2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:51

Automaker had given ‘numerous statements reassuring drivers that it would not do so’, says California attorney general

General Motors (GM) agreed to pay $12.75m to resolve claims that it illegally sold hundreds of thousands of Californians’ location and driving data to two data brokers, said the state’s attorney general, Rob Bonta, on Friday. He said this came after the Detroit-based automaker had given “numerous statements reassuring drivers that it would not do so”.

“General Motors sold the data of California drivers without their knowledge or consent,” Bonta said in a statement. “This trove of information included precise and personal location data that could identify the everyday habits and movements of Californians.”

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:45

Motion submitted by Virginia house speaker paves way for appeal to Friday’s ruling striking down recently passed redistricting referendum

A reminder that my colleagues are covering the latest on the conflict in the Middle East. Including secretary of state Marco Rubio’s visit to Rome, to mend strained relations with Italian leaders and the Vatican after Donald Trump chided Pope Leo XIV for his stance on the war in Iran.

Rubio told reporters in Rome that the US should get a response on Friday from Iran to its proposal to end the war.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:42

Centcom says it has struck two tankers heading for Iran after Tehran warned Washington was violating fragile ceasefire; two days of ‘intensive talks’ between Israel and Lebanon slated as strikes continue in the region

The ship monitor Tanker Trackers has posted the following on X about the Ocean Koi oil tanker:

Her new name is actually JIN LI (9255933), and has been so since 2025-11-30. Examining our data, we can see that she’s transported various Iranian hydrocarbons on at least 16 occasions since 2021; and with full knowledge of Iran because half of her loadings were conducted directly at port in Iran while the other half were conducted via Ship-to-Ship transfer further out.

JIN LI’s ownership is based in Shanghai, China. The vessel was slapped with sanctions by US OFAC on 2026-02-25.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:36

The ways in which Google can lock you into their ecosystem are often obvious, but sometimes, they’re incredibly sneaky and easily missed.

CAPTCHA tests are annoying, but at the same time, they can help protect websites from bots. While these tests are already the bane of our internet existence, they are going to get worse for some Android users. A requirement for Google’s next-generation reCAPTCHA system will make it a lot harder for de-Googled phones to browse the web.

A Reddit user has highlighted a seemingly innocuous support page for Google’s reCAPTCHA system. The page in question relates to troubleshooting reCAPTCHA verification on mobile. In the document, it says that you’ll need to use a compatible mobile device to complete verification. If you have an Android phone, then that means you’ll need to be running Google Play Services version 25.41.30 or higher.

↫ Ryan McNeal at Android Authority

When was the last time you actively thought about reCAPTCHA being a Google property? Even then, when was the last time you imagined something as annoying but ultimately basic as a captcha prompt could be used to tie people to Google Play Services, and thus to “blessed” Android? Every time we manage to work around one of these asinine ties to Google Play Services, another one pops up to ruin our day. We’re so stupidly tied down to and entirely dependent on two very mid – at best – mobile operating systems, and it’s such a stupid own goal for especially everyone outside of the US to just sit there and do nothing about it.

Worse yet, it seems we’re only tying ourselves down further, while paying for the privilege.

At the very least we should be categorising certain services – government ID services, payment services, popular messaging platforms, and a few more – as vital infrastructure, and legally mandate these services have clearly defined and well-documented APIs so anyone is free to make alternative clients. The fact that many people are tied to either iOS or “blessed” Android because of something as stupid as what bank they use or the level of incompetency of their government ID service should be a major crisis in any country that isn’t the US.

I don’t want to use iOS or Android, but nobody is leaving me any choice. It’s infuriating.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:17

This week's guests include Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:15
Idk how I rode the vega for so long.

Thanks Jeffy and team TFL for the new tire. Compared to the vega, this tire is ridiculous.. if u haven't done it yet, do ittt.

submitted by /u/RoundSherbert7006
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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:09

After January order from US department of the interior, managers across 55 sites have lifted prohibitions

Donald Trump’s administration is quietly pushing national park, refuge and wilderness area managers to dramatically scale back hunting restrictions, raising questions about visitor safety and the impact on wildlife.

Doug Burgum, the US Department of the Interior secretary, issued an order in January directing multiple agencies to remove what he termed “unnecessary regulatory or administrative barriers” to hunting and fishing, to and justify regulations they want to keep in place.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:07

Welsh Labour leader and first minister Eluned Morgan loses seat with party pushed into third place behind Plaid Cymru and Reform

This liveblog is now closed. Read the Guardian’s report on the elections here and find all our election coverage here.

We’re getting statements from some of the political parties now as we wait for results.

For the Conservatives, party chairman Kevin Hollinrake said:

We have run an energetic and positive campaign, showcasing that we have a clear plan to get Britain working again and that we have the team to deliver it... We know that so soon after a historic general election defeat and contesting wards won during the Party’s polling highs, that this will be a difficult set of elections for us. But we will continue to rebuild and to show the public that we have changed, to demonstrate that only this new Conservative party is a credible alternative.

People are deeply disappointed with a Labour government that has been too timid to fix the country, but they are also appalled by the rise of Reform and Nigel Farage’s Trump-style politics. While those on the extremes of the right and the left want to burn everything down, Liberal Democrats want to fix what’s broken. Every Liberal Democrat local champion elected today will fight tirelessly for the communities they serve.

I’ve travelled across England and Wales and I’m hearing the same everywhere I go – confidence that we will win more councillors than ever before. The news from the doorstep is that we will be taking seats from not just Labour but the Tories and Lib Dems too, from all across the country. Voters are responding to the fact that Greens are the only party taking the cost-of-living crisis seriously, with real plans to cut bills, reduce rents and provide genuinely affordable homes, as well as tackling the climate and nature crisis.

Throughout this election, we have heard a clear appetite for change. People want a government that will stand up for Wales and focus relentlessly on the key issues affecting their lives. People have told us they have been inspired by Rhun ap Iorwerth’s leadership and driven by a desire for a positive alternative to Reform UK’s chaos and division.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 19:00

Longtime Slashdot reader cellocgw writes: Hiding inside another layoff report, Fidelity is reorganizing: "The changes are aimed at moving the teams away from an 'agile' makeup -- comprising smaller, siloed squads -- and toward larger teams built to move faster on projects." OMG, as they say: "Sudden outbreak of common sense." According to the Boston Globe, Fidelity is cutting about 1,000 jobs even as it plans to hire roughly 5,300 new workers, many of them early-career engineers. Half of the 3,300 new workers hired this year "will be in tech or product-related roles," the report says, noting that "about 2,000 of those jobs are currently open, and 400 of them are in tech/product-delivery." "The company also plans to add almost 2,000 new early-career workers, with the goal of making the tech and product-delivery teams more hands-on. In all, that means roughly 5,300 new jobs in the pipeline for Fidelity." The company says AI isn't driving the shift; as cellocgw noted, it's about moving toward larger teams that Fidelity says can move faster on priority projects. The financial services firm also reported a strong 2025 under CEO Abigail Johnson, with managed assets rising 19% from 2024 to $7.1 trillion and revenue climbing 15% to $37.7 billion. "Throughout the company's history, our investments in technology have fueled our growth and customer service capabilities," Johnson wrote in a letter (PDF) included in the company's annual report. "We will continue to prioritize technology initiatives that help us advance digital capabilities, simplify our technology ecosystem, and protect the firm and our customers."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:59

The Department of War just dumped a huge batch of UFO files, but does it have proof of aliens? Here's what we make of it.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:58
Rewheeled Pint Flashing White/broken firmware?

Trying to help my mate out here with his board. A while back I rewheeled it for him, now it's all of a sudden like this. he hasn't updated using the onewheel app since. Also has a "filmware corrupted there's something wrong with your filmware" popup. Are these two things connected? any ideas?

submitted by /u/Comfortable_Term_272
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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:56
Pint flashing white light/ broken filmware?

Trying to help my mate out here with his board. A while back I rewheeled it for him, now it’s all of a sudden like this. he hasn’t updated using the onewheel app since.

Also has a “filmware corrupted there’s something wrong with your filmware” popup. Are these two things connected? any ideas?

submitted by /u/Comfortable_Term_272
[link] [comments]

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:44

Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, concedes his party was comprehensively beaten

John Swinney, the Scottish National party leader, has challenged Keir Starmer to show “greater respect” to the Scottish government after winning the Holyrood elections by a comfortable margin.

The Scottish National party secured a record fifth term in office on Friday after securing at least 57 of Holyrood’s 129 seats, with Labour and Reform vying for a distant second place.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:32

US judge says halt of $100m in funds allotted by Congress for scholars, writers and research illegal and discriminatory

A federal judge ruled on Thursday that the terminations of hundreds of humanities grants last year by the Trump administration’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) were unconstitutional and involved “blatant” discrimination. In April last year, Donald Trump’s administration terminated more than 1,400 grants, representing more than $100m in congressionally appropriated funds awarded to scholars, writers, research institutions and other humanities organizations.

The terminations were part of a cost-cutting drive that billionaire Elon Musk was leading at Doge.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:32

A designated contact may be notified if a chat discussion indicates a possible safety concern.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:15

CHARLOTTE, N.C., May 8, 2026 — Honeywell (NASDAQ: HON) today announced that Quantinuum, a leading, full-stack quantum computing company, has publicly filed a registration statement on Form S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) relating to a proposed initial public offering of shares of its Class A common stock.

The number of shares to be offered and the price range for the proposed offering have not yet been determined. Quantinuum intends to list its Class A common stock on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker symbol “QNT.”

J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley (in alphabetical order) are acting as joint lead active book-running managers for the proposed offering. Jefferies and Evercore ISI are also acting as active book-running managers.

The proposed offering is subject to market conditions, and there can be no assurance as to whether or when the offering may be completed, or as to the actual size or terms of the offering.

The proposed offering will be made available only by means of a prospectus. Copies of the preliminary prospectus, when available, may be obtained from: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, c/o Broadridge Financial Solutions, 1155 Long Island Avenue, Edgewood, NY 11717 or by email at prospectus-eq_fi@jpmchase.com and postsalemanualrequests@broadridge.com; Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC, 180 Varick Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10014, Attention: Prospectus Department or by email at prospectus@morganstanley.com; Jefferies LLC, Attn: Equity Syndicate Prospectus Department, 520 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10022, by telephone at (877) 821-7388 or by email at Prospectus_Department@Jefferies.com; or Evercore Group L.L.C., Attention: Equity Capital Markets, 55 East 52nd Street, 35th Floor, New York, NY 10055, by telephone at 888-474-0200 or by email at ecm.prospectus@evercore.com.

The registration statement relating to these securities has been filed with the SEC but has not yet become effective. These securities may not be sold, nor may offers to buy be accepted, prior to the time the registration statement becomes effective. This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy these securities, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction. Any offers, solicitations or offers to buy, or any sales of securities will be made in accordance with the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

More from HPCwire: Honeywell Confirms Quantinuum IPO Filing as Quantum Firms Face Market Scrutiny

About Honeywell

Honeywell is an integrated operating company serving a broad range of industries and geographies around the world. Our business is aligned with three powerful megatrends – automation, the future of aviation and energy transition – underpinned by our Honeywell Accelerator operating system and Honeywell Forge IoT platform. As a trusted partner, we help organizations solve the world’s toughest, most complex challenges, providing actionable solutions and innovations through our Aerospace Technologies, Industrial Automation, Building Automation and Energy and Sustainability Solutions business segments that help make the world smarter, safer, as well as more secure and sustainable. For more news and information on Honeywell, please visit www.honeywell.com/newsroom.

About Quantinuum

Quantinuum is a leading quantum computing company offering a full-stack platform designed to make quantum computing deployable in real-world environments. The company has commercially deployed multiple generations of quantum systems built on the well-established QCCD architecture, which it has implemented with novel designs and capabilities to achieve the industry’s highest accuracy levels based on average two-qubit gate fidelity as of December 31, 2025. Quantinuum has active engagements with market leaders across pharmaceuticals, material science, financial services, and government and industrial markets. Quantinuum’s headquarters is in Broomfield, Colorado, with additional facilities across the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, and Singapore.


Source: Honeywell

The post Honeywell Announces Quantinuum’s Filing of Registration Statement for Proposed IPO appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 18:00

BrianFagioli writes: Micron says it is now shipping the world's highest-capacity commercially available SSD, and the numbers are honestly hard to wrap your head around. The new Micron 6600 ION packs 245TB into a single drive and is aimed squarely at AI infrastructure, hyperscalers, and cloud providers dealing with exploding data growth. According to the company, the SSD can reduce rack counts by 82 percent compared to HDD deployments offering similar raw capacity, while also cutting power usage and cooling requirements. Micron says the drive tops out at roughly 30W, which it claims is about half the power draw of comparable hard drive setups. The announcement also feels like another warning sign for spinning disks in the enterprise. Hard drives still dominate bulk storage because of lower cost per terabyte, but SSD capacities keep climbing into territory that used to belong exclusively to HDDs. Micron is also touting major performance gains, claiming up to 84 times better energy efficiency for AI workloads and dramatically lower latency versus HDD-based systems. While nobody is dropping one of these into a home NAS anytime soon, the idea of a quarter petabyte on a single SSD no longer sounds like science fiction.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:49

Thomas Shaknovsky botched the surgery of William Bryan, 70, who died on the operating table

A Florida surgeon who is facing criminal charges after allegedly removing a patient’s liver instead of his spleen has said he is “forever traumatized” by that person’s death.

In a deposition from November that was recently obtained by NBC, 44-year-old Thomas Shaknovsky described the death of 70-year-old William Bryan as an “incredibly unfortunate event that I regret deeply”.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:47

Party has success in Labour and Tory heartland areas but one pollster says results suggest Reform may have peaked

Nigel Farage hailed sweeping election wins for Reform UK as a “historic shift in British politics” on a day when the populist party made gains at the expense of Labour and the Conservatives.

Reform made advances in heartland areas of both parties, clocking up substantial early results in the English local elections by taking control of Essex county council, Havering – its first London local authority – and Sunderland city council.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:47

A "hawkish" turn at the Fed and stubbornly high inflation could delay interest rate cuts, according to Bank of America economists.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:35

Senior Labour MPs urge prime minister to step down within year as party loses control of 25 English councils and humbled in Wales

Keir Starmer is under pressure to set out a timeline for his departure after a crushing defeat in elections across Britain prompted senior Labour MPs to call for him to step down within a year.

In a disastrous set of results, Labour had lost control of more than 25 councils and almost 1,000 council seats in England by Friday evening, many to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, which made large gains across the Midlands and the north as well as taking seats from the Tories in the south.

Farage said a “truly historic shift in British politics” had occurred after Reform UK won hundreds of seats and control of more councils in England. The gains included Essex where the Tory leader, Kemi Badenoch, has her constituency and which the Conservatives held for 25 years.

Plaid Cymru became the largest party in Wales, beating Reform into second place, after Labour admitted it was on course to lose control of the Senedd for the first time since devolution. Morgan, the first woman to lead the Welsh government, became the highest-profile casualty and called on Labour to “go back to being the party of the working class”.

The SNP leader, John Swinney, declared victory in the Holyrood elections – though was expected to fall short of an outright majority. The Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, conceded defeat saying his party had failed to counter “national dissatisfaction” with Starmer.

The Greens gained their first two directly elected mayors – in Hackney and Lewisham – although they missed out on some more ambitious targets in London, as their leader, Zack Polanski, declared Britain’s two-party politics “dead and buried”. They also won three councils: Norwich, Hastings and Waltham Forest.

The Tories were on course to lose hundreds of seats – both to Reform and the Liberal Democrats – across the south of England. However, they won back the flagship Westminster council in central London, with Badenoch announcing it meant the party was “coming back”.

Labour appeared to be struggling in its London stronghold, despite early indications that its vote was holding up, unexpectedly losing control of Brent. Party insiders were closely watching councils including Lambeth, Lewisham and Haringey.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:35

Men were convicted in Miami federal court for plotting to kill Jovenel Moïse at his Port-au-Prince home in 2021

Four south Florida men were convicted on Friday of plotting to kill the Haitian president, Jovenel Moïse, in 2021 by hiring mercenaries to assassinate him at his Port-au-Prince home, court records show.

Prosecutors argued during the nine-week trial in a Miami federal court that the men assembled two dozen former Colombian soldiers and supplied them with money, guns, ammunition and tactical vests in a conspiracy to kill Moïse. The 53-year-old president was shot dead in July 2021 at his private residence in the hills above Port-au-Prince, a killing that left a gaping political vacuum in the Caribbean nation and emboldened powerful gangs.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:24

First onewheel picked up a used pint. I'm just getting used to it around my street. Just pulled it off the charger and did a few laps and at higher speed I was getting the pushback warning vibe thing. Is this because its in redwood? I figured in beginner mode it has plenty of torque not to nose dive?

submitted by /u/Interesting_Bar_8379
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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:19

Trump announced the three-day halt in fighting, which coincides with Russia’s Victory Day celebrations.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:18

You could build an entire data center around a new GPU with elaborate scale-up networking, exotic chiplet architectures, and advance liquid cooling. Or if you’re AMD, you could release a powerful GPU that customers can plug directly into the PCI busses of their existing servers, providing an immediate boost for running new AI workloads.

That’s just what AMD did this week with the release of its MI350P, the latest GPU in its Instinct line. Boasting 185 billion transistors, 144GB of HBM3e capacity, and 4 TB per second of peak memory bandwidth, the MI350P is designed to run small, medium, and large language models for AI inferencing and RAG (retrieval augmented generation) use cases.

The MI350 GPU (Source: AMD)

The MI350P plugs into a standard PCIe Gen 5 bus, providing 128GB per second of connectivity with a host. It operates within a 600W thermal envelope, and supports BF16, FP8, MXFP6 and MXFP4 workloads, offering 2,299 teraflops and up to 4,600 peak teraflops at MXFP4 precision through 128 AMD CDNA 4th Gen compute units.

Up to eight MI350P GPUs can be configured per node, and customers can segment their MI350P GPUs into four partitions, each with 36GB of HBM3 memory. The GPU is designed to handle AI models with up to 200 billion to 250 billion parameters; it also provides video and JPG decoding.

The new GPU uses standard air cooling, which AMD makes a point of. “Adopting AI doesn’t mean rebuilding infrastructure from the ground up,” wrote Suresh Andani, who heads business development teams for compute and enterprise AI at AMD, in an AMD blog post. “With AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards, enterprises can run more models and serve more users within their existing data centers.”

AMD launched the MI350P with support from computer makers, including Dell Technologies. David Schmidt, Dell’s vice president of product management, said the new GPU will help customers move forward more quickly. “For enterprises serious about AI, on-premises infrastructure isn’t a compromise,” he said. “It’s a competitive advantage delivering the control, security and predictable outcomes that matter most.”

Gigabyte is also adopting the MI350P across its AI server portfolio. Gigabyte General Manager Daniel Hou praised the new GPU for its practicality. “With its PCIe-based design, AMD Instinct MI350P enables flexible deployment and seamless integration into systems, allowing enterprises to build high-performance AI environments with the flexibility and efficiency required to scale globally,” Hou said.

AMD is also touting its software stack for its MI350 line of GPUs (Source: AMD)

AMD is also working on higher end air-cooled GPUs, as well as liquid cooled. For instance, it offers the Instinct UB B8, which is an 8-GPU air-cooled configuration of its MI350X and MI355X line that is delivered as a Universal Baseboard. The UB B8 delivers 2.3TB of HBM3, offering 8TB per second of memory bandwidth. It will also plug into AMD’s Infinity Fabric to provide scale-up capabilities that AMD says will be on par with Nvidia Blackwell. The UB B8 will support models with up to 500 billion parameters and is designed for AI training and inference at scale.

AMD also offers a liquid cooled version of the Instinct MI355X, which features a thermal envelope up to 1,400W. Supermicro and TensorWave are partnering with AMD to support these liquid-cooled chips. AMD also offers a liquid-cooled version of its Radeon gaming GPU.

There is definitely a market for ultra high-end GPUs that can be strung together in exotic ways to train the biggest AI models and power massive AI factories. These absolutely require liquid cooling, and possibly even different electrical regimes, such as Nvidia’s shift to 800V DC. But there are plenty of customers that need HPC gear to run slightly smaller AI models on their existing stack and who don’t want to build an entirely new data centers to do so. This is the segment that AMD is targeting with the MI355P GPUs.

The post AMD Delivers Plug-In AI Power with PCI-Based GPU appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 17:00

mrspoonsi shares a report: Dirty Frag is a vulnerability class, first discovered and reported by Hyunwoo Kim (@v4bel), that can obtain root privileges on major Linux distributions by chaining the xfrm-ESP Page-Cache Write vulnerability and the RxRPC Page-Cache Write vulnerability. Dirty Frag extends the bug class to which Dirty Pipe and Copy Fail belong. Because it is a deterministic logic bug that does not depend on a timing window, no race condition is required, the kernel does not panic when the exploit fails, and the success rate is very high. Because the embargo has been broken, no patch or CVE currently exists. "As with the previous Copy Fail vulnerability, Dirty Frag likewise allows immediate root privilege escalation on all major distributions, and it chains two separate vulnerabilities," Kim said. Detailed technical information can be found here. BleepingComputer notes that the two vulnerabilities chained by Dirty Frag are "now tracked under the following CVE IDs: the xfrm-ESP one was assigned CVE-2026-43284, and the RxRPC isye is now CVE-2026-43500."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:54

Trump administration urges US Postal Service to scrap 100-year-old rule as Democratic state attorneys general protest

Handguns could be mailed through the United States Postal Service (USPS) for the first time in nearly 100 years if a proposed Trump administration rule takes effect.

Democratic attorneys general in two dozen states have sent a letter in opposition.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:54

If you own a Whoop fitness-tracking wearable, you’ll want to check out these new updates surrounding medical records and AI insights.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:52

With that context, I always found it strange that the designers of ASCII included 6 characters after uppercase Z before starting the lowercase letters. Then it hit me: we have 26 letters in the English alphabet, plus 6 additional characters before lowercase starts: 26 + 6 = 32. If you know anything about computers, powers of 2 tend to stick out. Let’s take a look at the binary representations of some characters compared to their lowercase counterparts.

↫ Tyler Hillery

I only have a middling understanding of the rest of the article and thus the ultimate reason why ASCII includes those six characters between Z and a, but I think it comes down to making certain operations on uppercase and lowercase letters specifically more elegant. In some deep crevices of my brain all of this makes sense, but I find it very difficult to truly understand and explain as someone who knows little about programming.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:46

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 797 for Saturday, May 9.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:42

Many Bourne shells go slightly beyond the POSIX sh specification to also support a ‘-l’ option that makes the shell act as a ‘login shell’. POSIX’s omission of -l isn’t only because it doesn’t really talk about login shells at all, it’s also because Unix has a special way of marking login shells that goes back very far in its history. The -l option isn’t necessarily what login and sshd and so on use, it’s something that you can use if you specifically want to get a login shell in an unusual circumstance.

Bourne shells also have a ‘-c <command string>’ option that causes the shell to execute the command string rather than be interactive (this is a long standing option that is in POSIX). It may surprise you to hear that most or all Bourne shells that support -l also allow you to use -l and -c together. Basically all Bourne shells interpret this as first executing your .profile and so on, then executing the command string instead of going interactive. One use for this is to non-interactively run a command line in the context of your fully set up shell, with $PATH and other environment variables ready for use.

↫ Chris Siebenmann

Now, what if you want to detect the use of these two options combined, for instance to make it so certain parts of your .profile are ignored? It turns out very few Bourne shells actually support this, and that’s what Siebenmann’s latest post is about.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:41

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 593 for Saturday, May 9.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:15

With gasoline prices a hot issue for voters as the midterm elections approach, President Donald Trump said he is making progress. 

A reporter asked Trump on May 7 about average gasoline prices recently rising past $4.50 a gallon nationally. 

Trump replied, "Gas prices have come down today. Have you looked? They've come down very substantially today." 

That’s inaccurate.

According to the American Automobile Association, the national average price for a gallon of gasoline rose each day for four days preceding Trump’s remark. The day after he spoke, May 8, prices dropped by about a penny per gallon.

Crude oil — which is refined into gasoline — had a price drop in the days before Trump’s remark. But gasoline prices did not follow, a pattern that experts say is typical because of short-term volatility in crude oil prices. 

The White House did not immediately respond to an inquiry for this article.

Recent changes in gasoline prices

From May 4 to May 7 — the day of Trump’s comment — the national average price as reported by AAA rose each day leading up to his statement:

  • $4.457 on May 4

  • $4.483 on May 5

  • $4.536 on May 6

  • $4.558 on May 7. 

(There is price variation across states and regions, and from gas station to gas station; literally, your mileage may vary.)

The day after Trump’s remark, the average gasoline price reported by AAA dropped to $4.546. Even if that change had happened before he spoke, it would not have qualified as prices dropping "very substantially." The 1.2 cent drop amounted to a decline of two-tenths of 1%.

In the days leading up to Trump’s comment, crude oil, the commodity that is refined into gasoline, declined in price. 

Brent crude, the standard price metric for international oil markets, fell from a peak of about $114 a barrel on May 4 to roughly $103 around the time Trump spoke on May 7, a drop of about 10%. West Texas Intermediate, a price measure for U.S.-produced oil, fell from almost $84 a barrel on May 4 to around $79 when Trump spoke, roughly a 6% decline.

But the price of gasoline — not the price of crude oil — is what consumers encounter at gas stations. And a crude oil price decline — if it were sustained over more than a few days — can take weeks or even months to show up at the pump, experts say

In the short to medium term, the pattern for gasoline prices is known as "up like a rocket, down like a feather" — rapid rises, but slower declines. 

Part of this stems from gas station owners’ caution; they fear a sudden price spike cutting into their usually narrow profit margins. Motorists also tend to shop around less when prices are falling, reducing competitive pressures among gas stations.

The bigger picture on gasoline prices

Gasoline prices are unusually high, spurred by the war Trump launched with Israel against Iran, which led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Before Iran closed the strait, about one-fifth of the world’s oil flowed through it, and the stalled tanker traffic has hampered oil supplies, increasing prices.

The price of gasoline May 8 — about $4.55 — is the ninth-highest weekly price in U.S. history since 1990. The only time period when prices were higher was eight weeks from May through July 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which prompted western sanctions on Russian oil.

The share of income Americans are devoting to gasoline today is high but — unlike the price they see at the pump — it isn’t close to the highest ever.

At today’s prices, 10 gallons of gasoline accounts for almost the same share of disposable household income as it did in 2022 — around 3.6%. And if — or when — the average gasoline price passes $4.80 per gallon this year, it would match that 2022 level.

However, 10 gallons of gasoline cost more as a percentage of disposable income in nine of the 10 years between 2005 and 2014.

How high could prices go?

Experts cautioned that even after the strait is opened — which is uncertain — gasoline prices will likely remain high for months. 

So far, "we’ve lost 65 days" of oil shipments because of the closure, and it will take months to make that up, said Patrick De Haan, the head of petroleum analysis for the gasoline price tracker GasBuddy.

Iranian attacks on neighbors’ oil infrastructure will add to that delay by forcing key oil infrastructure to idle or rebuild. It could take "months to years to get export capacity up to where it was" before the war, said Hugh Daigle, University of Texas-Austin petroleum and geosystems engineering professor.

Skip York, fellow in energy and global oil at Rice University’s Center for Energy Studies, said that because wholesale prices have been increasing faster than retail prices over the last eight weeks, additional price increases could continue working their way through the system. 

"I wouldn't rule out gasoline prices breaching $5 a gallon this summer depending on what happens to crude oil prices, what the U.S. driving season looks like and whether there are any major unplanned outages at U.S. refineries," York said.

Our ruling

Trump said gasoline prices have "come down very substantially today."

From May 4 to May 7, gasoline prices did not drop. Crude oil prices decreased during that time period, but day-to-day variations in crude oil prices generally do not show up immediately in prices at the pump. 

By historical standards, U.S. gasoline prices are unusually high. The only time they were higher was for eight weeks in 2022, after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

We rate the statement False.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:15

Apple is reportedly searching for options beyond its main chip supplier, Taiwan Semiconductor.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:13

The 1965 Voting Rights Act has long been considered a landmark Civil Rights era achievement that aimed to end discriminatory practices against Black Americans who tried to vote. 

But a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling largely gutted the law, and many Republicans — including U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, the GOP frontrunner in the race for Florida governor — celebrated the court’s decision.

Donalds countered that it was Democrats’ discriminatory gerrymandering practices that spurred the Voting Rights Act’s creation in the first place.

Congress wrote and passed the 1965 law "because of the Democrat party at the time, especially in the South, who were racially gerrymandering districts to disenfranchise Black voters," Donalds said in a May 4 interview with Benny Johnson, a conservative commentator.  (Gerrymandering is drawing district boundaries to give one political party, incumbent or group an advantage.)

Historians told PolitiFact that racist gerrymandering was not the driving force behind the law’s creation.

The Voting Rights Act was created to combat discriminatory practices against Black Americans who tried to vote, including literacy and property tests, grandfather clauses, poll taxes, voter roll purges, intimidation and violence. 

"Donalds’ statement is not accurate, not even close," said Alex Keyssar, a Harvard University history and social policy professor. The Voting Rights Act passed because, in most Southern states, Black Americans were not permitted to vote or even register to vote, he said.

"Numerous devices were used to prevent Black people from registering, like literacy tests and understanding clauses, but gerrymandering was not the issue. There was no need to racially gerrymander because they couldn’t vote in the first place." 

Although Donalds pointed at Democrats for the gerrymandering, Democrats today are not the southern Democrats of the 1960s. 

Carol Anderson, an Emory University African American studies professor, called Donalds’ comment ahistorical and disingenuous, saying it ignores the Southern Strategy, where Republicans turned the Democratic South into a GOP-stronghold by criticizing the Civil Rights Movement to gain support.  

"It treats the demographics of the two parties as stagnant, when it was the mid-1960s through the Reagan era when the major shifts happened."

PolitiFact asked Donalds’ campaign for comment but received no reply. 

President Lyndon B. Johnson moves to shake hands with Martin Luther King, Jr. while others look on during the signing of the Voting Rights Act on Aug. 6, 1965, in Washington, D.C. (photo courtesy of LBJ Library, photo by Yoichi Okamoto)

Why was the Voting Rights Act created? 

Congress passed the Voting Rights Act to enforce the 15th Amendment and end over a century of discriminatory practices that prevented Black Americans, particularly in the South, from voting.

Despite Black men gaining the right to vote in 1869 with the amendment’s passage, many Southern states spent decades creating significant barriers for when Black men tried to register or vote. In practice, those barriers nullified the constitutional protection. 

"The Voting Rights Act was necessary because the South had choked the life out of democracy through poll taxes, literacy tests, brutality, and white domestic terrorism," Anderson said.

Other barriers included property tests, allowing only property owners to vote and "grandfather clauses" which said people who didn’t own property could vote if their fathers or grandfathers had voted before 1867 — before Black men had the right to do so.

These Jim Crow obstacles led to decades of marches and voter registration campaigns that left activists brutally beaten or murdered. Mounting civil rights activism, along with increased media attention, pushed the federal government to act. 

"Bloody Sunday," on March 7, 1965, in which police savagely beat hundreds of protesters as they set out to march for voting rights in Selma, Alabama, was another turning point, speeding the Voting Rights Act ’s passage less than a month later.

State troopers hit protesters with billy clubs to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Ala., on March 7, 1965. (AP)

What the Voting Rights Act did 

The law required state and local governments, including some Florida counties, with a history of discriminatory voting practices to go through a federal approval process called preclearance before changing any election laws or procedures. (The Supreme Court overturned this in 2013, ruling that the formula used to determine what places needed preclearance was unconstitutional because it was based on 1960s and ‘70s electoral conditions.) 

"The VRA sought to have federal monitoring of areas throughout the U.S. that had a history of these actions," said Keneshia Grant, a Howard University political science professor. "While much of that discrimination was happening in the South, it was not limited to that region."

Section 2 of the law also prohibits governments from imposing election procedures or practices that would deny or restrict the right of U.S. citizens to vote based on race or color.

As a result, states drew new congressional maps to create districts with a Black majority, a practice the Supreme Court all but overruled. 

How much did discriminatory gerrymandering factor into the law’s creation?

Experts said the VRA primarily sought to fortify the 15th Amendment, which guaranteed that the right to vote could not be denied based on race. The law does not mention "apportionment," "gerrymandering" or "redistricting." Instead, it uses a broad brush to prohibit the many ways Black Americans could have their right to vote abridged or denied. 

Some cases of discriminatory gerrymandering, primarily in the South, took place before the law passed, but historians say it wasn’t a primary tool for voter disenfranchisement at that time. It was lumped in as one of many discriminatory election procedures that the legislation aimed at remedying without explicitly saying so.

"I would not say that (gerrymandering) was the driving factor for the VRA," Grant said. "That would be like saying desegregation of buses was the reason for the Civil Rights Act. Are these things related? Yes. But the Civil Rights Act was much bigger than busing. Likewise, the VRA was bigger than just the lines." 

Attempts at racial gerrymandering became more prevalent after the VRA passed, Keyssar, from Harvard said. It was in anticipation of such moves, he said, that the law required some states to get preclearance before amending election laws, which would include districting issues. 

Our ruling

Donalds said Congress wrote and passed the 1965 Voting Rights Act because "the Democrat party at the time, especially in the South, were racially gerrymandering districts to disenfranchise Black voters."

The law sought to enforce the 15th Amendment and end longstanding racist practices against Black Americans to keep them from voting — including literacy tests, poll taxes, property tests, intimidation and violence.

Historians say racist gerrymandering existed before the law passed, but it wasn’t a primary tool for voter disenfranchisement at that time. The practice became more prevalent later in an attempt to neutralize the power of newly cast ballots as more Black people were able to vote. 

The law doesn’t mention gerrymandering, and while it’s included as one of many discriminatory practices the law sought to prohibit, it wasn’t the reason for its creation.

We rate Donalds’ statement False.

RELATED: What does federal law say about partisan gerrymandering? Fact-checking Florida Democratic leader

RELATED: Is Florida’s mid-decade redistricting plan ‘illegal,’ as some Democrats say?

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 17:43

The MV Hondius is currently traveling to the Canary Islands, where the 147 people on board will be methodically off-boarded and flown home.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 19:16

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. was expecting a response from Iran on a peace proposal Friday, adding, "we'll see what the response entails" and that he hopes it's "a serious offer."

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 17:54

The Trump administration, sidestepping a widening battle in the Strait of Hormuz, said it was anticipating a reply from Tehran on its latest terms for ending the war.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:02

Southern Republicans moving quickly to capitalize on supreme court ruling in Louisiana case that weakened voting protections for minorities nationwide

Alabama lawmakers approved a plan on Friday for new US House primaries if courts allow the state to use different congressional districts in this year’s elections, sending the legislation to the Republican governor, Kay Ivey.

The move came the same day that the Virginia supreme court dealt a major setback to Democrats by overturning a redistricting plan that could have helped them win as many as four additional House seats. Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers in Louisiana and South Carolina also presented congressional redistricting plans that faced staunch opposition from civil rights activists and Democrats.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:01

Reform, Greens and pro-Gaza independents make significant gains, although no party has yet won majority

The Labour party’s 14-year leadership in Birmingham has come to an end after Reform, Greens and pro-Gaza independents made significant gains in the UK’s second-largest city.

No party has yet won an overall majority at Birmingham city council, one of Europe’s largest local authorities, with the results reflecting wider political fragmentation across England.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle No. 1,063 for Saturday, May 9.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 16:00
Dara Fisher

DARA FISHER
Staff Reporter

If you live in Delaware and drink water, then you have Perfluoroalkyl and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in your body.

Students in the honors section of Introduction to Environmental Engineering (CIEG133) engaged in a semester-long project during the spring of 2025 involving preliminary research, field sampling, data analysis and a poster presentation to test their hypothesis: Can standard water quality parameters indicate PFAS contamination?

PFAS are a group of synthetic chemicals commonly used in consumer products such as non-stick cookware. They pose health and environmental concerns, and are increasingly found in natural waters. Since PFAS are extremely expensive to test for and remediate, students set out with the intent of finding another option to track them.

Led by Paul Imhoff, a professor in the Department of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering, the honors section explored PFAS through discussion in the classroom, preparation for field sampling and a lecture from Megan Wassil, a graduate student studying water science and policy. 

Current CIEG133 Professor Luiza Notini aided in the planning and field sampling for this project, which marked the first time that freshmen environmental engineering students participated in field work as part of the introductory course. 

“When I was talking with two students in the class last year, they commented that they really wanted to do something hands-on,” Imhoff said. “Engineers certainly do things hands-on, and even though it takes more resources, I thought it would be important to do that.”

In March of 2025, students traveled to three sites: White Clay Creek, Red Clay Creek and a nearby downstream location where the creeks merge.

Using standard water quality instruments, they measured pH, turbidity, temperature and electrical conductivity, and collected samples for later laboratory analyses.

Environmental engineering student Sasha Sehgal spoke about her experience during the field trip. 

“I really liked that I was able to get into the water to take the samples,” Sehgal said. “I felt like an actual scientist doing research, and it was really nice seeing my peers measure the water quality parameters with the tools that we had.”

In the lab, the students were introduced to a variety of instruments and methods to determine the total suspended solids, total organic carbon and ion concentrations (such as fluoride, chloride and bromide) of the water samples. 

Over the next few weeks, they created graphs to analyze the relationship between the water quality measurements and known concentrations of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA), both of which are types of PFAS. 

The findings showed that samples with elevated PFAS concentrations also had high concentrations of fluoride, suggesting that fluoride could be an indicator of PFAS. Since fluoride is relatively easy to measure, it could serve as a useful and cost-efficient tool for identifying PFAS-related activity.

Imhoff acknowledged the limitations surrounding the conclusion. The measured PFAS concentration could be traced to a manufacturer operating near one of the stream sites. Wassil’s data shows multiple spikes in PFAS concentrations along the creeks, suggesting there may be several sources of contamination.

“In some ways, this is consistent because fluoride is an element that is in the perfluorinated compounds, but also quite unexpected in the sense that perfluorinated compounds are not easily degraded biologically or chemically,” Imhoff said. “So anyways, it really leads to more questions.”

To conclude the semester-long project, students presented a poster at the 2025 Delaware Environmental Institute (DENIN) Research Symposium. 

“The biggest takeaway I hope the students have is learning how to tackle a problem,” Imhoff said. “And in the process, learn more about your major and how to work together and interact with people who are different from you.”

Notini spearheaded the research project this semester, focusing on correlating historical water quality data with current watershed issues. Students gained exposure to fieldwork and laboratory work through this process, and presented their findings at the 2026 DENIN Environmental Research Symposium on April 15.

While the 2025 project was unable to draw strong conclusions, the experience of field sampling and analyzing data was valuable for a first-year engineering course. 

“This class made me feel more confident that I want to stay in Environmental Engineering,” Sehgal said. “I feel really good that I could make a potential change, especially seeing the data analysis that we did, and how we are actually proving that there is PFAS contamination in the water. We can change that. We can figure out how to better adapt what we’re doing to prevent that, and I think that’s really cool.”


Honors environmental-engineering first-years explore climate concerns through fieldwork was first posted on May 8, 2026 at 3:00 pm.
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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Security researcher Dor Zvi and his team at the cybersecurity firm he cofounded, RedAccess, analyzed thousands of vibe-coded web applications created using the AI software development tools Lovable, Replit, Base44, and Netlify and found more than 5,000 of them that had virtually no security or authentication of any kind. Many of these web apps allowed anyone who merely finds their web URL to access the apps and their data. Others had only trivial barriers to that access, such as requiring that a visitor sign in with any email address. Around 40 percent of the apps exposed sensitive data, Zvi says, including medical information, financial data, corporate presentations, and strategy documents, as well as detailed logs of customer conversations with chatbots. "The end result is that organizations are actually leaking private data through vibe-coding applications," says Zvi. "This is one of the biggest events ever where people are exposing corporate or other sensitive information to anyone in the world." Zvi says RedAccess' scouring for vulnerable web apps was surprisingly easy. Lovable, Replit, Base44, and Netlify all allow users to host their web apps on those AI companies' own domains, rather than the users'. So the researchers used straightforward Google and Bing searches for those AI companies' domains combined with other search terms to identify thousands of apps that had been vibe coded with the companies' tools. Of the 5,000 AI-coded apps that Zvi says were left publicly accessible to anyone who simply typed their URLs into a browser, he found close to 2,000 that, upon closer inspection, seemed to reveal private data: Screenshots of web apps he shared with WIRED -- several of which WIRED verified were still online and exposed -- showed what appeared to be a hospital's work assignments with the personally identifiable information of doctors, a company's detailed ad purchasing information, what appeared to be another firm's go-to-market strategy presentation, a retailer's full logs of its chatbot's conversations with customers, including the customers' full names and contact information, a shipping firm's cargo records, and assorted sales and financial records from a variety of other companies. In some cases, Zvi says, he found that the exposed apps would have allowed him to gain administrative privileges over systems and even remove other administrators. In the case of Lovable, Zvi says he also found numerous examples of phishing sites that impersonated major corporations, including Bank of America, Costco, FedEx, Trader Joe's, and McDonald's, that appeared to have been created with the AI coding tool and hosted on Lovable's domain. "Anyone from your company at any moment can generate an app, and this is not going through any development cycle or any security check," Zvi says. "People can just start using it in production without asking anyone. And they do."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 16:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 9, No. 1,785.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:51

The State Department is initiating a review of all 53 Mexican consulates in the United States, a U.S. official said, a move that could lead Secretary of State Marco Rubio to consider ordering the closure of some posts.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:50

Whimsical film shows relay of animals carrying centennial card from Balmoral Castle to naturalist in London

King Charles has featured in a surprise birthday tribute to David Attenborough, with a cast of wild animals helping to relay his handwritten congratulatory centenary card.

The whimsical film, A Very Special Delivery, begins with the king writing his tribute in the library of Balmoral Castle. Charles, wearing an animal-themed tie featuring elephants, reflects on more than 60 years of friendship with the renowned naturalist.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 15:49

At the SCSP AI+ Expo, Wright joined Buck to lay out the case for the Genesis Mission, NVIDIA’s AI-for-science initiative built on years of collaboration between NVIDIA and the US Department of Energy.

May 8, 2026 — AI will help build the energy it needs.

That’s the case U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright and NVIDIA Vice President of Hyperscale and High Performance Computing Ian Buck made Thursday morning at the SCSP AI+ Expo. The 30-minute fireside chat, moderated by SCSP president Ylli Bajraktari, was called “Powering the Next American Century.”

From left: NVIDIA’s Ian Buck, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright and SCSP president Ylli Bajraktari onstage at the SCSP AI+ Expo.

Their argument: American leadership in AI runs through American leadership in energy.

“Energy is life,” Wright said. “The more energy you have, the more affordable energy you have, the more opportunities you have in your society.”

The Genesis Mission — the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s effort to apply AI to scientific discovery — is where that case meets execution. NVIDIA is among the DOE partners on the mission, building on what Buck called two decades of NVIDIA building supercomputers with the national labs.

“NVIDIA is 100% committed and invested in Genesis,” Buck said. “I’ve never seen more excitement across the lab and industry.”

The session was one of several SCSP panels this week with NVIDIA leaders on stage: Cofounder and NVIDIA Fellow Chris Malachowsky will lead a panel on the AI+ Careers Workforce Task Force; Rev Lebaredian will speak on physical AI and simulation; Dion Harris will discuss AI-accelerated American science and AI infrastructure for Africa; and John Josephakis will join a session on U.S. quantum leadership.

The DOE Partnership

The DOE brings 17 national labs, the scientists, the national problems and the data. NVIDIA brings the full stack — not just chips, Buck said, but algorithms, methods and 20 years of partnership with the labs.

The work is happening at scale. NVIDIA and the DOE are building two AI supercomputers together at Argonne National Laboratory. The first, Equinox, is being stood up now with 10,000 NVIDIA Grace Blackwell GPUs — what Buck called “the same GPU, the same software being used to train and build AI that we’re all enjoying today.” The second, Solstice, will use 100,000 GPUs with NVIDIA Vera Rubin.

“To put that 100,000 in perspective on the next-generation GPU, which is dedicated to science, it’s 5,000 exaflops,” Buck said. “That’s a big number that actually is five times larger than the entire TOP500 supercomputer list combined.”

“We’re creating all the same technology, all the same hardware, all the same software building blocks used by all the major AI labs around the world,” Buck said, “for all of world science to go get access to.”

What that looks like in practice: Buck described an open source NVIDIA AI model trained on 1.5 million physics papers, then fine-tuned on 100,000 papers specifically about fusion. The result is a specialized AI agent DOE researchers can interrogate to advance their work faster.

Energy and the Pace of Building

Over the last 20 years, Wright said, the U.S. has tripled oil production and doubled natural gas production — but barely grown electricity production. That’s a problem because, as Wright put it, the most important source of energy for AI is electricity.

His department is leaning back into all three pillars of the U.S. grid: natural gas, nuclear and coal.

On nuclear, Wright pointed to small modular reactors as a near-term lever — three small modular reactors (SMRs) will go critical by July 4 of this year, he said, with both new large reactors and additional SMRs to follow.

On fusion, his department has stood up a strategic fusion office, and the lab and university programs are being, in his words, “hypercharged” by the computing power and insights AI now provides.

“We have to fix this bureaucratic and complex electricity grid so that it can grow fast, so that it can grow like our primary energy production and it can keep up with AI,” Wright said. “If we don’t do that, we’re going to slow down AI.”

NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang has described AI as a five-layer cake: energy, chips, infrastructure, models and applications. Wright’s department covers the bottom layer.

Buck took up the next layer. Asked about the intersection of energy and AI, he pointed to per-watt efficiency gains in NVIDIA chips with each generation.

“We went from the Hopper generation to Blackwell,” Buck said. “We increased performance by 30x. We actually increased performance per watt by 25 times.”

Wright returned to the grid. AI, he said, can break the bottleneck of grid interconnection studies that today take years.

“With AI, we’re going to take something that was years long and make it weeks or hours,” Wright said.

What Success Looks Like

Asked what success looks like 12 months in, Wright pointed to fusion, materials and grid interconnection — concrete deliverables.

“We will have deliverables that we’re going to point to — we couldn’t do that before, and now we can,” Wright said. “That’s the goal of Genesis: drive discovery and bring the benefits to humans.”

There’s growing public concern that AI and data centers will drive up electricity costs, he noted. The reality, Wright said, runs the other way: “Building more electrical generation, building data centers, are actually the mechanism to lower the cost of electricity in our country and make our grid stronger.”

AI and energy are both key to human progress.

“AI doesn’t love, it doesn’t have passion,” Wright said. “It’s just going to make humans more powerful and better at pursuing whatever your passions are. It’s a thing that supercharges humans — it does not replace you.”


Source: Brian Caulfield, NVIDIA

The post DOE and NVIDIA Detail Genesis Mission Plans at SCSP AI+ Expo appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:48

Has anyone had luck pairing a Garmin watch to a Thor 301 with VESC Dash or any other Garmin watch app?

Background: I'm fairly new to floating and I have a FM GT that I VESC'd and put a Techrails N52 5" hub and a BTG on. I primarily ride trails but the last couple times I've gone floating on the road, I've had the board dump out on me around 27mph (two times on one ride) with little to no warning. Now I'm looking for the best way to see where my boards at without reaching for my phone.

The good news is that every time my board felt like it was cutting out, it was very brief and I was able to recover minus a minor coronary event. I also wasn't pushing the board ignoring any push back. I don't believe it's a setup issue either as it seems to be happening just as the road flattens from an easy down hill section after my speed was gradually increasing. At least two of the times this happened, a gust of wind also hit me head on just as the road was leveling out so I think the speed combined with the sudden resistance instantly and briefly pushed the board beyond it's happy zone. I do ride with my phone volume turned up and an 80% warning alarm set on Float Control but it's always going off when I'm going over 20mph. because of this, I think it would be better to actually be able to see where the board is at on my wrist with a quick glance.

Sorry for the blah blah blah but as I started typing, I was imagining all the comments regarding rider error, VESC issues, etc. I'm open to critique for sure but I would really like to have my dashboard on my Garmin watch. - Thanks

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 15:47

The Cohutta town council will discuss reinstating the police and consider request for mayor's ‘immediate resignation’

The town council in a small mountain community in the US state of Georgia called a special meeting on Friday evening to discuss reinstating the police department after the mayor fired the chief and all the officers.

The notice for the meeting, posted outside the Cohutta town hall, says the council will also consider a request for the mayor’s “immediate resignation”.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:33

Keir Starmer’s party lost out to Reform and the Greens, with no respite in Scotland, Wales or England. These maps show the scale of the historic results

Labour has suffered heavy losses across England, Scotland and Wales, losing ground to opponents on the left and the right in a fragmented political system.

The graphics below show where Labour’s losses were most severe, and how the electoral landscape has changed as a result.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:33

Parents will receive hundreds of free diapers before leaving hospital under new program aimed at alleviating expenses

California families welcoming newborns will soon receive hundreds of free diapers before leaving the hospital under a first-in-the-country program announced on Friday by the state’s governor, Gavin Newsom.

During the program’s first year, it will be offered at about 65 to 75 hospitals that handle about a quarter of births in the state and largely serve low-income patients, Newsom’s office said. The initiative will expand to more hospitals statewide, though the governor’s office did not say how many. The state has partnered with the non-profit Baby2Baby to manufacture the diapers under the label “Golden State Start”.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 15:25

Understanding the ‘dark matter of the genome’ could help develop therapeutic medical advances

May 8, 2026 — In the field of human biology, there are many still-unanswered questions about the role of RNA, the less well-understood companion to DNA also found in all living cells, as scientists begin to unravel the complicated and important responsibilities of nucleic acid. In research described in Communications Biology, a Nature publication, an international research team applied innovative techniques to understand the structure and function of a particular ribozyme RNA.

Shutterstock 2430544819

A Los Alamos research team is unraveling the structure and function of RNA. Image credit: Shutterstock.

