1989. While Microsoft stopped supporting you with the release of Windows XP in 2001, Linux kept you alive and well for another 20+ years. But all good things must come to an end, and with the forthcoming release of the Linux 6.15 kernel, the 486 and the first Pentium processors will be sunsetted. Why? Linus Torvalds wrote recently on the Linux Kernel Mailing List (LKML), "I really get the feeling that it's time to leave i486 support behind. There's zero real reason for anybody to waste one second of development effort on this kind of issue." Senior Linux kernel developer Ingo Molnar put Torvalds' remark into context, writing, "In the x86 architecture, we have various complicated hardware emulation facilities on x86-32 to support ancient 32-bit CPUs that very very few people are using with modern kernels. This compatibility glue is sometimes even causing problems that people spend time to resolve, which time could be spent on other things." "This will be the first time Linux has dropped support for a major chip family since 2012, when Linux stopped supporting the 386 family," notes ZDNet's Steven Vaughan-Nichols. "Moving forward, the minimum supported x86 CPU will now be the original Pentium (P5) or newer, requiring the presence of the Time Stamp Counter (TSC) and the CMPXCHG8B (CX8) instruction. These features are absent in the older 486 and early 586 processors, such as the IDT WinChip and AMD Elan families." That said, you can continue running Linux on Pentium CPUs, but you'll have to "run museum kernels," as Torvalds pointed out in 2022 when he first floated the idea of ending support for 486.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
There have been 13 previous popes named Leo, the last elected in 1878. Previous Leos have been reformers, a possible sign of what the new pontiff hopes to emulate.
Fire department leaders on Thursday forcefully pushed back against a proposal to put speed bumps on Main Street, arguing that doing so would slow down emergency responses and put Newarkers in danger.
The announcement should mean tariffs won't impact prices on its smart ring.
Investors hope the U.S.-U.K. trade agreement is a preiude to more deals, although Wall Street analysts say to expect more volatility.
Since returning to the White House, President Donald Trump has touted corporate and foreign U.S. investment announcements as proof he is ushering in "the golden age of America."
On Jan. 21, Trump said that before he’d finished the "first full business day" of his second term, the U.S. had "already secured nearly $3 trillion of new investments."
On April 2, he said, "It looks like we’re going to have about $6 trillion of investments." Six days later, Trump told National Republican Congressional Committee Dinner attendees that the investment total was "now revised up to about $7 (trillion)."
During an April 30 News Nation town hall, Trump speculated that "it could be more than $8 trillion."
On May 4, Trump told NBC’s "Meet the Press" host Kristen Welker, "I think we probably have close to $9 trillion of investments coming into this country."
On May 6, Trump told reporters, "I think the real number could be $9 (trillion) or $10 trillion."
Finally, on May 8, Trump said, "We have now close to $10 trillion — think of that, $10 trillion" in investments. "We’re talking about essentially two months."
That’s far beyond the figures the White House has released publicly.
We tallied the White House’s public lists of investments; they amount to $2.1 trillion in corporate investments, or at most $5.1 trillion when including promised investments from countries. Experts cautioned that the promised corporate investments are not guaranteed to materialize in full, or during Trump’s presidency, and some of them would have occurred regardless of who was president.
Trump isn’t the first to overstate new investments on his watch. President Joe Biden said in 2024 that his bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act had attracted $640 billion in private investments; economists told PolitiFact that Biden’s numbers were based on what companies had announced, which is not the same as dollars already spent.
Roman V. Yampolskiy, a University of Louisville professor and a specialist in artificial intelligence, which dominates the promised investments Trump cited, said, "Historically, large-scale investment announcements often overpromise and underdeliver. There is a performative element to them, especially in politically charged contexts. They function as political theater as much as economic commitment."
Since Trump’s inauguration, the White House has publicized investment announcements from three countries and roughly 60 companies on its website, including in a "non-comprehensive running list." Many of the highest-dollar corporate announcements were in March and April.
Corporate announcements in the White House’s lists total approximately $2.1 trillion worth of U.S. investment.
The White House separately has cited commitments from the United Arab Emirates to invest $1.4 trillion over the next 10 years; from Japan to "boost" its investment in the U.S. to $1 trillion; and from Saudi Arabia to invest $600 billion in the U.S. during Trump’s presidency. Combined with the corporate announcements, these bring the total to about $5.1 trillion, $4.9 trillion short of Trump’s figure.
But the $5.1 trillion total has caveats. For example, the White House said "Japan announced a $1 trillion investment in the U.S." But the article it linked said in 2023, Japan’s U.S. investment was $783.3 billion and Japan would "boost" that to $1 trillion. That’s an increase of $216.7 billion rather than a new $1 trillion investment. That would put the total value of newly pledged U.S. investment at about $4.3 trillion.
This spreadsheet was last updated with the White House’s investment tallies as of noon ET, May 8.
The White House figures can’t easily be used for apples-to-apples comparisons. Some of the investments are planned over Trump’s four-year term, others over five years or a decade. In one case — ADQ and Energy Capital Partners’ planned $25 billion investment — it isn’t limited to U.S.-based projects.
The White House declined to detail additional investments. A spokesperson pointed to federal Bureau of Economic Analysis data that shows a 22% increase in business investment in the first quarter of 2025, calling it a historic increase.
However, experts cautioned this increase was shaped by businesses stocking up on inventory before Trump’s tariffs take effect and said the increase is unlikely to be sustained.
Experts told PolitiFact that each of the five biggest investments on Trump’s list warrants some caution, because they might not reach Trump’s cited dollar amounts or were not solely prompted by Trump’s policies.
"Many of these announcements, particularly those in the AI and semiconductor sectors, appear to be, at least in part, aspirational in nature," Yampolskiy said. "They serve a signaling function: to attract investor attention, shape policy discourse, and secure favorable regulatory or funding environments."
The five largest company investments collectively account for 82% of the dollar value on the White House’s corporate list.
Stargate
Stargate is an artificial intelligence collaboration among OpenAI, Oracle and Softbank, announced during a Jan. 21 White House event. The White House values the investment at $500 billion.
The company’s official announcement says $100 billion will be invested "immediately" and that it "intends to invest" a total of $500 billion over the next four years, a goal repeated by Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son at the White House event.
"Whether that much will ultimately get spent remains to be seen," wrote John Higgins, chief economist at Capital Economics, an international consulting firm.
Enrique Dans, who studies technology and policy at Madrid’s IE Business School, said the $500 billion figure is "astronomical — roughly 2% of U.S. gross domestic product — and lacks clear documentation."
At the White House event, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said, "We wouldn’t be able to do this without you, Mr. President." But Altman had been discussing plans for a $100 billion investment 10 months before Trump won his second term, The Washington Post reported, including an Abilene, Texas, data center which began construction in summer 2024.
"AI investments have been on a global trajectory driven by technological maturity and competitive pressure, especially from China," Dans said. "Any U.S. president would have seen a surge."
NVIDIA
NVIDIA, another AI company, said it plans to invest up to $500 billion on U.S. infrastructure over the next four years. Previously, NVIDIA manufactured most of its chips in Taiwan.
"It is unlikely Nvidia would have moved any production to the U.S. if it was not for pressure from the Trump administration," Gil Luria, an analyst with the financial services firm D.A. Davidson, told Reuters. However, Luria added, "The half a trillion number is likely hyperbole."
Dans said that although tax cuts from Trump’s first term have benefited the company’s focus on U.S.-based efforts, "the core growth likely would have occurred anyway," regardless of the president.
Apple
On Feb. 24, days after Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, met with Trump, the consumer electronics giant announced it plans to spend "more than $500 billion in the U.S. over the next four years."
Analysts have expressed skepticism that this represents new investment. Dans called the investment "simply more of what (Apple) already does," from "day-to-day activities with thousands of suppliers in all 50 states to the operation of its domestic data centers, as well as its investments in Apple TV+ and other projects already manufactured in the country."
In a note to investors, David Vogt, an analyst with the Swiss-based bank UBS, wrote, "Call us a skeptic. … We believe (the figure) lacks substance."
IBM
IBM announced April 28 plans to invest $150 billion in the U.S., including more than $30 billion in research and development on U.S-based manufacturing of mainframe and quantum computers.
This is "not clearly Trump-related," Dans said. "IBM’s strategy pivots have been underway since the 2010s."
Luria said, "While we believe IBM will continue to invest in the emerging area of quantum technology, the bombastic figure is more likely a gesture towards the U.S. administration," Reuters reported.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which makes semiconductors for computing and electronics, has pledged to spend $100 billion in the U.S. Analysts said this number is the most well-supported among the investments that Trump cites. Although bringing semiconductor production back to the U.S. began during Trump’s first term, it was "greatly accelerated by" Biden’s CHIPS and Science Act, which prompted years of investment before Trump’s second term, Dans said.
Over the past five years, the company has spent at least $65 billion on fabrication facilities near Phoenix, funded in part by $6.6 billion from the CHIPS and Science Act.
Overall, Dans said, "Trump might deserve some partial credit for setting a more aggressive tone on economic nationalism and supply chain reshoring, and for lowering the corporate tax reform, which did affect repatriation and some investment decisions. But most of these trends — the AI boom, the semiconductor reshoring, the cloud computing infrastructure — are long-term structural shifts that predate Trump and will continue regardless of who is in office."
Trump said, "We have now close to $10 trillion, think of that, $10 trillion" in investments. "We’re talking about essentially two months."
The White House has pointed to investment announcements totaling $5.1 trillion, including $2.1 trillion from companies and the rest from countries.
That’s at least $4.9 trillion short of Trump’s figure, and these announcements represent future spending, some of which is planned over four years, five years or a decade.
Experts said many of the dollar amounts are aspirational and that the investments announced might never be fully reached. They also said some of this investment would have occurred regardless of who was president.
We rate the statement False.
PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.
This live blog is now closed. You can read our latest reporting on the Kashmir crisis here:
The Pakistan Aviation Authority has announced that operations at Karachi airport will be suspended until midnight, Reuters reports. It has just gone past 6pm in Karachi.
Reuters is also carrying comments from India’s foreign secretary, who has said that any further escalation would be escalation by Pakistan, and would be responded to. Pakistan would, he said, be responsible for the consequences if India infrastructure was targeted.
Continue reading...Some users wonder whether new pope has had Chicago’s favorite liqueur Malört while others reference The Bear
The internet exploded with humor and Chicago pride on Thursday following the historic announcement that Robert Francis Prevost, a 69-year-old American clergyman from Chicago, has been named the new pope.
Now known as Pope Leo XIV, Prevost has become the first clergyman from the United States to lead the Roman Catholic church, ending the Vatican’s longstanding opposition to the idea of a US pontiff.
Continue reading...So I got my One wheel GT about a week ago, and I waited till I started falling off alot less to put my rail guards on, only problem it too the adhesive off one of the guards by accident. I'm wondering if JB weld would work trying to put it on or should I just order a new set?
So I recently ordered a GT as my first onewheel and after doing some more reading about it, it seems people prefer the riding experience of the XR classic over the GT. I understand it’s entirely subjective and there are minor differences between the two. I just wanted some insight on if you guys think it’s worth it to return the GT when I get it and exchange it for the XR classic.
I appreciate your opinions and insight! Thanks.
I’ve “launched” the Mac Themes Garden! It is a website showcasing more than 3,000 (and counting) Kaleidoscope from the Classic Mac era, ready to be seen, downloaded and explored! Check it out! Oh, and there also is an RSS feed you can subscribe to see themes as they are added/updated!
↫ Damien Erambert
If you’ve spent any time on retrocomputing-related social media channels, you’ve definitely seen the old classic Mac OS themes in your timeline. They are exquisitely beautiful artifacts of a bygone era, and the work Damien Erambert has been doing to make these easily available and shareable, entirely in his free time, is awesome and a massive service to the retrocomputing community.
The process to get these themes loaded up onto the website is actually a lot more involved than you might imagine. It involves a classic Mac OS virtual machine, applying themes, taking screenshots, collecting creator information, and adding everything to a database. This process is mostly manual, and Erambart estimates he’s about halfway done.
If you have classic Mac OS running somewhere, on real hardware or in a virtual machine, you can now easily theme it at your heart’s content.
A federal judge has allowed key parts of a class action lawsuit against Delta Air Lines to proceed, stemming from massive flight disruptions caused by CrowdStrike's faulty Windows update in July 2024. The Register reports: Delta blamed its reliance on Microsoft software and the CrowdStrike incident for its woes. However, according to the plaintiffs in the action (PDF), both companies offered the airline assistance, which Delta turned down. Customers of the Atlanta-based carrier affected by the delays and cancellations claim they struggled to secure refunds and compensation from the airline. The plaintiffs allege that "although Delta offered reimbursement of eligible expenses through their website and app, Delta failed to clarify that the customer would only be receiving a partial reimbursement." "Furthermore, Delta did not disclose to its customers that acceptance of the partial reimbursement would release any legal claims the customer may have against Delta until after the customer 'click[ed] on the button to accept the partial reimbursement.'" The action concerns both US domestic and international travel. The former is covered by US Department of Transportation rules, which require airline agents to "inform customers of their right to a refund ... before making an offer for alternative transportation, travel credits, vouchers, or other compensation in lieu of refunds." The latter claims come under the Montreal Convention, which is designed to be a single, universal treaty to govern airline liability. Delta, which estimated its operational losses at around half a billion dollars due to the outage, sought to dismiss the complaint. While the US District Judge, Mark H. Cohen, granted the airline's motion to dismiss some of the claims, he permitted others to proceed. These were Count I (breach of contract based on failure to refund) and Count XII (violation of the Montreal Convention).
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
About two-thirds of the staff that provides free examinations for the deadly disease, which one study says affects 1 in 5 longtime miners, was recently fired.
Companies are already moving to hike their prices as U.S. tariffs bite, a move economists say is likely to drive up inflation.
Donald Trump’s all-caps executive order on policing — “STRENGTHENING AND UNLEASHING AMERICA’S LAW ENFORCEMENT TO PURSUE CRIMINALS AND PROTECT INNOCENT CITIZENS” – is less about policy and more about intent. And that intent is clear: To give Trump direct control over local law enforcement and further shield police from accountability.
As journalist and author of “Rise of the Warrior Cop” Radley Balko puts it, “It’s a statement of intent and whether or not Trump is able to do a lot of the more pernicious and unconstitutional things he wants to do.”
The executive order calls for “military and national security assets” to assist in local policing, directs federal resources and protections for state and local law enforcement, and enhances police protections, among other proclamations. But it reflects a deeper ambition.
“He wants more federal militarized law enforcement under his thumb instead of under the thumb of governors or mayors,” says Balko. “He wants to use them to help with immigration deportations. He wants help with cracking down on protest.” And the concern and fear, says Balko, is that Trump will also “use law enforcement to go after his critics and people he perceives to be his enemies.”
This week on The Intercept Briefing, Balko joins senior reporter Akela Lacy and host Jessica Washington to break down the Trump administration’s push to federalize local law enforcement and “unleash” police who already face minimal meaningful restraint.
“We’re really getting to the point where law enforcement officers have almost no accountability at all,” says Balko, who writes the newsletter The Watch. He adds, “All of this is based on a premise that isn’t true, which is that we’re in some sort of massive crime wave that’s been sweeping the country.”
The fearmongering, Lacy notes, is that cities run by Democrats — San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Baltimore — are dangerous.
But as Balko points out, “When [Trump] took office for the first time he had actually inherited the lowest crime rate of any president since like Eisenhower. And [he] was the first president in 40 years to leave office with a higher homicide rate than when he entered it.” While crime spiked during the pandemic under Trump, Balko continues, “Under Biden it started going down over the last two years of [his] administration and it continues to go down.”
“The narrative,” Lacy adds, ”is extremely detached from reality.”
But that narrative serves to justify a sweeping law-and-order agenda.
“The vision is for police to respond to everything,” says Lacy. It’s a vision for a militarized police force with no accountability under the discretion of the president that “they can deploy to enforce any and every part of their agenda beyond criminal issues, and then further criminalize participation in the public’s sphere and exercise of constitutional rights.”
Over the last few months, Balko adds, the federal government has increasingly used masked, unidentified agents to snatch people off the streets — not for violent crimes, but for political speech, protests, and civil offenses “in a deliberate effort to evade judicial review.”
“They’re snatching people off the street and taking them to an overseas prison that’s more like a gulag and imposing on them what’s effectively a life sentence with no due process,” Balko continues. “No habeas corpus, no judicial review whatsoever. These are very classic characteristics of a police state.”
Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
The post A Trumped Up Police State Is Coming appeared first on The Intercept.
In what's believed to be a first in U.S. courts, the family of Chris Pelkey used AI to create a video using his likeness to give him a voice.
The next pair of Sony wireless premium headphones will see a series of improvements and AI mics if leaked specs are to be believed.
This is a follow-up to the Samsung NX mini (M7MU) firmware reverse-engineering series. This part is about the proprietary LZSS compression used for the code sections in the firmware of Samsung NX mini, NX3000/NX3300 and Galaxy K Zoom. The post is documenting the step-by-step discovery process, in order to show how an unknown compression algorithm can be analyzed. The discovery process was supported by Igor Skochinsky and Tedd Sterr, and by writing the ideas out on encode.su.
↫ Georg Lukas
It’s not weekend quite yet, but here’s some light reading ahead of time.
The film-maker, whose credits also included many Madonna music videos, died of brain cancer
Director James Foley, whose credits included Glengarry Glen Ross and the Fifty Shades sequels, has died aged 71.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, his death was confirmed by his representative who said he died “peacefully in his sleep earlier this week following a years-long struggle with brain cancer”.
Continue reading...Yeah, I was about to say.
Phase Wires from the motor kill BLE connection, but can also effect LED data wires if they aren’t shielded.
The outlines of the agreement Trump announced Thursday did not amount to the prize the United Kingdom has been seeking.
I believe you can go to your IMU configuration in either motor or app settings and set the pitch to 0 manually
Leo says ‘evil will not prevail’ as he addresses crowd of 100,000 pilgrims and tourists in St Peter’s Square
Robert Prevost, the first US cleric to lead the Roman Catholic church, has said “evil will not prevail” as he addressed a crowd of 100,000 pilgrims and tourists in his first speech as Pope Leo XIV from the central balcony of St Peter’s Basilica.
The stunning election on Thursday of Prevost, who is 69 years old, as the church’s 267th pontiff, ended the Vatican’s longstanding opposition to the idea of a pontiff from the US.
Continue reading...The company is reportedly pulling back on some privacy concerns to give its smart glasses lineup a bigger AI boost.
President Trump will introduce a "most favored nation" plan aimed at cutting Medicare drug prices by linking them to the prices of medication abroad, sources told CBS News.
New York Attorney General Letitia James pursued the civil fraud case against President Trump while he was a presidential candidate.
The pope's name helps indicate what direction he wants to take the church.
Cameron Hamilton, acting administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), was fired Thursday—just one...
The post FEMA chief fired one day after stating he doesn’t think the agency should be eliminated appeared first on News Facts Network.
The political tug-of-war on student loan policy isn't helping anyone get out of debt.
After gaining attention from Neowin and DistroWatch last week, the sole maintainer behind AnduinOS 1.3 -- a Linux distribution styled to resemble Windows 11 -- decided to reveal himself. He turns out to be Anduin Xue, a Microsoft software engineer, who has been working on the project as a personal, non-commercial endeavor built on Ubuntu. Neowin reports: As a Software Engineer 2 at Microsoft (he doesn't work on Windows), Anduin Xue says he's financially stable and sees no need to commercialize AnduinOS. Explaining the financial aspects of the project, he said: "Many have asked why I don't accept donations, how I profit, and if I plan to commercialize AnduinOS. Truthfully, I haven't thoroughly considered these issues. It's not my main job, and I don't plan to rely on it for a living. Each month, I dedicate only a few hours to maintaining it. Perhaps in the future, I might consider providing enterprise solutions based on AnduinOS, but I won't compromise its original simplicity. It has always been about providing myself with a comfortably themed Ubuntu." In our coverage of the AnduinOS 1.3 release last week, one commenter pointed out that the distro is from China. For some, this will raise issues, but Anduin Xue addressed this in his blog post, too, saying that the source code is available to the public. For this reason, he told lacing the operating system with backdoors for the Chinese government would be "irrational and easily exposed." For those worried that the distribution may be abandoned, Anduin Xue said that he intends to continue supporting it and may even maintain it full-time if sponsorship or corporate cooperation emerges.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US agency will no longer update major weather database in latest showing of Trump’s influence on climate resources
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) will no longer track the cost of climate crisis-fueled weather disasters, including floods, heatwaves, wildfires and more. It is the latest example of changes to the agency and the Trump administration limiting federal government resources on climate change.
Noaa falls under the US Department of Commerce and is tasked with daily weather forecasts, severe storm warnings and climate monitoring. It is also parent to the National Weather Service.
Continue reading...Jeffrey Rupnow, 42, was arrested in connection with his teenage daughter, who killed two people in the Abundant Life Christian School shooting, officials said.
On this episode, The Washington Post's Libby Casey, Rhonda Colvin and James Hohmann are joined by religion reporter Michelle Boorstein and Rome bureau chief Anthony Faiola to discuss the papal conclave and the election of the first American pope, Leo XIV. The crew breaks down the process the cardinals followed, then dives into the politics of the conclave: How cardinals make themselves candidates, and how they try to elevate their positions behind the scenes while adhering to the strict traditions surrounding the process. And finally, the crew breaks down whether the cardinals take American politics, or world politics, into account at all when choosing a new leader for the Catholic Church.
Robert Francis Prevost, who was born in Chicago and attended Villanova University, was elected as the new pope on Thursday and chose Leo XIV as his papal name.
NOAA announced that it is decommissioning several databases, including its widely reported annual compilation of billion-dollar weather and climate disasters.
Q: Did President Donald Trump call military nurse Ruby Bradley a “loser,” and were there orders for her service history to be removed from Department of Defense archives?
A: There’s no evidence for these claims. We could find no record of Trump referring to nurse Ruby Bradley, who received 34 medals for her service during World War II and the Korean War. A Pentagon spokesperson told us that there was “nothing deleted and/or taken offline related to Ruby Bradley” and “we have not received any guidance requiring the removal of content” related to her.
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
Among President Donald Trump’s early executive actions in his second term was an order titled “Restoring America’s Fighting Force,” which called for the secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security to “abolish every DEI office” within their departments, referring to diversity, equity and inclusion programs based on “race and sex preferences within the Armed Forces.”
In the weeks that followed Trump’s order, and a subsequent memo from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth calling for a “digital content refresh,” the Department of Defense deleted websites and social media pages that highlighted the historic roles of women and some ethnic and racial groups in the military.
The angry blowback from military families, lawmakers and the public in general led to the Defense Department’s reassessment and restoration of some, but not all, of the content. A page about baseball star Jackie Robinson’s military experience was restored, but content about other Black players talking about their military service was deleted, NBC News reported.
Ripples of distrust following the digital purge continue, including an unfounded claim circulating on social media regarding a heroic World War II nurse. We received numerous emails asking about the claim, including one reader who said: “I recently saw a social media post claiming that President Trump called WWII Veteran Ruby Bradley a ‘loser’ for being captured and ‘woke’. Additionally, it claimed that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is wiping her military records. Is this true?”
We found no evidence for such claims. We could find no record of Trump referring to Bradley in his social media posts or public remarks. And a Pentagon spokesperson told us in an email, “nothing deleted and/or taken offline related to Ruby Bradley. Also confirmed that we have not received any guidance requiring the removal of content featuring Ruby Bradley. Looks like the rumor is just that.”
In fact, we found a U.S. Army page devoted to women in the Army Medical Department, which included a spotlight on the heroic actions of Bradley, who was taken prisoner by the Japanese in the Philippines during World War II, and returned to combat duty during the Korean War.
According to that webpage, “Maj. Ruby Bradley would remain in service after the war and find herself in combat again in Korea as chief nurse for the 171st Evacuation Hospital. At the end of November 1950, the 171st was ordered to evacuate its patients and withdraw from Pyongyang where it was located. The overall evacuation of Eighth Army from North Korea outpaced the 171st’s ability to clear its area. Bradley was ordered to leave but remained with her patients until all were evacuated. As she boarded a plane to depart the area an enemy shell destroyed the ambulance she had been using to ferry patients to the airfield. Bradley demonstrated bravery under fire in two wars, and by the time she retired from the service in 1963 she had received 34 medals and citations for bravery and was reportedly the most decorated woman in the military.”
Bradley was promoted to colonel before she retired from the military. She died in 2002 and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
The reference in the social media posts to Trump calling prisoners of war “losers” harks back to comments he made as a presidential candidate in 2015. Speaking about Sen. John McCain, who was held captive for over five years during the Vietnam War, Trump said that McCain “was a war hero because he was captured. … I like people who weren’t captured.”
“He lost and let us down,” Trump also said, referring to McCain’s failure to win the presidential race in 2008. “I don’t like losers,” Trump said.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post Was Record of Heroic Nurse Wiped from Defense Department Archives? appeared first on FactCheck.org.
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.
Columbia University has agreed to a $750 million settlement with 576 patients of a former doctor who sexually abused them while working at the school.
In 2023, a ProPublica investigation, published with New York Magazine, revealed how Columbia had ignored women, undermined prosecutors and ultimately protected a predator. Obstetrician-gynecologist Robert Hadden worked at the university for 20 years despite decades of complaints about him.
The university had even cleared Hadden to see patients three days after he was arrested when a patient called 911 to report that he had assaulted her during a postpartum exam. University higher-ups had been informed of the arrest but allowed Hadden to continue working for another five weeks. Patients he saw during that time also reported being assaulted.
The latest settlement, combined with payouts from previous cases, means that Columbia will have paid out more than $1 billion to resolve claims of sexual abuse by Hadden. Columbia also said that it has now settled more than 1,000 claims of sexual abuse by Hadden’s former patients.
Hadden was convicted of sex crimes in federal court in January 2023 and is now serving a 20-year prison sentence.
Laurie Kanyok, the patient who called 911, said the settlement is bittersweet. “It’s emotional because it’s been 13 years,” she told ProPublica.
She also said that financial compensation does not amount to justice.
“I’m grateful that I’m involved in this,” Kanyok said. “At the same time, I feel like I want to see people held accountable and not just somebody’s insurance company or checkbook.”
Unlike in other high-profile cases involving sexual abuse by doctors, no administrators from Columbia have been fired or have stepped down as a result of the Hadden case.
In a statement, Columbia acknowledged failing to protect Hadden’s patients. “We deeply regret the pain that his patients suffered, and this settlement is another step forward in our ongoing work and commitment to repair harm and support survivors,” the statement said. “We commend the survivors for their bravery in coming forward.”
The latest settlement puts Columbia on par with the largest payout ever by a university to settle sexual abuse claims. In 2021, the University of Southern California agreed to pay $1.1 billion to survivors of George Tyndall, a university gynecologist who abused thousands of women.
Anthony DiPietro, the attorney who handled most of the Columbia claims, said the lesson from this week’s settlement is clear: Institutions “cannot continue to cover up sexual exploitation and abuse by their doctors because they’re going to be held accountable.”
Weeks after ProPublica’s investigation, Columbia announced that it would set up a $100 million settlement fund for patients who did not want to file civil suits. Survivors have about another week, until May 15, to submit a claim.
As part of the same announcement, Columbia also said it would notify all of Hadden’s nearly 6,500 former patients of the doctor’s crimes and that it would commission an external investigation to examine failures that allowed the abuse to go on for so long.
Asked about the status of that investigation, which was announced a year and a half ago, the university said it is ongoing. Columbia did not give a time frame for the report’s completion.
Newark City Manager Tom Coleman recently received the credentialed manager designation from International City/County Management Association.
Tears of the Kingdom's most important core mechanic, the Ultrahand ability, is confusing and unwieldy. The Switch 2 edition of the game aims to fix that.
Some of Nintendo's best games pushed the Switch to its limits. Switch 2 editions will buff them out with better graphics and improved frame rates.
Pakistan tried to hit Indian-administered Kashmir, Punjab and Rajasthan, according to India, which reported ‘no losses’
India claimed to have thwarted retaliatory missile and drone strikes launched by Pakistan on Thursday evening, which attempted to hit sites in Indian-administered Kashmir, Punjab and Rajasthan.
Residents in Jammu, in Indian-controlled Kashmir, reported missiles and drones over the city and the noise of explosions, amid a city-wide blackout.
Continue reading...Priests are required to report child abuse or neglect to Washington state law enforcement after learning about the crime through confessions.
The Basilisk Mobile and Joro are an ergonomic mouse and keyboard, and the Clio is a gaming chair head cushion with wireless sound.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The US Senate today voted along party lines to kill a Federal Communications Commission program to distribute Wi-Fi hotspots to schoolchildren, with Democrats saying the Republican-led vote will make it harder for kids without reliable Internet access to complete their homework. The Senate approved a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution to nullify the hotspot rule, which was issued by the Federal Communications Commission in July 2024 under then-Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. The program would be eliminated if the House version passes and President Trump signs the joint resolution of disapproval. The Rosenworcel FCC's rule expanded E-Rate, a Universal Service Fund program, allowing schools and libraries to use E-Rate funding to lend out Wi-Fi hotspots and services that could be used off-premises. The FCC rule was titled, "Addressing the Homework Gap through the E-Rate Program," and the hotspot lending program was scheduled to begin in funding year 2025, which starts in July 2025. Today's Senate vote on the resolution of disapproval was 50-38. There was a 53-47 vote on Tuesday that allowed the Senate measure to proceed to the final step. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said on Tuesday that "this resolution would prevent millions of students, educators, and families from getting online." Sen. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) called the Republican move "a cruel and shortsighted decision that will widen the digital divide and rob kids of the tools they need to succeed."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Cameron Hamilton, FEMA's acting administrator, is leaving the nation's disaster relief agency, after saying he didn't support eliminating FEMA.
Prince Harry and King Charles will need to put past grievances to one side if they are to move on from their estrangement, experts say
For most families, fallouts and squabbles are a regular occurrence. But what happens when those rifts deepen to an estrangement, such as appears to have beset the royal family and the Beckhams, and how can relationships be rebuilt?
According to the following psychologists and psychotherapists, family reconciliation requires both sides taking accountability for their behaviour and not letting past grievances and trauma block efforts to meaningfully re-engage with estranged relatives.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Prosecutors impanel federal grand jury in Virginia to hear evidence after Trump official’s referral against Letitia James
Federal prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, after the Trump administration alleged last month in a referral that she may have falsified paperwork for properties she owns in Virginia and New York, according to people familiar with the matter.
The investigation marks a swift and notable escalation against James, a major political enemy of Donald Trump, who was ordered to pay more than $450m in penalties as a result of a lawsuit brought by James’s office that accused him of inflating his net worth to secure financial benefits.
Continue reading...Cardinal Robert Prevost, a Chicago native who became the first American pope on Thursday, has...
The post America’s First Pope Previously Criticized Trump Policies, Calls for Unity in First Address appeared first on News Facts Network.
A key procedural vote Thursday on a first-of-its-kind crypto regulation bill fell short in the Senate, facing opposition from Democrats amid ties between the crypto industry and the Trump family have threatened to tank the vote.
The Trump administration's announcement comes as Newark Liberty International Airport continues to deal with disruptions following an outage last week.
At IBM Think 2025, IBM announced Granite 4.0 Tiny Preview, a preliminary version of the smallest model in the upcoming Granite 4.0 family of language models, to the open source community. IBM Granite models are a series of AI foundation models. Initially intended for use in IBM’s cloud-based data and generative AI platform Watsonx, along with other models, IBM opened the source code of some code models. IBM Granite models are trained on datasets curated from the Internet, academic publications, code datasets, and legal and finance documents. The following is based on the IBM Think news announcement.
At FP8 precision, the Granite 4.0 Tiny Preview is extremely compact and compute-efficient. It allows several concurrent sessions to perform long context (128K) tasks that can be run on consumer-grade hardware, including GPUs.
Though the model is only partially trained, it has only seen 2.5T of a planned 15T or more training tokens, it already offers performance rivaling that of IBM Granite 3.3 2B Instruct despite fewer active parameters and a roughly 72% reduction in memory requirements. IBM anticipates Granite 4.0 Tiny’s performance to be on par with Granite 3.3 8B Instruct by the time it has completed training and post-training
As its name suggests, Granite 4.0 Tiny will be among the smallest offerings in the Granite 4.0 model family. It will be officially released this summer as part of a model lineup that also includes Granite 4.0 Small and Granite 4.0 Medium. Granite 4.0 continues IBM’s commitment to making efficiency and practicality the cornerstone of its enterprise LLM development.
This preliminary version of Granite 4.0 Tiny is now available on Hugging Face under a standard Apache 2.0 license. IBM intends to allow GPU-poor developers to experiment and tinker with the model on consumer-grade GPUs. The model’s novel architecture is pending support in Hugging Face transformers and vLLM, which IBM anticipates will be completed shortly for both projects. Official support to run this model locally through platform partners, including Ollama and LMStudio, is expected in time for the full model release later this summer.
IBM also mentions that LLM memory requirements are often provided, literally and figuratively, without proper context. It’s not enough to know that a model can be successfully loaded into your GPU(s): you need to know that your hardware can handle the model at the context lengths that your use case requires.
Furthermore, many enterprise use cases entail multiple model deployment, but batch inferencing of multiple concurrent instances. Therefore, IBM endeavors to measure and report memory requirements with long context and concurrent sessions in mind.
In that respect, IBM believes Granite 4.0 Tiny is one of today’s most memory-efficient language models. Despite very long contexts with several concurrent instances of Granite 4.0, Tiny can easily run on a modest consumer GPU.
Whereas prior generations of Granite LLMs utilized a conventional transformer architecture, all models in the Granite 4.0 family utilize a new hybrid Mamba-2/Transformer architecture, marrying the speed and efficiency of Mamba with the precision of transformer-based self-attention. Granite 4.0 Tiny-Preview is a fine-grained hybrid mixture of experts (MoE) model, with 7B total parameters and only 1B active parameters at inference time.
Many innovations informing the Granite 4 architecture arose from IBM Research’s collaboration with the original Mamba creators on Bamba, an experimental open-source hybrid model whose successor (Bamba v2) was released earlier this week.
Mamba is a type of state space model (SSM) introduced in 2023, about six years after the debut of transformers in 2017.
SSMs are conceptually similar to the recurrent neural networks (RNNs) that dominated natural language processing (NLP) in the pre-transformer era. They were originally designed to predict the next state of a continuous sequence (like an electrical signal) using only information from the current state, previous state, and range of possibilities (the state space). Though they’ve been used across several domains for decades, SSMs share certain shortcomings with RNNs that, until recently, limited their potential for language modeling.
Unlike the self-attention mechanism of transformers, conventional SSMs have no inherent ability to selectively focus on or ignore specific pieces of contextual information. So in 2023, Carnegie Mellon’s Albert Gu and Princeton’s Tri Dao introduced a type of structured state space sequence (“S4”) neural network that adds a selection mechanism and a scan method (for computational efficiency)—abbreviated as an “S6” model—and achieved language modeling results competitive with transformers. They nicknamed their model “Mamba” because, among other reasons, all of those S’s sound like a snake’s hiss.
In 2024, Gu and Dao released Mamba-2, a simplified and optimized implementation of the Mamba architecture. Equally importantly, their technical paper fleshed out the compatibility between SSMs and self-attention.
Mamba’s major advantages over transformer-based models center on efficiency and speed.
Transformers have a crucial weakness: the computational requirements of self-attention scale quadratically with context. In other words, each time your context length doubles, the attention mechanism doesn’t just use double the resources, it uses quadruple the resources. This “quadratic bottleneck” increasingly throttles speed and performance as the context window (and corresponding KV-cache) grows.
Conversely, Mamba’s computational needs scale linearly: if you double the length of an input sequence, Mamba uses only double the resources. Whereas self-attention must repeatedly compute the relevance of every previous token to each new token, Mamba simply maintains a condensed, fixed-size “summary” of prior context from prior tokens. As the model “reads” each new token, it determines that token’s relevance, then updates (or doesn’t update) the summary accordingly. Essentially, whereas self-attention retains every bit of information and then weights the influence of each based on its relevance, Mamba selectively retains only the relevant information.
While Transformers are more memory-intensive and computationally redundant, the method has its own advantages. For instance, research has shown that transformers still outpace Mamba and Mamba-2 on tasks requiring in-context learning (such as few-shot prompting), copying, or long-context reasoning.
Fortunately, the respective strengths of transformers and Mamba are not mutually exclusive. In the original Mamba-2 paper, authors Dao and Gu suggest that a hybrid model could exceed the performance of a pure transformer or SSM—a notion validated by Nvidia research from last year. To explore this further, IBM Research collaborated with Dao and Gu themselves, along with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) ‘s Minjia Zhang, on Bamba and Bamba V2. Bamba, in turn, informed many of the architectural elements of Granite 4.0.
The Granite 4.0 MoE architecture employs 9 Mamba blocks for every one transformer block. In essence, the selectivity mechanisms of the Mamba blocks efficiently capture global context, which is then passed to transformer blocks that enable a more nuanced parsing of local context. The result is a dramatic reduction in memory usage and latency with no apparent tradeoff in performance.
Granite 4.0 Tiny doubles down on these efficiency gains by implementing them within a compact, fine-grained mixture of experts (MoE) framework, comprising 7B total parameters and 64 experts, yielding 1B active parameters at inference time. Further details are available in Granite 4.0 Tiny Preview’s Hugging Face model card.
One of the more tantalizing aspects of SSM-based language models is their theoretical ability to handle infinitely long sequences. However, due to practical constraints, the word “theoretical” typically does a lot of heavy lifting.
One of those constraints, especially for hybrid-SSM models, comes from the positional encoding (PE) used to represent information about the order of words. PE adds computational steps, and research has shown that models using PE techniques such as rotary positional encoding (RoPE) struggle to generalize to sequences longer than they’ve seen in training.
The Granite 4.0 architecture usesno positional encoding (NoPE). IBM testing convincingly demonstrates that this has had no adverse effect on long-context performance. At present, IBM has already validated Tiny Preview’s long-context performance for at least 128K tokens and expects to validate similar performance on significantly longer context lengths by the time the model has completed training and post-training. It’s worth noting that a key challenge in definitively validating performance on tasks in the neighborhood of 1 M-token context is the scarcity of suitable datasets.
The other practical constraint on Mamba context length is compute. Linear scaling is better than quadratic scaling, but still adds up eventually. Here again, Granite 4.0 Tiny has two key advantages:
Put simply, the Granite 4.0 MoE architecture itself does not constrain context length. It can go as far as your hardware resources allow.
IBM expressed its excitement about continuing pre-training Granite 4.0 Tiny, given such promising results so early in the process. It is also excited to apply its lessons from post-training Granite 3.3, particularly regarding reasoning capabilities and complex instruction following, to the new models.
More information about new developments in the Granite Series was presented at IBM Think 2025 and in the following weeks and months.
You can find the Granite 4.0 Tiny on Hugging Face.
Based on IBM Think News Announcement authored by Kate Soule, Director, Technical Product Management, Granite, and Dave Bergmann Senior Writer, AI Models at IBM
The post IBM Think 2025: Download a Sneak Peek of the Next Gen Granite Models appeared first on HPCwire.
President’s announcement receives favorable political reaction but experts warn much remains unresolved
There was plenty of congratulatory backslapping in the Oval Office as Donald Trump unveiled his “major” trade deal with the United Kingdom on Thursday, but many of the details of that agreement have been left to later discussions.
Trump’s rush to claim a win for his controversial tariffs policy left many grasping just what to call this: a deal, an agreement, a framework? Observers predict that the coming negotiations could take months.
Continue reading...City official says it will not comply with request seeking to impose Donald Trump’s rollback of diversity measures
A city official in Stockholm has said the municipality has no plans to comply after one of its offices received a letter seeking to impose Donald Trump’s rollback of diversity measures, in what is believed to be the first such missive sent to a foreign government.
“It’s so bizarre,” said Jan Valeskog, Stockholm’s vice-mayor for planning. “It’s our political priorities that count, not the ones from this embassy or any other embassies.”
Continue reading...Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in March that she would be revoking the legal status of migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela.
An anonymous reader shares a report: When Microsoft announced new Surface devices earlier this week, we noted that there wasn't a lot of daylight between the starting prices of the new but lower-end devices ($799 for the 12-inch Surface Pro, $899 for the 13-inch Surface Laptop) and the starting prices of the older-but-higher-end Surfaces from last spring ($999 for both). It appears Microsoft has quietly solved this problem by discontinuing the 256GB versions of the 13.8-inch Surface Laptop 7 and the 13-inch Surface Pro 11. Microsoft's retail pages for both devices list only 512GB and 1TB configurations, with regular prices starting at $1,199. Though not technically a price hike -- the 512GB versions of both devices also cost $1,199 before -- it does amount to an effective price increase for last year's Surface hardware, especially given that both devices have user-replaceable storage that can easily be upgraded for less than the $200 that Microsoft charged for the 256GB-to-512GB upgrade. The upshot is that the new Surface PCs make more sense now than they did on Tuesday in relative terms, but it's only because you'll pay more to buy a Surface Pro 11 or Surface Laptop 7 than you would before. The 15-inch version of the Surface Laptop 7 still lists a 256GB configuration and a $1,299 starting price, but the 256GB models are currently out of stock.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
President Donald Trump has twice sworn to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States." But about three months after repeating that pledge during his second presidential inauguration, Trump said "I don’t know" when asked whether he needed to uphold the Constitution.
Trump was answering a question about whether immigrants in the U.S. illegally are entitled to due process.
"They talk about due process, but do you get due process when you’re here illegally?" Trump asked interviewer Kristen Welker, NBC News’ "Meet the Press" moderator.
"The Constitution says every person, citizens and noncitizens, deserve due process," Welker responded.
She then asked Trump whether he agreed with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who said noncitizens are entitled to due process.
Trump: "I don’t know. I’m not a lawyer. I don’t know."
Welker: "Well, the Fifth Amendment says as much."
Trump: "I don’t know. It might say that, but if you’re talking about that, then we’d have to have a million or 2 million or 3 million trials."
Welker: "But even given those numbers that you’re talking about, don’t you need to uphold the Constitution of the United States as president?"
Trump: "I don’t know. I have to respond by saying, again, I have brilliant lawyers that work for me, and they are going to obviously follow what the Supreme Court said. What you said is not what I heard the Supreme Court said. They have a different interpretation."
That wasn’t the first time Trump has brushed aside immigrants' due process rights.
In an ABC News interview marking Trump’s first 100 days in office, correspondent Terry Moran asked Trump, "But in our country even bad guys get due process, right?"
Trump answered, "If people come into our country illegally, there's a different standard."
During a May 1 speech at the University of Alabama’s commencement ceremony, Trump said, "Judges are interfering supposedly based on due process, but how can you give due process to people who came into our country illegally? They want to give them due process. I don’t know."
Days later, while announcing that the 2027 NFL draft will be in Washington, D.C., Trump said "The courts have, all of a sudden, out of nowhere, they said, maybe you have to have trials. Trials. We're gonna have 5 million trials? Doesn't work. … Past presidents took out hundreds of thousands of people when needed. … They didn't go through any of this."
Despite Trump’s dismissal of and questions about due process for immigrants, the U.S. Constitution, legal experts and decades of court decisions agree: Immigrants in the U.S., regardless of how they entered the U.S., legally or illegally, have due process rights.
What those rights look like vary depending on how long a person has been in the U.S. and what their legal status is.
Due process generally refers to the government's requirement to follow fair procedures and laws. The Constitution’s Fifth and 14th amendments protect "any person" against being deprived by the U.S. government of "life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."
"People have a right to be heard, and there are certain steps that need to be taken before someone can, say, be jailed," Kathleen Bush-Joseph, a lawyer and policy analyst at the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute, said.
Several court rulings have determined that due process rights are extended to all people in the U.S., not just U.S. citizens or immigrants in the country legally. The U.S. Constitution and the Immigration and Nationality Act dictate the process the government must use to afford immigrants due process rights.
In immigration, due process generally refers to "appropriate notice (of government action), the opportunity to have a hearing or some sort of screening interview to figure out, are you actually a person who falls within the law that says that you can be deported," Katherine Yon Ebright, a lawyer at the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty and National Security program, said.
For example, if the government seeks to deport people who are illegally in the U.S., the government generally must give them a charging document known as "notice to appear." Eventually, immigrants go before an immigration judge to present evidence and make a case that they qualify for some form of relief against deportation, such as asylum.
Without due process, legal experts say U.S. citizens also could be deported.
"The whole point of due process is to determine whether you're the kind of person who can be subject to deportation," Ilya Somin, a George Mason University constitutional law professor, said. "If there is no due process, then the government can simply deport people or punish them at will. … Because how can you show that you're actually a U.S. citizen if you're not getting any due process?"
Light illuminates part of the Supreme Court building on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 16, 2022. (AP)
Even though all people in the U.S. have due process rights, for noncitizens, the specifics of the process and the extent of protections vary. The term noncitizen applies to people legally and illegally in the U.S., including people here on visas, with lawful permanent status or without a legal immigration status.
There’s a "sliding scale of different protections that people can have depending on what their (immigration) status is," Yon Ebright said.
Noncitizens are not entitled to government-appointed lawyers during immigration proceedings, for example. And some immigrants who recently entered the U.S. illegally don’t have to appear before a judge before being deported; these cases are subject to what’s called the expedited removal process.
Under expedited removal, certain people can be quickly deported without a court case. However, people who express fear of persecution if they return to their home countries are referred to immigration officers who determine whether the immigrant is eligible for asylum or other deportation protections. Immigrants who pass the "credible fear" screening are referred to an immigration court where they can make their case.
In the past, people were placed in expedited removal if they’re within 100 miles of the border and within two weeks of their entry. In January, Trump expanded expedited removal for anyone who can’t prove they’ve been in the U.S. for more than two years.
The Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a wartime power that Trump invoked in March, allows the government to deport "alien enemies." Trump has used that law to deport people his administration says are members of the Venezuelan prison gang Tren de Aragua, without immigration court hearings. The Trump administration has deported hundreds of people under the law.
However, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the administration April 7, saying it must give immigrants notice that they will be deported under the Alien Enemies Act, and give them "reasonable time" to challenge the deportation in court.
Although expedited removal and the Alien Enemies Act limit people’s due process protections, they do not eliminate them. "There are no exceptions to due process," Bush-Joseph said.
Additionally, noncitizens who are charged with crimes receive the same due process protections as U.S. citizens in criminal court, Somin said.
"All of the protections of the Bill of Rights apply (in criminal court)," Somin said. "There has to be proof beyond a reasonable doubt. He or she is entitled to a jury trial, rights against self incrimination, right to counsel and so on."
Law officials load a man into a utility vehicle during a raid of an apartment complex, Feb. 5, 2025, in east Denver. (AP)
The Trump administration faces several court cases dealing with deportations and immigrants’ due process rights. They include challenges over Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act and the government’s mistaken deportation of a Salvadoran man.
Administration officials have criticized judges and rejected immigrants’ due process protections.
"Due process guarantees the rights of a criminal defendant facing prosecution, not an illegal alien facing deportation," White House adviser Stephen Miller posted May 5 on X.
The Trump administration's comments about due process are centered on Trump’s promise to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history. The administration’s current deportation pace is below its goal of 1 million people each year, the Migration Policy Institute said in an April 24 analysis.
Nayna Gupta, policy director of the immigrant rights advocacy group American Immigration Council, said the Trump administration is attempting to"get around those obstacles and those requirements" of due process "just to meet some target (deportation) number."
To reach Trump’s goal of deporting 1 million people a year, the administration would need to deport people who have lived in the U.S. for years and have no criminal convictions (whom past administrations haven’t prioritized for deportation).
Past presidents were also required to uphold noncitizens’ due process rights, but deportation processes moved more quickly under administrations that focused on people who had recently crossed the border illegally, Bush-Joseph said. That option is more limited for the Trump administration because illegal immigration has reached historic lows under Trump.
Trump is correct that deporting millions of the people who are illegally in the U.S. would require millions of court cases, Tara Watson, director of the Center for Economic Security and Opportunity at the Brookings Institution, said. That has long been the case.
Millions of immigration court cases are backlogged. And the Trump administration has fired several immigration judges who would hear these cases.
The administration’s goal for mass deportation doesn’t change due process rules and standards.
"It is true that due process slows down the machinery of deportation, but due process is also what separates democracies from dictatorships," Watson said.
Trump said, "If people come into our country illegally, there’s a different standard" for due process.
All people in the U.S. regardless of their immigration status have due process rights, based on the U.S. Constitution and decades of court decisions. That applies whether they entered the U.S. legally or illegally.
For noncitizens, people’s due process protections vary based on their legal status or how long they’ve been in the U.S. Legal experts say despite due process variations, there are no exceptions to due process requirements for immigrants.
We rate Trump’s statement False.
Exclusive: Backbenchers sign letter calling for change in direction on plans expected to be put to vote next month
More than 40 Labour MPs have warned the prime minister that planned disability cuts are “impossible to support” and have called for a pause and change in direction.
The letter from parliamentarians spanning the new intake and veterans, and from the left and right of the party, sets Keir Starmer up for the biggest rebellion of his premiership when the House of Commons votes on the measures next month.
Continue reading...Mohsen Mahdawi, a Palestinian student who was arrested during an interview about finalizing his U.S. citizenship, is helping launch an initiative to help other immigrants facing deportation.
Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson hails hometown cardinal as Donald Trump and others offer congratulations
Americans are celebrating and speaking out after the US cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who will be known as Pope Leo XIV, was announced as the next pope.
“Congratulations to Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who was just named Pope. It is such an honor to realize that he is the first American Pope. What excitement, and what a Great Honor for our Country. I look forward to meeting Pope Leo XIV. It will be a very meaningful moment!” Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social shortly after the pope, who was born in Chicago, appeared on the Vatican balcony in Rome on Thursday.
Continue reading...The first Double XP Weekend for Black Ops 6 Season 3 Reloaded will boost player and weapon XP to help you level up quicker.
The deal definitely puts the UK in a better position, but its impact on the wider economy might be limited
Thursday’s trade agreement between the US and the UK fell far short of the superlatives heaped on it in Donald Trump’s excruciating televised phone call with Keir Starmer. But it is worth having, nevertheless.
As Starmer made clear by appearing in front of an audience of Jaguar Land Rover workers in Solihull, reducing the 27.5% tariff on 100,000 car exports will come as a mighty relief for that industry.
Continue reading...A U.S. bishop thought it was unlikely that Catholic cardinals would break with more than two centuries of precedent to pick a pope from the states, but it has happened.
Car exports will face 10% tariffs while levies on steel and aluminium are cut to zero
The Liberal Democrats treasury spokesperson Daisy Cooper has reiterated the party’s position that any trade deal with the US should be put to parliament for approval before being ratified, saying Labour “should not be afraid” of a vote if they are confident a deal is in the country’s best interests.
Cooper, the MP for St Albans, said in a statement:
Parliament must be given a vote on this US trade deal so it can be properly scrutinised.
A good trade deal with the US could bring huge benefits, but Liberal Democrats are deeply concerned that it may include measures that threaten our NHS, undermine our farmers or give tax cuts to US tech billionaires.
If it’s correct, and you know, whilst we haven’t been named publicly, it does sound like something’s happening, nevertheless, it would be wholly speculative [to comment].
As you appreciate and know full well, with any deal like that, the devil is in the detail. What is the nitty gritty? What does it mean for individual sectors and so on.
I think if we don’t know at all what’s in it, or even if it’ll definitely happen, I think to try and sort of pre-judge what might or might not be in is not something I’m going to get into respectfully. I totally understand why you’re asking that. I think it’s an incredibly important issue, particularly with the wider challenge of tariffs and so on. I’m a big free trader. Our party wants us to see the UK growing by striking trade deals. But I just think you’ve got to wait and see, because who knows, quite frankly.
Continue reading...Temu is now only selling products from US suppliers, but what happens when the warehouses run out?
The app will push out notifications and let you easily track letters and deliveries.