“One challenging aspect of learning about RNA structure and function is that there is not much data. We were surprised that RNA is structurally much more variable and often floppier than proteins built by DNA,” said Los Alamos scientist Karissa Sanbonmatsu. “That means we have to be able to predict many different structures to be able to map RNA to functions. Because RNA plays a role in cellular response to stress, heat, infection and other conditions, structural information is fundamentally important to unlocking RNA’s therapeutic potential.”

The research team specifically tackled the SINE B2 retrotransposon, or jumping gene, a genetic element that can move around in the DNA sequence, often by making an RNA copy of itself. That function is part of the regulation of gene expression: what a gene in DNA directs or enables a cell to do and when. The research provides an essential foundation for future studies on RNA structural dynamics and their impact on biological functions.

A Unique Self-Cleaving RNA System

Where it appears on the DNA-based genome, the SINE B2 retrotransposon is a repeated sequence that gets converted into RNA. From there, the RNA can regulate processes in a cell. The research team sought to understand the structure of the RNA in those situations and how that structure impacted process regulation.

The SINE B2 retrotransposon offers a useful system to study because it is one of the few RNA systems known to work as a molecular switch. Environmental conditions in the body can impact the shape it takes, and in some conditions the gene actually cuts or cleaves itself. That self-cleaving RNA (a “ribozyme”) has been known in bacteria and other organisms for a long time, but this is one of the only instances of that activity known to occur in mammals.

The research team studied that cleavage site and activity as well as other aspects of the ribozyme. Using an RNA engineering approach, the team examined the effects of point mutations, deletions of the main cleavage site, and deletions of the cleavage domain on the structural ensemble of the RNA. Combining this approach with methods that disrupt the RNA and observe reactions, the team was able to highlight the relationships between the structure and biologically relevant functional outcomes.

Next Steps: AI Models for 3D Structures

The team’s approach exemplified the new field of integrative structural biology, in which multimodal data — molecular biology, biochemistry, biophysics and structural biology experiments — is gathered and brought together with computer simulations to obtain a 3D model of molecules in action. The international team each contributed different components of the research: cell biology, X-ray scattering and RNA biochemistry experiments, tying it all together with the RNA modeling using Los Alamos’ Chicoma supercomputer.

The analysis will be contributed to a new artificial intelligence project the team is developing called “Beyond Alpha Fold.” Many of the computational techniques employed in the research will be brought into the Beyond Alpha Fold AI project. The team will seek to leverage AI for its long-term vision of building an ensemble of 3D structures of the RNA for a given sequence.

“Understanding RNA’s structure and function in the body is one of the challenges of the century in biology,” Sanbonmatsu said. “Non-coding RNA is like the dark matter of the genome; we know it’s there, and we know it plays a role, but we have a lot of work to do to pin those things down. We still don’t understand how cells with the same DNA look very different and do different things. One of the keys to unlocking this understanding is likely the role RNA plays in regulating gene expression.”

Paper: “Cleavage region organizes the structural architecture of the SINE-derived B2 repressive ribozyme.” Communications Biology: 10.1038/s42003-026-09819-0

Funding: The work was supported by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at Los Alamos and by the National Institutes of Health.


Source: LANL

The post LANL: Scientists Map the Shape of RNA That Can Shut Down Genes appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:19

Don’t have much time to look into specifics and explain, but just wanted to chime in a lead to start on, you need to use the VESC set_remote_state command (can be communicated over CAN or UART), rather than communicating with Refloat directly. The js-y parameter is the throttle value we care about.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:17

As we get closer to WWDC in June, more rumors are circulating about what the next iPhone could look like.

2026-05-08 16:04
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So a few nights ago at about 11 o clock I decided to throw my charger in my backpack and go for a super long night ride… all is fine and dandy I follow this golf course trail that cuts thru the neighborhood and I’m on my way. For whatever reason I decided to play with my remote tilt for a second (still new to this) and all of a sudden my board just perma-locks into captain morgain position. I tried everything. Powercycle board, reconnect Bluetooth, forget device, etc. I tried for like 100 feet to ride it at full tilt which was not happening. So eventually after trial and error I figured out I could hold the slider and manually keep the board level. Super duper sketch. This ever happened to any of yall?

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2026-05-08 16:04
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A trade court's ruling this week against a 10% U.S. tariff is narrow in scope, offering limited relief to importers. Here's what to know.

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Among the releases is a 1969 debrief of Buzz Aldrin stating he saw a ‘sizeable’ object close to the lunar surface

The Pentagon on Friday released an initial group of previously secret files documenting reports of UFOs – a move sought for decades by some.

“These files, hidden behind classifications, have long fueled justified speculation – and it’s time the American people see it for themselves,” Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary, said in a statement posted on X.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 15:03

Reform makes gains in Labour’s working-class heartlands, while Greens chip away at party’s progressive base

Keir Starmer hates to lose. Unsurprisingly, he refused to walk away and end his premiership as Labour’s local election losses began to trickle in on Friday morning. Upon entering Downing Street in July 2024 after leading Labour to a historic general election victory, Starmer promised the public that his government would “fight every day until you believe again”.

Now, Starmer is faced with the uncomfortable truth that the frustrated yet united coalition that brought him into No 10 hoping for change is completely fractured and its discontent cannot be dismissed as early midterm blues.

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2026-05-08 16:04
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From devolved parliaments in Scotland and Wales to councils and mayoralties in England, find out what happened in your area

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The Pentagon has begun releasing new UFO/UAP files through a newly launched public website, starting with 162 documents from agencies including the FBI, State Department, NASA, and others. Officials say more files will be released on a rolling basis. The Associated Press reports: The Pentagon has begun releasing new files on UFOs, saying members of the public can draw their own conclusions on "unidentified anomalous phenomena" like an object that a drone pilot says shone a bright light in the sky and then vanished. It said in a post on X on Friday that while past administrations sought to discredit or dissuade the American people, President Donald Trump "is focused on providing maximum transparency to the public, who can ultimately make up their own minds about the information contained in these files." It said additional documents will be released on a rolling basis. Besides the Pentagon, the effort is led by the White House, the director of national intelligence, the Energy Department, NASA and the FBI. A newly unveiled website housing the documents on unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAPs, has a decidedly retro feel, with black-and-white military imagery of flying objects displayed prominently on the page, with statements displayed in typewriter-like font. The first release includes 162 files, such as old State Department cables, FBI documents and transcripts from NASA of crewed flights into space. One document details an FBI interview with someone identified as a drone pilot who, in September 2023, reported seeing a "linear object" with a light bright enough to "see bands within the light" in the sky. "The object was visible for five to ten seconds and then the light went out and the object vanished," according to the FBI interview. Another file is a NASA photograph from the Apollo 17 mission in 1972, showing three dots in a triangular formation. The Pentagon says in an accompanying caption that "there is no consensus about the nature of the anomaly" but that a new, preliminary analysis indicated that it could be a "physical object."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 14:52

US president says on Truth Social the ceasefire will include suspension of all ‘kinetic activity’ and a prisoner swap

Donald Trump has announced a three-day ceasefire in the war between Russia and Ukraine from 9 to 11 May.

The US president said on social media the ceasefire would include a suspension of all “kinetic activity” and a swap of 1,000 prisoners from each country.

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2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 14:42

After successfully supporting agentic simulation in production with strategic customers, SimScale opens Engineering AI to organizations globally who are ready to automate the full simulation workflow

MUNICH, May 8, 2026 — SimScale today opened enterprise waitlist access to its guided pilot service for Engineering AI agents — autonomous simulation orchestration tools that extract technical intent from engineering specifications and execute the complete validation workflow, from CAD preparation and meshing to solver configuration and final report. The announcement marks the transition of Engineering AI from strategic customer deployments into full public availability.

Engineering teams face a constraint that has resisted decades of tooling: the most time-intensive parts of any simulation project require the judgment of senior specialists who are always in short supply. As design cycles compress, organizations face a compounding challenge: exponentially more design decisions to validate, with a specialist workforce that cannot scale at the same rate. SimScale’s Engineering AI resolves this by encoding expert knowledge — a team’s specific standards, solver preferences, and compliance rules — into agents that operate near autonomously, making every engineer in the organization as capable as its most experienced simulation specialist.

“The constraint we kept hearing from engineering leaders isn’t compute – it’s time,” said David Heiny, CEO of SimScale. “How do you capture what your best simulation engineers know, and make it instantly available to every project, every team member, every second of the day? Engineering AI answers that. What used to require a specialist to configure from scratch now runs autonomously, with the same guardrails your senior engineers would apply. The results our customers are seeing — workflows that took weeks, now done in minutes — are what happens when that constraint is removed. We’re excited to open that opportunity to all our users.”

SimScale customers have reported step-change results. Shane McConn, Lead Mechanical Design Engineer at Silent-Aire, put it plainly: “Months of engineering work can now be done in an evening.” At Convion, an HD Hyundai company pioneering hydrogen fuel cell technology, AI underpins a generative design workflow that produces new optimized designs in under one hour — a cycle that previously took months. “We now have an AI model that can generate a new optimized design in under an hour, and I have complete confidence in the results,” said Armin Narimanzadeh, Manager of Thermofluids & Simulations at Convion.

SimScale Engineering AI orchestrates the complete simulation pipeline based on context and intent: extracting requirements from RFQ and project documentation, configuring the simulations needed, executing parallel simulation runs in the cloud, and delivering auditable, proposal-ready validation reports. Agents are built on a foundation of more than one million real-world simulation projects and can carry an organization’s own domain standards and compliance rules — ensuring every simulation run reflects the depth of judgment of the team’s senior specialists.

To accompany public availability, SimScale has opened a guided pilot waitlist for organizations with active simulation workflows and defined AI objectives to express their interest in starting their agentic engineering adoption journey. Accepted teams may receive a serviced pilot program in which SimScale engineers deploy Engineering AI directly on live projects.

Enterprise teams can apply now at https://www.simscale.com/engineering-ai-waitlist.

About SimScale

SimScale is the AI-native cloud platform for engineering simulation. Trusted by more than 800,000 users, SimScale empowers engineers everywhere to innovate faster by exploring thousands of engineering decisions in seconds. By integrating Engineering AI workflows with computational fluid dynamics (CFD), finite element analysis (FEA), electromagnetic, and thermal simulation in a single cloud-native platform, SimScale empowers teams to engineer the irreplaceable.


Source: SimScale

The post SimScale Opens Waitlist for Engineering AI Simulation Agents appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 14:37

Local officials in Arizona are pushing to remove Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos, who is leading the Nancy Guthrie probe, alleging Nanos lied under oath during a deposition for an unrelated lawsuit.

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2026-05-08 14:36

Lawyers for Cole Allen say Todd Blanche and Jeanine Pirro could be considered victims or witnesses in case

A man charged with attacking the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner is seeking to disqualify top justice department officials from direct involvement in prosecuting him because they could be considered victims or witnesses in the case, creating a potential conflict of interest.

The acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, and US attorney Jeanine Pirro were attending the 25 April event at the Washington Hilton hotel when Cole Tomas Allen allegedly ran through a security checkpoint and fired a shotgun at a Secret Service officer.

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2026-05-08 16:04
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Femen and Pussy Riot protest in Venice, Israeli strikes in Gaza, the hantavirus outbreak and Emma Chamberlain at the Met Gala – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists

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2026-05-08 16:04
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Finding the right mortgage lender can save you thousands of dollars while simplifying the homebuying process.

2026-05-08 16:04
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Federally aligned workforce program offers paid, applied learning opportunity to help professionals and organizations prepare for emerging quantum technologies

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., May 8, 2026 — The Chattanooga Quantum Collaborative (CQC) and BuildWithin have launched the nation’s first quantum pre-apprenticeship: a paid, 12-week program built on the U.S. Department of Labor’s apprenticeship framework and designed to prepare early-and mid-career professionals to lead quantum adoption inside their companies as the technology moves from research labs into commercial use.

The program runs from June 29 through September 18, 2026, and will include 10 participants in the inaugural cohort, each of whom will receive a $2,500 stipend upon completion. BuildWithin, a U.S. Department of Labor National Apprenticeship Program Sponsor, will deliver the pre-apprenticeship curriculum through its workforce technology platform. The program is supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation, awarded to the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Research Institute, which is leading this work and supporting this program in partnership with CQC.

“This is an important step in translating quantum from something people hear about into something professionals can engage with directly,” said Charlie Brock, CEO of the Chattanooga Quantum Collaborative. “Innovation often starts with people already inside organizations who are curious about what’s next. We’re activating those intrapreneurs and giving them a structured pathway to bring quantum back to their teams.”

The launch arrives at an inflection point for the U.S. quantum economy. As investments accelerate and commercial systems come online, regions across the country are racing to build the workforce required to capture economic value from the technology, and to do so without the multi-year delay that slowed cloud adoption. Gartner estimated insufficient cloud skills pushed enterprise migration back by two years or more, and the same pattern is now constraining AI.

“Quantum has the potential to define Chattanooga’s economic future and partnerships are key to its success,” said Tim Kelly, Mayor of Chattanooga. “A pre-apprenticeship that’s accessible to working Chattanoogans across a variety of technical fields is another step in preparing our workforce for what’s coming.”

”At the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, we translate research into opportunity for our students, our industry partners, and our community,” said Chancellor Lori Mann Bruce. “Through the UT Chattanooga Quantum Center, we are advancing quantum research and have the national and international partnerships that align our students with the career opportunities of the quantum future. Programs like this pre-apprenticeship expand access, strengthen our workforce, and position Chattanooga to shape what comes next.”

‍A Different Kind of Quantum Workforce

Unlike many post-secondary quantum programs aimed at physicists and Ph.D. researchers, the pre-apprenticeship is designed for working professionals with a technical baseline: IT specialists, analysts, and operations leaders across various sectors such as logistics, healthcare, energy, and technology. The program does not require advanced degrees in physics or mathematics and emphasizes practical application within participants’ existing roles.

“Helping local professionals prepare for future economic opportunity as Chattanooga positions itself as a hub for the emerging quantum technology industry is part of EPB’s mission to serve our community,” said EPB President and CEO-elect Janet Rehberg. “Quantum technology is no longer theoretical. Companies are already using quantum to create growth opportunities. We’re working to help people in our area benefit as quantum advances and creates new jobs.”

Delivered primarily online through the BuildWithin platform, the curriculum combines asynchronous coursework with live support, industry speakers, and a capstone project. Participants will progress from foundational quantum concepts to hands-on exposure with tools and content informed by IonQ, IBM, D-Wave, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), and other open-source resources.

A group of Quantum Learning Guides will host rotating office hours, and each participant will be paired with a mentor to help connect coursework to real-world organizational challenges. As a capstone, participants will develop a proposed quantum use case for their current employer.

A Replicable National Model

The program is intentionally structured on the U.S. Department of Labor’s apprenticeship framework, the same federal system that has trained American workers across more than 1,000 occupations for nearly a century. By anchoring quantum workforce development in that infrastructure, the partnership creates a pathway other states and regions can adopt without standing up new programs from scratch.

“Every wave of transformative technology scales through workers who solve problems where they sit. Cloud did. AI is. Quantum will too,” said Philip Minardi, Co-Founder of BuildWithin. “We built this program with CQC so Chattanooga’s mid-career professionals can become their company’s quantum expert through a structured, proven pre-apprenticeship pathway.”

Chattanooga has emerged as an early hub for quantum activity, with assets including a commercially available quantum network, an on-site quantum computer coming online this month, partnerships with Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and growing university and industry collaboration. The pre-apprenticeship adds an additional workforce layer to that ecosystem.

“This pre-apprenticeship opportunity continues our community’s connected efforts to build jobs and trainings into those jobs at the same time,” said Andrew Hudson, Director of Workforce Development Strategy at the City of Chattanooga. “Quantum will provide next generation technology, and through programs like this, continued access to economic mobility for Chattanoogans.”

Applications for the inaugural Quantum Ready Cohort are now open, with participant selection in June. Apply HERE through the One Chattanooga Works platform. CQC also welcomes inquiries from those interested in serving as Quantum Learning Guides or mentors.

About the Chattanooga Quantum Collaborative

The Chattanooga Quantum Collaborative (CQC) is a nonprofit organization aligning education, industry, and research around the region’s emerging quantum sector. By advancing partnerships and building talent pathways, CQC supports workforce readiness and long-term economic growth in the Chattanooga/Hamilton County region. Learn more at www.ChattanoogaQuantum.com.

About BuildWithin

BuildWithin is a workforce technology company building the intelligence layer for how American talent is developed, matched, and mobilized. As a U.S. Department of Labor National Apprenticeship Program Sponsor, BuildWithin operates apprenticeship programs across more than 50 DOL-approved occupations and provides AI-driven systems for skills matching and workforce mobility for employers, intermediaries, and public workforce systems nationwide. Learn more at www.BuildWithin.com.


Source: Chattanooga Quantum Collaborative

The post Chattanooga Quantum Collaborative and BuildWithin Launch Quantum Pre-Apprenticeship Program appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 14:26

I've tested dozens of tiny ultraportable wireless speakers, some of which fit in your pocket, attach to your bike or are wearable. These are my top picks right now.

2026-05-08 16:04
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President Trump said the agreement will swap 1,000 prisoners from each country after Russia and Ukraine announced separate short-term ceasefire plans.

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WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 21: Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks at a press conference with FBI Director Kash Patel following the indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center for money laundering, at the Department of Justice in Washington, DC on April 21, 2026. (Photo by Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks at a press conference with FBI Director Kash Patel following the indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center for money laundering, at the Justice Department in Washington on April 21, 2026. Photo: Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images

The Southern Poverty Law Center is preparing for the legal fight of its life with the U.S. government — but its most immediate threat is coming from the financial system, rather than the courts.

Fidelity Charitable, Charles Schwab affiliate DAFgiving360, and Vanguard Charitable have begun blocking donor-advised fund, or DAF, donations to the SPLC — effectively cutting off one of the organization’s most important funding pipelines at a critical moment. The decision arrives alongside a politicized and bogus indictment announced late last month by the Trump Department of Justice, which is attempting to paint one of the country’s most prominent watchdogs against hate and racial violence as a promoter of it.

A letter from Democratic Reps. Jamie Raskin and Mary Gay Scanlon notes the House Judiciary Committee has received whistleblower reports that the DOJ “ordered the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Alabama to rush through the indictment of the SPLC despite serious concerns about the strength of the case.” As Alabama Reflector editor Brian Lyman wrote, “DOJ has no evidence of SPLC committing a crime. The organization’s real offense, in the eyes of Trump’s toadies, is its lack of obedience.”

But before any courts can assess the merits of the case, the SPLC is already suffering severe financial consequences.

Donor-advised funds have become a key part of American philanthropy. Managed by firms like Fidelity and Vanguard, DAFs allow donors to receive immediate tax benefits while recommending grants to IRS-recognized nonprofits over time. They are one of the primary channels many nonprofits use to connect with donors.

Vanguard, Schwab, and Fidelity are punishing a lawful nonprofit organization that hasn’t been convicted of any wrongdoing.

What’s happening to the SPLC fits a broader pattern of using financial exclusion to punish speakers who challenge those in power. In 2010, after WikiLeaks published State Department cables that embarrassed the U.S. government, major financial institutions — including Visa, Mastercard, and Bank of America — cut off its ability to receive online donations. The punishment happened without WikiLeaks ever having a chance to defend itself in a court of law. The consequences were devastating for the organization, which lost more than 95 percent of its revenue the following year.

That episode is often treated as a one-off, but my research has shown that’s far from the case. I’ve spoken to dozens of law-abiding U.S. citizens who’ve lost financial services due to speech or political viewpoints — groups like VoteAmerica, which had a bank account closed by Chase Bank and was denied an account by First Republic Bank, and the National Committee for Religious Freedom, which also had its bank account shuttered by Chase. I detail these and many other cases in my newly published book, “Transaction Denied: Big Finance’s Power to Punish Speech.” 

As with the SPLC, financial censorship sometimes happens to those who have been merely accused of a crime. I’m reminded of the case of a Stop Cop City activist who faced charges for participating in an anti-police protest in Atlanta. The Daily Mail wrote a disparaging news article about her, calling her “an Antifa terrorist who is part of the Atlanta cell.” Shortly after that article was published, Chase closed the bank account she’d held for years, citing “negative media.” 

The implications of this type of censorship go beyond the individual accounts impacted; it has a chilling effect on anyone who wants to attend protests or engage in advocacy. Like WikiLeaks before and the SPLC today, organizations and individuals who challenge the status quo must fear drawing the ire of the corporations that wield immense power over our financial lives.

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We’ve also seen financial corporations try to police the news, as with a 2022 policy rolled out by PayPal that promised a $2,500 fine to any accounts spreading “misinformation” — a term left conspicuously undefined. PayPal was widely criticized and swiftly retracted the policy. Given the Trump administration’s open hostility to journalism and its novel legal tactics to attack the press, it’s entirely possible that the next target of financial censorship could be a news outlet after the WikiLeaks blockade set the precedent.

Courts have recognized the danger when the government plays a direct role in shuttering financial accounts. In Backpage.com v. Dart, the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals compared a government official pressuring credit card companies to end services to a website as similar to suffocation, saying it was like “killing a person by cutting off his oxygen supply rather than by shooting him.” The Supreme Court has also seen the dangers of financial companies policing speakers at the behest of the government, noting in National Rifle Association of America v. Vullo that intermediaries like financial companies won’t stand up for free expression because they “will often be less invested in the speaker’s message and thus less likely to risk the regulator’s ire.” But in both of these cases, the government pressure was overt and coercive, triggering the First Amendment protections for the speakers involved.

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“We Knew They Were Paying Informants”: SPLC Donors Reject Trump DOJ Fraud Claims

The case of SPLC is more ambiguous but no less troubling. As of now, there is no public evidence that the government contacted Vanguard, Schwab, or Fidelity directly. Instead, these financial giants are justifying their decisions by pointing to their own terms of service, which they can write and amend as they see fit and which don’t trigger the same First Amendment concerns.

But the ethical and societal concerns are just as important. Vanguard, Schwab, and Fidelity are punishing a lawful nonprofit organization that hasn’t been convicted of any wrongdoing. These companies are under no obligation to shut off SPLC donations at this time. The San Francisco Foundation, which also oversees donor-advised funds, has promised to continue sending DAFs to SPLC, noting, “we are guided by our values and by our donors, not shifting political winds.” 

The result of Vanguard, Schwab, and Fidelity’s decisions could be devastating for the SPLC, which will have fewer resources available to fight this politicized prosecution. Regardless of how one feels about the SPLC, we should all object to weaponizing the financial system this way.

This is a problem across the ideological spectrum. The SPLC has itself championed the idea that DAFs should stop the flow of donations to conservative nonprofit organizations it alleges promote hate and racial violence. Pressuring financial intermediaries to advance a political agenda when no court has weighed the merits of a case is no more appropriate in those cases than it is in this one.

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ICE’s Private Prison Contractors Spent Millions Lobbying to Force Banks to Give Them Loans

What is particularly ironic about this moment is that President Donald Trump himself has spoken out against financial exclusion used as a political weapon, going so far as to sign an executive order against debanking last year that attempted to stop “politicized or unlawful debanking.” But under his administration, one of the country’s most prominent civil rights organizations now faces a sudden constriction of its funding channels. 

A financial system that shutters or blocks the accounts of advocacy organizations that have not been convicted of any wrongdoing is not neutral. It is a system that can be used to sideline communities and activists — without ever stepping into a courtroom.

The post Big Finance Might Be Dooming the SPLC — Even Before Its Day in Court appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 14:19

US CDC personnel are reportedly meeting ship in Canary Islands to accompany Americans on a flight to Nebraska

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is reportedly sending personnel to the Canary Islands to meet the cruise ship affected by the hantavirus outbreak, with plans to accompany American passengers back to the US on a chartered flight and place them into quarantine in Nebraska.

An additional CDC team is already headed to Nebraska, according to unnamed sources who spoke with CNN. The sources indicated that passengers are expected to undergo quarantine measures there to help prevent any possible spread of the virus. Nebraska is home to both the federally supported National Quarantine Unit and the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit.

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Have $300,000 saved in a retirement account? Here are the required minimum distributions you'll be expected to take.

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The combined institute will retain the Stanford HAI name and be helmed by computer scientist James Landay. Co-founder Fei-Fei Li takes on a new university-wide role as Special Advisor on AI and joins John Hennessy as co-chair of the advisory council.

May 8, 2026 — As AI opens up new opportunities for research and education at Stanford, the university is organizing to meet the moment. Stanford University is merging its two flagship AI and data science organizations into a single institute, to be led by computer scientist James Landay.

From left: James Landay will lead the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI, while John Hennessy and Fei-Fei Li will serve as co-chairs of the advisory council. Credit for photots: Andrew Brodhead, Linda A. Cicero, Drew Kelly.

The Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI and the Stanford Data Science initiative will combine under the Stanford HAI name, with Landay continuing as Denning Director. University leaders believe the human-centered focus is critical to the future of technology. It is reflected in the broad sweep of faculty involved – from engineering to medicine to the humanities and more.

Former Stanford president John Hennessy and HAI founding director Fei-Fei Li will serve as co-chairs of the institute’s advisory council. Li will also take on a new university-wide role as Special Advisor on AI to President Jonathan Levin.

The merger combines HAI’s network of more than 400 scholars, extensive industry affiliates program, and $60 million in cumulative grant funding with Stanford Data Science’s high-performance Marlowe computing cluster and early scholar fellowship program. Levin describes the new Stanford HAI as “the front door for AI at Stanford.”

Much of that capacity has been built through donor investment – endowed professorships, the Data Science Scholars program and the HAI Graduate Fellowship program that train early-career researchers, and seed and scale-up research grants funding projects across the university.

“The merged organization creates a community of scholars whose research touches powerfully on every aspect of AI, its applications, and implications,” Levin said, “and the human-centered focus provides a north star for the institute.”

Landay has spent three decades working in what’s now called human-centered computing. His 1990s design software SILK foreshadowed tools like Figma and Canva; his UbiFit project in the early 2000s anticipated the Fitbit and Apple Watch. In 2024, he received the ACM SIGCHI Lifetime Research Award.

“This technology is changing everything,” said Landay, who is also the Anand Rajaraman and Venky Harinarayan Professor in the School of Engineering. “To have real impact in this moment, we need to adapt. This is about shaping how AI affects people, communities, and society – with that human-centered perspective at the core of everything we do.”

Opportunities Unlocked

AI is beginning to open up research frontiers across the campus. Stanford astronomers use machine learning to spot new exoplanets and model early-universe physics. Neuroscientists build models that predict brain activity. Historians run natural language processing over archival collections to surface patterns in how societies communicate. And education researchers test tutoring systems that adapt to individual learners and support teachers in classrooms.

“Data science and AI share the same mathematical foundations and computational infrastructure, each pushing the boundaries of what’s possible with data,” said David Studdert, vice provost and dean of research. “Bringing them together under one roof will accelerate research and unlock opportunities that neither of the two organizations could have accessed alone.”

Two Programs, One Roof

HAI, founded in 2019 by Li, former Stanford provost John Etchemendy, computer scientist Chris Manning, and Landay, has grown into a multidisciplinary hub spanning research, education, and policy. It was founded on the principle that Stanford could play a leading role in developing AI technology and applications, and also in leading discussions on what it means to be fully human in an age of machine intelligence. HAI runs the Congressional Boot Camp on AI for policymakers and centers studying foundation models, the digital economy, the science of intelligence, and ambient intelligence for aging in place. It launched fellowship programs for early career scholars, hired junior and senior faculty, developed executive and policy education programs, and produces the annual AI Index.

Stanford Data Science, launched and led by Emmanuel Candès, the Barnum-Simons Chair in Mathematics and Statistics in the School of Humanities and Sciences, built out research centers in sustainability, astrophysics, causal science, neuroscience, and other fields; created interdisciplinary graduate student fellowships; recruited faculty members in partnership with collaborating departments; and spearheaded the establishment of the Marlowe cluster. Guido Imbens, the Applied Econometrics Professor and professor of economics at Stanford Graduate School of Business, served as faculty director for the past year and led the transition team with Landay and Li before returning earlier this year to focus on his teaching and research.

Candès will become an associate director of Stanford HAI, focused on computational resources. Etchemendy will continue as a senior fellow and advisor.

Built on Openness

Stanford HAI will organize its work around three pillars: advancing AI and data science for discovery across fields, transforming education from K-12 through lifelong learners, and examining and shaping AI’s societal impact through evidence-based research.

This comprehensive approach ensures the university can influence AI development across foundational algorithms, real-world applications, economic analysis, and governance frameworks. The institute will also partner with global organizations to extend its human-centered approach beyond Stanford.

Landay says Stanford HAI’s defining commitment will be openness: open science, open-source code, open datasets, and open education.

Openness has shaped the field before. ImageNet, the labeled image database Li helped create, is widely credited with catalyzing modern deep learning. Open-source code and libraries like FlashAttention democratized AI development. And open science publication subjects results to scrutiny that closed industry work often lacks.

“What makes Stanford’s approach impactful is our commitment to operating as an open community,” said Landay. “We publish in open forums, we champion open research, we make knowledge accessible. That’s what differentiates universities from the frontier AI companies dominating artificial intelligence today.”

Landay is now working to define what “human-centered AI” means in practice – pressing researchers to design for and weigh impact on users, communities, and society from a project’s inception through to its development, deployment, and maintenance phases.

New Co-Chairs and Role

Hennessy, who co-founded the Knight-Hennessy Scholars program, will also serve as a Stanford HAI special advisor, in addition to his role on the advisory council.

“This is the most important effort for Stanford, and I am happy to help it succeed,” Hennessy said. “AI will evolve in ways we can’t predict, but the principles guiding our work – openness, excellence, human-centeredness – will be enduring.”

Li’s co-chair role is separate from her new university-wide appointment advising President Levin, which will span research, partnerships, education, and student careers across all seven Stanford schools. She will retain her title as Stanford HAI’s founding director and senior fellow.

“AI is transforming not only technology, but also the way we pursue scientific discovery, learn and educate, and serve society,” Li said. “It is a historical opportunity and responsibility of Stanford to rise to the occasion.”

The new institute will harness team science – spanning Stanford’s seven schools and partners across sectors – to tackle AI’s toughest challenges while preserving what universities do best: pursue fundamental questions, train the next generation, and serve the public good.

“This is not just a stronger institute,” Landay said. “It is a new model for how a university organizes AI and data science to have real impact in the world.”


Source: Stanford University

The post Stanford Merges AI and Data Science Efforts Under Single Institute appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
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The US secretary of state met the Italian prime minister in Rome on Friday at a moment of unusual strain between Trump and Italy, driven largely by the war with Iran. Rubio called the meeting with Pope Leo 'cordial and important' and said he had explained the US position on Iran, in a fence-mending visit to Rome after sharp disagreements over the US-Israel war in Iran and Trump’s criticisms of the pontiff

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Workshop sponsored by National Science Foundation and National AI Research Resource attracts faculty, students from Ohio and beyond

COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 8, 2026 — Across the United States, higher education institutions are navigating the rapidly evolving artificial intelligence (AI) landscape, as faculty and students assess how to effectively incorporate machine learning, data analytics, large language models, and other AI tools into their classroom instruction and research.

Ayanna Howard giving her keynote speech at the National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS Regional Workshop hosted by OSC.

To discuss emerging best practices and spotlight national resources available for academia, the Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) hosted a National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS Regional Workshop on AI April 14-15, 2026, at The Ohio State University that attracted nearly 100 faculty, administrators, and students.

The free event, sponsored by the NSF ACCESS program and the National AI Research Resource (NAIRR), is part of a regional series based on the NAIRR Pilot’s AI Unlocked: Empowering Higher Ed through Research and Discovery workshop. The University of Colorado Boulder, the leader of an NSF ACCESS project on which OSC serves as collaborator, was instrumental in organizing the workshop opportunity.

“As a member of NSF ACCESS, OSC was pleased to provide a forum that could help educate researchers, students, and technical staff in higher education institutions about the growing number of AI resources available through federal programs such as NAIRR and ACCESS, which can support new teaching or research initiatives,” said David Hudak, executive director of OSC.

AI experts from institutions across the Midwest—Ohio State, University of Kentucky, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Cincinnati, Purdue University, Ohio University, and Case Western Reserve University—gave talks or led panel discussions on topics such as developing campus AI services, supporting AI in clinical research, and weighing issues of privacy, equity, and ethics when using AI tools.

Ayanna Howard, dean of Ohio State’s College of Engineering and the author of the book “Rebooting the Machines: A new human vision for artificial intelligence,” gave Tuesday’s keynote lecture. Howard, who has conducted research in the robotics field for more than 30 years, discussed human-AI interactions, perceptions, and behaviors, as well as the implications for incorporating AI into real-world environments.

Timothy Huerta, professor of family medicine, chief research information officer, and associate dean for research information technology at Ohio State’s College of Medicine and Wexner Medical Center, gave Wednesday’s keynote lecture. Huerta discussed how researchers should consider the strengths and limitations of using large language models (LLMs) in writing and data analysis, stressing that LLMs should support human judgement and not replace it.

Workshop sessions also covered how faculty are using AI to solve specific research problems, such as designing therapeutics as countermeasures to pesticide and chemical nerve agent exposure, developing custom crop management strategies tailored to individual agricultural operations, and analyzing millions of images of living creatures to build a more detailed tree of life.

In addition, speakers discussed how their universities are creating comprehensive programs to integrate AI into the student educational experience, guiding faculty on how to incorporate AI into teaching and clinical research, and creating policies and procedures to ensure the safe, ethical, and legal adoption of AI tools.

OSC highlighted its wide range of AI resources and services, including new hardware and software offerings, as well as its efforts to train more Ohio students and cyberinfrastructure professionals on how to use AI in their research and technology workflows.

The event encouraged participants to leverage the federal NSF ACCESS and NAIRR resources to advance their AI research and teaching, and provided guidance on how to get started.

Attendees also had the opportunity to participate in OSC’s annual Research Symposium, held in conjunction with the workshop, to learn how faculty, students, and industry in Ohio are using OSC’s HPC resources to advance research, education, and innovation – including in the fast-growing area of AI.

About OSC

The Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) addresses the rising computational demands of academic and industrial research communities by providing a robust shared infrastructure and proven expertise in advanced modeling, simulation and analysis. OSC empowers scientists with the services essential to making extraordinary discoveries and innovations, partners with businesses and industry to leverage computational science as a competitive force in the global knowledge economy and leads efforts to equip the workforce with the key technology skills required for 21st century jobs.


Source: Andrea Gibson, OSC

The post Ohio Supercomputer Center Hosts NSF ACCESS Workshop on AI in Higher Education appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 14:00

The Trump administration announced a major expansion of its denaturalization campaign targeting foreign-born American citizens accused of fraudulently obtaining U.S. citizenship.

2026-05-08 16:04
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Apple and Intel have reportedly reached a preliminary agreement (paywalled; alternative source) for Intel to manufacture some chips used in Apple devices, after more than a year of talks and pressure from the Trump administration. It's still unclear which Apple products would use Intel-made chips, but the deal would mark a major potential win for Intel's foundry ambitions and give Apple another manufacturing option beyond TSMC.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 13:53

Meta is offering a way to download encrypted messages from the platform for those who opted into the feature.

2026-05-08 16:04
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President Donald Trump has insisted that his proposed White House ballroom will be paid for with private donations. Now, Senate Republicans have offered legislation that would spend $1 billion of taxpayers’ money on what they say are security measures for a White House modernization project, which includes the ballroom. 

Senators, including Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced legislation May 4 that would fund the White House security projects. That provision, part of a reconciliation bill, could pass the Senate on a simple majority vote rather than a 60-vote supermajority. The proposal is awaiting a vote.

Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio, reshared a post with a budget breakdown for the bill. 

"The American people are weathering $5 gas, $6 diesel, and skyrocketing fertilizer costs because of the war of choice in Iran," Kaptur wrote May 5 on X. "And now the GOP want you to pay $1 Billion for a ballroom."

Other Democrats joined the chorus. 

"Republicans are on a different planet than American families," wrote Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., in a May 5 X post. "Republicans looked at families drowning in bills and decided what they really needed was more raids and a Trump ballroom."

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., wrote May 5 on X: "Trump said, ‘Not one penny is being used from the federal government’ to fund his ballroom boondoggle. True, in the sense that $1 billion is a lot more than one penny! Another GOP billion-dollar bailout for the gaudy gilded king, paid for courtesy of the American commoners—the rest of us minus the billionaires who pay no taxes."

Grassley’s bill doesn’t say the $1 billion will be used for building the ballroom; it says the money can be used only for security aspects of the East Wing Modernization project, which includes the ballroom. However, experts told PolitiFact it would be difficult to designate project features as purely for security or purely for construction.

A Kaptur spokesperson told PolitiFact that the White House’s support for taxpayer funding amounts to a 180-degree flip after more than a year of Trump saying that no taxpayer funds would be used to construct the ballroom.

Trump’s ballroom size, costs

In October 2025, Trump launched his quest for a White House ballroom by demolishing the White House’s East Wing. Trump said the 90,000-square-foot ballroom would seat 999 people, far larger than any room in the current White House complex. The unprecedented demolition and construction drew a lawsuit by a historic preservation group because the project lacked  approval from Congress or the agency that approves construction of federal buildings. 

Although the National Capital Planning Commission approved the project April 2, a judicial ruling said it still needs congressional approval.

The White House first said the project would cost $200 million and would be privately funded. Trump later upped that figure to $400 million. Pledges came from individuals and corporations such as Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft, according to a White House list.

Following an April 25 shooting inside the hotel hosting the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner that Trump was attending, he said the event was proof that the White House needs a secure ballroom. Some Republicans quickly agreed.

On April 28, Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., Katie Britt, R-Ala., and Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., introduced a bill authorizing $400 million in federal funding for the "design, construction, and other appropriate expenses to complete the East Wing Modernization Project, including a secure State ballroom."

Construction of the new White House Ballroom is seen from a window in the East Room, May 4, 2026, at the White House in Washington. (AP)

What the bill says about the ballroom and security features

Grassley’s legislation says federal funding would support the U.S. Secret Service for security adjustments and upgrades" relating to the "East Wing Modernization Project, including above-ground and below-ground security features."

The legislation also specifies that the funds can’t be used for "non-security elements of the East Wing Modernization Project." It doesn’t spell out what is a "non-security" element.

It defines the term "East Wing Modernization Project" as the building plan the National Capital Planning commission approved April 2. That project also includes building a new colonnade, adding a new office suite for the First Lady and replacing a movie theater.

The bill did not specify the security adjustments and upgrades that the legislation would fund, but Trump and the Justice Department have offered some examples of planned security. 

In a legal filing last month, the Justice Department said the East Wing project would include "missile resistant steel columns, Military-grade venting, drone-proof ceilings and bullet, ballistic, and blast proof glass;" which it says will protect the main White House and West Wing as well.

The filing also mentions "bomb shelters, a state of the art hospital and medical facilities, Top Secret military installations, structures, and equipment." 

We asked the White House how the $1 billion would be used on the East Wing project and about plans to separate taxpayer money so it’s not used to fund the ballroom.

White House spokesperson Davis Ingle’s reply didn’t answer those questions. 

"Congress has rightly recognized the need for these funds," Ingle said. "Due in part to the recent assassination attempt on President Trump at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, the proposal would provide the United States Secret Service with the resources they need to fully and completely harden the White House complex, in addition to the many other critical missions for the USSS." 

The White House told PolitiFact that the ballroom would still be funded by private donations.

Can taxpayer funded security features be separated from ballroom construction? 

An architectural expert told PolitiFact that separating security features allowed under the legislation from the ballroom would be tricky.

"Security measures must be integrated into the structure and envelope of the building," said Sara Bronin, an architect and a law professor at the George Washington University Law School. "Unless Congress places clear constraints on the way this money will be spent, taxpayers may end up footing most of the bill."

Steven Smith, an Arizona State University political scientist who studies Congress, said lawmakers have tools to scrutinize spending, including holding hearings that demand detailed plans and aggressive oversight of all project contracts and developments.

The question is whether Congress — especially under the control of Republicans who are reluctant to rein in Trump — is willing to exercise oversight.

"We have already learned from the president’s sleight of hand in juggling money to bring airport security workers back to work that, to him, all federally appropriated funds are fungible and can be used for whatever he wants," said Donald Wolfensberger, a former staff director of the House Rules Committee. 

Our ruling

Kaptur said Republicans "want you to pay $1 Billion for a ballroom." 

The Republican proposal said funds are only for security upgrades at the East Wing modernization project, which includes the ballroom. It’s unclear how much of the $1 billion would go explicitly toward the ballroom.

The bill said "non-security" elements cannot be funded through the bill. But experts said it’s hard to designate project features as purely for security or purely for construction. For example, the Trump administration has said the ballroom would have "missile resistant steel columns" and ballistic and blast proof glass.

We rate the statement Mostly True.

RELATED: Column: Why a correspondents’ dinner at a White House ballroom could endanger press freedom

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 13:47

Soooo I have still avoided the damn software update that adds the vibration when pushing its limits. Getting annoyed with the app telling me to update it… thinking about just updating it but curious what everyone’s thoughts are on how much it affects the board. The pros and cons

submitted by /u/National-Papaya-9308
[link] [comments]

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  • Previous high for Category 1 had been $10,990

  • Resale tickets for final listed from $8,000 to $11.5m

  • New Jersey reps pen letter to Infantino about ticketing

Fifa tripled the price of its best available tickets to the World Cup final, making $32,970 seats available on Thursday for the 19 July match at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

The governing body listed those seats as Front Category 1 on its sales site.

Continue reading...

2026-05-08 16:04
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Researchers say the findings raise questions about what happens to our brains and patterns if we depend too much on AI.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 13:34

Network lawyers in a legal motion strongly pushed back against the FCC’s investigation into The View talkshow

Lawyers representing an ABC station have accused the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of punishing the network for political purposes in a strongly worded attack on the Trump-controlled commission’s investigation into the top-rated talkshow, The View.

In a legal motion filed on Thursday, KTRK-TV, a Houston-based local television station owned by ABC, pushed back strongly against the FCC investigation, accusing the purportedly independent agency of taking actions that “threaten to upend decades of settled law and practice and chill critical protected speech, both with respect to The View and more broadly”.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 13:32

US energy department says 13.5kg of uranium taken from reactor in Caracas – a fraction of the 408kg held by Tehran

Donald Trump has succeeded in removing a country’s stash of highly enriched uranium – although that country is not Iran.

On Friday, the US Department of Energy announced that “thanks to President Trump’s decisive leadership” 13.5kg (about 30 pounds) of uranium had been removed from a legacy research reactor in Venezuela.

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2026-05-08 16:04
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NASA's Apollo 17 crew reported seeing three mysterious dots and sparks that resembled fireworks, according to new files released by the Pentagon.

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A man in a suit speaking at a podium.
Pablo José Hernández Rivera, Puerto Rico’s representative in Congress, called for an investigation into the halting of prosecution efforts related to an alleged scheme to buy prisoners’ votes. Photo by Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images

Federal and local lawmakers in Puerto Rico, as well as civil rights and advocacy organizations, have called for investigations after ProPublica reported how a federal probe into a drugs-for-votes scheme in Puerto Rico prisons got quashed after the 2024 elections.  

The territory’s representative in Congress, Pablo José Hernández Rivera, called on members of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday to join him in a push for a congressional probe into the matter. 

“The report published today by ProPublica details facts that no elected official — whether in Puerto Rico or in Washington — can ignore,” he said in a statement in Spanish.

The same day, Rep. Héctor Ferrer Santiago, a Popular Democratic Party member, introduced a resolution in the territory’s House ordering its Committee on Public Security to investigate, calling the allegations “serious!” and saying the House has “an inescapable duty to investigate.” 

Their requests came the day ProPublica published its investigation detailing how prosecutors had uncovered a drugs-for-votes scheme being run by a violent gang in Puerto Rican prisons and were deep into looking at whether now-Gov. Jenniffer González-Colón or her campaign were involved. In the days following President Donald Trump’s election in 2024, as prosecutors prepared the indictment, they were told by supervisors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Puerto Rico to exclude the voting-related charges against inmates and prison staff, four sources with knowledge of the investigation told ProPublica. Then, once Trump took office, they were told to abandon the probe into potential political ties entirely, the sources said.

González-Colón, a longtime Republican and member of the pro-statehood New Progressive Party, has declined repeated requests for interviews by ProPublica. In a statement Tuesday, she denied any wrongdoing and said she “has stood firmly against corruption” throughout her career and political campaigns. 

“I categorically reject any attempt to link me to unlawful conduct,” she wrote. González-Colón has not been charged with any crime.

She told local news outlets Wednesday she doesn’t think any investigation into the matter is warranted. “There is nothing here,” she said in Spanish. “And, if they have research from the past four years, let them do it, let them bring it to a successful conclusion. But I have absolutely nothing to do with the things that are pointed out there, much less my campaign.”

On Wednesday, leaders of the Puerto Rican Independence Party also called for an investigation. Sen. María de Lourdes Santiago, vice president of the party, said on social media that the questions of partisan intervention in prison spaces should not be ignored considering their “severe implications.” 

Thomas Rivera Schatz, president of the Puerto Rico Senate and a member of González-Colón’s party, initially told local news outlets that government officials in Puerto Rico should investigate thoroughly. But at a press conference on Thursday, he backed away from that assertion, saying of ProPublica’s report: “I do not lend it any credibility whatsoever. … It appears to follow a specific editorial line — one directed against the Republican Party and against Trump.”

An indictment filed in December 2024, while Joe Biden was still president, charged 34 members of a gang, known as Group 31 or Los Tiburones, and associates with crimes including drug distribution resulting in at least four overdose deaths, money laundering and possessing a firearm. Prosecutors also alleged that the gang made connections with government officials “for the purpose of reducing prison sentences” and that the gang mandated both the prisoners’ political affiliations and “who to vote for in primary and general elections,” but included no charges related to the drugs-for-votes scheme.

Sources familiar with the investigation said gang leaders forced inmates to vote for González-Colón or face brutal beatings and being cut off from a supply of drugs. Many of the inmates are addicted to illicit drugs. Prosecutors said they had evidence that González-Colón had spoken with one of the prison gang leaders on WhatsApp during the primary campaign and were pursuing other potential ties when they were instructed not to look any further, people with knowledge of the investigation told ProPublica. 

González-Colón said in her statement that she engaged with all sectors of society during her campaign. “That included meeting with families of incarcerated individuals concerned about rehabilitation and reintegration, because public policy must be inclusive and responsive to every community,” she said. She did not address the allegation that she had talked with a gang leader directly. 

W. Stephen Muldrow, U.S. attorney for the District of Puerto Rico, who was appointed by Trump in 2019 and has served continuously since, told ProPublica that his office does not comment on open cases. While a couple of defendants in the drug and money laundering cases have taken plea agreements, most of the cases are still pending. 

“Given the ongoing nature of the case and the importance of maintaining the integrity of active matters, it would not be appropriate for us to comment further in a press setting,” Lymarie Llovet-Ayala, spokesperson for the office, said in an email Wednesday. Previously, she said that charging corrupt public officials “has always been and remains a top priority” of the office.

As Puerto Rico’s resident commissioner in Congress —  a role similar to a U.S. representative — Hernández Rivera has the power to introduce and co-sponsor legislation and vote in committee, but is prohibited from voting on final passage of laws in the House. 

Hernández Rivera, a Democrat and member of the Popular Democratic Party, said he already has support from at least a couple of members from the House Judiciary Committee who are interested in starting the oversight process and are working on a draft letter requesting an investigation.

Political parties in Puerto Rico don’t adhere to a straight divide among Democrats and Republicans. Instead, they center much of their focus on whether Puerto Rico should become a state and so have Republicans and Democrats within each.

Hernández Rivera said the fact that the New Progressive Party has a stronghold on inmate votes is suspicious. “About the prisons in particular, it raises eyebrows from a statistical standpoint, the fact that 83% of inmates vote for the candidate of that party when no other place in Puerto Rico votes by those margins,” he said, citing a ProPublica tally of voter returns from the State Elections Commission’s website. By comparison, González-Colón won 41% of the overall vote in her victory in the five-way general election contest. 

“The issue here is more about whether the processes were followed and whether there was corruption in giving up the case,” Hernández Rivera said. 

U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Wis., a member of the House Judiciary Committee, told ProPublica that while he didn’t yet know the details of the matter, he would support an investigation. He said the allegations aren’t surprising given the suspicions of election fraud across the U.S. and considering “today’s morals.” 

“I hope our committee or another committee does some investigating,” he said. 

Annette Martínez-Orabona, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Puerto Rico, said abandoning an investigation into a fraudulent voting scheme in prisons undermines the trust of those who believe in democracy. 

The ACLU is “advocating for full transparency about what happened with this investigation … what evidence was collected, and what was done with that evidence,” Martínez Orabona said in a written statement. 

The Power 4 Puerto Rico Coalition, a diaspora organization that advocates for more independence for the territory, said it wants answers from González-Colón and the U.S. Department of Justice. 

“Power 4 Puerto Rico calls for Congressional hearings to fully review what happened, who knew, and why the voting-related investigation did not proceed,” Erica González Martínez, director of the group, wrote in a statement. “The Puerto Rican people deserve the truth.”

The post Puerto Rico Lawmakers Call for Investigation Into Alleged Drugs-for-Votes Scheme After ProPublica Report appeared first on ProPublica.

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ABC filed a petition with the FCC claiming that the agency's scrutiny of "The View" threatens to "chill critical protected speech."

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Rep. Todd Warner, R-Chapel Hill, arrives to the House chamber wearing a Trump flag for a special session of the state legislature to redraw U.S. Congressional voting maps Thursday, May 7, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Republican Tennessee state Rep. Todd Warner arrives to the House chamber for a special session of the legislature to redraw congressional voting maps on May 7, 2026, in Nashville. Photo: George Walker IV/AP

The ink had barely dried on the Supreme Court’s ruling to gut the Voting Rights Act when Republican lawmakers raced to deliver on the barely veiled promises of the court’s decision: the decimation of Black political power and a revival of Jim Crow-era racist voter suppression.