New pope will be known as Leo XIV and is the first leader of the Catholic church from the US. After two days of discussions, white smoke billowed out of the chimney in the Vatican to signal a new pope had been chosen
Continue reading...Graham Parsons criticizes military institution in NYT essay for ‘failing to provide an adequate education’
A West Point philosophy professor has announced his resignation after 13 years on the faculty, citing the academy’s rapid shift away from its core educational principles under the Trump administration in an essay for the New York Times.
Graham Parsons, a professor of philosophy at the US Military Academy at West Point, criticized the institution for “failing to provide an adequate education for the cadets” under the new administration.
Continue reading...Mauritshuis in The Hague says guarantees would be needed of artworks’ safety amid uncertainty caused by US funding cuts
A leading museum in the Netherlands has said it is reconsidering lending works from its collection to museums in the US amid the uncertainty wreaked by Donald Trump’s funding cuts and ideological impositions.
Martine Gosselink, the director of the Mauritshuis museum in The Hague, whose collection includes Vermeer’s Girl With a Pearl Earring and Rembrandt’s The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp, said the turmoil had left her team wary of lending pieces to the US.
Continue reading... ![]() | Hello everyone, has anyone tried successfully to add a bumper handle on their Pint. I’ve seen some ideas online. Was thinking about getting something like the handle on the pictures and using a spare bumper to try it out on. Just wanted to get feedback/ideas on this topic. TIA! [link] [comments] |
Measure passes nearly along party lines, with all Democrats opposed and almost every Republican voting in favor
Republicans in the House of Representatives on Thursday approved legislation to codify Donald Trump’s policy of renaming the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America”.
The measure was sponsored by rightwing Georgia lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene and passed nearly along party lines, with all Democrats opposed and almost every Republican, with the exception of vulnerable Nebraska representative Don Bacon, voting in favor.
Continue reading...We've looked at the top home security systems to find the best picks to keep your property secure, no matter where you are.
A Florida federal judge has dismissed the majority of claims against celebrities who endorsed Sam Bankman-Fried's now-collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX. Judge K. Michael Moore ruled that investors failed to demonstrate the high-profile endorsers -- including Tom Brady, Gisele Bundchen, Kevin O'Leary, Larry David, Shohei Ohtani, and Stephen Curry -- knew about FTX's fraudulent activities. In his ruling, Moore wrote that while the celebrity endorsers may have been "uninformed, negligent, or even reckless," plaintiffs didn't adequately establish that defendants had "knowledge of FTX's fraud" or "the requisite intent to deceive and defraud investors."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Move follows run of downbeat economic data and looks to cushion UK from Trump’s trade war fallout
Bank of England policymakers have cut interest rates by a quarter point to 4.25% to cushion the UK economy against the impact of rising economic uncertainty.
The widely expected move from the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC), its fourth cut since last August, also carried a warning that the UK economy would slow by a further 0.3% over the next three years in addition to dramatic cuts to its forecasts made earlier this year.
Continue reading...Japanese automaker underscores impact of Trump's tariffs on imported vehicles by outlining hefty hit to profits.
Beneath the steaming geysers and bubbling mud pots of Yellowstone National Park lies one of the world’s most closely watched volcanic systems. Now, a team of geoscientists has uncovered new evidence that sheds light on how this mighty system may behave in the future—and what might keep it from erupting. The findings were recently published in Nature.
A team of researchers from Rice University, the University of New Mexico, the University of Utah, and the University of Texas at Dallas has discovered a sharp, volatile-rich cap of magma just 3.8 kilometers beneath Yellowstone’s surface. This cap acts like a lid, helping to trap pressure and heat below it. Using innovative controlled-source seismic imaging and advanced computer models, their findings suggest that the Yellowstone magma reservoir actively releases gas while remaining stable.
The research, led by Rice’s Chenglong Duan and Brandon Schmandt along with collaborators, provides new insight into how magma, volatiles, and fluids move within Earth’s crust. The National Science Foundation (NSF) and supercomputing resources at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) supported the project.
“For decades, we’ve known there’s magma beneath Yellowstone, but the exact depth and structure of its upper boundary has been a big question,” said Schmandt, professor of Earth, environmental, and planetary sciences. “What we’ve found is that this reservoir hasn’t shut down—it’s been sitting there for a couple million years, but it’s still dynamic.”
Previous studies suggested the top of Yellowstone’s magma system could lie anywhere from 3 to 8 kilometers deep—an uncertainty that left geologists debating how the magma system today compares with conditions before prior eruptions.
That changed after Schmandt conducted a high-resolution seismic survey in the northeastern part of the caldera. A 53,000-pound vibroseis truck—typically used for oil and gas exploration—essentially generated tiny earthquakes to send seismic waves into the ground. These waves reflected off subsurface layers and were recorded at the surface, revealing a sharp boundary at about 3.8 km depth.
“The motivation behind my research is to advance structural seismic imaging beyond the limits of conventional travel-time methods,” said Duan, a postdoctoral research associate. “Using a wave-equation imaging technique I developed during my Ph.D. for irregular seismic data, we made one of the first super clear images of the top of the magma reservoir beneath Yellowstone caldera.”
“Seeing such a strong reflector at that depth was a surprise,“ Schmandt said. “It tells us that something physically distinct is happening there—likely a buildup of partially molten rock interspersed with gas bubbles.”
To better understand what causes this signal, Duan and Schmandt modeled various rock, melt, and volatile combinations. The best match they determined is a mixture of silicate melt and supercritical water bubbles within a porous rock matrix, resulting in a volatile-rich cap with about 14% porosity, half of which is occupied by fluid bubbles.
The NSF-funded Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program awarded Schmandt allocations on the Stampede3 supercomputer at TACC. Stampede3 helped his team run high-frequency elastic wave propagation simulations for many different magma and bubbles scenarios within an elastic medium’s pore space.
“The use of Stampede3 helped us avoid the need to make less accurate assumptions like ray theory for evaluating seismic reflection properties. ACCESS made it easy to get an allocation and identify that Stampede3 was a good fit for the project’s computing needs,“ Schmandt said.
The supercomputer’s high-bandwidth memory-enabled nodes worked well for the team’s seismic waveform studies. “We are using Stampede3 for ongoing work on 3-D simulations for magma reservoirs that would be difficult to try otherwise,“ Schmandt added.
As magma rises and decompresses in volcanic systems, gases like water and carbon dioxide exsolve from the melt, forming bubbles. In some cases, these bubbles can accumulate, increasing buoyancy and potentially driving explosive eruptions.
But present conditions at Yellowstone appear to tell a different story.
“Although we detected a volatile-rich layer, its bubble and melt contents are below the levels typically associated with imminent eruption,“ Schmandt said. “Instead, it looks like the system is efficiently venting gas through cracks and channels between mineral crystals, which makes sense to me given Yellowstone’s abundant hydrothermal features emitting magmatic gases.”
Schmandt likened the system to “steady breathing“ with bubbles rising and releasing through the porous rock—a natural pressure-release valve that lowers eruption risk.
Getting these results was anything but easy. The research team not only completed the field survey during the COVID-19 pandemic but also had to coordinate the project within a busy and carefully protected national park. This restriction meant they could only operate the heavy vibroseis truck at night and only from designated roadside turnouts.
More than 600 seismometers were temporarily deployed to record the vibroseis truck signals, then recovered a few weeks later. Collaboration with University of Utah professor Jamie Farrell, a Yellowstone geophysics expert and seismic network operator, was essential to making this unusual survey possible, Schmandt said.
Processing the data proved just as difficult. Yellowstone’s complex geology, known for scattering seismic waves, produced noisy data that were initially hard to interpret. But with persistence and many discussions with Schmandt, Duan said he kept going, refining his approach again and again until the numbers finally told a clear story.
“The challenge was that the raw data made it almost impossible to visualize any reflection signals,“ Duan said. “We used the STA/LTA function to enhance coherent seismic reflections, and this was the first time we had innovatively applied STA/LTA data within the wave-equation imaging algorithm.”
Duan said that just like traversing the rocky landscape of Yellowstone, tenacity is key for navigating its mysteries underground.
“When you see noisy, challenging data, don’t give up,“ Duan said. “After we realized the standard processing was not going to work, that’s when we got creative and adapted our approach.”
Even sensitive field observations from hundreds of seismometers are not enough to give scientists answers to questions about the subsurface. “We need to compare our observations to model predictions to understand them,“ Schmandt said. “Numerical wave propagation codes on high-performance computing systems are the main way we can predict seismic data in a physically accurate manner.”
By identifying this sharp, volatile-rich cap beneath Yellowstone, Schmandt’s team has established a new benchmark for monitoring the volcano’s activity. Future research could attempt to detect any shifts in melt content or gas accumulation that may serve as early warning signs of unrest.
Beyond Yellowstone, the study offers broader insights into onshore subsurface imaging, which has potential applications not only for volcano monitoring but also for carbon storage, energy exploration, and hazard assessment.
“Being able to image what’s happening underground is important for everything from geothermal energy to storing carbon dioxide,“ Schmandt said. “This work shows that with creativity and perseverance, we can see through complicated data and reveal what’s happening beneath our feet.”
Originally posted by TACC, reproduced here with permission.
Jorge Salazar has conducted over a thousand in-depth interviews with scientists in over twelve years for the Austin-based science radio program EarthSky, which broadcasts on over 1,200 radio stations worldwide as well as the Voice of America and XM/Sirius satellite networks.
The post Using HPC to Peer into Yellowstone’s Fiery Heart appeared first on HPCwire.
Google is evolving beyond search in an effort to better protect its users from hoaxes.
Vermont senator’s joint initiative aims to recruit and train those seeking public office, especially young people
Bernie Sanders is partnering with the group Run for Something to help support a new generation of progressive candidates interested in seeking public office.
Questions about the future of Sanders’ leftwing movement have followed his cross-country Fighting Oligarchy tour, where at each stop the Vermont senator encourages supporters to get involved and run for office. The initiative builds on those calls, Politico first reported, by teaming up with organizations that recruit and train candidates running for office, with an emphasis on young people.
Continue reading...In his first major interview since leaving office, former President Joe Biden said he takes...
The post Biden Says Sexism and Racism Played Role in Harris Loss, Blames Himself for Trump’s Return appeared first on News Facts Network.
Bill Gates intensified his long-running feud with Elon Musk on Thursday, accusing the world’s richest...
The post Bill Gates Accuses Elon Musk of Harming Children Through USAID Cuts appeared first on News Facts Network.
Pope Francis' death set off a series of traditions that culminates in a vote for his successor. Here are some of the possible candidates.
Lawyers say they’re ‘still in dark’ about government’s efforts to free the man who was wrongly deported to El Salvador
The Trump administration is invoking the “state secrets privilege ” in an apparent attempt to avoid answering a judge’s questions about its erroneous deportation of Kilmar Ábrego García to El Salvador.
US district judge Paula Xinis disclosed the government’s position in a two-page order on Wednesday. She set a Monday deadline for attorneys to file briefs on the issue and how it could affect Ábrego García’s case. Xinis also scheduled a 16 May hearing in Greenbelt, Maryland, to address the matter.
Continue reading...Wikipedia is taking legal action against the UK's new Online Safety Act regulations it says could threaten the safety of its volunteer editors and their ability to keep harmful content off the site. From a report: The Wikimedia Foundation -- the non-profit which supports the online encyclopaedia -- is seeking a judicial review of rules which could mean Wikipedia is subjected to the toughest duties required of websites under the act. Lead counsel Phil Bradley-Schmieg said it was "unfortunate that we must now defend the privacy and safety of Wikipedia's volunteer editors from flawed legislation." The government told the BBC it was committed to implementing the act but could not comment on ongoing legal proceedings. It's thought this is the first judicial review to be brought against the new online safety laws - albeit a narrow part of them - but experts say it may not be the last. "The Online Safety Act is vast in scope and incredibly complex," Ben Packer, a partner at law firm Linklaters, told the BBC. The law would inevitably have impacts on UK citizens' freedom of expression and other human rights, so as more of it comes into force "we can expect that more challenges may be forthcoming," he told the BBC.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Sue Bird is giving another assist to USA Basketball, becoming the managing director of the women’s national team.
The five-time Olympic champion was named to the newly created position Thursday and it marks a major change in the way the organization creates its roster and coaching staff.
Continue reading...Researchers link suspected cases in New Brunswick to known diseases, suggesting ‘misdiagnosis and misinformation’
A new peer-reviewed scientific study has found no evidence of a mystery brain disease in the Canadian province of New Brunswick, suggesting instead a troubling combination of “misdiagnosis and misinformation”.
The research comes as the Maritime province prepares its own assessment of more than 220 suspected cases in the hope of giving families some answers to a medical mystery that has gripped the region for years.
Continue reading...Los Angeles will make Olympic history in 2028 by staging the opening ceremony of the Summer Games across two venues: the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. LA28 organizers confirmed the unprecedented dual-venue format on Thursday, making Los Angeles the first city to open an Olympics at two stadiums simultaneously.
The 14 July ceremony will also mark a milestone for the Coliseum, which organizers say will become the first venue to host Olympic events at three separate Games, following 1932 and 1984. SoFi Stadium, the $5bn home of the NFL’s Rams and Chargers which opened in 2020, will make its Olympic debut.
Continue reading...Chicago sports power couple Mallory and Dansby Swanson are expecting their first child.
Mallory Swanson is a forward for the Chicago Stars of the National Women’s Soccer League and the US women’s national team; her husband is the All-Star shortstop for the Cubs.
Continue reading...Commemorations take place across the UK and Europe against backdrop of Ukraine conflict
Another from the Guardian archive:
St Peter Port, Guernsey
Continue reading...PARIS, May 8, 2025 – Alice & Bob, a global leader in the race for fault-tolerant quantum computing (FTQC), has announced the construction of a $50 million quantum computing laboratory in Paris to support the development of its products. The company has selected Quantum Machines, provider of hybrid control solutions, and Bluefors, a cryogenic systems manufacturer, as partners to equip this cutting-edge facility.
Designed to be one of Europe’s most advanced QPU (Quantum Processing Unit) development facilities, the new lab will enable Alice & Bob’s next-gen quantum chip series: Lithium, Beryllium and Graphene.
This 4,000 m2 purpose-built product development hub is funded by the company’s recent $103 million Series B round. The facility is designed to host a nanofabrication cleanroom for the prototyping of advanced QPUs. Experimentation on these chips is enabled by Quantum Machines control solutions and a cryostat farm designed to host 20 Bluefors dilution refrigerators.
“Our state-of-the-art product development lab will serve as a cornerstone of French quantum infrastructure and as a blueprint of how to build industrial-scale tech in Europe,” said Théau Peronnin, CEO of Alice & Bob. “As our company’s focus is shifting from pure research to commercialization, our lab will enable Alice & Bob to create technology that can be tested by actual clients and end users.”
A dedicated area of the cryostat farm is reserved for the installation of the company’s large-scale quantum computer Graphene, a 100-logical-qubit quantum computer planned for 2030. With modern offices built to accompany the lab, the new facility will also foster cross-disciplinary exchange through common areas for workshops and brainstorming. Alice & Bob’s new laboratory will allow the company to turn its quantum chips, powered by proprietary cat qubit technology, into market-ready products.
Quantum computers built on cat qubits scale more efficiently due to the modality’s unique ability to suppress bit-flip errors. Alice & Bob’s goal is the creation of more powerful quantum computers at a fraction of the footprint, hardware and energy resources needed for competing quantum computing players.
“As the control provider for more than half of companies developing quantum computers globally, we’re involved in many ambitious initiatives,” said Dr. Itamar Sivan, co-founder and CEO of Quantum Machines. “This lab stands out as one of the most innovative projects. Alice & Bob’s hardware-efficient approach creates a unique path to fault-tolerant quantum computing that could dramatically reduce the resources needed for utility scale quantum error correction.”
“Alice & Bob’s hardware-efficient cat qubit is a very interesting application for Bluefors cryogenic solutions, which also support more stable and efficient quantum systems,” said David Gunnarson, Bluefors’ Chief Technology Officer. “We are excited to work with Alice & Bob to deploy our dilution refrigerator measurement systems to push quantum technology even further, underscoring our commitment to advance the quantum computing industry with cryogenic systems of the highest standard.”
“This facility marks a major milestone for the French quantum industry,” said François Charbonnier, Investment Director at Bpifrance. “By anchoring its accelerated quantum chip development cycle in Paris, Alice & Bob is positioning itself – and Europe – as a leader in delivering real-world breakthroughs.”
About Bluefors
Bluefors is the world leader in manufacturing cryogenic measurement systems for the field of quantum technology. We are dedicated to delivering the most reliable, easy-to-operate systems and versatile on the market. The quality of our products in combination with our scalable production capabilities has made the quantum technology field recognize us as the preferred choice for their ultra-low temperature requirements. We offer a variety of models of dilution refrigerator measurement systems to meet the specific needs of our customers in laboratories in companies and universities worldwide.
Bluefors – Cool for Progress.
About Quantum Machines
Quantum Machines (QM) is a leading provider of quantum control solutions, driving the advancement of quantum computing with its Hybrid Control approach. By harmonizing quantum and classical operations, Hybrid Control eliminates friction and optimizes performance across hardware and software, enabling researchers and builders to iterate at speed, resolve setbacks, and bring visionary ideas to life. Its platform supports any type of quantum processor, empowering the industry to scale systems, accelerate breakthroughs, and push the boundaries of what’s possible.
About Alice & Bob
Alice & Bob is a quantum computing company based in Paris and Boston whose goal is to create the first universal, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Founded in 2020, Alice & Bob has already raised €130 million in funding, hired over 100 employees and demonstrated experimental results surpassing those of technology giants such as Google or IBM. Alice & Bob specializes in cat qubits, a pioneering technology developed by the company’s founders and later adopted by Amazon. Demonstrating the power of its cat architecture, Alice & Bob recently showed that it could reduce the hardware requirements for building a useful large-scale quantum computer by up to 200 times compared with competing approaches. Alice & Bob cat qubit is available for anyone to test through cloud access.
Source: Alice & Bob
The post Alice & Bob to Build $50M Advanced Quantum Lab in Paris appeared first on HPCwire.
The Viola need to overturn a one-goal deficit as they host the La Liga side.
![]() | Enjoying it now. because it's about to get real hot, real quick. Gotta hit the streets early or late. [link] [comments] |
Plastic producers have pushed "advanced recycling" as a salve to the plastic waste crisis despite knowing for years that it is not a technically or economically feasible solution, a new report argues. The Guardian: Advanced recycling, also known as chemical recycling, refers to a variety of processes used to break plastics into their constituent molecules. The industry has increasingly promoted these technologies, as public concern about the environmental and health effects of plastic pollution has grown. Yet the rollout of these technologies has been plagued by problems, according to a new analysis from the Center for Climate Integrity (CCI), a fossil-fuel accountability advocacy group. "The companies make it sound like it's pretty great, like it's something we should pursue," said Davis Allen, investigative researcher at the CCI and author of the report. "But they know the problems, the limitations." The new analysis follows a 2024 CCI report which alleged that plastic producers concealed the problems with traditional recycling, and argued that they could face legal ramifications for doing so. That earlier research was cited in a September lawsuit filed by California's attorney general, Rob Bonta, against ExxonMobil for its role in the plastic pollution crisis. "The new report focuses on this modern deception with advanced recycling, which has become a real focus for the industry in recent years," said Davis.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bank policymakers split 5-2-2 over this month’s interest rate decision
Sweden’s central bank has left interest rates on hold this morning, despite concerns about the economic outlook.
Sveriges Riksbank has maintained its policy rate at 2.25% today, with policymakers concerned that Donald Trump’s new US trade policy has increased uncertainty in the global economy.
The increased uncertainty abroad implies that the economic outlook appears to be slightly weaker than in the March forecast. The impact on inflation is more difficult to assess.
The Executive Board considers that monetary policy is currently well-balanced and that it is wise to await further information to obtain a clearer picture of the outlook.
Continue reading...This week, the Epic Games Store's free-to-play titles are an eclectic early-access looter-shooter and an award-winning fantasy typing game.
Here are some highly rated titles to check out, plus the new releases for May.
UD alumnus Joe Rogerson leads wildlife conservation and management for the state of Delaware
Pulitzer citation honors late UD professor
California, Colorado and Washington are among the 17 states protesting the freezing of $3.3 billion in funds meant to bolster EV charging infrastructure in the US.
Add a first-of-its-kind robotic arm to Roborock's advanced smart navigation and cleaning tech, and you have a robot vacuum in a category of its own.
Bill Gates revealed his plan to give away virtually all of his wealth in an interview with "CBS Mornings" co-host Tony Dokoupil and criticized the Trump administration's aid cuts. Here are some standout moments.
President Trump said in remarks from the Oval Office that the two countries are "affirming that reciprocity and fairness is an essential and vital principle."
As Russia celebrates its 80-year-old victory over Nazi Germany, Putin wants the world to see that despite the new conflict in Europe, he still has friends in high places.
The Blues boast a three-goal advantage going into today's clash at Stamford Bridge.
The Spanish team has a mountain to climb as it heads to Old Trafford.
These low-risk accounts can keep your money safe in an economic downturn.
Here are the settings and equipment you need to take amazing northern lights photos, as suggested by a pro photographer.
Spurs head to the Arctic for the second leg of their Europa League semifinal.
Chinese leader describes talks as ‘friendly and fruitful’ during visit for Victory Day commemorations
Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin exchanged warm words in the Kremlin on Thursday during a grand ceremony welcoming the Chinese leader for his 11th visit to Russia, ahead of a military parade to mark 80 years since the end of the second world war.
After nearly four hours of talks, Xi described his meeting with his Russian counterpart as “in-depth, friendly and fruitful”.
Continue reading...A pathologist hired by death row inmates' attorneys says a South Carolina man executed by firing squad was conscious and likely in extreme pain for up to a minute.
34 million people live in one of these major U.S. cities that's sinking, new research shows. See if your area is on the list — and how quickly the land is moving.
Trying to wipe the financial slate clean by filing for bankruptcy? Here's what to know before making your move.
The Office for Students is warning that declining international student numbers will lead to more cuts on campus
Universities in England have experienced a fall in income for the third year in a row, according to the higher education regulator, as it warned that declining international student numbers will translate into more cuts on campuses.
The Office for Students’ (OfS) annual financial health check found that many universities are trying to repair budget deficits by slashing building and maintenance spending as well as cutting courses and staff, with the sector expected to sell off more than £400m worth of land and property this year.
Continue reading...Nicola Packer, 45, was prescribed medication but was accused of believing she was more than 10 weeks pregnant
A woman has been cleared of illegally terminating a pregnancy, after taking abortion pills during lockdown.
Nicola Packer took the pills at home in November 2020. She had been prescribed mifepristone and misoprostol after a remote consultation.
Continue reading...Apple asked a judge to halt an order forcing it to give up control over App Store payments while it appeals the decision. From a report: In a filing on Wednesday, Apple says the order contains "extraordinary intrusions" that could result in "grave irreparable harm" to the company. Last week, California District Court Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers found that Apple was in "willful violation" of a 2021 injunction issued as part of the Epic Games v. Apple case. As a result, the judge ordered Apple to stop collecting an up to 27 percent commission on purchases made outside the App Store, and said the company can no longer restrict how developers point users toward external purchases.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New-York based asset management company about to issue new guidance, according to FT
BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset management company, is reportedly preparing to order its senior managers to work from the office five days a week.
The New-York based company is expected to tell its staff as early as Thursday that about 1,000 managing directors around the world should work in the office full-time, the Financial Times has reported.
Continue reading...Avoid this north Jersey airport if you can. If you can't, the right credit card can help you sidestep hidden, last-minute costs if your flight is delayed.
Trying to figure out what my estimated range is with my newly installed P45B battery from ISC on my XR.
Tend to ride purely street around 15-20 mph and everywhere online is estimating 20-30 miles.
Took it out a couple days ago and went 14 miles, battery going from 80% to 60%. Seems like I'd get much more than what I'm seeing online.
Some believe that vibration plates are effective tools for weight loss. We spoke with fitness experts to find out the truth.
The President's criticism comes a day after the Federal chair said the time isn't yet right for a rate cut.
At least 10 of musical’s cast members will not participate in June show the president is expected to attend
At least 10 cast members from the current North American touring production of Les Misérables are choosing not to participate in an upcoming performance at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, in order to boycott the anticipated attendance of Donald Trump, according to CNN.
Cast members were reportedly given the option to opt out of the 11 June show. The production has not publicly identified which individuals will not be performing.
Continue reading...The bill would codify the name change, though it would carry no authority outside the U.S.
The Trump administration has said it wants to pull apart Russia and China, but the two countries need each other too much.
Number of child deaths is highest in 15 years and cumulative hospitalization rate is highest since 2010-2011
At least 216 children have died of influenza in the US during the last flu season in what the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said was classified as the first high severity season overall and for all age groups since 2017-2018.
That number marks the highest pediatric death toll in 15 years; the previous high reported for a regular (non-pandemic) season was 236 pediatric deaths in the 2009-2010 season, according to the CDC. More recently, 207 pediatric deaths were reported during the 2023-2024 season.
Continue reading...
GIA JOELLA
Associate Arts & Culture Editor and Development Officer
Back at the very beginning of the semester, I was scrolling through the university’s events calendar when I saw a listing that made me stop in my tracks. If this link was to be believed, Brittany Broski would be headlining Perkins Live on Feb. 28 in Trabant University Center.
Though I desperately wanted this to be confirmed, I was initially skeptical as the event was not advertised anywhere else. I decided not to get too excited until the university released more information, but I still texted my friends and told them to keep their schedules clear on the 28.
On Feb. 13, my hopes were confirmed when the university’s student involvement Instagram page posted the official event announcement, which has since garnered over 1,700 likes.
Though the ability to RSVP to the event was not initially offered, it was soon announced that attendees would need to claim free general admission tickets to the event in a “sale” on Feb. 24 at 2 p.m..
This sale was probably one of the most terrifying moments of my life. I logged onto the university’s student events website around 10 minutes before the sale began, and I watched the countdown like a hawk until the page finally refreshed and let me in to reserve a ticket. I rushed to put one in my cart, and though the site froze as I was checking out, I soon received the purchase confirmation email. My hands were full-on shaking, but I was so relieved to have gotten it.
Over the next few days, the event continued to evolve. On Feb. 25, the university announced that, due to extreme demand, the event would be moved to the Bob Carpenter Center. It would also be moved up from 10:15 p.m. to 8 p.m.. Those who had not been able to reserve a ticket to the original event had another chance as more went up for “sale” at 2 p.m. that day, and anyone who had already purchased a ticket to the Trabant show was automatically given a new ticket to the Bob show.
The day of the event finally came on Feb. 28. Since the tickets were general admission, it was still necessary to queue before doors opened at 7 p.m.. Though the university provided shuttles to the event leaving from Perkins Student Center, the George Read bus stop and the Smith Hall South Bound bus stop beginning at 6 p.m., we were too excited to wait and instead took a regular bus to the Bob.
We arrived around 5:30 p.m.. Even though the shuttles would not leave for another half hour, the line was surprisingly long already. We ended up just across from the ticket windows, and sat down to wait for an hour and a half before the doors opened. The line became longer and longer until we could hardly see where it ended behind us.
Finally, the doors opened, and we scanned our tickets before being led into another line as staff members directed us to seats. Somehow, we ended up in the first row directly across from where Broski and the moderators were sitting. I will be shocked if I ever have this kind of general admission luck again.
The moderators came out around 8 p.m. and gave an introduction for Broski, as well as reminded us that there was no videoing or photography allowed at the event. Then it was time for the highlight of the night: Broski made her entrance to Charli xcx’s “Lamborghini” accompanied by screams from the audience.
Broski was hilarious. The moderators asked her a series of questions, some submitted by audience members, and Broski’s answers, which ranged from serious discussions about the impact of TikTok to more lighthearted memories over the course of her career, always received huge reactions from the audience (including me). Broski was even introduced to a cardboard cutout of YoUDee, a highlight of the night.
The set then ended, and Broski danced away to “Lamborghini” once again. Though we did not get them, a variety of free plushies were also offered for guests as they were leaving – hippos, cows and dinosaurs with a small packet of stuffing for guests to fill them with.
Overall, the roller coaster journey to the event was so worth it. I cannot wait to watch anything Broski does in the future.
![]() | I bought this as a second board to beat up with friends for 600 bucks but honestly it’s my favorite board now. A board makeover feels amazing though! [link] [comments] |
Company referred to policy for restricting content when governments say material goes ‘against local law’
Meta has banned a prominent Muslim news page on Instagram in India at the government’s request, the account’s founder said on Wednesday, denouncing the move as “censorship” as hostilities escalate between India and Pakistan.
Instagram users in India trying to access posts from the handle @Muslim – a page with 6.7 million followers – were met with a message stating: “Account not available in India. This is because we complied with a legal request to restrict this content.”
Continue reading...The E.U. proposed a list of $100 billion worth of U.S. goods that could face tariffs if trade talks with the Trump administration fail to yield a deal.
Before you pay off credit card debt with money from an inheritance, there are factors you should consider first.
Move would hit Boeing, as Brussels also starts consultation on possible litigation over Trump’s blanket 20% tariffs
The EU is considering imposing tariffs on US aircraft and car exports in a fresh attempt to persuade Donald Trump to drop his current and proposed tariffs against the EU.
If acted on they will hit Boeing hard but also include further categories of US exports including chemicals, electrical equipment including cameras, health-related products and some foods such as sweet potato and nuts.
Continue reading...Switzerland will hold a national referendum on the introduction of electronic identity cards after opponents of the legislation secured enough signatures to force a public vote. The Federal Chancellery confirmed Wednesday that 55,344 valid signatures were submitted against the Federal Act on Electronic Identity passed last December. The proposed e-ID would enable citizens to apply online for criminal record extracts, driving licenses, and age verification when purchasing alcohol. This marks the second referendum on e-ID implementation, after voters rejected a previous version in 2021. The government has revised its approach, making the new system free, optional, and fully state-operated rather than privately managed. If approved, the e-ID would come into force no earlier than 2026, though the collection effort suggests privacy concerns remain paramount for many Swiss voters.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Microsoft co-founder accuses Trump ally of involvement in ‘killing the world’s poorest children’ by slashing US aid funding
Bill Gates announced plans on Thursday to shutter the Gates Foundation in 2045 and also strongly criticized Elon Musk for slashing funding to the US Agency for International Development (USAID), accusing the Tesla CEO of involvement in “killing the world’s poorest children” in new interviews.
In an interview with the Financial Times published on Thursday, Gates condemned the sudden funding cuts to USAID by Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge), saying the cuts had led to life-saving food and medicines expiring in warehouses, and could result in the resurgence of diseases such as measles, HIV and polio.
Continue reading...OXFORD, England, May 8, 2025 — Oxford Ionics, a world leader in trapped-ion quantum computing, today announced its development roadmap to achieve scalable fault-tolerant quantum computing – outlining three short-term phases on the company’s path to delivering 1M+ qubit devices.
Oxford Ionics’ development roadmap focuses on three strategic phases: Foundation, Enterprise-grade, and Value at scale. Each development phase builds upon the last, enabling further scalability and increased performance. Notably, the phases are marked by the development of quantum systems that push the boundaries of what’s possible – not just in qubit count, but in achieving the industry’s lowest error rates of 10⁻⁴ across the largest number of physical qubits.
These low error rates are a crucial component of Oxford Ionics’ unmatched level of performance. For its Foundation and Enterprise-grade systems, low error rates power a far wider range of applications compared to other approaches on the market – fewer errors mean longer and more complex applications can run successfully. For its Value at scale systems, low error rates empower Oxford Ionics to solve meaningful problems on devices with up to 10,000x fewer physical qubits than competing platforms – allowing it to rapidly deliver reliable, high performance systems to its customers.
Foundation
Currently available to order, Oxford Ionics’ Foundation systems contain 16 – 64 qubits at 99.99% fidelity. These quantum computers allow organisations to research quantum algorithms, Quantum Error Correction (QEC), and early applications to fields like security and defence, pharmaceuticals, and materials science. With over $20m in sales in 2024, Oxford Ionics has rapidly commercialised these devices to customers including the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre and Germany’s Cyberagentur.
Enterprise-Grade
With its Enterprise-grade systems, Oxford Ionics is developing 256-qubit quantum computers at 99.99% fidelity, which the company is selling to customers today. These ultra-high performing systems will begin to unlock early commercial value, yielding quantum use cases that surpass classical computing capabilities. This includes applications within advanced QEC research, the intersection of quantum and AI, and hybrid classical and quantum computing workflows through integrations with HPC data centers.
Value at Scale
The development roadmap unveiled today also outlines Oxford Ionics’ plans to develop a 10,000+ high-fidelity qubit quantum processor, available to order in 2027. The Value at scale development phase builds off the work conducted in the Enterprise-grade period, enabling Oxford Ionics to scale its 256-qubit designs to 10,000+ qubits by replicating the design elements rather than reinventing. Whilst the company’s Enterprise-grade systems will unlock early applications that surpass classical computing capabilities, the Value at scale systems developed in 2027 will be capable of powering broad commercial value – yielding solutions to previously-unsolvable problems across a wide range of use cases.
The systems developed in each phase are data centre compatible, highly automated, and field upgradeable. In order for customers to upgrade to a higher performance system, they simply swap out the credit-card sized Quantum Processor Unit (QPU) – meaning the quantum computer’s power and performance can evolve as the organization does.
All Oxford Ionics’ products rely on its proprietary technology, Electronic Qubit Control, which uses electronics instead of lasers to control its qubits. The benefits of this approach are twofold: first, it unlocks unprecedented scalability by enabling the company to produce its quantum chips via the existing semiconductor supply chain. Second, it has yielded the highest performing quantum platform in the world, with Oxford Ionics holding the world record in all three of the most important metrics of quantum computing performance.
Dr. Chris Ballance, co-founder and CEO of Oxford Ionics, commented: “We are tremendously proud to outline our development roadmap today. Our team has always been driven by the firm conviction that powerful quantum computing will usher in an era where organisations can rewrite what’s possible and find solutions to otherwise unsolvable problems. The roadmap we’ve unveiled today combines scale and fidelity, essential ingredients to moving the field beyond proof of concept demonstrations and into real-world impact. We’re excited to continue putting these devices into the hands of end users, taking us one step closer to unlocking the power that quantum computing promises to deliver.”
For more information on Oxford Ionics’ development roadmap, read the latest blog post here.
About Oxford Ionics
Oxford Ionics was co-founded in 2019 by Dr. Tom Harty and Dr. Chris Ballance who both hold world records in quantum breakthroughs. The team includes 80 global experts across physics, quantum architecture, engineering and software and expects to triple headcount over the next 18 months as the business scales internationally. Oxford Ionics has raised £37 million to date with investors including Braavos, OSE, Lansdowne Partners, Prosus Ventures, 2xN, and Hermann Hauser (founder of chip giant ARM). In 2024, Oxford Ionics rapidly commercialised its technology, selling full-stack quantum computers to the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) and Germany’s Cyberagentur. The company also holds the world records in the three most important metrics for quantum performance: single- and two-qubit gate fidelity and quantum state preparation and measurement (SPAM).
Source: Oxford Ionics
The post Oxford Ionics Unveils Roadmap to Scalable Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
Records obtained by the Guardian indicate shooters did not hit Mikal Mahdi according to protocol, which lawyers say caused prolonged suffering
A South Carolina firing squad botched the execution of Mikal Mahdi last month, with shooters missing the target area on the man’s heart, causing him to suffer a prolonged death, according to autopsy records and his attorneys.
Mahdi, 42, was shot dead by corrections employees last month in the second firing squad execution this year in South Carolina. The state has aggressively revived capital punishment over the last seven months and brought back the controversial firearm method that has rarely been used in the modern death penalty era.
Continue reading...President Trump said his new pick for surgeon general, Dr. Casey Means, has "impeccable" credentials, after the White House withdrew his earlier nominee.
Fighting continued despite Moscow’s declared three-day ceasefire, with seven people killed in Ukraine by Russian strikes.
South Korean skincare retailers want to capitalise on viral sales of beauty ranges by opening stores across the UK
Korean beauty products are moving from phone screens to UK high streets as social media drives sales of skincare with the help of eye-catching ingredients such as snail slime and salmon sperm.
Retailers are looking to capitalise on the TikTok and Instagram trend for skincare and makeup ranges from South Korea – known as K-beauty – by opening physical stores and launching brands in a push to get consumers to pick up products that havegone viral online.
Continue reading...Bill Gates announced on Thursday that the Gates Foundation will close "permanently" at the end of 2045.
Rudolf Peters was hiking in a rough section of a trail called The Windows Loop when he fell, the National Park Service said.
Whether you want to bolster your home’s security or simply make sure you know when someone is at the door, the latest generation of smart doorbells will help put your mind at ease
• The best robot vacuums to keep your home clean and dust free
Doorbells have evolved. Today, they watch us as we approach, let the people inside the home know we’re coming sooner than our finger can hit the button, and give them a good look at our faces before they open the door. They’re essentially security cameras with a chime function.
If you haven’t already installed one of these handy tools, there’s a huge array available. Choosing the best video doorbell can be a bewildering task, with various factors to consider, including how much of your doorstep you want to see or whether you’re prepared to pay for a subscription. To help make the decision a little bit easier, I tested eight popular video doorbells to find the best.
Best overall video doorbell:
Google Nest Doorbell (battery)
£139 at Amazon
Best budget video doorbell:
Blink smart video doorbell with Sync Module 2
£60 at AO
Best subscription-free video doorbell:
Eufy video doorbell E340
£124 at John Lewis
PSG and Inter will play for the crown at the end of the month but there were plenty of twists and turns before the finalists were decided
Inter
Continue reading...
WILLIAM SPINETTA MCCARTHY
Managing Sports Editor
The University of Delaware softball team celebrated a 3-2 walk-off victory over the Towson Tigers with a little extra swagger on May 2.
A combined effort of grit and perseverance was on display at the Delaware Diamond as numerous players pulled the Blue Hens across the finish line. Morgan Hess and Mary Beth Cahalan each homered in the victory. The third run of the game was scored in the bottom of the seventh inning by Sorella Gallucci, after a timely double by freshman Ellie Talley.
Excitement soon filled the air as the team celebrated their new title – 2025 CAA Regular Season Champions. This is a familiar thrill for many players, as well as head coach Jen Steele. Delaware has now hoisted the trophy three times in the last four years.
The win also locks down the number one seed in the upcoming CAA tournament, which is set to be played from May 7 to May 10. Delaware will receive a bye for the first day of competition and will play the fourth-seeded Campbell Camels on May 8. Campbell defeated the Stony Brook Seawolves 13-7 on May 7 to advance to the second round of play.
This comes just a day after a 19-0 blowout win against Towson in the first game of the series. Delaware eventually swept the Tigers after a 4-0 shutout win on May 3.
None of this could have been accomplished without the relief pitching by Billie Kerwood, who recorded nine strikeouts in five innings in game 2, all while allowing just one run and two hits by the Tigers.
Already one of Delaware’s biggest assets this year, Kerwood added another accolade to celebrate on May 2. She set a new program record for most wins in a season by a pitcher with 23 victories.
In the process of being crowned first in the league this season, Delaware also set numerous team accolades. The Blue Hens set a new program record for conference wins in a season at 23. They also extended their already program-best conference win streak to 13 after the three consecutive Towson victories.
Delaware looks ahead to competing as the number one seed in the CAA tournament and hopefully participating in the NCAA Regionals, which are set to be played from May 16 to May 18. The winner of the CAA tournament clinches the automatic bid to represent the CAA in the NCAA regionals.
The path to win in the CAA tournament is never an easy feat, and that is no different for Delaware this year. Barring any upsets, the Blue Hens will likely play against the second seeded Elon Phoenix on the third day of the tournament.
Elon challenged Delaware during their series in Newark from March 28 to March 30, but the Blue Hens found their way to victory. After Elon won game two with a 5-4 score, Delaware narrowly took the series after a 3-2 walk-off victory through eight innings in game three.
The winner of the day three matchup will advance to the championship game. However, the loser could still reach the final through the CAA tournament’s double-elimination format, which allows a second chance through the loser’s bracket. Delaware could theoretically play the same team two days in a row, in two different stages of the tournament.
Delaware did not play against the Campbell Camels this year. Campbell ranks first in the CAA in fielding, the only area that the Blue Hens are not first in. The Blue Hens rank third in CAA fielding percentage.
Delaware’s cohesive playstyle makes them a formidable opponent as they prepare to take on the best teams in the league. They boast a 37-14 overall record, in addition to their program-best conference record, and lead the CAA in batting and pitching respectively.
Delaware also received a whopping eight all-conference awards, which were announced by the CAA on May 6. These truly encapsulate the impact Delaware has had during the regular season this year.
The Blue Hens took multiple major awards home, Sydney Shaffer was named CAA Player of the Year. Kerwood, the five-time pitcher of the week with a 1.58 ERA, was named CAA Pitcher of the Year, and Cahalan was named CAA Defensive Player of the Year. Those three players also joined Morgan Hess in being named to the All-CAA First-Team.
Katie Scheivert received honors as well, being named to the All-CAA Second-Team alongside Sorella Gallucci, who was also named to the All-Rookie Team with Delaware’s freshman infield player Ellie Talley.
Given everything Delaware has accomplished, earned and shown this year, the Blue Hens enter the postseason as CAA favorites to win it all.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is aggressively promoting a future where AI becomes the dominant form of social interaction, claiming that AI friends, therapists, and business agents will soon outnumber human relationships. During a recent media blitz across multiple podcasts and a Stripe conference appearance, Zuckerberg cited statistics suggesting "the average American has fewer than three friends" while claiming people desire "meaningfully more, like 15 friends" -- positioning AI companions as the solution to this gap. The Meta founder's vision extends beyond casual interaction to therapeutic and commercial relationships, with personalized AI that "has a deep understanding of what's going on in this person's life." Meta has already deployed its AI across Instagram, Facebook, and Ray-Ban smart glasses, reaching nearly a billion monthly users.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) sharply criticized both major political parties during a Wednesday appearance on...
The post Bernie Sanders Says Both Political Parties Are “Largely Corrupt” and Controlled by Billionaires appeared first on News Facts Network.
This marks the first time a bison has gored a Yellowstone National Park visitor in 2025.
Cryptocurrency legislation once seemed to be the rare issue that could draw bipartisan support in Donald Trump’s Washington, thanks to the industry’s prolific donations on both sides of the aisle.
Then Trump and his family attempted to monetize the presidency through a meme coin and a $2 billion crypto deal involving an Abu Dhabi-backed venture firm.
Democrats were, suddenly, outraged. Some centrist party members who had treated cryptocurrency with deference even began to walk away.
Nine Senate Democrats pulled their support for so-called “stablecoin” legislation over the weekend, imperiling the industry’s most likely legislative win this year. Meanwhile, Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., blocked a House hearing on a broader, more ambitious crypto “framework” on Tuesday, leading several Democrats in a walkout.
“Trump may just cause enough polarization to make crypto skepticism mainstream within the Democratic Party.”
The industry is still pushing for a vote on the legislation in the Senate, where Democrats continue to work on a potential compromise. Yet for skeptics who have had their warnings about crypto’s threat to the economy ignored for years, Democrats’ sudden conversion was heartening. They just wished it hadn’t taken Trump to wake the party up.
“Crypto has been able to buy so many Democrats because there was no organized opposition and thus little downside to politicians selling their vote,” said Jeff Hauser, a longtime critic of the industry and executive director of the Revolving Door Project. “Trump may just cause enough polarization to make crypto skepticism mainstream within the Democratic Party.”
The industry’s bipartisan alliances were on display last May, as the House debated its favorite legislation: the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act.
Out of 213 Democrats, 71 joined with Republicans to give overwhelming support to FIT21, as it is known, though the bill did not proceed to a vote in a Senate. The legislation is aimed creating a framework that would largely shield the industry from oversight by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is viewed as having the sharpest regulatory bite.
The industry seemed even better positioned this year, thanks to Trump’s election and a record-breaking $197 million spending spree on the 2024 campaigns. All the cash helped knocked hostile Democrats out of primaries and propel industry-friendly candidates in the general election.
Analysts predicted that after the new Congress was sworn in, Democrats skeptical of the industry would hold their tongue for fear of facing well-funded primary challengers. Trump and his family’s rapid move into the industry, though, seems to have changed the calculation for some Democrats.
The White House has said that the Trump family’s crypto deals raise no ethical concerns because Trump’s business interests are held in a trust that his sons run.
In September, Trump’s sons helped launch a crypto marketplace called World Liberty Financial.
Hours before his inauguration, the Trump Organization launched a Trump meme coin that has now generated more than $320 million in transaction fees, according to a recent analysis.
Then, last week, World Liberty Financial announced the massive deal with the Emirati firm, which planned to use the company’s tokens to make a transaction with the crypto exchange Binance, according to a report in the New York Times.
By that point, the bipartisan mood on Capitol Hill was already beginning to sour.
Waters expressed openness to legislation dealing with stablecoin last year. In March, however, the Trumps announced that they would be issuing a stablecoin of their own. Waters on April 2 tried to amend a stablecoin bill in the House Financial Services Committee, where she serves as ranking member, to prohibit the Trump family from issuing one that benefits the president.
Republicans rejected her bid, and the bill passed out of committee with support from several Democrats, including some who have drawn hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations from the industry.
Then, as news of World Liberty Financial’s Abu Dhabi deal circulated, Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., led eight other Democrats in announcing Saturday that they were backing off their support for a similar stablecoin bill in their chamber, imperiling its chances of overcoming a filibuster.
Though Gallego and several of his colleagues had just voted for the bill in committee, they now said it “has numerous issues that must be addressed, including adding stronger provisions on anti-money laundering, foreign issuers, national security, preserving the safety and soundness of our financial system, and accountability for those who don’t meet the act’s requirements.”
Gallego’s statement may have had a special sting for the industry, which spent $10 million in super PAC funds helping him win his Senate race last year.
In a joint statement Monday, three leading crypto trade organizations said they still hoped the Senate would advance the legislation.
“A comprehensive regulatory framework will enable widespread and increased stablecoin adoption,” the groups said, “which is essential to cementing U.S. dollar dominance in the digital economy.”
According to Axios, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., is still planning to hold a vote on the stablecoin bill on Thursday, and the measure’s sponsors are hoping to strike a deal to revive the legislation.
On Tuesday, Waters ratcheted up pressure on the industry by objecting to a joint House Financial Services and Agriculture committee meeting on the newest iteration of the FIT21 bill.
“I object to this joint hearing, because of the corruption of the president of the United States and his ownership of crypto and his oversight of all the agencies. I object,” Waters said.
Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., the chair of the Financial Services Committee, said the hearing had been negotiated with Democrats for weeks.
“Through her actions today, the ranking member has thrown partisanship into what has historically been a strong, good bipartisan relationship,” Hill said.
Republicans and some of the committees’ Democrats continued holding a more informal roundtable, as Waters marched over to a different building for a hearing of her own.
At Waters’s breakaway hearing, one witness said Congress shouldn’t just take a hard line on the Trumps, since some of World Liberty Financial’s most problematic practices are mirrored by other leading companies.
“In many ways, the Trump family is simply copying common crypto business practices.”
World Liberty Financial markets itself as the future of decentralized finance. On its website, the company says that its governance system, based on a special token that can be bought but not traded, “ensures that every $WLFI owner has an equal voice. From submitting proposals to casting votes, your participation is key to shaping our decentralized platform.”
Yet it is controlled by a small set of insiders who stand to profit at the expense of retail customers, according to Mark Hays, associate director for cryptocurrency and financial technology at Americans for Financial Reform and Demand Progress.
“While it is entirely right for members of Congress to raise concerns about how actions of the Trump presidency distort good policymaking and threaten the public interest, none of us here should lose sight of the fact that, in many ways, the Trump family is simply copying common crypto business practices,” Hays said. “In other words, many of the potential issues we see with the Trump family’s crypto practices are a feature — not a bug — of the crypto industry.”
Neither the Trump Organization nor World Liberty Financial immediately responded to a request for comment on the company’s governance structure.
Waters’s effort to disrupt the House hearing pointed to a continuing divide among Democrats. While six other Democrats joined her, several remained at the main hearing featuring industry witnesses, including Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota, the House Agriculture Committee ranking member.
“I think that, with more publicity around the corruption, they’re going to pay more attention.”
Democrats who stayed drew supportive statements from one of the industry’s biggest players, Coinbase.
Craig and the other Democrats who stayed did, however, criticize the Trump family’s deals.
“It is corrupt, it is wrong, and it makes this process of coming together to regulate crypto more partisan than it needs to be,” Craig said.
In the Senate, Gallego and his colleagues’ statement focused on the substance of the stablecoin bill rather than on the Trumps’ attempts to enrich themselves.
In an interview with The Intercept, Waters predicted that Democrats’ focus will soon shift to Trump. “It’s coming,” she said. “I think that, yes, they had some real issues, but I think that with more publicity around the corruption, they’re going to pay more attention.”
The post Democrats Woke Up to Trump’s Crypto Grift. Will They Stop Other Scammers? appeared first on The Intercept.
Bill Gates says $200 billion spent over the next 20 years will go toward causes to help save and improve lives around the world. He also criticized the Trump administration's cuts to aid, saying they could lead to more child deaths.
CANTON, Mass., May 8, 2025 — UNICOM Engineering has announced a strategic partnership with E4 Computer Engineering, an Italian leader in High-Performance Computing (HPC) and AI-driven solutions. This collaboration expands UNICOM Engineering’s presence in the European market by offering comprehensive, integrated AI infrastructure solutions designed to accelerate deployment and optimize performance.
The partnership combines UNICOM Engineering’s expertise in liquid cooling technologies and custom server solutions with E4’s extensive experience in designing and deploying advanced HPC-AI and dense compute solutions across various sectors, including Research and Development, Banking, Government, Automotive, and Aerospace.
“This strategic partnership with E4 Computer Engineering represents an important step in our European expansion strategy,” said Rusty Cone, General Manager of UNICOM Engineering. “Combining our engineering expertise and technology portfolio with E4’s market presence and industry knowledge, we’re uniquely positioned to deliver the next generation of AI-ready infrastructure solutions to the European market. Together, we’re enabling our customers to accelerate their AI initiatives while addressing critical challenges around power efficiency and sustainability.”
Accelerating AI Adoption Through Advanced Infrastructure
The partnership aims to deliver comprehensive infrastructure solutions optimized for AI workloads, including systems powered by the latest accelerated computing technologies. UNICOM Engineering brings its expertise in thermal management and immersion cooling solutions, which are crucial for handling the intense power densities of modern AI systems, while E4 contributes its extensive experience in designing, deploying and supporting complex HPC and AI environments.
“Organizations across EMEA are looking forward to harnessing the transformative potential of AI, but face significant infrastructure challenges,” said Cosimo Damiano Gianfreda, CEO and Co-founder of E4. “Our partnership with UNICOM Engineering allows E4 to address these challenges head-on, providing our customers with purpose-built solutions that deliver the performance they need while meeting their sustainability goals. We’re excited to combine our expertise to drive AI innovation across the Italian and Swiss markets.”
This partnership enables enterprises to achieve faster time to value for their AI investments, with infrastructure solutions designed to deliver optimal performance while addressing the power and cooling challenges that often complicate AI deployments.
About UNICOM Engineering
UNICOM Engineering is a leading provider of purpose-built application platforms, appliances, and life cycle deployment services for solution providers and OEMs serving the global data center, storage, security, communications, video, and healthcare IT markets. We are best known for our solution design technologies, integration expertise, and unique deployment capabilities. Our turnkey platforms and appliances are designed for longevity and backed by life cycle management services. We create products and business solutions that solve deployment challenges, accelerate time to market, reduce ownership costs, and increase business efficiencies.
About E4 Computer Engineering
E4 is an Italian provider of High-Performance Computing (HPC) and AI-driven solutions. With a strong focus on innovation and technical excellence, E4 designs, develops, and delivers advanced computing systems and services to research institutions, enterprises, and government organizations. The company’s expertise spans various sectors, including scientific research, finance, automotive, aerospace and more. E4 is dedicated to helping its customers harness the power of cutting-edge technologies to drive innovation and achieve their strategic objectives.