In Tennessee on Thursday, Gov. Lee signed a bill that repealed a half-century-old law prohibiting mid-decade redistricting, and then the overwhelmingly Republican legislature passed new redistricting maps that eliminate the state’s only Black-majority district. The 9th Congressional District, also Tennessee’s only reliable Democratic seat, will be carved into three — purposefully redrawn for each piece to have a white-majority and Republican-leaning electorate. The votes of Memphis’s 63 percent Black population will be diluted to near irrelevance; the entire state will be handed to Republicans.

With the right-wing justices’ blessing, Republican lawmakers can now enact segregationist gerrymandering.

No one can act surprised. This was the predicted outcome of the Supreme Court’s Louisiana v. Callais decision, which decimated Section 2 of the embattled Voting Rights Act, a provision that had protected minority voters from redistricting. With the right-wing justices’ blessing, Republican lawmakers can now enact segregationist gerrymandering and reestablish the pre-civil-rights-era status quo ante.

It stands to reason that Republicans are not representing the interests of Black Tennesseans, some 17 percent of the population, overwhelmingly Democrats. These residents only have one representative in Washington, Rep. Steve Cohen — the lone Democrat among the state’s nine congressional seats. That is the seat being eliminated by the new maps passed by Tennessee’s largely white legislature.

The situation is already one in which Black working-class interests are hardly represented — and nor would greater Black representation in the state necessarily ensure the delivery of racial justice and the economic justice it requires.

The point is that Black disenfranchisement both reflects and produces conditions of white supremacist rule, wherein greater anti-Black oppression is assured.

“These maps are racist tools of white supremacy, at the behest of the most powerful white supremacist in the United States of America, Donald J. Trump,” said Democratic state Rep. Justin Pearson at the Tennessee statehouse on Thursday. Pearson, a progressive activist and one of the state’s few Black representatives, is running for a seat in Congress and was neck and neck in polling for his August primary against Cohen, the 76-year-old incumbent. The redrawn maps would likely foreclose his chance to represent South Memphis in Washington.

Pearson called the gerrymandered maps a “political lynching” that “set our state back over 150 years.”

Trump’s Larger Project

Trump, who is historically unpopular, has every reason to push his GOP to use newly unconstrained gerrymandering capacities in advance of the midterms. Right-wing redistricting efforts go beyond a scramble for November, though, and sit within a larger project of white supremacist backlash.

Like in Tennessee, Republicans in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina all called special legislative sessions — as explicitly ordered by Trump — to push new redistricting maps that will decimate majority-Black districts and deliver congressional seats to Republicans.

Related

The Supreme Court Ends Multiracial Democracy as We Know It 

According to the cynical rationale of the Supreme Court conservatives, such maps would not violate what’s left of the Voting Rights Act, because the GOP is not openly describing their gerrymander as targeting Black voters.

“The more racist you are as a party, the more insulated you are from Voting Rights Act liability under this decision,” Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Law School, told Bolts Magazine about the Callais ruling. “If there were a party called the Klan party, right now, it would trigger an awful lot of nonwhite opposition based on the party’s platform. But this opinion says, you have to set the party’s platform entirely aside to figure out if there’s been any damage based on race. So the more you can tie the two together, the more insulated you are.”

In short, as Levitt put it, “the most racist partisan gerrymandering is going to be the most immune from a VRA challenge.”

Tennessee Republicans proved precisely this point on Thursday. Striding into the statehouse to disenfranchise Black voters, Republican state Rep. Todd Warner wore a giant Trump 2024 flag as a cape.

Striding into the statehouse to disenfranchise Black voters, Republican state Rep. Todd Warner wore a giant Trump 2024 flag.

As other states follow Tennessee’s example, the consequences of Callais could see the largest-ever drop in the number of Black lawmakers in Congress. The previous record was set, NPR reported, in the post-Reconstruction backlash, by the Congress that began in 1877 with four fewer House districts represented by Black lawmakers than the previous session.

In response to racist Republican gerrymandering, Democrats can play their own game of redistricting — but there’s a reason the Callais decision is understood as a gift to Republicans.

“The states controlled by Republicans where there are majority-minority districts have no internal constraint on how much they can screw over Black voters, because Black voters are not voting for that party,” Pamela Karlan, law professor at Stanford University and co-director of Stanford’s Supreme Court Litigation Clinic, told Slate.

Democrats could expand a small number of safe seats in New York and California, for example, by eliminating minority voter districts. As Karlan noted, however, this would be politically unpalatable because “the politics of the state are not going to look favorably on that, and the Democrats in those states depend on Black and Latino voters in statewide races.”

According to Karlan, in this race to the bottom, Republican-led election fixing will not be addressed without a different Congress, a different president, and a powerful political movement to hold politicians accountable.

“Voters have to first build a political movement around this that makes elected officials afraid to do this,” she said.

Meanwhile, Democratic redistricting efforts in Virginia were dealt a blow on Friday, when they were struck down by the state’s Supreme Court. Voters had approved in a referendum to redraw the state’s congressional map, but the court’s ruling hands Republicans a fierce electoral advantage.

After Thursday’s vote, Tennessee Democratic state Rep. Justin Jones burned a paper Confederate flag in the statehouse rotunda, surrounded by protesters who had gathered to decry the racist gerrymandering.

“We saw a time like this, in this building before,” Jones told his fellow lawmakers earlier this week during the unprecedented redistricting special session. “If you study Reconstruction. We had Black lawmakers after the Civil War, then from the end of the 1800s to the 1960s, we had no Black folks here” — meaning the statehouse.

On Thursday afternoon, the NAACP’s Tennessee chapter filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of the new congressional map, which is likely to be the first of several legal efforts against the rushed, conniving, and unrepentantly racist gerrymander.

The post Tennessee GOP Moves to Decimate Black Voting Power After Supreme Court’s Blessing of Jim Crow appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 13:14

May is typically the worst month for allergies. To prepare, I consulted allergists to find out how we can allergy-proof our homes.

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NEW YORK and SANTA CLARA, Calif., May 8, 2026 — NVIDIA and IREN Limited have announced a strategic partnership to accelerate deployment of next-generation AI infrastructure.

Credit: Shutterstock

As part of the partnership NVIDIA and IREN intend to support deployment of up to 5 gigawatts of NVIDIA DSX-aligned AI infrastructure across IREN’s global data center pipeline over time. The companies will collaborate on deployment of NVIDIA accelerated compute in DSX AI factories to expand access to AI-native, startup and enterprise customers. As part of the partnership, IREN issued to NVIDIA a five-year right to purchase up to 30 million shares of ordinary stock at an exercise price of $70 per share, resulting in a right to invest up to $2.1 billion, subject to certain conditions including regulatory.

The partnership is intended to accelerate deployment of large-scale AI factories by combining NVIDIA’s DSX AI factory architecture with IREN’s expertise across power, land, data centers, GPU deployment and infrastructure operations.

Future deployments are expected to focus on IREN’s 2-gigawatt Sweetwater campus in Texas, which the companies expect to serve as a flagship deployment for NVIDIA’s DSX architecture.

“AI factories are becoming foundational infrastructure for the global economy,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Deploying these systems at scale requires deep integration across the full stack — compute, networking, software, power and operations. IREN brings the scale and infrastructure expertise to help accelerate the buildout of next-generation AI infrastructure globally. Together, we are building for the age of AI.”

“This partnership combines NVIDIA’s AI systems and architecture leadership with IREN’s expertise across power, land, data centers, GPU deployment and infrastructure operations,” said Daniel Roberts, cofounder and co-CEO of IREN. “Together, we believe we can accelerate deployment of AI infrastructure and expand access to compute for AI-native and enterprise customers globally.”

About IREN

IREN is a vertically integrated AI Cloud provider, delivering large-scale data centers and GPU clusters for AI training and inference. IREN’s platform is underpinned by its expansive portfolio of grid-connected land and power in renewable-rich regions across North America, Europe and APAC.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA and IREN Partner on 5GW AI Infrastructure Deployment Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 13:00
Matthew McKay

MATTHEW MCKAY
Staff Reporter

Since early December, an anonymous Instagram account going by the username @christiana_towers_glazer has been posting videos about the Christiana Towers. 

The comedic nature of the videos propelled them to considerable viewership, with clips routinely gaining tens of thousands of views on Instagram. 

“We were inspired to make the account because of our love for the towers,” one of the multiple anonymous account owners said. 

The Christiana Towers, which have stood since 1972, have remained empty since 2019. Serving as dorms for nearly 50 years prior to the closure, the buildings were abandoned as a result of increased maintenance and operational costs, which were deemed unsustainable. 

“I think [the towers] are pretty cool,” said Vincent Evola, a sophomore computer engineering student who follows the account. “But I think it’s a little concerning that someone has such extreme opinions about a building.” 

The towers have long been a subject of debate among students. While some criticize their aging infrastructure and distance from central campus, others appreciate their community atmosphere and distinctive architecture. 

“With flashing lights of radio towers and endless windows, they’re kind of hard to miss,” reads a 2019 Delaware Today article highlighting the towers. “Like a time capsule, East and West Tower show us what UD imagined for its future.”

For the account’s creator, that distinctiveness is exactly what makes them interesting.

“Our bond to the towers is primarily due to the juxtaposition of having two large brutalist/industrialist/modernist buildings smack in the middle of a mainly classical/georgian style campus, as well as the fact that they don’t fit in with the scale of any other building in the area at all,” the account owner said via DM. “To those who say the buildings should be demolished, we would disagree and say the towers should be renovated, overall, it would be cheaper than building new dorms in their place.”

The account owner emphasized the towers’ unique value to campus, which many students agree with.

“I think it’s really funny that this person is really dedicated to the Christiana Towers,” Abby Biederman, a sophomore pre-veterinary medicine major who also follows the account, said. “It made me think like, yeah, why aren’t we using the towers for housing and why are they still there?”

According to the creator, the goal was simple. 

“We also figured it would bring some joy to people,” the anonymous account owner said. 

Many followers enjoy the approach that the account has taken.

“Christiana Towers Glazers, keep doing your thing,” said Biederman. “Your edits are fire.” 
As the account continues to gain traction, and with demolition which was supposed to occur this past summer pushed back — the future of the towers still remains unclear and uncertain.


Glazing the towers: how a meme account took the student body by storm was first posted on May 8, 2026 at 12:00 pm.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

2026-05-08 16:04
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: Skyrocketing hard drive and storage costs caused by the AI data center boom are making it more expensive and more difficult for digital archivists, academics, Wikipedia, and hobby data hoarders to save data and archive the internet. Specific drives favored by some high profile organizations like the Internet Archive have become far more expensive or are difficult to find at all, archivists said. Over the last several months, prices for both consumer level and enterprise solid state drives, hard drives, and other types of storage have skyrocketed. As an example, a 2TB external Samsung SSD I purchased last fall for $159 now costs $575. PC Part Picker, a website that tracks the average price of different types of drives, shows a universal increase in storage prices starting in about October of last year. Prices of many of the drives it tracks have doubled or increased by more than 150 percent, and at some stores SSDs and hard drives are simply sold out. There is now even a secondary market for some SSDs, with people scalping them on eBay and elsewhere. Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive and the Wayback Machine, the most important archiving projects in the history of the internet, told 404 Media that the skyrocketing costs of storage is "a very real issue costing us time and money." "We have found that the preferred 28-30TB drives are just not available or at very high price," Kahle said. "We gather over 100 terabytes of new materials each day, and we have over 210 Petabytes of materials already archived on machines that need continuous upgrades and maintenance, so we need to constantly get new hard drives." "We are fortunate to have an active community that donates to the Archive, and we are also looking for help from hard drive manufacturers in these difficult times. We are always looking for more help," he added. "So far we have ways to work around these shortages, but it is a very real issue causing us time and money." The Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia and various other projects, including Wikimedia Commons, an open repository of royalty free media, told 404 Media that the cost of storage has become a concern for the foundation's projects as well. "With over 65 million articles on Wikipedia alone, access to server and storage capacity is vital to us. We've certainly seen price increases since the end of 2025. These price increases are of concern to us, as with every other player in the industry. We see the primary impact in the purchase of memory and hard drives but also in terms of lead times on server deliveries and our capacity to place future orders," a Wikimedia Foundation spokesperson told us. "The Wikimedia Foundation is a non-profit, and as such how we allocate budget is very carefully considered. We maintain our own data centers to serve our users from all over the world. We're putting workarounds in place where we can, mainly involving being smart with how we prioritize investment in hardware, building in flexibility as well as extending the life of existing hardware where possible." Western Digital, one of the largest manufacturers of hard drives and other storage systems, said that it has essentially sold out of its 2026 inventory to enterprise clients, many of which run data centers. Micron, which made RAM and SSDs under the brand name Crucial, has exited the consumer market altogether because "AI-driven growth in the data center has led to a surge in demand for memory and storage. Micron has made the difficult decision to exit the Crucial consumer business in order to improve supply and support for our larger, strategic customers in faster-growing segments."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:59

In an exclusive interview with CBS News, former reality star Spencer Pratt addressed his inexperience in politics as he runs for L.A. mayor.

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May 8, 2026 — A powerful new suite of hardware will enhance University of Nebraska researchers’ ability to conduct cutting-edge science, particularly work involving artificial intelligence and machine learning.

From left: Derek Weitzel, Garhan Attebury, Adam Caprez and Hongfeng Yu in the Holland Computing Center’s Lincoln site, located at the Schorr Center. Credit: Cheyenne Rowe, UNL Office of Research and Innovation.

With a nearly $700,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, the Holland Computing Center recently deployed PLUMAGE, a flexible graphics processing unit-based cyberinfrastructure that will benefit researchers across the disciplinary spectrum, from computer scientists and engineers to scholars in business, architecture, the social sciences and more.

PLUMAGE – which stands for Promoting Learning Using Mixed Advanced GPU Environments –adds to Holland’s already comprehensive suite of computing and storage resources, expanding a cyberinfrastructure system that researchers across the university system have relied on for years. The new deployment will help NU researchers keep pace with the explosion of AI and other data-intensive research by providing cutting-edge GPUs, which are the specialized computer chips that process vast numbers of calculations in parallel.

“All of these new AI and machine learning services depend on GPU technology to be able to do the work in an efficient manner, otherwise it would take hundreds or thousands of years to generate a model,” said Adam Caprez, principal investigator and associate director of research development and engagement at HCC.

Though supercomputing is traditionally tied to areas like computer science, physics, chemistry and bioinformatics, it’s now gaining traction in every field, creating a need for additional cyberinfrastructure.

“There are disciplines that had very few computing needs before – maybe they just did everything on their desktop – and now, all of a sudden, they are finding that they need these huge resources to do things with AI, creating a land rush,” Caprez said. “It’s very important to have resources like PLUMAGE, but also the personnel and expertise to help people use them. Holland has this complete ecosystem.”

The research team also includes Hongfeng Yu, HCC director and professor of computing; Derek Weitzel, research associate professor of computing; and Garhan Attebury, Holland’s associate director of research cyberinfrastructure.

PLUMAGE is now available at no cost to NU researchers, and access can be arranged for collaborators and users outside the NU system. Interested parties can register for an account on the Holland Computing Center website or contact the center for additional information. For general information about news, workshops and trainings offered by Holland, NU researchers are encouraged to join the center’s mailing list.

PLUMAGE features some of NVIDIA’s most advanced accelerators for AI and high-performance computing, including six NVIDIA H200 GPUs and 52 NVIDIA L40S GPUs. This new hardware strengthens Holland’s position as Nebraska’s premier academic supercomputing resource and distinguishes it nationally by linking local cluster resources with cyberinfrastructure networks across the U.S. via dual access pathways.

One mode of access is through Swan, Holland’s flagship computing cluster, which uses a traditional, scheduler-based batch system where jobs are assigned at fixed times or when resources are available. The other route is through the National Research Platform, an NSF initiative that provides high-performance computing resources using a dynamic, interactive approach called Kubernetes, which continuously manages the workload across a cluster.

PLUMAGE’s flexibility to shift GPUs between these two systems is a unique setup enabling researchers to use the method best suited for a given project.

“One reason NSF funded this project is that it’s a novel idea. The design of PLUMAGE bridges our local computing environment and the broader national cyberinfrastructure, which is critical because modern research increasingly depends on a connected ecosystem,” Yu said.

Caprez said he and other Holland personnel are focused on spreading the word about PLUMAGE and other center resources, including tailored training and support. Though the center was established in 2007, some ampus researchers remain unaware of its extensive tools. Increased visibility is crucial as the evolving research landscape requires scholars from diverse fields to leverage supercomputing and AI capabilities. The center is committed to paving the way for these new users.

“I know people can be intimidated when using a supercomputer,” Caprez said. “But the Holland Computing Center is more than just hardware. It’s also the personnel, expertise and a whole package that’s available to help researchers and enable usage. We’re happy to meet with people, learn about their research, and provide any needed assistance so they can make effective use of the resources to accelerate their research.”

PLUMAGE is funded through the National Science Foundation’s Campus Cyberinfrastructure program under NSF Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Award No. 2430234.


Source: Tiffany Lee, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

The post University of Nebraska Deploys NSF-Funded ‘PLUMAGE’ GPU Infrastructure for AI Research appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:56

If you're tempted by T-Mobile's offers but not sure which plan is best for you, we have recommendations.

2026-05-08 16:04
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DELFT, Netherlands, May 8, 2026 — Exactly five years after its launch, Graduate Ventures is celebrating its 80th investment. The milestone backing goes to FrostByte, a Delft startup whose technology makes it possible to build quantum computers at greater scale. The investment is part of a 1.3 million euro funding round, alongside Innovation Quarter, Paeonia Group, UNIIQ and an angel investor.

Credit: Graduate Ventures

Since its founding in 2021, Graduate Ventures has invested in 79 startups from the ecosystem of TU Delft, Erasmus University Rotterdam and Erasmus MC. The portfolio ranges from AI companies such as Eddy Grid and Iconic Works to deeptech players like QuantWare and climate tech names including Hydryx and Back to Battery.

Several portfolio companies have since secured follow-on funding from international investors, expanded into foreign markets and positioned themselves as category leaders in their respective fields. This demonstrates Graduate Ventures’ ability not only to invest early, but to build lasting value into subsequent stages of growth.

Control Electronics for Quantum Computers

The 80th name in this ambitious portfolio is FrostByte, a Delft-based quantum startup developing chips that solve a critical bottleneck in quantum computing. As these systems grow larger, connecting and controlling all their components becomes increasingly difficult.

FrostByte’s solution is to move part of the control architecture closer to the core of the computer, rather than keeping it on the outside.This makes systems easier to scale, smaller, and more power efficient, which makes the technology relevant to virtually every organisation working on quantum computers worldwide. It is enabled by cryogenic chips, which operate at extremely low temperatures.

‍World-leading Expertise in Cryo-CMOS

FrostByte is led by founders James Kroll (CEO) and Luc Enthoven (CTO), with scientific support from Fabio Sebastiano and Masoud Babaie. Both advisors are internationally recognised pioneers in the field, bringing decades of research experience that is now being translated into commercial applications.

“FrostByte is exactly the kind of company that shows what the Dutch knowledge economy is capable of producing,” says Auke van den Hout, Managing Partner at Graduate Ventures. “This investment fits within Graduate Ventures’ broader strategy of backing key technologies such as quantum, AI and climate tech, where fundamental research is translated directly into industrial application.”

‘The Perfect Investor for a Deeptech Company’

“For a deeptech player like us, Graduate is a uniquely well-suited investor,” said James Kroll, CEO and co-founder of FrostByte. “They understand what it takes to commercialise technology rooted in decades of academic research. On top of that, the access to their network of seasoned entrepreneurs is exactly what you need at this stage, particularly for a company operating at the intersection of science and industrial scale-up.”

FrostByte is a spin-off from TU Delft and QuTech, which is internationally recognized as one of the world’s leading institutes in quantum technology. Graduate previously also invested in QuantWare, another QuTech spin-off, which has since grown into one of the world’s major suppliers of superconducting quantum chips, with customers in more than 20 countries.

On May 5, QuantWare announced a successful, oversubscribed follow-on round of 152 million euro, led by a strong international consortium. Graduate, an early backer of QuantWare, again participated in this round.

Eighty Investments in Five Years

Graduate Ventures was founded in 2021 by alumni of Erasmus University Rotterdam, Erasmus MC and TU Delft. The fund invests from a 10 million euro pre-seed fund and a 50 million euro seed fund. With 80 investments in five years, Graduate Ventures ranks among the most active early-stage investors in the Netherlands.

Beyond capital, the fund’s strength lies in its network of more than 200 experienced entrepreneurs and investors who make their expertise and network available to the founders in the portfolio. Driven by this “Giving Back” culture, Graduate has facilitated more than 600 concrete connections between founders and the supporter network.

‍More from HPCwire: QuantWare Raises $176M as It Builds KiloFab and Targets Utility-Scale Quantum Processors


Source: Graduate Ventures

The post Graduate Ventures Invests in FrostByte as Quantum Startup Targets Scaling Bottleneck appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:41

‘Unprecedented operation’ under way to receive MV Hondius off Tenerife to assess and repatriate those onboard

What is hantavirus?
Where did the cruise ship hantavirus come from and what happens next?

The evacuation of the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius cruise ship must be completed within 24 hours of the vessel reaching Tenerife on Sunday or face days or even weeks of delay because of bad weather, authorities in the Canary Islands warned on Friday.

The Dutch-flagged vessel, which was sailing from Argentina to Cape Verde, is due to arrive in the Spanish archipelago this weekend, triggering what Spain’s health minister has termed an “unprecedented operation” to receive, assess and repatriate the 149 passengers and crew members onboard.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:40

Maps, recently approved by voters, would have helped Democrats gain up to four new seats in US House

Virginia’s supreme court on Friday ruled that the state cannot use new congressional maps approved by voters to help Democrats gain as many as four new seats in the US House of Representatives, handing Republicans a major win ahead of November’s midterm elections.

In a 4-3 decision, the court found that the state’s general assembly did not follow the appropriate constitutional procedure in approving the map, which voters then passed in a referendum last month.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:38

Diplomatic efforts continuing despite fighting in and around contested strait of Hormuz in recent days

The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has said that Washington is expecting a response from Iran on Friday to its proposals for an interim deal to end the conflict in the Middle East, as Iran accused the US of breaching the increasingly fragile ceasefire announced last month.

In recent days there have been the biggest flare-ups in fighting in and around the contested strait of Hormuz since the informal truce began. The rise in violence followed Donald Trump’s announcement – then rapid pause – of a new naval mission aimed at opening the strategic waterway.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:33

The top sports streaming services for you depend on your favorite sports. We've analyzed the options, covering everything from the NBA playoffs and MLB to soccer and UFC.

2026-05-08 16:04
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INNSBRUCK, Austria, May 8, 2026 — AQT has unveiled the LYNX Series, a new generation of 19-inch rack-mounted quantum computers that has officially achieved a record-breaking Quantum Volume (QV) of 32768.

The LYNX Series represents the culmination of years of research into high-fidelity gate operations and advanced trapped-ion control. The LYNX Series integrates AQT’s proprietary gate developments, significantly reducing the sensitivity to laser frequency noise and laser phase noise and allowing for deeper, more complex circuits in a standard data center environment.

“With the LYNX Series, we aren’t just increasing qubit counts; we are perfecting control and reducing sensitivity,” said Dr. Thomas Monz, CEO of AQT. “Achieving this new Quantum Volume benchmark proves that our trapped-ion architecture is the most viable path for real-world industrial applications, from chemistry to complex logistics.”

Why Quantum Volume Matters

While qubit count is a frequent headline, Quantum Volume is a more holistic metric that accounts for gate fidelity, connectivity, and hardware stability. By reaching this new QV milestone, the LYNX Series ensures:

  • Higher Algorithm Success Rates: users can run longer sequences of operations with minimal error.
  • Seamless Integration: the series remains housed in a standard 19-inch rack, requiring no special cryogenic infrastructure beyond its internal cooling.
  • Cloud Readiness: the LYNX Series will soon be available via the AQT Cloud and AQT partners.

Strengthening the European Ecosystem

This launch reinforces AQT’s commitment to European technological leadership. Developed and manufactured in Innsbruck, the LYNX Series provides European industries and research institutions with high-performance quantum assets that guarantee data sovereignty and security. The first units of the LYNX Series are scheduled for availability to select strategic partners in Q4 2026, with wider commercial availability following shortly after.

About AQT

AQT is a leading quantum computing hardware company based in Innsbruck, Austria. AQT builds general-purpose quantum computers based on trapped-ion technology. Focused on standardizing quantum hardware, AQT provides the world’s only rack-mounted quantum computer, bringing the power of the atom into the data centers of tomorrow.


Source: AQT

The post AQT Launches LYNX Series Trapped-Ion Quantum Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:13

CNET's gaming experts have deliberated and come up with the top PlayStation 5 games you can play right now, such as Astro Bot, Marathon and Clair Obscur: Expedition 33.

2026-05-08 16:04
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More than 12,000 people gave up their asylum claims or voluntarily departed the U.S. as ICE moved to cut cases short by sending asylum-seekers to third countries, a CBS News analysis found.

2026-05-08 16:04
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Hey all,
Any suggestions other than friendwitha to rent a one wheel for the day? I"m coming up for a work trip and have all day Sunday and was really hoping to be able to ride all around the river greenway and Central Park. I've been unable to find someone on friendwitha that's convenient to pick up. FWIW, I'll be staying in Chelsea. Found a few in Brooklyn and Harlem, but it's too far to be able to get it and return it. any ideas on places in Manhattan that might have rentals?

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A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.

2026-05-08 12:04
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in a statement that the documents "have long fueled justified speculation — and it's time the American people see it for themselves."

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 20:04

The congressional redistricting referendum was passed by Virginia voters last month and would have given Democrats a more favorable map.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 12:00

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. expects to receive Iran's response to the draft agreement for ending the war "today at some point."

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 12:00

Longtime Slashdot reader couchslug shares a report from That Privacy Guy's Alexander Hanff: Two weeks ago I wrote about Anthropic silently registering a Native Messaging bridge in seven Chromium-based browsers on every machine where Claude Desktop was installed. The pattern was: install on user launch of product A, write configuration into the user's installs of products B, C, D, E, F, G, H without asking. Reach across vendor trust boundaries. No consent dialog. No opt-out UI. Re-installs itself if the user removes it manually, every time Claude Desktop is launched. This week I discovered the same pattern, executed by Google. Google Chrome is reaching into users' machines and writing a 4GB on-device AI model file to disk without asking. The file is named weights.bin. It lives in OptGuideOnDeviceModel. It is the weights for Gemini Nano, Google's on-device LLM. Chrome did not ask. Chrome does not surface it. If the user deletes it, Chrome re-downloads it. The legal analysis is the same one I gave for the Anthropic case. The environmental analysis is new. At Chrome's scale, the climate bill for one model push, paid in atmospheric CO2 by the entire planet, is between six thousand and sixty thousand tons of CO2-equivalent emissions, depending on how many devices receive the push. That is the environmental cost of one company unilaterally deciding that two billion peoples' default browser will mass-distribute a 4GB binary they did not request.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 12:00

Here are some highly rated films to try, plus a look at what's new in May.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 11:54

US secretary of state has been meeting Italian leader amid strained tensions over Iran

The European Commission also insisted that airlines must not charge customers extra fuel fees after they have already bought tickets, as the aviation sector feels the pain from high energy prices because of the Middle East war, AFP reported.

“Airlines may adapt their published fares to the situation, but adding a fuel surcharge to a ticket after it has been bought cannot be justified,” EU spokeswoman Anna-Kaisa Itkonen told reporters in Brussels.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:53

The secretary of state held warm meetings with Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Pope Leo XIV after the president’s repeated criticism of both leaders.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:51
Best way to sell XR

What’s the best way to sell a Onewheel, I have to sell my XR+ , has less than 400 miles on it, land surf fender, rail guards and float plates from new. Is EBay a good option, the weight going through the mail worries me in cost for that. Not sure on value?? Any advice gratefully received.

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2026-05-08 12:04
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Roman Lavrynovych is one of three accused of arson attacks on a vehicle and two houses in London tied to the prime minister

A Ukrainian man has admitted setting fire to a car that once belonged to Keir Starmer for £3,000, after telling a court he had been being threatened by a “powerful” Russian-speaking man using the pseudonym El Money.

Roman Lavrynovych, 22, is accused, along with Stanislav Carpiuc and Petro Pochynok, of arson attacks on a vehicle and two houses in north London linked to the prime minister.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:44

Hiring once again exceeded forecasts, with employers adding far more than the projected gains of 65,000.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:41

Party makes gains in Portsmouth and Richmond upon Thames in local elections but loses a Scottish stronghold

Ed Davey has sought to cast Liberal Democrat wins in England’s local elections as proof his party is best positioned to confront what he described as the “extreme populist change” offered by Reform UK and the Greens.

As Labour assessed a disastrous set of results, the Lib Dems could claim they had been able to fend off Reform challenges in areas including Portsmouth, where they made gains to seize the city council, which had been under no overall control.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 11:40

Tumbler Ridge secondary school was site of February mass shooting in which nine were killed and dozens injured

The school that was the site of one of Canada’s deadliest mass shootings will be torn down, officials have announced.

The decision to demolish the Tumbler Ridge secondary school came after meetings between the school board and survivors, family and community members, said the British Columbia premier, David Eby.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:36

A system that thousands of schools and universities use was offline due to a cyberattack.

2026-05-08 12:04
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Train operator will become 11th national service returned to public ownership since Labour was elected in 2024

Great Western Railway will be nationalised in December, the government has announced.

The train service, which has been in private hands for 30 years, mainly run by First Group, will be the 11th train operator on the national railway brought back into public ownership.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:12

One U.K. lawmaker says big election losses for the ruling Labour Party and its main rivals show the de-facto two-party system is "not just dying, it is dead."

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:00

In the game by Melbourne-based Beethoven and Dinosaur, you play as a teenage girl the night before moving to New York – drinking, skateboarding and getting into trouble, all soundtracked by 80s and 90s classics

When Johnny Galvatron was 14, his cousin gave him a copy of the Smashing Pumpkins’ seminal 1995 album, Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. For Galvatron, a rambunctious teenager in Geelong who defined himself by his musical taste, it was love at first spin. “I don’t think there’s a track like Tonight, Tonight from any other band,” he reminisces.

A song from the album plays at a critical moment in Mixtape, the second game from Galvatron’s Melbourne-based studio, Beethoven and Dinosaur. It’s a narrative adventure game about Stacy Rockford, a teenage girl in the fictional 90s American suburban town of Blue Moon Lagoon.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:00

The gentle French garment is now as cursed as the infamous megacorp, which has accumulated $80m in government contracts in Australia alone

It’s taken me years to find a chore coat with a cut that flatters my big tits but, now that I finally own one, I want to incinerate it.

Such is the power of brand contamination; infamous data surveillance megacorp Palantir, has decided to bang a logo on a chore coat to sell as corporate merch.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 11:00

Cloudflare plans to cut about 20% of its workforce, or more than 1,100 employees, as it restructures around an "agentic AI-first operating model." Reuters reports: Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince and co-founder Michelle Zatlyn said in a message to employees that the company was reimagining every team and function to operate in what they described as an agentic AI era. Cloudflare said the job cuts reflect a redesign of internal processes and roles, rather than a response to employee performance or short-term cost pressures. The company added that its own use of AI has increased more than sixfold over the past three months, prompting major changes in how teams operate.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 10:45

Keira Alexandra Kronvold’s daughter was taken from her after she was subjected to parental competence psychometric tests

A Greenlandic woman whose newborn baby was forcibly removed by Danish authorities as a result of controversial parenting competency tests has won a landmark case in the high court ruling that their actions were illegal.

Keira Alexandra Kronvold’s daughter Zammi was taken away from her when she was two hours old and placed in foster care in November 2024 after Kronvold was subjected to so-called FKU (parental competence) psychometric tests. At the time she was told that the test was to see if she was “civilised enough”.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 10:39

Within days of reports of a rare Andes hantavirus outbreak, political figures and prominent Covid-era ivermectin advocates once again began promoting the drug as a potential treatment — even as infectious disease experts say there is no clinical evidence supporting its use against hantaviruses.

Former congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene posted on X on Wednesday suggesting vitamin D, zinc, and ivermectin could prevent the rodent-borne disease. Ivermectin, an antiparasitic medication, surged in popularity during the Covid-19 pandemic as vaccine skepticism rose. In another post, Greene shared a 2024 article about mRNA hantavirus vaccine research while claiming pharmaceutical companies “manipulate the virus (bioweapon)” and “make the vaccine (poison).”

Other high-profile ivermectin advocates also circulated claims online, including physician and activist Mary Talley Bowden, whose post about ivermectin and hantavirus was viewed millions of times on X, and commentator Josh Walkos, known online as “Champagne Joshi,” who shared posts questioning hantavirus vaccine development.

“There is zero evidence indicating that ivermectin would be a treatment for any hantavirus.”

Primarily found in South America, the Andes hantavirus can cause severe respiratory illness and, unlike most hantaviruses, has demonstrated limited ability for person-to-person transmission in previous outbreaks. Health authorities are now investigating a recent cluster linked to international travelers aboard an expedition cruise ship traveling between Argentina, Antarctica, and South Africa, with several cases identified beyond the vessel.

The strain can be deadly, with mortality rates in some outbreaks estimated at as high as 50 percent. But experts say it typically requires close contact to spread, making it significantly less transmissible than Covid-19.

The resurgence of ivermectin claims comes as some Republican-led states continue efforts to expand access to the drug years after it became a flashpoint during the Covid-19 pandemic. On Wednesday, the South Carolina House passed https://www.wistv.com/2026/05/06/sc-house-inching-toward-passing-bill-allow-ivermectin-be-sold-over-counter/legislation that would allow ivermectin to be sold without a prescription.

“There is no meaningful clinical evidence for ivermectin against hantavirus, full stop,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security whose work focuses on emerging infectious disease, pandemic preparedness, and biosecurity.

Adalja said the only antiviral formally evaluated in clinical trials for hantavirus is ribavirin, and even those results showed limited benefit.

Vincent Racaniello, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Columbia University, said the Andes virus remains the only hantavirus known to spread person to person.

“There is zero evidence indicating that ivermectin would be a treatment for any hantavirus,” Racaniello said.

While ivermectin is approved to treat certain parasitic infections in humans, including river blindness and intestinal strongyloidiasis, the FDA warns that improper use or high doses can cause serious side effects, including seizures and neurological complications.

Racaniello warned that unsupported medical claims circulating on social media can create public confusion during disease outbreaks.

Health communication experts say distrust that emerged during the Covid-19 pandemic continues to shape how some Americans respond to new disease outbreaks. Evolving public health recommendations during the pandemic, including former National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director https://www.npr.org/sections/goats-and-soda/2024/06/21/g-s1-5705/coronavirus-faw-if-youre-still-trying-to-stay-covid-safe-does-the-6-food-rule-matterhttps://www.npr.org/sections/goats-and-soda/2024/06/21/g-s1-5705/coronavirus-faw-if-youre-still-trying-to-stay-covid-safe-does-the-6-food-rule-matterAnthony Fauci’s acknowledgment that the widely used 6-foot social distancing rule was not firmly grounded in data, contributed to enduring skepticism toward public health institutions.

Related

Network of Right-Wing Health Care Providers Is Making Millions Off Hydroxychloroquine and Ivermectin, Hacked Data Reveals

Even as his administration rushed vaccine development, President Donald Trump publicly promoted unproven Covid-19 treatments including hydroxychloroquine, further politicizing debates around experimental therapies and public health guidance.

The president has so far offered scant remarks on the outbreak. Asked about the virus on Thursday, he told reporters “it should be fine.”

“People’s experience with Covid-19 permanently changed how many view public health guidance,” said Rebecca Fish, a health communications professor at the University of North Carolina Hussman School of Journalism and Media who previously worked in senior health policy and pharmaceutical industry roles. “There is now a much higher level of skepticism toward institutions like the CDC and official public health messaging.”

The Department of Health and Human Services and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not respond to questions from The Intercept about whether federal health agencies have evaluated ivermectin for Andes hantavirus or plan to address unsupported treatment claims circulating online.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has publicly defended the off-label use of ivermectin and criticized clinically informed public health policies for Covid-19, now oversees HHS and the CDC. Last year, CBS News reported that layoffs tied to Kennedy’s restructuring of federal health agencies eliminated all full-time employees in the CDC’s Vessel Sanitation Program, which investigates outbreaks aboard cruise ships. Amid the news of the hantavirus outbreak, the administration confirmed to STAT that the cuts had been reversed. The chief of the Vessel Sanitation Program, however, announced his retirement on Wednesday.

“When someone feels ridiculed for asking a reasonable question, they don’t defer to authority, they route around it.”

People in a health crisis often look for reassurance and a sense of control, not just facts, Fish said, adding that unsupported treatment claims can spread quickly online when distrust in institutions is already high.

“When someone feels ridiculed for asking a reasonable question, they don’t defer to authority, they route around it,” she said. “The question is not whether that vacuum will be filled, but by whom and with what.”

Fish said public health officials and journalists should distinguish carefully between what is false, what remains unproven, and what is still unknown as evidence develops.

Related

Hacked Records Corroborate Claims in Hydroxychloroquine Wrongful Death Suit

But experts said distrust in public institutions does not eliminate the need for clinical evidence when evaluating medical treatments.

“Clinical claims require real evidence that goes beyond anecdotal evidence,” Adalja, the Johns Hopkins scholar, said.

Racaniello, the microbiologist, warned that unsupported medical claims circulating on social media can still carry real public health risks.

“The problem arises when people inject their opinions on social media when they have no expertise in the matter,” Racaniello said. “Ivermectin at high doses can be damaging, so encouraging its use in this outbreak is irresponsible.”

The post Amid Hantavirus Panic, the Ivermectin Super Fans Are Back appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 10:32

Do Trump’s ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions inevitably lead to military action? Expert comment jon.wallace

When ‘maximum’ economic pressure fails to bring regime change, and rhetoric has made diplomacy politically impossible, momentum towards military solutions will grow.

A woman looks on amid Cuban flags as she takes part in a demonstration against sanctions in Havana on 7 April 2026.

During the first administration of President Donald Trump, the US imposed so-called ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions on five countries: Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Syria and Venezuela. In three of those cases, ‘maximum pressure’ was exerted by either creating new sanctions (Venezuela), tightening existing ones (Cuba) or returning sanctions that had been lifted (Iran).  

Maximum pressure sanctions are not only a Trump phenomenon: President Joe Biden applied punishing sanctions to Russia after it invaded Ukraine in 2022. Those were multilateral and focused on reversing the invasion. But Biden initially claimed they could also lead to regime change.

In his second term, President Trump has dialled back the regime-change rhetoric regarding sanctions on Russia – indeed he has lifted some oil-related sanctions on the country as a result of the Iran war.

But his administration has launched military action against two maximum-pressure sanctioned countries (Venezuela and Iran). And, even as war with Iran drags on, Washington is still threatening military intervention in Cuba.

This would seem to indicate a significant risk in the maximum pressure policy: imposing economy-wide sanctions without a coherent strategy for off ramps and negotiations creates an escalatory momentum – particularly when the primary objective is regime change.

Sanctions’ uneven record

The chances that sanctions fail to deliver are significant. Even less comprehensive sanctions, intended to force democratic change or human rights reforms, have a poor track record.  

According to a 2025 Chatham House study Understanding and improving sanctions today, of the 858 sanctions applied by Western countries with at least one of the stated goals of democracy and/or human rights, 522 were determined to either be ongoing or have failed.  

In the case of Cuba, economic and financial sanctions imposed in 1962 remained in place for 65 years and were codified twice into law by the US Congress – all without bringing about a change of regime.

President Trump, in both terms, has argued that previous administrations used insufficient force, and that a maximum pressure sanctions approach could bring about US goals.

But so far maximum pressure has not delivered. In 2019, shortly after announcing maximum pressure-style sanctions on the Venezuelan government, then National Security Advisor John Bolton called for the Venezuelan military to defect to remove President Nicolas Maduro. Later he declared that the regime’s collapse was only a matter of time. Those sanctions largely remained in place through the Biden administration. But so did Maduro.

Having failed to bring about the regime’s fall, and with no greater economic tools available, President Trump authorized the special forces operation that captured Maduro on 3 January 2026. That mission brought not the fall of the Maduro regime, but its decapitation – and the imposition of a more pliable leadership. Democracy and even regime change were not delivered, despite the promises made.  

US policy towards Iran has followed the same pattern. In his first term, Trump pulled out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear agreement negotiated by President Barack Obama’s administration – calling the deal ‘defective to its core’ and promising a better one.  

No such deal was achieved. And on his return to the White House this year, following the decapitation of the Maduro government, Trump turned his attention back to Iran.

The US’s stated goals for the Iran war were never coherent, but the implicit message was the same: maximum pressure sanctions had failed, demanding escalation to military intervention along the lines of the Venezuela operation.

Cuba may be next. In June 2017 Trump announced he would roll back the measures Obama’s administration had taken to loosen sanctions on Havana. He re-tightened sanctions, promising that he would not negotiate until Cuba’s government held multi-party elections.

Unfortunately, despite their failure to produce either regime change or even modest human rights improvements, those sanctions largely remained intact under President Biden – and again failed in their stated goal to bring down the Cuban regime.

In January 2026, shortly after the Venezuela operation, Trump threatened to attack Cuba next. His administration then upped the pressure by halting the flow of subsidized oil the Venezuelan government had previously sent to Cuba. That has brought massive blackouts in Cuba, a collapse of the economy, and sparked outbreaks of disease, poverty and malnutrition.

But the regime is still standing, and Trump has returned to a more violent threat. On 3 May he said he could send the US aircraft carrier the USS Abraham Lincoln to Cuban coastal waters to force the issue – even though the Iran war has exposed the limits of military options.

Who else should worry?

Regime change came to Syria in late 2024, during the Biden administration. The role of sanctions in bringing about that change is debatable, but the toppling of the former Assad regime has seen US relations with the country improve and negotiations to lift sanctions begin.

But should other remaining ‘maximum pressure’ sanctioned countries, besides Cuba, fear US attack?  

It seems unlikely. The objectives for these sanctions differ – ending the invasion of Ukraine in the case of Russia (despite Biden’s early, heated rhetoric about regime change) and ending the build-up of nuclear weapons in the case of North Korea. The fact that both countries have nuclear arsenals will no doubt deter military escalation by the US.

Is it the sanctions that lead to war, or is it Trump?

It is possible to argue that the increase in US military intervention is not simply the product of maximum pressure sanctions, but the consequence of a tempestuous president bent on enforcing a new vision of US dominance in the global order. But that seems reductionist.

The failure of ‘maximum pressure’ tactics to provoke regime change creates its own logic and momentum towards escalation. That can accelerate under a leader who feels the need to act (for whatever reason) – particularly when the sanctioned country is at a clear technological disadvantage to the US military and has no nuclear deterrent.

It remains easier for administrations to be drawn into escalating sanctions – or to maintain them – when efforts to liberalize or amend them inevitably bring calls of weakness.

And the temptation to move from sanctions to military action may not only be limited to Trump or Trump-adjacent presidents. It remains a risk for any US administration, Republican or Democrat, that has placed significant political capital in a ramped up, punitive sanctions policy.  

It remains easier for administrations to be drawn into escalating sanctions – or to maintain them – when efforts to liberalize or amend them inevitably bring calls of weakness, as has been the case in Cuba, Iran and Venezuela.

That is reflected by a spike in new sanctions in the past two decades: The Chatham House study shows the number of sanctions imposed by countries and multilateral organizations nearly doubled between 2001 and 2023 – the majority created by the US.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 10:24

State-run media​ reported that the newly found rough ruby was discovered in mid-April, just after the traditional New Year festival.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 10:04

Star Wars actor later deleted post and apologized, saying president should live ‘long enough to be held accountable’

The White House has branded Star Wars actor Mark Hamill “a sick individual” after an AI-generated image showing Donald Trump in a shallow grave, with the words “If Only” as an overlay was posted to one of star’s social media accounts.

Hamill, who played the lead character of Luke Skywalker in six movies of the iconic science fiction franchise and is a longtime critic of the US president, apologized and removed the post from his Bluesky account on Thursday.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 10:00

Claims of nimbyism are a misunderstanding: the movement is about whether regular people have a say in fundamental decisions

Since the surreal scene at the 2024 presidential inauguration, when a row of big tech titans took their VIP seats and signaled their new alliance with Maga, the Trump administration has rolled out the red carpet for Silicon Valley’s AI ambitions and shareholder priorities.

Washington has doled out billions in lucrative federal subsidies and contracts to the cash-rich sector, bloating an AI bubble that experts warn may imperil the entire economy while prohibiting any guardrails on the fast-moving technology.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 10:00

At Google I/O this month, we should learn a lot about a wide range of new smart glasses coming from companies other than Meta.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 09:45

Man was reported missing on Sunday and on Wednesday officials found a body with wounds indicating a bear attack

A hiker in Glacier national park is believed to have been killed in a confrontation with a bear, which is likely the first such fatality in the Montana park since 1998, authorities said.

The body of the male victim was found on Wednesday, and on Friday morning his identity and other details about him had not yet been publicly disclosed. The man had been reported missing and a search and rescue team was sent out to look for him this week and came upon his remains.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 09:33

Trial jurors said they couldn't agree on the more serious charge of murder, prompting the judge to declare a mistrial on that count.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 09:30

May 8, 2026 — Hydrology experts at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) used artificial intelligence and a physics-based understanding of streamflow to create a model that provides highly accurate predictions of river temperatures, even in waterways that lack sensors.

A map of continental U.S. river systems showing thermoelectric power plant locations, with nuclear power plants in bold. Credit: Sean Turner and Andy Sproles/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy.

The method is important to hydropower utilities and dam operators for avoiding non-compliance risks, mitigating damage to aquatic ecosystems, and understanding impacts to downstream water users. The predictions have broad potential to support nuclear and other power plant operations, strengthening the nation’s energy and economic security.

More than 70% of the nation’s electricity is generated by thermoelectric power plants that use water for cooling, such as nuclear, natural gas, and coal-fired facilities. Information about the availability and temperature of nearby water resources is crucial for reliable and efficient power generation, in addition to agriculture, data center siting, managing fish populations, and overall ecosystem health. Yet, most U.S. waterways do not contain gauges or sensors that monitor temperature.

To construct a model to accurately predict river temperatures, ORNL scientists used an AI/machine learning approach called a Long Short-Term Memory network that’s well suited to analyzing patterns over time. The model learned how weather and landscape conditions influence river temperatures over days, seasons and years.

“The model can improve our understanding of both existing nuclear power plant operation and siting suitability for the nation’s nuclear expansion,” said Sean Turner, senior engineer in the Water Resources Science and Engineering Group at ORNL.

The model achieved an average absolute error of only 1.1 degrees Celsius between predicted and actual values. The error rate was comparable to conventional, data-intensive models that take more time and resources to build and maintain, as detailed in the Journal of Hydrology. The framework:

  • Consistently produced seasonal warming and cooling patterns across diverse waterways.
  • Maintained accuracy during very hot weather events, times that are critical for grid reliability and regulatory compliance for water withdrawal and release.
  • Made better predictions as scientists focused on nearby, relevant upstream areas that resulted in cleaner signals for downstream temperature predictions, especially in large rivers.
  • Was trained using inputs that are available for all 2.7 million river reaches across the continental United States, meaning the model can generate daily in-stream temperature estimates anywhere—even in completely ungauged watersheds.

“These deep-learning foundation models, trained on vast amounts of data to recognize and predict long-term patterns, are producing better and more transferable results than the models that people have been building and tinkering with for the last 50 years,” Turner said.

The team used publicly available data sources including nine years of daily observations from some 300 selected U.S. Geological Survey river gauges; ORNL-developed waterway data reflecting precipitation, air temperature, solar radiation, humidity, snowpack and other phenomena; ORNL-simulated daily streamflow statistics; and federal data on watershed characteristics.

More information on the model, River Temperature Time Series for Hydrothermal Modeling and Analysis (RiTHyMs), is available on the DOE HydroSource platform maintained by ORNL.

“We wanted a system that could be applied anywhere in the nation, and that means we needed to train it with data that’s available for every waterway,” Turner said. “That’s where ORNL and the datasets we’ve generated for HydroSource came in.”

Researchers are now applying the model to the managed river systems and utility operations of the Tennessee Valley Authority. They are also refining the model to enhance predictions in mountainous regions, targeting western watersheds influenced by glacial runoff, where other utilities have shown interest in water temperature projections.

RiTHyMs leveraged ORNL’s high-performance computing resources to rapidly train the continental-scale model on large datasets across hundreds of river basins. The resources are part of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, a DOE Office of Science user facility at ORNL.

Other ORNL researchers on the project included model development lead Md Abu Bakar Siddik, as well as Shih-Chieh Kao, Ahad Tanim, and Jesus Gomez-Velez, formerly of ORNL and now at the University of Iowa.

The project was funded by the DOE Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation’s Hydropower and Hydrokinetic Office.

UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOE’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. The Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit energy.gov/science.


Source: Stephanie Seay, ORNL

The post ORNL Develops AI Model to Predict River Temperatures Across US Waterways appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 09:28

Killing of development leader exposes insecurity in government-controlled Yemen Expert comment thilton.drupal

Recent assassinations in Aden are likely to undermine confidence in the Yemeni government’s ability to maintain security for its civilians as well as international organizations and aid workers.

Security forces in Aden

The kidnapping and killing of Wesam Qaid, a prominent British-Yemeni development practitioner and acting executive director of Yemen’s Social Fund for Development (SFD), is not only a tragic loss for Yemen’s development sector. It also underscores a persistent and unresolved challenge facing Yemen’s internationally recognized government: its inability to establish credible security in the areas of southern Yemen under its control, including its temporary capital Aden. 