Source: E4 Computer Engineering
The post E4 and UNICOM Engineering Partner to Tackle HPC and AI Deployment Challenges in Europe appeared first on HPCwire.
The Song Is Over tour will serve as ‘a truly grand finale of their illustrious six-decade career’, the rock band said
The Who have announced a final farewell tour of the US and Canada.
The British rock band, who played their first American concerts back in 1967, will kick off The Song Is Over tour in August in Florida. The tour will go on to include dates in locations including New York, Toronto and Seattle before ending in Las Vegas.
Continue reading...WASHINGTON and SANTA CLARA, Calif., May 8, 2025 — Nutanix and Pure Storage have announced a partnership aimed at providing a deeply integrated solution that will allow customers to seamlessly deploy and manage virtual workloads on a scalable modern infrastructure.
This integrated solution comes at a pivotal time for customers as the virtualization market evolution is top of mind. IT leaders are focused on helping their organizations maintain pace with the rapidly changing technology landscape while simultaneously implementing greater operational effectiveness. Gartner predicts that “by 2028, cost concerns will drive 70% of enterprise-scale VMware customers to migrate 50% of their virtual workloads.”
With this collaboration, the Nutanix Cloud Infrastructure solution, powered by the Nutanix AHV hypervisor along with Nutanix Flow virtual networking and security, will integrate with Pure Storage FlashArray over NVMe/TCP to deliver a customer experience uniquely designed for high-demand data workloads, including AI.
Key Benefits:
“We’re thrilled to see Nutanix and Pure Storage joining forces. Their collective expertise, innovative technologies, and shared commitment to reliability and performance will deliver a compelling solution that directly addresses critical needs in the market,” said Anthony Jackman, Chief Innovation Officer at Expedient. “Expedient is proud to be an early design partner, collaborating closely with both companies to ensure this solution elevates the quality of service we deliver, ultimately enhancing the value and experience for our clients nationwide.”
“This new solution will help Nutanix and Pure Storage reach more customers together and help them better manage and modernize their mission-critical applications,” said Tarkan Maner, Chief Commercial Officer at Nutanix. “Our integrated solution will be ideally suited for companies with storage-rich environments looking for choices in modernization.”
This solution will be supported on major server hardware partners that currently support Pure Storage FlashArray, including Cisco, Dell, HPE, Lenovo and Supermicro, for both existing and new deployments.
Additionally, Cisco and Pure Storage are expanding their partnership of more than 60 FlashStack validated designs to include Nutanix in the portfolio – further simplifying full-stack delivery.
“The future of infrastructure is defined by flexibility,” said Jeremy Foster, SVP and General Manager, Cisco Compute. “That’s exactly what this next evolution of FlashStack delivers. With nearly a decade of joint innovation with Pure Storage, and an expanded partnership and co-development roadmap with Nutanix, we’re offering a proven platform backed by Cisco validated designs, a world-class joint support model, and deep integration with Cisco Intersight – providing unified visibility across both Pure Storage and Nutanix clusters for a more complete view of the operating environment. This level of integration, insight, and support is what will set FlashStack with Nutanix apart in the market.”
The solution is currently under development and is expected to be in early access by the summer of 2025 and generally available at the end of this calendar year through both Nutanix and Pure Storage channel partners.
About Pure Storage
Pure Storage (NYSE: PSTG) delivers the industry’s most advanced data storage platform to store, manage, and protect the world’s data at any scale. With Pure Storage, organizations have ultimate simplicity and flexibility, saving time, money, and energy. From AI to archive, Pure Storage delivers a cloud experience with one unified Storage as-a-Service platform across on premises, cloud, and hosted environments. Our platform is built on our Evergreen architecture that evolves with your business – always getting newer and better with zero planned downtime, guaranteed. Our customers are actively increasing their capacity and processing power while significantly reducing their carbon and energy footprint. It’s easy to fall in love with Pure Storage, as evidenced by the highest Net Promoter Score in the industry.
About Nutanix
Nutanix is a global leader in cloud software, offering organizations a single platform for running applications and managing data, anywhere. With Nutanix, companies can reduce complexity and simplify operations, freeing them to focus on their business outcomes. Building on its legacy as the pioneer of hyperconverged infrastructure, Nutanix is trusted by companies worldwide to power hybrid multicloud environments consistently, simply, and cost-effectively.
Source: Nutanix
The post Nutanix and Pure Storage Partner on Integrated Virtualization Infrastructure for AI Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.
Africa Aware: Envisioning a more peaceful and secure Africa Audio LToremark
In this episode, AU Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security HE Ambassador Bankole Adeoye shares his vision for a more peaceful and secure Africa.
The uptick in armed conflicts across Africa in recent years has challenged peacebuilding efforts and upset a trajectory towards continental stability. From the ongoing conflicts in the Sahel and Sudan, a return to violence in eastern DRC and recent rising tensions in South Sudan, the African Union’s Political Affairs, Peace and Security (PAPS) department is being called upon to uphold its mandate to prevent, resolve and manage conflict and crises across the continent.
In this episode, HE Ambassador Bankole Adeoye, who has recently been re-elected for his second and final term as the African Union’s commissioner for political affairs, peace and security, discusses the AU’s goal of silencing the guns by 2030, the evolution of peacekeeping, and his vision for a more peaceful and secure Africa.
Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together the best international experts to provide original analysis on issues affecting the individual states of Africa, their international relations, and the continent as a whole.
You can also listen to Africa Aware on Soundcloud, Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
EDINBURGH, Scotland, May 8, 2025 — Women in HPC (WHPC), in collaboration with ISC High Performance 2025 (ISC), is pleased to announce the full WHPC schedule of in-person events aimed at celebrating innovation, inclusion, and leadership in supercomputing. All events will take place at the ISC 2025 conference, held at the Congress Centre Hamburg (CCH) from June 10–12, 2025.
“Our partnership with ISC enables WHPC to bring visibility to the brilliant and diverse talent across the HPC community,” said Eleanor Broadway, Executive Board Member. “These events are a celebration of innovation, inclusion and the future of supercomputing leadership.”
“Diversity isn’t just a goal, it’s a necessity for innovation in HPC,” said Colleen Sheedy, People & Organization Development Manager at ISC Group and Student Volunteer Program Manager at ISC High Performance. “We’re proud to continue our work with WHPC to champion inclusivity, spotlight emerging talent and foster a more equitable community.”
WHPC Event at ISC25
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
WHPC presents “Tech Talks” at the Exhibitor Forum | 18:45–20:30
Join WHPC and supporters at the Exhibitor Forum during the evening gala. Enjoy inspiring talks from established leaders, rising researchers, and early-career professionals. Meet WHPC volunteers and be sure to grab exclusive WHPC swag!
Tuesday, June 10 – Thursday, June 12, 2025
WHPC Poster Series | Foyer D-G (Second Floor)
Experience 15 poster presentations from the WHPC community, showcasing cutting-edge research and fresh perspectives from emerging talent in HPC.
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Diversity Day (All Day)
Show your support for inclusion in STEM by wearing WHPC Diversity Day swag! Help honor the contributions of underrepresented groups in the high-performance computing community.
BoF: SUPER(COMPUTING)HEROES | 10:15-11:15 | Hall E (Second Floor)
“Super(computing) Heroes” highlights women at the forefront of HPC. Join inspiring leaders from academia, industry, and research to share stories, foster connections, and drive change in the community.
WHPC Poster Pitch | 13:00–13:30 | Hall E (Second Floor)
The talented WHPC poster authors present rapid-fire pitches to showcase their work. Don’t miss this dynamic session, which culminates in the presentation of the WHPC Best Poster Award.
WHPC Networking Reception | 14:15–16:15 | Foyer D-G
Connect with poster authors, WHPC leaders, and fellow supporters during the WHPC community networking reception. This is a great chance to connect, collaborate and celebrate the progress toward inclusion in supercomputing.
All WHPC events at ISC 2025 require an Exhibitor badge or higher. To register, visit the ISC25 website.
These events are made possible thanks to: The WHPC ISC25 Volunteer Committee: Eleanor Broadway, Ayesha Afzal, Dominik Wojtak, Karina Pesatova and Cristin Merritt in collaboration with the ISC 2025 Committee.
Generously Supported by: Do IT Now, AMD, AWS, HPE, Google Cloud, University of Cambridge, EPCC, University of Edinburgh, FAU, Alces Flight, NHR FAU, Pawsey, VIRIDIEN, and LuxProvide.
Source: WHPC
The post Women in HPC Announces Full Lineup of Events at ISC High Performance 2025 appeared first on HPCwire.
COLLEGE PARK, Md., May 8, 2025 — IonQ, a leading commercial quantum computing and networking company, has announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Lightsynq Technologies Inc., a Boston-based startup founded by former Harvard University quantum memory experts. Lightsynq’s team and IP are expected to significantly accelerate both IonQ’s quantum networking and quantum computing roadmaps.
“IonQ’s vision has always been to scale our quantum networks through quantum repeaters, and scale our quantum compute power through photonic interconnects. Today’s announcement of our intention to acquire Lightsynq helps accelerate both roadmaps,” said Niccolo de Masi, CEO of IonQ. “We are pleased to welcome Lightsynq founders Dr. Mihir Bhaskar, Dr. Bart Machielese, Dr. David Levonian and the rest of the Lightsynq team to IonQ. Their groundbreaking technology will accelerate IonQ’s commercial quantum computer delivery to 10,000s and ultimately millions of qubits.”
Lightsynq was founded by former Harvard quantum networking experts and Amazon Web Services (AWS) Center for Quantum Networking leaders, Dr. Mihir Bhaskar (CEO), Dr. Bart Machielse (CTO), and Dr. David Levonian (CPO) with the goal of building the leading photonic interconnect platform to enable high-fidelity, multi-nodal qubit operations.
Lightsynq’s approach not only supports modular scalability, but also advances fault-tolerance for creating the world’s most powerful interconnected quantum systems. Lightsynq’s unique architecture provides a powerful platform to support IonQ’s quantum computers and advance the company’s quantum networking roadmap.
“We’re excited to work alongside the world-class quantum computing and networking teams at IonQ. Together we intend to move faster than any other player in the industry to deliver data-center-scale quantum computers that can deliver transformative value to customers,” said CEO of Lightsynq, Dr. Mihir Bhaskar. “Our photonic interconnect will integrate with IonQ’s quantum processing units (QPUs) to boost connection speeds and ensure long term market-leading scale and power in quantum computing. Our interconnect will also be critical for IonQ to build the quantum internet, enabling entirely new applications for customers in the financial, telecommunications, aerospace, and defense sectors.”
IonQ will also acquire ownership of Lightsynq’s portfolio of over 20 technology patents and patent applications related to quantum memory, further strengthening IonQ’s growing intellectual property position.
About IonQ
IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ) is a leader in the quantum computing and networking industries, delivering high-performance systems aimed at solving the world’s largest and most complex commercial and research use cases. IonQ’s current generation quantum computers, IonQ Forte and IonQ Forte Enterprise, are the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems, boasting 36 algorithmic qubits. The company’s innovative technology and rapid growth were recognized in Newsweek’s 2025 Excellence Index 1000, Forbes’ 2025 Most Successful Mid-Cap Companies list, and Built In’s 2025 100 Best Midsize Places to Work in Washington DC and Seattle, respectively. Available through all major cloud providers, IonQ is making quantum computing more accessible and impactful than ever before.
About Lightsynq
Lightsynq is a quantum interconnect company founded by Harvard quantum networking experts and former AWS research leads Dr. Mihir Bhaskar (CEO), Dr. Bart Machielse (CTO) and Dr. David Levonian (CPO). Lightsynq’s founders built the first-ever quantum repeater capable of extending the range of quantum networks, a key technology enabling quantum devices to connect together in a future Quantum Internet. Lightsynq’s core mission is to use this same technology to build the world’s best quantum interconnects to link quantum processors at high speeds and overcome the bottleneck of single-system scaling.
Source: IonQ
The post IonQ to Acquire Lightsynq to Accelerate Quantum Networking and Scaling appeared first on HPCwire.
Mohsen Mahdawi was detained after leading protests at Columbia against Israel’s war in Gaza and later freed
A Palestinian student arrested during an interview about finalizing his US citizenship is helping launch an initiative to assist other immigrants facing deportation in Vermont on Thursday, a week after a federal judge freed him from custody.
Mohsen Mahdawi, 34, who led protests against Israel’s war in Gaza at Columbia University, spent 16 days in a state prison before a judge ordered him released on 30 April. The Trump administration has said Mahdawi should be deported because his activism threatens its foreign policy goals, but the judge ruled that he has raised a “substantial claim” that the government arrested him to stifle speech with which it disagrees.
Continue reading...Cant really find any comparisons between the two. Which is better in your opinion? Front and back kush wide, or lowboy flared set?
I plan to put them on a Xrc for reference.
Don't miss the latest on Netflix, Peacock and other streaming services. Here's what's new this weekend.
NTSB report is US government’s first public explanation about what might have happened
US transportation safety officials have released images of the New York City sightseeing helicopter that crashed earlier this year, killing a family of five and the pilot, showing that the aircraft began to break apart in midair, according to a preliminary report released on Wednesday.
The report by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is the government’s first public explanation about what might have happened on 10 April, when the Bell 206L-4 helicopter plunged into the river.
Continue reading...May 8, 2025 — Cisco has unveiled a quantum entanglement chip and launched a dedicated quantum lab in California, advancing its effort to enable distributed quantum computing through specialized networking. This recent blog post by Vijoy Pandey outlines the company’s vision for quantum networking and its latest research milestones.
Just as Cisco helped build infrastructure for the internet, we’re now creating quantum networking technology that will be the foundation for the quantum internet, making quantum computing practical years ahead of current timelines. Our approach could accelerate impactful quantum computing and networking applications from decades away to just 5-10 years. Today, we are announcing two milestones:
Breaking the Quantum Scaling Barrier
Here’s the challenge: Today’s quantum processors have only hundreds of qubits, while applications require millions. Even the most ambitious quantum computing roadmaps currently only target a few thousand qubits by 2030.
Decades ago, classical computing faced similar challenges until we began to connect smaller nodes together through networking infrastructure to create powerful distributed systems within data centers and cloud computing. Just as the use of large classical monolithic computer systems phased out, the future of quantum does not lie in a single monolithic quantum computer. Scaled-out quantum data centers, where processors work together through specialized networking, will be the practical and achievable path forward.
Companies building quantum processors will benefit from Cisco’s quantum networking technologies to scale their systems. By building this infrastructure now, Cisco is helping to accelerate the entire quantum ecosystem.
The Quantum Network Entanglement Chip
A key part of our quantum networking vision is Cisco’s quantum network entanglement chip, developed as a prototype in collaboration with UC Santa Barbara. It generates pairs of entangled photons that enable instantaneous connection regardless of distance through quantum teleportation—what Einstein famously described as “spooky action at a distance.”¹
What makes our entanglement chip stand out:
From Lab to Reality
While today marks the formal opening of the Cisco Quantum Labs facility in Santa Monica, our team has been developing fundamentals of the quantum networking stack for years. The lab serves as a facility where our researchers can experiment with quantum networking solutions that bridge both theoretical concepts and practical implementation. Our approach is detailed in our arXiv paper “Quantum Data Center Infrastructures,” which outlines the architecture needed for distributed quantum computing systems.
Beyond the entanglement chip, we’re using the lab to advance research prototypes of other critical components to complete our vision of the quantum networking stack, including entanglement distribution protocols, a distributed quantum computing compiler, Quantum Network Development Kit (QNDK), and a Quantum Random Number Generator (QRNG) using quantum vacuum noise. More components of our quantum data center infrastructure roadmap will be announced soon as we complete our vision of the quantum networking stack.
In parallel, Cisco teams are implementing Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) NIST standards across our portfolio, ensuring classical networks remain secure in a post-quantum world.
Advancing Quantum Networking in Two Strategic Directions
Our quantum networking strategy follows two complementary paths:
What makes our quantum networking approach powerful is our focus on both software and hardware development. By developing our own network hardware components such as the chip alongside our full software stack, we gain unique insights into how these elements work together to build complete quantum networking infrastructure. While some companies focus solely on one type of quantum computing technology (superconducting, ion trap, or neutral atom-based systems), Cisco is building a vendor-agnostic framework that works with any quantum computing technology. This approach mirrors Cisco’s historical strength in networking – we don’t need to pick winners because we’re building the networking fabric that will enable various quantum technologies to scale.
For a deeper technical dive into how our quantum network entanglement chip and quantum data center architecture work, check out the blog by Ramana Kompella, Cisco Fellow and VP of Cisco Research and Reza Nejabati, Head of Quantum Research and Cisco Quantum Labs.
Source: Vijoy Pandey, Cisco
The post Cisco Launches Quantum Lab and Debuts Entanglement Chip for Scalable Networking appeared first on HPCwire.
Quiet conversations could decide whether the next pope is conservative, progressive or a unifier
As the sun sank behind St Peter’s Basilica on Wednesday evening without smoke emerging from the the Sistine Chapel chimney, some in the crowd began to wonder why the first vote of the conclave was taking so long.
Speculation included a malfunctioning stove and a medical emergency. Some thought disagreements between cardinals may have delayed the vote. The reality was probably rather more prosaic: voting is thought to have started late, and the record number of cardinal electors – 133 and including many new faces – meant it took a long time.
Continue reading...A kitchen expert, a meal kit newbie and a novice cook set out to verify if HelloFresh is truly the best meal kit delivery service. After trying various recipes (including vegan), here’s what we found.
Starfighter is set after Episode 9, The Rise of Skywalker, and stars Ryan Gosling as a character new to the famed space franchise.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from SFGATE: When the pandemic upended the world of higher education, Robin Pugh, a professor at City College of San Francisco, began to see one puzzling problem in her online courses: Not everyone was a real student. Of the 40 students enrolled in her popular introduction to real estate course, Pugh said she'd normally drop three to five from her roster who don't start the course or make contact with her at the start of the semester. But during the current spring semester, Pugh said that number more than doubled when she had to cut 11 students. It's a strange new reality that has left her baffled. "It's really unclear to me, and beyond the scope of my knowledge, how this is really happening," she said. "Is it organized crime? Is it something else? Everybody has lots of theories." Some of the disengaged students in Pugh's courses are what administrators and cybersecurity experts say are "ghost students," and they've been a growing problem for community colleges, particularly since the shift to online instruction during the pandemic. These "ghost students" are artificially intelligent agents or bots that pose as real students in order to steal millions of dollars of financial aid that could otherwise go to actual humans. And as colleges grapple with the problem, Pugh and her colleagues have been tasked with a new and "frustrating" task of weeding out these bots and trying to decide who's a real person. The process, she said, takes her focus off teaching the real students. "I am very intentional about having individualized interaction with all of my students as early as possible," Pugh said. "That included making phone calls to people, sending email messages, just a lot of reaching out individually to find out 'Are you just overwhelmed at work and haven't gotten around to starting the class yet? Or are you not a real person?'" Financial aid fraud is not new, but it's been on the rise in California's community colleges, Cal Matters reported, with scammers stealing more than $10 million in 2024, more than double the amount in 2023. Wendy Brill-Wynkoop, the president of the Faculty Association of California Community Colleges and a professor at College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, said the bots have been enrolling in courses since around early 2021. "It's been going on for quite some time," she said. "I think the reason that you're hearing more about it is that it's getting harder and harder to combat or to deal with." A spokesperson for the California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office estimates that 0.21% of the system's financial aid was fraudulently disbursed. However, the office was unable to estimate the percentage of fraudulent attempts attributed to bots.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
President Donald Trump lashed out at Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Thursday after the...
The post Trump Rages at Fed Chair Powell Over Rate Decision as Tariff Fallout Hits Consumers appeared first on News Facts Network.
Three health and smart home experts monitored their air quality in different locations for several months. These are the surprising things we learned.
“I wanted to be just like him,” Jacob Bello said of his father figure, Andy McIlveen, a now-retired police officer who took him in.
Study finds human-caused climate change made four-day rainfall across central Mississippi valley 40% more likely
The four-day historic storm that caused death and destruction across the central Mississippi valley in early April was made significantly more likely and more severe by burning fossil fuels, rapid analysis by a coalition of leading climate scientists has found.
Record quantities of rain were dumped across eight southern and midwestern states between 3 and 6 April, causing widespread catastrophic flooding that killed at least 15 people, inundated crops, wrecked homes, swept away vehicles and caused power outages for hundreds of thousands of households.
Continue reading...President Trump ordered the release of files on Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's assassination — with the backing of the senator's son, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Holly LaFavers says she tried stopping 8-year-old Liam's Amazon order for about 70,000 Dum-Dum suckers before the treats arrived but it was too late.
2025 papal conclave continues for a second day at the Vatican, as more black smoke signals no new pope after a third vote.
Amid fears of further escalation, Pakistan said it shot down 12 drones overnight, while India said it targeted an air defense system in Lahore.
The NBA was under attack from critics during the regular season. But the playoffs so far have contained shocks, upsets and moments of pure joy
Welcome to Act III of the 2024-25 NBA season. It was a rough start for the league this year. People came out of the woodwork to criticize it, offering wild solutions, and pointing out the low early season TV ratings. But then the Dallas Mavericks traded Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers and things got real interesting in Act II.
Now, though, we’re in the third portion of the season and it couldn’t be more exciting. Indeed, we seem far away from those calls for sweeping change. Let’s look at five players who have wowed us and taken us to the edge of our seats in this third act.
Continue reading...Cliona Ward, who has lived legally in US for decades, was returning from trip to Ireland when held over criminal record from 20 years ago
An Irish woman who was detained by US immigration authorities because of a criminal record dating back almost 20 years has been released after 17 days in custody.
Cliona Ward, 54, who has lived legally in the US for decades, emerged on Wednesday from an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) facility at Tacomain Washington.
Continue reading...With less than a month before the start of the 2025 hurricane season, residents are still recovering from catastrophic damage from the past two years
Idalia. Debby. Helene.
Not visiting friends, not neighbors. All hurricanes that have not yet faded into memory for the residents of Taylor county in Florida, where all three powerful storms hit in just two years.
Continue reading...AirDrop is a convenient way to transfer photos and files between Apple devices, but sometimes it fails. Here are some quick tips for troubleshooting the issue.
Commentary: If you've missed Barbarians star Jeanne Goursaud, she's kicking butt in Netflix's latest No. 1 film.
Attorneys for Ralph Leroy Menzies, who's been on death row for 37 years, sought to convince a Utah state judge that the convicted murderer should be spared execution because he has dementia.
President Nayib Bukele’s government has poured millions of dollars into developing El Salvador’s coast. U.S. travelers might be more familiar with the CECOT prison.
Likes of Lyse Doucet and Jonathan Dimbleby say they have at times turned away from current affairs
She is perhaps the UK’s most prominent war correspondent, broadcasting from the world’s toughest regions, interpreting its most intractable and bloody conflicts. Yet, like many others at a time when the news agenda is so tough, even Lyse Doucet has admitted she finds herself tempted to turn off.
“I just want to say as a broadcaster that even though I’m on one side of the microphone and you’re on the other, that I too have been turning away from news and listening to Radio 3 instead of Radio 4, because the news is difficult,” said Doucet, the BBC’s fearless chief international correspondent, as she picked up an award last week. “We all think: ‘Oh, it’s so depressing. It’s so gloomy.’”
Continue reading...U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis has ordered the Trump administration to turn over certain information to Kilmar Abrego Garcia's lawyers.
RTÉ asks European Broadcasting Union for talks after 72 former contestants call for ban on Israeli broadcaster
Ireland’s public broadcaster has asked the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) for a discussion about Israel’s inclusion in the Eurovision song contest, as 72 former contestants called for the Israeli broadcaster Kan to be banned from next week’s event in the Swiss city of Basel.
The director general of Ireland’s RTÉ, Kevin Bakhurst, said in a statement on Wednesday that he was “appalled by the ongoing events in the Middle East and by the horrific impact on civilians in Gaza, and the fate of Israeli hostages”.
Continue reading...Matildas captain shares Instagram post welcoming couple’s first child
Sam Kerr and her partner, Kristie Mewis, have announced the birth of their first child.
In an Instagram post on Thursday, the Matildas captain wrote: “Our little man is here, Jagger Mewis-Kerr.”
Continue reading...Wikimedia Foundation seeks judicial review of some requirements of Online Safety Act it claims may endanger safety of volunteer editors
The charity that hosts Wikipedia is challenging the UK’s online safety legislation in the high court, saying some of its regulations would expose the site to “manipulation and vandalism”.
In what could be the first judicial review related to the Online Safety Act, Wikimedia Foundation claims it is at risk of being subjected to the act’s toughest category 1 duties, which impose additional requirements on the biggest sites and apps.
Continue reading...The Bank of England has voted to cut the cost of borrowing, reducing the base rate to 4.25%. Here’s what it means for you
The Bank of England has cut interest rates from 4.5% to 4.25%. It follows two interest rate cuts in the second half of last year, and another one in February this year.
Continue reading...After voting for stability, Australia faces tough foreign policy choices Expert comment thilton.drupal
Albanese has convincingly won a second term but faces a difficult balancing act to boost ties in Europe and Asia while managing complicated relations with Beijing and Washington.
Australia’s incumbent Labor Party won a resounding election victory on Saturday. Some commentators have portrayed its victory as part of a global backlash against Donald Trump, comparing it to the recent poll success for Canada’s centre-left Liberal Party led by Mark Carney.
There is an element of truth in this. Australians’ wholesale rejection of the right-wing opposition, confusingly also named the Liberal Party, partly reflected distaste at senior Liberals’ efforts to ape some of Trump’s language and style. Anthony Albanese, the first Australian prime minister to be re-elected since 2004, hinted at that in his victory speech when he said: ‘we do not need to seek our inspiration overseas.’
But the explanation has its limits. Unlike Canada, which has been a major target for Trump’s ire and bullying tactics, Australia is still seen in favourable terms in the White House. Trump himself praised his ‘very good relationship’ with Albanese.
And also unlike in Canada, foreign policy was not a major issue in the Australian contest, which was dominated by domestic issues such as the cost of living, healthcare and productivity. Australians decided that Albanese could deliver on these challenges better than opposition leader Peter Dutton, who lost his seat in a sign of the swing against the Liberals.
Although Australians voted for stability at home, their government faces difficult choices abroad. It must try to balance its deep economic relationship with China against growing concerns about Beijing’s assertive regional actions. It must also try to maintain its critical security alliance with the US while navigating Trump’s unilateralism and his unpopularity in Australia.
Despite his predilection for targeting his allies, Trump seemed relatively well disposed to Australia in his first term and the first few months of his second term, in large part because the US usually runs a trade surplus with its key Pacific ally.
But most Australians do not like Trump.
Their level of trust in the US has fallen to the lowest level for two decades, according to a poll by the Lowy Institute, a Sydney-based think-tank, with only just over a third of respondents having any faith that the US will act responsibly in the world. Nearly 60 percent of Australians believe that Trump’s re-election is bad for Australia and two-thirds believe it is bad for the world, according to a poll by the Australia Institute, another think-tank.
Beyond generating public distaste, Trump is also destabilizing the open and predictable global order on which Australia has depended for its economic success.
The Albanese government, like other US allies in Asia and Europe, will have to find ways to boost its own sovereign capabilities and resist the Trump administration’s moves to remake the global economic order, even as it tries to keep Trump on side.
There is particular concern in Canberra about the prospects for AUKUS, Australia’s trilateral security partnership with the US and the UK. Through AUKUS, over the next 20 years, Australia is acquiring three nuclear-powered submarines from the US while jointly developing a new class of nuclear-powered submarine, at a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars.
Pete Hegseth, the US Secretary of Defence, has backed the partnership, which is the centrepiece of Australia’s long-term military-industrial strategy. But AUKUS has previously been criticized by some in the Trump administration for stretching the US’s military industrial capabilities when Washington is already unable to expand its navy quickly enough to keep pace with Beijing.
Like other US allies facing a similar dilemma, Australia will need to mimic some of Trump’s own transactional approach when it deals with Washington, highlighting the mutual benefits of AUKUS, both for industrial capacity and integrated deterrence against China in the Indo-Pacific.
The Albanese government has handled China, its largest export market, with necessary care.
It has reopened channels of dialogue with Beijing and convinced the Chinese leadership to remove many of the trade embargoes that Beijing placed on Australia during a period of strained relations with the previous Australian administration.
This mending of relations has occurred even while the Albanese government has continued to resist the Chinese Communist Party’s interference in its domestic affairs and called out aggressive and dangerous Chinese military activity in the wider region.
But the bilateral relationship remains fragile, partly because of Beijing’s propensity to use economic coercion against those who test its expanding range of red-line issues.
Your sci-fi binge just got a lot more fun.
City comptroller Brad Lander, also a mayoral candidate, calls for state and local action to take up oversight work of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
New York City’s financial watchdog is raising the alarm about the Trump administration’s cull of a key federal agency that oversees consumer financial protection laws, warning it will usher in an “open season” for fraudsters.
Brad Lander, New York City’s comptroller and a candidate for the city’s mayoral race, said the uprooting of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) will leave many Americans vulnerable to scams and predatory lending as the federal agency’s oversight and regulatory powers have been significantly diminished. Lander is calling on state and local governments to make up for the gap in oversight.
Continue reading...Sen. Elizabeth Warren is calling for President Trump’s pick for Under Secretary of the Army to sell his stock in a defense contractor that experts say would pose a clear conflict of interest.
In a federal ethics agreement first reported by The Intercept, Michael Obadal, Trump’s pick for the second most powerful post at the Army, acknowledged held equity in Anduril Industries, where he has worked for two years as an executive. Obadal said that contrary to ethics norms, he will not divest his stock, which he valued at between $250,000 and $500,000.
In a letter shared with The Intercept in advance of Obadal’s confirmation hearing Thursday, Warren, D-Mass., says Obadal must divest from Anduril, calling the current arrangement a “textbook conflict of interest.”
“By attempting to serve in this role with conflicts of interest, you risk spending taxpayer dollars on wasteful DoD contracts that enrich wealthy contractors but fail to enhance Americans’ national security.”
Warren, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, writes that Obadal’s stock holdings “will compromise your ability to serve with integrity, raising a cloud of suspicion over your contracting and operational decision.”
“By attempting to serve in this role with conflicts of interest, you risk spending taxpayer dollars on wasteful DoD contracts that enrich wealthy contractors but fail to enhance Americans’ national security,” Warren writes.
A more detailed financial disclosure form obtained by The Intercept shows Anduril is not the full extent of Obadal’s military investments. According to this document, a retirement investment account belonging to Obadal holds stock in both General Dynamics, which does billions of dollars of business with the Army, and Howmet Aerospace, a smaller firm. While nominees are not required to list the precise value of such investments, Obadal says his holdings in General Dynamics and Howmet are worth between $2,000 and $30,000.
Don Fox, former acting director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, told The Intercept that neither stock should be exempt from conflict of interest considerations under federal law. “The fact that they are within either a traditional or Roth IRA doesn’t impact the conflict of interest analysis,” he said. “Not sure why he would be allowed to keep those.”
“A DoD contractor is a DoD contractor,” said Fox. “The degree of their business with DoD or what they do isn’t material. A lot of people were surprised for example that Disney was/is a DoD contractor. For a Senate confirmation position they would have had to divest.”
In addition to these defense contractors, Obadal holds stock in other corporations that do business with the Pentagon, including Microsoft, Amazon, Thermo Fisher Scientific, and Cummins, which manufactures diesel engines for the Army’s Bradley Fighting Vehicle. None of these companies are mentioned in Obadal’s ethics letter detailing which assets he will and won’t dispose of if confirmed. In his more detailed disclosure document, known as a Form 278, Obadal explicitly notes he will be able to exercise his shares in Anduril “if there is an equity event such as the sale of the company, or the company becoming a publicly-traded entity,” potentially netting him a large payout. Anduril was most recently reported to be valued by private investors at over $28 billion.
In addition to divesting from Anduril, Warren’s letter asks Obadal to get rid of the stocks in these other firms, commit to recusing himself entirely from any Anduril-related matters at the Army, and pledge to avoid working for or lobbying on behalf of the defense sector for a period of four years after leaving the Department of Defense. “By making these commitments, you would increase Americans’ trust in your ability to serve the public interest during your time at the Army,” Warren writes, “rather than the special interests of large DoD contractors.”
The post Trump Army Appointee Should Sell His Anduril Stock, Sen. Warren Demands appeared first on The Intercept.
An alligator killed a Florida woman after tipping over a canoe she and her husband were paddling, investigators said.
The FAA says it's taking immediate steps to alleviate the delays at Newark Airport that began more than a week ago.
Home Chef is designed with families and picky eaters in mind. See how this popular meal kit service holds up in 2025.
NYPD officers took dozens of pro-Palestinian demonstrators into custody at Columbia University's Butler Library on Wednesday evening.
The agency's law enforcement office, which is investigating the attack, was searching for a "person of interest" spotted by a witness.
University’s acting president says move was necessary for safety and calls protesters’ actions ‘outrageous’. Plus, Pakistan’s PM vows to avenge India’s airstrikes
Good morning.
The NYPD arrested dozens of pro-Palestinian activists who had occupied part of the main library building on Columbia University’s campus yesterday, ending an hours-long standoff, roughly a year after student anti-war protests swept the Ivy League school.
How did Columbia justify its decision to call in the NYPD? “Requesting the presence of the NYPD is not the outcome we wanted, but it was absolutely necessary to secure the safety of our community,” said Shipman, who called the protesters’ actions “outrageous”.
How did the Trump administration weigh in on the arrests? Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, said on X: “We are reviewing the visa status of the trespassers and vandals who took over Columbia University’s library.”
Continue reading...Commentary: A stranger-than-fiction crime story packed with Elvis impersonators, conspiracy theories and a terrorist threat that feels like a storyline straight out of a Coen Brothers movie.
You can watch the third and final season of the hit Netflix series in a few weeks.
The bill would codify the name change, though it would carry no authority outside the U.S.
Stacey Wales played the AI-generated video of her brother as a victim impact statement during the sentencing of his killer in an Arizona court.
Conservative groups stumbled across Badar Khan Suri by investigating the academic centers where he and his wife studied.
Doctors fear the potential impact of the Trump budget cuts, with the number of babies dying of SIDS or other unexpected causes already on the rise.
At its Config 2025 event on Wednesday, Figma unveiled four new AI-powered tools -- Sites, Make, Buzz, and Draw, positioning itself as a full-stack design platform to rival Adobe, WordPress, and Canva. These tools enable users to build websites, generate code, create marketing content, and design vector graphics without leaving the Figma ecosystem. The Verge reports: Figma's first solution is Figma Sites, a website builder that integrates with Figma Design and allows creators to turn their projects into live, functional sites. Figma Sites provides presets for layouts, blocks, templates, and interactions that aim to make building websites less complex and time-consuming. Additional components like custom animations can also be added either using existing code or by prompting Site's AI tool to generate new interaction codes via text descriptions, such as "animate the text to fall into place like a feather." Figma Sites is rolling out in beta for users with full seat access to Figma products. Figma says that AI code generation will be available "in the coming weeks," and that a CMS that allows designers to manage site content will be launched "later this year." Figma Make is Figma's take on AI coding tools like Google's Gemini Code Assist and Microsoft's GitHub Copilot. The prompt-to-code Figma Make tool is powered by Anthropic's Claude 3.7 model and can build working prototypes and apps based on descriptions or existing designs, such as creating a functional music player that displays a disc that spins when new tracks are played. Specific elements of working design, like text formatting and font style, can be manually edited or adjusted using additional AI prompts. Make is rolling out in beta for full seat Figma users. Figma says it's "exploring integrations with third parties and design systems" for Figma Make and may apply the tool to other apps within its design platform. Figma Buzz is a marketing-focused design app that's rolling out in beta to all users, and makes it easier for teams to publish brand content, similar to Canva's product design platform. The tool allows Figma designers to create brand-approved templates, styles, and assets that can be used by marketers to quickly assemble emails, social media posts, advertising, and more. Figma Buzz includes generative AI tools for making and editing images using text prompts, and can source information from spreadsheets to bulk create thousands of image assets at once. Lastly, the Figma Draw vector design app is like a simplified version of Adobe Illustrator that creatives can use to make custom visuals without leaving the Figma platform. It includes a variety of brushes, texture effects, and vector editing tools to create or adjust scalable images and logos for product design projects. Figma Draw is generally available now for full seat users as a toggle in Figma Design, with some features accessible in Sites, Slides, and Buzz. It's not quite as expansive as Adobe's wider Creative Cloud ecosystem, but Figma Draw places the two companies in direct competition for the first time since Adobe killed its own XD product design platform. It also brings some new options to the creative software industry after Adobe failed to acquire Figma for $20 billion due to pressure from competition regulators.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent declined to identify which countries the United States is close to...
The post Treasury Secretary Bessent Declines to Name Countries in Pending U.S. Trade Deals appeared first on News Facts Network.
Guide for Building an 8K GPU Cluster with Ethernet-based Network Cloud-AI
When building large-scale AI GPU clusters for training or inference, the backend network should be high-performance, lossless, and predictable to ensure maximum GPU utilization. This is hard to achieve when using Ethernet for the back-end network. This guide showcases a high-level reference design for an 8,192 GPU cluster, describing how it can be achieved with DriveNets Network Cloud-AI, equipped with 400Gbps Ethernet connectivity per GPU. This design explores network segmentation, high-performance fabrics, and scalable topologies, all optimized for the unique demands of large-scale AI deployments.
In this guide you will learn about:
The post AI Cluster Reference Design appeared first on HPCwire.
Pakistan and India have accused each other of fresh provocations with drone attacks targeting each others' military facilities.
The women have accused Motown star of sexual assault and employment violations. His attorney has called the lawsuit ‘an ugly method of trying to extract money’
Smokey Robinson has denied allegations of sexual assault, after four former housekeepers of the Motown star filed a lawsuit with claims including sexual battery, false imprisonment, negligence and gender violence.
The suit was filed in a Los Angeles court on 6 May. It also alleges a series of labour violations, including that Robinson and his wife, Frances, failed to pay the women minimum wage and overtime, submitted inaccurate wage statements and created a hostile work environment. The women are seeking financial damages.
Continue reading...The 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair returns this weekend to London, New York City and Marrakech. It remains the first and only fair dedicated to contemporary art from Africa and its diaspora and this year sees a total of 30 galleries and more than 70 artists. The show runs 8 to 11 May
Continue reading...The strange reproductive habits of a large, carnivorous New Zealand snail were once shrouded in mystery. Now, footage of the snail laying an egg from its neck has been captured for the first time.
Grammy-nominated and chart-topping singer says he has ‘no fear’ of illness in kidney and lung
Brad Arnold, the frontman with chart-topping US rock band 3 Doors Down, has been diagnosed with stage four cancer.
The singer said he has kidney cancer that has spread to his lungs. He discovered the illness after feeling unwell in recent weeks, “then I went to the hospital and got checked out and actually got the diagnosis that I had a renal carcinoma that had metastasised into my lung”.
Continue reading...My father-in-law has two Pints, fully stock. They both work fine, but sometimes when they go on the charger for a while and then are turned on, the light bar and the app both indicate battery at ~30%. Already strange since they should be fully charged.
But then, after power cycling the boards and then reconnecting the charger for a couple seconds, it will jump up to fully charged as expected. Both boards seem to get about average range/battery life. It's not a major issue, just a strange glitch, but it does happen the vast majority of the time.
FIL lives overseas and has disassembled both boards to fly with from the US on a couple occasions, but this issue apparently was happening before that.
I've done a good amount of searching this issue and haven't been able to find anything, so this post is a last resort to see if anyone has seen this. Thanks!
Since the invasion of Ukraine, the Russian education system has cranked the patriotic themes into overdrive, seeking to mold the soldiers of tomorrow.
The University of Queensland system is intended to give policymakers idea of how species traverse the oceans and what it will take to save them
Off the east coast of Florida, female loggerhead turtles swim more than 1,000km north, hugging the edge of the continental shelf to get to feeding grounds.
Humpback whales move through Moreton Bay off the Brisbane coast in Australia, on their way to feed around the Balleny Islands more than 4,000km away off the Antarctic coastline, where wandering albatross circle above, travelling 1,000km a day.
Get Guardian Australia environment editor Adam Morton’s Clear Air column as an email
Continue reading...Should we talk about the weather? Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle No. 1,419 for May 8.
Here are the hints and answers for Connections for May 8, No. 697. Think movies with non-stop action.
Think glamour and glitz. Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 431 for May 8.
Major corporations are best placed to benefit from Trump polices at the expense of independent farmers
The winners and losers of Trump’s first tariff war strongly suggest that bankruptcies and farm consolidation could surge during his second term, with major corporations best placed to benefit from his polices at the expense of independent farmers.
New analysis by the non-profit research advocacy group Food and Water Watch (FWW), shared exclusively with the Guardian, shows that Trump’s first-term tariffs were particularly devastating for farmers in the Maga rural heartlands.
Continue reading...ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.
The pain jolted me awake. It was barely dawn, a misty February morning in 2023. My side felt as if I’d been stabbed.
I had been dealing with pain for weeks — a bothersome ache that felt like a bad runner’s cramp. But now it was so intense I had to brace myself against the wall to stand up.
A few hours after arriving at the emergency room, I heard my name. A doctor asked me to follow him to a private area, where he told me a scan had uncovered something “concerning.”
There were lesions, areas of bone destruction, on top of both of my hip bones and on my sternum. These were hallmarks of multiple myeloma. “Cancer,” he said.
Multiple myeloma is a blood cancer that ravages bone, leaving distinctive holes in its wake. Subsequent scans showed “innumerable lesions” from my neck to my feet as well as two broken ribs and a compression fracture in my spine. There is no cure.
I walked out of the ER in search of fresh air. I sat on a metal bench and did what many patients do. I turned to Google. The first link was a medical review stating that the average lifespan of a newly diagnosed patient was three to five years. My stomach churned.
I soon learned that information was outdated. Most patients today live much longer, in large part due to a drug with a horrific past. It was a doctor at the hospital who first told me I would likely take a thalidomide drug as part of my treatment.
That couldn’t be possible, I told him.
I knew the story of thalidomide, or at least I thought I did. It represented one of the darkest chapters in the history of modern medicine, having caused thousands of severe birth defects after it was given to pregnant women in the 1950s and 1960s. The drug was banned in most of the world, and the scandal gave rise to the modern-day U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
It turns out the drug once relegated to a pharmaceutical graveyard had new life as a cancer fighter.
That drug I take is called Revlimid. It is a derivative of thalidomide, a slightly tweaked version of the parent compound.
Revlimid is now one of the bestselling pharmaceutical products of all time, with total sales of more than $100 billion. It has extended tens of thousands of lives — including my own.
But Revlimid is also, I soon learned, extraordinarily expensive, costing nearly $1,000 for each daily pill. (Although, I later discovered, a capsule costs just 25 cents to make.)
That steep tab has put the drug’s lifesaving potential out of reach for some cancer patients, who have been forced into debt or simply stopped taking the drug. The price also helps fuel our ballooning insurance premiums.
For decades, I’ve reported on outrageous health care costs in the U.S. and the burden they place on patients. I’ve revealed the tactics used by drug companies to drive sales and keep the price of their products high.
Even with my experience, the cost of Revlimid stood out. When I started taking the drug, I’d look at the smooth, cylindrical capsule in my hand and consider the fact I was about to swallow something that costs about the same as a new iPhone. A month’s supply, which arrives in an ordinary, orange-tinged plastic bottle, is the same price as a new Nissan Versa.
I wanted to know how this drug came to cost so much — and why the price keeps going up. The price of Revlimid has been hiked 26 times since it launched. Some of what happened was reported at the time. But no one has pieced together the full account of what the drugmaker Celgene did, how federal regulators failed to rein it in and what the story reveals about unrestrained drug pricing in America.
What I discovered astonished even me.
My journey started with an indefatigable New York City lawyer on a quest to give her dying husband a chance.
Tiny and TerrifyingBeth Wolmer’s story begins on a moon-splashed beach in the Cayman Islands in the winter of 1995. She and her husband, Ira, were holding hands as they walked in the sand, enjoying a rare break from a hectic life as parents to a 1-year-old daughter and demanding jobs as 30-something professionals in New York City.
They had met through friends and clicked from the start. On Sunday mornings, they sat together for hours, sharing sections of the newspaper and eating bagels. They planned trips to Europe and outings to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Ira was an interventional cardiologist who followed his father into medicine. Beth was a lawyer at the high-powered firm Skadden Arps.
“We had a great life,” Beth told me. “I specifically remember coming home on the bus and thinking: ‘My life is just perfect, perfect. I’m not going to change a thing.’”
As they walked that night in the Caribbean, Ira felt a sharp pain in his cheekbone. The pain flared several more times during the trip, becoming so intense that it brought tears to his eyes.
When he got home, Ira made an appointment to figure out what was wrong. Imaging tests revealed multiple myeloma. The prognosis was grim. The couple was told Ira had two years to live.
Specialists recommended treatments that would only provide a brief reprieve. The couple searched for someone who could offer something more. That’s when they found Dr. Bart Barlogie in Little Rock, Arkansas.
I’ve never been more scared of a spouse of a patient than I was of her.
—Dr. David Siegel, who treated Ira WolmerBarlogie had been recruited to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences from the more prestigious MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. In Texas, Barlogie had been frustrated by a medical culture that he viewed as too timid in its approach to multiple myeloma.
He remembers working on a Sunday when a newly diagnosed patient was admitted to the hospital. With few options, Barlogie decided to put the patient on a taxing, four-drug chemotherapy cocktail used for lymphoma patients. It didn’t work. The patient died from a sepsis infection, a known complication of the treatment.
The attending physician later admonished him, Barlogie said, saying, “Bart, we have to learn to treat myeloma gently.” Barlogie said he thought to himself, “Fuck you.”
In Arkansas, Barlogie was in charge. He quickly developed a reputation as a practitioner willing to try anything to fight the fatal disease. Patients from around the world — including the actor Roy Scheider from the movie “Jaws” — flocked to his clinic.
Beth and Ira heard Barlogie before they saw him. The cowboy boots he’d taken to donning since his time in Houston clacked down the linoleum hallway floors. A short, slight man, Barlogie had a booming voice with a German accent. He wore leather jackets and round, red-framed glasses on his bald head.
When he strode into the exam room, he hugged Beth and Ira and told them they had come to the right place.
Now retired, Barlogie recalls being struck by Beth’s intensity. He said she told him “you must do something” to help Ira.
I met Barlogie at his home in Little Rock. We sat in his office, which is filled with photos of the red Ducati motorcycle he used to ride to work. An old license plate with the letters “MMCURED” sat on a shelf, reflecting his goal to find a cure for multiple myeloma.
When Beth and Ira found him, Barlogie told me, he had been having some success with a novel approach that put patients through two stem cell transplants a few months apart, which he called a tandem stem cell transplant. With a transplant, a patient is bombarded with high-dose chemotherapy to kill the cancerous plasma cells. The patient is then infused with healthy stem cells that travel to the bone marrow.
The intense chemotherapy can be grueling and poses a small risk of death.
Ira underwent three transplants. Each time, he relapsed. By the fall of 1997, after two years of treatment, Ira’s thick black hair was gone. He was losing weight. Then he had a stroke. His kidneys failed and required dialysis. He developed pneumonia and had to be intubated.
Beth was determined to keep him alive long enough for their toddler daughter to remember him. With a photograph of Ira smiling with their baby as motivation, she applied her lawyer’s tenacity to the case. She pored over medical journals and peppered oncologists with questions about why what they were trying wasn’t working or quizzing them about a promising study. When doctors told her there was nothing more they could do for her husband, she refused to accept it.
“She is a tiny person, but she is terrifying,” said Dr. David Siegel, part of the team that treated Ira in Arkansas. “I’ve never been more scared of a spouse of a patient than I was of her.” He meant it as a compliment.
By late fall in 1997, Ira was dying and Beth was desperate.
A researcher told her about the work of Dr. Judah Folkman, a surgeon and researcher at Boston Children’s Hospital. Folkman believed the growth of cancerous tumors could be stunted by starving them of a supply of new blood vessels.
“Thank You, God”Folkman was a workaholic who, when he wasn’t in the operating room or the research lab, was traveling across the world to promote his novel theory of how to attack cancer. Peers had ridiculed his idea since he first proposed it in the 1970s. The prevailing belief at the time was that tumors didn’t need a new blood supply to grow.
A young researcher in his lab, an ophthalmologist named Robert D’Amato, was at work on the top question Folkman had posed. Could they come up with a drug, in pill form, that blocks the growth of new blood vessels?
Folkman has since died, but it wasn’t difficult for me to track down D’Amato. He still works at Boston Children’s Hospital, where he has his own lab and holds the Judah Folkman Chair in Surgery. Now in his early 60s, D’Amato has a youthful energy and speaks in a rapid, matter-of-fact clip.
D’Amato told me that he had set out to find existing drugs that block blood vessel growth. He started by thinking of his own body and side effects caused by certain drugs. A drug that causes hair loss might be the result of the blood supply to hair follicles being shut off, for example. But this exercise wasn’t producing any viable candidates.
After giving it some thought, D’Amato realized he had myopically narrowed his search. What about a woman’s body? There were drugs that stopped menstrual cycles. Then there were drugs that caused birth defects in pregnant women. In both of those cases, it was possible the drug was inhibiting blood vessel growth. He came up with a list of 10 drugs. At the top of the list was one with a devastating history: thalidomide.
Beginning in the 1950s, pregnant women in Europe, Australia and other countries were frequently prescribed thalidomide as a treatment for morning sickness and to help them sleep. The drug was thought to be harmless and in Germany was sold over the counter. An advertisement for thalidomide in the United Kingdom claimed it could “be given with complete safety to pregnant women and nursing mothers without adverse effect on mother or child.”
They were wrong.
The drug was eventually linked to birth defects in more than 10,000 babies. Those babies were born without limbs or with shortened limbs, malformed hands, disfigured faces and damage to internal organs. Nearly half died within months of being born.
By the early 1960s, the drug was widely banned, considered a shameful chapter in the history of pharmaceuticals. It was never sold in the U.S. thanks to the unwavering objections of a resolute reviewer at the FDA named Frances Oldham Kelsey. The close call, however, prompted Congress to require more rigorous safety and efficacy data from drug manufacturers and empower the FDA to monitor the industry more closely.
D’Amato theorized that the thalidomide birth defects were the result of the drug stopping the growth of new blood vessels that the fetus needs to develop. He walked me through his experiments: He cracked a fertilized chicken egg on a glass petri dish and placed thalidomide on the surface. After two days, if no blood vessels grow on the embryo, a halo should appear around the thalidomide sample, showing the drug worked. It didn’t.
Folkman told D’Amato to move on. But D’Amato couldn’t shake the disappointing results. He did more research and realized thalidomide needs to first be broken down in the body to have an effect on humans. He purchased metabolites of thalidomide, repeated the test and this time found a halo around the sample.
He kept experimenting and in 1994 published a paper finding that thalidomide had “clear implications” for treating tumors.
So when Beth called three years later, Folkman told her they should try it.
Barlogie told me he didn’t think it would work. Beth said she had to convince him to try it.
Barlogie agreed to test it on Ira and two other patients who were out of treatment options in early December.
I wanted him alive forever.
—Beth WolmerThe drug did not work for Ira. Beth said just before he died, Ira sat up in bed, kissed her and smiled. It was March 10, 1998. He was 38.
After years of frantically searching for anything that would help, the finality of his death was difficult to accept, she said. “I wanted him alive forever.”
It is unclear what happened with the second patient. The third patient, however, started to get better.
His name was Jimmy. Little more is known about him except that he was a patient of another oncologist at the hospital, Dr. Seema Singhal, and near death before he started the drug. “I told him it might work, but at the very least it would help him sleep,” Singhal said. Shortly after Jimmy took his first dose of thalidomide, Singhal left for a vacation.
Dr. Bart Barlogie and Dr. Seema Singhal (Painting by James Lee Chiahan for ProPublica)When she returned two weeks later, her mailbox was full of lab results for Jimmy. He was still alive. She sat down to double-check the results, which showed declining amounts of a cancer marker. “For 30 minutes, I was the only person in the world who knew this worked,” she said.