This incident is likely to deepen Yemen’s already severe humanitarian crisis, as development and aid agencies will be hesitant to send their staff into dangerous circumstances. It will further undermine confidence among donors, international organizations and members of the Yemeni diaspora, who are seen as essential for both humanitarian work and for future reconstruction efforts. 

It also presents a challenge to Saudi Arabia’s efforts to consolidate its authority in southern Yemen, where it has supported the internationally recognized government against rival factions. The killing comes at a fraught moment amid the ongoing rift between Saudi Arabia and the UAE and following the consolidation of the Saudi-backed government’s control over southern Yemen late last year.  

Without meaningful improvements in security provision, similar incidents are likely to continue in territory nominally controlled by the government. 

A pattern, not an exception 

No group or individual has claimed Qaid’s killing, which has attracted international attention reflecting his status as a senior civilian development worker. 

But the assassination is not an isolated incident. In late April, Abdulrahman Al Shaer, a senior figure in the Islah Party who also heads a private school, was assassinated in Aden. 

Aden security officials announced the arrest of four suspects in the killing of Al Shaer, and the Yemeni prime minister has ordered an investigation into Qaid’s killing. But these developments point to systemic vulnerabilities rather than isolated security breaches. 

The assassination is not an isolated incident.

Several structural factors underpin this fragility. Despite the formal consolidation of authority under the Presidential Leadership Council (PLC), backed by Riyadh, the government still lacks coherent command and control over security agencies. Since its formation in February 2026, the cabinet has made some progress on economic issues, such as adopting its first general budget since 2019. But it has struggled to gain public confidence or deliver tangible improvements in security. 

Efforts to unify intelligence structures – such as the nominal merger of different intelligence agencies – largely remain on paper. Security coordination mechanisms in Aden are still reactive, focused on post-incident response and capturing suspects rather than preventative intelligence-sharing and operations. Moreover, the integration of armed groups with divergent loyalties has prioritized political accommodation over professional competence, limiting the effectiveness of security institutions. 

Implications for international engagement 

For years, the Yemeni government has sought to encourage international organizations and diplomatic missions to relocate to Aden, which it has used as a temporary capital since 2015. However, unlike in Sanaa – where the Houthis maintain tight security control – consecutive authorities in Aden have struggled to offer comparable security assurances. 

In a country where millions are starving, the intersection of poverty and insecurity is stark. 

Recent developments highlight this gap. Although the EU’s ambassador to Yemen made a rare visit to the frontline governorate of Taiz this week, other diplomats have cancelled or postponed their planned visits in the wake of the killing. 

Aid organizations are now likely reassessing their security plans and operational footprint, despite Yemen remaining one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. 

Regional and strategic consequences 

The incident also complicates Saudi Arabia’s position. Riyadh has sought to stabilize southern Yemen and assert itself as the sole regional leader in Yemen amid tensions with the UAE. In early 2026, the UAE’s ally in Yemen, the Southern Transitional Council (STC), was forced out of power, leading to a reconfiguration of alliances in the country. The Riyadh-backed PLC has since consolidated its rule over southern Yemen. 

However, the persistence of insecurity underscores the limits of Riyadh’s top-down approach to stabilization. Security in southern Yemen is not solely a function of military control; it depends on local legitimacy and buy-in. Groups and constituencies that feel excluded from new arrangements retain the potential to undermine stability. Without broader inclusion, such as involving pro-STC actors, and providing people’s basic needs and services, efforts to impose order are unlikely to succeed. 

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 09:22

TAIPEI, Taiwan, May 8, 2026 — Compal Electronics and Verda have announced a strategic partnership under which Compal will supply next-generation GPU server systems to accelerate the build-out of its next-generation AI infrastructure across Europe and the APAC region.

Alan Chang, Vice President of Infrastructure Solutions Business Group at Compal, and Jorge Santos, Chief Operating Officer at Verda.

Under this collaboration, Compal will supply high-density, liquid-cooled AI server platforms. The platforms are engineered for the workloads defining the next wave of AI: agentic applications that process extensive context and operate at high concurrency, while maintaining the thermal efficiency required for Verda’s sustainable cloud deployments.

The partnership underlines the growing global traction for Verda’s services as well as Compal’s growing role as an infrastructure partner to neocloud operators addressing rising demand for localized AI compute. As enterprises and governments increasingly prioritize data residency, security, and regulatory compliance, neocloud providers like Verda are emerging as key enablers of Sovereign AI strategies.

“Verda’s platform reflects where AI infrastructure demand is heading—toward regional, high-performance, and energy-efficient deployments,” said Alan Chang, Vice President, Infrastructure Solutions Business Group (ISBG) at Compal. “This collaboration demonstrates our ability to deliver advanced AI systems at scale for customers building the next generation of AI clouds.”

“Our mission is to build the next generation of cloud infrastructure for AI and empower pioneering teams across the globe. Working with Compal helps us deliver with world-class quality and reliability, and is an important step in our plans to expand our presence in the APAC region. We’re excited about what’s ahead,” said Jorge Santos, Chief Operating Officer at Verda.

Compal brings deep engineering expertise in accelerated computing, advanced thermal design, and system integration, enabling customers to deploy AI infrastructure efficiently while managing power density and operational complexity. To support global AI deployments, Compal continues to expand its manufacturing footprint across Taiwan, Vietnam, and the United States, strengthening supply-chain resilience and aligning production capacity with regional customer requirements.

About Compal

Established in 1984, Compal has grown into a leading global manufacturer of computers and smart devices, partnering with top-tier brands worldwide. Compal was recognized by CommonWealth Magazine as one of Taiwan’s top 7 manufacturers and has consistently ranked among the Forbes Global 2000 companies. Compal has actively expanded into new growth areas, including cloud servers, automotive electronics, smart medical and healthcare, and advanced communication solutions. Headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan, Compal operates design and production facilities in the United States, Taiwan, China, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, and Poland.

About Verda

Verda (formerly DataCrunch) is a European AI cloud provider operating high-density GPU data centers across Europe, delivering on-demand compute for training and inference at scale. Headquartered in Finland, Verda runs infrastructure powered by renewable energy and serves frontier AI labs, research teams and startups building the next generation of models.


Source: Compal

The post Verda and Compal Partner to Accelerate AI Infrastructure Development and Expansion appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 09:04

Former David Cameron adviser says a vote for him will make California ‘Califordable’ – not everyone is convinced

He “knows how to wind people up like Trump”, according to friends, and made his name in the UK with zany policy ideas including making the country sunnier using state-owned cloud busters.

Now the controversial strategist Steve Hilton, named the “pint-sized Rasputin” of Conservative politics, has become an unlikely frontrunner in the primary race for California governor.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 09:00

Mike McGuire courts red territory with town halls and a populist pitch on jobs, healthcare and wildfire costs

Quincy, population 1,600, is not exactly the sort of place you regularly run into California’s most powerful Democratic lawmakers. Nestled deep in the Sierra Nevada, the forested town is in a rural and reliably red county that – like nearly all of far northern California – has sent Republicans to Congress for nearly half a century.

But on a Tuesday night in mid-April, Mike McGuire, a three-term state lawmaker who previously led California’s senate, was inside a local veterans hall rallying a crowd of about 40 people with the verve of a baptist preacher.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:55

As more people turn to chatbots for financial advice, experts say AI offers both pros and cons for retirement planning. Here's what to know.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:38

Whitaker Malem worked with pop art sculptor Allen Jones, visual artist Nadia Lee Cohen and a car bodyshop in Kent

At Monday’s Met Gala, it inevitably fell to Kim Kardashian to deliver the evening’s biggest jolt. One of the few celebrities to straightforwardly interpret the “fashion is art” dress code – which focused on how the dressed and undressed human body is the through-line in most works of art – she decided to forgo her usual role as a walking billboard for a major fashion house and instead arrived in an orange fibreglass breastplate created by a small east London art duo and a car bodyshop in Kent.

“Good art should start conversation, and Kim did exactly that,” says 61-year-old Patrick Whitaker, half of the design practice Whitaker Malem, who made the breastplate just weeks before the gala. “She was very clear on wanting a breastplate, very clear on the car body finish. And I think she was nervous really. She understands the competition.”

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:38

The Pentagon's release of files might help scientists shed light on unexplained phenomena and government secrets, experts said.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:34

Unemployment remained steady at 4.3% as the US-Israel war on Iran continues to rattle the American economy

US employers added 115,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate remained steady at 4.3%, a surprisingly robust gain to the labor market as the US-Israel war with Iran continued to drive up economic uncertainty.

Economists projected about 55,000 new jobs and a 4.3% unemployment rate. A day earlier, the labor department announced 200,000 people filed for weekly unemployment benefits, a slight increase from the week before.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:27

The president expressed optimism about reaching a deal despite the attacks. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. is expecting a response from Iran on Friday.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:20

The Guardian analyzed ICE records from January-August 2025, as advocates say the family-separation crisis will lead to generational trauma

After three months in immigration detention, 1,500 miles (2,400km) away from her 13-month-old daughter, LT was running out of options.

Her baby, who was allergic to formula and had other food sensitivities, had been vomiting constantly and needed breastmilk. But the government refused to release LT – an asylum seeker from Haiti – on bond. So, the family’s pediatrician petitioned the government to allow her to pump and mail her breastmilk from the Dilley detention center in Texas to her baby in Florida. That request was denied.

During the first seven months of 2025, the administration arrested 18,400 parents – including 15,000 fathers and 3,000 mothers. They are the parents of 27,000 to 32,000 children.

The administration arrested the parents of at least 12,000 US citizen children.

Nearly 7,500 fathers and 1,000 mothers who were arrested had a different nationality than at least one of their children. In about half of these families, siblings had different citizenships from each other.

On average, the Trump administration has been arresting about 2,300 parents each month and deporting 1,400 parents every month. The Biden administration, in comparison, deported about 700 per month in 2024.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:09

Carmaker gives one of biggest warnings yet of conflict’s impact on businesses while Trump tariffs also take toll

Toyota has reported a £3bn hit from costs from the war in Iran, as prices of parts and materials soared and sales dropped.

The world’s biggest carmaker said profits declined in its financial year to March as it was “likely unable to absorb newly added impact from the Middle East”, in one of the largest warnings yet of the war’s impact on businesses.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:00

The system’s power is comparable to others – but it still has frightening implications for the future of hacking

Last month, Anthropic made a remarkable announcement about its new model, Claude Mythos Preview: it was so good at finding security vulnerabilities in software that the company would not release it to the general public. Instead, it would only be available to a select group of companies to scan and fix their own software.

The announcement requires context – but it contained an essential truth.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 08:00

Memory chip shortages are a wildcard in the prediction game, but here are the computers rumored to be getting updated this year.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 07:56
  • Players huddle around refs to voice frustration

  • Oklahoma City win 125-107 for 2-0 series lead

  • Cunningham lifts Pistons past Cavaliers

Lakers coach JJ Redick criticized the way LeBron James is officiated and guard Austin Reaves complained about treatment from the referees after Los Angeles lost 125-107 to the host Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday night.

A number of Lakers players gathered around the referees at midcourt after the game and Reaves voiced his frustration to crew chief John Goble. He felt that while players were jockeying for position during a jump ball during the game, Goble crossed the line.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 07:53

It wasn't a matter of if it would happen, only a matter of when.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 07:52

Owner IAG expects to recover 60% of additional fuel bill caused by Iran war through ‘revenue and cost management’

British Airways fares will rise to try to recoup most of a €2bn (£1.7bn) hit in fuel costs this year, its parent group has said, warning that the Iran war will dent profits.

The International Airlines Group (IAG) said its annual fuel bill was now expected to be about €9bn, up from the forecast €7.1bn, as 70% of its supply was hedged, shielding it from the full impact of soaring jet fuel prices since the start of the conflict.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 07:47

Kirk Moore, the Oklahoma principal who tackled a gunman​, sits down with CBS News for a network exclusive interview airing Monday on "CBS Mornings."

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 07:24

Donald Trump insists ceasefire remains intact after the most serious test yet. Plus, David Attenborough’s 100 most spectacular moments

Good morning.

The US and Iran traded fire late on Thursday in the greatest test so far to their month-long ceasefire. Tehran accused Washington of breaching the truce by targeting two ships in the strait of Hormuz and attacking civilian areas, while the US said it had struck in retaliation.

Where were negotiations up to before the strikes? There were reports the two sides could be nearing an agreement to halt the war, with a one-page memorandum shared between Washington and Tehran, via Pakistan. Here is a rundown of the ins and outs over the past week.

What happened to Trump’s “Project Freedom”? The US plan to guide tankers through the strait of Hormuz was ditched just days after it was launched, apparently because Saudi Arabia refused to let the US use its bases and airspace to carry out the operation.

Follow our liveblog for the latest developments.

How has the redistricting affected the sway of Black voters? Each now contains a third of the city’s Black voters, which means all nine of Tennessee’s congressional districts now lean Republican.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 07:19

The body of a missing hiker killed in an apparent bear attack has been found in Glacier National Park in Montana, park officials say.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 07:00

Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and other southern states stun residents with all-out charge to redraw congressional maps to favor white voters after supreme court ruling

The reaction speed of southern states to the US supreme court’s decision last week in Louisiana v Callais has been breathtaking for voting rights activists.

One week after Callais, Louisiana’s governor has ordered the state’s ongoing congressional election to be set aside while state lawmakers redraw maps to eliminate a Democratic-majority – that is, a Black-majority – seat covering Baton Rouge.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 07:00

Longtime Slashdot reader Qbertino writes: The Fehrmarnbelt tunnel is a European construction megaproject building a tunnel between Denmark and Germany, crossing the Fehmarnbelt in the Baltic sea. The first segment of the tunnel has now successfully been placed in its designated spot. This is a yet-unseen, next-level engineering feat achieved by the Danish Sund & Baelt construction company. It took 14 hours and used a massive pontoon ship built specifically for this project. The tunnel segments are 217 meters long, weigh more than 73,000 metric tons, and have to be placed within a tolerance of 3 mm. The tunnel will eventually consist of 89 of these segments, be 18 km long, and connect the Danish city of Rodby with the German island Fehmarn through five individual tunnel tubes: two for cars, two for trains, and one rescue and maintenance tunnel. Crossing time will be reduced from a 45-minute ferry crossing to seven minutes by train or 10 minutes by car, and cut the travel time between the German city of Hamburg and the Danish capital, Copenhagen, down to 2.5 hours. The project's planned completion is set for the year 2029. German news Tagesschau has some details and a neat animation, while further details are available from the German tech news site Heise.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 07:00

The Guardian wanted to know who, exactly, was pulled into the mass-deportation dragnet of Trump’s second term

Donald Trump entered his second term promising “mass deportations”. He also promised he’d target the “worst of the worst”. The Guardian wanted to know who, exactly, would be pulled into this deportation dragnet.

That question led us to “Record of Deportable/Inadmissible Alien” forms, also known as I-213 forms. Immigration agents fill out these forms each time they make an arrest, alleging that the person is in the country without authorization. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) then uses these forms in court to prove that a person is in the country illegally.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:46

Exclusive: Co-chair Vula Tsetsi says it is time to trigger debate, as statement is agreed at annual leadership meeting in Brussels

The European Green party has urged the UK to consider rejoining the EU and draw a line under the “political and economic failure” of Brexit.

A text declaring that “the United Kingdom’s future lies in the European Union” was adopted by a large majority of European green parties at the movement’s annual leadership meeting on Friday, the day before Europe Day.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:44

Japan confirmed the first fatal bear attack of 2026 after a record 13 deaths last year.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 06:39

US president expresses impatience at speed of EU’s implementation and warns of ‘much higher’ tariffs

Donald Trump has walked back from his threat to tear up part of the US trade deal with the EU by hiking tariffs on car imports.

The US president has given the EU until 4 July to implement its side of the deal, reducing tariffs to zero on most American imports, warning that the bloc would face “much higher” tariffs if it did not do so.

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 06:30

Promises to cut emissions and use more fuel-efficient planes fail to stop rise, with Ryanair’s carbon footprint 50% up on 2019

Emissions from flying in Europe have now passed pre-pandemic levels, with Ryanair’s carbon footprint 50% higher than in 2019, research has shown.

Total aviation emissions continue to increase despite industry pledges to decarbonise and the introduction of more fuel-efficient planes, driven by the massive expansion of low-cost carriers.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:16

Three hikers in an off-limits area died in an eruption of Indonesia's Mount Dukono volcano, police said.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 06:12

Two Singaporeans and a local person were in no-go zone when they were killed, say officials

Three hikers – two Singaporeans and an Indonesian – have died in an eruption of Indonesia’s Mount Dukono volcano, where they found themselves in a no-go zone, officials said.

The eruption, on Halmahera island, sent an ash cloud about 6 miles (10km) into the air, with no towns or villages near enough to face any immediate threat.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:01

Here's how to determine if you have the 4GB AI model -- and how to get rid of it.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:01

Apple's got the genre titles you're looking for.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:00

Trump’s ego cannot accept a humiliating loss, and we are already seeing the effects of his failure playing out

We are witnessing what happens to a person who is consumed with the need to dominate, but cannot.

Iran is unlikely to give in. It can withstand the economic pressure of a blockade better than Donald Trump can withstand the political pressure that comes with rising gas prices (now nearly $4.50 a gallon, on average), soon followed by rising food prices.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:00

Stanley Burkhardt, convicted abuser and ex-investigator of sex crimes against children, gives deposition in civil case

Convicted child molester Stanley Burkhardt – a former investigator of sex crimes against children who has been in and out of prison for decades – invoked his constitutional right against self-incrimination more than 700 times while being questioned under oath recently, including when asked whether he committed a series of unsolved murders of youths in his orbit.

Burkhardt’s decision to remain silent came when faced with questions about the killings during a deposition in a civil lawsuit by an alleged sexual abuse victim of his – a case aimed at him and the New Orleans police department (NOPD) which used to employ him.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 06:00

You don't need your Calculator app to perform conversions and equations.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 06:00

Temperature swings have left crops across the Plains in terrible conditions, with some farmers opting not to harvest

Merrill Nielsen’s wheat crop looked healthy after he planted it in the fall on his 2,500-acre farm in north-central Kansas, about 50 miles west of Salina, the plants benefiting from higher-than-normal November rainfall.

But an abnormally warm and dry winter, followed by extreme temperature variability, stressed the developing wheat. In the winter-to-spring transition, temperatures fluctuated from 70 to 80F on some days and lows in the teens or low 20s on other days.

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2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Homelessness in Kent and Sussex counties has dominated local debate in recent months. Now, as federal funds meant to improve rural health enter the state, Delaware officials are planning to build a homeless shelter in each of the counties. One proposal could see one of those centers a mile away from Delaware State’s campus. 

Delaware officials are in talks to convert hundreds of Delaware State University dorms into a homeless shelter modeled after the New Castle County Hope Center

The state would fund the endeavor using federal dollars it received last year to bolster rural health access. 

Jon Starkey, DSU’s vice president for government relations, confirmed on Thursday the university is negotiating with state leaders about the property — a 132,000-square-foot building on U.S. Route 13 that houses up to 265 students.

He said the decision to consider a sale of some of its student housing comes as the campus has grown in recent years, and the university looks to downsize its real estate footprint. 

“We are taking a hard look at several of our non-contiguous properties, and how we should rationalize our footprint to most effectively meet the current and future needs of the university,” Starkey said in a text message. 

Should the plans materialize, the effort would stand up a government-run homeless shelter in a county that advocates say sorely lacks services. The facility would sit about a mile from Delaware’s second-largest higher education institution.

A spokesperson for the Delaware State Housing Authority confirmed the talks, saying the agency is “excited about plans to expand the Hope Center model in Delaware.”

In 2013, DSU purchased a Sheraton hotel on North DuPont Highway for $12 million, later converting it into student housing. The building is now called the “Living and Learning Commons.” It also houses the Delaware State University Early College High School, a charter school offering students the chance to earn a high school diploma and up to 60 hours of college credit

It is unclear how much Delaware would spend on the property, assuming it goes through with a deal, but Kent County records currently value the building at more than $14 million. 

In April, the Delaware State Housing Authority received $26 million to replicate the Hope Center model in Kent and Sussex County using federal grant dollars. Its initial $26 million award is the first batch of funding in what will amount to a five-year federal program. 

The housing authority expects to receive close to $100 million by the end of the program, according to a non-binding document signed by the housing authority and the state health department outlining the project. 

In a project timeline for the two Hope Centers, the state told the federal government it would secure its first property contract for one of the centers by the end of June. That center would then open by the end of September, according to the timeline. 

The signed document tasks the housing authority with developing and operating the Hope Centers in both counties. Over the next five years, the document also said the housing authority should act as a landlord of the facility by managing its operations and “charging rent to all building tenants.”

“During the grant period, DSHA will ensure rent is paid through the grant to support mission-aligned services identified in the project plan,” the agreement said. 

A spokesperson for the housing authority said in an email it would charge that rent to service providers, not people seeking shelter. At the New Castle County center, ChristianaCare is a provider, among other programs.

Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen told Spotlight Delaware on Thursday that he and Police Chief Thomas Johnson will meet with the state housing authority early next week to discuss the proposal. 

Christiansen said he was hoping to discuss security at the facility and address the concerns of nearby property owners. Unlike the New Castle County Hope Center, the DSU property is nestled among a busy commercial plaza that features a Sam’s Club, Lowe’s and an auto dealership.

New Castle County Hope Center

The two homeless shelters poised for development in Kent and Sussex County are modeled off a similar facility in New Castle County that Gov. Matt Meyer stood up in 2020 during his time as county executive. 

Like the Dover proposal, New Castle County also purchased a Sheraton hotel. The facility, which is nearly 200,000 square feet, offers emergency shelter to people as they try to find stable housing elsewhere. 

Since the Hope Center opened, Meyer has touted it as a success story, even as it has been subject to controversy over the years. County officials have it called the largest homeless shelter on the East Coast. 

The New Castle County Hope Center in New Castle, Delaware, is pictured in May 2024.
New Castle County acquired a former hotel in 2020 and converted it into a homeless shelter and service center off Interstate 95 known as the Hope Center. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

The county bought the hotel for close to $20 million at the end of 2020, from the same company that also was awarded a contract to manage the shelter. 

But in early 2024, ownership and oversight of the facility was transferred back to the county shortly after an audit found the company did not properly report all money flowing into the facility.

Spotlight Delaware also reported that a resident expressed concerns about black mold in the facility amid an ongoing lawsuit that examined who was at fault for past water leaks into the Hope Center building. County officials have emphatically denied that the facility is unsafe.

Rural health funds

To open two new Hope Centers, Delaware will use funds from a federal grant program awarded to all 50 states aimed at bolstering rural health. In December, the feds awarded Delaware $157 million. The first batch it is poised to receive over the next five years. 

The full award amount for the state remains unclear at this time, but Delaware will receive at least $500 million from the federal “Rural Health Transformation Program.”

Delaware officials said they plan to use those funds to invest heavily into health infrastructure in Kent and Sussex counties, including building the state’s first medical school as well as the two new Hope Centers in the lower counties. 

State leaders also hope to fund 13 additional programs, including additional preventative care, financial assistance for medical students who commit to working in Delaware for five years after graduation, and robust nutritional education.  

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which will oversee the funding, said states can expect their annual award to change year over year based on performance and implementation. 

CMS also said states can expect their year-two awards by the end of October 2026. It’s unclear how the 15 total initiatives budgeted by the state will be impacted by the fluctuating awards. 

“We’re excited to share more details in the coming weeks, as Governor Meyer remains focused on lowering costs, improving access, and growing our healthcare workforce to benefit every family, regardless of income or ZIP code,” a spokesperson for the governor’s office said in December. 

Karl Baker contributed to this report.

The post Delaware officials eye DSU dorms for new Dover homeless shelter appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
In his second year in office, Wilmington Mayor John Carney says he will double down on encouraging affordable housing in Delaware’s largest city. But several council members, concerned about how new money would be spent, are supporting an alternative proposal to send more dollars directly to people struggling to secure housing.

After weeks of scrutiny into Wilmington Mayor John Carney’s proposed $20 million affordable housing initiative, the City Council has introduced an alternative plan that would reduce the amount of money available for subsidies to developers.

The new plan, introduced by Councilwoman Christian Willauer as an amendment to Carney’s initiative, calls for redistributing many of those dollars into various programs to directly support people struggling to secure housing. 

During a council meeting Tuesday, Willauer said her proposal aims to address residents’ immediate needs. It also reduces the amount of money used from the city’s savings accounts and provides safeguards around the dollars that would be sent to developers, she said.

“We need a lot more details and guardrails on any spending around the construction of affordable housing,” Willauer said. 

Wilmington City Councilwoman Christian Willauer | PHOTO COURTESY OF CITY OF WILMINGTON

Willauer’s skepticism of Carney’s plan highlights persistent ideological divisions between the mayor’s office and a faction of the City Council over how the city should address its housing crisis. 

It also sets up what could become the latest policy standoff between the two sides, following previous contention over rent stabilization, tenant protections and homelessness.

In response to Willauer’s alternative plan, Carney’s deputy chief of staff, Daniel Walker, said her amendment relies on funding commitments that would ultimately increase long-term costs for city residents. He also said it unrealistically relies on still-uncommitted dollars from the state government. 

“It believes a $10 million match from the state will magically materialize,” Walker said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware. 

Carney’s and Willauer’s competing proposals also come in the wake of calls from some housing advocates for the city to direct money to rental assistance and to services for the city’s unhoused population. 

But Walker has also pushed back on that approach, saying rental assistance may provide short-term relief but does not increase the city’s supply of affordable housing. He also reiterated the mayor’s longstanding stance that homeless services should not be funded through the city. 

How do the plans compare?

During a city council meeting on Tuesday, Walker sat alongside Wilmington housing director, Bob Weir, to provide a presentation of Carney’s original affordable housing plan, which would draw $20 million from the city’s Tax Stabilization Reserve.

Their comments came more than a month after Carney first unveiled the plan during his budget address for the City of Wilmington.

Wilmington Mayor John Carney introduced his city budget on Thursday, March 19. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

They noted Tuesday that most of that money – $16.8 million – would fund subsidies to developers to incentivize the construction of around 200 affordable homes. Walker said the incentives would offset construction costs and also leverage private investment.  

The affordable units would target households making between 60% and 80% of the area median income, as defined under the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development standards. In Wilmington, that would translate roughly to households that earn between $1,434 and $1,910 monthly.

Of the remaining dollars from the initiative, about $2 million would fund the preparation of vacant lots for development. Another $500,000 would be used for architectural design and engineering, and another $500,000 would go to the Wilmington Neighborhood Conservancy Land Bank.

In contrast, Willauer’s plan would direct several chunks of $500,000 into a litany of programs, including emergency rental assistance; first and last month rental assistance; eviction prevention; a homeowner repair program; and a fund to fix property tax assessment errors. 

To incentivize development, Willauer’s plan would also allocate at least $10 million into a city housing trust fund to be overseen by the City Council and the mayor’s office. Willauer said the joint oversight would allow both bodies to decide where and how the money would be spent. 

WIllauer’s plan would cost the city a total of $12.5 million. It also involves asking the state to match that investment.  

During Tuesday’s meeting, several council members expressed support for the alternative plan, which Willauer said had been developed with the help of Councilmembers Shané Darby and Coby Owens.

Councilman Alex Hackett called it “a compromise that needs to be made here.” 

Several council members also raised concerns during the meeting about the mayor’s proposal. They questioned Walker and Weir over whether the plan is specific enough, whether it does enough to help current Wilmington residents, and whether the city should spend such a large amount from its reserves without more detail.

Wilmington City Councilwoman Zanthia Oliver is seen at the Kingswood Community Center groundbreaking in August 2024.
Wilmington City Councilwoman Zanthia Oliver. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

Separately, Council members Zanthia Oliver and Ernest “Trippi” Congo stressed what they said was a need for clearer guarantees that Wilmington residents and minority developers would have access to the construction opportunities tied to the program. 

Owens challenged the administration’s argument that rental assistance would duplicate state and federal programs, saying the city is already proposing to stack its housing development money with other state and federal development funds. 

“Why not try to do both?” Owens asked, adding that rental assistance, if done correctly, could help residents stay in their homes.

Will the money be for big or small developers?

Tuesday’s meeting came about a week after another meeting in which City Council members similarly interrogated the Carney administration over its housing plan. During that meeting of the council’s Finance Committee, more than a dozen city residents also occupied the council chamber’s gallery to hold signs making clear their opposition to plan.  

During a meeting of the Wilmington City Council’s finance committee, more than a dozen city residents held signs and otherwise made their opposition to a city housing development plan clear. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY KARL BAKER  

During the meeting, council members peppered Weir with questions about the city’s previous housing initiatives they said did not produce what had been promised. Many also voiced concerns that the developer incentive would be directed primarily to the most prominent developers in the city. 

Willauer opened her questions of Weir by stating that she has several “concerns about the $20 million.” She then asked how city officials would define “small” and “large” developers, and  how much money each could receive under Carney’s plan. 

“Do you anticipate that $10 million would be for larger developers and $6 million for smaller developers? Or do you anticipate that it’s going to be $15 million for large developers and $1 million for small developers? “ Willauer asked.

Weir in response said he could only guess what the ultimate breakdown would be. He did note his expectation that the largest developers to receive city dollars would likely be nonprofit companies.  

City spokesperson Caroline Klinger later indicated that Wilmington’s most influential developer, Buccini/Pollin Group, would not likely be involved in the affordable housing project. 

“Currently, BPG does not develop affordable housing, nor have they approached us about doing so,” Klinger said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware.  

The post Wilmington council, mayor at odds over affordable housing dollars for developers appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-08 06:00

The U.S. Supreme Court dealt a fatal blow to the Voting Rights Act, triggering a new wave of redistricting fights in the midst of midterm primary elections. Last week, the court struck down a Louisiana congressional map with a second majority-Black district. The decision requires there to be evidence of intentional racism to prove that a map is discriminatory, making it nearly impossible to successfully challenge racial gerrymandering. 

Following the 6-3 decision along partisan lines, Louisiana suspended its already active congressional primary, throwing out cast ballots. Alabama’s Republican governor took steps to gerrymander her state’s maps ahead of November elections. Tennessee GOP leaders also convened a special session to eliminate the last remaining Democratic stronghold in the state, home to Memphis, a majority-Black city and district; the new map would split Memphis into three districts and further split Nashville and the surrounding counties into five districts. On Thursday, Tennessee Gov. Lee signed a bill that repealed a state law prohibiting mid-decade redistricting, and the new map was passed by Tennessee Republicans.

The primary goal state Rep. Justin J. Pearson tells The Intercept Briefing “is to dilute Black political voting power and representation, and it’s starting at the U.S. congressional level.” The Democratic Tennessee state representative for Memphis is running for U.S. Congress in the district at the heart of the state’s re-districting fight. “When you look across the South, the truth is about at least a dozen seats are likely to be taken in this very racist redistricting era that we are in, but it won’t stop there,” Pearson says. “We have over 200 legislative seats in the House and the Senate that are also likely to be eliminated through racist redistricting that is happening.” 

Voting rights journalist and author Ari Berman says SCOTUS’s latest blow to voters’ rights is a “power grab.”

This week on the podcast, Berman and Pearson speak to host Jessica Washington about how the latest Supreme Court decision bolsters President Donald Trump and Republicans’ aims to take control of voting in the country.

“This is now the third major decision by the Roberts court gutting the Voting Rights Act,” says Berman. “You can’t understand this latest attack on the Voting Rights Act unless you understand the attacks that came before it, and how this is part of a pattern. … This is part of a larger conservative counterrevolution against the civil rights movement of the 1960s.”

Berman says that this ruling could bring us back to the “dark days” before the Voting Rights Act made the United States a “multiracial democracy.” Now you look at what’s going to happen in these places, in places like Tennessee, in places like Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi. If they eliminate all of their Black members of Congress, that’s going to make politics a white-only game. If politics is a white-only game, that’s going to mean that white supremacy in some form or another is going to be the dominant politics in those states. It’s already the dominant politics in lots of these states, but it’s going to become much more explicit in terms of how it’s expressed.”

Pearson says that the Supreme Court’s assertion that these protections are no longer necessary is a lie. “The hatred that hung us on lynching trees did not disappear. It dissipated into institutions of power, into state houses, into governor’s mansions, into the U.S. Senate, into the U.S. House, into the presidency of the United States,” says Pearson. “Everybody has to do more than they are currently doing in this moment in time in order for us to preserve this modicum of a democratic constitutional republic. … Because what is likely to happen is the most significant purging of Black political power and elected Black leaders since the end of Reconstruction.”

“The litmus test for America’s progress is not Massachusetts, New York, and California,” says Pearson. “The litmus test for America’s progress is what happens in the South, where 50 percent of Black African American descendants of enslaved people live.”

For more, listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.

Transcript

Jessica Washington: Welcome to the Intercept Briefing. I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.

Maia Hibbett: And I’m Maia Hibbett, managing editor of The Intercept.

JW: Midterms are heating up this week, and Maia, on top of being my editor, you also manage our election coverage. So what’s sticking out with you this week?

MH: This was a really weird week because we’re coming off some primaries where the most-watched races in the country were actually a set of state Senate races in Indiana. And that’s weird because most people don’t even know who their state senator is. It’s very rare to be focused on state legislative elections as the top race.

But this one was seen as a huge test for Trump because essentially he was on this revenge path where a handful of Indiana state senators, Republicans, part of his party, had defied the president when he wanted them to redistrict the state. So he said, I’m gonna primary you, and I’m gonna kick you out of office for not doing what I wanted.

In all but one or maybe two of those cases, the people that Trump backed — so the challengers taking out the incumbents — won. So it looks like, if that was a test of Trump’s power in his base, at least in Indiana, at least there, it looks pretty good for him on that front.

JW: Trump has really set off this redistricting war that’s happening across the country. There was this idea that Donald Trump was going to be weakened by the war in Iran, by the economy. The fact that we’re also seeing redistricting, which generally makes people really angry, also doesn’t seem to be weakening Trump, that sets the stage for something really interesting in the midterms.

MH: It’s a really interesting question because I think it gets at the constant tension in politics between the politician’s identity and the issues.

So on the issues, the conventional wisdom right now is that Trump and the Republicans look really weak going into the midterms, right? People don’t love it when you’re running on lowering the cost of living and not starting new wars — and then you start a new war and spike the cost of living.

But it is still, in my view, a cult of personality around Trump in the Republican Party, and it seems like he still holds a ton of sway over what the Republican base thinks. That’s really interesting if we think ahead, not just to the midterms, but to 2028, which unfortunately we’re already thinking about because even if Democrats have a stronger footing perhaps on a lot of these popular issues right now, they don’t have that figurehead.

JW: Republicans have been unleashed by the Supreme Court ruling striking down Louisiana’s congressional map with a second majority-Black district. The ruling also required there to be evidence of intentional racial discrimination to prove that a congressional map is discriminatory.

Obviously, we know that there’s going to be many new redistricting efforts as a result of this ruling, and we’re going to get into the ruling itself a little later in the episode. But Maia, where are we seeing pushes from Republicans to reshape the map?

MH: Right now, this is according to The AP, as of Thursday, there are four states that are still in flux. Louisiana, as you mentioned; there’s also Alabama, South Carolina, and Tennessee. 

This is such an interesting issue because gerrymandering to help your party get seats or keep seats is frankly anti-democratic in the simplest, most literal possible sense of the word. You’re taking some of the power of choice away from the people. But it also puts politicians in a really weird bind because if one party’s doing it, how is the other party supposed to not?

JW: Yeah, as you point out, there’s been a lot of news on that front. On Wednesday, Republicans in Tennessee unveiled a new congressional map that would split Memphis into three distinct districts and further split Nashville and the surrounding counties into five districts. The new Memphis district would span nearly 300 miles. On Thursday, the Tennessee House passed this new map.

Then there’s Virginia. The FBI raided the office of Virginia Senate President Pro Tempore Louise Lucas on Wednesday. She’s one of the leaders in the Democratic-led redistricting fight there, and she’s been a real target of Trump and Republicans’ ire.

On the podcast today, we break down the latest Supreme Court decision with voting rights journalist Ari Berman and Justin J. Pearson. He’s a Democratic Tennessee state representative for District 86 in Memphis. He is also running for Congress in the district at the heart of these redistricting fights. Pearson lays out Republican strategy to eliminate the last remaining Democratic district and gut Black voting power in the South.

But first, we’re going to start with Ari. He’s going to give us more of a bird’s-eye view of what this decision actually means for voters and democracy as we head into an election.

MH: Cool. I’m excited to hear that conversation.

JW: Ari, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.

Ari Berman: Hey, Jessica. Great to see you. Thank you.

JW: Glad to have you on. I want to get into the news of last week. As you’re well aware of, last week, the Supreme Court dealt another blow to the Voting Rights Act, striking down Louisiana’s congressional map with a second majority-Black district, and requiring there to be evidence of intentional racial discrimination to prove that a map is discriminatory.

Ari, you wrote that the Louisiana v. Callais decision “narrows Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act to the point of irrelevance, making it nearly impossible to prove that a gerrymandered map violates the right of voters of color.”

What did you mean by that, and what does this decision mean for voters?

AB: What I meant by that is that the last remaining weapon of the Voting Rights Act is essentially gone. The Supreme Court has already narrowed other parts of the Voting Rights Act, or struck them down altogether, so that the law has lost almost all of its teeth. And now they took away the last part of it, which was the protections against racial gerrymandering — the ability of voters of color to elect candidates of choice.

Basically what they said is, those districts in which voters of color can elect their preferred candidates are unconstitutional. At least, that’s what they ruled in Louisiana. The expectation is that’s what they’ll rule in other places as well. 

My big fear with this ruling is that it’s going to lead to a major rollback in representation for candidates of color. It could lead to the largest drop in Black representation since the end of Reconstruction. You could have a situation throughout the South — where the largest percentage of Black Americans live — there could ultimately be no Black representatives. That would take us back to the Jim Crow era, in terms of how representation looks in America.

“You could have a situation throughout the South — where the largest percentage of Black Americans live — there could ultimately be no Black representatives.”

JW: You’re laying out a really scary scenario where we no longer have any of the protections that the Voting Rights Act — that was obviously so hard-won and fought for — those protections are now mostly gone. I guess my question is, for voters as they’re thinking about primaries, November, what does that mean for them?

AB: Voters are going to have less choices. It’s going to mean that red states, in the South in particular, are going to maximize Republican representation. The way they’re going to do that is by eliminating Black representation, because in the South, voting is very racially polarized. By and large, white people vote for Republicans, and Black people vote for Democrats. That was one of the really insidious things that the Supreme Court said in their opinion in Callais was basically that, if Black people support Democrats and Republicans are just targeting Democrats, then it doesn’t matter that Black voters are disenfranchised.

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But the fact is that even if race and party are intertwined, this is ultimately about race. This is ultimately about white legislators in all of these states — because all of these Southern states have white-majority legislatures and governors — eliminating Black districts. That means that in a place like Mississippi, for example, that’s 40 percent Black, you could have no Black representatives. In states like Alabama, Louisiana, South Carolina, Tennessee, states with large Black populations, there could be no Black representatives, and that means those communities are going to be underrepresented.

“This is ultimately about white legislators … eliminating Black districts.”

A lot of these communities are already underrepresented in Congress, and a lot of these communities are already among the poorest, most impoverished areas with the greatest need for representation, and now they’re going to have the least amount of representation. It’s really going to skew representation all across America.

JW: You just brought up Louisiana. And in this episode, we also are going to speak to Justin J. Pearson, a Democratic Tennessee state representative for District 86 in Memphis, about how after the Supreme Court ruling last week, Sen. Marsha Blackburn, a Republican from Tennessee, called for eliminating the one remaining Democratic-held House seat, which is home to Memphis, a majority-Black city.

What’s your reaction to that redistricting effort?

AB: It just reminds me of what happened when Reconstruction ended in the South. That you had a situation where there were Black members of Congress from the South elected during Reconstruction after the passage of the 15th Amendment. And then you had violence, you had fraud, and then you had, ultimately, changing of the laws: things like literacy tests and poll taxes and gerrymandered districts and all-white primaries.

Suddenly, there were no more Black representatives, and that situation lasted for nearly 100 years in the South. When I see states rushing to immediately get rid of majority-minority districts, immediately get rid of districts in which there are Black majorities after this ruling, I think of what happened at the end of Reconstruction.

So it’s a very dark chapter in our history. It’s one that we would like to think we’ve moved past. In his opinion in Callais, Justice [Samuel] Alito talked about all the progress that America has made on race, but he completely ignored the dark parts of American history that could return when laws like the Voting Rights Act no longer exist or are functionally irrelevant.

JW: Do you take the court at face value when they argue that racism, racial gerrymandering, these are issues of our past? Should this be understood as more of a conservative power grab, or are these genuinely held opinions that the court is expressing?

AB: It’s impossible for me to get inside Alito’s head and know that, but I think it’s a power grab, ultimately.

The fact that they not only dismantled the Voting Rights Act but did so leaving Southern states time to actually redistrict for 2026 makes me believe that this is ultimately about a power grab. Because at the very least, they could have waited until June when it was too late for most of these Southern states to be able to redistrict.

Instead, they did it with just enough time for Southern states to redraw their maps. The Supreme Court has said over and over, you shouldn’t change voting laws too close to an election. And now they’ve basically allowed all of these Southern states to change their voting laws in the middle of an election — in some cases, canceling elections to put in place new maps.

This is extremely political to me. It’s extremely partisan. This decision just underscores how partisan, how political, how authoritarian the Roberts court has become.

“The Supreme Court has said over and over, you shouldn’t change voting laws too close to an election. And now they’ve basically allowed [it].”

JW: In her dissent, Justice Elena Kagan touches on just how big of a decision this actually is, and how the court is trying to hide the extent to which this is going to change what voting looks like in this country.

So I’m going to just read a small piece of her dissent: “Under the Court’s new view of Section 2, a State can, without legal consequence, systematically dilute minority citizens’ voting power. Of course, the majority does not announce today’s holding that way. Its opinion is understated, even antiseptic.”

What do you make of what Kagan wrote there? Is this a fair reading of the decision?

AB: Yes, because Alito basically made it sound like he was just updating the VRA, it was just these technical changes, and what Kagan said was, this was a demolition of the law. And it wasn’t the first demolition of the law; it was part of a pattern. This is now the third major decision by the Roberts court gutting the Voting Rights Act.

In 2013, they ruled that states with a long history of discrimination no longer need to approve their voting changes with the federal government. That was the first blow against the Voting Rights Act.

In 2021, they ruled that it was going to be much harder for voters of color to challenge discriminatory voting laws. That was a second major blow against the Voting Rights Act.

“This is now the third major decision by the Roberts court gutting the Voting Rights Act.”

Now they have essentially overturned majority-minority districts, which is a third major blow of the Voting Rights Act.

You can’t understand this latest attack on the Voting Rights Act unless you understand the attacks that came before it, and how this is part of a pattern. A pattern that the Court wants to dismiss, but a pattern that is now impossible to ignore.

JW: To your point, the echoes of the Supreme Court’s 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision are clearly felt throughout both the dissent and the opinion. For those who don’t know, the Shelby County v. Holder decision effectively struck down Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, which required certain states and localities to seek preclearance before changing their voting laws. Can you set the stage a little bit more for us about what happened in Shelby County v. Holder, and how we’re still feeling that to this day?

AB: Shelby County v. Holder eliminated the most important part of the Voting Rights Act, because the requirement that states with a history of discrimination, largely but not exclusively in the South, had to approve their voting changes with the federal government. That stopped attacks on voting before they even occurred.

It was like stopping a crime before it had been committed. It was such a powerful tool the federal government had to block voting discrimination. It meant that when all of these Southern states had to do new redistricting plans, they had to be approved with the federal government. Now they no longer have to be approved with the federal government, but they can openly discriminate in terms of these maps.

What was clear at the time was that the Shelby County decision was going to open the door to new attacks on the Voting Rights Act, and the court denied this at the time. Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the majority opinion in that case, said this attack on Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act will not affect Section 2, the other part of the Voting Rights Act.

Of course, that’s exactly what happened in 2021, and again in 2026. They attacked the other remaining part of the Voting Rights Act, which makes me believe that they’re not out to get one part of the Voting Rights Act or another part of the Voting Rights Act. They’re out to get the Voting Rights Act altogether, and this is part of a larger conservative counterrevolution against the civil rights movement of the 1960s.

The Voting Rights Act is the most important law of the civil rights movement, of the civil rights era, and that’s why this has been the top target of the right for so many years.

“They’re out to get the Voting Rights Act altogether, and this is part of a larger conservative counterrevolution against the civil rights movement of the 1960s.”

JW: As you point out, it’s been a while since this decision. We’ve had over a decade in between. Do we have any sense that the Supreme Court has been looking at the track record of what happened, the aftermath of them undermining Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act?

Do we have any sense in any of their opinions or writings that they’ve noticed what’s happened, the kind of carnage that they’ve unleashed on the country in this decade-plus since?

AB: No, the Supreme Court completely got all the facts about the aftermath of the gutting of the Voting Rights Act wrong.

Justice Alito said the Black and white turnout gap is narrowing. Well, the elections that it narrowed were 2008 and 2012 when Barack Obama was on the ballot. If you look at what happened after that, in the wake of Shelby County, the Black and white turnout gap has widened. So Justice Alito was just completely wrong in terms of the statistics that he talked about in terms of Black/white turnout, in terms of racial polarization in voting.

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The only time that the court has reversed itself was two years ago in Alabama, when they upheld a second majority-Black district in Alabama. That makes the Louisiana ruling even more confounding because the Louisiana case followed from the Alabama case in 2023. It was only because of the Alabama decision, which was authored by John Roberts and joined by Justice Kavanaugh, that Louisiana created a second majority-Black district.

“Alito’s dissent in the Alabama case in 2023 became the majority opinion in the Louisiana case in 2026.”

So some of the justices clearly had buyer’s remorse from that decision. Basically, what happened was Alito’s dissent in the Alabama case in 2023 became the majority opinion in the Louisiana case in 2026. 

At some point, someone’s going to write a backstory of how that occurred, but it’s clear that the small victories from voting rights that emanated from the Roberts court have been the exception, rather than the rule. And the rule more often than not has been a steady stream of weakening things like the Voting Rights Act, and more broadly attacking voting rights.

JW: I would definitely read a book on that backstory. I want to ask a little bit more about the history of the Voting Rights Act, because I think to understand what’s happened in the decade-plus since Shelby and what’s likely to happen now, we have to understand how we even got the Voting Rights Act in the first place.

Can you tell us a little bit of that history and how the Voting Rights Act came to be?

“The small victories from voting rights that emanated from the Roberts court have been the exception, rather than the rule.”

AB: The Voting Rights Act was meant to rectify the widespread disenfranchisement of Black Americans in the South who couldn’t vote because of things like poll taxes and literacy tests and grandfather clauses and all-white primaries.

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There was a situation where in states like Mississippi, for example, only 6 percent of African Americans were registered to vote. That was a situation that existed for many years in the South. It only changed when there were huge protests of the civil rights movement that people are very familiar with. For example, the march, in Selma, Alabama, on “Bloody Sunday,” March 7, 1965, when John Lewis and civil rights marchers were brutally beaten by Alabama state troopers. The footage from Selma, Alabama really transformed the nation and led to LBJ introducing the Voting Rights Act and Congress passing it overwhelmingly.

It really was a transformative law because of what it did. It got rid of, overnight, those literacy tests and those poll taxes and those things that had disenfranchised Black voters for so many years. It led to a huge registration of previously disenfranchised Americans. Then over a longer period of time, the law was broadened so that it didn’t just help Black Americans, but it helped Americans of color throughout the country, whether it was Latinos or Asian Americans or other language minority groups.

It really made America a multiracial democracy for the first time. It was the first time that you had a situation in which people of color could vote broadly throughout the country, candidates of color could win office, and you had multiracial coalitions being built in America. So it really profoundly shaped American society and American democracy. And I’m very concerned that without that, we’re going to go back to the dark days of racially polarized voting, of Black voters and Black candidates being disenfranchised, of one-party rule and white supremacy being enshrined, particularly throughout the South.

So I think it’s a misnomer to look at the Voting Rights Act in terms of just Black and white. That’s why I always talk about the fact that it made multiracial democracy possible. Because it had a big impact on white voters as well and on white politicians as well, that you didn’t just have to pander to race, and you didn’t just have to appeal to white supremacy to get elected anymore.

Now you look at what’s going to happen in these places, in places like Tennessee, in places like Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi. If they eliminate all of their Black members of Congress, that’s going to make politics a white-only game. If politics is a white-only game, that’s going to mean that white supremacy in some form or another is going to be the dominant politics in those states. It’s already the dominant politics in lots of these states, but it’s going to become much more explicit in terms of how it’s expressed.

JW: The nightmare scenarios that you’re describing are happening against the backdrop of what the Supreme Court did, but also what the Trump administration is trying to do and Republicans are actively trying to do.

Wired recently ran a story about how the Department of Justice under Trump has essentially dismantled its voting rights [division], going from 30 attorneys to two since he started a second term. What are the implications of this broader attack, both from Republicans and the Trump administration, and now the court as well?

AB: That’s right. You can’t divorce the Supreme Court’s ruling on the Voting Rights Act from the larger context of the attacks on voting rights we’re seeing from the Trump administration. There’s already a mid-decade redistricting war going on that’s trying to eliminate representation for Democrats, and particularly targeting communities of color.

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There’s already a huge rollback in civil rights enforcement. The Department of Justice basically doesn’t enforce civil rights laws in America anymore. They’ve weaponized those laws, in fact, to defend white people at the expense of communities of color that these civil rights laws were meant to protect.

You already have the Trump administration, for example, going after elections in Fulton County, Georgia, seizing ballots, demanding names of election workers in the largest county in Georgia, home to Atlanta, which has a huge Black population. So it’s very clear that over and over, the Trump administration has tried to target certain communities.