Singhal walked down to Barlogie’s office to give him the news. “He took me by the hand, opened a window and shouted, ‘Thank you, God,’” she said.
“Violent Arguments”Word of Jimmy’s stunning recovery in Arkansas quickly made its way to the offices of Celgene Corp., located in a small corporate park in a rural patch of northern New Jersey.
The company had just wrapped up a brutal year-end accounting, which showed losses of $27 million on revenue of just $1.1 million. Money was so tight that executives engaged in what one of them called “violent arguments” over whether to charge employees for coffee.
Celgene had acquired the rights to thalidomide patents held by researchers at Rockefeller University in 1992. The company, which was new to pharmaceuticals, planned to use the experience of obtaining FDA approval for thalidomide to develop other drugs.
“It wasn’t meant to be a blockbuster,” said Sol Barer, who started at the company in 1987 and later became CEO.
When Celgene announced plans to develop the disgraced drug for new uses, the only analyst following the company on Wall Street dropped coverage and told Celgene officials they didn’t know what they were doing.
The company thought the largest market would be as a treatment for AIDS patients experiencing dangerous weight loss. To win approval of the drug, however, Celgene selected a use that was already in practice in parts of the world for a small group of patients.
In July 1998, the FDA approved thalidomide for the treatment of a painful complication of leprosy. It was a momentous decision, coming just a few decades after the drug caused so much harm.
The market for leprosy was tiny, but what happened with Jimmy in Arkansas changed everything for the company.
Blocked ExitsThe Arkansas doctors had been busy since first testing thalidomide on Ira Wolmer, Jimmy and the other patient. They quickly got approval to conduct a larger experiment funded by a grant from the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Now, in December 1998, they were ready to share their initial findings at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
It had been three decades since a new therapy for multiple myeloma had been approved, and there was a buzz among the oncologists gathered in Miami Beach for the conference. So many doctors crowded into the room for the presentation that the fire marshal had to intervene several times to clear exit ways. Word had already spread among multiple myeloma specialists about Jimmy. Now, the assembled doctors wanted to know whether it had been a fluke or a discovery that would fundamentally change how they practiced.
Singhal was tasked with presenting the data. It was a big stage for the 32-year-old doctor, who had only been practicing in the U.S. for two years.
It completely changed the treatment landscape.
—Dr. Seema SinghalThe 89 patients in the study were high-risk cases who had undergone prior treatment. They were patients who, like Ira, had run out of options. Now, after thalidomide treatment, one-third had declines in myeloma activity.
Those were stunning numbers, unlike anything seen before in the treatment of multiple myeloma. When Singhal finished, the room erupted in applause.
“It completely changed the treatment landscape,” she said.
I wasn’t able to track down Jimmy, but I have a sense of how he might have felt when he realized the treatment was working.
After my initial emergency room visit, it took time to confirm my diagnosis and do some additional testing. While I waited, the pain worsened. Painkillers barely made a dent. All I could picture was this cancer eating away at my bones, doing more damage every day.
David Armstrong (Painting by James Lee Chiahan for ProPublica)Some patients wait months for care. I was lucky enough to meet my oncologist within weeks. He had a script for Revlimid ready to go, part of a regimen of four drugs I would take as standard induction therapy, and I was able to start it within days.
The initial dose of Revlimid cost $18,255 for a month’s supply, and my insurance covered the cost.
Within a month, my blood tests showed a massive drop in a key cancer indicator.
My pain gradually subsided too. By the end of April, I wrote in my journal that the pain was a 3 or 4 instead of the usual 9 or 10. “It doesn’t hurt to get out of bed anymore,” I wrote.
A Piggy BankThe discovery in Arkansas made thalidomide, which Celgene sold as Thalomid, an instant hit.
As a result, Celgene’s revenue increased nearly sevenfold to $26.2 million in the year after the Miami presentation. It sold its thalidomide pills for $7.50 each.
From those modest beginnings, Celgene took a slightly altered version of that pill and turned it into one of the bestselling and most expensive prescription drugs in history. Celgene’s success with Thalomid was the result of remarkable good fortune, a case where the heavy lifting of discovery and initial testing had already been done, by Beth Wolmer, D’Amato, Barlogie, Singhal and others.
The development of the drug that would become Revlimid took me deep into the confounding, sharp-elbowed world of drug patents, which ostensibly protect drugmakers, allowing them to recoup the massive investments they made in developing a new product. Celgene drew on patent law, a drug safety system and even patient assistance programs to guard the exclusivity of its prized drug and the massive revenue it generated.
Those tactics, detailed in reams of court filings, allowed Celgene to treat Revlimid like a piggy bank, tapping it whenever it wanted.
There was a common internal theme at Celgene that cancer patients were willing to pay almost any amount Celgene charged.
—David Schmidt, a former Celgene executiveAmid the early success of Thalomid, Celgene identified two potential threats: One was obvious. Thalidomide caused birth defects, a looming risk that could result in it being pulled from the market.
The other was that Celgene held limited patents on the drug. Patents are exclusive legal rights to inventions, and researchers file them on nearly every aspect of drug development as soon as they can, locking up everything from specific sets of ingredients to the way the drug is used and administered. The more robust patents a company has, the longer it can potentially ward off competitors.
Thalidomide was an old drug and Celgene’s patents did not cover the active ingredient, leaving it open to competition. The patents it did have, covering items such as the optimal dosages and its use in treating particular diseases, were considered weaker and open to a court challenge. If Celgene could create a new version of thalidomide — ideally one that didn’t cause birth defects — the company could seek more and stronger patents that would extend beyond those of the original drug.
So researchers at Celgene tested analogs of thalidomide, which are drugs that have a similar effect but are different from the parent compound in minor ways, such as having one less oxygen atom. The analogs are also more potent than the original, meaning they can achieve a similar effect at lower doses.
Celgene was not alone in its efforts. D’Amato was also studying thalidomide analogs and filing patents on their use, which he and Boston Children’s Hospital licensed to a Celgene competitor, EntreMed Inc.
With dueling patents, the companies sued each other in 2002.
Celgene was newly flush with cash from rising sales of thalidomide. EntreMed, on the other hand, was burning through money as it focused most of its resources on developing other drugs discovered in Folkman’s lab.
In December of 2002, the companies settled.
Celgene agreed to pay Boston Children’s Hospital royalties from future sales of Revlimid. In exchange, the hospital and D’Amato licensed their patents of thalidomide analogs to Celgene. Celgene also agreed to pay EntreMed $27 million.
For Celgene, the fight with EntreMed was a valuable experience. It learned that competition can be neutralized.
The Rise of RevlimidCelgene had kept the price of Thalomid low when it was initially intended for AIDS patients, CEO John Jackson told investors in 2004, as the company “didn’t want huge numbers of people demonstrating in front” of its office.
That wasn’t a problem with cancer patients. There was “plenty of room for very substantial increases” in the price of the drug now, Jackson told investors.
It is time for us to take Jimbo to the wood shed.
—A senior Celgene official discussing a doctor critical of RevlimidJust two days earlier, Celgene had hiked the price of Thalomid to $47 a pill.
“There was a common internal theme at Celgene that cancer patients were willing to pay almost any amount Celgene charged,” wrote David Schmidt, a former national account manager at the company, in a whistleblower lawsuit he filed after his employment was terminated in 2008. The lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed by Schmidt. (Jackson didn’t respond to requests for comment; Schmidt declined to talk to me.)
When Celgene launched Revlimid in December of 2005, it set the initial price at $55,000 a year, or $218 a pill, which was about double what analysts expected.
Seven months later, when the FDA approved the drug for multiple myeloma, the price jumped to $70,560 a year, or $280 a pill.
The Price of Revlimid Has Increased 26 Times Since FDA ApprovalEach dot indicates a new manufacturer list price per pill.
(Source: AnalySource)The cost to manufacture each Revlimid pill, meanwhile, was 25 cents. I found a deposition marked “highly confidential” in which a top Celgene executive testified that the cost started at a quarter and never changed.
Even on Wall Street, which cheered higher pricing, the initial cost of Revlimid prompted concern among analysts who tracked the company that such aggressive maneuvering would cause insurers to push back. In the U.S., that is one of the only real checks on the price of prescription drugs.
That fear turned out to be unfounded, and Celgene would repeatedly test the bounds of how high it could go.
At the same time, Celgene worked to mute any criticism of Revlimid.
In 2005, Celgene received reports that Los Angeles oncologist Dr. James Berenson was “bashing” Revlimid in presentations sponsored by patient groups.
In one email, a senior company official said, “it is time for us to take Jimbo to the wood shed.” The company discussed a range of options for dealing with the doctor, from taking legal action to arranging a sit-down with Celgene’s chief executive.
Ultimately, the company appears to have decided on a friendlier course of action. Berenson became a frequent paid speaker and consultant for the company, with payments totaling at least $333,000, according to Celgene disclosures. Berenson declined to comment.
He wasn’t the only doctor the company befriended. Payment records show that between 2013 and 2018, Celgene paid doctors $11 million for speaking engagements and consulting work related to Revlimid. At one point, Celgene rented a suite at the Houston Astros baseball stadium to throw a party for the entire multiple myeloma department at the MD Anderson Cancer Center, according to court testimony. The center said it was unable to verify any of those details.
They remind me of an octopus with many, many tentacles, and at the end of each tentacle is a wad of cash.
—David Mitchell, president of Patients For Affordable DrugsCelgene went on to spread its largesse across the multiple myeloma world. It funded patient groups, sponsored medical meetings and contracted with prestigious academic medical centers.
“They remind me of an octopus with many, many tentacles, and at the end of each tentacle is a wad of cash,” said David Mitchell, a former Washington, D.C., communications executive who launched a nonprofit organization to fight for lower prices after he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma. “Everybody relies on the money.” Mitchell said his group, Patients For Affordable Drugs, does not accept donations from any entity that profits from the development or distribution of pharmaceuticals.
At the same time it showered doctors and patient groups with money, Celgene was shutting Beth Wolmer out. She told me that John Jackson, the CEO at the time, had promised her a paid board seat at the company as a way of compensating her for her role in the discovery before the company cut off communication.
Wolmer sued Celgene in federal court in 2009, seeking $300 million or more for alleged misappropriation of her idea and what she termed the “unjust enrichment” of Celgene.
Celgene said it never promised to compensate Wolmer. The company also suggested she greatly inflated her role in the discovery and, in any event, waited too long to take legal action.
In 2010, a judge granted Celgene’s motion for summary judgment in the case, agreeing that the statute of limitations had expired while at the same time expressing “admiration” for Wolmer’s “contribution to the struggle against this terrible disease.”
Ira and Beth Wolmer in the Cayman Islands (Painting by James Lee Chiahan for ProPublica)Wolmer has remarried and changed her name to Jacobson. She remains disappointed about the way she was treated by Celgene. “There was no ambiguity about who found the purpose of this drug, and I’m thrilled that it’s helping so many people,” she said. “Why they treated me that way? I don’t know.”
The Generic ThreatAfter the FDA approved Revlimid in late 2005, it also granted Celgene something else: seven years of market exclusivity because the drug treats a rare disease. In those seven years, Celgene raised the price of the drug nine times, increasing the price per pill by 82% to $397 in 2012.
The company also fended off challengers by claiming its patents protected the drug from competition until 2027.
But by 2010 generic makers were already working on copies of the drug, preparing to challenge those patents and enter the market earlier. A government analysis has found that generics generally lower the price of brand name drugs by an average of 85% after just one year.
Celgene was well aware of the danger generics posed and warned in a 2012 financial filing that their entry into the market could have a “material adverse effect” on its finances. At that point, Revlimid sales made up 70% of the company’s revenue.
Celgene needed another move.
The drug still posed a risk of birth defects like the parent compound. In approving the drug, the FDA had mandated a strict safety program to control its prescription and distribution.
Celgene realized early on that this could also be a tool to thwart competition. An internal company presentation at the time noted that the safety program could make it “more difficult for generic companies to access” thalidomide for testing.
Generic drug makers are required by the FDA to test their version against the brand name drug, so they need to buy small amounts of Revlimid from the company.
By 2012, at least six generic makers had requested to purchase Revlimid for testing. In every case, Celgene refused.
Federal regulators took notice. The FDA had warned Celgene that it could not use the safety program “to block or delay approval” of generic competitors. Now, it appeared to be doing just that.
The Federal Trade Commission, which enforces antitrust laws, had been investigating Celgene for years and in June of 2012 notified the company it was poised to take action.
In a previously unreported letter, the FTC said that its staff had recommended filing a legal complaint against the company for refusing to sell to competitors, thereby keeping them out of the marketplace.
The commission’s patience is wearing thin.
—FTC official Richard Feinstein to a Celgene attorneyIn its letter, the FTC noted that while Celgene refused to sell its drugs to potential competitors, it routinely provided Revlimid to other third parties around the world, including researchers and universities studying the drug.
Then, in August of 2012, the FDA directed Celgene to sell a small amount of Revlimid to a generic competitor.
With both federal agencies bearing down on Celgene, a closed-door meeting was held at FDA headquarters at the end of August. The FTC sent five lawyers, and 11 FDA staffers attended. Celgene showed up with a large contingent that included in-house lawyers and outside counsel.
Celgene started by denying it was using the safety program to block generics, according to minutes of the meeting. (The minutes were filed in a court case against Celgene, and it is unclear if they were prepared by the agencies or the company.) Citing the threat of birth defects, the company said that it had legitimate safety concerns about selling Revlimid to generic companies and that it needed to protect its investment in the drug.
Jane Axelrad, an associate director for the FDA, told Celgene that it was raising safety concerns because “the company does not want generics on the market,” according to the minutes. She declined to comment.
The meeting ended without a resolution. The FDA had no way of enforcing its directive to Celgene. The FTC staff, however, was still determined to act. The agency had spent more than two years investigating Celgene. It hired experts, deposed Celgene officials and obtained internal company documents.
The staff drafted a complaint alleging the company engaged in unfair actions to maintain a monopoly, hoping either that it would push the company to agree to sell to competitors to avoid legal action or that Celgene would be forced to do so by the courts, according to a person familiar with the agency’s stance.
“The commission’s patience is wearing thin,” FTC official Richard Feinstein wrote to the company’s lawyer in February 2013. “We have reached a point where the staff may be instructed in the very near future to commence litigation.” (Feinstein did not respond to emails seeking a comment.)
Celgene appeared to relent, telling the FTC that it would sell to generic makers, as long as the FDA approved their safety plan. In July, the FDA approved the safety protocols of generic maker Mylan.
Still, Celgene refused to sell.
Jon Leibowitz, who was the chairman of the FTC at the time, told me that Celgene’s promise to cooperate, even if it didn’t result in any sales to generic makers, lessened interest in the case among his fellow commissioners. Three of five commissioners need to vote in favor of commencing litigation. Now, in retrospect, he said that “if we knew then what we know now” about the delays, “we certainly would have brought a case.”
The agency would close its case in 2017 without taking any action.
With would-be generic competitors sidelined by Celgene’s refusal to sell drugs for testing, the company continued to raise the price of Revlimid.
They could raise their price any time they wanted to.
—Francis Brown, former Celgene sales executiveOn a Saturday morning in early March of 2014, Celgene President Mark Alles sent an internal email complaining of disappointing first quarter Revlimid sales. Revenue from the star drug, which had surpassed $1 billion the previous quarter, was down by about 1% — or $11.4 million.
“I have to consider every legitimate opportunity available to us to improve our Q1 performance,” he wrote. But the only idea he proposed was a familiar one: raise the price of the drug.
Alles said he wanted a meeting the following Monday to discuss an immediate 4% price increase, followed by another increase of 3% at the beginning of September.
The company implemented those hikes, along with a third in December. It brought the price of Revlimid to $9,854 a month, or $469 a pill, and helped boost Revlimid sales for the year to $5 billion. Alles didn’t respond to my requests for comment.
“They could raise their price any time they wanted to,” said Francis Brown, a former sales executive at the company, in a 2015 deposition. I wasn’t able to reach Brown for comment.
Celgene found a solution to the generic threat when it struck a deal to settle a lawsuit brought by generic maker NATCO Pharma in 2015. NATCO could bring a generic to market, Celgene agreed, but not for seven more years — in March 2022. Even then, the generic would be limited to less than 10% of the total market for Revlimid in the first year, with gradual increases after that.
The deal set the bar for deals with other rivals for limited generic sales, and it ensured that unlimited generic competition — and lower prices — would not arrive until 2026.
The delayed entry of generics may have been bad news for patients and health care payors, but there was one constituency that was thrilled with the 2015 deal. Celgene’s stock jumped nearly 10% the day after it was announced.
“Ridiculous,” “Ugly” and “Killer”Revlimid turned out to be a unicorn for Celgene, a drug whose financial success proved impossible to replicate.
In October of 2017, Celgene announced it was abandoning a once-promising effort to develop a drug for Crohn’s disease. Shares of Celgene declined by 11%.
As it had done so many times in the past, Celgene tapped Revlimid to try to mitigate the damage. The day it announced the failure of the Crohn’s drug, it quietly raised the price of Revlimid by 9%.
By the end of the year, Celgene had cumulatively raised the cost 20% to $662 a pill, the largest one-year increase in the drug’s history.
That made Revlimid the most expensive Medicare drug that year, with the government insurance program spending $3.3 billion to provide it to 37,459 patients.
At Celgene, the brash increases triggered rare internal dissent. Betty Swartz, the company’s vice president of U.S. market access, objected to the measures in a pricing meeting with the CEO, who at the time was Alles, and other top executives. She said her concerns were swiftly dismissed, according to a whistleblower lawsuit she filed and later dismissed.
“Why would you be afraid to take an increase on our products?” she said the CEO told her. “What could be the worst thing that happens ... a tweet here or there and bad press for a bit.” Swartz declined to comment.
The price increases added to the burden faced by many patients. In online groups, patients use words like “ridiculous,” “ugly” and “killer” when talking about the financial pain they have experienced related to the high costs associated with Revlimid. Some have taken out mortgages, raided retirement funds or cut back on everyday expenses like groceries to pay for Revlimid. Others have found overseas suppliers who ship the drug for pennies on the dollar, although doctors caution there’s no way to guarantee quality. Some just decide not to take the drug.
By increasing the price of Revlimid, Celgene executives in several instances boosted their pay. That’s because bonuses were tied to meeting revenue and earnings targets. In some years, executives would not have hit those targets without the Revlimid price increases, a congressional investigation later found.
In total, Celgene paid a handful of top executives about a half-billion dollars in the 12 years after Revlimid was approved.
Robert Hugin, who worked as Celgene’s CEO and then executive chairman, received $51 million in total compensation from 2015 to 2017. Hugin retired in 2018 to launch an unsuccessful Senate bid.
Even sales reps earned more than $1 million a year and were rewarded with trips to resorts such as the Four Seasons in Maui. That pay is more than two times what the average oncologist earns.
I connected with Hugin just before Christmas while he was driving. He was ardent in his defense of the pricing of Revlimid. He told me the drug passes any cost-benefit analysis because of its impact on multiple myeloma patients like myself. “People recognize when you have a breakthrough therapy and you have an opportunity to deliver that, you want to deliver that across the world,” he said. “And I think Revlimid is an example of a product that ends up to be a global lifesaver because of what it did.”
Hugin told me that when Revlimid has unlimited generic competition, the price will be “cheaper than aspirin” and patients will benefit from that low price for many decades.
Celgene also cited the cost of developing drugs and its expansive research efforts as reasons for the high cost of Revlimid. Celgene said it spent $800 million to develop Revlimid and spent several hundred million more on additional trials to study the use of the drug in other cancers. Those combined figures represent about 2% to 3% of Revlimid sales through 2018.
The drug didn’t get any better. The cancer patients didn’t get any better. You just got better at making money. You just refined your skills at price gouging.
—Former Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif.By the end of 2018, Celgene’s stock was down 56% over the past 15 months amid development failures. Despite the raft of bad news, Alles’ total pay that year increased by $3 million to $16.2 million.
Celgene tried desperately to boost its flagging stock price by buying back $6 billion of its own shares that year.
Ultimately, the buyback was not enough. Just days into the new year in 2019, Celgene announced it had agreed to be acquired by Bristol Myers Squibb in a deal valued at $74 billion.
As part of a severance agreement, top Celgene executives stood to make millions once the deal closed. For Alles, that meant a potential estimated payday of $27.9 million.
In the fall of 2020, Alles appeared before the House Oversight Committee, which was investigating the high cost of prescription drugs. He said pricing decisions “reflected our commitment to patient access, the value of a medicine to patients and the health care system, the continuous effort to discover new medicines and new uses for existing medicines, and the need for financial flexibility.”
When it came time for questions, then-Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., quizzed Alles in rapid-fire style about Revlimid. Did the drug change as the price increased? Did it work faster? Were there fewer side effects? The drug was the same, Alles responded.
“So, to recap here,” Porter said. “The drug didn’t get any better. The cancer patients didn’t get any better. You just got better at making money. You just refined your skills at price gouging.”
The Drumbeat ContinuesHigh prices have consequences beyond individual patients. While there have been tremendous advancements in the treatment of my disease, there is still no cure. The specter of relapse hovers over every blood test, every new ache or pain.
The day I learned I was in remission, in November 2023, was bittersweet. I wrote at the time that I didn’t get to ring a bell — the traditional sign that a cancer patient has finished treatment. Instead, my doctor explained the next step: “maintenance” treatment.
This includes not only continuing Revlimid, but making monthly visits to my cancer center to get a shot of a bone-strengthening drug, have another drug injected into my stomach and blood drawn for lab tests.
“The visit,” I wrote that day, “only reinforced the fact that I’m a patient, and I always will be.”
For most of us, cancer will return at some point after treatment. And for most patients, the drugs eventually stop working.
Revlimid can also be difficult to live with. Some patients quit the drug after developing severe gastrointestinal issues, infections or liver problems. The drug also poses an increased risk of stroke, heart attack and secondary cancers.
Those are the trade-offs for keeping multiple myeloma in check.
Meanwhile, the drumbeat of price increases continues under Bristol Myers Squibb, helping the company bring in $48 billion in revenue from Revlimid since it purchased Celgene. Bristol said its pricing “reflects the continued clinical benefit Revlimid brings to patients, along with other economic factors.” The company said it is “committed to achieving unfettered patient access to our medicines” and provides some financial support for eligible patients. “While BMS develops prices for its medicines, we do not determine what patients will pay out of pocket.”
Last July, the cost of my monthly Revlimid prescription increased by 7% to $19,660.
At the beginning of this year, my insurer switched me to generic Revlimid. I didn’t fight it, thinking it would result in a dramatic decrease in what ProPublica’s health plan pays for the drug.
It turns out it is not much of a savings: The generic costs $17,349 a month.
Alec Glassford contributed research.
Some figures have been immortalized for far less than what others have achieved. It’s time the International Boxing Hall of Fame reevaluates who truly deserves a place in Canastota
On 8 June, 14 men and women will be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, New York. Some, like Manny Pacquiao, clearly deserve the honor. Others – in my opinion – don’t. More egregiously, some fighters and other members of the boxing community who should be in the Hall of Fame have never even been on the ballot.
I’d like to highlight some of them. Let’s start with fighters and, for purposes of comparison, put their ring accomplishments side by side with those of one of the 2025 inductees: Vinny Pazienza.
Thomas Hauser’s email address is thomashauserwriter@gmail.com. His next book – The Most Honest Sport: Two More Years Inside Boxing – will be published this month and is available for preorder. In 2019, Hauser was selected for boxing’s highest honor - induction into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
Continue reading...The newest trailer indicates Grand Theft Auto VI may have a soft centre, with its focus on outlaw lovers Lucia and Jason
Something new is coming to the Grand Theft Auto universe next year. I don’t mean super-high-definition visuals, or previously unexplored areas of Rockstar’s take on the US. This time it’s something much more profound. If you’ve seen the newly released second trailer from GTA6 – somewhat cruelly released just days after we discovered the game won’t be out until next May – then you might know what I mean. The brand new thing is romance.
It’s now clear that the key protagonists of the latest gangland adventure are Lucia Caminos and Jason Duval, two twentysomething lovers from the wrong side of the tracks. He’s ex-army, now working for drug runners; she’s fresh out of jail, looking to make a better life for herself and her beloved mom. They fall for each other, hatch a plan to get out of Vice City, and then when their simple heist goes wrong, they find themselves at the sharp end of a state-wide conspiracy. You always knew that if Rockstar were going to tell a love story, it would involve a formidable cast of underworld kingpins, gang members, conspiracy nuts and corrupt politicians, and you were right.
Continue reading...India-Pakistan: Will tensions boil over? 19 May 2025 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
As India and Pakistan engage in a new round of hostilities, experts look into the long-term implications for stability in the region and what the crisis means for both countries.
As India and Pakistan engage in a new round of hostilities, experts look into the long-term implications for stability in the region and what the crisis means for both countries.
Following the deadly terror attacks on India-administer Kashmir in April 2025, India launched retaliatory strikes on targets inside Pakistan. The stated aim of demolishing terror operations against India. However, this latest round of violence along the India-Pakistan border highlights the tension in one world’s most volatile hot spots.
The latest in a long history of episodes of conflict between the two neighbours, and with a fragile international order struggling to maintain peace around the world, this session will ask what is the likelihood of a broader conflict between India and Pakistan?
Alongside this, experts will look key questions including:
By registering for this event, attendees agree to our Code of Conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.
Analysis from World Weather Attribution, a climate science group, found that human-caused global warming made the record-breaking downpours in early April about 9% heavier.
New York, where 25 children died, saw a record number of pediatric deaths during the 2024-25 season. The state health commissioner blamed vaccine skepticism.
sciencehabit shares a repot from Science.org: Scientists have captured fungal spores cruising in the inhospitable environment of the stratosphere, much higher than commercial aircraft fly. When brought back to the lab, the researchers found that some of the spores -- including pathogens of plants and people -- had survived intercontinental trips and could be cultured in the lab. Although spores and microbes have been detected in the stratosphere before, the new results come from a cheap, homespun sampling device dangled from weather balloons, the project could help researchers figure out what traits and conditions allow spores to survive a swing through the stratosphere and how they get up there in the first place. The work could also be a first step towards an atmospheric monitoring system that could nip emerging fungal pathogens in the bud, the study's authors reported at a conference of the European Geophysical Union. After five preliminary flights, the team has already learned a lot. Based on DNA sequencing analysis, they identified spores from 235 genera, including fungi that infect blackberries and carrots in the United States and Japan, and one species, Naganishia albida, that can make immunocompromised people sick. In the lab, they were able to revive and culture spores from 15 different fungal species, among them several plant pathogens. Mostly, the results show that their sampler works. Now, the researchers want to set up regular flights to track airborne fungal biodiversity and seasonal variations. They also want to identify how events such as wildfires or volcanic eruptions inject spores into the stratosphere.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New Hampshire has become the first U.S. state to establish a cryptocurrency reserve, following the...
The post New Hampshire Becomes First State to Create Strategic Crypto Reserve appeared first on News Facts Network.
The Trump administration on Wednesday unveiled a new partnership between the National Institutes of Health...
The post Trump Admin Backs RFK Jr.’s Controversial Autism Research Project Using Medicare, Medicaid Data appeared first on News Facts Network.
India–UK free trade agreement signals deepening bilateral relations Expert comment jon.wallace
But New Delhi’s policy of strategic autonomy – and its brewing conflict with Pakistan – may hamper cooperation in some areas.
India and the UK announced the conclusion of their bilateral trade agreement on 6 May. The in-principle free trade agreement (FTA) was reached after 14 rounds of negotiations, with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer due to visit India this year to sign the deal.
While consensus was reportedly reached on most of the FTA’s 26 chapters, the process was stalled by last year’s elections in both countries and political instability in the UK beforehand (there have been four UK prime ministers since FTA negotiations began in 2022).
Under the terms of the FTA, India will cut tariffs across 90 per cent of British product lines, including automobiles (from 100 to 10 per cent), whiskey and gin (from 150 to 75 per cent, dropping to 40 per cent by the tenth year of the FTA), as well as food and drink products, aerospace, medical devices, cosmetics, and electrical machinery.
The tariff cuts are worth over £400 million (based on their 2022 trade figures). The FTA also includes chapters that address issues of environmental and labour standards, gender equality and anti-corruption.
The FTA is one of three economic and trade agreements between both countries. The other two are a Double Contribution Convention Agreement (or social security pact), which was concluded alongside the FTA – and a Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT), which has yet to be concluded.
Key sticking points appear to have been moved out of the FTA. They include mobility rules of skilled Indian professionals, national insurance contributions by Indian workers on intra-company transfers, and New Delhi seeking an exemption from the UK’s planned carbon tax.
The national insurance issue has been resolved through a social security pact, by which Indian and British workers temporarily living in each other’s country will not have to pay national insurance contributions for three years. Talks are ongoing on the carbon tax issue, while the mobility issue has been addressed with visas being expedited for Indian professionals in selected sectors.
The India–UK FTA should be seen in a broader geopolitical context. It comes at a time of growing global economic uncertainty fuelled by the Trump administration’s so-called reciprocal tariff policies. This has accelerated efforts to forge agreements between likeminded countries.
The UK has concluded a string of trade deals in recent years, with Australia, Japan, and Singapore among others. But the one with India is arguably the most significant bilateral agreement since the country’s Brexit vote in 2016. India is the UK’s 11th largest trade partner, with bilateral trade of £42.6 billion in 2024, which accounted for 2.4 per cent of the total trade. The FTA is projected to boost bilateral trade by £25.5 billion by 2040 while increasing the UK’s GDP by £4.8 billion and adding £2.2 billion in annual wages.
The deal is also important to India. While India’s trade with China and the US far surpasses that of the UK, the UK remains an important trade partner. Exports to the UK are six times those to Russia – another important strategic partner for New Delhi. Aside from the UK, India is negotiating trade agreements with the EU and US.
When asked about these trade deals in March, Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar noted that these countries (including the UK) were India’s key ‘growth markets, technology partners, connectivity partners and strategic partners’.
The India–UK FTA may also grant New Delhi more leverage in trade negotiations with partners such as the EU.
Beyond the specifics of the deal, the FTA also holds symbolic importance in strengthening the India–UK relationship. Since assuming power last year, the UK’s Labour government has sought to deepen relations with India.
I was riding today, cruising around 10-15 mph on a dirt track. As soon as I stopped and removed my foot from the sensor, I received a notification on my OW app stating, “Error 212. Please consult your board’s manual or contact customer support.” The board didn’t show any weird behaviors and I kept riding for another hour afterwards.
I can’t find any information about this error 212 anywhere. Does anyone know what it means?
I’m using an XR classic with Polaris - 6200 firmware.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Chris Pelkey was killed in a road rage shooting in Chandler, Arizona, in 2021. Three and a half years later, Pelkey appeared in an Arizona court to address his killer. Sort of. "To Gabriel Horcasitas, the man who shot me, it is a shame we encountered each other that day in those circumstances," says a video recording of Pelkey. "In another life, we probably could have been friends. I believe in forgiveness, and a God who forgives. I always have, and I still do," Pelkey continues, wearing a grey baseball cap and sporting the same thick red and brown beard he wore in life. Pelkey was 37 years old, devoutly religious and an army combat veteran. Horcasitas shot Pelkey at a red light in 2021 after Pelkey exited his vehicle and walked back towards Horcasitas's car. Pelkey's appearance from beyond the grave was made possible by artificial intelligence in what could be the first use of AI to deliver a victim impact statement. Stacey Wales, Pelkey's sister, told local outlet ABC-15 that she had a recurring thought when gathering more than 40 impact statements from Chris's family and friends. "All I kept coming back to was, what would Chris say?" Wales said. [...] Wales and her husband fed an AI model videos and audio of Pelkey to try to come up with a rendering that would match the sentiments and thoughts of a still-alive Pelkey, something that Wales compared with a "Frankenstein of love" to local outlet Fox 10. Judge Todd Lang responded positively to the AI usage. Lang ultimately sentenced Horcasitas to 10 and a half years in prison on manslaughter charges. "I loved that AI, thank you for that. As angry as you are, as justifiably angry as the family is, I heard the forgiveness," Lang said. "I feel that that was genuine." Also in favor was Pelkey's brother John, who said that he felt "waves of healing" from seeing his brother's face, and believes that Chris would have forgiven his killer. "That was the man I knew," John said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Trump administration is pressing the U.N., aid organizations and allies to participate in a new Israeli plan to resume limited aid to Gaza under conditions that Israel will strictly control.
Collector of Expo memorabilia had a ticket to the 1940 Grand International Exposition of Japan, which was postponed indefinitely due to the war
A man was admitted to the World Expo in Japan using a ticket to the 1940 Grand International Exposition of Japan, an event that was called off as war escalated, organisers said.
Tickets for the Grand International Exposition of Japan in Tokyo were released in 1938 but the event was postponed indefinitely as Japan became embroiled in the second world war.
Continue reading...UN World Food Programme says $50m is urgently needed amid fears that Uganda may now begin forced repatriations
Food rations for a million people in Uganda have been cut off completely this week amid a funding crisis at the United Nations World Food Programme, raising fears that refugees will now be pushed back into countries at war.
The WFP in Uganda warned two weeks ago that $50m (£37m) was urgently needed to help refugees and asylum seekers fleeing conflicts in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Sudan and Sudan.
Continue reading...Residents of the Christina School District will go to the polls Tuesday to vote in a school board election that will decide the balance of power on the board and determine the direction of the district for at least the…
I’ve got about 600 miles on my GTS. Recently (often when turning and/or going slow) I hear a bit of the haptic buzz. At first I thought it was maybe just motor sound, but it was pretty prominent today, it went off for about 1 full second. (no flashing light or anything) Has anyone had this problem?
A developer’s proposal to build 12 new student rental townhouses on Lovett Avenue suffered a setback Tuesday, when the Newark Planning Commission voted not to recommend its approval, citing concerns about the design.
I woke up today to my onewheel pint not sensing the Left footpad. The right sensor works but the left doesn't so it won't engage the motors.
It was working just fine yesterday and the day before and I didn't crash or anything.
I opened up the footpad and everything seems to be okay. The connector is fine but I need a special tool to unplug and plug the connector back in
What could be the issue? Do I need new footpads or would there be other issues with the board
In the meantime is there a way to turn the footpad into a single zone sensor so it could still work just like the GT and XRC boards.
Thank you
President teases deal ‘with representatives of a big, and highly respected, country’ but specifics remain unclear
Donald Trump is expected to announce the framework of a trade agreement with the UK, according to two people familiar with the matter, after teasing a major announcement with a “big and highly respected, country.”
The specifics of any agreement were not immediately clear and there was no comment from the White House or the British embassy in Washington on whether an actual deal had been reached or if the framework would need further negotiation. Any agreement would mark the first such deal for the administration since it imposed sweeping tariffs against trade partners last month.
Continue reading...Events to take place against backdrop of Ukraine conflict, rises in defence spending and US foreign policy shift
Solemn ceremonies will be held at war memorials in towns and villages across France on Thursday as the country honours its dead and marks the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE) Day, a public holiday this year, as it is every year.
In Paris, the president, Emmanuel Macron, will lay a wreath at the foot of Charles de Gaulle’s statue, walk up the Champs-Élysées to the Arc de Triomphe, rekindle the eternal flame at the tomb of the Unknown Warrior, and inspect the troops.
Continue reading...On the 80th anniversary of the end of the second world war in Europe, survivors, including veterans from both sides, remember what happened
Eighty years ago today, on 8 May 1945, the second world war in Europe came to an end with the unconditional surrender of Germany’s armed forces. The number of people who remember the war – and how it finished – decreases every year, even as European security feels ever more precarious.
Here, seven people, aged between 85 and 100, from Estonia, Poland, Britain, Germany and Romania, talk to the Guardian about their memories.
Dorothea is a passionate supporter of the Taxi Charity for Military Veterans and recently launched its Our Heroes Fund, to raise money for future trips for veterans to the continent and across the UK.
Continue reading...They are mocked by gen Z for everything from their trainer socks to their mom jeans and selfie technique. A maligned millennial asks: how did we get here?
Her right to a naked ankle is, in the end, the hill Natalie Ormond is willing to die on. Ormond, a millennial, simply cannot – will not – get her head around gen Z’s fondness for a crew sock, pulled up over gym leggings or skimming bare legs, brazenly extending over the ankle towards the lower calf. “I stand by trainer socks and I won’t budge,” says the 43-year-old. “The more invisible the sock, the better.”
A proclivity for socks hidden within low-top trainers is just one reason why millennials – anyone born between 1981-1996 – are now considered achingly uncool by the generation that came next: gen Z, AKA the zoomers, or zillennials. According to countless TikTok videos, other sources of derision for the generation that first popularised social media, millennial pink, and pumpkin-spice lattes are their choice of jeans (skinny and mom jeans are out; baggy hipsters are in); an obsession with avocado on toast (gen Z’s green grub of choice is matcha); their excessive use of the crying laughing face emoji (for a zoomer, the skull emoji indicates humour, representing phrases such as “I’m dying with laughter”); and the “millennial pause”, a brief moment of silence at the start of a millennial’s video or voice note, thought to be because – and this really does make them sound ancient – they like to check the device they’re using is actually recording. Millennials, typically self-deprecating, tend to join in, poking fun at themselves under the hashtags like #millennialsoftiktok.
Continue reading...President Trump’s tariffs have plunged the world economy into chaos. But history counsels against despair – and the left should seize on capitalism’s crisis of legitimacy
Since Donald Trump launched his chaotic trade war earlier this year, it has become a truism to say he has plunged the world economy into crisis. At last month’s spring meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund in Washington, where policymakers and finance ministers from all over congregated, the attenders were “shellshocked”, the economist Eswar Prasad, a former senior IMF official who now teaches at Cornell, told me. “The sense is that the world has changed fundamentally in ways that cannot easily be put back together. Every country has to figure out its own place in this new world order and how to protect its own interests.”
Trump’s assault on the old global order is real. But in taking its measure, it’s necessary to look beyond the daily headlines and acknowledge that being in a state of crisis is nothing new to capitalism. It’s also important to note that, as Karl Marx wrote in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon: “Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please.” Even would-be authoritarians who occupy the Oval Office have to operate in the social, economic and political environment that is bequeathed to them. In Trump’s case, the inheritance was one in which global capitalism was already suffering from a crisis of legitimacy.
Continue reading...Learning the right lessons from three years of grinding war and faltering negotiations.
Fast and unplanned growth of cities providing ideal conditions for the creatures to thrive, say researchers
Scorpions are “taking over” Brazilian cities, researchers have warned in a paper that said rapid urbanisation and climate breakdown were driving an increase in the number of people being stung.
More than 1.1m stings were reported between 2014 and 2023, according to data from the Brazilian notifiable diseases information system. There was a 155% increase in reports of stings from 2014 to 2023, according to research published in the journal Frontiers in Public Health.
Continue reading...Bogotá must do more to stop armed groups from recruiting minors.
Google has pushed back against Apple executive Eddy Cue's testimony that Safari searches declined last month, asserting it continues "to see overall query growth in Search" with "an increase in total queries coming from Apple's devices and platforms." The statement comes as Apple's Senior VP revealed under oath that the company is "actively looking at" revamping Safari to focus on AI-powered search engines, potentially threatening the estimated $20 billion-a-year deal making Google the default search provider on Apple devices. Cue testified that AI search providers including OpenAI, Perplexity, and Anthropic will "eventually replace standard search engines." Google, in its response, pointed to ongoing enhancements to its search product, noting users are "accessing it for new things and in new ways, whether from browsers or the Google app, using their voice or Google Lens."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
For the second straight game, the New York Knicks found themselves in a hole the Boston Celtics have rarely let teams out of this season.
The Knicks again found a way – almost the same way, in fact – to pull off the improbable. And now they are two wins away from knocking the defending champions out of the playoffs.
Continue reading...A federal judge warned the Trump administration on Wednesday that deporting non-citizens to Libya would...
The post Judge Blocks Trump Deportations to Libya, Citing Due Process and Risk of Persecution appeared first on News Facts Network.
The 2025 measles breakout that first surfaced in West Texas has spread much farther.
JD Vance says US could ‘walk away’ from ceasefire talks; wellness influencer is pick for surgeon general. Key US politics stories from Wednesday 7 May at a glance
Speaking at a security conference on Wednesday, the US vice-president, JD Vance, said of fruitless efforts to end the war in Ukraine: “Right now, the Russians are asking for a certain set of requirements, a certain set of concessions in order to end the conflict. We think they’re asking for too much.”
Asked about the comments later on Wednesday, Donald Trump said: “It’s possible that’s right.”
Continue reading...What range you guys getting? Im a very light person and ride a pint x currently. Does this get more range than pint x? I've heard good and bad things about the range.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 8.
NYPD officers entered campus’s main library building in riot gear after activists occupied area in hours-long standoff
The New York police department arrested dozens of pro-Palestinian activists who occupied part of the main library building on Columbia University’s campus on Wednesday evening, ending an hours-long standoff, roughly one year after student anti-war protest swept the Ivy League school.
Claire Shipman, the university’s acting president, said in a statement that she requested officers with the NYPD to help clear the building, after protesters had refused to leave despite being warned that a failure to comply would result in disciplinary action and possibly arrest for trespassing. A spokesperson for the NYPD said officers arrested “multiple individuals” who refused to disperse.
Continue reading...This blog has now closed. You can read more of our US politics coverage here
Britain is in “active discussions” with US officials over the extraordinary 100% tariff on all movies produced outside the US proposed by Donald Trump, as it tries to protect one of its biggest creative industries.
“We are already in active discussions with the top of the US administration on this subject. We are working hard to establish what might be proposed, if anything, and to make sure our world-beating creative industries are protected,” creative industries minister Chris Bryant told parliament.
Continue reading...The Trump administration has formally invoked the state secrets privilege in a federal court case...
The post Trump Uses State Secrets Claim to Withhold Records in Case of Man Wrongfully Deported to El Salvador appeared first on News Facts Network.
On the same day that President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire between the United States and Yemen’s Houthis, an F/A-18 Super Hornet crashed off the deck of an aircraft carrier. The fighter was landing on USS Harry S. Truman when the “arrestment failed, causing the aircraft to go overboard,” U.S. Central Command told The Intercept by email. After the $60 million jet’s tail hook failed to catch the wire that slows down the aircraft, it plummeted into the Red Sea. Two aviators ejected from the jet and were plucked from the water by a search and rescue helicopter. Both were injured, according to an unnamed CENTCOM official.
The injured aviators are the latest in a growing number of casualties in the Middle East that the Trump White House prefers to ignore. As The Intercept reported last week, CENTCOM, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the White House are keeping the total number of U.S. casualties from the war secret.
“The refusal to provide the casualty data for U.S. troops in the Middle East is another example of the gross incompetence of this administration,” Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., told The Intercept. “Transparency in the casualties sustained through every military operation should be a cornerstone of every administration. The refusal to provide the public with basic information should be deeply alarming to every American.”
Omar is the third lawmaker in the last week to call for accountability from the White House and the Pentagon, joining Reps. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash.
The total number of military personnel who have been killed or wounded in the broader U.S. campaign against the Houthis, which began under the Biden administration, is being withheld from the American people. But since last Monday, there have been at least three casualties. That day, a sailor was injured when a different F/A-18 Super Hornet was lost at sea, falling off the Truman after the ship made a sharp turn to evade a Houthi attack.
When The Intercept asked the Office of the Secretary of Defense last week for the number of casualties sustained by U.S. forces in the campaign against the Houthis, the Pentagon balked at providing a number and referred questions to Central Command, which referred questions to the White House. Repeated requests to White House assistant press secretary Taylor Rogers have gone unanswered for more than a week.
This is not standard operating procedure. Under the Biden administration, the Office of the Secretary of Defense and CENTCOM provided detailed data on attacks on military bases across the Middle East — including to this reporter. CENTCOM provided the total number of attacks, breakdowns by country, and the total number injured. The Pentagon offered even more granular data, providing individual synopses of attacks, including information on deaths and injuries not only to U.S. troops but even civilian contractors working on U.S. bases.
The Intercept found that U.S. troops in the Middle East have come under attack close to 400 times, at a minimum, since the outbreak of the Israel–Hamas war. U.S. Navy vessels in the region have been the most frequent target, coming under attack 174 times since October 2023, according to Central Command. There have also been “about 200” attacks on U.S. bases in the region since the Gaza war began, according to Pentagon spokesperson Patricia Kreuzberger. This amounts to roughly one attack every 1.5 days, on average.
The strikes, predominantly by Iranian-backed militias and the Houthi government in Yemen, include a mix of one-way attack drones, rockets, mortars, and ballistic missiles. These groups ramped up attacks on U.S. targets in October 2023, in response to the U.S.-supported Israeli war on Gaza.
Despite Trump’s claims that the Houthis “capitulated” and “don’t want to fight anymore,” it remains unclear whether America’s billion-dollar, seven-week campaign of strikes that targeted civilian infrastructure and, according to local reports, killed scores of innocent people, has achieved its objective of stopping the Houthis from impeding international shipping.
“What happened now is that America announced the cessation of its aggression against Yemen after failing to achieve any of its goals.”
Nasruddin Amer, a Houthi spokesperson, dismissed Trump’s “fallacies and bravado” and directed The Intercept to a statement by Oman’s foreign minister, Badr Albusaidi, who said that mediation by his country had “resulted in a ceasefire agreement” in which “neither side will target the other, including American vessels, in the Red Sea and Bab al-Mandab Strait.” A senior Houthi leader had already told Drop Site in April that the group would cease attacks if the Trump administration halted bombings. Amer also told The Intercept that the Houthis will continue fighting Israel.
Houthi officials and supporters portrayed the ceasefire as a triumph over Trump and a U.S. defeat. “America attacked our country in service of Israel and in support of the continuation of the crimes of genocide in Gaza. We defended ourselves against the American aggression and continued our support for Gaza,” Amer told The Intercept by text message. “What happened now is that America announced the cessation of its aggression against Yemen after failing to achieve any of its goals.”
The White House did not reply to repeated requests for comment on the statement.
The post More Troops Injured as U.S. Planes Keep Plunging Into Red Sea appeared first on The Intercept.
Hello, is their any way I can test my bms to see if it works? I am getting a battery overcharge from the board and after taking it apart, the battery has 52 voltage. Is this a BMS issue or Controller Issue?
When i bought my gt I swapped the stock treaded tire for the fl enduro. 600 miles later I swapped to the stock tire and I hate it. Any good enduro style tires I should check out before ordering another float life
SANTA CLARA, Calif., May 7, 2025 — AMD (NASDAQ:AMD) has announced financial results for the first quarter of 2025. First quarter revenue was $7.4 billion, gross margin was 50%, operating income was $806 million, net income was $709 million and diluted earnings per share was $0.44. On a non-GAAP(*) basis, gross margin was 54%, operating income was $1.8 billion, net income was $1.6 billion and diluted earnings per share was $0.96.
“We delivered an outstanding start to 2025 as year-over-year growth accelerated for the fourth consecutive quarter driven by strength in our core businesses and expanding data center and AI momentum,” said Dr. Lisa Su, AMD chair and CEO. “Despite the dynamic macro and regulatory environment, our first quarter results and second quarter outlook highlight the strength of our differentiated product portfolio and consistent execution positioning us well for strong growth in 2025.”
“We grew first quarter revenue 36% year-over-year and delivered significant earnings leverage as our business gains scale,” said AMD EVP, CFO and Treasurer Jean Hu. “We continue to invest in R&D and go-to-market initiatives, positioning the company for long-term growth and value creation for our shareholders.”
GAAP Quarterly Financial Results
Non-GAAP Quarterly Financial Results
Segment Summary
Data Center segment revenue in the quarter was $3.7 billion, up 57% year-over-year primarily driven by growth in AMD EPYC CPU and AMD Instinct GPU sales.
Client and Gaming segment revenue in the quarter was $2.9 billion, up 28% year-over-year. Client revenue was $2.3 billion, up 68% year-over-year primarily driven by strong demand for the latest “Zen 5” AMD Ryzen processors and a richer mix. Gaming revenue was $647 million, down 30% year-over-year primarily due to a decrease in semi-custom revenue.
Embedded segment revenue in the quarter was $823 million, down 3% year-over-year as demand in end markets remained mixed.
Current Outlook
AMD’s outlook statements are based on current expectations. The following statements are forward-looking and actual results could differ materially depending on market conditions and the factors set forth under “Cautionary Statement” below.
For the second quarter of 2025, AMD expects revenue to be approximately $7.4 billion, plus or minus $300 million. Non-GAAP gross margin is estimated to be 43% inclusive of approximately $800 million in charges for inventory and related reserves due to the new export controls as previously disclosed in AMD’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on April 16, 2025. Excluding this charge, non-GAAP gross margin would be approximately 54%.
About AMD
For more than 55 years AMD has driven innovation in high-performance computing, graphics and visualization technologies. AMD employees are focused on building leadership high-performance and adaptive products that push the boundaries of what is possible. Billions of people, leading Fortune 500 businesses and cutting-edge scientific research institutions around the world rely on AMD technology daily to improve how they live, work and play.
Source: AMD
The post AMD Reports 1st Quarter 2025 Financial Results appeared first on HPCwire.
KAYLA BELFONT
Staff Reporter
Women make up 49.6% of the world’s population but only 15% of the engineers in the world. As of the 2021-22 academic year, 30% of engineering bachelor degree graduates at the university were women.
As a professor in the civil, construction and environmental engineering department, an associate dean for academic affairs for the College of Engineering and a core member of the Disaster Research Center, Rachel Davidson does it all.
Even though she always enjoyed math and science, Davidson was relatively late to the field of engineering. After being placed in a classroom full of engineering students her freshman year, she ended up switching her major her sophomore year.
“I wanted to save the world,” Davidson said.
How to actually do that was another question entirely. Davidson had no idea what to do and how her life goals would connect to the world of engineering. She realized she could use engineering to understand disasters and reduce the loss caused by disasters, specifically hurricanes and earthquakes.
Davidson recalls that once she entered engineering, she began to notice gender biases in the field. Now, the overt sexism is largely gone; however, Davidson explained that engineering culture is dominated by one group of people – men.
Since Davidson’s undergraduate career, the number of women in engineering has grown. Lila Hintz, a senior chemical engineering major, is very excited to step into the field of engineering soon. Hintz hopes to go into process control for optimization of products, profit and sustainability.
Currently a peer facilitator for an introductory chemical engineering class, she has known that engineering was her calling since freshman year of high school.
“I knew I liked engineering, I took engineering all throughout my high school,” Hintz said.
Hintz is proud to state that she has no regrets about choosing her path.
“I think it’s very fulfilling to me and who I am as a person,” Hintz continued. “It’s made me who I am today, and I know it’s been tough, but I’d choose it all over again. I would go through the whole four years again if it meant that I still get to be a chemical engineer.”
According to Hintz, engineering has been such a crucial, impactful part of her life, but she also admits that the male-dominated industry is a double-edged sword. At times, Hintz finds it a bit intimidating to be a woman in the field, especially after receiving negative comments.
“There are, you know, comments made, kind of just looking down on me because of my gender,” Hintz said. “There were literally times where comments about my body were made.”
One of the newest additions to the university’s engineering programs is Juliette Tzitzis, a freshman material science and engineering major. Currently interested in infrastructure or biomaterials, Tzitzis does not have any regrets about choosing this major so far, but also feels the effects of stepping into a male-dominated industry.
“It’s definitely harder than people think it is,” Tzitzis said. “It’s doable, but I will say that one of the biggest things that I experienced has been a little bit of impostor syndrome, but thankfully, the people here make it easier.”
Tzitzis is happy where she is, but did state that she has to learn how to approach engineering differently since dealing with the male-dominated industry firsthand.
“It was something that I had never experienced before,” Tzitzis said. “It’s just something that I saw that I’m just like, ‘Okay, this is something extra that I have to get used to,’ and then I have to maybe approach learning and engineering in a different way than a male counterpart would.”
In the end, Hintz feels that despite outdated views of women in engineering, she is confident in her choice of career.
“I know my place in the world, and I’m going to be here, and I’m going to show up,” Hintz said.