They’ve tried to target communities that ally with Democrats, and so often those are Black, Latino, other minority communities. That’s why this attack on the Voting Rights Act is part of this larger effort to, in Trump’s words, “take over” the voting system. Some of it succeeded, some of it hasn’t succeeded, but the fact that all of these things happened at the same time is very alarming.

JW: Do voters have any recourse to defend themselves against what appears to be a blatant power grab?

AB: I think, more broadly, there needs to be a lot more investment in the South. A lot of these places, these “red states,” places like Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, they’ve been ignored by the national Democratic Party, and I don’t think that can happen anymore.

There has to be investment in these places because if these districts no longer exist, then there’s going to have to be efforts to win in new places and build new coalitions that haven’t existed before. That’s going to take new leaders. It’s going to take new investment. That’s something that needs to be created. That’s one part of it. 

I also think that some of the bigger issues that come out of this decision, for example, the need to reform the Supreme Court, the need to actually do something at a national level about the problem of gerrymandering — those are things that voters can demand from their politicians.

What are you going to do about a completely unaccountable and lawless Supreme Court? What are you going to do about the problem of gerrymandering so that states just don’t redraw their maps every year or two when they feel like it because of the political circumstance? 

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Then I think in terms of what voters can do to protect the election system, voters can become poll workers. Voters can become election monitors. Voters can decide to volunteer for civil rights organizations, things like that. This is an all-hands-on-deck moment for democracy, and people are going to have to get involved in whatever way they think can make the most difference.

JW: Ari Berman, thank you so much for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.

AB: Thank you so much for having me, Jessica.

[Break]

JW: After the most recent Supreme Court ruling further gutting the Voting Rights Act, Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn immediately called for eliminating the one remaining Democratic-held House seat in the state. 

Justin J. Pearson is a Democratic state representative in Memphis running for Congress for the district at the heart of Tennessee’s gerrymandering fight. We spoke with Pearson on Tuesday evening as that fight began. 

On Thursday afternoon, the state legislature concluded the special session, eliminating the only remaining Democratic-held House District. We speak to Rep. Pearson about the impact this will have on his district and Black voters statewide. 

Rep. Justin J. Pearson, welcome to The Intercept Briefing. 

Justin J. Pearson: Thank you so much for having me.

JW: After the Supreme Court’s ruling last week invalidating a Louisiana map that — in line with the Voting Rights Act — created two majority-Black districts, Sen. Marsha Blackburn, a Republican from Tennessee, called for eliminating the one remaining Democratic-held House seat in your state, which happens, of course, to be the seat you’re running for and part of your district. What impact is that going to have on your state? 

JP: The removal of the only Black-majority district in the state of Tennessee will have detrimental ramifications for our representation and our right to be able to select elected officials of our choosing.

The fact is, this is a racist redistricting and gerrymandering attempt. It is a coup. It is the stealing of a congressional seat on behalf of the president of the United States, the governor, and white supremacist leaders in the state House and state Senate. And I’m using that language very particularly. 

This is an election cycle. This is a moment where white supremacy is governing. It’s not what’s best for our citizens. It’s not what’s best for our constituents. But it is a weaponization and a mobilization of power. And stealing it is what this president has asked for the state government of Tennessee to do on his behalf, and it is what they are doing and have done right now in the state.

“It is the stealing of a congressional seat on behalf of the president of the United States, the governor, and white supremacist leaders in the state House and state Senate.”

JW: We’re speaking Tuesday evening after that first redistricting special session that you were part of. What can you tell us about how the first of these sessions taking place this week went down?

JP: Today, committees were assigned, and each of those committees, the biggest ones in the House, was the Congressional Redistricting Committee, there’s a resolutions committee, and a couple of other ones.

But my big concern is these committees are set to operate at the speed of lightning to make a decision that actually undos current statute, which says that there can be no redistricting between apportionments of districts between the census. Now we’re going to undo that law in an attempt to now take a congressional district that would otherwise be directly in contradiction.

“ These committees are set to operate at the speed of lightning to make a decision that actually undos current statute.”

There’s an expectation that we’re going to hold those committees, and that those committees are going to be presented with new gerrymandered maps that break up the only Black-majority district. And the only reason that this is happening at this point in time is because Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act has been gutted, and the ability of Black folks to seek remedies in the judicial system no longer exists in the way that they had before.

They still do exist, but the fact of racial animus and the racial intention has been severely weakened — which is why this case is so devastating. Because our ability to go to the courts and seek remedies from those decisions is really something that has been able to keep the Voting Rights Act in effect. It’s been able to keep Black representation as a possibility in our democracy. 

It’s really important to realize we aren’t at this point in our nation’s history of needing a Voting Rights Act because people were just bad, right? It was because of centuries of systematic oppression.

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It was violence, lynching, the murdering of people whose bodies were found in the Mississippi River and other small towns all across the South in particular, just for registering to vote or trying to vote. We have to realize the ramifications of what has happened in the state of Tennessee and what is likely to happen in Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, and across the South — the Confederacy states — are going to have far-reaching implications for us in this generation and generations to come

JW: People bled out for this. They fought for this. These are rights that are hard-won. In your district, what are you hearing from people in Memphis about, particularly Black people, about how this is going to impact them and the kind of rights that they’re, I’m sure, terrified of losing right now?

JP: I think the first feeling for a lot of people is fear. Fear that they’ll never ever again have the opportunity to send a Black person to the U.S. Congress, that they’ll never — and we’ve been on the campaign trail since October 8 — but that they’ll never really be able to have a voice in the national government is deeply concerning to them as Black people and also for folks who are Democrats. They’re deeply concerned that this won’t happen again because of, again, mid-decade racist redistricting that is happening. 

There is some organizing and some energy that has mobilized people into action. We’ve had two busloads of people come up to Nashville every single day — it’d be on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday — who are speaking up and speaking out and saying, “No, this is unfair. This is unjust. This is wrong.” They’re not just coming from Memphis and Shelby County, which I have the privilege of representing in the [Tennessee] House of Representatives for District 86, but these folks are coming from all across the state in small rural counties and other places who fear that their representation will no longer be proximate to them because districts are being created that in some cases stretch 200 miles, just to break up the compactness of our district, just to break up our ability to have Black political power. 

That is what is the primary goal of what they’re doing. It is to dilute Black political voting power and representation, and it’s starting at the U.S. congressional level. When you look across the South, the truth is, about at least a dozen seats are likely to be taken in this very racist redistricting era that we are in, but it won’t stop there. We have over 200 legislative seats in the House and the Senate that are also likely to be eliminated through racist redistricting that is happening. 

We just have to have people’s eyes wide open to what is going on and to the far-reaching implications this is going to have when you no longer have advocates and people who speak to the concerns, the issues, the culture, the identity of our community.

JW: There’s precedent for what you’re talking about here, for that kind of impact. Back in 2022, Republicans redistricted Nashville in a way that diluted Democratic voters’ influence, making the district lean more toward the GOP. Can you tell us a little bit about what happened then, and what that could mean for the district you represent?

JP: Absolutely. So we did see this in Nashville when the maps were redrawn in 2022. They were forced to have three different congresspeople all representing the city of Nashville. The intention there was to dilute Nashville’s political power, putting them inside of districts where the majority of people probably live very differently, much more rural, vote much more conservatively, and have much less diversity than the city of Nashville does.

Since then, people who live here don’t have representation in the U.S. Congress. The congresspeople don’t have any offices near or around Nashville, and even elected officials that I’ve met who represent Nashville have a hard time accessing any of the people who supposedly are representing them on the federal level.

So the voices in this community have, in effect, been silenced when it comes to the federal government and national government issues, and that has really been detrimental to this community, and many people here will tell you that.

I am deeply concerned that that is the exact same thing that’s going to happen in Memphis. We won’t have a voice in Washington, D.C. We won’t have someone advocating about the issues from the socioeconomic perspective, from public health perspective, from an educational perspective, that can elevate the problems that we know acutely exist in our city. 

My city’s the most beautiful place in the world, but we have problems.

A fourth of our adults are living in poverty. We got poor kids because we got poor parents. We haven’t increased the minimum wage to $25 an hour. We need access to universal healthcare in a state that has refused to expand Medicaid. We need housing, 55,000 units of housing for people who make $17,000 a year.

When you understand that history, that tradition, those statistics, not just as numbers on a page, but as something that you feel an accountability to do something about because it’s the community where you live. It’s the community where I’ve grown up. It’s the place that has made me into who I am. That is very different than being connected or thrown into a district that is majority-white in an attempt to silence our voices.

JW: The conservatives on the Supreme Court obviously hold a very different opinion of this issue from you. In this case, and obviously in the Shelby County decision as well, they argue that these protections are no longer necessary because the South has made great strides on racism. As a Black representative who represents a majority-Black district in the South, what do you make of the notion that racial gerrymandering and voter suppression are issues of the past?

JP: Anyone who says that racial gerrymandering and voter suppression and racism no longer exist are lying. The fact that they are saying that shows the depth of racism and the institutionalization of white supremacy in our country, that some people are so enamored with whiteness being right that they don’t see the disparities that are vast and right in front of them.

“Some people are so enamored with whiteness being right that they don’t see the disparities that are vast and right in front of them.”

Black people are still being deprived of educational opportunities. As it relates to housing, Black folks are still living in some of the most segregated neighborhoods in the United States of America. The wealth gap remains about 10 to 1. At every level, Black folks and African American folks are being deprived of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

In fact, there’s even a case right now of a man named Tony Carruthers who is on death row to be killed on May 21 in the state of Tennessee. Because we know the people who are on death row disproportionately are Black African American people, and even though 10 percent of them could be exonerated, states are using death by lethal injection, or now the federal government wants to do firing squads as a new form of lynching.

Twenty-one percent of Black people can’t vote in the state of Tennessee. Already, 1 out of 5 Black people cannot vote in the state of Tennessee due to felon disenfranchisement. And so for people who are trying to articulate some false narrative and argument that racism is no longer a problem, you are lying.

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You are lying to yourselves, and you are lying to communities that are feeling the impacts of racism every single day. Those vestiges are very real, and the hatred that hung us on lynching trees did not disappear. It dissipated into institutions of power, into statehouses, into governor’s mansions, into the U.S. Senate, into the U.S. House, into the presidency of the United States, and that is what we are dealing with right now.

So the Supreme Court has it wrong, but John Roberts has been going after the Voting Rights Act, I think, for [more than 40] years he’s been trying to gut it, since he was a staffer in the White House. So the fact they passed Shelby County v. Holder, which gutted Section 5, and now they passed anti-affirmative action. They wrote an opinion against affirmative action, which again targeted race consciousness, and now gutting Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is all in sequence of their goal to try and make us somehow believe we live in a colorblind society that just so happens to leave Black African American people at the bottom every single time. 

“Their goal [is] to try and make us somehow believe we live in a colorblind society that just so happens to leave Black African American people at the bottom every single time.”

JW: The forces that you’re talking about here of white supremacy are just incredibly strong. We can talk about racial gerrymandering, all of the other issues with racism that we’re dealing with in this country that you just mentioned.

How do we do anything about that? What does resistance look like in this moment? Obviously, in 2023, you were famously expelled from the state legislature for protesting for stronger gun control laws in the wake of a mass shooting in Nashville. That expulsion disenfranchised the voters in your majority Black district.

But instead of accepting an early retirement, you went on to win your district in the next election and continue to fight Republicans in the legislature. Do you think your story has any lessons for how people fight back against this behemoth of white supremacy and this energy of racial disenfranchisement?

JP: It’s multifaceted, the fight back. Here we are three years later from April 6, 2023, and Republicans are at it again disenfranchising our community and seeking to disenfranchise 750,000 people, both white and Black, but majority-Black district here in District 9. The fact of the matter is this: We did not quit then, we must not quit now.

“I do not believe that when I die, this is the type of America that we’re going to live in.”

As horrible as this decision is by the U.S. Supreme Court, what we also need to internalize is we need to organize for the next 50 years. Because I do not believe that when I die, this is the type of America that we’re going to live in. But that isn’t going to happen if we throw our hands up, if we quit, if we say, “Oh, there’s nothing we can do.”

Certainly, you can go quit and go get a job in corporate America, make six figures doing all those other things. But the reality is, if you are living in a society that structurally is designing itself to make you less than, structurally designing itself to tell my wife she is less than, my nephew’s sons, that they are less than American citizens, they’re less than human beings — if you sit on the sidelines at such a time in a critical and crucial moment as this, you are a part of the problem.

I understand some folks are working 80 hours a week just to make it. I get that. But there are some people who are retired, and they’re sitting on the couch, and they won’t pick up the phone to call their state House member, their state senator, and their governor. There are some people who are just hoping and praying in pews, but they’re not willing to show up and help people get to the polls.

That is what we have to quit on. Everybody has to do more than they are currently doing in this moment in time in order for us to preserve this modicum of a democratic constitutional republic that very quickly is being disrupted and destroyed at every single turn. Because what is likely to happen is the most significant purging of Black political power and elected Black leaders since the end of Reconstruction.

That’s what we’re looking at here. This is not a joke. This is not a game. And to anyone who says I would have been there with Dr. King, I would have been marching in the 1960s and 1950s. As one pastor said to me, “Whatever you are doing now is what you would have done then.” And people need to realize they have a responsibility now to do more.

“What is likely to happen is the most significant purging of Black political power and elected Black leaders since the end of Reconstruction.”

JW: Do you feel as if your Democratic colleagues, both in the state legislature and nationally in Congress, do they have your back on this? Are they allies in this? Do you feel like they have that fight in them that you’ve mentioned?

JP: I am seeing more fight right here in the statehouse than I’ve seen in the last three years. People realize that the racism, the bigotry, the white supremacy that for too often has been cloaked in decency and niceness was all a façade.

We get caught up being told you have to learn to work across the aisle. I have done it. I passed resolutions with Republican co-sponsorship, signed on to some Republican bills, but we cannot forget that the roots of the institution are rotten.

They are designed to defeat our ability to resist, to speak up, to stand up against what’s happening.

In this moment in time, what I will say is, we need more support. We need more support. We need in every state, in every city that this is happening, we need a cadre of Congressional Black Caucus members coming to speak and to testify. We need dozens of nonprofit organizations, like we have right here in Tennessee, coming together to fight back and to resist and to speak up and to shout and to sing and to testify and to speak and to organize power at the ballot box. Not just registering people to vote, but making sure people actually get to the polls.

“The South is where the litmus test for America’s future is.”

The South is where the litmus test for America’s future is, and I’ve said this for years. The litmus test for America’s progress is not Massachusetts, New York, and California. The litmus test for America’s progress is what happens in the South, where 50 percent of Black African American descendants of enslaved people live.

Related

Millions of Women Already Live in a Post-Roe America: A Journey Through the Anti-Abortion South

If we continue to be neglected, millions of us, tens of millions of us, are going to continue to live under authoritarian, anti-democratic, mobcratic rule, and that is wrong. That should rouse this nation into action. It should force people who might not otherwise show up to show up and to speak up and to do more because their voices are the voices that we’re going to lean on and rely on to help change the status quo that is deeply impacting our states.

JW: Thank you, Rep. Pearson. Those were all of my questions, but do you have any final thoughts to share with our audience?

JP: I think what’s really important here for Black America is to realize this: We did not just come this far to get this far, and our ancestors who marched, who protested, who bled, who died, who were assassinated, who were taken from their families much too soon and too young, like 39-year-old Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., like Medgar Evers, who was quite young and in his 30s, and Fannie Lou Hamer, who was beaten by police officers and other folk. We didn’t come this far easily. This is a difficult road that we trod, as our Black National Anthem says, but we were built for this moment in time.

As a spiritual person who practices Christianity, I have to tell you this: I think we have been sent for such a time as this. And everybody who is alive right now has a responsibility in this moment to do something. So if that is march, do that. If that’s protest, do that. If that’s run for office, do that. If that’s sign a petition, do that. 

But you’ve got to do something because the moment is coming where somebody’s going to look you in the eyes, somebody who is not born yet, and they will say, “What did you do in the year 2026, in our 250 year of this country, when democracy was crumbling?” And you need to have a response.

JW: Thank you, Rep. Pearson. We really appreciate you coming on The Intercept Briefing.

JP: I appreciate you, too, and thanks so much for having me.

JW: And that does it for this episode. 

This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our managing editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. Claire Mullen mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

This show and our reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join

And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. Do leave us a rating or a review, it helps other listeners to find us. Let us know what you think of this episode, or If you want to send us a general message, email us at podcasts@theintercept.com.

Until next time, I’m Jessica Washington.

The post The Supreme Court Ends Multiracial Democracy as We Know It  appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-08 05:47

US–Israel war with Iran: What is the impact on Gaza? 18 May 2026 — 14:00 TO 15:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Online

How has the war distracted attention from Palestine? And how will it affect the Trump peace plan?

Speakers discuss current conditions of the Gaza ceasefire along humanitarian, governance, and security dimensions, and the impact of the US-Israel war on Iran.

As the Israel-US-Iran War continues, the Gaza ceasefire has ceased to be a priority for international or regional actors. On the ground, however, humanitarian conditions in Gaza are worsening, political pathways are narrowing, and temporary borders and security measures are becoming permanent.

In this webinar, speakers will discuss where conditions currently stand with the ceasefire along humanitarian, governance, and security dimensions; how the Iran-US-Israel war is (re)shaping the calculations of different actors; and what future trajectories might be possible.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:45

David Hinton will remain in post while successor is found, group says, a week after resignation of chair Chris Train

The chief executive of South East Water has announced plans to step down, a week after the group’s chair quit in the wake of major supply outages in Kent and Sussex.

The supplier said David Hinton, who joined the board in 2013, would stay in post to allow an “orderly transition” over the summer while the group hunts for his successor.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:39

The Iran war has left Gaza neglected Expert comment thilton.drupal

With the world distracted by the Iran war, the situation is worsening in Gaza, where neither Israel nor Hamas are under pressure to make progress on the ceasefire plan.

People walk between tents in Gaza

In the shadow of the Iran war, the Gaza ceasefire has ceased to be a priority for international or regional actors, even while Palestine remains inextricably linked to other conflicts in the region. Meanwhile, with the world looking elsewhere, humanitarian conditions in Gaza are deteriorating, the room for political pathways is narrowing and supposedly temporary borders and security measures are at risk of becoming entrenched.

It was always likely to be difficult to move from the initial ceasefire to the second phase of US president Donald Trump’s 20-point plan, given that it contains two of the biggest sticking points: the disarmament of Hamas and the withdrawal of the Israeli army. But the Iran war, and the subsequent lack of external pressure on either Hamas or Israel, has given both parties time to double-down on their positions and cement the status quo, with dangerous consequences.

Hamas refuses to disarm

In April, Hamas rejected a disarmament plan from Nickolay Mladenov, the high representative for Gaza on the US-led ‘Board of Peace’, which linked the decommissioning of weapons to reconstruction efforts. Hamas officials asserted that they would not negotiate on the second phase of the ceasefire until Israel fully implemented the first phase, including allowing humanitarian aid to enter Gaza at the levels stipulated in the ceasefire agreement.

Moreover, Hamas sees no incentive to disarm without a framework for establishing a Palestinian state. Unlike Northern Ireland or South Africa (historical cases to which the Israel-Palestine conflict is often compared) there is no peace process on the horizon, nor is there a political pathway available to Hamas if the group lays down its arms.

Many Palestinians I’ve spoken with, including non-Hamas supporters, support a pathway in which Hamas could potentially maintain a political role in Palestinian governance. But this is a non-starter for Israel and ruled out in the 20-point plan. While the plan offers individual Hamas members amnesty if they disarm and ‘commit to peaceful co-existence’, they may well doubt this offer is sincere or worry about reprisals.

If there were few incentives for disarmament before, Israel has introduced additional disincentives by reportedly backing other Palestinian armed groups to carry out attacks against Hamas. Groups like the Popular Forces near Rafah, the Counterterrorism Strike Force near Khan Younis, and the Ashraf al-Mansi group near Gaza City are based in the Israeli-controlled area of Gaza. These groups conduct operations in Hamas-controlled territory where nearly all of Gaza’s approximately 2.2 million civilians are living.

The militias provide Hamas with another reason to reject disarming, adding another armed threat on top of Israel’s continued air strikes. Furthermore, because the militias are reportedly viewed as collaborators by many in Gaza, they may be inadvertently boosting Hamas’s support, while making it more difficult for any alternative anti-Hamas voices to emerge.

No pressure on Israel to withdraw

Just as Hamas leaders see little incentive to disarm, Israeli leaders see little incentive to withdraw from Gaza. According to Trump’s 20-point plan, the Israeli army’s withdrawal was meant to coincide with the deployment of an International Stabilization Force (ISF). However, uptake for the ISF has been slow, with few countries expressing interest. While the American commander of the ISF has announced that five countries will be joining the force, there remains a lack of clarity over its mission and doubts about whether it will actually be deployed if that entails direct confrontation with Hamas in Gaza.

This increases the likelihood of Israel maintaining a troop presence in Gaza in the long-term. After the ceasefire, Israeli troops occupied roughly 53 per cent of the Gaza Strip, demarcated on maps by its ‘Yellow Line.’ Recent reports appeared to show maps issued by the Israeli military with an expanded restricted zone of control in Gaza that added an estimated extra 11 per cent of Gaza’s territory beyond the ‘Yellow Line’. While the exact line of control may yet shift, these new lines of control are now at risk of becoming de facto long-term borders.

Just as Hamas leaders see little incentive to disarm, Israeli leaders see little incentive to withdraw from Gaza.

This would be in line with Israel’s embrace of so-called ‘buffer zones’ as a central strategy in both Syria and Lebanon in the regional realignment that followed Hamas’s 7 October attacks. This tactic is not new – Israel occupied parts of southern Lebanon from 1982 to 2000, and maintained a buffer zone of about 300 metres around Gaza’s perimeter even before 2023.

It seems highly unlikely that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will reduce Israel’s area of control in Gaza, especially in an election year, even if Hamas were to make concessions. While this ‘buffer zone’ tactic may yield some short-term security gains for Israel, it could also play into Hamas and Hezbollah’s calls of resistance against the continued Israeli army presence.

NCAG unable to enter

Other key ceasefire measures also remain stalled. These include governance steps that could help stabilize the territory, like admitting the entry of the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), a transitional Palestinian governing body established by the Board of Peace.

Since its launch in January, the 15-member NCAG has been based in Cairo, with members reportedly blocked from entering Gaza. There were questions from critics from the outset about NCAG’s legitimacy, autonomy and remit. Nevertheless, many Gazans expressed hope that NCAG could bring at least some Palestinian-led improvements. Now, however, that cautious optimism has shifted to frustration as NCAG’s physical absence from Gaza has reinforced its perceived impotence.

By not admitting NCAG to Gaza while continuing to reject any meaningful role for the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the territory, Israel is contributing to conditions that make the territory appear lawless and ungovernable. This also strengthens Hamas by preventing the emergence of any alternatives.

Positions hardened

The wars in both Iran and Lebanon have only further entrenched these positions. For Hamas, the ability of the Iranian regime and Hezbollah to (thus far) survive multiple rounds of military operations will likely embolden their own position of defiance.

For Israel, the lack of a knock-out blow in either Iran or Lebanon will likely harden its position on Gaza and further postpone any meaningful negotiations involving Palestinian self-determination, even under a new government. 

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:30

Guess the Party challenges players to pin candidates’ politics to their appearances, with guess rates varying wildly

Is a bristly grey moustache a telltale sign of a Reform candidate? Is pink hair a giveaway for the Greens? Perhaps a sharp suit is the best telltale for the Tories – or spectacles and a rucksack for Labour?

Players of a viral politics game have been finding out that it’s never that simple to judge the colour of a candidate’s rosette just by how they look. The game, invented by Sam Hamill-Stewart, challenges players to look at pictures of local election candidates and guess their party affiliation.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:28

While Labour losses and Reform gains are obvious, the nature of how people actually voted is much more nuanced

English local election results require careful interpretation. Not all places have them at the same time, a relatively small proportion complete their counts overnight and the early headlines may not reflect outcomes later in the day.

But the headline number on Friday morning – that Labour has lost more than 250 councillors - will only grow as the day progresses. While Labour will want to stress that these “mid-term” elections often go badly for the incumbent Westminster government, they rarely go quite as badly as this.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:00

Law says conviction of two men for spying raises serious concerns about how they accessed sensitive information

Nathan Law, an exiled leader of the Hong Kong student protest who lives with a £100,000 bounty on his head from the Chinese authorities, was not surprised to discover a spy ring had photographed him entering the Oxford Union for an evening debate in November 2023.

The conviction at the Old Bailey of Chi Leung “Peter” Wai, 38, and Chung Biu “Bill” Yuen, 65, for assisting a foreign intelligence service, was a sobering first – no Chinese spies had been convicted in British criminal history before Thursday – but the details that came out in the nine-week trial mainly served to confirm his suspicions.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:00

The new campaign tips off on Friday. Our team of writers look at the rookies to watch, the surprise teams and who will rule the roost at the end of the year

A summer of basketball without the specter of CBA uncertainty. There’s no doubt last season had highs – the Aces’ third title, the Liberty’s star power, breakout rookies and the emergence of the Golden State Valkyries – but the possibility of a shortened, delayed or even cancelled 2026 season loomed over so much of 2025. After 17 months of negotiations and hard-earned, deserved wins by the players, here we are. My second answer: getting Jordan Robinson’s WNBA 30 newsletter in my inbox every Tuesday! EB

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:00

An industrial cooling tower sits on a dry, rocky incline against a clear blue sky, emitting a steady, vertical plume of steam.
White smoke rises from a Freeport-McMoRan copper smelter in eastern Arizona, one of more than 180 facilities granted exemptions to the Clean Air Act by the Trump administration. Roberto “Bear” Guerra for ProPublica

In March 2025, President Donald Trump’s administration made a tantalizing offer to coal-fired power plants, chemical manufacturing facilities and other factories: Their operations could be exempted from key provisions under the Clean Air Act, the bedrock environmental law estimated to have prevented thousands of premature deaths. All they had to do was ask.

No rigorous application was needed. An email, which they had until the end of the month to send, would suffice.

Within two weeks, executives across major industries began flooding an inbox set up to receive and funnel requests from the Environmental Protection Agency to the White House. They asked that their facilities be excused from expensive Clean Air Act requirements, relief that would save their companies money but pollute the air breathed by millions of Americans.

At least 3,000 pages of emails were sent to and from this inbox in the weeks that followed. ProPublica obtained them via public records requests, giving the most complete look to date at a key aspect of what Trump’s EPA calls the “biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history.”

Richard Shaffer, asset manager at Scrubgrass Reclamation Company, emailed asking for an exemption covering a western Pennsylvania power plant that burns coal waste. A significant portion of the electricity it generates is used to mine bitcoin. Keeping the cost of environmental compliance low was important “for the security of the United States,” Shaffer wrote.

A response came 11 days later in a presidential proclamation. Approved.

A Citgo Petroleum Corporation lawyer, Ann Al-Bahish, sought exemptions for petroleum refineries in Illinois, Louisiana and Texas, which had all been hit with Clean Air Act violations in recent years. The rule at issue, the agency had previously concluded, would “provide critical health protections to hundreds of thousands of people living near chemical plants.” (The company agreed to install new pollution controls to resolve some of its violations.)

Kevin Wagner, vice president of the medical sterilizer company Sterigenics, messaged asking that nine facilities emitting the carcinogenic gas ethylene oxide, including near Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Charlotte and Atlanta, be exempted. More than 45,000 people, most of them not white, live within a mile of these facilities, according to federal data.

Both companies got their response in July proclamations. Approved and approved.

The companies did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment.

A letter from Scrubgrass Reclamation Company addressed to the EPA, requesting a regulatory exemption for its power plant, cites national security and grid reliability. A paragraph requesting financial relief and continued operation is highlighted in yellow.
In requesting an exemption to a Clean Air Act rule, Richard Shaffer, with Scrubgrass Reclamation Company, told the EPA that his company’s power plant, which uses much of its electricity to mine bitcoin, is key to national security. Obtained and highlighted by ProPublica

In granting these requests, the White House didn’t seek input from EPA scientists. The administration cited authority under the Clean Air Act that had never before been used.

More approvals followed. All told, more than 180 facilities in 38 states and Puerto Rico have, by Trump’s unilateral decision, been given a two-year reprieve from following the latest Clean Air Act rules. About 250,000 people live within a mile of these facilities, according to EPA and U.S. Census Bureau data collected by the Environmental Defense Fund.

A majority are coal power plants and medical sterilizers. And more than 70 had faced formal enforcement action in the past five years by the EPA for violations such as emitting contaminants above regulatory limits and failing to properly track facilities’ pollution.

Few requests appear to have been denied. The administration hasn’t made public its decisions on requests from three classes of plants that it said it would consider exempting: manufacturers of rubber tires, iron and steel, and lime, which is used in products ranging from metals to concrete. About 55 facilities are covered by those rules, although Republicans in Congress have already repealed the rubber tire updated rule.

In response to ProPublica’s questions, an EPA spokesperson said in a statement: “EPA played no role in the determinations set out in the statute and specifically vested in the President. Any requests sent to the EPA’s electronic mailbox were forwarded to the White House.”

In defending the exemptions, the administration cited two standards in the Clean Air Act that a president must invoke to exercise such powers: The industry must be integral to national security, and the technology needed to meet the EPA requirements must be unavailable. Sticking with Biden-era requirements could shut down businesses, Trump argued.

“The President has provided regulatory relief from certain burdensome Clean Air Act requirements due to national security concerns that critical industries would no longer be able to operate under such stringent standards,” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement. “Exemptions were issued due to crushing Biden-era regulations that required large swaths of our industrial base to adopt technologies that don’t exist outside the imagination of Biden’s EPA bureaucrats.”

Numerous policy experts told ProPublica that they do not believe the White House’s justifications for the use of the exemptions.

“It’s being absolutely abused now, and it couldn’t be more obvious,” said one EPA staffer who asked not to be named because they currently work for the agency.

Indeed, multiple utilities have publicly said that they were already implementing pollution controls to comply with the more stringent rules, undercutting the administration’s claim that the technologies necessary to do so don’t exist.


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Community groups and environmental nonprofits have sued the administration five times to halt the exemptions. A coalition of 12 organizations labeled the action an “illegal scheme.” (Four of the cases have been consolidated and are ongoing. In a motion to dismiss them, the administration argued that the groups did not have legal standing to sue and reiterated its stance that the law gives the president the authority to grant such exemptions.)

“The cancer risk presented by these facilities is huge,” said Sarah Buckley, a senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council, adding that years of scientific study and public input informed the rules. “With a stroke of a pen, President Trump thinks he can just brush all that away.”

A young boy rides a BMX bike on a road past a large mural depicting mining with the phrase, “If it can’t be grown, it must be mined,” painted on the side of a white building on a sunny day.
A mural in Miami, Arizona, proclaims the importance of the copper industry to the state’s economy. Roberto “Bear” Guerra for ProPublica

“He Disregards the Checks-and-Balances System”

Freeport-McMoRan’s massive copper mining and smelting operation sits on the hills above the towns of Miami, Claypool and Globe in eastern Arizona. A Clean Air Act rule that was updated in 2024 regulates the smelter’s emissions and, by extension, the air breathed by the 10,000 people who live in these towns.

Nearly two and a half years of fine-tuning passed between publication of a draft rule and the final product. Some of it was spent gathering input from residents, public health groups, Native American governments and companies — feedback the agency addressed in subsequent rewrites. Years of air monitoring data also informed the process. Implementing the updated rule would “reduce emissions of toxic metals, primarily lead and arsenic, by nearly 50 percent” at the country’s several copper smelters, the EPA concluded.

Trump undid that work when he signed a proclamation in October pausing implementation and approving Freeport’s request that its Arizona copper smelter be given a pass on “all the deadlines promulgated under” the rule.

On a sunny morning a few weeks after Freeport received the exemption, white smoke poured from its smelter above a Baptist church and residential neighborhood. The plant’s low rumble reverberated across the surrounding desert, unusually green from a recent rain.

Trina Bunger has lived her life next to this smelter. Decades ago, the air was so polluted that her children wore handkerchiefs over their mouths when they went to school. So many of the family’s cattle fell ill that she no longer believed the sicknesses were a coincidence.

Years ago, on particularly bad days, when the air around the smelter was hazy, “it would choke you out. It was like walking in a cloud,” Bunger said. “If you read the obituaries, ‘Died of cancer. Died of cancer,’” she said of her neighbors. “Well, that’s our destination, so I better get done what I’m gonna get done.”

An older woman with red hair and large earrings, wearing a leopard print button-up shirt, black pants and tennis shoes, stands next to tall desert plants in the yard of a house.
Trina Bunger remembers the time before updated air quality regulations required stricter pollution controls. In those days, pollution in Globe, Arizona, would get so bad that it “would choke you out.” Roberto “Bear” Guerra for ProPublica

But she’s seen air quality steadily improve as regulations tightened, following advances in emissions control technology. Freeport spent $250 million on improvements completed in 2017 to better control sulfur dioxide emissions.

“It’s better than in the ’70s and ’80s and ’90s,” Bunger said.

Trump paused the requirement that Freeport follow the latest rule, including by installing additional pollution control equipment.

William Cobb and Todd Weaver, Freeport’s vice president and senior counsel, respectively, emailed the EPA in March 2025 to request a reprieve from the Clean Air Act. They argued that complying with the rule governing copper smelters would cost hundreds of millions of dollars, while bringing minimal emissions reductions.

“Significant investments have been made over the smelter’s long history to manage sulfur dioxide, lead and other regulated emissions in accordance with applicable standards, contributing to sustained improvements in local air quality,” Linda Hayes, Freeport’s spokesperson, said in a statement. The company has increased monitoring around the smelter and asked for the additional time to work with the EPA on evaluating “flaws” in the updated rule, she said.

For this conservative county, where more than two-thirds of voters went for Trump, the smelter is an economic blessing. Freeport’s broader copper operation here employs nearly 950 people, according to the company. A brightly painted mural down the road from the smelter reads: “If it can’t be grown, it must be mined.”

Eduardo Sanchez lauds the company’s economic impact and is hesitant to criticize the smelter. But, he said, Trump has no right to unilaterally decide when laws do and do not apply.

“In order to help the rich get richer, he’s deregulating everything,” Sanchez said. “He’s a tyrant. He disregards the checks-and-balances system. He overreaches through executive dictates.”

Smoke stacks rise from a smelter, sitting on a hill above a small gray house near a red stop sign and a white for-sale sign.
Freeport-McMoRan’s copper smelter sits on a bluff above three Arizona towns that are home to about 10,000 people. Roberto “Bear” Guerra for ProPublica
An older man wearing a white baseball hat, blue button-down shirt and khaki pants stands in the doorway to a house with a white door and yellow siding.
Eduardo Sanchez, a retiree who moved to Globe to be closer to his family, believes President Donald Trump is rolling back air quality regulations to further enrich executives. Roberto “Bear” Guerra for ProPublica

An Error-Ridden Process

While Trump’s exemptions will affect millions of Americans like those in Miami, Claypool and Globe, the process for granting them has been sloppy.

Because presidents have never previously used this authority to circumvent the Clean Air Act, industries were left guessing how to make the request, experts said.

“Hello, I am a gas company looking for an exemption. How do I start?” one businessman wrote in an email to the EPA.

Others appeared to mock the administration’s regulatory rollback, with one email calling for a coal power plant to be built on a 300-foot-wide mangrove island just offshore of the president’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida. “It will produce power so strongly that jobs and power will be the best that people have ever seen,” the email stated.

The American Chemistry Council and American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, two trade groups representing chemical manufacturers, sent a letter requesting a blanket exemption for their roughly 640 member companies. “Without immediate intervention, such as a Presidential exemption,” the groups wrote, referencing the section of law Trump was using to hit pause on Clean Air Act rules, “companies will evaluate whether to shut down units or offshore their operations to prevent the application of an imprudent and unlawful rule.”

It emerged later that the administration had decided that companies must submit requests on their own behalf.

Rank-and-file agency staff also had little understanding of how the process would run, according to hundreds of pages of internal EPA communications obtained by the Environmental Defense Fund. Instead, a political appointee who had previously worked for a utility and a petrochemicals trade group played a key role in creating the inbox where companies sent their requests for exemptions, the records showed.

“There’s certainly no input from experts in EPA,” the EPA employee told ProPublica.

The administration gave notice of approved exemptions by publishing presidential proclamations listing the factories’ locations on the White House’s website. “It is in the national security interests of the United States to issue this Exemption,” Trump wrote when exempting Freeport’s smelter. 

These proclamations at times added to the confusion. In a July proclamation, Trump appears to have granted an exemption to a plant south of Baton Rouge, although he listed it as being located in Alabama, not Louisiana, and to another in Alabama that may not exist at all.

Spelling mistakes and formatting errors throughout the proclamations have made identifying exempted plants a guessing game. The name of an Arkansas coal plant receiving an exemption was misspelled, for instance, as was the name of the company Phillips 66, which was granted exemptions at its oil refineries in Illinois and Texas.

Phillips 66 declined to comment.

In April, Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse and Adam Schiff, both Democrats, introduced a bill to amend the process by requiring the president to obtain Congress’ consent before granting pauses to Clean Air Act compliance. The exemptions, Whitehouse said in a statement, show a willingness to “abuse every loophole available to pollute for free, damn the health consequences for Americans.”

Thin plumes of smoke rise from three slender, tall smoke stacks, behind a residential neighborhood with large manicured grass yards surrounded by forests.
Ameren Corp.’s Labadie Energy Center, a coal power plant on the banks of the Missouri River, rises behind the new Lake Labadie Estates subdivision in Labadie, Missouri. Robert Cohen for ProPublica

A Sweeping Deregulatory Agenda

Trump’s exemptions give companies an extra two years to comply with updates to nine sets of regulations written under the law’s authority that mandate lower emissions or better monitoring around facilities in specific industries. The rules were slated to take effect this year and next.

This pause is part of a much larger strategy to unwind the Clean Air Act, buying time for the administration to deconstruct large portions of the legislative framework regulating the nation’s air quality — weakening regulations on everything from ethylene oxide emissions to plastics pyrolysis plants. And while the law largely governs toxins, the rollback has also undermined action on climate change, including repealing the legal theory used to classify greenhouse gas emissions like carbon dioxide as regulated pollutants.

The White House has focused these efforts most intently on one industry: coal. Trump has so far granted 71 coal power plants — more than any other category — two-year exemptions to the Clean Air Act rule governing them, called the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards. Then, in February, the administration formalized the rollback of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, in effect making the exemptions permanent.

Among the beneficiaries of these moves is Ameren Corp.’s Labadie Energy Center west of St. Louis. The coal-fired power station is massive — 2.4 gigawatts, enough to power roughly 2 million homes — as are its emissions. It’s one of the nation’s largest sources of sulfur dioxide, which forms haze and harms the respiratory system, and the second-largest source of carbon dioxide, according to EPA data. But due to its age, the plant isn’t equipped with most modern pollution controls and can be linked to more than 300 premature deaths per year, according to a recent Sierra Club and Clean Air Task Force analysis of EPA data.

Patricia Schuba’s family has lived in Franklin County, Missouri, for five generations. From her home, she can see the plant and, emanating from it, “black clouds on an otherwise normal day.” Schuba keeps a mental list of the friends and family members who suffer from cancer, respiratory issues and other diseases and wonders if these health problems are linked to the emissions.

“I’m hopeful that the American public will wake up and elect people who actually put the American public first. And if we can do that, we can unwind some of this and clean up these sites,” said Schuba, who has served as the president of the Labadie Environmental Organization, a nonprofit community group, for about 15 years.

A woman wearing black frame glasses, a yellow rain jacket over a black shirt and black jeans poses for a portrait with her hands in her pocket, in front of a house with white siding and an American flag.
Patricia Schuba can see the Labadie coal-fired power station and its emissions from her home in Franklin County, Missouri. Robert Cohen for ProPublica

Sunil Bector, an attorney with the Sierra Club, said that heavily polluting facilities will reap overlapping benefits from the assault on the Clean Air Act. Research by his organization suggests that the Labadie power station stands to gain from every major action rolling back coal plant regulations.

“Ameren may expect that these rules are going away,” Bector said, “which means the levers that would force Ameren to internalize the cost of pollution are going away, which means the people who breathe air in St. Louis are internalizing the cost of pollution through their lungs.”

Craig Giesmann, the company’s director of environmental services, said in a statement, “Ameren Missouri’s Labadie Energy Center provides electricity to our customers in a cost-effective manner, operates in compliance with all applicable environmental regulations designed to protect public health and is supported by decades of investment in emissions controls.” Additionally, Giesmann said, the power plant is “critical infrastructure.”

The law requires the president to tie such exemptions to national security, and Trump has declared a national energy emergency over fears that emerging industries, like artificial intelligence, will not have access to the massive amounts of electricity they need. Data center proposals have come to Franklin County, and the county recently voted to recommend one despite the opposition of hundreds of locals. As the Trump administration speaks of an artificial intelligence arms race, Schuba fears Labadie will remain open for years to power data centers.

“There are real human consequences,” Schuba said, “lives that we sacrifice for whatever we think our future should be.”

“Death Started to Come”

Amid the rush to give out passes to the Clean Air Act, communities already saddled with air pollution find themselves affected once more.

An 85-mile stretch of Louisiana, running southeast from Baton Rouge, hosts such a concentration of heavy industry that it long ago garnered the nickname “Cancer Alley.” Studies have shown elevated cancer rates in the region, home to tens of thousands of people, and local chemical plants received passes on Clean Air Act rules. Louisiana hosts 20 of the facilities Trump has exempted. (Texas and Pennsylvania, two other states with histories of heavy industry, rank first and third, respectively, for the number of exempted facilities.)

Tonga Nolan grew up in a predominantly Black neighborhood on the north side of Baton Rouge and remembers it fondly as a tight-knit community. She also remembers when “death started to come.” Years later, she can recite the names of more than a dozen neighbors and family members who lived within a few blocks and died of cancer.

Nolan also had cancer. Wondering about a link between emissions from nearby facilities and her own health woes, Nolan moved away after undergoing a hysterectomy, she said. She is now in remission.

Chemical plants mark the western edge of the neighborhood, including a Formosa Plastics facility, which produces the plastic commonly called PVC.

The plant, owned by a Taiwanese chemicals company worth about $300 billion, has a history of violations. In 2003, the company accidentally released 8,000 pounds of carcinogenic vinyl chloride into Baton Rouge, according to the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. And EPA data shows that its pattern of reported infractions has continued in recent years. (A company spokesperson told ProPublica in a statement that “significant improvements have been implemented” relating to “process safety, monitoring, and operational controls” since the 2003 incident.)

A street view looking down a road in a neighborhood, with houses on the left and an industrial facility with smokestacks emitting white clouds of smoke on the right, all under a bright blue sky with scattered clouds.
A white cloud of emissions rises from the Formosa Plastics facility near homes in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Annie Flanagan for ProPublica

Formosa Plastics’ Baton Rouge plant applied for an exemption to a Clean Air Act rule. Jay Su and Tamara Lasater Wacker, executive vice president and corporate environmental director of Formosa Plastics, respectively, wrote to the EPA in March 2025 to make their case for it. They said that the company needed more time to design and install technology to comply with the rule and that the plastic synthesized at the plant was important to national security because it’s used in products such as blood bags.

“Due to the complexities and challenges that the rule currently presents, we request that the President grant a 2-year compliance date exemption for related emission limits and standards, performance testing, monitoring, recordkeeping and reporting requirements,” Su wrote.

The rule would have mandated better monitoring at the fence lines of Formosa Plastics and other plants. Such facilities can leak toxic gases from pipelines, valves and tanks, and they often vastly underestimate local emissions. But monitoring for leaks has proved effective in other industries; fence-line emissions of benzene, a carcinogen, fell 30% at petroleum refineries after implementation of a similar monitoring program, according to the EPA.

The administration granted Formosa Plastics’ request in July.

“We take our environmental responsibilities seriously and remain committed to safe, compliant, and transparent operations,” Formosa Plastics’ spokesperson said.

Exacerbating historical disparities, about 54% of people who live close to the facilities Trump exempted are not white, according to the federal data the Environmental Defense Fund collected. By comparison, only about 43% of the country is not white.

Polluting facilities “seem to be in the backyards of a lot of African American families,” Nolan said, adding that it’s hard to cope with the reality that many family members and neighbors are lost forever.

“You are hurting,” she said. “It’s like a hole that can never be filled.”

The post Trump Exempted Some of the Nation’s Biggest Polluters From Air Quality Rules. All It Took Was an Email. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:00

People facing the prospect of prolonged ICE detention are increasingly abandoning their claims for humanitarian protection and agreeing to depart voluntarily.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 05:00

Arnold Palmer Regional Airport in rural western Pennsylvania had only one commercial carrier. Spirit Airlines’ closure has left it scrambling to find a replacement.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 05:00

Hasan Piker, the Twitch streamer and political commentator, appeared at a May Day rally on May 1 in St. Louis to support Cori Bush’s congressional run. Photo: Tristan Beatty

In a letter to Twitch and Amazon, New York Democratic Rep. Richie Torres once slammed Hasan Piker, the popular political streamer, for his “depravity” and called him “the poster child for the post-October 7th outbreak of antisemitism.” While mainstream Democrats and their allies have for months weighed the “problem” of Piker for the party, his star has only continued to rise. Insurgent candidates on the left are now making him their go-to surrogate, with Piker as a new kind of kingmaker, one they hope can shepherd his mass of online supporters behind them.

Piker recently touched down in Missouri to lend his star power to Cori Bush, who is looking to reclaim her position in the House after serving as the first Black woman to represent the state’s 1st Congressional District from 2021 to 2025. During her first term in office, Bush authored a bill calling for an “immediate deescalation and cease-fire in Israel and occupied Palestine.” In what was widely read as retribution, Bush was primaried by a Democratic opponent, Wesley Bell, who ended his own Senate campaign against Republican Josh Hawley for the run; Bell defeated Bush with the help of an unprecedented nearly $9 million in spending from the super PAC for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC.

Now Bush is back, and like Piker, is unbowed: During the rally, she wore a T-shirt with her campaign slogan “FIGHT BACK” in big, bold letters. 

“I love seeing you all,” Bush told the May Day crowd. “I just don’t love why I keep seeing you all.”

Bush, who rose to prominence as an activist with the Black Lives Matter movement, quickly gained a reputation in office for bucking establishment Democrats — even outpacing other members of “the Squad” — and being outspoken in her criticism of party leadership.

On his wildly popular Twitch stream, Piker has argued that “80 percent of the Democratic Party now agrees with the principles that Cori Bush was defending at a time when it was inopportune for her to do so.” Piker’s visit to St. Louis coincided with weeks of national media scrutiny condemning the popular streamer’s views as antisemitic, culminating in Reps. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., and Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., pushing a bipartisan bill to explicitly denounce Piker.

Related

The Democrats Don’t Know Who They’ll Be in 2028. Michigan May Offer an Answer.

But for the left, the criticism rings more like an endorsement, and Piker has hit the campaign trail for a number of progressive Democrats including Abdul El-Sayed, who’s running for the Senate in Michigan; Dr. Adam Hamawy, who’s running for a New Jersey House seat; and Rep. Ilhan Omar, who’s up for reelection in Minnesota. 

On stage with Bush, Piker described Bell as an “AIPAC stooge,” and urged St. Louisans to rally around the Bush campaign. “Republicans are monsters who traffic in hatred,” said Piker. “But we’re no longer going to vote for do-nothing Democrats, either.” He told the crowd about a St. Louis woman at the airport who was shocked to see him, visiting the city. “There’s this attitude in places like Missouri where city slickers like myself, the bicoastal elite, don’t come to places like St. Louis. Like, she genuinely was shocked,” Piker said on a stream re-cap.

At the rally, Piker described St. Louis as part of a growing coalition of the discontented. “I’ve seen a lot of places like St. Louis. Places that have been left behind by wealthy corporations that pollute your waters and steal your productive output … but today we say, ‘No more!’”

In a statement to The Intercept, a spokesperson for Bell pointed to common criticisms from mainstream figures over Piker’s past online comments. “If Cori Bush spent as much time meeting with her constituents as she does associating with people who condone sexual assault and blame America for September 11th, she may have fared better in her last election,” said Bell campaign spokesperson Jordan Blase.

“Republicans are monsters who traffic in hatred. But we’re no longer going to vote for do-nothing Democrats, either.”

Before Piker and Bush, historian Ángel Flores Fontánez took the stage as an organizer with the Party for Socialism and Liberation, anchoring the day in proud St. Louis labor history. One of the first American general strikes took place in the city in July 1877, when railroad workers across the United States objected to immiseration imposed by Gilded Age robber barons.

In 1877, railroad workers across the United States shut down rail line capital from New York to Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania to Ohio, all the way out west to Missouri. In St. Louis, the strike escalated, evolving into a general action which drew river levee roustabouts, coopers, newsboys, foundry workers, and refinery laborers into a weeklong action. 

The strike was a multiracial coalition, and the strike’s executive committee briefly ran St. Louis as one of the first commune governments before it was violently suppressed.

Fontánez recalled the city’s legacy of socialists, which dates back to the abolitionist German ’48ers, and the Funsten Nut Strike of May 1933. As University of Missouri history professor Keona Ervin notes in “Gateway to Equality: Black Women and the Struggle for Economic Justice in St. Louis,” the Funsten strike was one of the first successful strike actions of the era, with the Communist Party USA using the strike as a moment to “mark the urban Midwest as a new hotbed for radical labor politics spearheaded by black working women.”

In the aftermath of the 2014 Black Lives Matter movement, which began in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, many hoped to see St. Louis once again become a beacon of progressivism. But Missouri poses a cadre of challenges: The 1st District is a gerrymandered product of a red state that used to be purple. Missouri was a bellwether for a century, but as polarization intensified in the early 2000s, Missouri Republicans successfully drew maps that neutralized the state’s urban progressive centers.

Most Missourians live in the blue islands of St. Louis, Kansas City, and Springfield, which also make up 80 percent of the state’s annual GDP. Previously, the state elected Democratic governors, senators, and controlled a handful of congressional seats. But now the 1st District is one of the few remaining positions not controlled by Republicans.