New emblems approved by city councils in defiance of bans on ‘unofficial flags’ on government property
Earlier this year, Utah and Idaho’s Republican-controlled legislatures passed bans on flying the rainbow pride flags and other “unofficial flags” on government property.
Leaders in both states’ capital cities, Salt Lake City and Boise, recently devised an inventive workaround – changing their official flags.
Continue reading...UnitedHealth Group is facing a class action lawsuit from investors, who allege the company misled them after the December killing of top executive Brian Thompson.
A majority of Catholics look to the Pope and the Church's teachings for difficult moral questions.
Tyre Nichols’s 2023 killing helped galvanize public support for police reform. He died after running from police and being beaten by several Memphis officers.
Well...I experienced my first nose dive on my Pint X last night at about 40 miles old. I felt very comfortable on the board and seems I tried to push it a bit too much while going downhill. I hit 21.8mph while trying to accelerate downhill and was greeted with an instant nose dive. I tried to run it out and managed a couple of steps before I inevitably came to a tumble. Luckily it doesn't seem like there are any fractures/breaks or major injuries but man am I sore. Tore my hands and knee up good, and definitely bruised some ribs. This is my first one wheel and I've always respected the board and slowed down on pushback. This time I think I just accelerated so fast that pushback had no time to even kick in. Lesson learned the hard way and now it's time to get some knee pads, wrist guards and decent gloves. Wear your gear no matter how goofy you think it makes you look.
Casey Means, a key ally to HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., replaces Janette Nesheiwat, a physician criticized for promoting coronavirus vaccines.
President taps wellness influencer after withdrawing initial pick, former Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat
Donald Trump has tapped Dr Casey Means, a wellness influencer with close ties to Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health secretary, as nominee for surgeon general after withdrawing his initial pick for the influential health post.
The US president said in a social media post on Wednesday that Means has “impeccable ‘MAHA’ credentials” – referring to the “make America healthy again” slogan – and that she will work to eradicate chronic disease and improve the health and wellbeing of Americans.
Continue reading...President Trump slammed Gavin Newsom on Tuesday, just hours after the California governor asked for collaboration on a massive national film tax credit.
Google has partnered with Elementl Power to develop at least 600 MW of nuclear capacity at each of three planned sites. It's unknown where the three proposed sites will be located or how much Google is investing. World Nuclear News reports: The two companies will work "with utility and regulated power partners to identify and advance new projects" and Elementl "will continue the evaluation of potential technology, engineering, procurement and construction, and other project partners, while prioritising specific sites for accelerated development." Elementl Power, founded in 2022, describes itself as a technology-agnostic advanced nuclear project developer which aims to provide "turn-key development, financing and ownership solutions for customers that want access to clean baseload power but may not want to own or operate nuclear power assets." It says its mission is to "to deploy over 10 gigawatts of next-generation nuclear power in the US by 2035." It is not Google's first nuclear power deal -- in October 2024 the company signed an agreement with Kairos Power to purchase power from its fluoride salt-cooled high-temperature small modular reactors, with a fleet of up to 500 MW of capacity by 2035. The aim of the power purchase agreement was to facilitate Kairos Power to develop, construct, and operate plants and sell energy, ancillary services, and environmental attributes to Google. At the time of that announcement Google said that it would help it achieve net-zero emissions across all of its operations and value chain by 2030. Further reading: Google tries to greenwash massive AI energy consumption with another vague nuclear deal (The Register)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
![]() | Hello, i was wondering if any of you guys have had luck getting a new battery covered by FM. I opened the battery box up and sent a picture of the damage and they sent this reply. Am i cooked or what do yo guys recommend. If they wont cover it then why send if to them if it cost more? [link] [comments] |
The stern order followed reports indicating the U.S. was poised to send a planeload of immigrants to the troubled African nation.
President Trump wants to launch a U.S. sovereign wealth fund — but the administration is still debating the mechanics of the fund.
Counterpoint's latest report shows an ongoing dropoff in Apple Watch interest -- and that's before taking tariffs into account.
New York Times reports Elon Musk’s Doge agency has created spreadsheet of federal grants earmarked for cuts
The Trump administration is reportedly eyeing dozens of grants across the National Park Service for termination, according to reporting from the New York Times, one of several moves destabilizing the US’s investment in public lands.
According to the newspaper, staff members at Elon Musk’s unofficial “department of government efficiency” have created a spreadsheet of federal grants earmarked for cuts, with total funding cuts amounting to some $26m.
Continue reading...Is their a order to unplug the battery? I'm pretty sure there is but I'm unsure of what is it.
Netflix has officially launched a new AI-powered search feature that uses OpenAI's ChatGPT to deliver a conversational content discovery experience, allowing users to describe what they're looking for in natural language. The streaming giant is also getting into short videos with a new vertical feed set to rival Instagram Reels and TikTok. TechCrunch reports: Users can enter their preferences using natural phrases like "I want something funny and upbeat" or even more detailed requests, such as "I want something scary, but not too scary, and maybe a little bit funny, but not haha funny." The feature is set to roll out this week to iOS users as an opt-in beta. Some subscribers in Australia and New Zealand have already had access to it, as reported by Bloomberg last month. [...] Additionally, at the tech and product event, the company mentioned plans to use generative AI to update title cards in subscribers' preferred languages. Other features revealed on Wednesday include a short-form video feed for mobile users and a redesign of its TV homepage. Netflix's new mobile-only vertical feed allows users to easily scroll through clips of its original titles. Within this feed, users can tap on buttons to watch the entire show or movie immediately, save it to their "My List," or share it with friends. Of note is that the clips are curated from the "Today's Top Picks for You" section rather than being chosen from Netflix's entire library. This approach makes it specifically tailored to each user, ultimately encouraging viewers to watch the full shows.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
In the April 30 meeting of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet, which followed his 100th day in office, Attorney General Pam Bondi praised the president’s progress so far and highlighted efforts to curb the flow of the synthetic opioid fentanyl. But Bondi overstated the impact of drug seizures, claiming that they had saved the lives of more than half of all Americans.
“Since you have been in office, President Trump, your DOJ agencies have seized more than 22 million fentanyl pills, 3,400 kilos of fentanyl … which saved — are you ready for this media — 258 million lives,” Bondi said.
The total U.S. population is about 342 million, according to the Census Bureau. So, in Bondi’s rhetoric, that would mean three-quarters of the country would have died if not for recent drug busts.
The previous day, on April 29, Bondi had posted a lower estimate on X, saying, “In President Trump’s first 100 days we’ve seized over 22 million fentanyl laced pills, saving over 119 Million lives.”
Still, that would be about one-third of the country.
Drug overdose deaths have been trending downward since 2023, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In a Feb. 25 press release, the CDC reported a 24% decline for fiscal year 2024, compared with the prior year. It estimated that there were 87,000 drug overdose deaths in fiscal 2024. Most of those deaths — about 55,000 — were from synthetic opioids, including fentanyl.
Even if DOJ’s drug seizures were to eliminate every single fentanyl death in the U.S., 55,000 is a far cry from 258 million. Or even 119 million.
We asked the Department of Justice how Bondi had arrived at that estimate, and we received an email that said:
DOJ email, May 5: 1 kg of fentanyl* .1518 (current purity level) * 1000 (to convert to grams) / by .002 (amount needed for a deadly dose) = lethal dose of fentanyl
So, 3,400 Kg of fentanyl seized in Trump’s first 100 days
3400*.1518
*1000
/.002
=258,060,000 deadly doses
The DOJ had calculated the number of potentially deadly doses of fentanyl that could have been made from the 3,400 kilograms that were seized. Prosecutors often highlight the amount of lives that a seized quantity of fentanyl has the capacity to kill, but Bondi heightened that rhetoric by translating it to lives “saved.”
“It’s government lingo at its best,” Anthony Cangelosi, a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice who has investigated the import of narcotics for the Department of Homeland Security, told us in a phone interview.
Regardless of who it is — a U.S. attorney or a local prosecutor — law enforcement officials always use the high-end estimate for the potential harm that could have been caused by drugs or contraband that was seized, Cangelosi said.
“I’m not saying that the numbers are incorrect,” he said. “Does it have the potential to kill this many people? Sure.” But, he asked, does it actually kill this many people? “No.”
Overdoses generally happen when too much of a drug like fentanyl has been mixed into a pill or when the user takes too many pills, Cangelosi explained. So, not all doses of fentanyl end up killing the user.
Also, most Americans wouldn’t be exposed to fentanyl at all, since they don’t use opioids or pills that would be laced with the drug. For instance, about 25% of the population reported using illicit drugs — the vast majority of which was marijuana — and about 0.2% of the population reported using illegally made fentanyl, according to the most recent National Survey on Drug Use and Health, which covered 2023.
Rhetoric like Bondi’s, Cangelosi said, is “always a form of hyperbole, to some extent. But, again, it [the fentanyl seized] has the capability to do that.”
Overdose deaths from fentanyl began significantly increasing in the second decade of the 2000s, and during his first administration, Trump declared an opioid crisis. The Department of Justice at the time began announcing fentanyl busts by highlighting the stories of individual victims and reporting numbers of overdose deaths.
By April 2018, it had begun calculating the number of deadly doses that could have been made from a given stash. “Over the last few weeks, the DEA has seized a total of more than 64 kilograms of suspected fentanyl in cases from Detroit to New York City,” then Attorney General Jeff Sessions said on April 17, 2018. “That’s enough to kill 21 million people—more than the population of New York State.”
The Justice Department continued to tout its fentanyl busts under the Biden administration and, in some cases, provided the calculation of lethal doses. For example, then Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a speech at the end of 2021, “In August, the department launched a nationwide law enforcement effort to address the alarming increase in the availability and lethality of fentanyl-laced pills. By the end of September, our cooperative efforts led to the seizure of 1.8 million such pills – a supply large enough to kill more than 700,000 Americans.”
And, in a January 2023 speech, Garland praised the efforts of various agencies that had seized caches of fentanyl. “Together, these seizures represent more than 379 million potentially deadly doses of fentanyl,” he said. “That much fentanyl could kill every single American.”
But Bondi turned that statistic into a claim about the number of lives saved.
The number of fentanyl pills that the Drug Enforcement Administration has seized between January and April — 22 million — is up by 24% compared with the same time period in 2024, or 36% compared with 2023, according to data captured in archived versions of the DEA’s website.
As we’ve reported before, there is no comprehensive federal data showing how much fentanyl is in the country.
But there is data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection about the amount of drugs seized at U.S. borders, and experts say most of the U.S. supply of fentanyl comes through the southern border.
CBP data show that, beginning in January, monthly fentanyl seizures have been at their lowest numbers since 2022. We asked the DEA if its figures included seizures at the border, but we didn’t receive a response.
We don’t know how much fentanyl is smuggled into the country, but the amount seized at the primary entry point has been lower in recent months. And we don’t know how many people would have died from the fentanyl that has been seized so far this year. But overdose statistics show yearly deaths are in the tens of thousands, not millions.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post Bondi Far Overstates the Impact of Fentanyl Seizures on American Lives appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Here's how the conclave creates black and white smoke and why the Catholic Church began using them to signal whether a new pope has been elected.
Home secretary says raids across UK last weekend reflected some of biggest terrorism threats in recent years
Israel’s embassy in London was the target of an alleged terror plot involving a group of Iranian nationals who were detained by police after a series of dramatic raids across England on Saturday, sources have told the Guardian.
Four men remain in custody and are being questioned by police on suspicion of preparation of a terrorist act targeting what police and politicians have so far only been willing to describe publicly as “specific premises”.
Continue reading...As the headline suggests, we’re going to be talking about some very dry Windows stuff that only affects a relatively small number of people, but for those people this is a big deal they need to address. If you’re working on pre-production drivers that need to be signed, this is important to you.
The Windows Hardware Program supports partners signing drivers for use in pre-production environments. The CA that is used to sign the binaries for use in pre-production environments on the Windows Hardware Program is set to expire in July 2025, following which a new CA will be used to sign the preproduction content starting June 9, 2025.
↫ Hardware Dev Center
Alongside the new CA come a bunch of changes to the rules. First and foremost, expiry of signed drivers will no longer be tied to the expiry of the underlying CA, so any driver signed with the new CA will not expire, regardless of what happens to the CA. In addition, on April 22, May 13, and June 10, 2025, Windows servicing releases (4D/5B/6B) will be shipped to Windows versions (down to Windows Server 2008) to replace the old CAs with the new ones. As such, if you’re working on pre-production drivers, you need to install those Latest Cumulative updates.
On a very much related note, Microsoft has announced it’s retiring device metadata and the Windows Metadata and Internet Services (WMIS). This is what allowed OEMs and device makers to include things like device names, custom device icons, and other information in the form of an XML file. While OEMs can no longer create new device metadata this way, existing metadata already installed on Windows clients will remain functional. As a replacement for this functionality, Microsoft points to the driver’s INF files, where such information and icons can also be included.
Riveting stuff.
![]() | Do you ride off-road? It’s so fun. My gf and I have been riding off-road a lot in the past month. We've mostly rode pavement for the past few years and it wasn't until trying to do more offroading that we realized how sick it really is. It unlocks a whole different level of fun and exploration. Offroad terrain is definitely a lot harder and we've been practicing on all kinds of trails with big rocks, sand, gravel, to really get the feel of everything. It's honestly surprising how much the onewheel can take. Def has also rejeuvenated our love for the sport. we can't get enough and are always looking for new offroad trails to ride to challenge ourselves and continue to improve. This video is a culmination of a month of consistent effort. [link] [comments] |
"Illinoisans are sending a clear message to Trump's lackeys that we will not let you mess with us without a resistance," Pritzker said.
A jury returned a verdict of not guilty in state court for three former Memphis police officers in the fatal 2023 beating of Tyre Nichols.
Phoronix's Michael Larabel reports: Last July it was announced Holly Million was stepping down as the GNOME Foundation's Exeuctive Director after less than a year at the helm. Richard Littauer took over as interim Executive Director while this week a new GNOME Foundation Executive Director was hired. GNOME's new Executive Director is Steven Deobald. Steven Deobald is a Canadian free software advocate and has been a GNOME user since 2002. As the GNOME Foundation Executive Director, Steven wants to focus on transparency and to better ensure financial stability of the GNOME Foundation. You can read Deobald's welcoming statements on blogs.gnome.org. Further reading: Is It Time For a Change In GNOME Leadership?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Looming tariffs put an uncertain spin on the economy. Get on top of credit card debt now in case things go sideways.
Security minister says US delegation wanted classification for PCC and Comando Vermelho to aid immigration policy
The Brazilian government has rejected a request by the US state department to designate two major criminal gangs as terrorist organizations, according to Mario Sarrubo, Brazil’s national secretary of public security.
Sarrubo said the request was made on Tuesday during a meeting between US and Brazilian officials in Brasília.
Continue reading...FBI Director Kash Patel told lawmakers Wednesday that President Donald Trump‘s proposed $10 billion FBI...
The post FBI Director Kash Patel Pushes Back on Trump’s Budget, Seeks $1 Billion More for Bureau appeared first on News Facts Network.
The White House withdrew the nomination of Dr. Janette Nesheiwat for U.S. surgeon general after reports about her credentials, and President Trump announced a new pick, Dr. Casey Means.
![]() | These were just some cheap lumber racks off of Temu I ordered over the winter and finally got around to mounting. [link] [comments] |
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: There's a new warehouse robot at Amazon that has a sense of touch, allowing it to handle a job previously only done by humans. Amazon unveiled the robot, called Vulcan, Wednesday at an event in Germany. CNBC got an exclusive first look at Vulcan in April, as it stowed items into tall, yellow bins at a warehouse in Spokane, Washington. An up-close look at the "hand" of the robot reveals how it can feel the items it touches using an AI-powered sensor to determine the precise pressure and torque each object needs. This innovative gripper helps give Vulcan the ability to manipulate 75% of the 1 million unique items in inventory at the Spokane warehouse. Amazon has used other robotic arms inside its warehouses since 2021, but those rely on cameras for detection and suction for grasp, limiting what types of objects they can handle. Vulcan can also operate 20 hours a day, according to Aaron Parness, who heads up the Amazon Robotics team that developed the machine. Still, Parness told CNBC that instead of replacing people in its warehouses, Vulcan will create new, higher skilled jobs that involve maintaining, operating, installing and building the robots. When asked if Amazon will fully automate warehouses in the future, Parness said, "not at all." "I don't believe in 100% automation," he said. "If we had to get Vulcan to do 100% of the stows and picks, it would never happen. You would wait your entire life. Amazon understands this." The goal is for Vulcan to handle 100% of the stowing that happens in the top rows of bins, which are difficult for people to reach, Parness said. [...] Amazon said Vulcan is operating at about the same speed as a human worker and can handle items up to 8 pounds. It operates behind a fence, sequestered from human workers to reduce the risk of accidents.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Officials say the likelihood Lily and Jack Sullivan are still alive after disappearing in Nova Scotia on 2 May is ‘very low’
Nearly a week after two young children went missing in rural Nova Scotia, Canadian police say they are beginning to scale back search efforts given the “low” odds the children are still alive – and that they are not ruling out the possibility of foul play.
Since Friday, more than 160 searchers with drones and canine units have scoured the thickly forested region of Pictou county in search of Lily Sullivan, six, and Jack Sullivan, four.
Continue reading...
KEL MARQUEZ
Staff Writer
On March 28, Lucy Dacus released a masterpiece of an album titled “Forever Is A Feeling.” After listening to this gorgeous lineup of songs, I feel certain that it will be considered one of the best albums of the year. Dacus’ writing in this release is so poetic and raw, making it incredibly easy to fall in love with every line. Her beautiful vocal range shines through each song and compliments her vibrantly emotional writing.
The messages within her lyrics make it clear that this is an album about love. Dacus seems to explore the highs and lows of her past (and current) relationships. It was difficult not to relate to the themes she writes about. The connections I drew from her lyrics made these songs resonate with me deeply, especially the more gut-wrenching ones.
Of the tracks that fall under this “gut-wrenching” category, my favorites would include “Limerence,” “Come Out” and “For Keeps.” “Limerence” has a gentle piano that accompanies Dacus’ emotional tone, making this song serenade-worthy. When this song plays through my earbuds, I feel as if I’m being carried away by a gentle wind and floating with the comfort of a tender melody.
The writing of “Limerence” is absolutely heartbreaking, with one of the lines being, “I’m thinking about breaking your heart someday soon / And if I do I’ll be breaking mine too.” This situation of knowing a relationship won’t last and having to end things is complex. Dacus translates this difficult affair into a melody that hits close to home.
One of my top three songs off the album would be the absolute headbanger, “Talk.” Based on the lyrics, Dacus seems to write about her feelings toward a relationship that she’s received mixed signals from. She sings, “Why can’t we talk anymore? We used to talk for hours,” which seems to address a shift in a connection between her and a past lover.
I relate to this song’s message and Dacus’ frustration on a personal level, which quickly landed this track in my top three. My favorite part of this track would be the last chorus when she belts, “Do I make you nervous or bored? Or did I drink you to the last drop?” followed by a bass drop. Her stylistic choices truly add another dimension to “Talk” that exudes her raw emotions.
If you are not in the market for songs about heartbreak, don’t be discouraged. Dacus also explores the brighter side of love. Her choice to write about the ranges of love stays true to the heart of relationships. This is another aspect of the album that made it my favorite release this year: The sheer honesty of what love is – both ugly and beautiful.
The tracks that are on the brighter side of love would include “Ankles,” “Forever Is A Feeling,” “Best Guess” and “Most Wanted Man.” Of these four, the one I have returned to most would be “Best Guess.” This song has a romantic tone that makes me want to grab a stranger’s hand and dance. I would recommend “Best Guess” for anyone who is currently in love, as Dacus highlights the best qualities of their partner, her “best guess at the future.” There is something so intimate about the lyrics with lines, such as “Tracing your tan lines making you mine,” that emit sensuality.
I cannot complete this review without writing about “Most Wanted Man,” which Dacus dedicates to her current partner Julien Baker. As a boygenius fan, I was excited to hear them announce their relationship and was even more excited to hear this song. Dacus perfectly captures the playful nature of a friends-to-lovers relationship and I can’t help but dance when this track plays. If you listen closely, you can hear Baker sing a part of the chorus that makes this song even more meaningful. It truly feels as if I’m hearing a love letter written for Baker.
If you’re someone that loves love, this is the album for you. Although I didn’t discuss every part of this release, the following are some of my favorite lyrics I didn’t write about, highlighting the addictive writing of Lucy Dacus that makes it tough for me to press pause.
“You make me homesick for places I’ve never been before,” from “Modigliani.”
“Isn’t that what love’s about? Doing whatever to draw it out?” from “Forever Is A Feeling.”
“Nothing lasts forever but let’s see how far we get / So when it comes my turn to lose you, I’ll have made the most of it,” from “Lost Time.”
The Trump administration has a new plan to get "healthy" food to low-income seniors, but an anti-hunger advocate fears many will miss out.
Open roles include engineers and manufacturing operators as firm prepares to ramp up production
British Steel has said it will hire more than 180 new employees, as it prepares to ramp up iron and steel production for the first time since its government rescue.
The company has started recruiting for 165 roles in Scunthorpe and a further 17 at its operations in Teesside and Skinningrove, to support production at its two blast furnaces.
Continue reading... ![]() | I draw onewheel comics. If youre my target fellow i would appreciate a follow @sixoclockdogpark [link] [comments] |
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.
For more than two months, the Trump administration has been subject to a federal court order stopping it from cutting funding related to gender identity and the provision of gender-affirming care in response to President Donald Trump’s executive orders.
Lawyers for the federal government have repeatedly claimed in court filings that the administration has been complying with the order.
But new whistleblower records submitted in a lawsuit led by the Washington state attorney general appear to contradict the claim.
Nearly two weeks after the court’s preliminary injunction was issued, the National Institutes of Health’s then-acting head, Dr. Matthew J. Memoli, drafted a memo that details how the agency, in response to Trump’s executive orders, cut funding for research grants that “promote or inculcate gender ideology.” An internal spreadsheet of terminated NIH grants also references “gender ideology” and lists the number associated with Trump’s executive order as the reason for the termination of more than a half dozen research grants.
The Washington attorney general’s allegation that the Trump administration violated a court order comes as the country lurches toward a constitutional crisis amid accusations that the executive branch has defied or ignored court orders in several other cases. In the most high-profile case so far, the administration has yet to comply with a federal judge’s order, upheld unanimously by the Supreme Court, requiring it to “facilitate” the return of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March.
The records filed in the NIH-related lawsuit last week also reveal for the first time the enormous scope of the administration’s changes to the agency, which has been subject to massive layoffs and research cuts to align it with the president’s political priorities.
Other documents filed in the case raise questions concerning a key claim the administration has made about how it is restructuring federal agencies — that the Department of Government Efficiency has limited authority, acting mostly as an advisory body that consults on what to cut. However, in depositions filed in the case last week, two NIH officials testified that DOGE itself gave directions in hundreds of grant terminations.
The lawsuit offers an unprecedented view into the termination of more than 600 grants at the NIH over the past two months. Many of the canceled grants appear to have focused on subjects that the administration claims are unscientific or that the agency should no longer focus on under new priorities, such as gender identity, vaccine hesitancy and diversity, equity and inclusion. Grants related to research in China have also been cut, and climate change projects are under scrutiny.
Andrew G. Nixon, the director of communications for the Department of Health and Human Services, the NIH’s parent agency, told ProPublica in an email that the grant terminations directly followed the president’s executive orders and that the NIH’s actions were based on policy and scientific priorities, not political interference.
“The cuts are essential to refocus NIH on key public health priorities, like the chronic disease epidemic,” he said. Nixon also told ProPublica that its questions related to the lawsuit “solely fit a partisan narrative”; he did not respond to specific questions about the preliminary injunction, the administration’s compliance with the order or the involvement of DOGE in the grant termination process. The White House did not respond to ProPublica’s questions.
Mike Faulk, the deputy communications director for the Washington state attorney general’s office, told ProPublica in an email that the administration “appears to have used DOGE in this instance to keep career NIH officials in the dark about what was happening and why.”
“While claiming to be transparent, DOGE has actively hidden its activities and its true motivations,” he said. “Our office will use every tool we have to uncover the truth about why these grants were terminated.”
Since Trump took office in January, the administration has provided limited insight into why it chose to terminate scientific and medical grants.
That decision-making process has been largely opaque, until now.
Washington Fights to Overturn Grant TerminationIn February, Washington state — joined by Minnesota, Oregon, Colorado and three physicians — sued the administration after it threatened to enforce its executive orders by withholding federal research grants from institutions that provided gender-affirming services or promoted “gender ideology.” Within weeks, a federal judge issued an injunction limiting the administration from fully enforcing the orders in the four states that are party to the suit.
The same day as the injunction, however, the NIH terminated a research grant to Seattle Children’s Hospital to develop and study an online education tool designed to reduce the risk of violence, mental health disorders and sexually transmitted infections among transgender youth, according to records filed in the court case. The NIH stated that it was the agency’s policy not to “prioritize” such studies on gender identity.
“Research programs based on gender identity are often unscientific, have little identifiable return on investment, and do nothing to enhance the health of many Americans,” the notice stated, without citing any scientific evidence for its claims. The NIH sent another notice reiterating the termination four days later.
The Washington attorney general’s office requested the termination be withdrawn, citing the injunction. But the administration refused, claiming that it was in compliance as the termination was based on NIH’s own authority and grant policy and was not enforcing any executive order.
The Washington attorney general asked the judge to hold the administration in contempt for violating the injunction. While the request was denied, the court granted an expedited discovery process to better assess whether the administration had breached the injunction. That process would have required the administration to quickly turn over internal documents relating to the termination. In response, the administration reinstated the grant for Seattle Children’s Hospital and declared the discovery process moot, or no longer relevant. However, U.S. District Judge Lauren J. King, who was appointed by former President Joseph Biden, permitted it to continue.
Whistleblower Documents Reveal Sweeping Changes at NIHIn recent months, whistleblowers have made the plaintiffs in the lawsuit aware of internal records that more closely connect the grant terminations to the administration’s executive orders.
In an internal spreadsheet of dozens of grants marked for cancellation at an NIH institute, the stated reason for termination for several was “gender ideology (EA 14168),” including the grant to Seattle Children’s Hospital.
The rationale appears to reference Executive Order 14168, which banned using federal funds to “promote gender ideology,” again seeming to conflict with the administration’s stance that the termination was not based on the executive orders. The termination dates of the grants, according to the spreadsheet, were after the injunction went into effect.
Another internal document, which provides extraordinary insight into the administration’s efforts to reshape the NIH, also states the executive order was the impetus for grant terminations.
In the March 11 memo from Memoli, the NIH cataloged all actions that the agency had taken thus far to align with the president’s executive orders. In a section detailing the steps taken to implement the “gender ideology” executive order, one of the 44 actions listed was the termination of active grants.
“NIH is currently reviewing all active grants and supplements to determine if they promote gender ideology and will take action as appropriate,” the memo stated, noting that the process was in progress.
While the administration has said in court filings that it is following the judge’s injunction order, the Washington state attorney general’s office told ProPublica that it disagreed.
“Their claim to have complied with the preliminary injunction is almost laughable,” said Faulk, the office’s deputy communications director. “The Trump administration is playing games with no apparent respect for the rule of law.”
Depositions Reveal DOGE LinksIn depositions conducted last month as part of the lawsuit, the testimony of two NIH officials also raised questions about why the research grants were terminated and how DOGE was involved.
Liza Bundesen, who was the deputy director of the agency’s extramural research office, testified that she first learned of the grant terminations on Feb. 28 from a DOGE team member, Rachel Riley. Bundesen said she was invited into a Microsoft Teams video call, where Riley introduced herself as being part of DOGE and working with the Department of Health and Human Services.
Riley, a former consultant for McKinsey & Co., joined HHS on Jan. 27, according to court filings in a separate lawsuit, and has reportedly served as the DOGE point person at the NIH.
The executive order detailing DOGE’s responsibilities describes the cost-cutting team as advisers that consult agency heads on the termination of contracts and grants. No language in the orders gives the DOGE team members the authority to direct the cancellation of grants or contracts. However, the depositions portray Riley as giving directions on how to conduct the terminations.
“She informed me that a number of grants will need to be terminated,” Bundesen testified, adding that she was told that they needed to be terminated by the end of the day. “I did not ask what, you know, what grants because I just literally was a little bit confused and caught off guard.”
Bundesen said she then received an email from Memoli, the NIH acting director, with a spreadsheet listing the grants that needed to be canceled and a template letter for notifying researchers of the terminations.
“The template had boilerplate language that could then be modified for the different circumstances, the different buckets of grants that were to be terminated,” she said. “The categories were DEI, research in China and transgender or gender ideology.”
Bundesen forwarded the email with the spreadsheet to Michelle Bulls, who directs the agency’s Office of Policy for Extramural Research Administration. Bundesen resigned from the NIH a week later, on March 7, citing “untenable” working conditions.
“I was given directives to implement with very short turnaround times, often close of business or maybe within the next hour,” she testified. “I was not offered the opportunity to provide feedback or really ask for clarification.”
Bulls confirmed in her own deposition that the termination list and letter template originally came from Riley. When Bulls started receiving the lists, she said she did what she was told. “I just followed the directive,” she said. “The language in the letters were provided so I didn’t question.”
Bulls said she didn’t write any of the letters herself and just signed her name to them. She also said she was not aware whether anyone had assessed the grants’ scientific merit or whether they met agency criteria. The grant terminations related to gender identity did not stem from an independent agency policy, she testified, appearing to contradict the administration’s assertion that they were based on the agency’s own authority and grant policy.
As of April 3, Bulls said she had received more than five lists of grants that needed to be terminated, amounting to “somewhere between five hundred and a thousand” grants.
Most grant recipients endure a rigorous vetting process, which can involve multiple stages of peer review before approval, and before this year, Bulls testified that grant terminations at the NIH have historically been rare. There are generally two main types of terminations, she said, for noncompliance or based on mutual agreement. Bulls said that she has been “generally involved in noncompliance discussions” and since she became the director of the office in 2012, there had been fewer than five such terminations.
In addition to the termination letters, Bulls said she relied on the template language provided by Riley to draft guidance to inform the 27 centers and institutes at the NIH what the agency’s new priorities were to help them scrutinize their own research portfolios.
Following the depositions, the Washington state attorney general’s office said that the federal government has refused to respond to its discovery requests. It has filed a motion to compel the government to respond, which is pending.
Riley, Bundesen, Bulls and Memoli did not reply to ProPublica’s requests for comment.
While the administration did not answer ProPublica’s questions about DOGE and its involvement in the grant terminations, last week in its budget blueprint, it generally justified its proposed cuts at the NIH with claims that the agency had “wasteful spending,” conducted “risky research” and promoted “dangerous ideologies that undermine public health.”
“NIH has grown too big and unfocused,” the White House claimed in its fiscal plan, adding that the agency’s research should “align with the President’s priorities to address chronic disease and other epidemics, implementing all executive orders and eliminating research on climate change, radical gender ideology, and divisive racialism.”
Jeremy Berg, who led the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the NIH from 2003 to 2011, told ProPublica that the administration’s assessment of the institution was “not fair and not based on any substantial analysis or evidence,” and the proposed cuts “would be absolutely devastating to NIH and to biomedical research in the United States.”
“It is profoundly distressing to see this great institution being reduced to a lawless, politicized organization without much focus on its actual mission,” he said.
![]() | Excited to break these in [link] [comments] |
Your data is yours, right? It seems like a simple question, but thanks to a little-known loophole in federal law, US regulators are can access your private data without a warrant as long as it’s being stored by a third party. The so-called “third-party doctrine” could be reconsidered in a case currently before the Supreme Court.
The case, Harper Vs. O’Donnell, pits Coinbase customer James Harper against the head of the Internal Revenue Service, Douglas O’Donnell. The case stretches back to 2016, when the IRS conducted a dragnet by demanding Coinbase hand over transaction records for more than 14,000 customers of the cryptocurrency trading platform.
Harper received a letter from the IRS warning that he had under reported his crypto income, a charge that Harper denied. But more importantly, Harper learned that the IRS had access to his transaction logs, his wallet addresses, and public keys–all without obtaining a court warrant. Harper’s lawyers argued that his constitutional protections–namely, the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures–had been violated by the IRS.
Lower courts repeatedly deined Harper’s claim, citing the third-party doctrine, which stems from a pair of Supreme Court cases in the 1970s. The Supreme Court ruled that “a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.” The First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Harpe’s records are owned by Coinbase, and thus fall within the third-party exception to the Fourth Amendment.
The third-party doctrine may have made sense in the late 1970s, when most Americans had a little in the way of a digital footprint. However, in the year 2025, the vast majority of Americans have a substantial digital footprint. Harper’s lawyer argue that he should have “a reasonable expectation of privacy in financial records.” What’s more, they argue that if cellphone location tracking, or CSLI, data is partially protected–as the Supreme Court decided with the Carpenter Vs. United States case about seven years ago–then detailed financial records should have at least as much protection from warrantless searches.
Civil rights groups are taking notice of the case. The Cato Institute has filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court on behalf of Harper, stating that the third-party doctrine poses a threat to the privacy rights of Americans. “The government has relied on the third-party doctrine to circumvent the warrant requirement and obtain Americans’ most sensitive records, including emails, Google search histories, financial records, and location histories,” the Cato Institute states. “Without judicial enforcement of Fourth Amendment protections, secretive and suspicionless digital record collection will become a routine tool of government regulation and control.”
The New Civil Liberties Alliance has also weighed in on Harper vs. O’Donnell. “The Supreme Court should take the opportunity to fix the third-party doctrine, which the government has relied on to strip away the Fourth Amendment rights of millions of Americans who share data, such as internet browsing histories and medical records, with third-party companies,” the group stated in February. “Digital records are a modern-day individual’s ‘papers’ and ‘effects’ that the Fourth Amendment explicitly safeguards against government’s prying eyes.”
Originally posted on sister site BigDATAwire
The post Do You Own Your Cloud Data? Third-Party Doctrine Says No appeared first on HPCwire.
Maine Republican lawmakers are advancing a suite of bills that would restrict the rights of...
The post Maine Republicans Push Bills Limiting Trans Student Rights as Federal Scrutiny Intensifies appeared first on News Facts Network.
Harman International, a Samsung subsidiary, announced it is acquiring Masimo's consumer audio division for $350 million in cash. "The deal is expected to finalized by the end of 2025, though it's still subject to regulatory approvals," notes Engadget. From the report: Samsung purchased Harman International back in 2017 for $8 billion, though it allowed the company to operate as an independent subsidiary. Harman's brands include JBL, Harman Kardon, AKG, Mark Levinson, Arcam and Revel. If and when the acquisition pushes through, Masimo's audio brands under Sound United will be added to the list, including Bowers & Wilkins, Denon, Marantz and Polk Audio. [...] As noted by The Verge, Samsung published a press release, where it briefly talked about the history of the brands it's acquiring. It mentioned some of Bowers & Wilkins' most iconic products, such as the Nautilus loudspeaker (pictured above) and its Zeppelin wireless speaker, as well as Denon's history as an early adopter of the CD player. Harman had a 60 percent market share in portable audio devices last year, and the company is looking to maintain that position with this purchase. Samsung also plans to apply the new brands' audio technologies to its smartphones, TVs, wireless earphones, soundbars and other devices in the future.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Three former Memphis police officers were acquitted Wednesday of all state charges, including second-degree murder,...
The post Three Former Memphis Officers Acquitted of All Charges in Tyre Nichols’ Death appeared first on News Facts Network.
The White House has withdrawn President Donald Trump‘s nomination of Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, a frequent...
The post Fox News Doctor Pulled as Surgeon General Nominee After Far-Right Pushback Over Vaccine Support appeared first on News Facts Network.
Looking for headphones or earbuds that are well-suited for gym use? These are my current favorites among dozens of sport-friendly models I've tested.
Actor Michael Pitt was arrested Friday at his home in Brooklyn on nine state counts. His lawyers deny the allegations.
The Crkd Neo S is a fun, little controller with a reasonable price -- and a few quirks.
Oscar-winning actor gives first interview to Variety since working with Trump on plan to shake up Hollywood
Jon Voight, the actor who inspired Donald Trump’s surprise statement about placing a 100% tariff on foreign-made films, has given his first interview on the supposed plan to “give people back their dignity and their jobs”.
“Something has to be done, and it’s way past time,” the 86-year-old actor told Variety while he was, according to the magazine, “driving through what sounded like a car wash”.
Continue reading...On, Wisconsin! Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, No. 227, for Thursday, May 8.
The glucose tracking won't work unless you purchase an accompanying $99 pack of biosensors.
Cardinal electors have withdrawn to pray, deliberate and cast votes in secret elections. The proceedingss are set to continue Thursday.
Trump says ‘it’s possible that’s right’ about the vice-president’s remarks amid frustrations with Russia
JD Vance has said that Russia is asking for “too much” in its negotiations with Ukraine in the latest sign of growing frustration from Washington with ceasefire talks to end the war between the two countries.
Speaking at a security conference of senior military and diplomatic leaders in Washington, the US vice-president said that the White House is focused on getting the two sides to hold direct talks and is ready to walk away if certain benchmarks are not reached.
Continue reading...According to Bloomberg, the Trump administration plans to revise a set of chip trade restrictions called the "AI diffusion" rule, which were scheduled to take effect on May 15. CNBC reports: The rule, which was proposed in the last days of the Biden administration, organizes countries into three different tiers, all of which have different restrictions on whether advanced AI chips like those made by Nvidia, AMD, and Intel can be shipped to the country without a license. Chipmakers including Nvidia and AMD have been against the rule. AMD CEO Lisa Su told CNBC on Wednesday that the U.S. should strike a balance between restricting access to chips for national security and providing access, which will boost the American chip industry. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said earlier this week that being locked out of the Chinese AI market would be a "tremendous loss."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Nearly four years ago in Texas, the state’s new abortion law started getting in the way of basic miscarriage care: As women waited in hospitals cramping, fluid running down their legs, doctors told them they couldn’t empty their uterus to guard against deadly complications.
The state banned most abortions, even in pregnancies that were no longer viable; then, it added criminal penalties, threatening to imprison doctors for life and punish hospitals. The law had one exception, for a life-threatening emergency.
Heeding the advice of hospital lawyers, many doctors withheld treatment until they could document patients were in peril. They sent tests to labs, praying for signs of infection, and watched as women lost so much blood that they needed transfusions.“You would see the pain in peoples’ eyes,” one doctor said of her patients.
Not every hospital tolerated this new normal, ProPublica found. A seismic split emerged in how medical institutions in the state’s two largest metro areas treated miscarrying patients — and in how these women fared.
Leaders of influential hospitals in Dallas empowered doctors to intervene before patients’ conditions worsened, allowing them to induce deliveries or perform procedures to empty the uterus.
In Houston, most did not.
The result, according to a first-of-its-kind ProPublica analysis of state hospital discharge data, is that while the rates of dangerous infections spiked across Texas after it banned abortion in 2021, women in Houston were far more likely to get gravely ill than those in Dallas.
As ProPublica reported earlier this year, the statewide rate of sepsis — a life-threatening reaction to infection — shot up more than 50% for women hospitalized when they lost a second-trimester pregnancy.
A new analysis zooms in: In the region surrounding Dallas-Fort Worth, it rose 29%. In the Houston area, it surged 63%.
After Texas Banned Abortion, the Sepsis Rate Spiked in Houston, but not Dallas Note: For hospitalizations at facilities in the Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth perinatal care regions involving a pregnancy loss between 13 weeks’ gestation and the end of the 21st week. Rates are annual. (Lucas Waldron/ProPublica)ProPublica has documented widespread differences in how hospitals across the country have translated abortion bans into policy. Some have supported doctors in treating active miscarriages and high-risk cases with procedures technically considered abortions; others have forbidden physicians from doing so, or left them on their own to decide, with no legal backing in case of arrest.
This marks the first analysis in the wake of abortion bans that connects disparities in hospital policies to patient outcomes. It shows that when a state law is unclear and punitive, how an institution interprets it can make all the difference for patients.
Yet the public has no way to know which hospitals or doctors will offer options during miscarriages. Hospitals in states where abortion is banned have been largely unwilling to disclose their protocols for handling common complications. When ProPublica asked, most in Texas declined to say.
ProPublica’s Texas reporting is based on interviews with 22 doctors in both the Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth metro areas who had insight into policies at 10 institutions covering more than 75% of the births and pregnancy-loss hospitalizations in those areas.
The findings come as evidence of the fatal consequences of abortion bans continue to mount, with a new report just last month showing that the risk of maternal mortality is nearly twice as high for women living in states that ban abortion. Last year, ProPublica documented five preventable maternal deaths, including three in Texas.
One second-trimester pregnancy complication that threatens patients’ lives is previable premature rupture of membranes, called PPROM, when a woman’s water breaks before the fetus can live on its own. Without amniotic fluid, the likelihood of the fetus surviving is low. But with every passing hour that a patient waits for treatment or for labor to start, the risk of sepsis increases.
The Texas Supreme Court has said that doctors can legally provide abortions in PPROM cases, even when an emergency is not imminent.
Yet legal departments at many major Houston hospitals still advise physicians not to perform abortions in these cases, doctors there told ProPublica, until they can document serious infection.
Dr. John Thoppil, the immediate past president of the Texas Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, said he was “blown away” by this finding. He said it’s time for hospitals to stop worrying about hypothetical legal consequences of the ban and start worrying more about the real threats to patients’ lives.
“I think you’re risking legal harm the opposite way for not intervening,” he said, “and putting somebody at risk.”
“We Have Your Back”In the summer of 2021, Dr. Robyn Horsager-Boehrer, a Dallas specialist in high-risk pregnancy, listened as hospital lawyers explained to a group of UT Southwestern Medical Center doctors that they would no longer be able to act on their clinical judgment.
Dr. Robyn Horsager-Boehrer, a retired maternal-fetal medicine specialist in Dallas (Lexi Parra for ProPublica)For decades, these UT Southwestern physicians had followed the guidance of major medical organizations: They offered patients with PPROM the option to end the pregnancy to protect against serious infection. But under the state’s new abortion ban, they would no longer be allowed to do so while practicing at the county’s safety net hospital, Parkland Memorial, which delivers more babies than almost any other in the country. Nor would they be permitted at UT Southwestern’s William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital.
Lawyers from the two hospitals explained in a meeting that the law’s only exception was for a “medical emergency” — but it wasn’t clear how the courts would define that. With no precedent or guidance from the state, they advised the doctors that they should offer to intervene only if they could document severe infection or bleeding — signs of a life-threatening condition, Horsager-Boehrer recalled. They would need to notify the state every time they terminated a pregnancy. ProPublica also spoke with six of Horsager-Boehrer’s colleagues who described similar meetings.
As the new policy kicked in, the doctors worried the lawyers didn’t understand how fast sepsis could develop and how difficult it could be to control. Many patients with PPROM can appear stable even while an infection is taking hold. During excruciating waits, Dr. Austin Dennard said she would tell patients at Clements, “We need something to be abnormal so that we can offer you all of the options that someone in New York would have.” Then she would return to the physicians’ lounge, lay down her head and cry.
Dr. Austin Dennard, an OB-GYN in Dallas (Lexi Parra for ProPublica)Their only hope, the doctors felt, was to collect data and build a case that the hospital’s policy needed to change.
Within eight months, 28 women with severe pregnancy complications before fetal viability had come through the doors of Parkland and Clements. Twenty-six of them were cases in which the patients’ water broke early. Analyzing the medical charts, a group of researchers led by Dr. Anjali Nambiar, a UT Southwestern OB-GYN, found that a dozen women experienced complications including hemorrhage and infection. Only one baby survived.
The research team compared the results with another study in which patients were offered pregnancy terminations. They found that of patients who followed the “watch and wait” protocol, more than half experienced serious complications, compared with 33% who immediately terminated their pregnancies.
Armed with the research, the doctors, including Horsager-Boehrer, returned to the lawyers for the two hospitals. Everyone agreed the data demanded action. Alongside physicians, the lawyers helped develop language that doctors could include in medical charts to explain why they terminated a pregnancy due to a PPROM diagnosis, Dennard said.
At Parkland, the new protocol required doctors to get signoff from one additional physician, attach the study as proof of the risk of serious bodily harm — part of the “medical emergency” definition in the law — and notify hospital leaders. At Clements, doctors also needed to get CEO approval to end a pregnancy, which could create delays if patients came in on a weekend, doctors said. But it was vastly better than the alternative, Dennard said. The message from the lawyers, she said, was: “We have your back. We are going to take care of you.”
A spokesperson for UT Southwestern said “no internal protocols delay care or otherwise compromise patient safety.” A spokesperson for Parkland said that “physicians are empowered to document care as they deem appropriate” and that hospital attorneys had “helped review and translate the doctors’ proposed language to make sure it followed the law.”
Parkland and UT Southwestern are not the only ones providing this care in Dallas. ProPublica spoke with doctors who have privileges at hospitals that oversee 60% of births and pregnancy loss hospitalizations in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, including Baylor Scott & White and Texas Health Resources. They said that their institutions support offering terminations to patients with high-risk second-trimester pregnancy complications like PPROM.
At Baylor Scott & White, doctors said, the leadership always stood by this interpretation of the law. (When asked, a spokesperson said miscarrying patients are counseled on surgical options, and that its hospitals follow state and federal laws. “Our policies are developed to comply with those laws, and we educate our teams on those policies.”)
Texas Health and other hospitals in the region did not respond to requests for comment.
While efforts to be proactive have meant more patients are able to receive the standard of care in Dallas, that is still not the case at every medical campus in the region. Doctors at Parkland said they have seen patients come to them after they were turned away from hospitals nearby.
In other parts of the state, however, it’s been impossible to know where to turn.
“No Interventions Can Be Performed”In Houston, one of America’s most prestigious medical hubs, Dr. Judy Levison mounted her own campaign.
The veteran OB-GYN at Baylor College of Medicine wanted hospital leaders to support intervening in high-risk complications in line with widely accepted medical standards. In 2022, she emailed her department chair, Dr. Michael Belfort, who is also the OB-GYN-in-chief at Texas Children’s. She told him colleagues had shared “feelings of helplessness, moral distress and increasing concerns about the safety of our patients.”
Dr. Judy Levison, a retired OB-GYN, at her home in Denver (Rachel Woolf for ProPublica)They needed training on how to protect patients within the bounds of the law, she said, and language they could include in charts to justify medically necessary abortions. But in a meeting, Belfort told her he couldn’t make these changes, Levison recalled.
He said that if he supported abortions in medically complicated cases like PPROM, the hospital could lose tens of millions of dollars from the state, she told ProPublica. “I came to realize that he was in a really difficult place because he risked losing funding for our residency program if Baylor and Texas Children’s didn't interpret the law the way they thought the governor did.” She wondered if he was deferring to hospital lawyers.
Belfort did not respond to requests for comment about his stance. Nor did Baylor or Texas Children’s.
Although Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has threatened hospitals with civil action if they allow a doctor to perform what he views as an “unlawful” abortion, he hasn’t filed any such actions. And in the years since the ban, there have been no reports of the state pulling funding from a hospital on account of its abortion policy.
A spokesperson at only one major Houston hospital chain, Houston Methodist, said that it considered PPROM a medical emergency and supported terminations for “the health and safety of the patient.”
Five other major hospital groups that, together, provide the vast majority of maternal care in the Houston region either continue to advise doctors not to offer pregnancy terminations for PPROM cases or leave it up to the physicians to decide, with no promise of legal support if they’re charged with a crime. This is according to interviews with a dozen doctors about the policies at HCA, Texas Children’s, Memorial Hermann, Harris Health and The University of Texas Medical Branch. Together, they account for about 8 in 10 hospitalizations in the region for births or pregnancy loss.
Most of the doctors spoke with ProPublica on the condition of anonymity, as they feared retaliation for violating what some described as a hospital “gag order” against discussing abortion. In a sign of how secretive this decision-making has become, most said their hospitals had not written down these new policies, only communicated them orally.
Several doctors told ProPublica that Dr. Sean Blackwell, chair of the obstetrics and gynecology department at Houston’s University of Texas Health Science Center, which staffs Harris Health Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital and Memorial Hermann hospitals, had conveyed a message similar to Belfort’s: He wasn’t sure he would be able to defend providers if they intervened in these cases. He did not respond to multiple requests for comment, and his institution, UTHealth Houston, declined to comment.
ProPublica reached out to officials at all five hospital groups, asking if they offer terminations at the point of a PPROM diagnosis. Only one responded. Bryan McLeod at Harris Health pointed to the hospital system’s written policy, which ProPublica reviewed, stating that an emergency doesn’t need to be imminent for a doctor to intervene. But McLeod did not respond to follow-up questions asking if patients with PPROM are offered pregnancy terminations if they show no signs of infection — and several doctors familiar with the chain’s practices said they are not.
The state Senate unanimously passed a bill last week to clarify that doctors can terminate pregnancies if a woman faces a risk of death that is not imminent. ProPublica asked the hospitals if they would change their policies on PPROM if this is signed into law. They did not respond.
Last fall, ProPublica reported that Josseli Barnica died in Houston after her doctors did not evacuate her uterus for 40 hours during an “inevitable” miscarriage, waiting until the fetal heartbeat stopped. Two days later, sepsis killed her.
Barnica was treated at HCA, the nation’s largest for-profit hospital chain, which did not respond to a detailed list of questions about her care. With 70% of its campuses in states where abortion is restricted, the company leaves the decision of whether to take the legal risk up to the physicians, without the explicit legal support provided in Dallas, according to a written policy viewed by ProPublica and interviews with doctors. A spokesperson for the chain said doctors with privileges at its hospitals are expected to exercise their independent medical judgment “within applicable laws and regulations.” As a result, patients with potentially life-threatening conditions have no way of knowing which HCA doctors will treat them and which won’t.
Brooklyn Leonard, a 29-year-old esthetician eager for her first child, learned this in February. She was 14 weeks pregnant when her water broke. At HCA Houston Healthcare Kingwood, her doctor Arielle Lofton wrote in her chart, “No interventions can be performed at this time legally because her fetus has a heartbeat.” The doctor added that she could only intervene when there was “concern for maternal mortality.” Leonard and her husband had trouble getting answers about whether she was miscarrying, she said. “I could feel that they were not going to do anything for me there.” Lofton and HCA did not respond to a request for comment.
Brooklyn Leonard was diagnosed with PPROM when she was 14 weeks pregnant in Houston. It took her five days to get care. (Lexi Parra for ProPublica)It was only after visits to three Houston hospitals over five days that Leonard was able to get a dilation and evacuation to empty her uterus. A doctor at Texas Children’s referred her to Dr. Damla Karsan, who works in private practice and is known for her part in an unsuccessful lawsuit against the state seeking permission to allow an abortion for a woman whose fetus was diagnosed with a fatal anomaly. Karsan felt there was no question PPROM cases fell under the law’s exception. She performed the procedure at The Woman’s Hospital of Texas, another HCA hospital. “She’s lucky she didn’t get sick,” Karsan said of Leonard.
Dr. Damla Karsan, an OB-GYN in Houston (Lexi Parra for ProPublica)Many Houston doctors said they have continued to call on their leadership to change their stance to proactively support patients with PPROM, pointing to data analyses from Dallas hospitals and ProPublica and referring to the Texas Supreme Court ruling. It hasn’t worked.
Houston hospitals haven’t taken action even in light of alarming research in their own city. Earlier this year, UTHealth Houston medical staff, including department chair Blackwell, revealed early findings from a study very similar to the one out of Dallas.
It showed what happened after patients at three partner hospitals stopped being offered terminations for PPROM under the ban: The rate of sepsis tripled.
Still, nothing changed.
How We Measured Sepsis RatesTo examine second-trimester pregnancy loss outcomes in Houston and Dallas, we used a methodology we developed to determine sepsis rates in inpatient hospitalizations where a pregnancy ended between 13 weeks’ gestation and the end of the 21st week. To assess regional differences, we grouped hospitals by perinatal care region and focused on the two regions with the highest population: Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth.
We grouped hospitalizations in the nine quarters after the implementation of the state’s six-week abortion ban (October 2021 through December 2023) and compared them with hospitalizations in the nine quarters immediately before. Each region had about 2,700 second-trimester pregnancy loss hospitalizations over the course of the time span we examined.
Sophie Chou contributed data reporting, and Mariam Elba contributed research.
Over the coming days, eyes will search for the billowing white smoke that signals Habemus Papam: “We have a pope.”
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M., May 7, 2025 — Laura McGill, Sandia National Laboratories’ new director, will meet with members of the media on Wednesday, May 14, to discuss her outlook for the nation’s premier engineering laboratory.
McGill, who recently became the 17th director in Sandia’s 75-year history, will share her vision for the national lab’s future and announce updated projections for Sandia’s construction-related spending in New Mexico over the next decade.
A limited number of one-on-one interviews with McGill will be available at the event. Media must request an individual interview by the RSVP deadline below. All attendees will have the opportunity to ask questions during a general Q&A session following McGill’s remarks.
About Sandia National Laboratories
Sandia National Laboratories is a multimission laboratory operated by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration. Sandia Labs has major research and development responsibilities in nuclear deterrence, global security, defense, energy technologies and economic competitiveness, with main facilities in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Livermore, California.
Source: Sandia National Laboratories
The post Sandia Labs’ New Director to Discuss Outlook and Future Economic Impact appeared first on HPCwire.
Canadians have long spent wintertime in Florida, trading in frigid temperatures for the Sunshine State’s sunny beaches and spending money on restaurants and hotels that cater to Canadian tourists.
But President Donald Trump’s rhetoric and actions targeting Canada has given some Canadians pause about spending money in the U.S. Trump has repeatedly said Canada should become the 51st U.S. state, called then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau "governor" and enacted substantial tariffs.
Canadians replied, excusez-moi?, and on April 28 elected Prime Minister Mark Carney’s liberal party. And according to a Florida congressman, many Canadians also ditched their Florida travel plans.
In a May 1 interview with Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a Democrat who represents parts of Broward and Palm Beach counties, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer said he had heard from Boca Raton, Florida, friends that many Canadians are not traveling to Florida because of Trump’s actions. Blitzer asked Moskowitz: "Have you noticed a drop in Canadian tourism to Florida?"
Moskowitz said, "It’s 80% less is what we’re seeing in the travel data."
When we asked Moskowitz’s team for comment, his spokesperson Christopher Bowman said Moskowitz referred to an April 2 report by WPTV, the NBC affiliate in West Palm Beach. The WPTV report said, "Airline reservations from Canada to Florida are down 76% this April compared to April 2024."
WPTV’s report cited OAG, an aviation firm. In a blog post, the firm said April bookings recorded in March for the entire U.S.-Canada market were down 75.7% compared with March 2024. It did not report Florida-specific numbers.
OAG said the nationwide drop "suggests that travellers are holding off on making reservations, likely due to ongoing uncertainty surrounding the broader trade dispute."
We found other sources of data pointing to a decline in Canadian visitors in Florida, but by much less than the 80% cited by Moskowitz.
In 2024, more Canadians traveled to Florida by air (2.1 million) than by other means (1.1 million), such as road travel, according to Visit Florida, the state’s tourism arm.
Statewide estimated visitor data for the first quarter of 2025 won’t be available until May 15, according to Visit Florida. In 2024, about 3.27 million Canadians visited Florida, representing about 2% of tourists to the state.
Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office said in April that in January and February, Florida saw a "0.5% increase in Canadian air visitation" compared with the same months in 2024.
Aviation firms and airports have said they’ve seen decreases.
OAG Chief Analyst John Grant told PolitiFact that in early March, there were 698,000 scheduled airline seats, or seats made available by airlines, between Canada and Florida from May to August. "That now stands at 628,000, so a reduction of 10%," he said. He noted that his firm’s data includes anyone booked on a flight between Canada and the U.S., so a traveler could be a connecting passenger from China travelling via Vancouver to Denver, for instance.
Courtney Miller, founder of aviation data firm Visual Approach Analytics, told PolitiFact that Canadian airline seats to Florida are down by 13% in May and 10% in June compared with the same periods in 2024.
"I have not seen any data that suggest 80%," Miller said. "We are seeing overall Canadian travel to the entire U.S. down no more than 25%."
A Visual Approach Analytics analysis showed that from January to March 27, two Florida airports — Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and Orlando International Airport — had the biggest decrease in monthly arrivals from Canadian airlines, at 20% and 12%, respectively.
Other Florida areas are also experiencing declines in travel. "Fort Myers and Palm Beach are down 30% and 43%, respectively, compared to April schedules as they existed on January 1, 2025," the analysis said.
A Miami International Airport spokesperson told PolitiFact that from Jan. 1 to April 23, the number of arriving passengers from Canada was down 5.9%.
National data for Canada-U.S. road travel also shows a drop.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shows about 4.1 million travelers arriving from the northern border in March 2025, compared with 4.9 million the same time last year — a 17.4% decrease. The data doesn’t specify whether the travelers entered the U.S. as tourists.
Richard Clavet, a longtime owner of Hollywood, Florida, motels and hotels, said his properties for years have attracted Canadians who gather at the pool or Friday night hot dog cookouts. Clavet told PolitiFact he saw a drop in Canadian visitors starting in February.
"A lot of them were blaming it on the political situation," said Clavet, who is originally from Quebec. "They were not happy with the way Trump was talking about their prime minister. They wanted to boycott the U.S. and make a statement so a lot of them canceled."
Clavet estimated that in recent months the number of Canadians staying in his properties was 50% less than last winter.
Usually, Canadians rush to book for the following year, but that hasn’t happened this year, Clavet said.
"They want a piece of the sun where it’s safe, the weather is great, that’s what I have been working on for so many years," Clavet said. "I really enjoyed dealing with Canadians; hopefully they will come back."
Moskowitz said Canadian tourism to Florida has declined by 80%.
His office pointed to information from a TV report, which cited information from aviation data firm OAG. The firm said April airline bookings recorded in March for the entire U.S.-Canada market were down 75.7% compared with 2024. It did not report Florida-specific numbers.
Other data sources confirm a drop in Canadian tourism to Florida, but by far less than the percentage cited by Moskowitz. For example, individual airports in Florida cited declines from 6% to 43% over a few months.
The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False.
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Campus community remembers retired Spanish professor who pioneered numerous study abroad programs
A new course exposes students to the sustainable world of insect cuisine
Amazon's new Vulcan robot uses physical AI to carefully stow and pick everything from socks to fragile electronics at fulfillment centers.
Kavan Markwood sustained injuries to several parts of his body, but has continued to progress positively.
Tension between the nuclear-armed nations is soaring. Pakistan's Shehbaz Sharif has vowed to retaliate after Indian strikes killed more than two dozen people.
The Federal Reserve is again leaving its benchmark interest rate at 4.25% to 4.5%, citing rising economic uncertainty.
Georgetown professor called to testify says Republican-led proceedings ‘an attempt to chill protected speech’
A congressional panel investigating antisemitism on US college campuses on Wednesday was accused of trying to chill constitutionally protected free speech and likened to a cold-war era committee notorious for wrecking the lives of people suspected of communist sympathies.
The comparison was made by David Cole, a professor at Georgetown University law centre, who told the House education and workforce committee that its proceedings resembled those staged by the House un-American Activities Committee (Huac) during and after the second world war.
Continue reading...Victim's mother says Dr. James Ryan noticed Sarah Harris years earlier in a toy store where she was dressed as Elsa from "Frozen."
The ruling is a setback to the Trump administration crackdown on international students involved in pro-Palestinian activism.
Men, who have been convicted of federal charges, found not guilty in death of Black man, 29, after he fled traffic stop
Three former Memphis officers were acquitted on Wednesday of state charges, including second-degree murder, in the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols after he ran away from a traffic stop in 2023.
A jury took about eight and a half hours over two days to find Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley and Justin Smith not guilty on all charges after a nine-day trial in state court in Memphis. After the jury’s verdict was read, the defendants hugged their lawyers as relatives of the former officers cried. One relative yelled: “Thank you, Jesus!”
Continue reading...The central bank doesn't set mortgage rates outright, but its policy decisions affect the housing market's longer-term outlook.
APYs are slipping so lock in a high one while you still can.
Cardinals will be back for more votes tomorrow with up to four rounds of voting
If you’d rather get up to date on the pomp and the politics of the conclave, the process to elect Pope Francis’s successor, good news: we’ve got you covered.
It is, as Guardian journalist Harriet Sherwood explains, an election rich in ceremony and ritual. Yet it can get very dirty too: cardinals lobbying in corridors and Vatican gardens; allegations of leaks to the media to discredit rivals; even the emergence of a video of one cardinal – a bookies’ favourite to be the next pope – singing ‘atheist anthem’ Imagine by John Lennon.
Continue reading...Eddy Cue, Apple's senior vice president of services, gave an ominous warning today that the iPhone could go the way of the iPod 10 years from now. From a report: Cue's remarks came during the Google Search antitrust remedies trial today while discussing how AI has the potential to reshape the tech industry and open the door to new entrants. Incumbents have a hard time ... we're not an oil company, we're not toothpaste -- these are things that are going to last forever ... you may not need an iPhone 10 years from now. Cue went on to say that the best thing Apple did was kill the iPod, a move he said was bold. "Why would you kill the golden goose," he added. That may seem like a silly thing for Apple to say, given that more than half of its revenue is iPhone sales. But Cue calls AI a "huge technological shift," and suggests that such shifts can humble companies that once seemed unassailable.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that Donald Trump’s ban on trans people serving in the military could be enforced while legal challenges against the policy continue.
The ban on trans service members — one of Trump’s early executive orders in a tidal wave of discriminatory directives — had been blocked by lower courts. U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes, one of the judges who previously ruled to block the ban in February, said the executive order showed “unadulterated animus” to “an entire group of people.” Anti-trans animus is all there is: The government has made no effort to show that trans service members have been detrimental to military objectives, discipline, and cohesion — because it’s a lie.
That lie didn’t stop the Supreme Court’s conservative majority form its ruling to permit the enforcement of the ban. And the consequences could reach far beyond this case itself.
That the enforced ban risks immediately upending the lives of over 4,200 people currently serving in the military with a recorded diagnosis of gender dysphoria — the metric by which the military tracks the number of trans troops — is a cause of great concern. They can now be discharged for their gender identity alone, even while the policy’s legality remains in question.
The order repeats an anti-trans myth: that there’s something dishonest and deceptive about being trans at all.
Then there is the risk that the military ban’s logic gets applied more widely — beyond the confines of an institution of imperial violence. For those of us who see little liberatory about trans-inclusion in the military, this broader application is terrifying.
If the sick premise of Trump’s executive order is accepted in a Supreme Court precedent, it would be a further threat to the already imperiled rights of trans and nonbinary people everywhere in the country.
At the heart of the executive order is the claim that being trans “conflicts with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle, even in one’s personal life.”
The language repeats a most pernicious anti-trans myth: that there’s something dishonest and deceptive about being trans at all.
Such profoundly discriminatory and false assumptions have long had purchase in U.S. courtrooms through the so-called gay and trans “panic” defense. This line of argumentation, as the American Bar Association notes, permits defendants to bolster diminished capacity defenses and “seek to partially or completely excuse crimes such as murder and assault on the grounds that the victim’s sexual orientation or gender identity is to blame for the defendant’s violent reaction.” It is rooted in the very same cis-supremacist presumption that undergirds Trump’s executive order.
In the 30-plus states where this defense is still allowed, gender nonconformity can therefore be framed as not only deceitful, but also a deception for which violence is seen as an understandable response.
Reyes, the federal judge, said that Trump’s military ban calls “an entire group of people lying, dishonest people, who are undisciplined, immodest and have no integrity.” She demanded of the government’s lawyer at the time; “How is that anything other than showing animus?”
“I don’t have an answer for you,” the Justice Department attorney, Jason Lynch, replied.
“You do have an answer,” said Reyes. “You just don’t want to give it.”
The Supreme Court’s decision did not stay Reyes’s injunction; it was already stayed by a D.C. District Court. The Tuesday high court ruling overturns another block on the ban: a nationwide injunction issued by a federal District Court in Washington state, which was upheld by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
The case, brought by seven active service members and another person who planned to enlist, now returns to the 9th Circuit for review. The Supreme Court did not offer any reasoning for its decision, which is technically temporary, given that the legal fight is ongoing. It was only noted that the three liberal justices —Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson — dissented.
“By the time the Ninth Circuit, and ultimately the Supreme Court, issues a final ruling, the damage will already have been done,” wrote trans journalist and advocate Erin Reed. “Service members will have been removed not for misconduct or performance, but solely for being transgender.”
Reed noted that “the Court’s willingness to greenlight these separations now offers a sobering preview of where it likely stands on the constitutional rights of transgender people — and the likely outcome of the case.”
The Supreme Court’s right-wing justices have already given us reasons for concern about an upcoming ruling that could determine the fate of trans youth health care in the country. In oral arguments last year for United States v. Skrmetti — the case challenging Tennessee’s draconian blanket ban on gender-affirming medical care for trans youth — conservative justices parroted bunk, unscientific claims pushed by the anti-trans lobby, claims that go against the views of every major American pediatric medical association.
Now, this same court has ruled that an order premised on the lie that transness is per se dishonest passes muster enough to be put into effect. A decision in Skrmetti is expected to be issued in June.
If Trump’s trans military ban does not count to the Supreme Court as screamingly unconstitutional and discriminatory, it is hard to imagine any anti-trans legislation that the conservative super majority would not uphold.
The post The Supreme Court Just Imperiled the Rights — and Lives — of All Trans People appeared first on The Intercept.
Rumors of a handheld gaming device made by Asus in collaboration with Xbox got a shot in the arm after an alleged prototype surfaced in leaked photos.
Get ready to return to Vice City in May 2026, when Grand Theft Auto 6 is slated to be released.
The Vatican is streaming live views of St. Peter's Square on its YouTube channel, NBC offers a "smoke cam" and CNN created a 3D visualization.
The personal data of 76 million US customers was exposed during a cyberattack in 2021. The settlement payout has been pushed back.
Not all debt can be wiped away. Here's what qualifies for forgiveness and what you're still on the hook to pay.
The Fed's latest decision is good news for savers. Here's how to take advantage of it.
Exposure to small particulate matter from fires contributes to thousands of annual deaths in US, according to study
Wildfires driven by the climate crisis contribute to as many as thousands of annual deaths and billions of dollars in economic costs from wildfire smoke in the United States, according to a new study.
The paper, published on Friday in the journal Nature Communications Earth & Environment, found that from 2006 to 2020, the climate crisis contributed to about 15,000 deaths from exposure to small particulate matter from wildfires and cost about $160bn. The annual range of deaths was 130 to 5,100, the study showed, with the highest in states such as Oregon and California.
Continue reading...Wondering what's in our carry-on bags? These are the products we use to stay well on the go. Plus, expert tips for keeping your immune system strong as you travel.
Cardinals begin locked-in selection process amid throng of pilgrims and peaceful protest for women’s rights in church
Plumes of black smoke have emerged from the chimney on top of the Sistine Chapel, signalling that the 133 cardinals sealed off inside have failed to elect a new pope on the first day of conclave.
After the formal procession to the Sistine Chapel and each of the cardinals swearing the oath to secrecy, the first voting round only got under way at about 5.45pm local time. Then all eyes were on the famous chimney, which was diligently guarded by a seagull for some of the time the cardinals were voting.
Continue reading...Take advantage of the Fed's latest rate decision by doing these things now.
President Donald Trump said Wednesday he will not reduce the 145% tariff rate on China,...
The post Trump Refuses to Lower China Tariffs Despite Beijing’s Request for Talks appeared first on News Facts Network.
As interest rate cuts look more and more likely for later this year, should savers renew their maturing CD account?
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Broadcom has been sending cease-and-desist letters to owners of VMware perpetual licenses with expired support contracts, Ars Technica has confirmed. Following its November 2023 acquisition of VMware, Broadcom ended VMware perpetual license sales. Users with perpetual licenses can still use the software they bought, but they are unable to renew support services unless they had a pre-existing contract enabling them to do so. The controversial move aims to push VMware users to buy subscriptions to VMware products bundled such that associated costs have increased by 300 percent or, in some cases, more. Some customers have opted to continue using VMware unsupported, often as they research alternatives, such as VMware rivals or devirtualization. Over the past weeks, some users running VMware unsupported have reported receiving cease-and-desist letters from Broadcom informing them that their contract with VMware and, thus, their right to receive support services, has expired. The letter [PDF], reviewed by Ars Technica and signed by Broadcom managing director Michael Brown, tells users that they are to stop using any maintenance releases/updates, minor releases, major releases/upgrades extensions, enhancements, patches, bug fixes, or security patches, save for zero-day security patches, issued since their support contract ended. The letter tells users that the implementation of any such updates "past the Expiration Date must be immediately removed/deinstalled," adding: "Any such use of Support past the Expiration Date constitutes a material breach of the Agreement with VMware and an infringement of VMware's intellectual property rights, potentially resulting in claims for enhanced damages and attorneys' fees." [...] The cease-and-desist letters also tell recipients that they could be subject to auditing: "Failure to comply with [post-expiration reporting] requirements may result in a breach of the Agreement by Customer[,] and VMware may exercise its right to audit Customer as well as any other available contractual or legal remedy."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Senior negotiators hope to get agreement with US signed ahead of UK-EU summit on 19 May
A team of senior British trade negotiators has landed in Washington as talks over a deal between the two countries gather pace.
Officials from the business and trade department are in the US for much of this week, attempting to get an agreement signed before the planned UK-EU summit on 19 May.
Continue reading...Eight US senators ask Shari Redstone not to settle to end president’s ‘bogus’ $20bn lawsuit over 2024 Harris interview
The senator Bernie Sanders and his Democratic colleagues are urging Paramount Global not to settle Donald Trump’s $20bn lawsuit against 60 Minutes, saying such a decision would “capitulate to this dangerous move to authoritarianism”.
In a letter co-signed by eight senators, Sanders urged controlling shareholder Shari Redstone and Paramount Global’s board to reconsider settling with Trump for as much as $75m to end his lawsuit against CBS News over its editing of last year’s 60 Minutes interview with Kamala Harris.
Continue reading...Cynthia Diekema and husband were paddling in mouth of river when startled animal thrashed and capsized canoe
An alligator killed a Florida woman after tipping over a canoe she and her husband were paddling, in what investigators say appeared to be an accidental encounter.
The attack happened on Tuesday afternoon near the mouth of Tiger Creek into Lake Kissimmee, south of Orlando, the Florida fish and wildlife conservation commission (FWC) said. It is near the location of a March alligator attack in which a woman was bitten on the elbow while kayaking.
Continue reading...A federal appellate panel will hear arguments on where and whether Mohsen Mahdawi and Rumesya Ozturk should be detained as cases challenging their confinements proceed.
Central bank says ‘uncertainty has increased’ as it opts to maintain benchmark interest rate for third time in a row
The Federal Reserve kept interest rates on hold and called out growing dangers in the US economy amid Donald Trump’s erratic rollout of an aggressive trade strategy.
Jerome Powell, the US central bank’s chair, cautioned that the president’s tariffs were likely to raise prices, weaken growth and increase unemployment if maintained.
Continue reading...Row over exemption of national insurance contributions for Indian short-term workers overshadows deal
A multibillion-pound free trade agreement with India has long been touted as a big Brexit boon.
Cheaper clothes and shoes for British shoppers, a huge market for scotch whisky producers and luxury carmakers, and billions of pounds worth of extra trade are among the benefits of the agreement, which was finalised this week.
Continue reading...Locals welcome plan but fear being pushed out of homes by theme park
When it was announced that Universal Pictures, one of the largest movie studios in the world, was opening its first theme park in Bedfordshire, fans were ecstatic.
Social media was filled with questions: Which film franchises will appear? How many rides would there be? Will there be a section dedicated to the Minions?
Continue reading...Ford Motor cites higher U.S. tariffs as one reason why the automaker is raising prices for three of its cars.
With HELOC rates falling, homeowners considering a $100,000 HELOC should keep these three items in mind now.
With the Fed keeping rates paused, here's how to determine if a HELOC or home equity loan is better for homeowners.
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Telecom failure resulted in ‘most dangerous situation you could have’ and hundreds of delays
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said on Wednesday that it was taking immediate steps to address ongoing problems that have disrupted hundreds of flights at Newark Liberty international airport, one of the US’s busiest hubs, which serves New York City and the surrounding region.
The FAA said it was increasing air traffic controller staffing, adding three new high-bandwidth telecommunications connections and deploying a temporary backup system to the Philadelphia Terminal Radar Approach Control, which is handling Newark traffic during the switch to a more reliable fiber-optic network.
Continue reading...Tariffs are threatening higher inflation, and a wave of uncertainty is sweeping markets.
SANTA CLARA, Calif., May 7, 2025 — At its annual flagship user event, CadenceLIVE Silicon Valley 2025, Cadence today announced a major expansion of its Cadence Millennium Enterprise Platform with the introduction of the new Millennium M2000 Supercomputer featuring NVIDIA Blackwell systems, which delivers AI-accelerated simulation at unprecedented speed and scale across engineering and drug design workloads.
The new supercomputer integrates Cadence’s industry-leading solvers with NVIDIA HGX B200 systems, NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs and NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries and solver software. This powerful combination delivers dramatic reductions in simulation run times and up to 80X higher performance versus CPU-based systems for electronic design automation (EDA), system design and analysis (SDA), and drug discovery applications. The supercomputer provides a tightly co-optimized hardware-software stack that enables breakthrough performance with up to 20X lower power across multiple disciplines, accelerating the build-out of AI infrastructure, advancing physical AI machine design and pushing the frontiers of drug design.
“The Millennium M2000 Supercomputer will drive the next leap in AI-accelerated engineering by leveraging our massively scalable solvers, dedicated NVIDIA Blackwell-accelerated computing and AI to help designers continue to push the limits of what is possible,” said Anirudh Devgan, president and CEO of Cadence. “Purpose-built for the most advanced AI models of today and tomorrow, the Millennium M2000 Supercomputer delivers unprecedented designer productivity to propel the next generation of AI infrastructure, physical AI systems and drug discovery.”
“From biology to chip design, the world’s most complex engineering challenges require simulation at scales and speeds only possible with accelerated computing,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Built with NVIDIA Blackwell, CUDA-X and Cadence’s computational software, the Millennium M2000 Supercomputer is a new class of infrastructure: an AI factory for science to drive breakthroughs that will transform discovery across disciplines.”
The next generation of infrastructure AI, physical AI and sciences AI requires sophisticated computational capability in data centers and edge devices. Building upon the success of the Millennium M1 Supercomputer, which delivers breakthrough performance and energy efficiency for high-fidelity computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, the Millennium M2000 Supercomputer harnesses Cadence’s broad array of EDA, SDA and molecular software solvers to perform massive simulations that were previously impossible, transforming approaches to semiconductor and 3D-IC design, data center digital twins, drug discovery modeling and other engineering challenges across the hyperscale computing, automotive, data center, and aerospace and defense markets.
Advancing Semiconductors and 3D-IC Design
The industry’s first purpose-built emulator for AI design, the Millennium M2000 Supercomputer combines all the multiphysics capabilities needed to analyze and optimize 3D-IC and advanced packaging designs, including power, thermal, stress/warpage and electromagnetics. This enables superior quality in a fraction of the time, ensuring engineering teams can achieve greater reliability and efficiency in their product development cycles. For example, traditional semiconductor chip-level power integrity simulations are limited to small windows of time. Customers can now deliver simulations in less than a day with one Millennium M2000 Supercomputer that previously would have taken hundreds of CPUs almost two weeks.
Accelerating Autonomous System Design
The AI infrastructure buildout requires a significant investment in data centers and compute infrastructure. Doing this in an energy- and resource-efficient manner is critical to delivering the next generation of foundation models from AI factories. Digital twins improve operational efficiencies, reduce risk and lower total power consumption. The Millennium M2000 Supercomputer accelerates the design and operation of these data center digital twins and the modeling process required for the racks, boards and equipment that power them.
The Millennium M2000 Supercomputer also enables high-accuracy and high-capacity virtual simulations of machines that will embody AI outside of data centers, such as autonomous transportation, drones and robotics. To design these systems effectively, the combination of accelerated compute and computational software unlocks improved designs in a shorter time by delivering virtual wind tunnels that can precisely simulate real-world conditions. Designers of electronic and mechatronic systems can now make crucial decisions in less than a day versus multiple days, saving both time and energy compared to using a CPU-based Top 500 supercomputer cluster with hundreds of thousands of processors.
Advancing Life Science Innovation
Cadence Molecular Sciences accelerates drug discovery by enabling pharmaceutical customers to perform more simulations in less time with the Millennium M2000 Supercomputer. Cadence’s Orion Molecular Design Platform on Cadence OnCloud, available on the Millennium M2000 Supercomputer, equips researchers with unmatched computational power to speed up the discovery of potential drug candidates and enhance process scalability. As a result, customers can explore more design scenarios and iterations within tighter deadlines, leading to faster innovation and improved product development.
Availability and Customer Endorsements
The Millennium M2000 Supercomputer is available both in the cloud and as an on-premises appliance. Multiple customers have provided endorsements, including Ascendance, Boom Supersonic, MediaTek, Supermicro and Treeline Biosciences, which can be viewed in the quote sheet.
About Cadence
Cadence (Nasdaq: CDNS) is a market leader in AI and digital twins, pioneering the application of computational software to accelerate innovation in the engineering design of silicon to systems. Our design solutions, based on Cadence’s Intelligent System Design strategy, are essential for the world’s leading semiconductor and systems companies to build their next-generation products from chips to full electromechanical systems that serve a wide range of markets, including hyperscale computing, mobile communications, automotive, aerospace, industrial, drug design and robotics. In 2024, Cadence was recognized by the Wall Street Journal as one of the world’s top 100 best-managed companies.
Source: Cadence
The post Cadence Launches Millennium M2000 Supercomputer with NVIDIA Blackwell for AI-Driven Simulation appeared first on HPCwire.
Looking for earbuds that keep you connected to your surroundings while still delivering great sound? These open-design true-wireless picks from CNET do just that.
Going to Vice City this time will not be cheap.
In face of ‘economic doom loop’, Labour factions call for reset and demand party tackle populist nationalism head on
Labour MPs have ramped up pressure on the Treasury, calling for an economic reset after the Reform UK surge in the local elections and saying that the economy is stuck in a “doom loop”.
The warning comes from the influential Labour Growth Group (LGG), a large caucus of loyalist new MPs who have lobbied the government to go further on planning and energy reforms. Its chair said that, without drastic action, the Reform UK leader Nigel Farage was on course to become prime minister.
Continue reading...Each year, the CDC usually hires a new class of Epidemic Intelligence Service officers, known as disease detectives.
Study also found 54% of adult Americans said the relationship between police and Black people was about the same since George Floyd’s death
This 25 May marks the fifth anniversary of the police killing of George Floyd, a Black man in Minneapolis, Minnesota, whose murder sparked international protests against police brutality and racism.
A new study by the Pew Institute examines the beliefs of American adults regarding race and racial issues five years after Floyd’s death.
Continue reading...The curl open source project is fighting against a flood of AI-generated false security reports. Daniel Stenberg, curl's original author and lead developer, declared on LinkedIn that they are "effectively being DDoSed" by these submissions. "We still have not seen a single valid security report done with AI help," Stenberg wrote. This week alone, four AI-generated vulnerability reports arrived seeking reputation or bounties, ArsTechnica writes. One particularly frustrating May 4 report claiming "stream dependency cycles in the HTTP/3 protocol stack" pushed Stenberg "over the limit." The submission referenced non-existent functions and failed to apply to current versions. Some AI reports are comically obvious. One accidentally included its prompt instruction: "and make it sound alarming." Stenberg has asked HackerOne, which manages vulnerability reporting, for "more tools to strike down this behavior." He plans to ban reporters whose submissions are deemed "AI slop."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Golden State Warriors are planning to play without Stephen Curry for at least the next three games of their playoff series against Minnesota, after an MRI exam on Wednesday confirmed the guard has a strained hamstring.
The Warriors said the 37-year-old will be sidelined at least a week after he picked up the injury during Tuesday night’s Game 1 victory over the Timberwolves. When he left the court, he had 13 points in 13 minutes to help Golden State build a comfortable lead and take home-court advantage away from the Timberwolves.
Continue reading...Vietti Food Group is voluntarily recalling some canned baked beans for undeclared soy on the label that could people with a soy allergy at risk, the FDA said.
Support your gut without a supplement with these probiotic-rich foods.
Homebuyers shouldn't expect much interest rate relief in the coming months.
Depending on which AI is default, it could be a major blow to Google.
All-out war is unlikely but shifting of goalposts amid Gaza and Ukraine conflicts suggests Kashmir crisis could escalate
India’s string of attacks on Pakistan overnight – a response, Delhi says, to the killing of 26 in a terror attack in Kashmir last month – comes at a time when warfare has become increasingly normalised internationally and the restraints of the global diplomatic system weakened.
Though flare-ups between the two south Asian powers are nothing new, India’s Operation Sindoor is already notably more aggressive than recent military actions launched by Delhi against its neighbour in 2016 and 2019, raising the stakes for Pakistan’s promised response to what it says was “an act of war”.
Continue reading...The openSUSE team has decided to remove the Deepin Desktop Environment from openSUSE, after the project’s packager for openSUSE was found to have added workaround specifically to bypass various security requirements openSUSE has in place for RPM packages.
Recently we noticed a policy violation in the packaging of the Deepin desktop environment in openSUSE. To get around security review requirements, our Deepin community packager implemented a workaround which bypasses the regular RPM packaging mechanisms to install restricted assets.
As a result of this violation, and in the light of the difficult history we have with Deepin code reviews, we will be removing the Deepin Desktop packages from openSUSE distributions for the time being.
↫ Matthias Gerstner
Matthias Gerstner goes into great detail to lay out every single time the openSUSE team found massive, glaring security issues in Deepin, and the complete lack of adequate responses from the Deepin upstream team over the past 8 or so years. It’s absolutely shocking to see how utterly lax the Deepin developers have been regarding the security of their desktop environment and its dependencies, and the openSUSE team could really only come to one harsh conclusion: Deepin has no security culture whatsoever, and it’s extremely likely that every corner of the Deepin code is riddled with very serious security issues.
As such, despite the relatively large number of Deepin users on openSUSE, the team has decided to remove Deepin from openSUSE entirely, instead pointing users to a third-party repository if they desire to keep using Deepin. I think this is the best possible option in this situation, but it’s not exactly ideal. After reading this entire saga, however, I don’t think anyone who cares about security should be using Deepin.
Of course, I doubt this will be the end of the story. What about all the other Linux distributions out there? The security issues in Deepin itself are most likely also present in Debian, Fedora, and other distributions who have the Deepin Desktop Environment in their repositories, but what about the workaround to bypass packaging security practices? Does that exist elsewhere as well?
I think we’re about to find out.
Federal judges in New York and Colorado ruled against President Trump's administration over his invoking of the Alien Enemies Act.
NASA Plus is now on Prime Video and will include, among other cosmic content, livestreams of major space launches.
Counterpoint's latest report shows an ongoing dropoff in Apple Watch interest -- and that's before taking tariffs into account.
Data storage firm Seagate is working to develop a 100-terabyte hard drive by 2030, touting blistering demand from data centers for the 70-year-old technology in the artificial intelligence boom. From a report: BS Teh, Seagate's chief commercial officer, told CNBC that the company is aiming to launch such a drive -- which would have about three times the capacity of the firm's top-of-the-line hard drives -- by 2030. The largest hard disk drive Seagate currently produces is the 36-terabyte Exos M model, which it launched in January. "You may be thinking, 'Who would need it?'" Teh said, referring to the idea of a 100-terabyte hard drive. "Well, plenty." He added: "I think there's definitely strong demand. This is a key enabler for the industry to be able to deliver the storage capacity that the market needs, because there's no other technology that's able to produce this capacity of storage technology to meet the growth that the market needs."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Fears raised of escalating conflict after Pakistan accused India of ‘igniting an inferno’ in Kashmir and Punjab
Pakistan has warned that it will “avenge” the death of 31 people killed in overnight missile attacks by the Indian air force, raising fears of an escalating conflict between the two nuclear-armed countries.
In a late night address to the nation late on Wednesday, Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, said: “We make this pledge, that we will avenge each drop of the blood of these martyrs.”
Continue reading...Homeland security secretary says people without ID yet can take domestic flights after additional identity checks
Most airports around the United States operated smoothly Wednesday as new Real ID requirements took effect because travelers without the updated document were still allowed to move through security easily.
Those without the IDs were given flyers informing them that going forward they would need to present Real ID or other federally accepted ID for air travel within the US.
Continue reading...Top CDs pay rates more than three times the national average for some terms.
What’s new in AI – from effects on job market to Meta’s new app and ChatGPT changes – and a look at Musk’s first term
Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, and this week in tech news: Trump’s tariffs hit tech companies that move physical goods more than their digital-only counterparts. Two stories about AI’s effect on the labor market paint a murky picture. Meta released a standalone AI app, a product it claims already has a billion users through enforced omnipresence. OpenAI dialed back an obsequious version of ChatGPT. And we look back at Elon Musk’s first term.
Continue reading...At its most basic level, Head Start provides free childcare – but it also creates jobs and can even have generational benefits
Tanya Stanton felt a sense of relief when she heard last week that the Trump administration seems to have reversed course on eliminating the Head Start early education program. She directs early learning programs at You Thrive, a Florida nonprofit that provides Head Start services to approximately 1,100 children in the central part of the state.
On Friday, the Trump administration released an updated “skinny budget,” which lays out the executive office’s discretionary spending priorities. It doesn’t contain a proposal to shut down Head Start, as mentioned in an administration memo obtained by the Associated Press in April. And that means thousands of families can breathe easier; the program served 833,000 low-income students nationwide in fiscal year 2022.
Continue reading...Former President Joe Biden gave his first interview to BBC News since leaving office in January.
As a survivor of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, it breaks me to watch my people struggle to find something to fill their stomachs.
Israel’s deliberate policy of starvation continues to tighten its grip on the enclave. Humanitarian organizations have sounded the alarm, warning that Gaza is on the verge of full-scale famine.
Since Israel shattered the ceasefire on March 18 and sealed its blockade, 2.1 million Palestinians in Gaza have been cut off from essential food and aid. As the World Food Programme and UNRWA have recently announced that their stocks of flour and food are depleted, the risk of widespread starvation grows with each passing day.
I lived through the first wave of starvation in Gaza in the early months of 2024, a time when Israeli-imposed aid restrictions drove hunger to catastrophic levels. Everyone across the Strip experienced severe food shortages, with empty plates becoming a daily scene. I was forced to leave Gaza alone in February 2024 and flee to Egypt, after nearly five months of relentless bombardment and siege. At the height of the famine, I lost 16 kilograms.
Since then, I have devoted myself to fighting against Israeli propaganda, narratives that distort the truth, downplay Palestinian suffering, and mock the agony Gazans endure.
While I investigate Israeli disinformation, I carry the emotional weight of seeing the pain of my family still trapped in Gaza. Like nearly every household there, my family is running out of food and flour. Each video call painfully reveals their shrinking bodies, thinned by hunger.
A study conducted in late December 2024 found that the average person in Gaza has lost around 18 kilograms due to severe food insecurity during the war. The situation has only worsened since.
The Israeli blockade that began on March 2 has driven food prices beyond reach. My father told me last week that a 25-kilogram bag of flour now costs around 200 U.S. dollars. This week, the price has climbed to $470.
I have seen videos of families grinding pasta and lentils to make makeshift bread for their starving children after running out of flour. For many, lentil bread is not a choice but a last resort under a starvation diet imposed by the Israeli occupation.
After my family returned to our bombed-out home in the northern Gaza Strip in January of this year, my brother Fahmy built a makeshift oven fueled by firewood to bake bread for our family and neighbors. With all major bakeries shut down due to the flour shortage, his small act of resistance became a vital lifeline.
Fahmy has been baking for over a month, helping those around him. He told me last week, “Fewer people come because flour is no longer available. Those who still do often bring bug-infested flour, the only thing they have left to feed their children.”
With food increasingly scarce in Gaza, much of the population now depends on tekias — community kitchens — for a single daily meal. These tekias, often limited to serving plain lentils, pasta, or rice, have had to reduce portions due to Israel’s blockade on food and cooking gas.
Amjad Al-Shawa, director of the Palestinian Non-Governmental Organizations Network, has warned that many tekias are on the brink of shutting down as food supplies dwindle.
I watch daily footage of people queuing and stampeding, and children crying, to receive a small meal. These heartbreaking scenes are undeniable evidence of Israel’s weaponization of starvation.
Even these few vital tekias have not been spared from Israeli attacks. Gaza’s Government Media Office reported that the Israeli military has targeted and bombed 29 tekias since the war began.
Many Palestinians in Gaza have been forced to eat any animal they can find to get some protein. Shocking videos, verified by myself and my colleagues in the press, show people consuming sea turtles, horses, and even hedgehogs to survive.
A story that deeply moved me was that of a child, Omar Qannan, who said he had eaten turtle meat despite his love for Raphael, the superhero from “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.”
It is devastating to imagine how Omar will ever watch his favorite cartoon character again without remembering that hunger once forced him to eat an animal he saw as a heroic friend.
Israeli trolls have waged an intensive hasbara, or propaganda, campaign to deny the famine ravaging Gaza, even at its peak in February 2024. These denials persist, despite repeated warnings from international organizations that Gaza is edging closer to famine and the evidence in front of our eyes.
On April 20, an X user, notorious for spreading Israeli propaganda, posted a video of a man sitting by the beach in Gaza, alleging he was enjoying a “large kebab meal” during the crisis. The user intentionally skipped the fact that the man was eating horse meat.
Another post stunned me: It came from “Gazawood,” a systematic campaign aiming to mock, discredit, and deny Palestinian suffering. The video showed a woman in Gaza grinding pasta to bake bread for her children. The Israeli propagandist accused the woman of staging her story for the camera instead of trying to feed her starving family.
On May 12, 2024, I debunked a viral video intending to discredit the case of Fadi al-Zant, a child from Gaza who was suffering from malnutrition before fleeing the Strip for urgent medical treatment.
Trolls cruelly accused his mother of deliberately starving him to stage a “Pallywood” scene. Some atrocity denials weaponized her appearance to cast doubt on her child’s suffering.
These malicious insinuations ignore the basic truth that children are especially vulnerable during famine. Their bodies weaken more rapidly and face a significantly higher risk of death in hunger crises, as stated by the International Rescue Committee.
The United Nations reported nearly 3,700 children were diagnosed with severe malnutrition last month alone, an 82 percent rise since February.
Recent videos of severely malnourished children, like baby Siwar Ashour and 12-year-old Rahaf Ayad, continue to haunt me.
Without urgent medical evacuation, these children may not survive. Without immediate and sustained delivery of food and aid, more children will fall victim to hunger and face the lifelong health consequences of starvation.
Israeli officials are lying to our faces. On July 24, 2024, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stood before the U.S. Congress and refuted Israel’s role in obstructing humanitarian aid to Gaza. Despite being riddled with misleading claims, his speech drew applause from U.S. lawmakers who chose to overlook the catastrophic humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza.
I have tracked several organizations affiliated with the Israeli government that have actively spread fake news and hate speech during the war.
Among them is HonestReporting, a hasbara group claiming to be a media watchdog exposing anti-Israel bias.
The group worked to deny the famine in Gaza and undermine the credibility of independent experts. It dismissed the findings of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification report, which warned that famine in Gaza was imminent by mid-March 2024. Rather than presenting the evidence, HonestReporting relied on cherry-picked evidence to discredit the report’s conclusions.
Israeli extremist officials have consistently denied the existence of famine among Palestinians in Gaza, while simultaneously pushing for harsher measures to block food and aid from reaching the besieged population.
Although international organizations have repeatedly warned about the imminent threat of famine, these officials have not stopped inciting hate speech and ignoring the suffering of Gaza’s population.
Israeli officials frame starvation and the blockade as strategic necessities.
Using soft language, Israeli officials frame starvation and the blockade as strategic necessities. On April 16, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz stated, “No humanitarian aid to enter Gaza,” to pressure ceasefire negotiations.
Around the same time, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said, “Not a single grain of wheat will enter Gaza.”
National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir went even further, recently calling for the Israeli forces to bomb food storage facilities in Gaza.
Starvation in Gaza has become yet another tool of death employed by Israel: its slowest and most agonizing weapon. It does not come with the sound of explosions; it silently erodes life day by day, further deepening an already dire humanitarian crisis.
Exhausted by the news and disillusioned by the endless cycle of broken ceasefire promises, my family in Gaza now turns to me for updates.
My role has shifted to one of constant reassurance. I tell them what they want to hear — that the border crossings will soon open and hundreds of trucks carrying vital supplies, including food and flour, are on their way. Yet, deep down, I know that the situation remains grim. Each day without aid arriving in Gaza pushes more families to the brink of death.
The post Famine Haunts the People of Gaza. Israel Is Trying to Convince You It’s Fake. appeared first on The Intercept.
Veterans on Patrol, which spread conspiracy theories in the wake of Hurricane Helene, has encouraged followers to visit sites hosting weather equipment.
One of mine went missing on a LONG night ride. I refuse to pay FM for ANOTHER one. So now I'm going to CAD them up and print my own. I was just wondering if anyone has a model handy?
KEL MARQUEZ
Staff Writer
“NISSAN ALTIMA” was my first introduction to the jack of all trades, Doechii. I was on the treadmill doing my go-to exercise at the gym while playing my workout playlist on Spotify. This time, I decided to spice things up by using Smart Shuffle so that Spotify would mix in recommendations based on my existing playlist. “Wake up, A-cup, get your t— sucked” were the first lyrics blasting through my headphones; and Doechii, you did wake me up.
After our first encounter, I dove into the Doechii universe. Her 2025 Grammy-nominated Rap Album of the Year, “Alligator Bites Never Heal,” took its bite, and there was no escaping for me. My favorite songs off this album are “NISSAN ALTIMA,” “BOOM BAP,” “BEVERLY HILLS” and “DENIAL IS A RIVER.”
Along with her own music, Doechii has some great features on other songs, including “Xtasy (Remix)” by Ravyn Lenae and “Balloon” by Tyler, The Creator. Not only does she write perfect bars delivered in her addictive style, but she also has a beautiful singing voice she flaunts in her discography.
Doechii knows how to write gorgeous music, bringing each song to life through her performances. I’ve never been to a Doechii concert, but I’ve seen footage of her performing some of my favorite songs. Simply watching her through a screen transports me into her live audience.
Doechii’s “Crazy” performance at The BET Awards in 2022 is just one instance of the embodiment of her music and what she is capable of. If you haven’t heard this song before, it’s so powerful and chaotic in the best way possible. She had no trouble matching the spirit of this track on stage as she commanded her performance with ease.
Another amazing performance she gave was at the Camp Flog Gnaw Music Festival in 2024. For the most part, she was alone on stage, except for the company of her DJ and SZA’s surprise appearance for “Persuasive.” For the entire set, she kept the energy above the bar, never having a weak moment.
Aside from her artistry, there are even more aspects to Doechii.
“LA ROSA DE DOECHII,” which altered my brain chemistry for the better, showcases her comedic side. This parody, filmed with her team, takes a spin on the famous telenovela “La Rosa De Guadalupe,” which was a staple show throughout my childhood.
One of my favorite examples is the song “BOOM BAP” in which she comments on the hate she’s received with a sprinkle of comedy. Since many of her critics call her an industry plant she responds in the song with “I gave my soul to this s— / Ate lumps of coal for this s—.” “LA ROSA DE DOECHII” was a moment for Doechii to highlight this side of her.
Doechii’s unique style has also set her apart from upcoming artists. She’s rocked designers such as Thom Browne and Miu Miu, who fit her androgynous, preppy and 90s inspired look marvelously. She’s worked with her stylist, Sam Woolf, to curate her unique style and together, they’ve stayed true to hip-hop fashion and its nostalgic elements. One of my favorites looks is from her interview with Zane Lowe on Apple Music. The denim ivy cap along with the clash of neutral browns with the pop of red from the skirt makes her look as if she came straight out of the 90s.
Many of her fans have also recognized her signature face tape. Face tape is often used as a beauty enhancement for a lifted effect of the face and those makeup artists who use this trick pull the skin back with tape, typically concealing it. However, Doechii doesn’t hide her face tape, which is quite unique. She rocks the tape in her public appearances and when asked why she wears the tape, she responded in a TikTok saying, “The face tapes are there on purpose because it’s c—.”
If you haven’t listened to Doechii, you’re missing out and I encourage you to start with her NPR Tiny Desk Concert. Doechii’s journey thus far has been incredibly successful and I’ve enjoyed adding her to my daily repertoire of music. I can’t wait to see what she has in store for her fans in the future. I have a feeling that Doechii will become a staple name in the rap genre.
India claims to have attacked camps associated with a militant group in Pakistan – but what is its relationship with Islamabad?
As India launches missile strikes on what it says are camps associated with militant groups inside Pakistan in retaliation for last month’s massacre in Kashmir, attention has once again focused on India’s claimed relationship between Islamabad and armed groups involved in attacks in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, most prominently Lashkar-e-Taiba.
Continue reading...A Cuban woman says U.S. immigration officials deported her without notice, separating her from her...
The post Mother Deported to Cuba Says ICE Separated Her From Breastfeeding Infant With Medical Condition appeared first on News Facts Network.
LOS ANGELES, May 7, 2025 — Q-CTRL is now delivering a world-first autonomous calibration solution for quantum computers. In partnership with QuantWare, a provider of quantum processor scaling technology, and TreQ, a quantum systems engineering and manufacturing company, Q-CTRL is now enabling push-button boot up of on-premises quantum processors.
This capability is the key to widespread deployment of quantum computers in research facilities, corporate R&D labs, and data centers, and follows recent scientific demonstrations of fully autonomous tune-up of an IBM processor.
Delivering useful results from today’s quantum computing hardware currently requires laborious, imprecise, serial, and manual tuning of all the various “control knobs” that govern quantum processing unit (QPU) performance. Intelligent autonomy is the solution that can enable QPUs to become ubiquitous computing engines in research facilities, corporate R&D labs, and data centers.
Q-CTRL’s Boulder Opal Scale Up solution combines PhD-level human intelligence with AI-driven automation to overcome this industry bottleneck. Built on the company’s track record of delivering peak QPU performance through physics-informed AI, Boulder Opal Scale Up provides an expert-configured and fully autonomous software solution to deliver fast, repeatable, and robust QPU characterization and calibration.
QuantWare’s customers will be able to leverage this autonomous calibration solution from Q-CTRL to significantly accelerate the construction of their quantum systems using QuantWare’s QPUs with their VIO scaling platform. By leveraging these solutions from Q-CTRL, any user can immediately achieve great performance on QuantWare QPUs with just a single line of code. This capability is critical for the rapid deployment and adoption of next-generation devices like Contralto-A, a 17-qubit tunable coupler QPU, making it easier than ever for customers to build faster and with greater confidence. QuantWare will also use Q-CTRL’s solution internally to optimize their test processes, improving the quality of their QPUs and effectively doubling their testing throughput.
“As we rapidly scale our devices thanks to VIO, tuning up systems built with our QPUs needs to be automated,” said Matthijs Rijlaarsdam, CEO of QuantWare. “We are excited not just to use Q-CTRL’s software internally, but especially to help our customers scale their systems faster and with confidence. Boulder Opal with Contralto-A is an extremely powerful combination that will greatly expand the capabilities of our customers.”
In addition, Q-CTRL has partnered with TreQ, a leading quantum computing system integrator, through a joint Innovate UK grant to deliver a complete modular compute system to end-users. Through the Open Architecture Quantum (OAQ) Testbed – powered by Q-CTRL’s Boulder Opal Scale Up solution – end users will benefit from access to a complete system operated the calibration experience as used by QuantWare, now also addressing Novera hardware provided by Rigetti.
“The OAQ Testbed project pushes the bounds of quantum computing systems,” said Dr Joseph Rahamim, Director of Systems Engineering at TreQ. “By integrating software and hardware, we expand the focus beyond processors to the systems engineering required to develop the supply chain, engage more innovators, and accelerate development. We know autonomous calibration tasks like those developed by Q-CTRL are a key part to enabling that system-level approach, allowing more users to access quantum computing resources.”
Boulder Opal Scale Up also complements Q-CTRL’s error-suppressing performance management software, Fire Opal, and in combination allows end users to go from a bare metal processor to a useful computer without any overhead or expert knowledge required.
“It’s our mission to make quantum technology useful for as many teams as possible,” said Michael J. Biercuk, CEO and Founder of Q-CTRL. “We’re excited to bring our expertise in physics-informed AI and performance management to the products of QuantWare and TreQ, and to all of their customers, so together we can have the biggest possible impact on delivering quantum advantage to the community.”
Learn more about these autonomous solutions to better enable cutting-edge quantum devices at q-ctrl.com.
About Q-CTRL
Q-CTRL is a key player in the global quantum technology industry as a category-defining business for quantum infrastructure software. Leading quantum computing hardware providers integrate its performance-management software with their superconducting and silicon-based platforms to deliver unprecedented capabilities to end users. The company’s global leadership in quantum sensing for defense and dual-use was featured in The New York Times. Q-CTRL also developed Black Opal, an award-winning edtech program that enables users to quickly learn quantum computing. Founded by Michael J. Biercuk in November 2017, Q-CTRL has assembled the world’s foremost team of expert quantum-control engineers, providing solutions to global quantum technology leaders, including Fortune 500 companies, startups, national research labs, and academic institutions. The company has international headquarters in Sydney, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Berlin, and Oxford.
About QuantWare
QuantWare is a leading provider of quantum hardware and creator of the VIO QPU scaling technology. Leading the Quantum Open Architecture paradigm, QuantWare powers the quantum computers of customers in 20 countries, spread over four continents. QuantWare’s VIO provides a scaling platform to unlock the fastest path towards systems with more than 1 million qubits. Available in fully packaged QPUs and via Foundry and Packaging Service.
About TreQ
TreQ is a global quantum systems engineering and manufacturing company building and operating bespoke, open-architecture quantum computing clusters. For more info, visit our website https://treq.tech.
Source: Q-CTRL
The post Q-CTRL Launches Autonomous Calibration Software for On-Prem Quantum Systems appeared first on HPCwire.
Liam LaFavers ordered $4,200 worth of Dum-Dums for friends, but his mother was eventually able to get a refund
A Kentucky mom found herself in a sticky situation when her eight-year-old son ordered 70,000 Dum-Dum lollipops on her phone.
On Sunday, Holly LaFavers noticed a $4,200 charge on her bank account, only to realize her son Liam had placed a bulk order for the candy via her Amazon account.
Continue reading...Alvin Brown was appointed as the vice chair of the National Transportation Safety Board by President Joe Biden late last year.
First stage of initiative will introduce ‘keystone’ species to beaver enclosures in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire
Elk could return to the UK after 3,000 years under plans by the Wildlife Trusts to reintroduce the “keystone” species into Britain’s landscapes.
The Derbyshire Wildlife Trust wants to introduce elk into two existing beaver enclosures in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, with the hope of demonstrating that the large semiaquatic deer should be released to roam free in the wild.
Continue reading...Apple is "actively looking at" revamping the Safari web browser on its devices to focus on AI-powered search engines, a seismic shift for the industry hastened by the potential end of a longtime partnership with Google. From a report: Eddy Cue, Apple's senior vice president of services, made the disclosure Wednesday during his testimony in the US Justice Department's lawsuit against Alphabet. The heart of the dispute is the two companies' estimated $20 billion-a-year deal that makes Google the default offering for queries in Apple's browser. The case could force the tech giants to unwind the pact, upending how the iPhone and other devices have long operated. Cue noted that searches on Safari dipped for the first time last month, which he attributed to people using AI. Cue said he believes that AI search providers, including OpenAI, Perplexity and Anthropic, will eventually replace standard search engines like Alphabet's Google. He said he believes Apple will bring those options to Safari in the future. "We will add them to the list -- they probably won't be the default," he said, indicating that they still need to improve.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Move sparks outrage in Iran as diplomats try to broker deal between Tehran and Washington over nuclear programme
Donald Trump plans to announce while on his trip to Saudi Arabia next week that the US will now refer to the Arabian Gulf or the Gulf of Arabia rather than the Persian Gulf.