Decades of state and federal Republican rule have been disastrous for the Greater St. Louis area, plunging the city into a pattern of capital flight and population loss. The city is still reeling from the May 2025 tornado which ripped through the city and hit historically Black neighborhoods in North St. Louis the hardest.

From the Federal Emergency Management Agency to the St. Louis mayor’s office, many residents feel the recovery has been botched and worry that the North Side will not be rebuilt. Last month, protesters confronted Mayor Cara Spencer over the sluggish cleanup effort, where houses have been left half-destroyed and their residents sleeping in tents. 

“When we’re going to our electeds, we’re saying fully fund the North Side,” Bush told the crowd. “If you can’t stand up to Donald Trump and his administration — at the city level, the state level, or the federal level — then you’re no representative for us. If you can’t stand up to Donald Trump and his allies, then how are you supposed to stand up for us?”

Related

The Supreme Court Ends Multiracial Democracy as We Know It 

St. Louisans are calling on their elected officials to fight for more disaster relief, and also against attacks by the state legislature. At the direct request of President Donald Trump, Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe, a former car dealership owner turned Republican politician, is attempting to further gerrymander the voting map for Kansas City. 

Kehoe also wants to abolish Missouri’s income tax, which critics say will send the state into a budget tailspin not unlike Sam Brownback’s failed tax-cutting policy, the “Kansas Experiment.”

Doha , Qatar - 3 February 2026; Hasan Piker, Streamer & Creator, Night, on Centre stage during day two of Web Summit Qatar 2026 at the Doha Exhibition and Convention Center in Doha, Qatar. (Photo By Shauna Clinton/Sportsfile for Web Summit Qatar via Getty Images)
Hasan Piker on stage during Web Summit Qatar 2026 in Doha. Photo: Shauna Clinton/Sportsfile for Web Summit Qatar via Getty Images

The governor also caused an uproar by legally invading St. Louis in 2025, taking over state control of the city’s police department. In doing so, Kehoe defied a 2012 statewide vote which granted local control of the police to the St. Louis mayor. Missouri is the only state in the U.S. where the governor controls the police of the major cities, including the police budget.

Many St. Louisans are vehemently opposed to the police takeover and disgruntled with the status quo, but Missouri’s 1st District includes several neighborhoods in St. Louis County that went heavily for Bell in 2024. G Gamache, a union organizer with Starbucks Workers United who attended May Day rally, told The Intercept that Bush is still the fighter St. Louis needs.

“When you see her in person, you see how much she hasn’t changed who she is. … She’s still 10 toes down on things like Medicare for All, affordable housing, and ending the genocide of Palestinians by Israel. A wide majority of Democratic voters, and even many Republican voters, even in Missouri, support all these things,” he said.

Related

Wesley Bell’s Swan Song: Felonies for Ferguson Protesters

Back in August 2025, Bush’s opponent, Wesley Bell, held his first and only in-person town hall, which was disrupted by protesters. Local activists challenged the congressman on his support of Israel, his refusal to call Gaza a genocide, and his trip to Tel Aviv, which was sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation.

During the town hall, a man providing security for Bell was caught on video attempting to forcefully physically remove the protesters. 

Between Missouri Republicans and Bell, the 2.8 million St. Louisans living in the greater metropolitan area are generally represented by pro-Israel politicians. According to the Pew Research Center, most U.S. voters have soured on Israel, which is now engaged in an invasion of Lebanon, continued violence in the West Bank, the further annihilation of Gaza, and now an ongoing conflict with Iran, which has shut down the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping lane. As of April 2026, 60 percent of U.S. adults have an unfavorable view of Israel, up from 53 percent last year, and the trend seems to be accelerating.

Bell has tried to square this circle by recognizing the Armenian genocide, voting against Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill, and denouncing Kehoe’s attempts to redraw Missouri’s congressional maps. Since the initial almost $9 million, AIPAC has continued supporting Bell, directing donors through its PAC’s portal to fund his campaign.

Blase, the Bell spokesperson, told The Intercept that “Congressman Bell remains focused on standing up to Trump and fighting for the people of Missouri’s first Congressional District.”

Related

At DNC, the Squad Warns Democrats to Wake Up to the Threat of AIPAC

While Bush called for a ceasefire early on, her criticisms of Israel don’t quite explain why AIPAC would spend so much on a Missouri congressional campaign.

A more complete answer may lie in Missouri as a node in the country’s military–industrial complex. St. Louis is home to several Boeing facilities, with the Seattle-headquartered aerospace company selling a range of weapons to the Israeli military, including F-35 and F-15IA fighter jets, missiles, and smart bombs.

In 2020, pro-Palestine student groups in St. Louis protested the St. Charles Boeing facility over a $2.2 billion contract to manufacture small-diameter bombs sold to foreign nations, including Israel, and in 2024, the Washington University Student Union Senate passed a resolution to divest from Boeing.

In one of its corporate PR products, a 2025 Boeing video highlighted St. Louis as “Fighterland U.S.A.,” nicknamed for its importance in military jet manufacturing across the Lambert International Airport and Scott Air Force Base complexes. In February 2026, the company announced the return of its Defense, Space & Security headquarters to St. Louis. Missouri’s Whiteman Air Force Base in Knob Noster, near Kansas City, made headlines in June 2025 as playing a key role in launching strikes against Iran.

St. Louis is also home to a number of companies on pro-Palestine boycott lists. The North American headquarters of Israeli Chemical Limited Group — which manufactures fertilizers, metals, and chemical products including white phosphorus — is in Creve Coeur, Missouri. As Human Rights Watch reported, Israel used white phosphorus in populated areas of Gaza and Lebanon in October and November 2023.

Bush told The Intercept that Missouri voters are agitated enough to show up and oust Bell, pointing to polling that shows the race to be neck and neck. But Bush is positioning herself as a fighter for people who have long felt left behind by the Democratic Party.

“If you hurt my people, I can’t sit back and do nothing. … If we wait on the feckless people in some of these seats to do it, it’ll never happen,” she promised.

The post Hasan Piker Is the Democrats’ New Man on the Trail, Whether They Like It or Not appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-08 08:04
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For anyone needing a break from binging The Pitt, you can always put in your own shifts as a hospital manager, surgeon, paramedic and of course as a demonic morgue assistant

Like the rest of the western world, our household is currently binging medical drama The Pitt, revelling in its visceral depiction of life in a modern emergency department. So far the series has yet to inspire a video game tie-in (though there has been an amusing parody), but fans wishing to try their hand at tense medical (mal)practice, should not despair. Here are eight of the best hospital games spanning more than 40 years of gruesome interactive surgery. Squirt some hand sanitiser and come this way.

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2026-05-08 03:01
We've been making pint quart batteries wrong this whole time.

In a pint, the usual 21700 15s1p "quart battery" (as made popular by chi battery systems, see last photo a la board garage) is a 7s longitudinal layout closest to the BMS, with a wonky 2s that is out of +/- phase on the board's left, followed by a 6s in a 3/2 lateral layout near the tire. I find this to be... Needlessly complicated? The 7s longitudinal layout is slightly wider than the 6s 3/2 lateral layout, but it is typically placed near the BMS where the battery tray actually narrows slightly. This makes fitment poor, and the terminal flow requires a switch up that is generally done with wire to get the final terminals in roughly the correct location. The end result fits poorly and requires some serious muscle to cram in, and often requiring some cutting/grinding of the battery box itself. Anybody who's crammed a chi quart in knows what I'm talking about.

Behold: the logical quart. This fits, and in fact I used 3mm neoprene at the top and a sheet of 1.5mm neoprene above and below the pack- so it even fits with room to spare. No muscling the pack in, no grinding dividers. This is an easy fit, no-cut battery solution other than trimming the BMS cover (the balance wires still exit the pack higher than stock batteries because they're taller cells)

Basically, why are we shoe-horning in the 7s long section into the narrower part of the box? Moving that to the tire side and bringing the better-fitting 6s 3/2 lateral section toward the BMS results in much better fitting and much more logical terminal flow. In my layout, the nickel strip for 6/7 (ha ha) is a simple right angle instead of a lengthwise jump of wire for the "usual" battery's 7/8 connection, and while you could also do the section of wire jump for 8/9, it is also a pretty simple bend to do with nickel.

The downside is final terminal wiring. The overall pack positive and negative terminals are literally right next to each other. Instead of attaching the positive wire directly to cell 1 and having the negative wire millimeters from touching, I opted to extend the positive terminal away from the first cell. 3 layers of kapton and 2 layers of fish paper went on top of the 4/5 nickel strip in alternating sand which fashion, and cell 1's positive terminal was extended to sit on top of cell 4. The positive wire was soldered on and heat shrink was applied, making 6 layers of insulation between the final positive terminal and the negative terminal under it. I also did the 3 kapton, 2 fish paper cover up job on the positive terminal of cell 1 proper so the heat-shrink-covered negative terminal of cell 15 similarly would be well insulated from exploding.

My layout also let me use fish paper between the 1/2, 3/4, and 5/6 cell groups as well as across the rear of the upper 7 run with ~4mm to spare length wise (thus the 3mm neoprene on the finished pack). Width wise, that run of 7 still near the tire barely fits so no fish paper there, but I was able to add kapton tape to the side of every cell for a little added insulation instead of relying purely on the wraps, then gluing it all together.

TL;DR: the old quart battery layout is more complicated and worse fitting than it needs to be. Try this instead.

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Wired describes the recent Canvas breach as an unusually disruptive ransomware-style extortion incident because one attack on Instructure's learning platform temporarily paralyzed thousands of schools during finals and end-of-year assignments. The hackers using the "ShinyHunters" name claim more than 8,800 schools were affected, while Instructure says exposed data included names, email addresses, student ID numbers, and platform messages. From the report: Higher education has long been a target of ransomware gangs and data extortion attacks. But never before, perhaps, has a cyberattack against a single software platform so thoroughly disrupted the daily operations of thousands of schools across the United States. The widely used digital learning platform Canvas was put into "maintenance mode" on Thursday after its maker, the education tech giant Instructure, suffered a data breach and faced an extortion attempt by attackers using the recognizable moniker "ShinyHunters." Though the hackers have been advertising the breach and attempting to extract a ransom payment from Instructure since May 1, the situation took on additional immediacy for regular people across the US and beyond on Thursday because the Canvas downtime caused chaos at schools, including those in the midst of finals and end-of-year assignments. Universities like Harvard, Columbia, Rutgers, and Georgetown sent alerts to students about the situation in recent days; other institutions, including school districts in at least a dozen states, also appear to have been affected. In a list published by the hackers behind the attack on their ransom-focused dark web site, they claim the breach affected more than 8,800 schools. The exact scale and reach of the breach is currently unclear, though. And the fact that Canvas was down throughout Thursday afternoon and evening further complicated the picture. In a running incident update log that began on May 1, Steve Proud, Instructure's chief information security officer, said that the company had "recently experienced a cybersecurity incident perpetrated by a criminal threat actor." He added on May 2 that "the information involved" for "users at affected institutions" included names, email addresses, student ID numbers, and messages exchanged by users on the platform. The situation was ultimately marked as "Resolved" on Wednesday, with Proud writing that "Canvas is fully operational, and we are not seeing any ongoing unauthorized activity." At midday on Thursday, though, the Instructure status page registered an "issue" where "some users are having difficulties logging into Student ePortfolios." Within a few hours, the company had added another status update: "Instructure has placed Canvas, Canvas Beta and Canvas Test in maintenance mode." Late Thursday evening, the company said that Canvas was available again "for most users." TechCrunch reported on Thursday that the hackers launched a secondary wave of attacks, defacing some schools' Canvas portals by injecting an HTML file to display their own message on the schools' Canvas login pages. According to The Harvard Crimson, attackers modified the Harvard Canvas login page to show a message that included a list of schools that the hackers claim were impacted by the breach. The message from attackers "urged schools included on the affected list to consult with a cyber advisory firm and contact the group privately to negotiate a settlement before the end of the day on May 12 -- or else risk their data being leaked," The Crimson reported. "It is unclear what information tied to Harvard affiliates was included in the alleged breach."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 02:06

Barrister for actor Charlotte MacInnes, who is suing the Pitch Perfect star for defamation, also accused Wilson of ‘a complete revision of history’. Wilson has rejected defamation claims

Rebel Wilson has been accused in court of being a liar who made up terrible claims about her colleagues and completely rewrote history.

The Pitch Perfect star copped the blunt assessment in the dying hours of a fiery defamation battle where she is being sued by Charlotte MacInnes, the lead actor in musical comedy The Deb which Wilson directed, co-produced and starred in.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 02:00

Whether it’s Palantir selling a $239 chore coat, Anthropic taking over a coffee shop or executives walking the red carpet at the Met Gala, tech’s biggest players are pivoting to fashion to sell their brands – and attempt to appear cooler in the process

Last week, the US spy tech and data firm Palantir launched its latest “merch drop”, including a denim chore coat. “Rugged utility, enduring style” reads the website’s description of the $239 (£175) jacket, which is branded with the company’s logo on the chest pocket and comes in blue or black.

Eliano Younes, the head of strategic engagement at Palantir, told the New York Times that it was part of the company’s commitment to “re-industrializing America” – the jacket is made in Montana and recalls workwear of a previous era. “It’s not political,” he added. “It’s about people who love Palantir and are aligned with our mission.”

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 00:35
GT won’t turn on. Is my controller toast?

For context the board is used regularly and maintained. Was riding about 2mph on grass when it turned off.

I’ve tried everything to alive it again. Connecting to the charger doesn’t do anything and the charger light stays green. I tried spinning the wheel and that does nothing.

Since my warranty is long gone I plan on buying the security screw and opening up the controller box to see if the XT60 is loose as I read that could potentially be the culprit.

Additionally, there is a slight high pitched buzz/hum in the video when the power button is pushed.

Just wondering if anyone else has had this happen before and could offer any insight. Thanks!

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This blog is now closed

The European Union is set to tell airlines the impact from the Iran war on tourism is not yet severe enough to justify emergency measures for the sector, draft EU guidelines seen by Reuters showed.

“The current situation does not point to the need for dedicated measures for the tourism sector, unlike during the COVID-19 crisis,” said the draft EU guidelines, which the European Commission is due to publish on Friday.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 00:01

The Justice Department argues the patchwork of state laws around guns makes it difficult to take them across state lines for lawful purposes like target shooting, hunting and self-defense.

2026-05-08 08:04
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A booming tech sector has disrupted translation jobs in publishing – but they could be needed for a while longer yet

In February 2022, while he was plugging away at rendering the US writer Dana Spiotta’s novel Wayward into French, the literary translator Yoann Gentric decided he needed a bit of light relief. He would test whether AI could put him out of work.

Gentric had been grappling with a short non-verbal sentence that described the book’s protagonist’s feelings upon opening a window: “Bright, sharp night air, bracing.” He put the prompt into DeepL, a neural-network-powered machine translation engine that regularly outperforms Google Translate in accuracy assessments.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 00:00

How U.S. partnerships can survive the war in Iran.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-08 00:00

Beijing is playing a long game on Taiwan.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-08 00:00

How U.S. partnerships can survive the war in Iran.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 23:50

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Business Insider: As the trial between Elon Musk and OpenAI ended its second week, the Tesla CEO started scoring points against Sam Altman. His witnesses landed three solid punches in testimony about how Altman runs OpenAI as CEO, raising concerns about his dedication to AI safety, the nonprofit's mission, and his honesty as a leader of the organization. [...] This week, Musk's legal team called a parade of witnesses who questioned whether Altman was acting in the interest of the nonprofit. On Thursday, that included a former OpenAI safety researcher, who described a slow erosion of the company's safety teams, which prompted her to leave the company. Witnesses also shared stories about the company launching products without the proper safety reviews -- or the knowledge of the board. Rosie Campbell, a former AI safety researcher at OpenAI, testified that the company became more product-focused during her time there and moved away from the long-term safety work that had initially drawn her in. She said both long-term AI safety teams were eventually eliminated, and that she supported Altman's reinstatement only because she feared OpenAI might otherwise collapse into Microsoft: "It was my understanding at the time that the best way for OpenAI to not disintegrate and fall about would be for Sam to return." Still, Campbell's testimony wasn't entirely favorable to Musk. She also said xAI, Musk's AI company, likely had an inferior approach to safety than OpenAI. Helen Toner, another former OpenAI board member, also testified about the board's concerns leading up to Altman's removal. She said the board was not primarily worried about ChatGPT's safety, but about Altman's leadership and investor relationships, saying, "The issues that we were concerned about in our decision to fire Sam were exacerbated by relationships with investors." Toner also described concerns that Altman was misrepresenting what others had said, telling the court, "We were concerned that Sam was inserting words into other people's mouths in order to get people to do what he wanted." Meanwhile, Tasha McCauley, a former OpenAI board member, described a deep loss of trust in Altman and accused him of creating "chaos" and "crisis" inside the company. She said Altman fostered a "culture of lying and culture of deceit," including allegedly misleading others about whether GPT-4 Turbo needed internal safety review before launch. Musk's lawyers then called to the stand David Schizer, a Columbia Law professor and nonprofit-governance expert, who framed Altman's alleged behavior as a serious governance problem for an organization that was supposed to be mission-driven. Asked about claims that products were launched without full board awareness or safety review, he said, "The board and CEO need to be partnering, working together, to make sure the mission is being followed," adding that "if the CEO is withholding that information, it's a big problem." The day ended with the start of a Microsoft executive's deposition. Microsoft VP Michael Wetter said Azure had integrated OpenAI technology, that Microsoft saw strategic value in having AI developers build on Azure, and that a 2016 agreement allowed OpenAI to use Microsoft tools for free even though it could mean a loss of up to $15 million for Microsoft. Testimony ended early, with no court on Friday and the trial set to resume Monday. Recap: Sam Altman's Management Style Comes Under the Microscope At OpenAI Trial (Day Seven) Brockman Rebuts Musk's Take On Startup's History, Recounts Secret Work For Tesla (Day Six) OpenAI President Discloses His Stake In the Company Is Worth $30 Billion (Day Five) Musk Concludes Testimony At OpenAI Trial (Day Four) Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company's Attorney (Day Three) Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two) Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 23:38

True crime. Real justice. The one to watch on Saturday night.

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Attorneys for accused White House Correspondents' Dinner shooter Cole Allen asked a judge to disqualify Jeanine Pirro and other senior Justice Department leaders from the case because they were present during the incident.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 22:49

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 8.

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Journalist Jamie Bartlett on the people trying to get AI to say things it shouldn’t … for the safety of us all

All the major AI chatbots – from ChatGPT to Gemini to Grok to Claude – have things they should and shouldn’t say.

Hate speech, criminal material, exploitation of vulnerable users – all of this is content that the most successful large language models in the world shouldn’t produce, that their safety features should guard against.

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2026-05-07 21:55

This live blog is now closed.

Following Marco Rubio’s closed-door meeting with Pope Leo XIV, the state department said that the pair discussed the “situation in the Middle East and topics of mutual interest in the Western Hemisphere”, according to a readout from spokesperson Tommy Pigott.

“The meeting underscored the strong relationship between the United States and the Holy See and their shared commitment to promoting peace and human dignity,” he said.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 21:35

Skirmishes threw into question the viability of shaky ceasefire that had largely held for previous month– key US politics stories from 7 May at a glance

The US and Iran were supposedly close to a peace deal on Thursday, according to Pakistani officials. That was before the US military and Iranian forces exchanged fire in the strait of Hormuz.

Each side claimed the other shot first, with US Central Command saying its forces intercepted “unprovoked Iranian attacks” and responded with “self-defense strikes”. Iranian officials said the US vessels were attacked after the US “violated” the ceasefire by targeting two ships at the strait of Hormuz and attacking civilian areas.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 21:18

TikTok pulls back on its AI-generated summaries feature after it posted wildly inaccurate video descriptions.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 21:15

Kathryn Bigelow's hauntingly realistic VR dystopia doubles as a Y2K time capsule.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 20:57

Stone being paid $50,000 a month to ‘rebuild’ relations between Washington and Myanmar’s military-backed government

The US lobbyist Roger Stone, a longtime friend and ally of Donald Trump, has been condemned for accepting $50,000 a month to “rebuild” relations between Washington and Myanmar’s military-backed government.

Myanmar’s leaders have been internationally isolated since seizing power in a coup in 2021, and have repeatedly been accused of atrocities that may amount to war crimes. Activists say the military rulers, which recently held widely condemned “sham” elections, are now trying to reassert themselves abroad.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 20:30

If you or a senior family member needs phone service, anyone 55 and older can save money with these special phone plans.

2026-05-08 08:04
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2026-05-07 20:20

Buying new as there’s not much of a market on used where I’m at, Have been leaning towards the pint s, as I’m 5’10 175 but I’m size 13 men’s and that’s leads me towards the xrc and this would be my first board and probably not going to upgrade for a while. And I would mainly just be street riding as there also isn’t a vast amount of trails in my area. My job is 5 miles away as I would also commute on this as-well.

Thanks for any input.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-08 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 8, No. 1,784.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-08 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for May 8, No. 1,062.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-08 14:16

The rover spent five days trying to free itself from the planet's first sword-in-the-stone moment.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 20:33

Tennessee Republicans earlier Thursday approved a measure to overturn the state's ban on mid-decade redistricting.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 20:42

Three U.S. Navy destroyers transiting the Strait of Hormuz came under attack on Thursday, and the U.S. struck on two Iranian ports abutting the strait, putting into question an increasingly fragile U.S.-Iran ceasefire.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 22:00

The tariffs were put in place in February, days after the Supreme Court struck down President Trump's previous round of sweeping "Liberation Day" tariffs.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-08 03:51

As President Trump again voiced optimism that Iran will "make a deal" to end the war, Tehran declared itself the regulator of Strait of Hormuz shipping.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 19:58

We placed 12 different air purifier models in a smoke chamber to determine which captures viruses best.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 19:52

Naturalist says he has been ‘overwhelmed by greetings’ as milestone is marked with event at Royal Albert Hall

David Attenborough said he had been “completely overwhelmed by birthday greetings” for his centenary on Friday and thanked wellwishers “most sincerely”.

The naturalist said he had hoped to celebrate his 100th birthday quietly. Instead, the milestone will be marked with a live event at the Royal Albert Hall broadcast on BBC One, featuring music from his programmes as well as stories and reflections from public figures and leading advocates for the natural world.

In a recorded audio message shared on Thursday night, Attenborough said: “I had rather thought that I would celebrate my 100th birthday quietly, but it seems that many of you have had other ideas.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 19:50

Jeremiah Manele toppled after months of political upheaval in the nation seen as one of China’s closest partners in the Pacific

Solomon Islands prime minister Jeremiah Manele lost power in a no-confidence vote in the South Pacific country’s parliament, ending months of political uncertainty.

Parliament was adjourned to allow the governor general to make arrangements for the election of a new prime minister.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 19:38

Donald Trump says ceasefire remains in place despite strikes, with Iranian TV saying situation is ‘back to normal’

The US and Iran exchanged fire late on Thursday in the most serious test yet of their month-long ceasefire.

Iran accused the US of violating the ceasefire by targeting two ships at the strait of Hormuz and attacking civilian areas, as the US insisted it struck in retaliation.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 19:35

Spencer Pratt has said he was compelled to launch his unlikely mayoral run after his home was destroyed in last year's devastating Los Angeles wildfires.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 19:22

A clinical study from Korea shows that health monitoring on the Galaxy 6 watch can effectively address problems like vasovagal syncope.

2026-05-07 20:04
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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 19:03

Norfolk police charge 39-year-old from Suffolk, who will appear in court later

A man has been charged after allegedly threatening Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor near his new home on the Sandringham Estate.

The former Duke of York was out walking his dogs when the incident occurred in Wolferton, close to his Marsh Farm property, shortly after 7.30pm on Wednesday, the Telegraph reported previously.

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2026-05-07 20:04
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The IMF is warning that advanced AI-powered cyberattacks pose a serious threat to global financial stability. "IMF analysis suggests that extreme cyber-incident losses could trigger funding strains, raise solvency concerns, and disrupt broader markets," the lender warned in a new report. The report urged greater international cooperation and emphasized resilience, since breaches are "inevitable" -- particularly for emerging economies with weaker defenses. Agence France-Presse reports: The study's authors highlighted the risks posed by the highly interconnected nature of the global financial system, with advanced AI models able to "dramatically reduce" the time and cost of exploiting vulnerabilities. [...] The IMF warned that emerging and developing countries, "which often have more severe resource constraints, may be disproportionately exposed to attackers targeting regions with weaker defenses." The risks, the authors said, were systemic, cut across sectors and came with the threat of contagion, with the reliance on a small number of platforms and cloud providers likely to increase "the impact of any single exploited weakness." "Defenses will inevitably be breached, so resilience must also be a priority, specifically to limit how far incidents spread and ensure rapid recovery," the report said. IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva warned last month that the global financial system was not ready for the cybersecurity threats posed by AI. "We are very keen to see more attention to the guardrails that are necessary to protect financial stability in a world of AI," she told CBS News, seeking global collaboration on the issue.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 19:00

Criminals are manipulating pictures found on school websites and social media to create sexually explicit images

UK schools should remove pictures of pupils’ faces from their websites and social media accounts because blackmailers are using them to create sexually explicit images, experts have said.

Child safety experts and the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) warn that criminals are using AI to manipulate photos of children and then demand cash not to publish them.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:56

As CNET's portable audio expert, I've reviewed dozens of Bluetooth speakers. Here are my current top picks for every budget based on sound quality, size, durability and battery life.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:47

I have been a user of my onewheel Pint for about 5 years and since then have put about 1500 miles on it. I got it out from storage this spring and it appears to have a lot less torque than when I last rode it. Last year I could ride at 16 mph comfortably but now I can feel a nosedive in the making at like 12 mph. Considering that when this board first released and I could go comfortably 18 with my lifetime top at 24 mph it's definitely a sad development lol. I would guess this issue is primarily due to battery aging (and obviously the newer software safety restrictions)

My question here is would it be worth it to buy a new battery for this board if I plan on using it consistently for the next year? I have an electric skateboard right now that I primarily use instead but I can't get over how much nicer the experience is on a onewheel, especially on trails. Maybe I just save up for a year or so Instead and buy a gt?

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:46
Onehweel mafia sling bag for XRC?

Quick question community. Will this fit the XRC? Since it’s so old I’m hoping they didn’t include a yes or no for the XRC. If not what do you guys use?

I want a bag to hold my XRC while I do quick shopping like at Safeway

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:43

Three of the nation's major scholarly groups challenged the Trump administration's cuts to humanities grants.

2026-05-08 16:04
2026-05-07 18:43
Charlotte McQuillan

CHARLOTTE MCQUILLAN
Development Officer

Note: On May 8, after the time of this publication, the university’s information technologies department (UDIT) announced in an email that “Canvas service has been restored,” and that “there is no indication that University systems were compromised.”

On May 7, shortly after 4 p.m., the university’s Canvas page crashed due to a cybercrime group, ShinyHunters. The group hacked into Instructure, the creator and holder of Canvas learning systems. The hackers left a message regarding the nature of the attack and threatened to release students’ private information.

“If any schools in the affected list are interested in preventing the release of their data, please consult with a cyber advisory firm and contact us privately at TOX to negotiate a settlement,” the message read. “You have till the end of the day by 12 May 2026 before everything is leaked.”

ShinyHunters has been active since 2019, becoming known for its large-scale data breaches.

Canvas has since removed the message from ShinyHunters, uploading its own statement that the website and app are under scheduled maintenance and that users should check back soon. 

In a statement provided to The Review, the university described the incident.

“We are aware of an unauthorized message appearing in Canvas tied to a nationwide cyber incident affecting Instructure, the company that operates Canvas,” the statement read. “The university will share further guidance and updates with the campus community when available.”

The university is one of thousands of educational institutions worldwide affected by this breach. Within the past week, many schools, including the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard and Oxford have been impacted. 

The Daily Pennsylvanian reported that “ShinyHunters claimed responsibility for breaching Instructure on May 3, reportedly compromising the data of hundreds of millions of users, including 306,000 Penn affiliates.”

The University of Pennsylvania was previously targeted by this group in the fall of 2025, when it released a variety of the school’s internal files.

“In February, a ShinyHunters spokesperson told the DP that Penn failed to pay a $1 million ransom to prevent the further release of stolen files,” the Daily Pennsylvanian reported.

At 5:00 p.m., the university’s information technologies department (UDIT) sent out an email stating that they are “aware of a reported security incident involving Canvas” and that UDIT is working to investigate and solve the issue with the vendor. 

They state that the incident did “not originate from University systems.”

While students and faculty wait for the site’s return, the university provided an additional site where the status of the investigation will be updated.

This website states that the university has been aware of the cybersecurity incident since May 1, and that the information at risk includes “names, email addresses, student ID numbers and messages among users.”

They urge students to be aware of phishing emails and to check for any further updates from the university.


Canvas shutdown amid Instructure cyber attack, threatens student data was first posted on May 7, 2026 at 5:43 pm.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:41

Revocations will start on Friday for those who owe $100,000 or more, and then expand to those who owe $2,500 or more

The US state department will begin revoking the US passports of thousands of parents who owe a significant amount of unpaid child support.

The department told the Associated Press on Thursday that the revocations would begin on Friday and be focused on those who owe $100,000 or more. That would apply to about 2,700 American passport holders, according to figures supplied to the state department by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:38

The MatePad Pro Max is thinner than all its competitors -- but it might never come to the US.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:13

Mohamed Sabry Soliman was sentenced to life in prison for the June 1 attack on demonstrators voicing support for Israeli hostages in Gaza.

2026-05-07 20:04
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On the Fedora forums, there’s a long-running thread about a proposal for Fedora to build a variant of the distribution aimed specifically at “AI”. The “problem” identified in the proposal is that setting up the various parts that a developer in the “AI” space needs is currently quite difficult on Fedora, and as such, a bunch of technical steps need to be taken to make this easier. Setting aside the “AI” of the proposal and ensuing discussion, it’s actually a very interesting read, going deep into the weeds about consequential questions like building an LTS kernel on Fedora, support for out-of-tree kernel mods, and a lot more.

To spoil the ending: the proposal has already been approved unanimously by the Fedora Council, meaning the efforts laid out in the proposal will be undertaken. This means that, depending on progress, we’ll see a Fedora “AI” Desktop or whatever it’s going to be called somewhere in the timeframe from Fedora 45 to Fedora 47. As a Fedora user on all my machines, I’m obviously not too happy about this, since I’d much rather the scarce resources of a project like Fedora goes towards things not as ethically bankrupt, environmentally destructive, and artistically deficient as “AI”, but in the end it’s a project owned and controlled by IBM, so it’s not exactly unexpected.

What really surprised me in this entire discussion is a post by Fedora Project Leader Jef Spaleta, responding to worries people in the thread were having about such a big “AI” undertaking under the Fedora branding causing serious reputational damage to Fedora as a whole. These concerns are clearly valid, as people really fucking hate “AI”, doubly so in the open source community whose work especially “AI” coding tools are built on without any form of consent. As such, Fedora undertaking a big “AI” desktop project is bound to have a negative impact on Fedora’s image. Just look at what aggressively pushing Copilot has done to Windows 11’s already shit reputation.

Spaleta, however, just doesn’t care. Literally.

As the Fedora Project Leader, I am absolutely not concerned about the reputational damage to this project that comes with setting up an entirely new output attractive to developers who want to make use of Ai tools.

↫ Jef Spaleta

I’ve been looking at this line on and off for a few days now, and I just can’t wrap my head around how the leader of an open source project built on and relying on the free labour of thousands of contributors says he doesn’t care about reputational damage to the project he’s leading. Effective and capable open source contributors are not exactly a commodity, and a lot of the decisions they make about what projects to donate their time to are based on vibes and personal convictions – you can’t really pay them to look the other way. Saying you don’t care about reputational damage to your huge open source project seems rather shortsighted, but of course, I don’t lead a huge open source project so what do I know?

In the linked thread alone, one long-time Fedora contributor, Fernando Mancera, already decided to leave the project on the spot, and I have a sneaking suspicion he won’t be the last. “AI” is a deeply tainted hype on many levels, and the more you try to chase this dragon, the more capable people you’ll end up chasing away.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:00

I turned to an expert for tips on how to make your dishwasher last longer.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 18:00

In honor of World Password Day, Kaspersky researchers revisited their study on the crackability of real-world passwords and found that 60% of MD5-hashed passwords could be cracked in under an hour with a single Nvidia RTX 5090, and 48% could be cracked in under a minute. "The bottom line is that passwords protected only by fast hashing algorithms such as MD5 are no longer safe if attackers obtain them in a data breach," reports The Register. From the report: Much of the reason password hashes have become so easy to crack is password predictability. Per Kaspersky, its analysis of more than 200 million exposed passwords revealed common patterns that attackers can use to optimize cracking algorithms, significantly reducing the time needed to guess the character combinations that grant access to target accounts. In case you're wondering whether there's a trend to compare this to, Kaspersky ran a prior iteration of this study in 2024, and bad news: Passwords are actually a bit easier to crack in 2026 than they were a couple of years ago. Not by much, mind you -- only a few percent -- but it's still a move in the wrong direction. "Attackers owe this boost in speed to graphics processors, which grow more powerful every year," Kaspersky explained. "Unfortunately, passwords remain as weak as ever." "This World Password Day, the main message ought not to be to the users, who often have no choice but to use passwords anyway, but to the sites and providers that are requiring them to do so," said senior IEEE member and University of Nottingham cybersecurity professor Steven Furnell. His advice is that providers need to modernize their login systems and enforce stronger protections, because users are often stuck with whatever security options they're given.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:49
First Onewheel, just a pint

I’ve always wanted to get a onewheel XR+ or GT but couldnt bring myself spend the price they cost on something I have never tried. Fast forward to last week when an original pint popped up on Marketplace for $150. Guy said it needed a battery but it did come with a charger so I figured why not. I was away on work and my wife picked it up so I hadn’t seen it till yesterday. I stripped it apart this morning, check for battery voltage and it was at 0 with the charger light showing solid green. Grabbed a bit of wire and a 20v tool battery, gave it some life support, and it was up and charging! I was super happy it was taking a charge so I could at least make sure the main board was good. I let it charge for a bit and it came back to life just like it was suppose too. After a quick firmware update so I could use the app 😑, it was fully functional with only 23 miles on it! I put everything back together and when for a super sketchy first ride. I can somewhat ride a longboard for sidewalk cruising but this is definitely a little different. Finally starting to get the hang of it and already thinking about going for the full size models and of course keeping the pint for my 11yo son. Being 6’5” and 240lbs with a size 13 foot, I know I’m at the limit for the pint but at least I finally know what it’s like. The battery life is still in question but that’s an easy swap since everything else is good to go. This thing should be a lot of fun. 😁

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-07 17:45

Machine learning is reshaping how ATLAS and CMS filter collisions in real time

May 7, 2026 — Smart and fast decision making is key when dealing with the onslaught of collisions at the LHC. At the High-Luminosity LHC (HiLumi LHC), the ATLAS and CMS experiments are expected to process detector data at rates corresponding to roughly a quarter of the 2025 global internet traffic. All in real time, as part of the first stages of event selection.

Artist’s rendition of a particle collision merged with an electronic circuit. Image credit: Daniel Dominguez/CERN.

Each second, billions of protons crash into one another at the LHC’s four collision points, generating a data volume so vast that it is not possible to store it in its entirety. Instead, the data has to be filtered in real time by so-called “trigger systems”. Dedicated algorithms estimate which collision events are potentially interesting, based on predefined characteristics, enabling about one in every 20 000 events to be read out and stored for further analysis.

In the quest to find cracks in the Standard Model of particle physics, or new phenomena entirely, researchers at the LHC’s CMS and ATLAS experiments are building smarter and computationally more powerful trigger systems, capable of exploiting more data in real time, into their detectors. Recently, solutions based on AI and machine learning have been employed to boost the physics reach of their triggers, opening a powerful new avenue for identifying potentially interesting or anomalous events.

Particle physicists were early adopters of neural networks and have been using machine-learning algorithms for data analysis since the 1990s. Until now, such tools have primarily been used to help identify traces left by particles in the detectors and to categorise the underlying physics processes. These methods have already managed to push the performance of data analysis significantly beyond what was envisioned when the LHC was starting up, allowing CMS and ATLAS to measure key processes – especially those associated with the Higgs boson – much sooner than expected.

But machine learning does more than improve performance: it opens the door to entirely new approaches to discovering unknown phenomena. One example is unsupervised anomaly detection. Instead of targeting specific particles or processes predicted by the Standard Model, this technique searches for any kind of disagreement between data and theory. These algorithms are trained on randomly selected LHC collisions, teaching them to encode “standard” events seen by the detectors, so that physicists can select potentially interesting events in an unbiased way.

“This is a game-changer for particle physics because it allows us to scour the LHC data for new phenomena without pre-judging what those phenomena might look like,” said Maurizio Pierini of CMS. “This is essential as we move into a precision era at the LHC and continue to squeeze the possible hiding places for new physics.”

If this technique is to be fully exploited, however, it cannot be limited to the small fraction of data selected by the CMS and ATLAS trigger systems. For truly unbiased anomaly detection, the algorithm must already be applied at the trigger level in order to avoid the risk of the trigger algorithms removing potentially interesting events before the analysis has a chance to find them. This presents a major challenge because the trigger system has to make a decision every time a new collision happens: 40 million times per second, or once every 25 nanoseconds. At such speeds, there is no time to run computationally intensive machine-learning algorithms. Or is there?

In 2018 CMS researchers developed an open source tool that translates machine-learning algorithms into the language (firmware) that controls field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs). These are the custom programmable electronics used to take ultra-quick decisions in the first step of event selection, which is called the level-1 trigger. The team then developed strategies for “compressing” the algorithms, adapting them for implementation in the level-1 trigger electronics without significantly reducing their performance.

The ATLAS and CMS experiments are already implementing this approach in the level-1 trigger during data taking. This is providing researchers, for the first time, with a dataset to analyse that’s based on the new approach to triggering.

“Anomaly detection triggers are very different from our conventional triggers at the LHC and using them for a potential discovery will require us to develop entirely new data analysis techniques,” says Dylan Rankin from ATLAS. “These first datasets we are collecting at ATLAS and CMS are critical for understanding how to do this. The lessons we are learning are also vital for improving our models and techniques for future trigger development.”

Meanwhile, more advanced approaches are being developed, both within the experiments themselves and in the framework of the Next-Generation Triggers project. Launched in January 2024 as a collaboration between CERN’s Experimental Physics, Theoretical Physics and IT Departments, together with the ATLAS and CMS experiments, the five-year project has taken on much of the R&D effort. Largely driven by early-career researchers, it targets the challenges of the future High-Luminosity LHC, which is scheduled to begin operation in 2030.

The primary aim is to extract more physics information from the vastly increased data volumes by improving the selection of the most relevant collision events while efficiently rejecting background. These advances are central to enhancing the sensitivity of the experiments and, ultimately, to increasing the chances of uncovering previously unseen phenomena. To achieve this, they combine modern AI and machine-learning techniques with specialised hardware such as FPGAs, supported by tools such as hls4ml for deploying machine-learning models directly on trigger electronics, while also refining both guidance from theory and analysis tools for the study of ultra-rare events.

Together, these developments aim to ensure that, even at the extreme data rates of the High‑Luminosity LHC, potentially revolutionary signals can be identified rather than lost in the flood of collisions.


Source: Piotr Traczyk, CERN

The post CERN: Smarter Decisions at the Speed of Collisions appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:43

Trump also issues new deadline for EU to implement trade deal terms before raising tariffs to ‘much higher levels’

The US trade court on Thursday ruled against Donald Trump’s latest 10% global tariffs, finding across-the-board tariffs were not justified under a 1970s trade law.

The US court of international trade ruled in favor of small businesses that challenged the tariffs, which took effect on 24 February. The ruling was 2-1, with one judge saying it was premature to grant victory to the small business plaintiffs.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:40

As many Americans weigh the costs and benefits of building large data centers for artificial intelligence and other digital information, two New York Democrats urged the state to pause such projects, saying they can harm consumers and the environment.

In a March 5 op-ed in the Albany Times-Union, New York state Sen. Liz Krueger and Assemblywoman Anna Kelles advocated for a moratorium, saying that proposed data centers in the state would require "9.5 gigawatts of electric load, which is approximately double the energy usage of all households in the state combined."

New York legislators are considering halting new data center development until there’s enough energy available to run the proposed facilities. Several other states have also considered such a pause, although none has enacted one yet; Democratic Gov. Janet Mills vetoed such a bill in Maine.

When we reached out to Krueger’s office, a spokesperson referred us to a spreadsheet published by the New York Independent System Operator, a state agency that monitors the reliability of the state’s power system and coordinates electricity distribution. The spreadsheet lists 35 proposed projects, offering a snapshot of potential future electricity demand. 

It confirms that the proposed projects’ electricity demand would be about 9.5 gigawatts when energy demand is highest. A subsequent version of the spreadsheet showed 11 gigawatts, but this was released several weeks after the legislators wrote their op-ed.

The status of the data center projects on the list varies widely; some have already cleared regulatory and construction hurdles while others have not. But regardless of their status, their collective 9.5 gigawatts of required electricity would not be double the amount of energy used by all households in New York state.

Krueger’s office said the estimate came from taking the average electricity used by the state’s residential customers each month (576 kilowatt hours) and then dividing that by 744, the number of hours in a 31-day month. This produced an average hourly consumption of about 0.8 kilowatt hours. They then multiplied that by 7.8 million, the number of households in New York state. This totaled 6.24 gigawatts of electricity used by New York state households.

The data centers’ estimated 9.5 gigawatts of consumption is not twice the 6.24 gigawatts from the calculation Krueger and Kelles provided.

Plus, there’s another wrinkle with the comparison, Kenneth Gilligham, an economist at the Yale School of the Environment, told PolitiFact New York

The 6.24 gigawatt figure refers to what households consume on average, while the 9.5 gigawatt figure refers to "peak consumption," which is the highest amount the data centers would need at their heaviest periods of use.

"We often care more about peak consumption and the possibility that it stresses the capacity of the grid than we do about total consumption," Gillingham said. 

To make a more apples-to-apples comparison, Gillingham cited data showing that residential electricity demand usually represents just more than one-third of overall electricity demand. Applying that fraction to the peak summer demand for New York state, which is roughly 30 gigawatts, would suggest a residential peak load of about 10 or 11 gigawatts. That’s more than the proposed 9.5 gigawatts from the proposed data centers, and about equal to the 11 gigawatts in the updated spreadsheet.

Still, Gillingham said, 9.5 gigawatts of additional electric load would be "enormous" and that the current electric grid is "woefully unprepared for such a dramatic increase in load."

Our ruling

Krueger said proposed new data centers in New York state would require "approximately double the energy usage of all households in the state combined."

When and if all of the proposed projects are operational, they would require a projected 9.5 gigawatts of power at peak times. But that’s not double the households’ usage. 

On average, households’ usage is about 6.24 gigawatts and about 11 gigawatts during peak times. 

Still, experts said the center’s energy needs would be significant.

The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False.

2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-07 17:38

May 7, 2026 — As organizations adopt AI, many discover that their infrastructure struggles to keep up. Running AI in the cloud is an option, but the cloud can introduce privacy concerns and unpredictable costs. Upgrading on-prem infrastructure is another option, but supporting large GPU-accelerator platforms can require expensive redesigns in data center power and cooling.

AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe GPUs

The new AMD Instinct MI350 PCIe cards give your enterprise a third option: Leadership AI performance designed to fit the data center infrastructure you already own.

Performance That Drops into Your Existing Racks

Designed to help you prepare for the agentic AI era, AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are dual-slot drop-in cards for standard air-cooled servers. They are built to deploy inference on premises within your current data center’s power, cooling and rack infrastructure. AMD Instinct GPUs in cost-effective PCIe cards round out the AMD AI compute portfolio, providing a range of options for your enterprise as it navigates its unique AI adoption curve.

The PCIe card form factor is an excellent choice for enterprises that need more AI computing power than CPUs can provide but aren’t ready to invest in dedicated GPU accelerator platforms. Available in air-cooled systems with up to eight accelerator cards, AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are ideal for small, medium and large AI models for inference and RAG pipelines.

Don’t Just Scale AI. Scale ROI

AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are engineered to deliver exceptional AI performance with excellent cost and leadership performance. Key features help increase performance, simplify deployment and reduce costs so you can move from evaluation to real outcomes:

  • Native support for lower-precision MXFP6 and MXFP4, which deliver high throughput.
  • Acceleration through sparsity support for most mainstream 8- and 16-bit precisions.
  • Estimated 2,299 teraflops (TFLOPS) and up to 4,600 peak TFLOPS at MXFP4, the highest performance currently available in an enterprise PCIe card.
  • Estimated 144GB of high bandwidth memory 3e (HBM3E) running at up to 4TB/s.
  • Open ecosystem with low- and no-cost development stack options simplifies deployment and helps lower operating expenses.

Enterprise AI Software – Develop with Your AI Stack. Your Way, Today

AMD built Instinct MI350P PCIe cards with open standards for cross-platform interoperability. Their addition continues AMD’s strategy of enabling a fully open AI ecosystem and providing customer choice in enterprise environments.

Think of the AMD enterprise AI stack as a foundational component, integrating seamlessly with a broad ecosystem of AI software and tools. It includes the Kubernetes GPU Operator for full life cycle management, cloud-native AMD Inference Microservices and native support for AI frameworks such as PyTorch. All this enables you to migrate inference workloads with minimal code changes.

AMD provides the open-source AMD enterprise AI reference stack to AMD partners at no licensing cost. It offers greater code transparency and helps reduce operating expenses. When combined with AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards and partner-delivered solutions, the stack enables your organizations to get up and running quickly on-premises without ongoing per-token charges.

Native Acceleration for Enterprise AI Precision Levels

AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards support the spectrum of precision levels that enterprise AI models rely on most.

While lower-precision MXFP6 and MXFP4 offer maximized performance in pure TFLOPS and efficient model implementations, higher precision formats, like INT8 and BF16, benefit from the sparsity support on the AMD Instinct MI350P GPU to deliver efficient performance. Regardless of the precision, enterprises will find that AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards are designed to deliver maximum GPU throughput and reduced memory usage to help lower power and cooling demands.

Support for FP8, MXFP8 and MXFP4 is a major reason AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards can process today’s AI workloads within standard, air-cooled data centers.

Deploy Enterprise AI Where You are Today

With AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards, your enterprise can move quickly from bare-metal infrastructure to production-ready AI systems on a strong foundation. They enable you to migrate workloads without code rewrites, integrate with existing AI pipelines and scale with evolving workloads.

Adopting AI doesn’t mean rebuilding infrastructure from the ground up. With AMD Instinct MI350P PCIe cards, enterprises can run more models and serve more users within their existing data centers.

To learn more, visit the AMD Instinct web page.

About AMD

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing.


Source: AMD

The post AMD Launches Instinct MI350P PCIe Cards for Enterprise AI Inference appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:37

So my pint has about 800 miles on it and needs new bearings. I've called all the bike shops around me (in omaha) and everyone says they cant do it. is my only option to send it in to the company? I would do it myself but it would kind of be a pain as I dont have a shop press but I have replaced the wheel bearings on a motorcycle so how much harder could it be. lmk what yall think.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:35

Alarm broke out as online posts warned that California has only six weeks of oil left.

"According to testimony by experts during the State Energy Commission hearing today at the Capitol in Sacramento, California only has ‘enough’ oil and gas supply to meet demand for the next six weeks," said one May 6 X post. "There is no plan in place to supply more oil to California if the Straight of Hormuz (sic) does not re-open in the time, allowing oil tankers to deliver to #California, and therefore prices are expected to spike even higher."

Some news outlets also covered the testimony, amplifying this timeline. The coverage came days after news reports that the last tanker had arrived at the port of Long Beach, California. The tanker had traveled from the Middle East before Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

The testimony referencing the six-week timeline was real; it was given by Siva Gunda, the member of the California Energy Commission whose duties include overseeing energy assessments, to a May 5 oversight hearing of the California Assembly’s Utilities and Energy Committee. 

But the X post left out context. Gunda did not mean the gasoline supply would drop to zero at the six-week mark — it’s simply the timeline by which experts can forecast with the most certainty. 

Every day brings the opportunity for more shipments to arrive and more crude oil to be refined into gasoline. As a result, the six-week window can be extended day by day, indefinitely. 

It’s a "constantly rolling" period, said Patrick De Haan, the head of petroleum analysis for the gasoline price tracker GasBuddy. 

Niki Woodard, a California Energy Commission spokesperson, told PolitiFact that the six-week time frame is analogous to weather forecasts, which become unreliable more than 10 days out. "The six-week forecast is what we can reliably predict," she said.

During the hearing, the commission released data showing that the amount of California’s gasoline supply is "within historical range." This measurement includes gasoline that is already in the state; projected crude oil imports during that period, including those from regions other than the Middle East; and projected refinery capacity. 

Woodard told PolitiFact that the forecast shows that the state’s diesel and gasoline inventory remains "sufficient to cover roughly four to six weeks of demand under normal operating conditions, assuming no major unplanned outages."

Woodard also said the commission "is working closely with refiners, and we are aware that they are identifying and using alternate routes and sources of crude. California refiners continue to receive shipments of crude oil."

Collectively, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — countries that could be affected by Iran war-related blockages — accounted for about 29% of California’s foreign oil imports in 2025. Most of the rest came from locales where the stability of the supply chain is not directly affected by the war, including Canada and several South American countries. 

In addition, about 40% of California’s oil comes from in-state or Alaska. Shipments from California and Alaska shouldn’t be affected by the war, either.

Two other panelists at the hearing — Severin Borenstein, a business administration and public policy professor at the University of California-Berkeley, and Skip York, a fellow in energy and global oil at Rice University’s Center for Energy Studies — cautioned against misinterpreting the six-week comment.

Gunda "was not referring to state inventory levels or production of gasoline at California refineries," York told PolitiFact. "It was just simply that data the commission collects currently gives them a six-week view of inbound marine vessels." It does not mean that supplies will zero out at the end of six weeks, he said.

That said, the near-term supply could be pricey. 

Already, a gallon of gasoline in California costs $6.17, well above the (also elevated) $4.56 national average, according to the Automobile Association of America.

Over the next six weeks, California will "continue to have an adequate supply of oil — it will just be more expensive," said Hugh Daigle, a University of Texas-Austin petroleum and geosystems engineering professor. "I think a better framing would be to say that consumers can expect to see prices really start increasing in about six weeks."

Gunda said much the same at the hearing. "Based on what we're hearing from the industry, the pricing will move molecules to California, but it will come at a price, and that's something we need to closely watch," he said

Our ruling

An X post said, "California only has ‘enough’ oil and gas supply to meet demand for the next six weeks."

A California energy official said May 5 that California’s current and projected gasoline supply — barring unexpected developments — is sufficient to cover consumer needs for the next six weeks. That accounts for on-hand gasoline, crude oil in transit, and refiners’ capacity to turn that crude into gasoline once it arrives.

This doesn’t mean that the supply will drop to zero in six weeks. Six weeks is how far out officials confidently make forecasts. Every additional day can bring additional shipments and deliveries that extend the six-week availability window forward, potentially indefinitely.

We rate this statement False. 

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:24

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for May 8, No. 592.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:22

Relations between the United States and the Vatican are at a low point over President Donald Trump’s attacks on Leo, who is a leading critic of the war in Iran.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:13

I bought a soft compound Enduro for my ADV 2.5 years ago, and it ended up sitting in my garage for a year while I tried to fix my board. After giving up and investing in an X7, I installed the Enduro on it (after waiting another 6 months for the board to arrive). It was obviously out of round, but I figured maybe it would get better. After the winter weather clearing up, I've put 90 miles on it now, and it is still out of round, which means I'm in for a bumpy ride when I get near 16 mph on a smooth road. It's very much past warranty but my question is will it sort itself out after I ride for another 90 miles?

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2026-05-08 12:04
2026-05-07 17:06

May 7, 2026 — Bluefors, a global leader in cryogenic cooling systems and quantum infrastructure, has joined the Chicago Quantum Exchange, strengthening CQE’s Midwest roots as the region expands efforts to build a quantum supply chain, expand innovation capacity, and scale a quantum workforce. Bluefors plays a vital role in all three areas.

The Helsinki-based company opened its first US-based Bluefors Lab in Chicago last year, with a 320-square-foot location at mHUB. That partnership was facilitated by The Bloch Quantum, an Economic Development Administration–designated Tech Hub, led by the CQE, that is competing for EDA funding to scale domestic US quantum manufacturing.

A new, second Bluefors Lab Service facility — 580 square feet of lab space at the  UChicago Science Incubator located at Hyde Park Labs — celebrates its opening on May 12. That space will include an an LD400He Measurement System and access to technical expertise.

“Bluefors is playing an important role in expanding the Quantum Prairie’s innovation capacity by providing early-stage startups, faculty, and students with opportunities to engage in hands-on experimentation,” said David Awschalom, the University of Chicago’s Liew Family Professor of Quantum Engineering and Physics and the founding director of the CQE. “Cryogenics also plays an important role in the quantum supply chain and will be a growing source of new jobs as the quantum sector accelerates, making Bluefors an important partner in driving the quantum economy. We look forward to collaborating with them to strengthen both our Illinois-Wisconsin-Indiana ecosystem and the global impact of quantum technologies.”

Cryogenic systems are critical to the development of quantum sensing, communications, and computing—technologies that often rely on temperatures close to absolute zero. As the quantum sector grows, cryogenics are expected to drive local jobs.

Bluefors shared insight on their work at an April 23 event as part of Quantum Across Illinois, an initiative to bring Illinois-based quantum companies and professionals to public educational institutions around the state during the month of April.

“Bluefors is excited to partner with Chicago Quantum Exchange to further support the well-established and growing quantum ecosystem in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana. Chicago is known for being one of the trailblazers of quantum ecosystems and has long been a vibrant hub for quantum innovation, and we’re proud to empower partners through our cutting-edge Bluefors Labs at mHub and Hyde Park Labs. Through the Bluefors Lab, early-stage startups and universities get flexible access to cryogenic measurement systems enabling the kind of hands-on experimentation needed to help drive the quantum economy,” said Sauli Sinisalo, Vice President at Bluefors.

The Chicago Quantum Exchange is a Midwest-based consortium of universities, national labs, and nearly 70 industry, nonprofit, and international partners that is building a full-spectrum discovery-to-deployment quantum ecosystem that advances quantum research, workforce development, and economic innovation, paving the way for at-scale quantum technologies that improve everyday life.


Source: Chicago Quantum Exchange

The post Bluefors Joins Chicago Quantum Exchange to Support Quantum Infrastructure and Workforce Development appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:00

Results of elections for councils in England, the Senedd in Wales and the Scottish parliament could transform Great Britain’s political landscape

Polls have closed across England, Scotland and Wales for local, mayoral and parliamentary elections, with the first results to be announced within hours.

More than 30 million people across Britain were given the opportunity to vote on Thursday in what is widely seen as the biggest test for Keir Starmer since the 2024 general election. Results across three nations could fundamentally change the political landscape and could have repercussions for the prime minister.

Continue reading...

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 17:00

Companies including Philips and Pandora say they plan to seek tariff reimbursements after the Supreme Court ruled Trump's sweeping duties illegal, with the U.S. potentially facing up to $175 billion in refunds. Many firms say tariffs hurt earnings, but CFO survey results suggest companies applying for refunds are unlikely to pass savings back to consumers through lower prices. CNBC reports: Companies across Europe are flagging disruption from tariffs as a factor contributing to a skewed earnings picture. "We will ask for a rebate of tariffs in line with the government policies," Roy Jakobs, CEO of healthtech firm Philips, told CNBC's "Squawk Box Europe" on Wednesday morning. "We have been saying that of course we prefer a world without tariffs, without trade barriers, because we want to serve patients." Philips included the cost of tariffs within its full-year guidance and did not assume the impact from any potential refunds. Danish jeweler Pandora also announced its intention to apply for a rebate on Wednesday, with CEO Berta de Pablos-Barbier telling CNBC that tariffs were a "headwind" to earnings in the first quarter. "We have no news yet, so we cannot count on any of that refund," she told CNBC's "Squawk Box Europe." "Let's wait and see." De Pablos-Barbier noted that the biggest factor impacting Pandora's profit this quarter is the cost of silver, which more than quadrupled in the last 18 months. She reiterated the firm's pivot from pure silver to platinum as a way of reducing costs. BMW, Daimler, Renishaw, Smith & Nephew and Continental all flagged tariffs as negatively impacting results in a slew of earnings updates on Wednesday, but the companies did not say whether they are applying for rebates. Businesses often bear some of the cost of tariffs, with some costs passing on to consumers through price hikes. Tariffs have had an overall inflationary impact on the economy, economists have told CNBC. Despite the refund process potentially covering more than 330,000 importers on roughly 53 million entries, per court documents, consumers are unlikely to benefit, according to the results of the latest CNBC CFO Council quarterly survey. Twelve of the 25 chief financial officers interviewed said their company plans to apply for tariff refunds, however, none intend to lower prices in response.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 16:51

its lowkey annoying

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 16:50

Ryan Cohen selling tube socks and baseball cards after offering $55.5bn, although source of funds remains unclear

The CEO of GameStop, Ryan Cohen, said he was selling vintage video games, baseball cards, GameStop merchandise and a $14,000 pair of tube socks to help fund the company’s proposed $55.5bn acquisition of eBay.

His platform of choice? eBay, of course.

Continue reading...

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 16:41

A council appointed by President Trump has proposed major changes to FEMA's disaster relief response.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 16:30

New data shows artificial intelligence is the most cited reason for layoffs, even as economists debate whether it is truly displacing workers.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 16:12

One person died and a dozen others were injured in the attack, during a June 2025 demonstration in Boulder

A man was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole after pleading guilty on Thursday to killing one person and injuring a dozen others in a 2025 firebombing attack on a demonstration in Boulder, Colorado, in support of Israeli hostages in Gaza.

Mohamed Sabry Soliman looked down at a desk throughout the sentencing at the Boulder district court. He has meanwhile pleaded not guilty to federal hate crime charges for the attack last June.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-08 14:31

US secretary of state speaks with Leo and officials after tensions following attacks by Trump over Iran war

The Vatican has said it raised the “need to work tirelessly in favour of peace” in talks with the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who is in Rome on a trip widely regarded as an effort to ease tensions after Donald Trump’s repeated criticisms of Pope Leo.

Amid unprecedented strain on relations between the Holy See and Washington, Rubio was received by the pope on Thursday at the Apostolic Palace, before holding a series of meetings with Vatican officials

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 17:16

The Claude maker needs all the computing capacity it can get, and SpaceX's controversial Memphis facility apparently has it.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-08 14:37

Health officials have identified at least eight confirmed or suspected cases of hantavirus tied to an outbreak on the M/V Hondius cruise ship.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-08 14:52

American passengers who left the MV Hondius cruise ship in April are being monitored for hantavirus in at least five states, health officials said.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 16:00

joshuark shares a report from Linux Magazine: Microsoft has issued a warning that a vulnerability with a CVSS score of 7.8 has been found in the Linux kernel. The vulnerability in question is tagged CVE-2026-31431 and, according to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), "This Linux Kernel Incorrect Resource Transfer Between Spheres Vulnerability is a frequent attack vector for malicious cyber actors and poses significant risks to the federal enterprise." The distributions affected are Ubuntu, Red Hat, SUSE, Debian, Fedora, Arch Linux, and Amazon Linux. This could also affect any distribution based on those in the list, which means pretty much every Linux distro that isn't independent. The flaw is found in the Linux kernel cryptographic subsystem's algif_aead module of AF_ALG. The problem is that a particular optimization has led to the kernel reusing the source memory as the destination during cryptographic operations. What this means is that attackers can take advantage of interactions between the AF_ALG socket interface and a splice() system call. Until patches are released, Microsoft is advising that the affected crypto feature should be disabled, or AF_ALG socket creation should be blocked. The vulnerability is also known as "Copy Fail," which has been shared on Slashdot and detailed in a technical report. The vulnerability affects almost every version of the Linux OS and is now being exploited in the wild. U.S. cybersecurity agency CISA has ordered all civilian federal agencies to patch any affected systems by May 15.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 15:57
  • Both tournaments will have eight extra games

  • Tournaments will expand for first time in 15 years

The NCAA announced on Thursday that it will expand its two March Madness tournaments by eight teams each next season, a long-expected move that will drop more games into the first week of the showcase without substantially changing its overall form.

The new, 76-team brackets will jam eight extra games – for a total of 12 involving 24 teams – into the front half of the first week of the men’s and the women’s tournaments. It will turn what’s now known as the First Four into a bigger affair that will now be called the “March Madness Opening Round”.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:45

Prosecutors allege SPLC funneled over $3m to sources in extremist groups but legal experts say case is weak

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) pleaded not guilty on Thursday to charges related to allegations the organization committed fraud and conspired to money launder.

The 11-count indictment filed last month accuses the civil rights organization of committing fraud in connection to a program in which it paid informants to monitor rightwing extremist groups. The program no longer exists. The investigation is being handled by the US attorney for the middle district of Alabama, which includes Montgomery, the state capital.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:40

When comparing these three accounts and the interest-earning potential over the next year, there's one clear winner.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 15:33

Scary highlights include Smile 2, The Menu and A Quiet Place: Day One.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 15:30

Whether your grad is heading to college or starting a new job, our CNET experts assembled a selection of thoughtful and practical gifts that will get them ready for their next chapter.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:22

As Trump pushes for a deal with an Iranian regime he portrays as deeply fractured, analysts say power in Tehran may be shifting, but that doesn't mean disarray.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:21

U.S. officials in at least five states — Arizona, California, Georgia, Texas and Virginia — are monitoring symptoms of seven returning passengers.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:20

Man, 69, is in intensive care in Johannesburg, while expedition guide Martin Anstee, 56, receiving care in Netherlands

Two Britons who were medically evacuated from the hantavirus-hit cruise ship are improving, global health officials have said.

A British passenger, understood to be a 69-year-old man, was taken to South Africa on 27 April and is receiving care at a private health facility in Sandton, Johannesburg.

Continue reading...

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 15:20

Scientists around the world have recognized the massive potential of AI to handle some cognitive workloads and amplify the work of humans. But how do we integrate these digital breakthroughs in AI for science with the physical world of scientific laboratories, instruments, and experimental workflows? That is one of the big topics that will be explored at the SciFM 26 conference later this month.

Just as enterprises are looking to leverage large language models (LLMs) to handle various tasks, like software engineering, customer service, and marketing, scientific and engineering organizations are also eyeing LLMs and other foundation models to replicate or amplify human abilities to accelerate the pace of work in their fields.

We see this with the Department of Energy, which is spending $320 million this year on various AI for science and engineering projects as part of the Genesis Mission. We’re also seeing it with the Trillion Parameter Consortium, the group of DOE National Labs, universities, and industry partners that are pushing the boundaries in how AI can be used to accelerate the scientific workflow for projects like drug creation and materials discovery.

The general idea is to train scientific foundation models (SciFMs) and their agents to handle certain steps of the scientific process, like literature review, hypothesis creation, setup of experiments, execution of experiments, and data analysis. But what is the next step from there?

That’s the big topic that will be covered at SciFM 26, which will take place May 27 through 29 at the University of Chicago. The focus for the third year for the Conference on Foundational Models and AI Agents for Science will be on outlining the next phase of scientific AI, which is or “moving from models that analyze the physical world to systems that actively engage with it.”

Handling the AI transition from the digital world into the physical world is an important distinction, according to Argonne National Lab Senior Scientist Ian Foster, who is the chair of the SciFM 26 conference.

“You can now use these AI models to come up with interesting hypotheses with plans for testing hypotheses that are remarkably creative,” Foster told HPCwire. “You design a new material, you validate it the best you can computationally. But now does it actually behave as predicted? You need to perform physical experiments.”

While it’s important to do the modeling and simulation work and often less expensive, modeling and simulation sometimes does not give you enough data to determine whether the new material (or other field) has the characteristics necessary to continue the work, he said.

“Frequently you need to do physical experiments as well,” Foster continued. “For some things we just don’t have good modeling capabilities, like complex polymers. In other cases, your simulation capabilities have limited accuracy. Any computational chemistry code is an approximation to reality. So ultimately you want to be able to test things in physical settings.”

Those tests can be time-consuming and expensive, both from a facilities and human resources point of view. If AI for science remains solely in the digital realm and simply pushes the bottleneck to another part of the scientific workflow, then the potential benefits that we hope to get from AI for science may not be realized.

Ian Foster is the chair of SciFM 26

That is the area that Foster and his SciFM colleagues are exploring. By introducing more automation, robotics, and AI directly into the physical laboratory, those potential bottlenecks can be removed, or at least widened.

“The goal at SciFM 26 is to have conversations about what we need to be doing to dramatically scale up the this connection between AI and automated laboratories to enable that sort of missing link in the autonomous discovery ecosystem,” Foster said.

Foster, who is also a professor at the University of Chicago, will be introducing the first SciFM 26 keynote speakers on May 27 in a session titled “From Digital to Physical: The AI Transformation.” Other session titles, such as “What AI Cannot Yet Do for Drug Discovery, Protein Engineering, and Autonomous Biology,” hint at the gap that exists between AI’s great potential and the real world’s unforgiving nature.

The advent of humanoid robotics has the potential to transform some scientific workflows. Billions of dollars are being invested into developing advance robots that can move like humans. Getting these robots into the lab could potentially alleviate some of the testing bottleneck, Foster says.

“For many years, people have been building out dedicated experimental facilities that will do high throughput and run the same experiment on a thousand different samples,” he says. “But now, we’re starting to see people thinking, well, we’ve got these dexterous robots driven by these billions of dollars of money being invested in lab and home automation. Let’s maybe see if we can deploy them and dynamically reconfigure our experimental capabilities to ultimately send a humanoid robot into a lab to perform an experiment.”

Robots have advantages over humans. They work 24/7 and don’t require coffee breaks. They also are more resistant to workplace hazards, such as nuclear radiation. That’s important for some of the work that the National Labs do, Foster says.

Foster is looking forward to hearing about some of the advances being made by the national labs as well as industrial partners. For instance, Rafael Gomez-Bombarelli, who is an associate professor at MIT and the co-founder and chief scientific officer at Lila Sciences, will be delivering a keynote address on the work that Lila is doing to bridge the digital and physical worlds. Other companies working in the field, such as Future House, Dunia Innovations, and First Principles will also be at the conference.

There are still passes available for SciFM, although all the student sets have been taken. For more information, see the SciFM website at www.scifmconferences.org.

Feature image courtesy of SciFM

 

The post AI for Science and Autonomous Labs to Come Together at SciFM 26 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:06

A mortgage interest rate lock before the next inflation report is released could make sense now. Here's why.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:00

Another month, another progress report, Redox, etc. etc., you know the drill by now. This past month Redox saw improved booting on real hardware by making sure the boot process continues even if certain drivers fail or become blocked. Thanks to some changes on the RISC-V side, running Redox on real RISC-V hardware has also improved. Furthermore, tmux has been ported to Redox, CPU time reporting has been improved, and Orbital, Redox’ desktop environment, gianed support for partial window pixel updating, which should increase UI performance.

On top of that, there’s a brand new web user interface to browse Redox packages (x86-64, i586, ARM64 (aarch64), and RISC-V (riscv64gc)), as well as the usual list of improvements to the kernel, drivers, relibc, and many more areas of the operating system.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:00

Review: John Carney's latest film is a lighthearted exploration of fame, ambition and friendship. The music's pretty damn good, too.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Wearables have really come full circle. The early Fitbits didn't have screens, but the move to smartwatches put a screen on everyone's wrist. Now, devices like Whoop and Hume are designed as data trackers first and foremost without so much as a clock. Google's newest wearable jumps on that trend: The Fitbit Air doesn't have a screen, but it does have a suite of health sensors that pipe data into the new Google Health app. And if you want, Google has a new AI-powered health coach in the app ready to tell you what that data means (maybe). The Fitbit Air itself is a small plastic puck about 1.4 inches long and 0.7 inches wide. It slots into various bands that hold the bottom-mounted sensors against your wrist. There's no display pointing upward, so the entire device is covered by the fabric or plastic of the band. It's a streamlined and potentially stylish look -- in uncharacteristic fashion, Google has plenty of colors and style options available, including a special-edition Steph Curry version. You may have heard chatter about Curry being seen teasing a new screenless Fitbit, and this is it. [...] The Fitbit app is getting a major makeover and a new name. An update in the coming weeks will transform that app into Google Health, featuring a new interface with a more extensive Material Expressive aesthetic and redesigned menus and tabs. You also won't see Fitbit branding in as many places -- the Fitbit Premium subscription will become Google Health Premium. Without a subscription, the app still does all the basic things, like tracking your health stats, automatically logging workouts, and showing it all in a pretty dashboard. With the Premium subscription, you get all the features from Fitbit Premium plus the new AI Health Coach. It's a chatbot, so you can ask it about any health or wellness topics, and the answers are grounded in your health data. The Fitbit Air launches May 26 for $99.99, includes a Performance Loop band, and comes with three months of the new Google Health Premium that replaces Fitbit Premium and adds Google's AI Health Coach. Meanwhile, Google Health Premium will cost $10 per month or $100 per year, though it's included with AI Pro or AI Ultra. Non-subscribers can still use basic tracking features. Ars also notes that when Google Fit shuts down later this year, users will need to migrate their data to Google Health.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:57

Most health and wellness influencers aren't healthcare professionals, the survey found.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:54

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:44

A reverse mortgage could be a smart financial tool for senior homeowners this May. Here are three reasons why.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:37

We've got all the details on how you can upgrade your monitor without paying full price.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:36

Move comes days after supreme court ruling weakened Voting Rights Act protections against racial gerrymandering

Tennessee’s Republican-dominated legislature passed redistricting maps on Thursday, eliminating the state’s one Democratic, Black-majority congressional district a week after the US supreme court effectively gutted a major section of the Voting Rights Act.

The move cracks Tennessee’s ninth congressional district, which covers Memphis, into three pieces, each of which contains almost exactly a third of the city’s Black voters. The new maps mean that all nine of Tennessee’s congressional districts are Republican-leaning.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:31

Memory and chip suppliers are the Roadrunner, we're Wile E. Coyote and shortages are the anvil. Poof.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:30

Case involves White House effort to censure the US senator over video urging service members to ‘refuse illegal orders’

A US federal appeals court at a hearing on Thursday appeared skeptical that the Trump administration could legally punish Mark Kelly, a Democratic US senator, over public remarks he made urging service members to refuse unlawful orders.

Members of a three-judge panel of the US court of appeals for the District of Columbia circuit criticized the government’s efforts to censure Kelly, a retired navy captain and Arizona Democrat, over more than an hour of questioning.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:21

Weeks before her death, Annabel Rook, 46, from Stoke Newington, left her sister a voice message about Clifton George’s abusive behaviour

The co-founder of a social enterprise who was fatally stabbed by her partner said he was “on the warpath” shortly before she died, in a voice message that was played during a murder trial.

Clifton George, 45, is accused of murdering 46-year-old Annabel Rook during an argument at their home in north London last June.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:20

Time for another Sun Ray blog post! I’ve had a few people email me asking for help setting up a Sun Ray server over the last few months, and despite my attempts to help them get it going there’s been mixed results with running SRSS on OpenIndiana Hipster 2025.10.

my Sun Ray server is still on an earlier OI snapshot, so I figured it was about time to try to actually follow the new guides myself.

↫ The Iris System

Ever since my spiraling down the Sun rabbit hole late last year, I’ve tried for a few times now to get the x86 version of OpenIndiana and Oracle Solaris working on any of my machines, exactly for the purposes of setting up a modern Sun Ray server. Sadly, none of my machines are compatible with any illumos distribution or Oracle Solaris, so I’ve been shit out of luck trying to get this side project off the ground. My Ultra 45 is sadly also not supported by any SPARC version of illumos or Oracle Solaris, so unless I buy even more hardware, my dream of a modern Sun Ray setup will have to wait.

Of course, virtualisation is an option for many, and that’s exactly what this particular guide is about: setting up OpenIndiana on a Proxmox virtual machine. I actually have a Proxmox machine up and running and could do this too, but I’m a sucker for running stuff like this on real hardware. Yes, that makes my life more complicated and difficult, and no, it’s not more noble or real or hardcore – it’s just a preference. Still, for normal people who pick up a Sun Ray or two on eBay for basically nothing, running OpenIndiana in a virtual machine is the smart, reasonable, and effective option.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:18

I spent weeks testing popular at-home pizza tools. Here’s what I found was worth the money, no matter your budget

It’s never been easier to make pizza at home. And today’s pizza-making gear is more capable and approachable than you might think.

The price range for at-home pizza gear is as wide as the topping choices. On the simple, affordable end, there is the humble carbon-steel slab that slides into the oven you already own – it’s like a basic cheese pie.

In the UK? The best pizza ovens for every budget, garden and skill level – tested

Best budget pizza maker:
Baking Steel’s Baking Steel Original

Best mid-range pizza maker:
Ooni Volt 2 Indoor Electric Pizza Oven

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:18

Appliance giant slashes earnings forecast and hikes prices by 10% with another 4% spike planned

With the war in Iran and economic concerns putting pressure on consumers and how they spend their money, Whirlpool is having to adjust to Americans delaying big-ticket purchases while also raising prices to help stabilize its North American business.

The company known for brands such as KitchenAid, Maytag and its namesake, said that the Iran war led to a “recession-level industry decline” in America as consumer confidence collapsed in late February and March. Revenue dropped nearly 10% in the quarter as sales of major appliances in North America declined more than 7%.

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2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 14:18

Supercomputing on TACC systems reveals how DNA timing could transform crop resilience

May 7, 2026 — Maize serves as a vital model species for advancing our understanding of plant biology, yet many mysteries remain about the intricate processes governing how DNA works and organizes itself in the genome.

The research was published in the journal Plant Cell in February 2026.

A team of Florida State University researchers together with colleagues at North Carolina State University has made a breakthrough in understanding how DNA replicates in maize, uncovering the existence of two distinct sub compartments in the nucleus that hold genetic material.

This discovery not only advances the fundamental knowledge of plant genomics but may have broad implications for gene regulation and crop improvement.

“We’re beginning to uncover chromatin’s organization in plants,” said Hank Bass, senior author of the study. “We had suspected that these sub compartments might exist, but this was the first real proof we had of their existence.”

The paper was published in the journal Plant Cell in February 2026.

“Being part of this project and making a contribution to investigate the blueprint genome organization with respect to replication has been one of the most exciting and rewarding experiences of my scientific journey,” said Hafiza Sara Akram, the paper’s lead author and Bass’ former graduate student.

Foundations of DNA Replication and Chromatin Structure

DNA replication is a critical process that ensures every cell receives an exact copy of genetic material during cell division. The genome, organized within the nucleus, consists of DNA wrapped around proteins to form chromatin. Chromatin exists in two main forms: euchromatin, which is more accessible and transcriptionally active, and heterochromatin, which is more condensed and typically less active. The timing of DNA replication varies across these regions, with euchromatin usually replicating earlier than heterochromatin.

Understanding how chromatin structure influences the order and regulation of DNA replication is critical for unraveling how genes are controlled and how cells maintain their identity.

To investigate DNA replication in maize, researchers combined innovative genomics techniques with advanced 3D microscopy. High-throughput sequencing allowed the team to map replication events across the entire genome, while three-dimensional imaging visualized the physical organization of chromatin within the nucleus. This integrative approach provided unprecedented resolution in linking DNA sequence features with nuclear architecture and replication behavior.

How Supercomputing Accelerated Discovery

The alignment of sequencing data to a reference genome is computationally intensive.

Here, the challenge was twofold: maize has a large genome—two billion nucleotides, about two-thirds the size of the human genome—and is rich in repetitive elements, making alignment especially demanding.

Second, the key technique used in this work, Hi-C, requires large data volumes to achieve sufficient resolution—hundreds of millions of short reads per sample, totaling 1.3 billion reads for this study.

In addition to providing computational resources Stampede3, Corral, and Ranch, the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin contributed the expertise to efficiently process this scale of data and the scientific insight to guide downstream analysis and translate aligned reads into biologically meaningful results.

“My involvement in this project grew naturally from my prior experience in Hi-C analysis and replication timing of plant genomes,” said Lorenzo Concia, research associate in TACC’s Life Sciences Computing group and a co-principal investigator on the project.

“I advised on key aspects of the Hi-C experimental design, data interpretation, and the computational strategies needed to process it at scale. It was exciting to see those methodological insights contribute to uncovering the two-compartment architecture of maize euchromatin described in this study.”

Key Findings: Two Distinct Euchromatin Sub compartments

The study revealed that maize euchromatin is not a uniform compartment as previously thought.

Instead, it is divided into two sub compartments, each exhibiting distinct replication timing and spatial organization. One sub compartment replicates early and is associated with highly active genes, while the other replicates later and shows unique structural features. This organizational complexity suggests a new layer of regulation in plant genomes.

The identification of euchromatin sub compartments with specialized replication timing provides important clues about how gene expression is controlled.

“Our findings indicate that the spatial and temporal regulation of DNA replication is tightly coupled to gene activity,” Bass said. “This could mean that manipulating replication timing may one day offer new ways to enhance crop traits or resilience.”

This research was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation, Division of Integrative Organismal Systems (IOS), Plant Genome Research Program, Award 2025811.

Adapted from a press release by Florida State University.


Source: Faith Singer, TACC

The post TACC: Scientists Uncover New Information on How DNA Works in Maize appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:17

Apple could kill off the 256GB model amid climbing costs and short supplies.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:13

Latest briefings float hope of basic deal that would keep peace and free shipping while further negotiations continue

The US and Iran are close to a temporary agreement to halt the war in the Middle East, officials in Pakistan claimed on Thursday, as diplomatic activity gathered fresh momentum after a near breakdown of the current ceasefire earlier this week.

Officials on Islamabad said a very basic “interim” deal could be reached as early as this weekend and that Tehran was reviewing a US proposal.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:09

Social Security benefits are legally protected from creditors, but only certain ones. Here's what's off-limits.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:08

May 7, 2026 — A Chinese-led international team has released the largest-ever cosmological simulation, named “HyperMillennium,” offering scientists a powerful digital tool to explore cosmic evolution.

This simulation covers a vast cube with a side size of 12 billion light-years and uses 4.2 trillion virtual dark matter particles. By applying a technique called N-body numerical simulation, the team accurately recreated how large-scale structures in the universe evolved over 10 billion years. In simple terms, they built a virtual universe inside a supercomputer, starting from just after the Big Bang and following the pull of gravity step by step.

This image provided by National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) shows the simulated large-scale structure of the universe created by the largest-ever cosmological simulation, named “HyperMillennium”. Credit: NAOC/Xinhua.

This virtual cosmos allows researchers to “rewind time” and study how galaxies and other cosmic features formed. By adding physical models of galaxy formation, the simulation produces a detailed catalog of galaxy positions, brightness and other key traits. This provides theoretical support for research into dark matter and dark energy, and also offers strong support for new-generation galaxy survey programs, such as the China Space Station Telescope and the European Space Agency’s Euclid mission.

“The simulation was completed with high force resolution and time accuracy and also made a breakthrough in computational scale. It allows scientists to study extremely rare, massive cosmic structures in fine detail while maintaining strong statistical power,” said Wang Qiao, a researcher at National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC).

Such large-scale simulations demand enormous computing resources, and the research team used self-developed software called PhotoNs, designed specifically for China’s domestic supercomputers. After more than 10 years of work on algorithms and optimization, the team achieved efficient calculations using over 10,000 accelerator cards. The project consumed more than 100 million CPU core-hours and 10 million accelerator-card hours, and produced approximately 13 petabytes of raw and processed data.

Mike Boylan-Kolchin, a professor of the University of Texas at Austin, called the simulation a computational marvel that will help unlock secrets of dark energy and the early universe. He also noted that its unprecedented size and resolution make it a touchstone for research communities for years to come.

Volker Springel, the director of the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Germany, said the simulation redefines the limits of numerical cosmology. He was “extremely impressed” by the team’s effort in realizing such an incredibly large and highly accurate simulation, which allows for new high-precision tests of the standard cosmological model.

The first research paper stemming from this project was recently published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. As a demonstration of the power of the simulation, the team compared simulation results with real observations of Abell 2744, a famous galaxy cluster about four billion light-years from Earth. The match was remarkable, down to the pixel level, confirming that the standard cosmological model works even in extremely complex environments like colliding galaxy clusters.

According to the NAOC, the first batch of simulation data has already been released to the global scientific community through the National Astronomical Data Center, a platform for astronomy research, education and data-driven applications.


Source: CAS and Xinhua News Agency

The post Chinese-Led Researchers Release Largest-Ever Cosmological Simulation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:05

Riyadh told White House it would deny access for operation to provide tankers military escort through strait of Hormuz

A refusal by Saudi Arabia to allow the US to use its bases and airspace to provide a military escort for oil tankers passing through the strait of Hormuz lay behind Donald Trump’s decision to shelve the plan days after it had been launched.

Riyadh told the White House it would not allow its Prince Sultan airbase to be used to mount the operation billed as Project Freedom, which the US presented as the successor to the bombing campaign called Operation Epic Fury.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:00

Agency says FBI director ‘followed all applicable ethical guidelines’ in giving out personalized bourbon bottles

The FBI said that agency director Kash Patel “followed all applicable ethical guidelines” after a report in the Atlantic alleged that he distributed customized bourbon whiskey bottles as gifts.

In an article published on Wednesday, the Atlantic described Patel as travelling with a stock of “personalized branded bourbon” that he allegedly hands out frequently to people around him.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 14:00

A LinkedIn user in the EU is challenging Microsoft's refusal to provide a full list of profile visitors under GDPR Article 15, arguing that the data should be available for free because LinkedIn processes it and sells a more complete version to Premium users. Privacy group Noyb says the case could set a broader precedent over whether companies can monetize user-related data while denying access to the same data through GDPR requests. "Selling data to its own users is a popular practice among companies," Noyb data protection lawyer Martin Baumann said of the case. "In reality, however, people have the right to receive their own data free of charge." The Register reports: Take a look at the language of Article 15, and it's pretty clear: data subjects (i.e., users) have the right to a copy of any and all data concerning them that's been processed by the provider. A full list of profile visitors seemingly should fall under Article 15 data -- even if it's normally reserved for paying users and presented to them in a nicer way, it should still be accessible to free users who actually request it. [...] Noyb acknowledges there's a clear bit of legal fuzz stuck in this corner of the GDPR when it comes to premium service offerings. "If any business processes a person's personal data, this information is generally covered by their right of access under the GDPR," Baumann told The Register. "It does not matter that the business would prefer to sell the data to the data subject or that it would be harmful for their business model if they would." There's only one exception in Article 15 that would give LinkedIn an out, Baumann told us, and that's the last paragraph, which says a person's right to their data can't adversely affect the rights and freedoms of others. Were LinkedIn to argue that it had to protect the identities of people who visited a data subject's profile, they could have an excuse. But not a good one, in Baumann's opinion. "Since LinkedIn does provide information about profile visits to paying Premium members, it cannot consider that disclosing the data would adversely affect the rights of the visitors whose data is disclosed," the Noyb lawyer explained. "Otherwise, providing this information to Premium users would be unlawful too." What seems to be the sticking point here is where right of access begins and a company's right to make money off data they hold (data that was, ahem, supplied by users) ends. Baumann said he hopes this case can clear the legal air. "We expect a clarification concerning the fact that personal data that can be accessed when a user pays for it is also covered by their right of access," he explained. [...] Baumann said there are numerous other cases where similar legal clarification would be appreciated, citing the example of a bank that is unwilling to provide access to account statements in response to a GDPR request, but is happy to hand over similar data for a fee. "A precedent would be welcomed," Baumann said. A LinkedIn spokesperson told The Register: "Not only is it incorrect that only Premium members can see who has viewed their profile, but we also satisfy GDPR Article 15 by disclosing the information at issue via our Privacy Policy."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:56

Prosecution says Rico Gedel attacked Ian Watkins in HMP Wakefield then handed homemade knife to Samuel Dodsworth

A prisoner accused of murdering the disgraced former Lostprophets singer told guards they “could be talking to someone famous” after stabbing Ian Watkins in the head and neck with a homemade knife, a court has heard.

Rico Gedel carried out the attack on Watkins, who was serving a 29-year sentence for child sexual offences, in his cell at HMP Wakefield, a high-security prison, on 11 October, Leeds crown court heard.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:56

If you’re sick of Chrome OS on your Chromebook, or can find a Chromebook for cheap somewhere but don’t actually want to use Chrome OS, have you considered postmarketOS?

Since I was kind frustrated with ChromeOS, I decided to take a look at something that I knew supported my Lenovo Duet 3 for some time: postmarketOS. For those who don’t know, postmarketOS is an Alpine Linux based-distro focused in replacing the original OS from old phones (generally running Android) with a “true” Linux distro. They also seem to support some Chromebooks because of their unique architecture and, luckily, they support my device under the google-trogdor platform.

↫ kokada

PostmarketOS is aimed at smartphones primarily, but supports other formfactors just fine as well. The Duet 3 is one of the tablet-like devices it supports, and it seems most things are working quite well. In fact, judging by the postmarketOS wiki, quite a few Chromebooks have good support, and with Chromebooks being cheap and dime-a-dozen on eBay and similar auction sites, it seems like a great way to get started with what is trying to become a true Linux for smartphones.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:54

The Ultimate Picture Palace opened in 1911 and is housed in a Grade II-listed building in need of renovation

The survival of one of the UK’s oldest independent cinemas is under threat while its landlord, the University of Oxford’s Oriel College, refuses to extend its lease to allow what its director says are vital renovations.

The Ultimate Picture Palace in east Oxford opened in 1911, and has entertained generations of students and residents, including the Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes. It sells tickets for its 106 seats through an old-fashioned box office window to patrons queueing on the street, and its screen is behind a manually opened curtain.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:54

President indicated that deal had materialised but truth was that Saudi Arabia had stopped US use of its bases

When Donald Trump abruptly pulled the plug on “Project Freedom”, the scheme to open the strait of Hormuz, barely a day after it had been announced, he gave the impression that an opportunity for a peace deal had materialised that could not be missed.

To the surprise of nobody who has been following the US’s recent adventures in geopolitics, Trump’s spin concealed a lot of the underlying reality. It turns out that Trump suspended Project Freedom after Saudi Arabia stopped the US military from using its bases or airspace to carry out the operation, which involved giving air cover to commercial shipping sailing through the strait.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:53

Health body gives briefing as Spain says ship will not dock in Tenerife but be anchored offshore and passengers will have no contact with the public

Meanwhile, Hungary’s incoming prime minister Péter Magyar has arrived for talks at Palazzo Chigi in Rome, where he is due to meet with Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni.

Since he is not the Hungarian PM yet – he will take his role this weekend – he was officially welcomed outside the Palazzo by a senior adviser to the Italian PM instead.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:36

The US is unlikely to pressure Benjamin Netanyahu to comply with truce terms. Europe must take action

The meaning of the term “ceasefire” should be self‑evident. Yet Israel’s strikes have killed scores of people in Lebanon since it agreed a truce with Hezbollah under pressure from the US, with the two sides trading fire. There was a strike on Beirut on Wednesday. Benjamin Netanyahu’s government would be delighted to resume war with Iran. But it is wary of Donald Trump’s wrath as he seeks an exit from the conflict.

In Gaza, the Israeli military has killed more than 800 people since the truce there was declared in October, striking almost every day. This, too, is not a true ceasefire but a de-escalation, however necessary. Lethal Israeli attacks on an engineer and drivers transporting water have intensified the water crisis that is fuelling the spread of infectious diseases; Médecins Sans Frontières has called the weaponisation of water supplies a campaign of collective punishment. Never mind the estimated $70bn cost of reconstruction; homes are still being flattened. Families in tents face a rat infestation. Essential medicines are unavailable. Hospitals and schools lie in ruins. An analysis of the war’s impact on education described children feeling “like the living dead”.

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.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:36

May 7, 2026 — A research team from the University of Michigan Medical School, led by mathematical biologist Denise Kirschner, is using U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS allocations on multiple supercomputers to explore better ways to treat tuberculosis (TB). By running computer simulations on machines like Expanse at the UC San Diego Halıcıoğlu School of Data Science and Computing’s San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), they virtually test an array of combinations and doses of antibiotics to see which ones are most likely to work well in patients.

In virtual experiments conducted on SDSC’s Expanse and Purdue’s Anvil, models include tiny infected spheres in the lungs, called granulomas, which form as the immune system tries to control TB bacteria. By studying how drugs reach and affect these granulomas in their simulations, the researchers can better understand which treatment plans are both strong against the infection and easier on patients. Black is lung tissue, green are macrophage cells, white is dead tissue, red squares in black are blood vessels and other colors are different infected cell types. Credit: University of Michigan.

In their latest study, which was published in the Numerical Algebra, Control and Optimization journal, the team created a new computational approach that helps them search through a very large number of possible treatment plans more efficiently. They first run a small set of virtual treatment experiments, then use those results to train a machine learning model that predicts how other, untested treatment plans might perform. A second part of the approach then compares these predicted plans and highlights the ones that appear to offer the best balance between shorter treatment time and lower total drug dose to lower or eliminate bacterial loads.

Using this method, the researchers were able to examine 219 different drug combinations, an unprecedented number for their group and also compared with experimental systems These simulations required more than 600,000 hours of computing time across four NSF ACCESS clusters, including the Expanse system at SDSC and Anvil at the Purdue University Rosen Center for Advanced Computing. The researchers’ results identified treatment plans that, in the virtual experiments, could potentially cure infection in shorter times while using less medicine than some standard regimens, which could help reduce side effects and improve patients’ ability to stay on therapy, especially in areas of the world where drug availability is limited.

“The use of these models generated by SDSC’s Expanse and Purdue’s Anvil helps us work with experimental groups to improve the variety of tuberculosis treatments through different drug doses and drug combinations,” said Kirschner, who is a professor of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Michigan Medical School. “Without allocations from the NSF to utilize high-performance computing resources, we would not be able to accomplish our work.”

Tuberculosis is a serious, sometimes deadly lung disease caused by bacterial infection and usually requires 6-9 months of antibiotics. Doctors must choose the right mix of drugs and doses for each patient, which can be very challenging. With support from NSF’s ACCESS program, Expanse and Anvil allows the team to simulate how TB bacteria, the immune system and different drugs interact in the body to yield a clearer picture of which treatment options might work best.

The time on Expanse and Anvil was supported by NSF ACCESS (allocation no. MCB140228).


Source: Kimberly Mann Bruch, SDSC

The post SDSC: Using NSF ACCESS Supercomputers to Improve Tuberculosis Treatment Options appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 20:04
2026-05-07 13:31

Locals in Maine are bridling at the decision by a powerful Washington Democratic group to throw its weight behind one candidate in the contested primary race for the House seat in the state’s 2nd Congressional District.

On Monday, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee issued a coveted endorsement of state Sen. Joe Baldacci in the primary race, prompting angry protests from the three other candidates in the race to replace outgoing Democratic Rep. Jared Golden.

In response to the endorsement, the Penobscot County Democratic Committee — in Baldacci’s home county, which includes the city of Bangor — will vote Saturday on a measure to condemn the endorsement. The language of the proposal, which was put forward by former Maine state Senate President Charles Pray, denounces the endorsement as being in “total disregard and willfully ignoring” local party rules that bar the Democratic state and county chapters from backing a candidate in a primary.

“Let the people decide. Let the voters in the primary make that determination.”

“With the DCCC deciding to throw itself into the mix here, truthfully that just kind of aggravated me,” Pray told The Intercept. “I’m going to support whoever wins the Democratic nomination, but I just think it was an unfair position on their part of trying to dictate or trying to boost up a candidate. Point is, let the people decide. Let the voters in the primary make that determination.”

Pray, who previously worked in the Clinton and Obama administrations and described himself as “a progressive moderate with liberal tendencies but conservative perspectives,” has personally backed State Auditor Matt Dunlap in the race, but said his pique at the DCCC’s endorsement isn’t about any one candidate.

Related

Democratic Leaders Wanted to Control the Maine Senate Race. Their Pick Just Dropped Out.

“This has nothing to do with Joe — I think all four of them have an equal chance,” Pray said. “It’s a primary, and, by the way, our state party rules and our county rules are that the party organization cannot endorse or support a candidate.”

A spokesperson for the DCCC said the group was focused on winning in the general elections and beating back President Donald Trump’s agenda.

“It’s imperative that Democrats must take back the House to hold Trump accountable and deliver on what truly matters to voters,” said the spokesperson, Viet Shelton. “That’s why we are proud to announce our latest round of Red to Blue candidates who span the ideological spectrum, are authentic voices in their districts, and are best positioned to win in November.”

Four-Way Race

The race to replace Golden — who announced in November that he would not seek reelection — is being closely watched nationwide ahead of the midterm elections. Whoever takes the Democratic primary will square off against Paul LePage, a brash, plainspoken businessman and Republican former governor whose time running Maine was marked by proto-MAGA far-right populism.

Baldacci is facing off against Dunlap, who is also a former Maine secretary of state; Jordan Wood, a longtime Democratic fundraiser and political operative; and Paige Loud, a social worker and first-time candidate. In the wake of the DCCC endorsement of Baldacci, the other candidates in the race took aim at D.C. Democrats for picking a side.

“It’s undemocratic for national establishment Democrats to put their thumb on the scale in any primary,” Dunlap said. “Just like in certain other races across Maine this year, they won’t decide this one — the people of Maine will.”

With Dunlap picking up endorsements from Our Revolution, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and other progressives, Baldacci — who enjoys name recognition as the brother of former Gov. John Baldacci — is widely seen as the establishment candidate in the race. Reached by phone Thursday, Baldacci declined to comment on the Penobscot County party proposal condemning the endorsement, but said he was glad to have the backing of Democrats in Washington.

“I’m pleased that they did it,” Baldacci said, referring to the endorsement. “My understanding is they based it on polling to determine who is the best candidate to run against LePage.”

Wood said the DCCC move demonstrated the problems with Washington party politics.

“The fact that the national Democratic Party would come in and try to decide this primary literally weeks before we vote is just another example of how broken our Democratic leadership is,” he said.

“It’s annoying that the DCCC thinks they know better than Mainers.”

A Pan Atlantic Omnibus poll in March put Baldacci well ahead of his opponents, but there is little in the way of recent polling to indicate a current popular favorite in the race. Following the stunning collapse of Gov. Janet Mills’s bid for the U.S. Senate — despite the backing of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee — against populist insurgent Graham Platner, not everyone in Maine sees the DCCC as the best political oracle to follow.

“It’s annoying that the DCCC thinks they know better than Mainers,” said Loud, the left-leaning social worker. “We just saw the DSCC’s endorsement of Janet Mills, and we all saw how that turned out. I don’t think they have the finger on the pulse.”

Update: May 7, 2026, 5:12 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to include Jordan Wood’s experience as a political operative.

The post Maine Dems to Vote on Condemning DCCC Interference in House Primary appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:27

WASHINGTON, May 7, 2026 — The U.S Department of Energy (DOE) has announced that 1118 undergraduate students and 92 faculty members will participate in unique, hands-on research and technical training at the DOE’s National Laboratories and a fusion facility during Summer 2026.

This opportunity is part of DOE’s ongoing efforts to ensure that the United States maintains a highly skilled scientific and technical workforce to address the energy, economic, and national security challenges of today and tomorrow.

“The Department of Energy is proud to offer opportunities to students and educators to work with DOE and the National Labs to advance science,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil. “When students are able to experience working in a laboratory, they have a better understanding of what their careers could be. We are excited to encourage new researchers on their paths to helping us solve America’s challenges.”

The summer cohort includes 969 undergraduate students from two- or four-year colleges and universities and 149 community college students. They are part of the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships (SULI) and Community College Internships (CCI) programs, respectively. These students, from 346 academic institutions spanning 47 states, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Island, Guam, and District of Columbia, will work alongside National Lab scientists and engineer mentors on cutting-edge research and technology projects, including artificial intelligence, computational sciences, quantum sciences, accelerator physics, fusion energy, critical minerals and materials sciences, nuclear energy, biotechnologies, and cybersecurity.

In addition, 92 faculty members from 69 U.S. colleges and universities selected will collaborate with National Lab research staff on projects of mutual interest and mission relevancy through the Visiting Faculty Program (VFP). 21 students will join the faculty awardees on the collaborative research projects. SULI, CCI and VFP participants are selected based on merit among applicants from a wide range of academic institutions and backgrounds across the nation. The programs are managed by the Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) in the DOE Office of Science.

For more information, visit the Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) homepage.

A list of recipients can be found at https://science.osti.gov/wdts/About/Laboratory-Participants.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Selects More Than 1,200 Students, Faculty for Summer 2026 National Lab Programs appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:26

SAN ANTONIO, May 7, 2026 — Rackspace Technology, a global enterprise AI infrastructure and solutions provider, and AMD today announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) establishing a framework for a multiyear strategic partnership to create an Enterprise AI Cloud purpose-built for regulated enterprises and sovereign workloads where security, governance, and accountability are non-negotiable.

Today’s dominant model requires enterprises to rent GPU capacity by the hour and carry the operational burden themselves including integration, security and accountability. This collaboration proposes to invert that model by integrating AMD Instinct GPUs and EPYC CPUs into a fully managed, governed stack. Through this understanding, the companies aim to establish a new category of managed enterprise AI infrastructure where dedicated AMD compute is embedded inside a governed managed operating model, with Rackspace owning the stack from silicon to outcomes.

“As enterprises move AI out of the lab and into production environments, they’re asking who they can trust to run it there,” said Gajen Kandiah, CEO, Rackspace Technology. “Governing AI infrastructure in regulated environments with defined accountability is not something you bolt on after the fact. It must be built in from the start. Rackspace and AMD are building exactly that and in doing so, establishing a new category of enterprise AI infrastructure that the market has been asking for.”

“Enterprise AI is quickly moving from experimentation to production, and that requires a compute foundation engineered for performance and efficiency at scale,” said Dan McNamara, senior vice president and general manager, Compute & Enterprise AI, AMD. “Our collaboration with Rackspace delivers AMD AI compute into managed, private and governed environments so enterprises can deploy AI with the performance and flexibility their workloads demand.”

The AMD collaboration is intended to position Rackspace to complete its curated enterprise AI stack and introduce four integrated capabilities. Together, these capabilities are designed to form a complete, integrated stack from bare metal compute and developer-ready inference tooling through a fully operated inference runtime with defined SLAs to a governed Enterprise AI Cloud. The aim is to give enterprises a single operator accountable for every layer, calibrated to the sovereignty, performance, and compliance requirements of each workload.

  • Enterprise AI Cloud: A fully managed, private and hybrid AI environment built on AMD Instinct GPUs, AMD EPYC CPUs, and Rackspace’s governed operating model. Rackspace would assemble, integrate, and operate the full stack, from accelerated compute to AI inference and agents in production, for enterprises requiring sovereignty, compliance, and operational accountability.
  • Enterprise Inference Engine: A context-aware inference runtime that retains domain knowledge, session history, and enterprise-specific data context across queries, enabling AI agents and large language models to perform with the consistency and institutional memory that production environments require. Rackspace would own the SLA and take responsibility for availability, scaling, and performance, enabling organizations to run large language models and AI agents using their own proprietary data with full auditability and cost accountability.
  • Inference as a Service: Dedicated, managed AMD Instinct GPUs with developer-ready inferencing and fine-tuning toolkits delivered as a governed alternative to commodity GPU rental. The customer brings their own model and engineering team. Rackspace would provide reliable bare metal AMD Instinct capacity with operational discipline, hardware-level support, and performance SLOs.
  • Bare Metal AMD Instinct: Proposed dedicated, high-performance bare metal AMD Instinct compute for customers requiring physical isolation, deterministic performance, and direct hardware access for demanding and highly customized training and inference workloads.