The move has prompted outrage from Iranian leaders, and last-minute efforts are being made to persuade Trump to pull back from offending Iran in the midst of vital talks on the future of the Iranian nuclear programme. “If Trump went ahead with the proposal he would manage to unite every Iranian, pro- or anti-regime, against him, and that is a near impossible achievement,” one diplomat said.
Continue reading...Lawyers say the Turkish national, who has been held in a Louisiana Ice center for six weeks, was illegally detained
A federal appeals court on Wednesday granted a judge’s order to bring a Turkish Tufts University student from a Louisiana immigration detention center back to New England for hearings to determine whether her rights were violated.
A judicial panel of the New York-based US second circuit court of appeals ruled in the case of Rümeysa Öztürk after lawyers representing her and the US justice department presented arguments at a hearing on Tuesday.
The Associated Press contributed reporting
Continue reading...Five episodes remain in this season of the Emmy-winning Max show.
Chinese leader is scheduled to attend Victory Day parade and hold talks with Vladimir Putin
Xi Jinping arrived in Moscow on Wednesday for the start of a four-day visit during which he will attend Russia’s military parade commemorating the anniversary of the end of the second world war, known in Russia as Victory Day.
The Chinese leader’s trip has coincided with mass Ukrainian drone attacks on the Russian capital. Moscow’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said Russia’s air defence units destroyed at least 19 Ukrainian drones overnight.
Continue reading...
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
In recent interviews, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has minimized the risk COVID-19 poses to kids and exaggerated the risk of the vaccine, incorrectly claiming that the shot poses a “profound risk” to children. While serious side effects can occur, they are rare, and have not been shown to outweigh the benefits of the vaccine in protecting against COVID-19.
Kennedy’s remarks come as he is reportedly considering removing the COVID-19 vaccine from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s childhood immunization schedule, a move that could reduce accessibility to the vaccine.
On April 22, when Fox News’ Jesse Watters asked about taking the COVID-19 vaccine off the schedule, Kennedy, who has long spread misinformation about vaccines, said the recommendation for children “was always dubious” because “kids had almost no risk for COVID-19.” (Both Watters and Kennedy misleadingly suggested the vaccine was mandatory for children, but as we’ve explained, being on the CDC schedule doesn’t make a vaccine mandatory.)
“Certain kids that had very profound morbidities may have a slight risk, but most kids don’t,” he continued. “So why are we giving this to — to tens of millions of kids when the vaccine itself does have profound risk? We’ve seen huge associations with myocarditis and pericarditis, with strokes, with other injuries, with neurological injuries.”
Kennedy made similar claims during an interview on “Dr. Phil Primetime” that aired on April 29. Replying to a question about the vaccine schedule by a member of the audience, Kennedy said the justification for giving COVID-19 vaccines to kids “is very, very weak” and that kids are “at almost a zero risk” from the disease. “We’re seeing a lot of adverse events from the vaccine, particularly in children — myocarditis, pericarditis, even strokes,” he added.
Dr. Sean O’Leary, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado and chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases, told us Kennedy’s claims are “inaccurate.”
“The vaccines are very safe in kids,” he told us in a phone interview, referring to the COVID-19 shots.
Myocarditis and pericarditis, the inflammation of the heart muscle and the outer lining of the heart, were identified early-on as rare side effects of some COVID-19 vaccines. The risk of these side effects is highest for adolescent and young adult males after a second dose, but is still very low. For younger children, the risk is so low it is sometimes not detectable in vaccine safety surveillance systems. According to CDC data, no increased risk has been observed for any age group since the 2022-2023 season. There’s also no evidence of an increased risk of strokes or neurological problems following vaccination in children.
It’s true that kids are typically at much lower risk of getting severely ill from COVID-19 than adults, and some physicians do not think it’s necessary for healthy children to receive annual updated doses. But the risk of COVID-19 to children is “not no risk,” O’Leary said. “Through much of the pandemic, COVID was in the top 10 causes of death among children, and it was not just children with severe comorbidities. There were, unfortunately, lots of pediatric deaths, many of them in healthy children — and certainly, you know, thousands of hospitalizations as well.”
The CDC currently recommends that everyone 6 months of age get vaccinated against COVID-19, including a dose of the most recent formulation of the shot. In April, however, the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices discussed shifting from a universal recommendation to a risk-based recommendation for certain populations. Although there is no consensus among ACIP members yet, O’Leary, who is an AAP liaison to ACIP, said removing the universal recommendation for kids under 2, where they’re seeing the highest rates of hospitalizations among children, is not on the table.
“We are not discussing removing that recommendation for the younger kids,” he said. “And whether that cut-off is 2 or 4 or 5 — right now, the discussion has basically been for kids under 5 to continue with the universal recommendation.”
We reached out to HHS asking for support for Kennedy’s claims, but we didn’t get an answer.
Three years of vaccine safety monitoring data shows that the COVID-19 vaccines are safe in children. As the CDC explains, children may experience some mild and temporary side effects, as is expected after any vaccination. But “adverse reactions are rare” and “the benefits of COVID-19 vaccination outweigh the known risks of COVID-19 and possible severe complications.”
Myocarditis and pericarditis were identified as rare serious side effects of the COVID-19 vaccines, as we’ve reported. But over time, that risk has appeared to decline.
“No increased risk was observed in VSD and VAERS during the 2022-2023 and 2023-2024 seasons or the 2024-25 season to date,” a CDC slide from the ACIP meeting in April reads, referring to the Vaccine Safety Datalink and the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System.
In addition, myocarditis following vaccination is “associated with less severe cardiovascular events” than myocarditis following a COVID-19 infection, the presentation notes.
“[M]yocarditis is more likely and more severe after infection compared with vaccination,” Charlotte Moser, co-director of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Vaccine Education Center and a member of the ACIP, told us in an email. “In fact, no children have died from vaccine-related myocarditis, but some have died from infection-related myocarditis. So, opting out of vaccination because of concerns about myocarditis does not remove the risk.”
Jeffrey S. Morris, director of the division of biostatistics at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, told us there are risks with the COVID-19 vaccines, but “the relevant comparison is the risk to children and teens of COVID-19 infections.”
“I do not think it is accurate to say there is ‘almost no risk,'” as Kennedy claimed, Morris told us in an email, referring to the risk of COVID-19 infections to children. “A non-negligible proportion of children are hospitalized with COVID-19 or even end up in ICU, and a small but non-negligible proportion suffer inflammatory syndromes (MIS-C) after infection, or suffer from post-COVID-19 sequelae (PASC),” he said, referring to long COVID.
According to provisional CDC data presented in the last ACIP meeting, COVID-19 was an underlying cause of death for 152 children under 18 years of age between September 2023 and August 2024. “About 4 of every 10 children hospitalized with COVID-19 did not have any pre-existing conditions,” Moser told us.
A study published in January in the Annals of Internal Medicine, based on more than 144,000 children and co-authored by Morris, suggests that the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine was effective in preventing moderate and severe illness and ICU admissions during the delta and omicron periods. A separate study co-authored by Morris, published in eClinicalMedical in January, showed that by preventing infections, the vaccine also protected children and adolescents from long COVID.
“In terms of the ‘vaccine itself having profound risk,’ the risks of adverse events from vaccination for children are characterized in numerous studies, and has not been shown to be greater than the risk of COVID-19 infection in children,” he told us in an email. “For example, I have not seen anywhere that it has not been shown that risk of hospitalization from COVID-19 vaccine complications is higher than hospitalization from COVID-19 infection, which would be a relevant comparison.”
Morris told us he’s “not aware of any evidence” that COVID-19 vaccines increase the risk of stroke in children. He pointed to two studies, one looking at Vaccine Safety Datalink data from 245,000 children between 6 months and 5 years of age, published in Pediatrics in 2023, and another, published in JAMA Pediatrics the same year, which used data from three commercial claims databases to monitor vaccine safety in near-real time in more than 3 million children ages 5 to 17. Neither found an increased risk for stroke.
“I have also not seen evidence for any neurological risks for children,” he added, noting that the two studies looked at Bell’s palsy and encephalitis or encephalomyelitis “and found no safety signal.”
During the Fox News interview, Kennedy went on to claim that the vaccine’s risk “was clear even in the clinical data that came out of Pfizer … there were about 25% more deaths in the vaccine group than the placebo group.”
Morris told us this “is not accurate.” The comparison of the number of deaths in the placebo versus vaccine groups is only statistically valid during the blinded period, he said, referring to when participants have not yet been told if they received the vaccine or a placebo. During that period, there were 15 deaths in the vaccine group and 14 in the placebo group. After that, placebo recipients were offered a vaccine and 90% of the group took one, Morris said. And as we’ve previously explained, no deaths “were considered related to vaccination” in the trial.
“There is no statistical evidence that vaccinated had higher death rate than placebo in the Pfizer phase 3 trial at all,” Morris told us.
We asked the CDC how the COVID-19 vaccine might be removed from the immunization schedule and the implications of the change, but we didn’t get a response. According to a CDC website, the schedule is meant to “[g]uide health providers in determining recommended vaccines” for children and adolescents 18 years old and younger. ACIP reviews its recommendations every year and those recommendations result in the official schedule.
Dorit Reiss, a professor of law at University of California Law San Francisco who specializes in vaccine law and policy, told us that “generally,” reversing a decision would need to follow the same process used to make the decision in the first place.
“So you should go through ACIP for a revision to its recommendation, and then get approval of the CDC director or the Secretary,” she told us in an email. “But because ACIP is an advisory committee, the Secretary may be deemed to have the final authority to make the decision.”
Adding a vaccine to the schedule has other practical implications, as we have previously explained. One of them is a requirement of the Affordable Care Act that health insurance plans cover the vaccines listed in the schedule without charging a deductible or copay. If the ACIP changes its recommendations, “a change could mean no ACA coverage – insurance companies won’t have to cover them,” Reiss told us.
“In terms of the standard of care, doctors can still recommend them, and that would be valid, especially if the recommendation is blatantly political, as here,” she said. To remove the COVID-19 vaccines from the Vaccines For Children program, which provides free vaccines to under-insured or uninsured kids, the secretary would have to overturn a separate recommendation, “and here, too, they would likely have to go through ACIP,” Reiss said.
Although most of the ACIP work group supported changing the universal recommendation to a risk-based one for the next updated COVID-19 shot, during the committee’s last meeting some members raised concerns, including access to vaccination for children. A large majority of the work group thought that a risk-based recommendation should still allow any individuals wanting the protection of a COVID-19 vaccine to receive a shot.
Moser, from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Vaccine Education Center, supports a risk-based recommendation that considers age and health condition for those who are previously vaccinated and a universal recommendation for young children and others who have never been vaccinated.
“When COVID-19 first emerged, everyone was susceptible. At this point, six years later, we know that most people have some immunity to the virus that causes COVID-19,” she told us. “But, every year, between 3 and 4 million new susceptibles are born – our babies. Babies will gain immunity through vaccination or infection. Vaccination gives us control over when and how our babies gain that immunity. Infection leaves it to chance. Most babies will be fine after infection, but not all of them will.”
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post RFK Jr. Misleads About Safety of COVID-19 Vaccine in Children appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Urgent mediation to save the Indus Waters Treaty could be a route to de-escalation between India and Pakistan Expert comment thilton.drupal
Tensions over water have contributed to the outbreak of hostilities, but potential mediation by the World Bank could provide an important chance for engagement.
India launched missile strikes on targets in Pakistan on 6 May, in what it says is retaliation for a militant attack in Kashmir that killed 26 civilians (Pakistan denies any involvement). The same day Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that he will also stop India’s water from flowing across international borders.
Modi’s statement did not mention Pakistan but comes after India said it will hold ‘in abeyance’ the 1960 Indus Water Treaty (IWT), a crucial water-sharing agreement with Pakistan that manages the control of the Indus River basin.
Indian foreign secretary Vikram Misri has said New Delhi will not reverse its decision on the IWT until Islamabad ‘credibly’ ends alleged cross border militancy. Pakistan’s prime minister Shehbaz Sharif responded that any move to block or divert water ‘will be considered an act of war.’
The vital treaty was considered an exemplar of resource diplomacy, having survived three wars in one of the world’s most volatile regions. Its suspension can only fuel tensions between two nuclear-armed neighbours, already at the brink of war.
As the downstream country, the implications for Pakistan are grave. The Indus basin supplies about 80 per cent of Pakistan’s irrigated agriculture, a sector worth roughly 25 per cent of GDP and employing 65 per cent of the labour force. Tens of millions of people rely on the rivers’ waters for their livelihoods and survival.
India does not currently have the ability to limit Pakistan’s access to water. This is because the IWT barred India from developing the necessary storage dams to control the river flows.
However, with the treaty in abeyance, India could choose to ignore its restrictions on silt-flushing, releasing sediment from reservoirs that could cause significant damage downstream. According to Reuters, it has already begun the process.
In the long-term, India may now be motivated to build storage dams on the river.
Without the treaty, Pakistan is more dangerously exposed to floods and droughts. The IWT obliges India to share real time hydrological data. Between 2010 and 2020, reports indicate India provided more than 5,000 pages of vital data concerning flood and drought forecasts, and changes in river discharge and glacier melting.
The suspension also threatens Pakistan’s domestic cohesion. The Sindh province, run by the Pakistan People’s Party, already accuses upstream Punjab province, governed by the rival Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz, of taking more than its share. Any changes in water flow and access could exacerbate these tensions.
Brokered by the World Bank in 1960, the IWT split control of the basin’s rivers between India and Pakistan. India was given access to the eastern rivers of Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej and Pakistan access to the western Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab rivers.
The treaty created a three-step ladder to resolve disputes over water: a yearly meeting of the bilateral Permanent Indus Commission handles ‘questions’, a ‘Neutral Expert’ appointed by the World Bank handles ‘differences’, and the convening of a Court of Arbitration handles ‘disputes’.
For decades, the ladder worked relatively successfully.
However, in 2016 Pakistan sought arbitration via the court over fears that Indian hydropower projects would decrease downstream flows. India insisted on a Neutral Expert. The World Bank froze both tracks, urging bilateral talks instead. After continued stalemate, the Bank restarted both processes in parallel in 2022, but by then India was openly demanding the renegotiation of the treaty, which Pakistan refused.
Both countries drew different lessons from the episode: Pakistan saw tacit approval of India’s projects, while India sensed it could leverage its upstream position. This likely contributed to undermining both parties’ belief in the treaty’s effectiveness, providing the groundwork for India’s suspension of the treaty today.
The prospects of resuscitating the treaty are undermined by the lack of an active mediator. No countries have yet offered to lead mediation focused on the treaty, and there are no obvious candidates that have the required political capital and trust with both parties.
The US could potentially fill this role but appears unlikely to do so. The State Department responded to the cross-border strikes by calling for both sides to keep lines of communication open and avoid escalation. But President Donald Trump has so far expressed little interested in leading mediation efforts, claiming: ‘They’ll get it figured out one way or the other.’
Beijing has likewise called for restraint in the conflict, but is also an unsuitable choice due to its close links with Pakistan and vested interest in the region’s waters. China controls part of Kashmir, finances Pakistan’s Diamer Bhasha dam, and is building a vast hydropower project on the Yarlung Zangbo/Brahmaputra river, which flows into India and Bangladesh.
So far, the IWT’s signatory, the World Bank, has not indicated it will take any action in relation to the treaty suspension. But given the stakes and the lack of alternatives, the most suitable option would be for the Bank to urgently assume the role of a neutral mediator and reaffirm its commitment to salvaging the IWT.
Subscribers can play these games with their whole family next month on Apple Arcade.
Environment Agency recommends rationing water as UK sees driest start to spring in 69 years
Crops are already failing in England because of drought conditions this spring, farmers have said.
People should start to ration their water use, the Environment Agency said, as water companies prepare for a summer of drought. The government has also asked the water CEOs to do more to avert water shortages, and the EA said hosepipe bans are on the horizon if a significant amount of rain does not fall.
Continue reading...The right travel credit card can help you cover hotel stays, transportation and food if you're held up at the airport.
One America News will now provide news and video to government-funded organization
A hard-right, Trump-supporting US news network that perpetuated conspiracy theories about the 2020 election will provide news coverage for Voice of America (VoA), the Trump administration said.
Kari Lake, a special adviser to the body that oversees the government-funded VoA, announced on X that One America News (OAN), which was sued by voting machine companies for promoting claims of election fraud, will provide “newsfeed and video service”.
Continue reading...CIA, NSA and Defense Intelligence Agency all included in ‘collection emphasis message’, report says
Denmark has said that it will summon the US ambassador to Copenhagen to respond to reports that US intelligence agencies have been ordered to increase espionage in Greenland.
The Danish foreign minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, said on Wednesday that he was concerned about the report in the Wall Street Journal, telling the Ritzau news agency: “It worries me a lot, because we don’t spy between friends.”
Continue reading...UD nursing alumna cares for Delaware’s tiniest patients and trains future nurses
As carriers begin to unveil their own satellite plans, here's everything you need to know whether your phone supports satellite connectivity or is "satellite optimized."
Disney's seventh theme park destination could open by the early 2030s on Yas Island.
Wednesday marks the first day U.S. travelers flying domestically will be required to show a Real ID at airports.
Motown legend Smokey Robinson and his wife were named in a lawsuit filed by four women claiming sexual battery and assault.
A pet raccoon named Chewy was in the driver's seat of a car in central Ohio earlier this week, holding a glass meth pipe in its mouth, according to police.
Tufts Ph.D. student Rumeysa Ozturk was taken into custody by federal immigration authorities in March.
A third night of drone attacks near Moscow has snarled airports as foreign leaders start arriving for Russia’s Victory Day celebrations.
India’s military said the strikes were in retaliation for a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. Analysts warned that the risk of escalation is rising.
The Drug Enforcement Administration has quietly ended its body camera program barely four years after it began, ProPublica reports, citing an internal email. From the report: On April 2, DEA headquarters emailed employees announcing that the program had been terminated effective the day before. The DEA has not publicly announced the policy change, but by early April, links to pages about body camera policies on the DEA's website were broken. The email said the agency made the change to be "consistent" with a Trump executive order rescinding the 2022 requirement that all federal law enforcement agents use body cameras. But at least two other federal law enforcement agencies within the Justice Department -- the U.S. Marshals Service and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives -- are still requiring body cameras, according to their spokespeople.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Judge confirms move would breach order as Libya’s rival governments say both would refuse any US deportees
The Trump administration is reportedly planning to deport a group of immigrants to Libya, despite a judge’s efforts on Wednesday to block any such flights and the state department’s previous condemnation of the “life-threatening” prison conditions in the country.
Reuters cited three unnamed US officials as saying the deportations could happen this week. Two of the officials said the immigrants, whose nationalities are not known, could be flown to the north African country as soon as Wednesday, but they added the plans could still change. The New York Times also cited a US official confirming the deportation plans.
Continue reading...Can the Gunners mount a comeback against the Ligue 1 champions?
A new Economist/YouGov poll shows 40% of Americans believe the U.S. is in a recession,...
The post Poll: 40% of Americans Say U.S. Is in a Recession Despite Economic Indicators appeared first on News Facts Network.
Trump administration launches review after what it calls ‘recent incidents of antisemitic violence’ at school
The Trump administration has launched a review into what it describes as “recent incidents of antisemitic violence” at the University of Washington and its affiliates following a pro-Palestinian protest there on Monday that led to about 30 arrests.
On Monday, protesters associated with the student group Super UW – short for Students United for Palestinian Equality and Return – temporarily occupied the Interdisciplinary Engineering Building on the university’s Seattle campus.
Continue reading...The NHL team in Salt Lake City is now known as the Utah Mammoth.
Owners Ryan and Ashley Smith unveiled the franchise’s permanent name Wednesday after more than a year of fan input and voting.
Continue reading...Jefferson Griffin had fought in courts to try and overturn 734-vote loss to Democrat Allison Riggs in November
The Republican candidate for a state supreme court race in North Carolina has conceded the election after more than six months of contesting the results.
For months, Jefferson Griffin, currently a judge on the North Carolina court of appeals, had fought in courts to try and overturn his 734-vote loss to Allison Riggs in November. Last month, the North Carolina supreme court said that more than 1,300 voters who had successfully cast ballots had to prove their eligibility or else they would be thrown out. On Monday, a federal judge blocked that ruling and ordered state election officials to certify the election.
Continue reading...With bipartisan support growing to end penny production, longtime collectors and small business owners say the coin still holds value.
After India’s missile strikes on Pakistan, the risk of accidental escalation is high Expert comment LToremark
The precarious situation shows the continuing danger of territorial disputes in Kashmir – and of the two countries’ nationalist foreign policies.
Concluding a ‘landmark’ trade agreement with the UK and launching military operations against Pakistan on the same day: it is fair to say that, for India, the future and the past have collided this week. The agreement with Britain, which has been three years in the making, is one of several India is negotiating, including with the US and EU. It illustrates its appeal as a rising global power – the world’s most populous country and its fastest-growing major economy, which is also the fifth (and on course to be third) largest overall.
In contrast, the military operations targeting Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir demonstrate how India continues to be bogged down by instabilities in its neighbourhood and held hostage to its history.
India’s military actions are in response to a terrorist attack last month in which 26 tourists were killed in Indian-administered Kashmir. The name of the military operation – Sindoor – refers to a symbol of marriage, alluding to the women who lost their husbands in the attack that selectively targeted Hindu men.
New Delhi says it is trying to ensure the conflict remains limited between the nuclear-armed neighbours. It says its operations have targeted terrorist infrastructure rather than military facilities, although civilian casualties have been reported, and referred to its military action as a ‘precision strike’ that has been ‘focused, measured and non-escalatory in nature’.
Whether it remains ‘non-escalatory’ will depend on Pakistan’s response. The situation remains precarious amid the risk of accidental escalation, limited external pressure and both sides adopting an assertive military posture to appease their domestic political constituencies and hyper-nationalist foreign policies.
In the past, the US played a prominent role in de-escalating tensions. But President Donald Trump nonchalantly referred to the current hostilities as a ‘a shame’, while stating earlier that both countries would sort it out in ‘one way or another’. In a world where the US sees international relations through the prism of ‘spheres of influence’ – as reflected in Trump’s claims to Canada, Greenland and the Panama Canal, while seeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine as Europe’s problem – there is clearly a limited appetite for Washington to get involved in South Asian geopolitics.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars since they were established in 1947, two of them over Kashmir. The territory is vital to Pakistan’s security, with about 80 per cent of the country’s cultivated land dependent on water from the Indus water system that traverses Kashmir – that’s why the recent decision by India to hold a longstanding water agreement in abeyance is seen as an existential threat to Pakistan. A week before the terrorist attack, Pakistan’s army chief, Asim Munir, referred to Kashmir as Pakistan’s ‘jugular vein’. Reports of critical mineral deposits in Kashmir have also elevated the strategic importance of the territory to India.
However, at the heart of the tensions is the question of identity rooted in the scars of partition in 1947 that created the countries of India and Pakistan. The Pakistani state – and in particular the military and intelligence establishment – has derived legitimacy from maintaining a well-entrenched anti-India identity. The real source of authority in Pakistan is not the prime minister (Shehbaz Sharif) or the president (Asif Ali Zardari), but rather Munir and the head of the country’s intelligence service, the ISI (Muhammad Asim Malik). No civilian prime minister has completed a full term in the country’s 77-year history. If India-Pakistan relations were on good terms, there would be little justification for the military to have such a dominant role in Pakistani politics and the economy.
The seventh Disney theme park is set to be built on Abu Dhabi's Yas Island. The company did not give a timeline for construction.
Complaints of people who were infected, and their relatives, include criticisms that scheme is slow, flawed and complex
People infected as a result of the contaminated blood scandal, and their relatives, say they have been “re-traumatised” by delays to – and flaws in – the compensation scheme.
At a special hearing of the infected blood inquiry, which published its final report in May last year, victims and campaigners lined up to castigate the government’s handling of compensation.
Continue reading...Chewy’s owner was detained and a bulk amount of methamphetamine was discovered in vehicle, officials say
Police in Ohio were surprised to discover a pet raccoon called Chewy with a meth pipe in its mouth during a traffic stop in the town of Springfield.
In a statement, Springfield Township police department said that one of its officers, Austin Branham, made the stop after spotting a vehicle whose owner had an active warrant and a suspended driver’s license.
Continue reading...Cheryl Tweedy, who has son with late One Direction star, appointed administrator of fortune along with lawyer
The late One Direction star Liam Payne has left behind a £24.3m fortune after dying without a will.
Cheryl Tweedy, his former partner and mother of his son, Bear, is legally responsible for Payne’s money, property and possessions after being named an administrator for his estate.
Continue reading...Chris Pelkey was killed in a road rage shooting in Chandler, Arizona, in 2021. Three-and-a-half years later, Pelkey appeared in an Arizona court to address his killer. Sort of. 'To Gabriel Horcasitas, the man who shot me, it is a shame we encountered each other that day in those circumstances,' says a video recording of Pelkey. 'In another life, we probably could have been friends.' Pelkey continues: 'I believe in forgiveness, and a God who forgives. I always have, and I still do.' Pelkey was 37 years old, devoutly religious and an army combat veteran. Horcasitas shot Pelkey at a red light in 2021 after Pelkey exited his vehicle and walked back towards Horcasitas’s car. Pelkey’s appearance from beyond the grave was made possible by artificial intelligence in what could be the first use of AI to deliver a victim impact statement.
Continue reading...Trump said the central bank should lower interest rates, but Powell demurred – and the president isn’t happy with him
The US Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell, has for months faced attacks from Donald Trump, who has threatened to fire the head of the central bank.
While Trump has since walked back his attacks against Powell, insisting he has “no intention” of terminating him after markets slumped, relations between the pair remain strained.
Continue reading...American Catholics who traveled to Rome spoke to "CBS Mornings" about what they want the next pope to represent as they prepare to witness history.
Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom says AI companies are trying too hard to "juice engagement" by pestering their users with follow-up questions, instead of providing actually useful insights. From a report: Systrom said the tactics represent "a force that's hurting us," comparing them to those used by social media companies to expand aggressively. "You can see some of these companies going down the rabbit hole that all the consumer companies have gone down in trying to juice engagement," he said at StartupGrind this week. "Every time I ask a question, at the end it asks another little question to see if it can get yet another question out of me."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Reported closure of program for home appliances comes amid president’s hatred of water-conserving showers
US customers could face higher energy bills, experts have warned, amid reports that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to end the Energy Star program whose blue labels have certified energy efficiency on home appliances for more than 30 years.
“If you wanted to raise families’ energy bills, getting rid of the Energy Star label would be a pretty good way,” said Steven Nadel, executive director of the non-profit research organization the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).
Continue reading...The Trump administration's cuts to the National Institutes of Health has some worried about stalls in research and medicine.
The Guardian’s south Asia correspondent, Hannah Ellis-Petersen, reports on India’s strikes on Pakistan, and what they may mean for the conflict over Kashmir
In the early hours of Wednesday, India launched a series of strikes on Pakistan that killed at least 26 people – a serious escalation of the decades-long dispute between the two nuclear-armed countries over Kashmir.
As the Guardian’s south Asia correspondent, Hannah Ellis-Petersen, reports, the onslaught was in response to a terrorist attack in Kashmir two weeks ago that left 26 dead. India claims the group responsible is backed by its neighbour – an accusation Pakistan denies.
Continue reading...Vice President JD Vance said the U.S. is working toward a "long-term settlement" to end Russia's war with Ukraine.
The political tug-of-war on student loan policy isn't helping anyone get out of debt.
If you have an old LG phone, you'll need to update it soon -- LG stopped creating new smartphones in 2021 and is shutting down its update servers on June 30.
Maehashi beat five finalists to take out prestigious prize after her second cookbook broke Australian records for first-week nonfiction title sales
Recipe book writer Nagi Maehashi has beaten cupcake queen Brooke Bellamy at the publishing industry’s annual awards, as Maehashi and other authors accuse Bellamy of plagiarism.
Maehashi won the illustrated book of the year a second time at the Australian book industry awards night in Melbourne on Wednesday for her most recent book, RecipeTin Eats: Tonight.
Continue reading...More than 20 experts call on countries to act or ‘witness the slaughter of innocents’
The Dutch government, seen as one of Israel’s most loyal allies in the European Union, is calling for an urgent review of the EU Israel association agreement, the basis for the EU-Israeli free trade agreement, the Dutch foreign minister Caspar Veldkamp told the Guardian.
Veldkamp described the Israeli ban on the supply of aid into Gaza as “catastrophic, truly dismal” and in clear breach of international humanitarian law.
You cannot starve the people of the Gaza Strip. It is against international law. It’s morally wrong. It’s dangerous. I don’t think it’s in Israel’s own interest.
Continue reading...WeightWatchers, founded in 1963, has struggled to shed debt and cope with the emergence of weight loss drugs.
Home Office says Labour inherited asylum system in chaos with applicants stuck in backlog
Accommodation for asylum seekers is expected to cost more than £15bn, three times the amount the Home Office originally estimated, according to the latest figures.
The Conservative government signed contracts in 2019 that were due to pay £4.5bn of taxpayers’ money to three companies over a decade.
Continue reading...A dispute between a software company that creates interactive chatbots for gaming purposes and the family of a late teenage game player is the latest test of the constitutional boundaries of artificial intelligence agents.
In Garcia v. Character Technologies, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida is faced with a novel question: Do AI chatbots enjoy some of the same free speech rights granted under the First Amendment to people?
Megan Garcia is the mother of Sewell Setzer III, a 14-year-old who took his own life after engaging for months with an AI chatbot, and she is suing on his behalf. Garcia believes her son was unduly negatively influenced by chatbots created by Character.AI (also known as C.AI), a digital platform created by Character Technologies.
The company uses Large Language Model (LMM) technology to allow people to create their own characters that act as companion chatbots with input from other users. According to Garcia’s court filings, Sewell mainly interacted with characters reminiscent of the Game of Thrones books and television series that offered sexually exploitative content and abusive communications, leading to Sewell’s development of anxiety, depression, and ultimately his suicide. The suit from Garcia alleges claims against Character Technologies for wrongful death and survivorship, negligence, deceptive and unfair trade practices, and other acts.
Character Technologies argues that the Constitution’s First Amendment protects it from the claims on several grounds. “The First Amendment protects the rights of listeners to receive speech regardless of its source,” Character Technologies argued in a recent reply brief. It also cited “numerous instances where courts have dismissed similar tort claims against media and technology companies to protect the viewers’ and listeners’ First Amendment rights.”
Another First Amendment claim in the case touches on the “speech” rights of the chatbots, where Character Technologies says the First Amendment’s protections are not limited to speech by human speakers. Citing Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, it quotes part of Justice Antonin Scalia’s concurrence as a central tenet: “The First Amendment is written in terms of ‘speech,’ not speakers.”
Character Technologies also cites Supreme Court precedents that support the rights of listeners independent of the fact that the speakers in question did not themselves have clear First Amendment rights. The company further argues that the lawsuit wrongly wants all AI-generated speech excluded from First Amendment protections, while the chatbots are expressing “pure speech” that is entitled to the highest levels of First Amendment protections.
A Cat in the Court Case
Garcia’s attorneys cite an unusual decision from the 1980s with a bit of a cult following, Miles v. City Council of Augusta, Ga. as countering the claim that non-humans have free speech rights.
In Miles, an 11th Circuit Court of Appeals decision, the court held that a “non-human entity” lacks free speech rights. The alleged speaker was Blackie the Talking Cat, whose owners claimed was exempt from a city business license ordinance on free speech grounds.
Blackie’s owners had trained him to mimic sounds that resembled human speech, and they requested “contributions” from the public to support themselves and Blackie. “After receiving complaints from several of Augusta’s ailurophobes,” or people with an extreme or irrational fear of cats, “the Augusta police—obviously no ailurophiles themselves—doggedly insisted that appellants would have to purchase a business license,” the decision explains. The Miles family paid the Augusta licensing fee and then sued. They claimed Augusta’s ordinance violated their rights of speech and association. A federal district judge did not rule on the cat’s constitutional rights but concluded, “The thrust of the ordinance is directed, not at speech and association, but at the generation of revenue through the imposition of an occupation tax.”
On appeal to the 11th Circuit Court, a three-judge panel reached the same conclusion and would not consider a free speech argument on Blackie’s behalf. “This Court will not hear a claim that Blackie’s right to free speech has been infringed,” the judges wrote in a per curiam opinion. “First, although Blackie arguably possesses a very unusual ability, he cannot be considered a ‘person’ and is therefore not protected by the Bill of Rights. Second,” the court added humorously in dicta, “even if Blackie had such a right, we see no need for appellants to assert his right jus tertii (as a third party). Blackie can clearly speak for himself.”
In the Garcia case, Garcia argues that AI output is not “speech” unless it reflects human expressive intent to communicate a message. In referring to the Miles case, Garcia argues that the case “presents a large obstacle to Defendants’ First Amendment challenge because they are attempting to attribute speech to a non-person entity. But without a person as a speaker, this argument falls short. Defendants cannot have it both ways.” In response, the attorneys for Character Technologies called the Miles precedent “misplaced” when applied to chatbots. “That case—which contains three cursory sentences in a humorous footnote about a supposedly talking cat—does not address a listener-rights argument at all and does not control here.”
Garcia further argues that other precedents, including the Supreme Court decision in Texas v. Johnson (1989), require speakers to have an intention when they speak, that the intent to “convey a particularized message was present.” However, “the LLMs at issue in this case have no intentions in the sense that humans do. They are machines without sentience or cognition. For C.AI to claim that the words of its AI chatbots’ outputs deserve First Amendment protection, they must demonstrate that there was intention behind the expression. C.AI has not done so,” Garcia concludes.
But Character Technologies claims that its Characters are conducting “pure speech, and “the Court need not … determine whether [the] expression showed intent to convey a particularized message.”
Other Cases
Garcia v. Character Technologies is the latest in a series of legal actions asking the courts to define the rights and limitations of artificial intelligence. In March 2025, a three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia determined that a machine can’t be listed as the author of the work submitted by the work’s human owner to the U.S. Copyright Office for protection.
In February 2025, a federal court in Delaware ruled in favor of Thompson Reuters, the owners of Westlaw, in a claim against the owners of a competitive product. Westlaw had refused to license its content to Ross Intelligence to train an AI-driven search engine that would compete with Westlaw. Instead, Ross licensed a third-party product that incorporated Westlaw’s headnotes into its own content, and Ross used that content to train the search engine. Circuit Judge Stephanos Bibas ruled for Thompson Reuters on copyright grounds and denied fair use claims from Ross.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
Former chancellor says he does not expect the Conservatives to die out as a party but he says it is a possibility
Keir Starmer starts by saying rising tensions between India and Pakistan will be of serious concern for many across Britain. The government is enouraging de-escalation, he says.
He says tomorrow the nation will fall silent to commemorate VE Day. The armed forces protect our freedom, he says.
Continue reading...Waymo's autonomous vehicles operating on Uber's platform in Austin are completing more trips per day than over 99% of human drivers in the market, according to Uber's Q1 2025 earnings report [PDF] released Wednesday. The fleet of approximately 100 autonomous Waymo vehicles, launched exclusively on Uber in March, has "exceeded expectations," CEO Dara Khosrowshahi stated in the report. He cited the performance to "Waymo's safety record and rider experience coupled with Uber's scale and reliability." Uber has rapidly expanded its autonomous vehicle operations, reaching an annual run-rate of 1.5 million mobility and delivery AV trips across its network. The company plans to scale to hundreds of vehicles in Austin in the coming months, while preparing for a launch in Atlanta by early summer. Khosrowshahi said that autonomous vehicle technology represents "the single greatest opportunity ahead for Uber."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Streaming Netflix on your phone is about to get more interactive.
This five-step routine can help relax your mind and body before bed, leading to a better-quality night's rest.
The US has brought the two sides back from the brink before, but the mood is very different with Trump
The uneasy calm that had settled over India and Pakistan in the past two weeks was swiftly shattered in the early hours of Wednesday morning.
In the days that followed the deadly attack that killed 25 Indian tourists and a guide in Kashmir in late March, the Indian government made it clear it held Pakistan responsible – and it intended to avenge the deaths.
Continue reading...Slowdown will deepen concerns Denmark’s biggest company is losing market share to US rival Eli Lilly
Denmark’s Novo Nordisk has cut its annual revenue and profit forecasts after disappointingly “flabby” sales of its weight loss drug Wegovy, as US prescriptions tailed off.
A boom in sales of Wegovy and the diabetes medication Ozempic helped to turn the drugmaker into Europe’s most valuable listed company, worth $615bn (£461bn) at its peak last year.
Continue reading...Giant canopy of stone lilies and exact cast of Windsor oak tree among ideas for commemoration in St James’s Park
How best to capture the enduring essence of Queen Elizabeth II is the question behind innovative designs shortlisted for a national memorial planned for Britain’s longest-serving monarch.
An exact cast of a Windsor oak tree, a giant canopy of stone lilies and a “graceful and strong” stone bridge symbolising her as the bedrock of the nation are among shortlisted designs on which the public is now being consulted.
A “tranquil family” of royal gardens linked by a natural stone path, by Norman Foster of Foster + Partners with the artist Yinka Shonibare, the ecologist Prof Nigel Dunnett and the landscape architect Michel Desvigne. It includes a statue of the queen alongside Philip, a wind sculpture for reflection, audio installations of the queen’s voice, a digital conservatory and a unity bridge.
A memorial walk inspired by the idea of “togetherness” with 70 lily pad stepping stones, by Heatherwick Studio with the sculptor and ceramicist Halima Cassell, MRG Studio, Webb Yates and Arup. At the centre of the bridge is a limestone sculpture of the late queen, protected by a giant canopy of eight sculptural lilies.
Continue reading...Group that calls itself NoName057(16) appears to have had limited success disrupting council and other websites
A pro-Russian hacking group has claimed to have successfully targeted a range of UK websites, including local councils and the Association for Police and Crime Commissioners, during a three-day campaign.
In a series of social media posts, the group calling itself NoName057(16) suggested it had made a number of websites temporarily inaccessible, although it is understood the attacks were not wholly successful.
Continue reading...Soo I know the float life has a video on these but they are a bit different in design for the GT was wondering if the install would be the same.. and where to put the thermal grease on the blocks as well the video doesn’t show
Launched in 1992, EPA's Energy Star has saved consumers more than $500 billion in energy costs, according to the federal program.
Ministry of culture tells Sotheby’s it would be ‘participating in continued colonial exploitation’ if sale of gems goes ahead
The Indian government is seeking to repatriate ancient gem relics linked to the Buddha’s remains after halting their sale at an auction in Hong Kong.
Sotheby’s postponed the sale of the Piprahwa gems, due on Wednesday, after the ministry of culture threatened to take legal action against the auction house in Indian and Hong Kong courts and through international bodies “for violations of cultural heritage laws”.
Continue reading...Authorities have cracked down on stores selling American candy on London’s Oxford Street, saying some also sell fake or dangerous goods and dodge taxes.
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna said the tech giant has used AI, and specifically AI agents, to replace the work of a couple hundred human resources workers. As a result, it has hired more programmers and salespeople, he said. From a report: Krishna's comments on Monday come as businesses sort through the workforce impacts of AI and AI agents, the independent bots that can autonomously perform tasks like analyze spreadsheets, conduct research and draft emails. While there haven't yet been widespread layoffs or downsizing as a result of AI across the economy, some business leaders have said they are holding down head count as they investigate the use of the technology. Meanwhile, the information-technology workforce has continued to shrink as AI weighs on hiring and some workers leave the field. For IBM, which this week hosts its annual Think conference in Boston, AI adoption has led it to boost hiring in some functions.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Claim:Harvard University published a corrected version of a letter from Education Secretary Linda McMahon, complete...
The post Fact vs. Fiction: Did Harvard Post a Corrected Letter from Education Secretary Linda McMahon? appeared first on News Facts Network.
Our fashion expert rounds up her pick of the best phone straps, from beaded wristlets and cross-body straps to lanyards with recycled cases
• Jess Cartner-Morley’s May style essentials: life-changing jeans and the ultimate holiday shoes
You’re probably familiar with the concept of adding a finishing touch to your outfit: a belt that smartens up trousers, a great pair of sunglasses, statement jewellery that livens up a plain T-shirt. Well, now, there’s a new accessory in town: the phone strap.
For many of us, it’s a must-have. On a practical level, it means you don’t have to root around in your bag every time you need to check Google Maps for directions. With phone theft also an issue, it could keep your mobile safer.
Continue reading...The Pittsburgh Steelers appear to have run out of patience with wide receiver George Pickens. The team have agreed a trade to send the talented but mercurial 24-year-old to Dallas.
According to ESPN, the deal, which the Cowboys confirmed on Wednesday morning, will send Pickens and a 2027 sixth-round pick to Dallas. In return, the Steelers will get a 2026 third-round pick and a 2027 fifth-round pick.
Continue reading...Experts say such tools may give dangerous advice and more oversight is needed, as Mark Zuckerberg says AI can plug gap
Having an issue with your romantic relationship? Need to talk through something? Mark Zuckerberg has a solution for that: a chatbot. Meta’s chief executive believes everyone should have a therapist and if they don’t – artificial intelligence can do that job.
“I personally have the belief that everyone should probably have a therapist,” he said last week. “It’s like someone they can just talk to throughout the day, or not necessarily throughout the day, but about whatever issues they’re worried about and for people who don’t have a person who’s a therapist, I think everyone will have an AI.”
Continue reading...MUNICH and LONDON, May 7, 2025 — ParTec AG and ORCA Computing today announced their partnership to provide customers with quantum-accelerated HPC and AI solution architectures. As part of the partnership, ParTec will integrate ORCA’s capabilities into its AI Factory infrastructure, marking a significant step in expanding the practical use of quantum computing across enterprise and research applications.
ORCA Computing brings deep expertise in photonic quantum computing, delivering scalable, room-temperature, high-performance systems already in use across industries such as energy, healthcare, manufacturing and cybersecurity. ParTec complements this with proven capabilities in managing large-scale, heterogeneous HPC environments for both research and enterprise. Together, the companies are positioned to extend their reach into new domains including mobility, transport, aerospace and satellite technologies. Their joint solution unifies HPC, AI and quantum in a single, energy-efficient architecture.
“This collaboration underscores our shared vision to build a robust, sovereign European technology ecosystem and lead the global charge in next-generation computing. ORCA’s quantum technology allows us to push the boundaries of what AI-focused HPC systems can achieve by leveraging our combined expertise in computing and cloud,” said Bernhard Frohwitter, CEO of ParTec AG. “As demand grows for quantum-enhanced AI, we need solutions that can integrate seamlessly into large-scale classical infrastructure. ORCA has an impressive track record when it comes to quantum-accelerated platforms purpose-built for AI factories – that is why we are looking forward to advancing our collaboration to a next level.”
By combining ParTec’s advanced HPC and AI infrastructure, including its AI Factories tailored for AI-as-a-Service, with ORCA’s photonic-based quantum systems, the two companies are delivering a fully integrated, real-world solution for bringing quantum capabilities to enterprise environments. To date, ParTec has signed memoranda of understanding (MOUs) for the construction and operation of two supercomputers which will rank among the world’s largest: one with Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) in Dresden named “ELBJUWEL”, and another with the Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II named “VESUVIO” for AI-as-a-Service. ORCA’s PT Series systems will be deployed within these installations.
“Together, ParTec and ORCA Computing are enabling a fully integrated IT architecture that brings together the benefits of HPC, AI, and quantum computing,” said Steve Conway, Senior Analyst for HPC, AI and Sustainability at Intersect360 Research. “This collaboration is helping to turn quantum advantage from a distant aspiration into a practical, evolving reality. Their joint solution gives organizations the ability to start now, scale with confidence and unlock new levels of performance across their most critical workloads.”
ParTec’s quantum strategy focuses on integrating cloud-based quantum computing tightly with classical AI supercomputers and fostering research collaboration with top academic and industrial institutions. Its AI Factories are purpose-built for high-performance inferencing with advanced GPUs and fast networking. These environments are further enhanced by ORCA’s quantum-accelerated GenAI capabilities, enabling deeper insights and better AI performance. This powerful combination provides users with enterprise-grade benefits, including:
“This partnership is about making quantum computing useful today, not someday,” said Richard Murray, Co-founder and CEO of ORCA Computing. “By integrating our data center-ready, room-temperature high-performance quantum systems into ParTec’s AI Factories and HPC infrastructure, we’re removing the traditional barriers to adoption. No need for external cryogenics, no facility overhaul and no long ramp-up. Our systems can be installed and operational within hours, making quantum as accessible and deployable as any high-performance infrastructure. This is how we accelerate real-world impact.”
To learn more, join ORCA Computing at the 4th Annual Commercialising Quantum Global Event 2025 by Economist Impact, in London on May 13–14. Meet us at booth 9 and hear our CEO, Richard Murray, on May 13 (09:15–09:45) as he joins the panel: “Going from Quantum Utility to Advantage.”
About ParTec
ParTec AG specializes in the development and manufacture of modular High-Performance Computing (HPC) systems and Quantum Computers (QC) as well as accompanying system software. Its offering also includes consulting and support services in all areas of the development, construction, and operation of these advanced systems. The dynamic Modular System Architecture (dMSA) paradigm is the result of more than ten years of research and has been developed by ParTec as a novel system design for massively parallel high-computing systems. The dMSA and its enabling ParaStation Modulo Software Suite, developed and maintained by ParTec, have proven particularly successful for the complex requirements of massive computing power in AI.
About ORCA Computing
Headquartered in London with offices in the United States and Canada, ORCA Computing is a pioneering developer and provider of full-stack photonic quantum computing systems. Established in 2019 and originating from the University of Oxford, the company offers an innovative approach to photonic quantum computing. Its modular optical fiber-based architecture, along with proprietary methods for manipulating the time, frequency, and switching of single photons, paves the way for quantum computing using significantly fewer components. ORCA Computing has successfully delivered numerous on-premises quantum computers to leading customers, including the UK Ministry of Defense and the Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center.Across industries like manufacturing, energy, and pharmaceuticals, organizations are already leveraging ORCA Computing’s cutting-edge photonic technology to tackle complex computational challenges that are reaching the barriers of classical computing.
Source: ORCA Computing
The post ParTec and ORCA Computing Announce Partnership to Deliver Quantum-Accelerated AI Factories appeared first on HPCwire.
Daniel Stenberg, creator and maintainer of curl, has had enough of the neverending torrent of “AI”-generated security reports the curl project has to deal with.
That’s it. I’ve had it. I’m putting my foot down on this craziness.
1. Every reporter submitting security reports on Hackerone for curl now needs to answer this question: “Did you use an AI to find the problem or generate this submission?” (and if they do select it, they can expect a stream of proof of actual intelligence follow-up questions)
2. We now ban every reporter INSTANTLY who submits reports we deem AI slop. A threshold has been reached. We are effectively being DDoSed. If we could, we would charge them for this waste of our time.
We still have not seen a single valid security report done with AI help.
↫ Daniel Stenberg
This is the real impact of “AI”: streams of digital trash real humans have to clean up. While proponents of “AI” keep claiming it will increase productivity, actual studies show this not to be the case. Instead, what “AI” is really doing is create more work for others to deal with by barfing useless garbage into other people’s backyards. It’s like the digital version of the western world sending its trash to third-world countries to deal with.
The best possible sign that “AI” is a toxic trash heap you wouldn’t want to have anything to do with are the people fighting for team “AI”.
In Zuckerberg’s vision for a new digital future, artificial-intelligence friends outnumber human companions and chatbot experiences supplant therapists, ad agencies and coders. AI will play a central role in the human experience, the Facebook co-founder and CEO of Meta Platforms has said in a series of recent podcasts, interviews and public appearances.
↫ Meghan Bobrowsky at the WSJ
Mark Zuckerberg, who built his empire by using people’s photos without permission so he could rank who was hotter, who used Facebook logins to break into journalists’ email accounts because they were about to publish a negative story about him, who called Facebook users “dumb fucks” for entrusting their personal information to him, is on the forefront fighting for “AI”. If that isn’t the ultimate proof there’s something deeply wrong and ethically unsound about “AI”, I don’t know what is.
You might be able to see if that company is actually looking at applications.
Starting May 7, Americans are required to use the new form of identification if they want to fly domestically.
Political uncertainty under Trump has dampened the market, even as red states see a boom in renewable energy
Renewable energy in the US has surged to unprecedented levels, with the combined power generated by solar, wind and geothermal more than tripling over the past decade, according to a new report by a network of state environmental groups.
The growth has slashed harmful greenhouse gas emissions, made the nation’s energy system more resilient and prevented thousands of premature deaths from power plant pollution, according to the report by Environment America.
The amount of solar energy produced in 2024 – enough to power 28m homes – was nearly eight times higher than a decade earlier. Solar power production increased 27% from 2023 to 2024.
Wind produced even more energy – enough to power 42m homes in 2024. The amount of power from wind has more than doubled over the past decade.
Wind, solar and geothermal energy accounted for 19% of all retail sales of electricity last year, according to the federal data used to produce the report.
The amount of utility-scale battery storage in the US grew 63% from 2023 to 2024 – and a more than 80-fold increase over the past decade.
Nearly 3.3m electric vehicles were on US roads at the end of 2023 – a 25-fold increase from 2014. The number of electric vehicle charging ports, meanwhile, grew to more than 218,000 at the end of 2024 – six times more than there were in 2015 and a 24% increase from just the year before.
Continue reading...Apartment and condo dwellers in one US state can enjoy balcony solar power with EcoFlow's new Stream series. Here's what you need to know.
While it's hard to argue with "more pixels equals more better," you have to be able to see those pixels, don't you?
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Monday released new documentation detailing its new "Rule on Unfair or Deceptive Fees." The rule, set to take effect on May 12, prohibits hidden fees for live events, hotels, and short-term rentals. It also bans practices such as "bait-and-switch pricing" and any actions that conceal or misrepresent total prices and fees. In a newly published FAQ, the FTC offers a guide for these types of businesses, providing detailed information about pricing transparency. The rule will impact businesses, including live-event ticket sellers and short-term lodging providers, like hotels, motels, Airbnb, or VRBO. Third-party platforms, resellers, and travel agents are also covered by the new regulation. (Airbnb already updated its service in advance of this new regulation to show users the total cost of their stay upfront.) [...] Also included in the FTC's new FAQ are the types of fees that can be excluded, such as taxes or government fees, shipping charges, and charges for optional goods or services people may select to buy as part of the same transaction. (Note that handling charges aren't on this list.) However, the FTC notes that businesses must disclose that it has excluded charges from the total price before asking for payment. For example, if a business excludes shipping charges from the advertised price, it's required to clearly state the amount and purpose of those charges.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A man accused of killing his boss in 2017 and fleeing to his home country, Mauritius, now faces a murder charge in New York.
May 7, 2025 — Allstate has joined the Chicago Quantum Exchange (CQE) as a corporate partner, becoming one of the first major insurers to explore how quantum computing can help solve some of the most complex insurance challenges.
“Allstate has thrived for 94 years by creating the future, not simply adapting to trends,” said Tom Wilson, Chair, President and CEO of The Allstate Corporation. “Quantum computing is a path to better serving customers, providing opportunity for employees, and generating returns for shareholders. Allstate’s all in!”
Quantum computing aims to enable the analysis of massive volumes of data at unprecedented speed. It has the potential to redefine how insurers assess risk, detect fraud and serve customers. While the technology is still evolving, Allstate sees early promise in its ability to improve precision, speed and scalability across its operations in support of customers.
As part of the CQE, Allstate will engage with leading quantum researchers, startups and technologists across the growing Illinois-Wisconsin-Indiana quantum innovation ecosystem. This includes opportunities to accelerate development in artificial intelligence and machine learning, enhance digital decision-making, and prepare for quantum-ready solutions of the future.
“Quantum technologies offer transformative potential for many industries, including insurance,” said David Awschalom, the University of Chicago’s Liew Family Professor of Molecular Engineering and Physics and director of the Chicago Quantum Exchange. “Companies like Allstate that are working now to develop sector-specific future applications will be among the first to reap the benefits. We are excited to collaborate with Allstate and welcome them as a partner to the Chicago Quantum Exchange.”
About the Chicago Quantum Exchange
The Chicago Quantum Exchange (CQE) is an intellectual hub in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana that advances the science and engineering of quantum information, prepares the quantum workforce, and drives the quantum economy in collaboration with leading universities, national labs, and industry partners. The recipient of millions of dollars in government and corporate investment and home to some of the world’s top experts in the field, the CQE community is a central driver of US leadership in quantum technologies. The CQE is based at the University of Chicago and anchored by the US Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Northwestern University, and Purdue University. The community includes more than 50 corporate, international, nonprofit, and regional partners and is one of the largest collaborative teams working on quantum science in the world.
Source: CQE
The post Allstate Joins Chicago Quantum Exchange to Explore Insurance Applications of Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
The TSA said that starting today, it will no longer accept driver's licenses and other forms of ID that don't comply with Real ID requirements.
VALBY, Denmark, May 7, 2025 — H. Lundbeck A/S has announced its agreement with the Danish Centre for AI Innovation (DCAI), the company established to run and operate Gefion, Denmark’s flagship AI supercomputer. Lundbeck is one of the first pharmaceutical companies to leverage Gefion to accelerate drug discovery and development in neurological and psychiatric disorders.
Brain disorders are estimated to affect half the world’s population, significantly impairing quality of life. Despite scientific advancements, there are still high unmet needs within brain health, and many patients have limited options for treatment. By leveraging Gefion’s unparalleled AI computational power, Lundbeck aims to enhance and expedite the discovery of next-generation treatments.
Lundbeck expects that Gefion will contribute to advancing research by providing AI-driven insights into molecule discovery and drug optimization in the development of therapies. By exploring innovative avenues for molecule discovery, Lundbeck aims to identify novel and better medicines for known drug targets as well as unlocking emerging drug targets to deliver new treatment options for people living with brain disorders, including rare and specialist-treated neurological conditions.
Senior Vice President & Head of Research at Lundbeck, Tarek Samad, emphasized the significance of AI-driven innovation and drug discovery in Lundbeck’s Focused Innovator strategy: “We are excited to be among the pioneers utilizing Gefion’s AI supercomputing power. The advanced computational capabilities of Gefion come with the promise of potentially allowing us to push the boundaries of tackling brain diseases and develop treatments at an unprecedented pace.”
“It’s an exciting milestone for us to work with such a big customer and innovator in the pharmaceutical space like Lundbeck,” said Nadia Carlsten, CEO of the Danish Centre for AI Innovation (DCAI). “We’ve been maturing Gefion since its launch just a few months ago, and to see its computing power now helping Lundbeck’s scientists uncover new treatment pathways more efficiently is very rewarding. This agreement has the potential to accelerate the timeline for bringing impactful neurological therapies to patients.”
Advancing Neuroscience with AI-Powered Research
Senior Vice President of Global IT at Lundbeck, Claus Thomsen, noted the key role of AI in Lundbeck’s IT strategy: “Working together with DCAI marks an important step towards transforming brain disease research by employing AI. Providing our researchers with access to Gefion and the state-of-the-art software stack opens the opportunity to leverage the fast-evolving development of AI-driven analysis and large-scale simulations. This supports our strategy to harness the power of AI for the benefit of our patients.”
The agreement between DCAI and Lundbeck is a significant milestone in relation to applying Gefion’s potential in pharmaceutical research and development. Other companies are already employing Gefion for projects spanning foundational AI research, human-centric healthcare solutions, and pharmaceutical and biotech innovation, as well as initiatives within other industries.
“As AI reshapes industries, Gefion stands at the forefront of revolutionizing research and innovation. Together with Lundbeck we can demonstrate the game-changing potential of AI supercomputing in tackling some of the world’s most urgent healthcare challenges,” said Nadia Carlsten, CEO of the Danish Centre for AI Innovation (DCAI).
About H. Lundbeck A/S
Lundbeck is a biopharmaceutical company focusing exclusively on brain health. With more than 70 years of experience in neuroscience, the company is committed to improving the lives of people with neurological and psychiatric diseases. Brain disorders affect a large part of the world’s population, and the effects are felt throughout society. With the rapidly improving understanding of the biology of the brain, Lundbeck holds itself accountable for advancing brain health by curiously exploring new opportunities for treatments. As a focused innovator, Lundbeck strives for its research and development programs to tackle some of the most complex neurological challenges. Lundbeck develops transformative medicines targeting people for whom there are few or no treatments available, expanding into neuro-specialty and neuro-rare from the company’s strong legacy within psychiatry and neurology. Lundbeck is committed to fighting stigma and the company acts to improve health equity. Lundbeck strives to create long term value for our shareholders by making a positive contribution to patients, their families and society as a whole. Lundbeck has approximately 5,500 employees in more than 50 countries and our products are available in more than 80 countries.
About DCAI
The Danish Centre for AI Innovation (DCAI) owns and operates Gefion, Denmark’s flagship AI supercomputer, designed specifically for large-scale AI projects. Gefion ranks among the most powerful supercomputers globally powered by 1.528 NVIDIA H100 Tensor Core GPUs. DCAI’s mission is to lower the barrier for accessing advanced computing capabilities, enabling customers to innovate and fostering ecosystem growth. DCAI customers include academic researchers, startups, government institutions, and enterprise customers doing large scale innovation. DCAI was formed as a company and funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and EIFO in 2024.
Source: Lundbeck
The post Lundbeck Partners with DCAI to Leverage Gefion for AI-Driven Brain Health Research appeared first on HPCwire.
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Collins has broken with Trump in the past, but so far has been unwilling to use the full power of her committee
Under normal circumstances, Senator Susan Collins would now be one of the most powerful figures in official Washington.
In January, the Maine Republican became the chair of the Senate appropriations committee, long considered one of the most consequential panels in the upper chamber. Nicknamed the “college of cardinals” for its outsized power over federal spending, it can approve funds for favored programs and slash it for others while blocking attempts by the White House to get in the way. One former chair of the committee used his power to get more than 30 federal projects named for himself in his home state. On its website, the committee boldly asserts its power, quoting from the constitution that “No money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in consequence of Appropriations made by law.”
Continue reading...Tariffs are threatening higher inflation, and that's putting pressure on the Fed to keep borrowing costs high.
Apple forged the iPhone 16 series to be the ultimate platform for Apple Intelligence. But over half a year later, the best iPhone 16 Pro features have little to do with AI.
Weighted vests may look like they’re a blast from the past, but their practicality is timeless.
The credibility of US backing for a DRC–Rwanda peace deal rests on the risk appetite of corporate America Expert comment jon.wallace
Washington needs to back projects that support local livelihoods and offer security. It must also clarify US regulation to overcome mining operators’ wariness of investing in the Great Lakes region.
At a tense ceremony in Washington on 25 April, representatives from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda committed to working towards a peace agreement to end ongoing violence in the Eastern DRC. The announcement came following mediation by Qatar underwritten by US promises of a minerals deal.
The agreement’s main points would include a respect for sovereignty and refraining from providing support to non-state groups – Rwanda has been accused of providing support to the M23 rebel group. Parallel talks were hosted subsequently in Doha, with DRC and Rwanda, as well as the AU mediation support group which includes France and the US. A draft peace agreement was reportedly submitted to the US on 5 May – although the two sides have said their proposals have not yet been consolidated.
All are hopeful that US investment in minerals will generate lucrative peace dividends. The region holds globally significant reserves of tantalum and niobium found in coltan – particularly around the rebel-held Congolese mining town of Rubaya – as well as tin and tungsten. All are listed as critical minerals by the US, EU, Japan, China and UK.
As ever, the devil will be in the detail. Turning a headline announcement into sustainable progress will require resolving deep suspicion between Rwanda and the DRC. A deal will also need to account for complex local political problems of land access and identity, wider security challenges in a region that hosts myriad non-state armed groups, and issues of asset scarcity.
Compounding this is the challenge of risk aversion: Corporate America is wary of operating in a conflict-affected and high-risk area (CAHRA), which requires enhanced due-diligence and reporting and carries governance, security and reputational challenges.
Headlines about a deal began appearing in late February 2025, with the DRC reported to be seeking ‘a formal security agreement’ with the US in exchange for access to Congolese minerals.
The DRC was looking to capitalize on the US and UN calling out Rwanda’s support for the M23 and illegal mineral flows. Washington and Kinshasa also have a mutual desire to limit Congolese dependence on China.
But rather than a bilateral US–DRC ‘minerals for security’ arrangement, Massad Boulos, Trump’s senior adviser for Africa and the Middle East, has said that bilateral economic agreements will be signed with both DRC and Rwanda ahead of a final peace accord, hopefully within two months.
This approach reflects the Trump administration’s instinct for peace deals that prioritize a realpolitik acceptance of the balance of power over the principle of territorial integrity or international law.
The M23’s direct involvement cuts across Kinshasa’s red line of not granting the group undeserved political legitimacy by bringing them to the table. DRC President Felix Tshisekedi’s seeming acceptance of the deal is a notable political concession.
The most significant details remain uncertain, notably how the benefits will be divided. One of the key drivers for Rwanda’s intervention in the DRC from 2022 was likely to protect and guarantee control of Congolese minerals. Kigali is unlikely to want its profits to be diluted – and is currently under little meaningful diplomatic or military pressure to give ground.
Any deal that asks President Tshisekedi to sign away rights to Congolese endowments may be deeply unpopular domestically. That will be particularly concerning for a president whose political hold already looks shaky. Beyond the carrot of US minerals deals, the wider set of actors involved in both mediation efforts may have to expend significant diplomatic capital to force the parties to abide by any agreement.
There are also significant technical limitations to a potential deal. The Tshekedi government may be eager for US engagement to balance China’s dominance, but there are few available assets for American companies to acquire.
Mining operations in the DRC’s peaceful southeastern copper and cobalt belt are already owned or operated by external actors. Chinese companies control 80 per cent of Congolese cobalt production.
US operators have largely divested from the DRC over the past two decades – although the US government is seeking to regain a foothold in the southern region, including through funding the Lobito Corridor. Support for this rail link between the Congolese copper belt and Atlantic seaboard has continued through the Biden and Trump administrations.
Instead, the prize for a minerals deal is likely to be access to the conflict-affected east of DRC (dominated by artisanal and semi-artisanal production) and the fledgling industry in Rwanda. Here, there are emerging foundations to build on.
Alpahmin’s Bisie mine, located close to the M23 conflict zone, is financed by US Denham Capital and has a 100 per cent offtake agreement with US trading firm Gerald Metals – although the material flows to China. It has consolidated former artisanal mining sites into the largest tin mine in Africa.
Senate Republicans are distancing themselves from President Donald Trump’s repeated remarks urging American families to...
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Last month, a Department of Government Efficiency aide at the nation’s consumer watchdog agency was told by ethics attorneys that he held stock in companies that employees are forbidden from owning — and was advised not to participate in any actions that could benefit him personally, according to a person familiar with the warning.
But days later, court records show, Gavin Kliger, a 25-year-old software engineer who has been detailed to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau since early March, went ahead and participated in mass layoffs at the agency anyway, including the firings of the ethics lawyers who had warned him.
Experts said that Kliger’s actions, which ProPublica first reported on last week, constitute a conflict of interest that could violate federal criminal ethics laws. Such measures are designed to ensure that federal employees serve the public interest and don’t use their government power to enrich themselves. At the CFPB, which regulates companies that provide financial services, there are strict prohibitions on the investments that employees can maintain.
As ProPublica previously reported, Kliger owns as much as $365,000 worth of shares in Apple Inc., Tesla Inc. and two cryptocurrencies, according to his public financial report. Investments in those businesses are off limits to employees since the bureau can regulate them. A further review now shows that he’s invested in even more companies that are on the agency’s “Prohibited Holdings” list. Kliger also disclosed owning as much as $350,000 worth of stock in Google parent Alphabet Inc., Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway and the Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba.
That means, at a maximum, Kliger could own as much as $715,000 of investments in seven barred companies, the records show.
Experts said a defanged and downsized consumer watchdog is unlikely to aggressively regulate those and other companies, freeing them of compliance costs and the risk associated with examinations and enforcement actions. That in turn could boost their stock prices and benefit investors like Kliger.
Don Fox, a former general counsel of the independent federal agency that advises executive branch workers on their ethical obligations, said that “this looks like a pretty clear-cut violation” of the federal criminal conflict-of-interest statute.
Richard Briffault, a government ethics expert at Columbia Law School, said the fact that Kliger was warned not to take any actions that could benefit him personally showed that “he’s on notice that this is a problem, as opposed to doing this by accident, or unintentionally.”
But Briffault said there would likely be no recourse for Kliger’s actions given that the Department of Justice under President Donald Trump has “greatly deprioritized public integrity, ethics and public corruption as issues for them.” The New York Times reported last week that the section handling such cases is down to just a handful of lawyers.
From the outset, the Trump administration has been dogged by ethics controversies, from the president’s own foray into the cryptocurrency industry to Elon Musk’s dual roles as both the head of DOGE and a major federal contractor. Kliger’s case is “a nice illustration of how even on this micro level, they are violating the law, acting in ways that positively should cause people to not trust what they’re doing because there is no question that these corporations will benefit,” said Kathleen Clark, an expert on government ethics at Washington University in St. Louis.
Kliger hasn’t returned a phone call or email seeking comment. The CFPB didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The White House didn’t answer questions about the warning, whether Kliger had sought ethics waivers or if he was in the process of divesting. Instead, a spokesperson provided ProPublica the same statement it previously had, writing that Kliger “did not even manage” the layoffs, “making this entire narrative an outright lie.” A spokesperson said that Kliger had until May 8 to divest.
The April 10 ethics warning came amid a heated legal battle over the future of the CFPB.
The following day, an appeals court in Washington, D.C., allowed the agency’s acting director, Russell Vought, to implement mass firings after a lower court judge had stayed them. The court instructed Vought to conduct a “particularized assessment” of the bureau and to lay off only those employees who were deemed to be “unnecessary” to perform the agency’s statutorily required duties. In court filings, the government has said that review was done by the bureau’s chief legal officer, Mark Paoletta, and two other attorneys. In court papers, Paoletta has said the cuts are designed to achieve a “streamlined and right-sized Bureau.”
On April 13, Kliger was among a small team of DOGE and agency officials who received an email from Vought about the coming layoffs with the subject line “CFPB RIF Work” — government parlance for reduction in force, according to emails produced in court records. Vought’s email is redacted in the filing, but hours after he sent it, records show the bureau’s chief information officer wrote to Kliger and another DOGE aide regarding a “follow-up on Russ’s note below” and advised Kliger that he’d been granted access to agency computer systems that “should allow you to do what you need to do,” according to the email.
Layoff notices to more than 1,400 bureau employees went out on April 17.
In the preceding 36 hours, “Gavin was screaming at people he did not believe were working fast enough” to get the notices out and “calling them incompetent,” a federal employee on the layoff team using the pseudonym Alex Doe wrote in sworn declaration filed by lawyers for unionized employees trying to stop the administration from dismantling the bureau.
Among those laid off were the agency’s ethics officer and their “entire team” of lawyers, according to court records.
Those are the very employees who’d twice notified Kliger that he was required to identify any investments in companies on the bureau’s Prohibited Holdings list. The warning last month explicitly instructed him not to participate in any bureau activity that could benefit the businesses whose stocks he owned, said the person familiar with the notice, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of its sensitivity.
Last week, the appeals court reversed course and temporarily stopped the firings at the CFPB amid a flurry of legal challenges. Agency officials then notified the more than 1,400 fired employees who’d been told they were being let go that the pink slips were being rescinded.
The court battle over the CFPB’s future is ongoing, though, with oral arguments before appellate judges in Washington, D.C., scheduled for later this month.
What exactly is preventive health care? The definition can seem broad and confusing, so we reached out to nine doctors for their expert insights.
The U.S. trade deficit jumped to $140.5 billion in March, up 8% from February, as...
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In May 2015, President Barack Obama gave a big speech about dropping trade barriers with other nations. He delivered it on a sunny day at Nike’s world headquarters in Oregon.
“Sometimes when we talk about trade, we think of Nike,” Obama said, before making his pitch for a trade deal with Asian countries that he described as the “highest-standard, most progressive trade deal in history.”
President Donald Trump canceled that deal, known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership, less than two years later.
Now, as Trump erects more trade barriers in his second administration, Nike once again is center stage in conversations about globalization, a familiar place for a company that has its roots importing Japanese track shoes and briefly made sneakers in the United States.
Last month, Trump announced sweeping tariffs that would slam imports from the countries where most Nike sneakers and apparel get made. A close look at Nike’s massive supply chain offers a case study in the possible ripple effects of the escalating global trade war and shows how vulnerable factory workers could get squeezed.
Some degree of taxation on imports has long been a feature of international garment trade, and Nike has decades of experience navigating these tariffs. The company has not spoken about how it will handle the current round under Trump, but it’s among 76 companies that signed a letter to the president last week warning about dire consequences for footwear companies unless there is tariff relief.
In response to questions about how tariffs might impact factory workers, Nike said in a statement it is “committed to ethical and responsible manufacturing.”
“We build long-term relationships with our contract manufacturing suppliers because we know having trust and mutual respect supports our ability to create product more responsibly, accelerate innovation and better serve consumers,” the statement said.
Where does Nike make sneakers and clothing?Nike doesn’t own or operate the overseas factories that make its products. Instead, it works with 532 contract manufacturers that employ nearly 1.2 million workers, according to an online Nike map.
No country is more important to Nike’s manufacturing than Vietnam, where the brand works with 131 factories that employ nearly 460,000 workers. Half of Nike’s sneakers were made in Vietnam last year, according to the company’s annual report.
Nike’s second-largest production base is Indonesia, where its 45 contract factories employ more than 280,000 workers.
The company has been moving production out of China over the last decade. It works with 120 Chinese contract factories that employ more than 100,000 workers — down from more than 350,000 workers in 2012. Some of the footwear and apparel that Nike makes in China is sold to Chinese consumers and therefore not subject to tariffs.
Are tariffs affecting Nike?Yes. On April 2, Trump announced “reciprocal” tariffs that included 46% on Vietnam, 32% on Indonesia and 34% on China. The next trading day, Nike’s shares fell 14%, wiping out $14 billion in shareholder value.
A week later, the president paused most of the tariffs for 90 days, but a 145% tariff on imports from China and a 10% surcharge on most imports from other countries remain in place.
Tom Nikic, a veteran industry analyst at Needham & Co., calculated that the tariffs, if fully implemented, would nearly wipe out Nike’s profits if the company made no changes to its current pricing or production.
“By my math, their earnings would decline by approximately 95%,” he said in an email.
Will Nike squeeze factories for better deals?“Almost certainly,” said Jason Judd, executive director of the Global Labor Institute at Cornell University. “The default for a brand or retailer faced with a tariff or some other shock is to press suppliers for discounts.”
“The COVID shock is a good example,” Judd added. “We know from talking to suppliers that the COVID shock meant canceled orders and renegotiations over price.”
The Worker Rights Consortium, a labor monitoring group, estimated brands canceled $40 billion in orders during the pandemic.
When Trump announced tariffs during his first administration, Nike’s top executives said they’d find savings in their supply chain.
“We have a lot of levers we can work with, from sourcing to other levers,” Andy Campion, then Nike’s chief financial officer, said in 2019.
How will tariffs affect Nike’s factory workers?Factory workers will likely feel the impact directly.
Dara O’Rourke, an associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who’s studied wages in Nike factories, said the tariffs could become a “huge hammer.”
“It is likely that you will see this kind of pressure from managers to say to workers, ‘For a period of time, we’re going to have to work harder and longer,’” he said. “Hold the line or you’re going to lose your job.”
That could mean workers are asked to make more sneakers and T-shirts every shift and work longer hours, according to Thulsi Narayanasamy, director of international advocacy for the Worker Rights Consortium.
It is likely that you will see this kind of pressure from managers to say to workers, ‘For a period of time, we’re going to have to work harder and longer.’
—Dara O’Rourke, associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley“When suppliers are squeezed and workers have unreasonable production targets, they don’t drink water, don’t take food breaks,” she said in an email. She added that in these circumstances, the organization consistently hears about “women having urinary tract infections, struggling with repetitive strain injuries, kidney stones, and having back problems due to rapid, repetitive movements for more than 12 hours a day.”
Narayanasamy said brands like Nike have a choice: “Push costs that they could reasonably absorb onto their suppliers, replete with the knowledge that doing so will immediately harm millions of factory workers, or not.”
In its statement, Nike said it sets clear labor expectations for supplier factories in its Code of Conduct and Code Leadership Standards.
Foreign garment workers could also face furloughs or work without pay, said Cornell’s Judd. That happened across the industry during the pandemic.
In 2021, the Worker Rights Consortium identified 31 garment factories — three of which did work for Nike — that the consortium said didn’t pay $39.8 million in severance benefits owed to 37,637 workers who lost jobs during the pandemic.
Nike previously has disputed that it owed wages to workers at the three factories named in the labor group’s report. In its statement, Nike also said factories are responsible for severance benefits.
“Manufacturing suppliers hold the financial obligation to pay worker severance, social security and other separation benefits to impacted employees in accordance with local law and Nike’s Code of Conduct,” the company said. “And in the event of any closure or divest, Nike works closely with the supplier to conduct a responsible exit.”
Will tariffs force Nike to move manufacturing back to the U.S.?“To think this will bring jobs back to the U.S. is poorly thought out, would be the nicest thing I could say,” said Berkeley’s O’Rourke.
Footwear and apparel manufacturing remains labor-intensive. Sneakers require gluing and stitching. T-shirts require sewing. Efforts to automate shoe production have mostly flopped.
That’s part of the reason Nike makes most of its products in countries with low wages. ProPublica reported this month on a former Nike factory in Cambodia where most employees made the minimum wage — about $1 per hour.
Ngin Nearadei, center, worked for three years in a Cambodian garment factory that produced baby clothes for Nike and other brands. She told ProPublica she couldn’t have afforded to buy the clothes she helped make. (Sarahbeth Maney/ProPublica)Nike also uses huge factories that are filled with equipment that’s difficult to transfer to a new location. They’re often located near materials companies that make the rubbers, nylons and polyesters needed to make sneakers.
“The full production system is not easily movable,” O’Rourke said.
Instead of moving the work back to the U.S., industry watchers expect apparel companies will continue to manufacture products in countries with low wages, but manufacturing will shift to those subject to less onerous tariffs.
That could further harm workers in Vietnam, Indonesia, China and other countries with relatively high proposed tariff rates and a lot of Nike manufacturing jobs. In Indonesia, for example, one labor union expects as many as 50,000 workers could lose their jobs if the full Trump tariffs go into effect.
As the number of people looking for work increases, wages in those countries will decrease.
“The line at the gate to find work gets longer,” Judd said. “And that means employers of any kind can start paying new workers less because unemployment has jumped.”
What could tariffs mean for Nike’s prices?Estimates vary and depend on how much of the cost Nike passes to consumers.
If the 46% tariff on Vietnam goes into effect, the price of a $155 sneaker made in Vietnam would increase to $220, according to the Footwear Distributors and Retailers of America, a trade group that counts Nike as a member.
The example, which isn’t specific to Nike, assumes the importing company passes nearly all of the tariff cost to customers. No athletic footwear brand has given specifics, although Adidas CEO Bjørn Gulden last week said “higher tariffs will eventually cause price increases.”
But Nike’s been in a slump and has been discounting many of its sneakers to boost sales.
It’s possible that Nike will absorb more of the tariff cost to avoid raising prices too steeply.
“It will likely be hard for Nike to raise prices,” the investment bank UBS recently wrote in a research note.
Vulcan device ‘capable of grabbing three-quarters of items in warehouses’ fuels fears of mass job losses
Amazon said it has made a “fundamental leap forward in robotics” after developing a robot with a sense of touch that will be capable of grabbing about three-quarters of the items in its vast warehouses.
Vulcan – which launches at the US firm’s “Delivering the Future” event in Dortmund, Germany, on Wednesday and is to be deployed around the world in the next few years – is designed to help humans sort items for storage and then prepare them for delivery as the latest in a suite of robots which have an ever-growing role in the online retailer’s extensive operation.
Continue reading...A new state audit has revealed that the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services (DJS) allowed...
The post Audit Finds Contractor With Assault Conviction Worked With Youth at Maryland Juvenile Facility appeared first on News Facts Network.
At age 10, she was spirited out of Nazi Europe to the United States as part of a rescue effort for young refugees.
On Saturday, helping the Food Bank of Delaware feed hungry Delawareans will be as simple as mailing a letter.
The popular Parks on Draft event will return for five dates this spring and summer.
Kyiv still relies heavily on foreign support for its war effort, and it has agreed to difficult terms to keep the US on side
Despite Russia’s occupation of its territory, missile attacks on its infrastructure and the enormous human costs of the war, Ukraine’s economy has been impressively resilient. Its effective military resistance against a much stronger adversary is in fact underpinned by this successful economic management. Rather than face institutional sclerosis or even collapse, Ukraine’s state capacity has been strengthened by the conflict. Through a combination of tax revenue collection and substantial networks of voluntary fundraising, the state has dramatically increased the size of its armed forces, invested in defence production and maintained a decent level of public infrastructure.
State spending on soldiers’ wages, infrastructure and logistics – including public sector procurement from private firms – has had a positive knock-on effect, supporting demand in the civilian market economy. Soldiers on the frontline earn well above the national average wage. An innovative military industrial complex, combining traditional state-owned enterprises with an ecosystem of drone startups, has been developed. These policies have stabilised the Ukrainian economy and directed it to the goal of the country’s basic survival.
Luke Cooper is an associate professorial research fellow in international relations at LSE Ideas, the in-house foreign policy thinktank of the London School of Economics and Political Science, and the director of PeaceRep’s Ukraine programme
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Washington must secure a supply of critical minerals that China doesn’t control.
Secretary of state says opponents of Maduro have left diplomatic compound in Caracas and are ‘safely on US soil’
Five members of Venezuela’s political opposition have left the Argentinian diplomatic compound in their country’s capital, Caracas, where they had sheltered for more than a year to avoid arrest, and were in the United States on Tuesday, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, said.
Rubio did not provide details of the group’s movements to reach the US, but he described the event as a rescue operation.
Continue reading...Officials recover body of girl’s 14-year-old brother as her mother is hospitalized and father remains in coma
A 10-year-old Indian girl remains missing at sea after a boat carrying migrants capsized off San Diego on Monday morning. One of the bodies recovered is the girl’s 14-year-old brother. According to the Department of Justice, the family’s mother is hospitalized while their father remains in a coma.
The US Coast Guard announced it had stopped its search on Monday evening. The justice department stated that of the original nine people reported missing, all except the 10-year-old girl had been found. Two Mexican nationals were killed in the boat’s capsizing as well.
Continue reading...US president reports three deaths and laments ‘terrible situation’ but does not provide further details
Donald Trump said on Tuesday that three more hostages held by Hamas in Gaza have died, bringing the number still alive to 21.
At a White House swearing-in ceremony for his Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump revealed that three more Israeli hostages have died in Gaza, meaning that just 21 of the hostages taken from Israel during the 7 October attacks remain alive.
Continue reading...Over the next two years, the number of liquid-cooled data centers is projected to grow from less than 1 percent of the market to about 30 percent of all installations. The reason behind such spectacular growth is clear – the power of the processors is growing rapidly every 6 months, and so is the power per rack. As a result, the data center is heating up, and air-based cooling has hit the end of the road. Hyperscalers are no longer asking themselves whether they should use liquid cooling; instead, they want to know which technology to use and how fast they can get up and running. This article takes a deep dive into the various options available today so you can make the best decision for your particular application.
As the graphic below illustrates, the two main categories of liquid cooling are immersion and direct-to-chip, and each has a single-phase and two-phase option. Often, people refer to direct-to-chip as “cold plate cooling” because it uses cold plates placed directly on top of the CPU or GPU. Immersion cooling, on the other hand, uses large, heavy tanks instead of the standard racks, and they are filled with liquid. The servers and equipment are immersed directly into this liquid.
There are two types of immersion liquid cooling. Single-phase immersion uses an oily fluid in a tank to absorb the heat. This heated fluid rises to the top of the tank and is pumped to a heat exchange unit that cools the fluid and sends it back to the tank housing the hardware.
The following are the pros and cons of single-phase immersion:
Two-phase immersion cooling uses dielectric fluid with a low boiling temperature instead of oil. The heat boils the fluid, creating vapor that rises to the top of the tank, where a network of tubes provides flowing cooled water. The vapor condenses and drips back to the tank.
The following are the pros and cons of two-phase immersion:
Direct-to-chip cooling consists of cold plates that sit on top of the CPU or GPU. Unlike immersion cooling, in which the equipment is immersed in fluid in large tanks, the fluid used in direct-to-chip cooling is contained inside the compact cold plate.
Direct-to-chip liquid cooling consists of either a single-phase or two-phase process. Single-phase direct-to-chip cooling uses water or a water-glycol mix as the coolant in the cold plate. Water remains in a liquid state, and the ability to take away heat with this method is dependent on water flow.
Below are the pros and cons of single-phase, direct-to-chip cooling:
Unlike single-phase, direct-to-chip cooling, two-phase direct-to-chip cooling does not use water in the cold plate. Instead, heat transfer fluid is used, which is 100 percent safe for IT equipment. The heat from GPUs and CPUs boils the heat transfer fluid at a low temperature, absorbing the heat and keeping the chip at a constant temperature. This process is similar to how boiling water keeps the bottom of a pot at 100⁰C, only at a lower temperature. As the liquid inside the cold plate boils, the liquid in the cold plate never passes the boiling temperature. This effect makes this technique highly scalable for cooling hotter future chips.
Below are the pros and cons of two-phase, direct-to-chip cooling:
According to recent research reports, the liquid cooling market is expected to grow from $5.65 billion in 2024 to $48.42 billion by 2034. The reason for this enormous growth is clear: There is simply no other way to support the build out of AI as heat inside AI factories and data centers rises to unprecedented levels.
Fortunately, as this article highlighted, many different types of liquid cooling technologies are available to help remove this heat, and each has its own pros and cons. As the chip power is rising continuously, making sure the cooling solution selected will fit next year’s generation is critical. It’s up to data centers, AI factories, and hyperscalers to decide which solution works better for them today and will fit their needs in the near future. This choice will ultimately be determined based on performance, cost, power consumption, ease-of-use, scalability, and sustainability.
Shahar Belkin, Chief Evangelist at ZutaCore
The post Which Liquid Cooling is Right for You? Immersion and Direct-to-Chip Explained appeared first on HPCwire.
Three Newark Police Department officers were assaulted Saturday in two separate incidents involving suspected drunken drivers.
A Newark man is behind bars after allegedly trying to sexually solicit a teenager at a hotel.
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has a long history of undermining confidence in vaccine safety, including by repeatedly claiming that vaccines are not tested in placebo-controlled trials, a familiar anti-vaccine trope.
Now, an HHS spokesperson has used similar language in a statement that falsely said there’s little available evidence on whether vaccines are safe.
“Except for the COVID vaccine, none of the vaccines on the CDC’s childhood recommended schedule was tested against an inert placebo, meaning we know very little about the actual risk profiles of these products,” the HHS spokesperson told the Washington Post. Other journalists also have published the statement.
The spokesperson also appeared to suggest a policy change and misleadingly said: “All new vaccines will undergo safety testing in placebo-controlled trials prior to licensure — a radical departure from past practices.”
It’s incorrect that there is little information on childhood vaccine safety. Vaccines approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration undergo testing for both safety and efficacy prior to approval, and their safety and effectiveness are also monitored after they are released to the public. Post-approval safety monitoring has rapidly detected very rare vaccine side effects that clinical trials are not large enough to identify.
Some current vaccines were indeed tested against a placebo, such as the rotavirus vaccines, while others have been tested in other types of randomized controlled trials. Many current vaccines for children are new iterations of older vaccines and were compared in clinical trials with previously approved vaccines, as it is unethical to give someone a placebo when a safe and effective version of a vaccine is available.
It is unclear what the HHS spokesperson meant when referring to “new” vaccines. We emailed HHS to ask whether the agency will be issuing official guidance on new vaccine testing requirements and how a “new” vaccine is being defined, but we did not receive a response.
Kennedy again himself made false claims about vaccine safety testing in an interview aired April 28 with Phil McGraw, also known as Dr. Phil, using similar language to that used in the HHS statement.
No vaccines other than the COVID-19 vaccines and the human papillomavirus vaccine Gardasil “were ever tested against placebo, so we have no idea what the risk profile for these products are,” Kennedy said. Again, it is incorrect to suggest that people have “no idea” what the risks of vaccines are. And a variety of vaccines have been tested against placebos.
Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told us the claim that vaccines are not tested against placebos isn’t new. “The only difference is now the anti-vaccine activists, instead of shouting these things from the sideline, are now making policy, so you’re hearing them recycled again,” he said.
It is misleading for HHS to say that it is a “radical departure” to require placebo-controlled trials for new vaccines. It in fact has been typical to test the first available version of a vaccine against a disease in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial.
For instance, Jonas Salk’s polio vaccine, the first vaccine against the disease, was tested in a placebo-controlled trial including more than 600,000 children, as we have written in the past in response to Kennedy’s claims. Following the success of that original trial, it would have been unethical in testing subsequent versions of the vaccine to randomly assign children, who otherwise would have access to a safe and effective polio vaccine, to a placebo, risking paralysis or death for those children.
Many currently available vaccines are new iterations of preexisting vaccines. These often were tested in clinical trials in which people were randomly assigned to either receive the new vaccine or an older version, an example of what’s called an active control group.
“A placebo control, such as saline, is not required to determine the safety (or effectiveness) of a vaccine. In some cases, inclusion of placebo control groups is considered unethical,” an FDA spokesperson told us in 2023. “In cases where an active control is used, the adverse event profile of that control group is usually known and the findings of the study are reviewed in the context of that knowledge.”
For instance, the currently available version of the human papillomavirus vaccine is Gardasil-9, which was compared with the prior version of Gardasil in clinical trials. The older shot protected against a smaller number of HPV types. It would have been unethical to randomly assign some people to go entirely without HPV vaccination, potentially putting them at risk of future cancer. (There was a smaller trial that tested Gardasil-9 in people who had already received the older Gardasil, and this trial did randomly assign some people to receive a saline placebo.)
Additionally, HHS is wrong to say that “none of the vaccines on the CDC’s childhood recommended schedule was tested against an inert placebo” except for the COVID-19 vaccines. Vaccines against the diarrheal disease rotavirus, for instance, are part of the childhood vaccine schedule. Offit co-invented RotaTeq, one of the currently given vaccines, and he said that it was tested in a placebo-controlled trial. In this case, the placebo consisted of the diluent for the vaccine, or the substance used to dilute the vaccine to the correct concentration. The diluent included “buffering and stabilizing agents, like sucrose,” Offit told us via email.
Kennedy and other anti-vaccine advocates have attempted to narrowly define placebos as salt water, but there are other types of placebo that would qualify as inert, Offit said.
“A lot of placebos are everything in the vaccine except for the vaccine itself,” Offit said. He explained that these components are considered inert because they are regarded as safe and cannot cause an immune response.
Furthermore, salt water placebos are not unheard of in clinical trials for current vaccines. For instance, as we have said and Kennedy himself appeared to suggest to Dr. Phil, Gardasil-9 was compared with a salt water placebo in one trial.
As we’ve also previously written, in other cases trials may compare a new vaccine with a vaccine for another disease. Advantages of this approach include that it is less likely that participants will realize which arm of the trial they are in before the trial is unblinded, and that participants who do not get the vaccine that is being tested still benefit from another vaccine.
Anti-vaccine advocates often use technical claims about how vaccines are studied and redefinitions of the word placebo to shift the goal posts on vaccine safety, as pediatrician Dr. Vincent Iannelli has written on his website Vaxopedia. These claims distract from the core question of whether vaccines have been sufficiently evaluated.
The goal of Kennedy’s claims on placebo-controlled trials “is to just scare people about vaccines, to make them think they are not tested for safety,” Offit said.
It is unclear exactly how HHS’ new statements will translate into policy, but experts have expressed concern that under Kennedy, the FDA might make it impossible to provide people with updated COVID-19 vaccines in a timely fashion.
Elsewhere, HHS has indicated the FDA might consider updated COVID-19 vaccines to be “new vaccines,” in a departure from prior policy that allowed companies to update their shots without new clinical trials. This has long been the policy for seasonal influenza vaccines, which can undergo strain changes without needing to be tested in new clinical trials.
“A four-year-old trial is also not a blank check for new vaccines each year without clinical trial data, unlike the flu shot, which has been tried and tested for more than 80 years,” an HHS spokesperson told the New York Times, apparently referring to the COVID-19 vaccines.
If the FDA were to require placebo-controlled trials of updated COVID-19 vaccines, it would be unethical, Offit said, and requirements for clinical trials would delay the vaccines. The point of coming out with updated COVID-19 shots is to release them rapidly to match the most current version of the virus that is circulating, but it would take “months to do that trial, if not longer,” Offit said.
The updated COVID-19 vaccines are substantially similar to the shots that were already tested in clinical trials. There are also now multiple years of data from people in the community who received updated COVID-19 vaccines, showing that they do protect against hospitalization. And vaccine safety monitoring systems and studies have fleshed out the understanding of COVID-19 vaccine side effects and safety.
Offit asked what the point of doing new COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials would be, given the data already available. “This is arguably the best studied vaccine we’ve ever had,” he said. “It’s been given to billions of people.”
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The post HHS Advances Kennedy’s Old ‘Placebo’ Vaccine Safety Claims appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Zelenskyy and Trump have agreed a minerals deal – but it will not stop the war in Ukraine Expert comment LToremark
For some, helping Ukraine is not worth the possibility of war. But if Russia is allowed to continue unopposed, almost everything is at risk.
Too many column inches have been wasted on inaccurate descriptions of the so-called minerals deal between the US and Ukraine. The deal has been hailed as ‘historic’, ‘momentous’, and a 180-degree change in America’s stances towards Ukraine – and therefore towards Russia as well.
Not so fast. Many have cheered that there was mention – an admission – of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine from the American side, and an apparent commitment to a future Ukraine that is, at least by implication, sovereign and independent.
It is true that we seem to have recovered, somewhat, from the infamous Oval Office meeting in February, between the Ukrainian and American presidents. And the terms appear less blatantly extortionate than the ones thrust upon (and then rejected by) Ukraine in February. In contrast to before, Ukraine will retain ownership over ‘subsoil, infrastructure, and natural resources’ including decisions on what to extract.
But there is less here than meets the eye. We should be clear that there are no security guarantees for Ukraine of any sort – no US presence (beyond a commercial one) to back it up. In fact, this document confirms the cessation of US military aid to Ukraine that America has provided so far, and confirms that from now on, Ukraine will be accruing debt for any US weaponry it may receive. (And it is not guaranteeing that either.)
The benefits for Ukraine – aside from the optics of signing any agreement with the US – are dubious too, and would not come until after the war has ended.
In fact, depending on how you interpret the text, the agreement implies a possible US say in Ukraine holding elections (which the Kremlin wants) through its rather hypocritical insistence on Ukraine upholding democratic values; and a potential say on whether it should join the EU (which the Kremlin does not want). It would be foolish to assume that Trump and his inner circle would not push the Kremlin’s requirements on these two issues.
But the overall reason not to place faith in the deal is because it is subordinate to the US’s ambition to have rapprochement with Russia. Whether it is out of misplaced economic ambition vis-a-vis Russia or a Cold War mentality of ‘great’ and peer power carve-ups, the current incarnation of US decision-makers take a ‘Russia first’ principle.
However, counter-intuitively, the US’s attempts to normalize relations with Russia are the main source of optimism. Not because they will work, but because they will not. That might seem perverse. Who would not want better relations between the world’s two largest nuclear powers?
For some, Ukraine is not worth it. Not worth the risk of falling into war. That argument might make sense if this were only about Ukraine (though I am not conceding that point). But it is not. If Russia is allowed to continue unopposed – untroubled by Western support, or lack thereof – then almost everything is at risk. It would mean risks to wider European security, global trade (including sanctions relief), fundamental legal principles – perhaps even the fate of Taiwan and the ability to meet climate change goals.
Music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs is facing trial on sex-trafficking charges. Here's what to know.
Bearing the brunt: Asia’s response to Trump 20 May 2025 — 10:45AM TO 11:45AM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
How are Asian economies reacting and adapting to Trump’s tariffs and a changing geoeconomic order?
How are Asian economies reacting and adapting to Trump’s tariffs and a changing geoeconomic order?
Policy makers and global markets have been rocked by U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade policies and tariff-driven agenda. America’s protectionist stance has hit Asia’s export-heavy economies particularly hard. China has engaged in a full trade war with the US. And although the Trump administration has eased some of its approach to trade temporarily, the tariff measures introduced on ‘Liberation Day’ have shone a light on Asia’s role in an integrated global trading system. Governments and business are exploring ways to adjust their trade, supply chains, and diplomatic strategies.
In a rapidly evolving geoeconomic landscape, this session assesses Asia’s reaction to the implications of Trump-era trade policies long-term. An increased focus on self-reliance, building up domestic consumer bases and engaging with new international partners; the economies of Asia are at a pivotal juncture. Following decades of development and growth based on a well established trading model, Asian governments are already demonstrating resilience and adaptability amid significant instability in the global trading system.
The discussion will discuss key questions including:
By registering for this event, attendees agree to our Code of Conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.
The Climate Briefing: What’s next for the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage? Audio thilton.drupal
Ibrahima Cheikh Diong, the executive director of the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage, discusses what progress has been made and what lies ahead for the fund.
Increasingly severe climate change impacts are wreaking destruction across the world, with disastrous implications for human health, wellbeing, livelihoods, culture and security. How to deal with ‘loss and damage’ caused by climate change was for long a controversial topic within the UN climate negotiations, but at COP27 in 2022 governments agreed to establish a dedicated fund to assist developing countries in responding to the challenge.
In this episode of the Climate Briefing, Anna Aberg and Nina Jeffs (standing in for Ruth Townend) speak to Ibrahima Cheikh Diong, the executive director of the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage, about what progress that has been made in operationalizing the fund, what lies ahead, what some of the main challenges are and how the fund interacts with the wider economic architecture.
To learn more about how loss and damage finance has featured in the climate negotiations, please see the Chatham House research paper ‘Loss and damage finance in the climate negotiations: key challenges and next steps’ (available here) and the expert comment ‘The historic loss and damage fund’ (available here).
Other ways to listen: Apple podcasts.
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If you’ve experienced setbacks in your care or benefits amid the changes at the Department of Veterans Affairs, ProPublica wants to hear from you. Share your story.
Earlier this year, doctors at Veterans Affairs hospitals in Pennsylvania sounded an alarm. Sweeping cuts imposed by the Trump administration, they told higher-ups in an email, were causing “severe and immediate impacts,” including to “life-saving cancer trials.”
The email said more than 1,000 veterans would lose access to treatment for diseases ranging from metastatic head and neck cancers, to kidney disease, to traumatic brain injuries.
“Enrollment in clinical trials is stopping,” the email warned, “meaning veterans lose access to therapies.”
The administration reversed some of its decisions, allowing some trials to continue for now. Still, other research, including the trials for treating head and neck cancer, has been stalled.
President Donald Trump has long promised to prioritize veterans.
“We love our veterans,” he said in February. “We are going to take good care of them.”
After the Department of Veterans Affairs began shedding employees and contracts, Trump’s pick to run the agency, Secretary Doug Collins, pledged, “Veterans are going to notice a change for the better.”
But dozens of internal emails obtained by ProPublica reveal a far different reality. Doctors and others at VA hospitals and clinics across the country have been sending often desperate messages to headquarters detailing how cuts will harm veterans’ care. The VA provides health care to roughly 9 million veterans.
In March, VA officials across the country warned that a critical resource — databases for tracking cancer — would no longer be kept up to date. As officials in the Pacific Northwest explained, the Department of Government Efficiency was moving to kill its contract with the outside company that maintained and ran its cancer registry, where information on the treatment of patients is collected and analyzed. DOGE had marked it for “immediate termination.”
Officials at the VA centers in the Pacific Northwest said funding for their cancer research was “updated for immediate termination” after a review by the Department of Government Efficiency. (Obtained by ProPublica)The VA in Detroit raised a similar alarm in an email, warning of the “inability to track oncology treatment and recurrences.” The emails obtained by ProPublica detail a wide variety of disruptions. In Colorado, for instance, layoffs to social workers were causing homeless veterans waiting for temporary housing to go without help.
The warnings, sent as part of a longstanding system at the VA to alert higher-ups of problems, paint a portrait of chaotic retrenchment at an agency that just three years ago was mandated by Congress through the PACT Act to expand care and benefits for veterans facing cancer and other issues after exposure to Agent Orange, burn pits or other toxins.
Doctors and other health care providers across the VA have been left scrambling and short-staffed amid an ever-shifting series of cuts, hiring freezes and other edicts from the White House.
VA officials in Pittsburgh sent warnings about studies being impacted by a hiring freeze. These included studies on cancer, suicide prevention and exposure to toxins. (Obtained by ProPublica)The upheaval laid bare in the emails is particularly striking because the cuts so far would be dwarfed by the dramatic downsizing in staff and shift in priorities the administration has said is coming.
The VA has cut just a few thousand staffers this year. But the administration has said it plans to eliminate at least 70,000 through layoffs and voluntary buyouts within the coming months. The agency, which is the largest integrated health care system in the U.S., currentlyhas nearly 500,000 employees, most of whom work in one of the VA’s 170 hospitals and nearly 1,200 clinics.
Despite an expanded role mandated by Congress through the PACT Act, administration officials have said their goal is to trim the agency to the size it was before the legislation passed.
“The Biden Administration understood what it meant to pay for the cost of war; it seems the Trump Administration does not,” said Rep. Mark Takano, a California Democrat and chief author of the PACT Act.
Documents obtained by ProPublica show DOGE officials working at the VA in March prepared an outline to “transform” the agency that focused on ways to consolidate operations and introduce artificial intelligence tools to handle benefits claims. One DOGE document proposed closing 17 hospitals — and perhaps a dozen more.
VA press secretary Pete Kasperowicz told ProPublica that there would be no hospital closures. “Just because a VA employee wrote something down, doesn’t make it VA policy,” he said in a written statement. But he did say that use of AI will be a big part of what he called VA’s “reform” efforts.
Kasperowicz dismissed the idea that the emails obtained by ProPublica show chaos.
“The only thing these reports show is that VA has a robust and well-functioning system to flag potential issues and quickly fix them so we can provide the best possible care to Veterans,” he wrote.
DOGE did not respond to requests for comment.
Have You Been Affected by Changes at the Department of Veterans Affairs? Tell Us About It.If you’ve experienced setbacks in your care or benefits amid the changes at the Department of Veterans Affairs, ProPublica wants to hear from you.
The White House released a budget proposal last week that calls for a 4% increase in the VA’s budget. That total includes more money for medical care, though a portion of that would be used to pay for veterans to seek care outside the VA medical system.
More answers to the VA’s larger plans may come today, when Collins is scheduled to testify before the Senate Veterans Committee, his first hearing on Capitol Hill since coming into office.
David Shulkin, who headed the VA in Trump’s first term, said the administration is too focused on cuts rather than communicating a strategy for improving care for vets.
“I think it’s very, very hard to be successful with the approach that they’re taking,” Shulkin told ProPublica.
One way local VA officials have tried to limit the damage has been by sending warnings — formally known as an issue brief — to higher-ups. And sometimes it works.
After officials in Los Angeles warned that “all chemotherapy” would stop unless Washington backed off killing a service contract, the VA reversed its decision.
And, amid growing scrutiny, the administration also made some researchers in Pennsylvania and elsewhere exempt from cuts. The laid-off social workers who helped homeless vets in Colorado were also brought back after about a month away from their jobs. Kasperowicz said that four social workers were affected but “their caseload was temporarily redistributed to other members of the homeless team.”
The warnings from officials across the country underscore how the comparatively modest cuts so far are already affecting the work of the VA’s medical system, with the study and treatment of cancer cited in multiple warnings to agency leadership.
“We have absolutely felt the impact of the chaos all around us. We’re already losing people,“ said one senior researcher, who spoke to ProPublica anonymously for fear of retaliation.
Referring to studies, he added: “We’re going to be losing things that can’t restart.”
And while Kasperowicz told ProPublica that the issues in Pennsylvania have been resolved, locals there said that’s not the case and that the impact is ongoing.
In Pittsburgh, two trials to treat veterans with advanced head and neck cancer, which officials in March had warned were at risk because of hiring freezes, have still not started, according to Alanna Caffas, who heads a Pittsburgh nonprofit, the Veterans Health Foundation, that partners with the VA on research.
“It’s insane,” Caffas said. “These veterans should be able to get access to research treatments, but they can’t.”
VA employees in Pittsburgh sent a warning that they had lost research staff because of the hiring freeze. (Obtained and highlighted by ProPublica)A third trial there, to help veterans with opioid addiction, wasn’t halted. Instead, it was hobbled by layoffs of key team members, according to Caffas and another person involved in the research.
Regarding the issues with cancer registries, Kasperowicz said there had been “no effect on patients.” He added that the VA is moving to create a national contract to administer those registries.
Rosie Torres, founder of Burn Pits 360, the veterans advocacy group that also pushed hard for the legislation, called the emails showing impeded cancer treatment a “crisis in the making” and “gutwrenching.”
That the decisions are being made without input from the communities of vets they affect is worse, she added.
“If they are killing contracts that may affect the delivery of care, then we have a right to know,” she said.
Last week, as the second Trump administration marked its first 100 days in office, Collins celebrated what he described as its achievements.
In a recorded address, he said that under his stewardship the VA processed record numbers of benefit claims, ended “divisive” spending on diversity initiatives and redirected millions of agency dollars from “non-mission-critical” programs back toward services to benefit veterans.
“We will not stop working to put veterans first,” he wrote in an accompanying op-ed.
Others say Collins has done no such thing. Instead of focusing on veterans, said one VA oncologist, “we’re spending an enormous amount of time preparing for a staffing catastrophe.”
“Veterans’ lives are on the line,” the doctor said. “Let us go back to work and take care of them.”
Alex Mierjeski contributed research, and Joel Jacobs contributed reporting.
Este artículo estará disponible en español en El Tiempo Latino.
On the eve of his inauguration on Jan. 19, Donald Trump took a bow for the then surging stock market.
“Everyone is calling it the — I don’t want to say this, it’s too braggadocious, but we’ll say it anyway — the Trump effect. It’s you. You’re the effect. Since the election, the stock market has surged,” Trump said.
But in the ensuing three months, the stock market has faltered. The S&P 500 stock average has declined by 5.2% since Trump took office, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average, made up of 30 large corporations, has dropped by 5%, as of closing on May 2.
On Truth Social last week, Trump blamed his predecessor, former President Joe Biden.
“This is Biden’s Stock Market, not Trump’s,” Trump wrote on April 30. “I didn’t take over until January 20th.” And then, partly in all caps, Trump emphasized that the market downturn “has NOTHING TO DO WITH TARIFFS, only that he left us with bad numbers.”
Later that day, Trump expounded on the claim, saying, “I don’t view the stock market as the end all. It’s an indicator, but what the stock market really tells you and … when you look at the stock market in this case … it says how bad a situation we inherited.”
Stock prices are, of course, driven by a myriad of economic factors. Market experts, however, have said that the market’s recent volatility has a great deal to do with Trump’s tariff policies. The following graphic shows how the markets responded after Trump made various tariff announcements, and how Trump took credit or placed blame on Biden, depending on whether stocks were up or down.
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The fall of Saigon 50 years ago marked the end of the Vietnam War, and for WCCO's Pauleen Le, it marked the start of her family's immigration story to America — one that resonates with so many Minnesotan families.
The Hmong diaspora to Minnesota started nearly 50 years ago with one man: Leng Wong. He fled his home of Laos, arriving at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, in the bitter cold, on Feb. 7, 1976.
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