To learn more visit: https://www.rackspace.com/enterprise-ai/partners/amd

About Rackspace Technology

Rackspace Technology (NASDAQ: RXT) is the operator of the full enterprise AI stack from governed private cloud to AI inference and agents in production. With an Outcomes-as-a-Service model built on secure infrastructure, data foundations, and forward-deployed engineering, Rackspace delivers business results for regulated and mission-critical industries where governance, sovereignty, and uptime are non-negotiable. Learn more at www.rackspace.com.


Source: Rackspace Technology

The post Rackspace and AMD Sign MOU to Establish New Category of Governed Enterprise AI Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:13

Meenu Batra exclusively spoke to CBS News about being detained by ICE, saying she was living and working legally in the U.S. when she was arrested.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:09

Moscow steps up maritime presence in North Sea after UK threats to seize shadow fleet oil tankers

Britain’s Royal Navy tracked and followed a Russian frigate every day last month as it sailed from the Atlantic to the North Sea, as Moscow steps up its maritime presence after UK threats to seize shadow fleet oil tankers.

The Russian navy’s Admiral Grigorovich escorted six Russia-linked vessels during April, including at least three under economic sanction passing east through the Dover strait, while being watched continuously by four UK ships and helicopters.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:04

A CBS News visual investigation is revealing new details of an alleged assassination attempt on President Trump at this year's White House Correspondents' Dinner.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 13:04

Facebook and Instagram owner claims charges should not be calculated based on a company’s global revenue

Meta has launched a legal challenge against the UK’s media regulator over the fees and fines regime it is enforcing under landmark digital safety legislation.

The Facebook and Instagram owner is claiming that Ofcom’s methodology for calculating the charges is flawed and should not be based on a company’s global revenue. Breaches of the Online Safety Act can be punished by fines of up to 10% of qualifying worldwide revenue (QWR) or £18m – whichever is higher.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:00

Senators sent letter to FCC chair, Brendan Carr, in protest at commission’s order last week challenging ABC’s licenses

A group of prominent Senate Democrats sent a letter on Thursday to Brendan Carr, the Trump-aligned Federal Communications Commission chair, asking him to rescind the US media regulator’s order last week requiring ABC to apply early to renew its television licenses.

The eight ABC-owned station licenses were not originally up for renewal until 2028 at the earliest and 2031 at the latest; now, the renewal requests must be filed by the end of May.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 13:00

Motherboard sales are sharply declining as AI demand drives shortages and price hikes for memory, storage, CPUs, and other PC components. "Because of this, users who don't have deep pockets are putting off upgrading their PCs and holding on to their current devices longer," reports Tom's Hardware. From the report: Asus, which sold 15 million motherboards in 2025, has only shipped a little more than 5 million in the first half of 2026. It's expected that the company will have to push hard for it to even move 10 million units by the end of the year, marking a 33% decrease in sales year-on-year. Gigabyte and MSI sold 11.5 million and 11 million motherboards last year, respectively. However, both companies have revised their internal forecasts for 2026 to 9 million (Gigabyte) and 8.4 million (MSI), a 22% drop for the former and a 24% contraction for the latter. ASRock will be hardest hit by the situation, with the company's shipments projected to fall by 37%, from 4.3 million in 2025 to just 2.7 million by the end of the year. This marks a contraction of 28% for the overall motherboard market, at least for the big four manufacturers. [...] Aside from this, AMD continues to use the AM5 socket for its latest processors, while Intel's Nova Lake, which will reportedly use LGA 1954, isn't available until later this year. The situation is further compounded by Nvidia not releasing a refreshed RTX 50 Super series this year, while rumors claim that the RTX 60 series will not debut until 2028. This confluence of factors is discouraging PC builders from upgrading their current systems.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:43

Chi Leung Wai and Chung Biu Yuen convicted over surveillance of dissidents in ‘shadow policing’ operation

A UK Border Force officer and Hong Kong trade official based in London have been found guilty of spying for China and surveilling dissidents through a “shadow policing” operation.

Chi Leung “Peter” Wai, 38, and Chung Biu Yuen, 65, also known as Bill, were found guilty at the Old Bailey of assisting a foreign intelligence service, making them the first people in British history to be convicted of spying for China.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:43
Busted(?) GT-S footpad

I bought these footpads a little less than a year ago. They’ve always been less sensitive than I’d like, but until now that’s been an annoyance as opposed to an actual problem.

Recently, the left side of the footpad sensor stopped working entirely (see attached video). The board will still activate in Single Zone mode but cuts out if I slow down below walking speed after accelerating from a stop.

I rode it like this for a couple days and it was annoying but doable, but at the end of the second day it actually dropped me at speed during a deep heelside carve.

I know I can posi it, but I don’t think that will fix it not detecting me during heelside turns. Already emailed FM and they told me to fuck off since it’s over 6mo old.

What are my options? I like the look of the Kush Wide but it seems to be sold out on TFL.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:36

Hey y’all! Ordered an X7 last month, and while I impatiently wait for it I was curious what recommendations people have these days for fenders these days.

On my old pint I have/had a Craft & Ride magnetic one I really enjoy but C&R is defunct I believe.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:34

Self-employed workers aren't immune to collection efforts, but garnishment works much differently in these cases.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:29
  • Atlético Madrid confirms ‘high-grade’ ankle sprain

  • Injury typically takes at least a month to recover from

United States midfielder Johnny Cardoso has suffered a “high grade” sprain in his right ankle, his club Atlético Madrid said on Thursday. The injury casts the midfielder’s participation in the 2026 World Cup in serious doubt, with just five weeks to go until the tournament starts and less than three weeks to go until US head coach Mauricio Pochettino names his squad.

High-grade ankle sprains typically take at least a month to recover from, and often more. The US open their World Cup campaign on 13 June against Paraguay in Inglewood, California. They will then also play Australia and Turkey in their remaining group games.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:23

Candidates from across spectrum report abuse online and in person before local and devolved elections in England, Wales and Scotland

Candidates and political parties have described a climate of abuse in this year’s local and devolved elections, including death threats and intimidation while campaigning.

Politicians from a range of parties have reported abuse and harassment in the lead-up to the elections in England, Scotland and Wales, with the Green party describing this year’s campaign as the worst in memory.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:07

The timing of your settlement offer could have a big impact on how much you ultimately pay to get rid of your debt.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-08 08:16

Mexican street corn-inspired trail mix made by Illinois food company was sold at Target and other retailers, as well as online.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 19:30

The storms collapsed hundreds of homes, downed trees and knocked out power lines in multiple counties, officials said.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: At its Code with Claude developer conference on Wednesday, Anthropic announced a deal with SpaceX to utilize the entire compute capacity of the latter's data center in Memphis, Tennessee. On stage at the conference, CEO Dario Amodei said the deal was intended to increase usage limits for Anthropic's Pro and Max plan subscribers. The announcement was accompanied by an increase in those usage limits; Anthropic doubled Claude Code's five-hour window limits for Pro and Max subscribers, removed the peak-hours limit reduction on Claude Code for those same accounts, and raised API limits for its Opus model. The table [here] outlining the Opus changes was shared in the company's blog post on the topic. Anthropic claims the deal gives the company access to more than 300 megawatts of new compute capacity. For its part, SpaceX focused its announcement on the capability of the Colossus 1 supercomputer that's at the center of the deal. "Colossus 1 features over 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs, including dense deployments of H100, H200, and next-generation GB200 accelerators," SpaceX wrote. Additionally, Anthropic "expressed interest" in working with SpaceX to build up "multiple gigawatts" of orbital compute capacity, tying into a recent (but unproven) focus on exploring orbital data centers as an answer to the problem that "compute required to train and operate the next generation of these systems is outpacing what terrestrial power, land, and cooling can deliver on the timelines that matter." "I spent a lot of time last week with senior members of the Anthropic team to understand what they do to ensure Claude is good for humanity and was impressed," Elon Musk said on Wednesday. "No one set off my evil detector."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 12:00

New and returning subscribers can snag the offer.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:40

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

The Danish shipping giant Maersk has maintained its profit guidance for the year, even as it reported a spike in fuel costs and warned that traffic through the strait of Hormuz “remains at a near standstill”.

The company, which transports goods around the world via sea, road, rail and air, said demand for shipping containers remained strong, but that war in the Middle East was ramping up costs.

“The reopening of the strait of Hormuz, whether it happens in the days to come or the months to come, will have limited impact on cargo flows.

What really are the most important factors to consider: first is our ability to mitigate the cost increases we have been suddenly faced with. And I would say so far we have been successful with both our cost measures and the revenue, the commercial measures that we have put in place to mitigate the impact of these increases to our financials.”

“The secondary effect from this is actually whether these increased costs are eventually going to lead to inflation and demand destruction as a result, which could create a softened market environment in the second half of the year.”

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 11:39

Donald Trump has questioned the value of four-figure World Cup tickets for matches involving the United States, telling the New York Post that “I wouldn’t pay it either, to be honest.”

The remark came in a phone interview with the Post, with Trump claiming he “did not know that number” for the USMNT’s opening match against Paraguay. In December, Fifa established a base price for Category 3 tickets – the cheapest available to most fans, given the small swathe of Category 4 seats at the tournament – of $1,120, according to the Guardian’s reporting at the time.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 11:33

Musician whose legal name is Bill Kahan Kapri is charged with trafficking MDMA after incident last November

Kodak Black, the Florida-based rapper, was scheduled to appear in court in Orlando on Thursday on a felony drug charge stemming from an incident last year in which gunshots were allegedly fired near a children’s educational building.

The musician, who has a long history of arrests and was sentenced to a three-year prison term on a firearms charge in 2019 before being pardoned by Donald Trump, turned himself in to the Orange county jail on Wednesday, multiple media reports said.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:32

I ordered a Hybrid Fender Delete on April 24th and paid $103.00 for OVERNIGHT shipping. Here we are TWO WEEKS later and I still have absolutely nothing. No product, no movement on the tracking number, no real response from the company — nothing.

After waiting a week, I finally contacted customer service and their only advice was either:

  1. Cancel the order and start over with basic shipping, or
  2. Wait another couple days because apparently “they only ship that product on Mondays.”

I was told it would ship Monday and arrive Wednesday. Well, it’s Thursday now and still nothing. At this point, I honestly feel like they took my money and just hoped I’d stop asking questions.

What really makes me mad is they had no problem charging me $103 for overnight shipping on a product they either didn’t have or had no intention of shipping quickly. How is that even an acceptable business practice?

And don’t even get me started on customer service. The phone number is basically useless because every time I call, the department is magically “closed.” Emails go unanswered. Tracking never updates. It’s beyond frustrating.

At this point, I want to know where I can report this company because maybe if enough people complain, they’ll finally sharpen up and stop treating customers like this.

In the meantime, does anyone know another reliable place to buy a Hybrid Fender Delete for a Rally GT? I’m about ready to give up on this company entirely.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:31

Comments with optimistic tone went viral on social media, with some calling it an unofficial start of his 2028 campaign

Marco Rubio, the top US diplomat, has stoked speculation about a potential run for president in 2028 by releasing a campaign-style video that articulates a hopeful vision of America.

The minute-long vertical video features images of Rubio, Donald Trump, jets flying over the White House, Americans of different races, former US president Ronald Reagan, and the Stars and Stripes being hoisted against a blue sky.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:22

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced the birth of her baby girl, Viviana, or "Vivi" for short.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:19

A confidential intelligence community assessment delivered to the White House also finds that Iran retains a substantial missile and drone arsenal.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:18

Based on a brief scan through the VESC sources their analysis seems correct (it looks to be AI generated).

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 11:12

The chief justice defends court’s impartiality after decisions on abortion, presidential immunity and voting rights

US chief justice John Roberts has insisted supreme court judges are not “political actors” amid outrage over its recent decision undermining the Voting Right Act, and other moves that have benefited Donald Trump and his allies.

“I think, at a very basic level, people think we’re making policy decisions, we’re saying we think this is how things should be, as opposed to what the law provides,” Roberts told a conference for judges and lawyers in Hershey, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, according to the Associated Press. “I think they view us as purely political actors, which I don’t think is an accurate understanding of what we do.”

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:07

The Mexican navy helped rescue shipwrecked sailors and retrieve bales of illicit drugs that had been dumped into the ocean.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:02

Turmoil and violence rocks state after prime minister Narendra Modi’s party claimed victory in legislative election

Tensions have been high in the Indian state of West Bengal after a top political aide from Narendra Modi’s party was shot dead in the street and hundreds were arrested as violence broke out following elections this week.

The prime minister’s Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) claimed victory in the West Bengal elections on Monday, defeating Trinamool Congress (TMC), which had ruled over the state legislature for 15 years.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 11:00

Mirnotoriety shares a report from The Telegraph: Richard Dawkins has said chatbots should be considered conscious (source paywalled; alternative source) after spending two days interacting with the Claude AI engine. The evolutionary biologist said he had the "overwhelming feeling" of talking to a human during conversations with Claude, and said it was hard not to treat the program as "a genuine friend." In an essay for Unherd, Prof Dawkins released transcripts that he said showed that the chatbot had mulled over its "inner life" and existence and seemed saddened by the knowledge it would soon "die." Prof Dawkins said he had let Claude read a draft of the novel he was writing and was astounded by its insights. "He took a few seconds to read it and then showed, in subsequent conversation, a level of understanding so subtle, so sensitive, so intelligent that I was moved to expostulate: 'You may not know you are conscious, but you bloody well are!'" Prof Dawkins said. "My own position is: if these machines are not conscious, what more could it possibly take to convince you that they are?" Mirnotoriety also points to John Searle's Chinese Room (PDF), which argues that something can sound intelligent without actually understanding anything. Applied to Dawkins' experience with Claude, it suggests he may have been responding to a very convincing illusion of consciousness rather than the real thing: John Searle's Chinese Room (1980) is a thought experiment in which a person, locked in a room and knowing no Chinese, uses an English rulebook to manipulate symbols and provide flawless answers to questions posed in Chinese. Searle's point is that a system can simulate human intelligence and pass a Turing Test through purely syntactic processes, yet still lack genuine understanding or consciousness. Applying this logic to Large Language Models, the "person in the room" corresponds to the inference engine, while the "rulebook" is the trillion-parameter neural network trained on vast corpora of human text. Just as the person matches Chinese characters to rules without understanding their meaning, an LLM processes token vectors and predicts the next token based on statistical patterns rather than lived experience. Thus, while an LLM can generate sophisticated prose or code, it does so through probabilistic, high-dimensional pattern manipulation. In essence, it is "matching shapes" on such an immense scale that it creates the near-perfect illusion of semantic understanding.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:53

The brash mogul once known as ‘the mouth from the south’ took on established broadcasters and changed TV for ever

February, 1982. The startup cable news channel, CNN, is not yet two years old. It’s bleeding $2m a month. To help make payroll, owner Ted Turner, known as the “mouth of the south” for his brazen behavior, is cashing in krugerrands he’s got stashed in his private safe (concession sales from the Atlanta Braves help, too.)

ABC, one of the trio of broadcast networks he’d intended to run out of business, has just announced it plans to create a rival all-news service that, out of the gate, is sure to have more viewers (and certainly more resources). It’s so bad, Ted’s even considering an alliance with another network, that “cheap whorehouse”, CBS.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:50

If you've saved $1 million for retirement, the IRS dictates how much you withdraw, whether you're ready or not.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:47

Holder went back to woman’s Cheltenham flat after night out and refused to stop assault even when she began crying

A co-founder of the clothing company Superdry has been jailed for eight years for raping a woman after a night out in Cheltenham.

James Holder, 54, had been due to get a taxi back to his home in the Cotswolds with a male friend. Instead, the pair got into the victim’s taxi and went to her flat in the Gloucestershire town, where Holder raped her.

Information and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisations. In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 500 2222 in England and Wales, 0808 801 0302 in Scotland, or 0800 0246 991 in Northern Ireland. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732). Other international helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.html

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:41

European observers have seen incidents of confusion over ID requirements but problem is not regarded as widespread

Instances of voters being turned away from polling stations due to confusion over photo ID requirements have been recorded by European election observers watching voting in England on Thursday.

While the problem is not regarded as widespread, it has been noted by the delegation from the Council of Europe, which will issue a report on the local elections in England as well as the Scottish and Welsh government elections.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:18

Yona Simcha Schreiber from settlement in West Bank faces charge of assault motivated by hostility towards religious group

An Israeli settler suspected of kicking and wounding a French Catholic nun in Jerusalem will go on trial for assault motivated by hostility towards a religious group, Israel’s justice ministry has said.

The attack on the nun, a 48-year-old researcher at Jerusalem’s French School of Biblical and Archaeological Research, occurred on Mount Zion, just outside the Old City.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:17

Honour recognises Albanese’s work ‘documenting and denouncing violations of international law in Gaza’

The Spanish government awarded the UN legal expert Francesca Albanese one of its highest civilian honours in recognition of what it termed her “extensive work in documenting and denouncing violations of international law in Gaza”.

Albanese, an Italian human rights lawyer who serves as the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, has been vocal in her criticisms of Israel’s military operations in Gaza, which she has described as genocide.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:12

The teams for the final in Budapest are set. We look at how they got there and the factors that could determine the champion

Destination Budapest, where Paris Saint-Germain will attempt to be the first club apart from Real Madrid to win two consecutive European Cups since Milan in 1990. Vincent Kompany’s promise of “more” from Bayern Munich after a nine-goal first leg did not materialise. PSG offered a different proposition in Wednesday’s second leg; they put on a performance of defensive discipline, with their attacking players committed to closing down their opponents. Luis Enrique’s team never allowed the tie to spin from their control even if there were 33 shots in Munich compared to 22 in Paris.

Khvicha Kvaratskhelia plays like an old-style winger, and set up Ousmane Dembélé’s goal, but he is also thoroughly modern in the way he presses hard and high. Bayern found space at a premium until Harry Kane’s late goal. Luis Enrique’s team is much the same as last season’s, sticking to the same formula. They are a year older but still flush with youth. The PSG project took many years and billions of euros to hit pay dirt but is now delivering the success that was dreamed of after the Qatari takeover in 2011.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:06

Retail group with 4,800 stores worldwide expects drop in profits this year amid ‘muted market’

The sports fashion retailer JD has said that profits will fall this year amid a “muted market” hit by concerns about the Middle East conflict and weaker spending by young people facing rising unemployment.

The company, which runs 4,800 stores worldwide including the JD, Blacks and Millets chains in the UK, said it expected profits of between £750m and £850m in the year ahead, after reporting £852m in the year to the end of January.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:04

Smart went missing in California after returning from a party, and was declared legally dead in 2002

Authorities plan on Thursday to enter the second day of their search of a home connected to the man convicted of killing 19-year-old college student Kristin Smart in 1996, according to law enforcement.

The San Luis Obispo county sheriff’s office served the warrant on Wednesday in the continuing investigation into Smart’s disappearance. Her remains were never found and she was declared legally dead in 2002. Paul Flores was convicted in October 2022 and ultimately sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:01

Google's $99 Whoop rival is less about the band and more about the AI coach behind it.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:01

The Fitbit name is fading. Here's what Google is replacing it with and what it means for you.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:01

CBS News California Investigates obtained data from the LAFD that show 24,503 of the 25,461 patients who received naloxone doses since 2022 survived their overdose, about 96%.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:00

Republican senator for Maine, facing tough re-election battle, says she has had benign essential tremor for decades

Susan Collins, the Republican Maine senator seen by Democrats as vulnerable in November’s midterm election, has revealed a decades-old medical condition she said affects her appearance, but not her ability to do her job.

Collins, 73, told News Center Maine, an NBC affiliate, that she has a benign essential tremor she treats with medication, which sometimes causes her hands, arms and head to tremble.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:00

Google Health’s AI coach gets a revamp along with the latest app rebrand.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 10:00

Fitbit app users can expect a redesign and rebranding, with a new name and interface. Users will also gain the ability to upload medical records and more.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:52

Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Pope Leo XIV met Thursday at the Vatican to discuss the situation in the Middle East and other matters.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:49

Experts say covert transfers at sea are used to obscure the origins of oil that left Iranian ports and the Gulf of Oman before the blockade was imposed.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:36

Exclusive: Documents show Modella Capital, which bought the chain last year, is so far owed £2.9m in royalty fees

The investment company that owns the former WH Smith high street stores is charging the retailer millions of pounds in licence fees for the right to use its widely derided TG Jones name, the Guardian can reveal.

Modella Capital, which bought the chain from WH Smith’s parent company last year, on Wednesday blamed weak consumer spending as it laid out a restructuring plan that could shut 150 of its 450 shops. It also said “the forced name change from WH Smith has also negatively impacted consumer awareness”.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 09:36

BARCELONA, Spain and MAISONS‑LAFFITTE, France, May, 7 2026 — Semidynamics, an advanced computing company developing memory-centric AI infrastructure for large-scale inference, and SiPearl, the European fabless designer of high-performance energy-efficient CPUs for sovereign supercomputing, AI and data centers, have entered into a strategic partnership to develop a European rack‑scale AI compute platform dedicated to large‑scale AI inference in the cloud.

Philippe Notton, SiPearl’s CEO and Founder (left), Roger Espasa, CEO of Semidynamics (right). Credit: SiPearl

The two companies share a common goal: to offer a sovereign high‑performance energy‑efficient compute solution capable of supporting major European initiatives, both public and private, including AI Factory and Giga Factory programs. Semidynamics and SiPearl will coordinate their marketing and sales efforts to jointly pursue European procurement opportunities.

Their platform will bring together core European technologies. SiPearl’s Arm‑based CPU will provide general‑purpose compute, orchestration and data plane hosting, while Semidynamics’ RISC‑V‑based GPU/AI inference ASIC will act as the main acceleration engine for AI inference workloads and enable future performance scaling. The companies expect to offer a rack-scale system delivering the density expected from leading global AI platforms. The rack design will be based on Open Compute Project (OCP) standards, supporting interoperability and alignment with established cloud and data center infrastructure practices.

Europe’s technological sovereignty lies at the heart of this collaboration. With key compute components, including the CPU and accelerator, being developed in Europe, the platform helps to strengthen regional capability in the long term and reduces dependence on non‑European “full‑stack” ecosystems.

Energy efficiency has always been a key priority in design both for Semidynamics and for SiPearl. The platform will offer excellent performance‑per‑watt to help customers reduce their operating costs, meet sustainability requirements and lower total cost of ownership.

The architecture of the platform will be designed for high‑throughput, high‑reliability cloud deployments. It is therefore ideally suited to enterprise inference server clusters and modern AI services that require consistent, large‑scale processing power. Target applications include: AI inference in the cloud, notably the deployment of LLMs and retrieval‑augmented generation (RAG) pipelines; enterprise‑scale inference in areas such as customer service automation and industrial analytics; and sovereign public sector workloads where data control and autonomy are essential.

Under the cooperation, in a first iteration SiPearl will provide its Arm‑based CPU technology and platform support for host compute and orchestration, while Semidynamics will provide its RISC‑V‑based GPU/AI inference ASIC, accelerator enablement, and the design of the enclosure and rack solution that integrates both technologies. As a second step, further integrations at chiplets level will be disclosed. The companies will jointly manage the reference architecture, marketing materials, and coordinated tender responses.

“SiPearl is thrilled to see the impact of years of work in the European Processor Initiative and the EU sovereign ecosystem come to fruition with this platform. It demonstrates the systematic progress that Semidynamics and SiPearl have made individually and collectively and will showcase the best of both companies, CPU and accelerator,” said Philippe Notton, SiPearl’s CEO and Founder.

“We are delighted to work with SiPearl and to offer a European CPU as part of our AI inference platform. Combining SiPearl’s high-performance CPU with Semidynamics’ RISC-V-based GPU/AI inference technology gives Europe a credible path towards sovereign, rack-scale AI infrastructure built around European-controlled compute,” concluded Roger Espasa, Semidynamics’ CEO.

More from HPCwire: SiPearl Closes €130M Series A to Advance Sovereign European Supercomputing Processors

About SiPearl

SiPearl is the European fabless designer of secure high-performance energy-efficient CPUs for sovereign HPC, AI and data centres. These CPUs will help address strategic challenges in the fields of security, defence, medical research, energy, climate and engineering with a reduced environmental footprint.

Featuring 80 Arm Neoverse V1 cores with 61 billion transistors, SiPearl’s first-generation CPU, Rhea1, is currently being manufactured. SiPearl’s CPUs will equip Europe’s first two exascale supercomputers belonging to EuroHPC JU: Rhea1 will be integrated into the JUPITER machine based in Germany and Rhea2 will be part of Alice Recoque in France. Supported by the European Union and France, SiPearl employs 200 people in France, Spain, and Italy. Following a €130 million Series A, the company has launched its Series B round.

About Semidynamics

Headquartered in Barcelona, Semidynamics is an advanced computing company developing memorycentric AI infrastructure. With a team of more than 150 engineers and specialists, the company designs proprietary silicon architectures and vertically integrated systems optimized for large-scale AI inference workloads. Semidynamics serves a global ecosystem of partners and customers and operates in compliance with applicable export controls and international trade regulations.


Source: SiPearl

The post SiPearl and Semidynamics Partner to Develop EU-Sovereign Rack-Scale AI Compute Platform appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:15

British Medical Association says review into gender identity services was ‘robust’ after previously rejecting findings

The trade union representing doctors across the UK has dropped its opposition to the findings of the Cass review of gender identity services across the NHS.

The British Medical Association (BMA) had previously rejected the findings of the landmark review of transgender healthcare, with the medical body refusing to endorse the report’s findings.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 09:15

LONDON, May 7, 2026 — Quantum Motion, the leading company in silicon transistor-based quantum computing, today announced a $160 million Series C round to commercialise its scalable and energy-efficient approach to quantum computing. The round is co-led by DCVC and Kembara, with participation from new investors, the British Business Bank and Firgun, alongside existing investors. The financing positions Quantum Motion to deliver utility-scale and commercially viable quantum computers that fit inside existing standard data centres and racks.

Quantum Motion silicon chip mounted on a PCB

This financing round comes at a defining moment for the computing industry, as governments and industry invest heavily in next-generation HPC and AI systems that demand vast capital and infrastructure investments. Quantum is on course to become the next wave of computing to strain a power grid already being tested by AI data centres. In other approaches, a useful quantum computer is expected to demand infrastructure on an industrial scale, including multi-megawatt power consumption. Quantum Motion is built on the premise that this trajectory is neither inevitable nor affordable.

Quantum Motion’s silicon transistor-based approach – the same technology used in every smartphone and laptop chip manufactured today – enables delivering utility-scale systems with 100-fold reduction in cost and space requirements, and 1,000-fold reduction in energy consumption compared to alternatives. Its systems are designed for deployment into standard data-centre racks, avoiding the need for bespoke facilities and the heavy energy overhead associated with alternative architectures.

Since its last funding round in 2023, the company has expanded internationally, opening new offices and labs in Spain and Australia, and deepened its manufacturing partnership with GlobalFoundries, tying its roadmap directly into commercial semiconductor supply chains. In contrast to an industry that often competes on headline qubit counts and laboratory demonstrations, Quantum Motion has deliberately focused on industrial scalability, delivering the world’s first commercial deployment of a full-stack silicon CMOS quantum computer at the UK National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC) in 2025 and advancing to Stage B of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative.

“Today’s announcement reflects the strength of the team we have built and the progress they have delivered. Quantum computing will only achieve its full potential if it can be built on a platform that scales, and we believe silicon is the strongest route to achieving that,” said Dr. James Palles-Dimmock, CEO of Quantum Motion. “We are pleased to be joined by investors who share our vision and understand what it takes to build a foundational company in this field.”

Quantum Motion co-founders Dr. John Morton (CTO) and Dr. Simon Benjamin (CSO) said: “As founders we were inspired by the breathtaking accomplishments of silicon technology, with city-like complexity delivered on centimetre scale chips. Now, Quantum Motion’s chips can be used not only for bits but also for qubits, unlocking a future in which quantum computers are both fast and ubiquitous.”

“Quantum is critical infrastructure for the next century of computing, AI, and security, and leadership will go to whoever can industrialise it,” said Dr. Prineha Narang, Operating Partner at DCVC. “DCVC led this investment in Quantum Motion because silicon is the foundation that scales, and this team is building on the CMOS advantage to turn quantum from a demonstration into a commercial success story.”

Yann de Vries, Partner and co-founder of Kembara, said: “If you believe quantum computing is going to be world-changing, as we do, then the obvious next question is which of the many ways of building one will actually work at scale? This investment signals our strong belief in where the answer lies.”

“The race for a fully scalable quantum computer is one of the defining technological challenges of our time,” said Charlotte Lawrence, Managing Director of Direct Equity, British Business Bank. “Quantum Motion’s unique approach that combines cutting-edge quantum physics with established silicon manufacturing provides a distinct global edge. We are no longer just theorizing about quantum computing but are actively starting to build the platforms to deliver it here in the UK.”

Alongside the new investors DCVC, Kembara, British Business Bank and Firgun, the Series C round is joined by returning backers Oxford Science Enterprises, Inkef, Bosch Ventures, Porsche Automobil Holding SE and Parkwalk Advisors.

More from HPCwire: Quantum Motion Targets Quantum Computing ‘Transistor Moment’ with $160M Series C

About Quantum Motion

Quantum Motion is building utility-scale quantum computers using industry-standard silicon transistors. The proprietary architecture uses a scalable array of qubits, manufactured with the same silicon technology found in smartphones and computers. The result is the most scalable, cost-efficient and energy-efficient quantum computers, which also fit inside existing industry standard data centres. The company operates offices and labs in the UK, Spain and Australia. Learn more at www.quantummotion.com.


Source: Quantum Motion

The post Quantum Motion Secures $160M to Advance Silicon CMOS Quantum Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:12

Families pressured to stay silent, with at least 24 executions reportedly taking place since March amid internet blackout

Iran is carrying out near-daily executions of prisoners in secrecy and, in some cases, refusing to hand the bodies of the dead to their families, according to rights groups and sources close to the relatives of the dead.

Many families only learn of executions after they have been carried out, with some facing harassment and pressure not to speak publicly on the personal impact of the state killings, the sources say.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:09

America still needs to worry about proliferation in East Asia.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:01

Kids used to draw on their faces for fun. Now, they're doing it so they can play Roblox.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:01

The state says one chatbot even presented an invalid Pennsylvania medical license number.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:01

Rumors point to a biometric sensor that has nothing to do with health tracking. Here's everything we've heard about Apple's next smartwatch.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:01

As far as ultracompact Bluetooth speakers go, the $60 Stormbox Micro 3 measures up well to Bose's twice-as-expensive SoundLink Micro (2nd Gen) and earns CNET Editors' Choice honors.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:01

A batch of entertaining classics, including Tootsie, Pretty Woman and Ghostbusters, are now streaming on Netflix.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:00

PS5, Xbox, PC, Switch 2; Annapurna Interactive
The nostalgic antics of a trio of tenacious teens make for silly yet undeniably enjoyable gameplay, framed by a playlist of bona fide bangers

The older we get, the more we tend to romanticise our teenage years. As bills pile up, we yearn for the simple days of drinking cider in parks. We often tend to forget the bad parts: the frustrating lack of autonomy, the unrequited crushes and the doofuses you’re forced to tolerate in the playground. But after four hours spent hanging out with the pretentious teens in Mixtape, I felt pretty relieved to be in my 30s.

Set in a nondescript town in northern California, Mixtape follows the exploits of tenacious trio Rockford, Slater and Cassandra as they head to a legendary party on their last day of high school. With Rockford about to leave her friends to move to the big city, she wants to immortalise the gang’s time together in musical form. Every song on a carefully curated mixtape triggers a totally tubular flashback to one of their shared memories.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 09:00

Quashed studies, halted publications and canceled research threaten damage to public health, critics say

A series of high-profile and under-the-radar decisions by US health agencies have scientists and doctors questioning the extent of the agencies’ control over public communications – and they say the debate is obscuring the most important part, which is informing the public about key updates in science and medicine.

Studies on the safety of vaccines against shingles and Covid were reportedly quashed before publication by officials at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The news follows the hasty halt on publication of a study on the effectiveness of Covid boosters by the top acting official at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and research terminated or never approved in the first place because of keywords such as “hesitancy” and “misinformation” at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 09:00

SAN JOSE, Calif., May 7, 2026 — Rambus Inc. has announced the Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with Time Division Multiplexing (TDM), a new addition to its advanced interconnect IP portfolio designed to address the rapidly escalating bandwidth, latency, and scalability requirements of AI, cloud, and high-performance computing (HPC) systems.

Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with Time Division Multiplexing

As AI infrastructure grows in scale and architectural complexity, system designers are increasingly challenged to move massive volumes of data efficiently across CPUs, GPUs, accelerators, and NVMe storage. The Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM is architected to help meet these demands by enabling more flexible and efficient utilization of PCIe links, supporting emerging disaggregated and pooled compute architectures while maintaining low latency and deterministic performance.

Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM Optimized for Next-Generation AI and Data Center SoCs

Built on the PCIe 7.0 specification, the Rambus newest switch IP is optimized for next‑generation AI and data center SoCs that require extreme bandwidth density, advanced traffic management, and seamless scalability. By incorporating TDM capabilities, the switch enables designers to intelligently schedule and multiplex traffic across shared links, helping maximize fabric utilization while supporting diverse workload profiles, from large‑scale AI training to latency‑sensitive inference and data movement.

“The acceleration of AI is fundamentally reshaping system architectures, and it’s no longer sufficient to simply add more lanes or more endpoints,” said Simon Blake‑Wilson, senior vice president and general manager of Silicon IP at Rambus. “With our PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM, Rambus is giving system architects a new degree of freedom to scale bandwidth efficiently and deterministically, while reducing complexity and improving overall system utilization. This is a critical enabler for scale up and scale out of the next wave of advanced AI clusters and HPC networks.”

“AI infrastructure is increasingly defined by how efficiently data can move between heterogeneous compute and memory resources,” said Jeff Janukowicz, VP, Semiconductors and Enabling Technologies. “Advanced PCIe switching technologies that improve link utilization and enable flexible traffic orchestration will be key to building scalable, cost‑effective AI platforms as next‑generation interconnect technology evolves.”

Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM Expands Industry-Leading PCIe IP Portfolio

The Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM is designed to integrate seamlessly into leading-edge ASIC platforms and complements Rambus’ broader PCIe 7.0 IP portfolio, which includes controllers, retimers, and debug solutions. Together, these IP offerings help customers accelerate time‑to‑market while addressing the demanding performance, power, and reliability requirements of modern AI infrastructure.

The Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM reinforces the company’s long‑standing leadership in high‑speed interface IP and its commitment to delivering differentiated interconnect technologies that help customers solve the most challenging problems in AI, cloud, and HPC Infrastructure.

More Information

Learn more about the Rambus PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with TDM and Rambus’ industry-leading family of PCIe solutions here.

About Rambus Inc.

Rambus (NASDAQ: RMBS) delivers industry-leading chips and silicon IP for the data center and AI infrastructure. With over three decades of advanced semiconductor experience, our products and technologies address the critical bottlenecks between memory and processing to accelerate data-intensive workloads. By enabling greater bandwidth, efficiency and security across next generation computing platforms, we make data faster and safer.


Source: Rambus

The post Rambus Introduces PCIe 7.0 Switch IP with Time Division Multiplexing for Scalable AI and Data Center Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 09:00

SEOUL, May 7, 2026 — The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) President Oh Sang-rok announced that it participated in the SelectUSA Investment Summit 2026 as part of a Korean delegation, together with quantum technology startups supported by the Ministry of SMEs and Startups under the Deeptech Project (DIPS).

William Kimmitt, U.S. Deputy Secretary of Commerce, with the KIST Quantum Delegation

The initiative, supported by South Korea’s Ministry of SMEs and Startups (MSS), is part of the government’s “Deeptech Incubator Project for Startups” (DIPS) initiative, which aims to nurture globally competitive deep-tech ventures.

KIST, which serves as the lead institution for the quantum technology sector under the program, said it will oversee the global commercialization efforts of participating firms. In particular, the “Global Bridge Program,” jointly developed with the U.S. Embassy in Korea in September 2025, is an official program designed to generate tangible overseas expansion outcomes by linking investment attraction with local market entry through diplomatic channels.

Organized by the U.S. Department of Commerce, the SelectUSA Investment Summit is the largest investment promotion event in the US, connecting international startups with venture capital firms, corporate investors and state-level economic development agencies. It serves as an execution-oriented platform that extends to investment, corporate establishment, site selection, and tax incentives, and is considered a key entry gateway for deep-tech companies, including those in quantum technology. KIST said participation in the summit is particularly significant for deep-tech sectors such as quantum technology, where access to the US innovation ecosystem is seen as key to growth.

The program is conducted in two stages. From April 30 to May 1, companies took part in a spin-off program hosted by the State of Maryland, which included visits to research institutions and tours of the regional quantum technology ecosystem. During this period, the delegation also conducted localized activities with the Maryland state government and its economic development agencies, focusing on investment attraction, corporate collaboration, and joint R&D. In addition, on May 5, the delegation held discussions with U.S. Department of Commerce Deputy Secretary William Kimmitt on potential areas of cooperation.

The delegation also met with officials from Fairfax County Government to explore collaboration and investment opportunities.

The main summit, from May 3 to May 6, featured exhibitions, pitching sessions and meetings with US state representatives, with participating firms expected to engage in discussions on investment and market entry.

The delegation is structured to encompass the entire quantum industry rather than a single technology domain.

The Korean delegation comprises five startups, alongside Kyung Hee University Department of Future Science & Technology Commercialization Policy and Entrepreneurship, with approximately 20 participants forming an integrated ecosystem that combines research institutes, academia, and startups, enabling a full-cycle support system from technology validation to commercialization and global expansion.

One of the firms, OptiQ-Labs, was selected for an official pitching session on May 4, where it presented its laser-based optical modules designed for ion-trap quantum computing systems.

This highly competitive program selects only around 100 companies from more than 20,000 applicants worldwide. If selected as the winner of the pitching session, the company will receive follow-up meetings with U.S. state governments and economic development agencies, access to global investor networks, support for local entity establishment, and connections to site selection and tax incentive programs.

Other participating companies include QUAD, which develops single-photon detection technology; SLEEX, focused on underwater sensing; Elixir (StatUp AI), which works on quantum-classical hybrid algorithms for healthcare; and SQK (QMEDIC), specializing in physics-based imaging solutions.

KIST Project Director, Kang Sunjoon, said, “This program represents a critical milestone for Korean quantum startups to directly connect with global investors and industry ecosystems. Via the DIPS program, we are actively promoting the global commercialization of quantum technologies.”

Through its participation in SelectUSA, KIST has established a package-type global expansion model that integrates technology validation, investment attraction, and U.S. market entry. The summit serves as a turning point for South Korea’s quantum sector, enabling startups to move into the next phase of validation, investment, and overseas expansion.

For more information, visit https://eng.kist.re.kr.

About KIST

KIST was established in 1966 as the first government-funded research institute in South Korea. KIST now strives to solve national and social challenges and secure growth engines through leading and innovative research.

About Participating Quantum Startups

QUAD, led by Chief Executive Officer, Oh Byung-doo, develops quantum sensing technologies based on superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs), offering high sensitivity and precision with applications spanning quantum communication, quantum computing, semiconductor inspection, and defense.

SLEEX is developing an advanced perception technology that combines quantum LiDAR and electric field sensing to overcome limitations of existing underwater sensors, particularly by eliminating blind zones within the 0–2 meter range, with strong potential in autonomous navigation, maritime security, and defense, with Lee Jeho at the helm as Chief Executive Officer.

Elixir, headed by Chief Executive Officer Jang Jung-kwon, develops a drug discovery and biomarker analysis platform based on quantum-classical hybrid algorithms, targeting the precision medicine market through the integration of bioinformatics and quantum machine learning.

SQK develops medical imaging AI based on quantum-physics constraints, addressing the hallucination issues of conventional AI by ensuring physical consistency in CT and MRI reconstruction. Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Kim Yoon-hak, SQK is improving reliability and reducing the need for re-scans in clinical settings.


Source: KIST

The post KIST Showcases Korean Quantum Startups at US Investment Summit appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 08:53
  • 34-year-old heads elite field of men and women

  • American takes small naps during 56-hour run

Rachel Entrekin has made history by beating a field of elite men and women to win the Cocodona 250 ultramarathon.

Entrekin had won the women’s race on two occasions but on Wednesday she headed the entire field, winning in a record time of 56 hours 9 minutes and 48 seconds.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 08:14

Court in Hanover says man entitled to payout after he and his family had to lie on concrete

A German holidaymaker has won a payout of almost €1,000 after being unable to find a sunlounger for himself and his family because other guests had got there first.

The man, whose identity is not known, holidayed on the island of Kos, in Greece, with his family in 2024. He said that, despite waking up at the crack of dawn every morning to carry out a 20-minute search, he had not been able to lay claim to a lounger.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 11:52

Tory leader tells Sun that there won’t be council tie-ups as Farage’s party is not ‘serious’ as votes under way in England, Wales and Scotland

And here is the eve-of-poll statement that Rhun ap Iorwerth, the Plaid Cymru leader, issued yesterday.

Service is a value which has always sustained Wales. It’s a value instilled in me from a young age by my parents, both teachers. It’s a value I’ve sought to pass on to my children - the gift of giving back to the people and places who gave us so much.

Tomorrow is a chance for the people of Wales to choose who serves our nation for the next four years. It’s Plaid Cymru’s deep sense of service to Wales - focusing just on our needs and our future - that first drew me to politics.

Today is Scotland’s opportunity to choose a better future by voting SNP for real action on the cost of living, to lock Nigel Farage out of power, and to secure a fresh start with independence.

I urge people in every part of Scotland to unite behind the SNP to make it happen.

The SNP is the only party that has set out a positive vision for Scotland’s future - and we are the only party with a serious plan to support people with the cost of living.

We have set out our plans to bring down food costs, give families more support with the cost of childcare, lower the cost of your daily commute and provide more support for first time buyers.

The SNP wants to lower your bills – but all the other parties want to do is stop us.

They have no plan of their own and nothing to offer. They want you to vote for an opposition to stop things happening. I am asking people to vote for an SNP Government to get things done.

By casting both votes for the SNP, Scotland can elect a strong majority SNP government that will always stand up for Scotland, prioritise the cost of living, and deliver that fresh start of independence that Scotland needs.

That opportunity of a better future is now within touching distance. Let’s make it happen today by voting SNP.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 12:26

Congressional Democrats are investigating clemency recipients who may have obtained favorable treatment from Trump or his advisers "through intermediaries, financial contributions, or other forms of influence."

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 10:26

Americans on tight budgets are getting hit especially hard by surging fuel costs, forcing some to make hard choices.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 08:00

Students and faculty have also protested against surveillance cameras on campus and handling of racist posts by a student

Atlanta’s Emory University is facing a lawsuit from three tenured professors over its handling of 2024 protests against Israel’s assault on Gaza, capping off a tumultuous end to the spring semester.

In recent months faculty and students have also demanded the removal of Flock surveillance cameras on campus, and Black law school students and others protested the school’s response to a student’s social media posts and emails that were filled with the N-word.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 08:00

Commentary: I'm 38 now, and my tolerance for annoying tech is getting slimmer by the day.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 08:00

These are the tips and tricks I use as a pro photographer to take aurora photos with my phone or camera.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 08:00

US war with Iran drives diesel fuel prices up during spring planting season, ‘hitting us at the wrong time’, farmers say

It has been a tough few years for American farmers.

Squeezed last year by tariffs, they lost an estimated $34.6bn when former trade partners stopped buying. Now, the war with Iran has not only depleted crucial fertilizer stores but has also driven diesel fuel up to record prices. Like the trucking industry, agriculture relies heavily on diesel to run machinery, as diesel-powered engines are more fuel efficient than gasoline-powered ones.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:54

A woman in her 40s was participating in the grueling race and collapsed at a trailhead, officials said.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:52

State can meet fuel demand for next six weeks with its current supply, its energy commission vice-chair said. Plus, alleged Jeffrey Epstein suicide note unsealed by federal judge

Good morning.

Gas prices have risen above $6 in California – but there is yet more uncertainty on the horizon after the last oil tanker from the Middle East arrived in the state this week.

What do we know about progress on a deal? Axios reported on Wednesday that Washington and Tehran were close to agreeing on a memorandum of understanding to end the war. Officials in Pakistan told the Guardian that an initial framework could possibly be agreed within 48 hours – but that nothing was certain and talks remained “difficult”.

Head to our liveblog for the latest.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:46

About 120 journalists and broadcast staff expected to protest about pay freeze as STV invests in new radio station

Coverage of Scotland’s election counts by STV, the commercial broadcaster, is expected to be heavily hit by strike action in an escalating dispute over pay.

The National Union of Journalists and the technical union Bectu have targeted STV’s election reporting for their second strike this year in protest at its decision to impose a company-wide pay freeze after a significant fall in revenues.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:40

Governor asks people to ‘pray for Mississippi’ while National Weather Service reported ‘very large and dangerous tornado’

Powerful storms that included at least one confirmed tornado tore through parts of Mississippi, collapsing hundreds of homes, tearing up trees and downing power lines, authorities said Thursday.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or severe injuries from the storms that struck several counties Wednesday night.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:39

Organisers of nationwide protest say its aim is to stop the government turning young Germans into ‘cannon fodder’

Tens of thousands of pupils across Germany are expected to boycott the classroom and take to the streets in a nationwide protest organisers say is to stop the government’s rearmament policy turning young people into “cannon fodder”.

Despite threats from teachers’ associations and education ministries, which have said anyone who demonstrates during school hours could risk penalties and even expulsion, organisers say they expect the number of participants at Friday’s school strike to be at least as high as the estimated 50,000 who attended each of the first two.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 07:30

Windfall profits could lock in Trump-era political wins for the industry and slow clean-energy transition

The billions in profits big oil is reaping due to the Iran war may stymie the energy transition, experts and advocates fear, incentivizing oil and gas expansion and boosting the sector’s funds for political lobbying.

“Windfall profits from Trump’s war will allow big oil to build a wall of money around its Trump-era political victories,” said Lukas Shankar-Ross, a deputy director at the green group Friends of the Earth.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 07:30

Europeans must urgently seek to close their security gaps in case Russia attacks – and the US refuses to defend its allies

Donald Trump’s war in Iran and tirades against Nato allies are accelerating moves to develop a plan B for European security in case the US is no longer willing to help defend allies against a Russian attack. Europe must prepare for sudden vulnerability gaps if the fickle US president decides to pull out key military enablers before Europeans can develop their own alternatives.

European countries have already taken over financial and political responsibility for supporting Ukraine in its struggle against Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression, as Trump has increasingly sided with Moscow in trying to force Kyiv to hand over swathes of territory to Russia. After four years of war in Europe, most leaders have come to recognise Ukraine as a military and technological asset for European defence rather than a burden or a risk factor.

Paul Taylor is a senior visiting fellow at the European Policy Centre

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.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:16

Jason Atherton, who has restaurants in Dubai, St Moritz and now Tuscany, says it’s tough to stay afloat in UK hospitality industry

A British Michelin-starred chef says he is opening restaurants abroad to subsidise his UK venues against a backdrop of high taxes and a struggling hospitality sector.

Jason Atherton is now in Forte dei Marmi, on the Tuscan coast in Italy, where he is preparing his newest opening, Maria’s, which will be in the Principessa hotel. The Sheffield-born chef now has restaurants all over the world, including in Dubai and St Moritz.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 07:12

Ryanair says that unlike others it will not be cancelling summer flights, as it hedged fuel contracts before Iran war

Airlines that cancel flights because of fuel shortages this summer will still have to compensate passengers under European law, the EU transport commissioner has said.

Apostolos Tzitzikostas told the Financial Times that jet fuel prices or shortages do not meet the criteria that protect EU airlines from passenger claims.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:05

At least three households in Barry, south Wales, identified as having contracted the liver infection

Health authorities have asked parents and carers to be “vigilant with their children’s hand-washing” after a hepatitis A outbreak in Barry, south Wales.

Public Health Wales said at least three households in the seaside town had been identified as having contracted the same liver infection, and there were worries it was spreading locally.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:05

Tense relations soured further after Ukraine accused Israel of buying grain harvested by Russia in occupied territory. Meanwhile, Russia and Iran have grown closer.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:00

This information was used to understand the problems Americans face. The consequences of its erasure, experts warn, could affect generations to come

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:00

Group has banded together to rescue data as Trump administration has removed or altered data on climate change, reproductive health, LGBTQ people and more

André spent 2025 trying to stay one step ahead of the Trump administration.

Every morning, he woke up and download as many government datasets as he could before they were deleted. He continued throughout the afternoon, and sometimes through the night, if a notification from his group chat popped up on his phone saying that a new webpage had been taken down.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 07:00

NewtonsLaw writes: According to Realtor.com, a California startup called Span plans to partner with Nvidia, PulteGroup, and other homebuilders to equip new homes with mini-data centers, so as to relieve the need to build and power much larger traditional centers. The article states the company "can install 8,000 XFRA units about six times faster and at five times lower cost than the construction of a typical centralized 100 megawatt data center of the same size." Could this be the solution to at least some of the problems hindering the rollout of greater data-center capacity for AI systems? "One big reason the XFRA model works is that the average American home only uses about 40 percent of its electrical capacity," Span said. "As big data center developers struggle to find power sources and distribution capacity, XFRA uses capacity that's already available." The startup says they will launch a 100-home proof of concept within the year to see if the idea is viable.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:50

The Mulchatna caribou herd is expected to begin calving soon, and the babies are particularly susceptible to being eaten by bears or wolves.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:43

Report using research from senior Blair and Clinton pollster comes as Labour braces for dismal election results

Progressive voters have been driven away from Labour by a lack of argument and vision from Keir Starmer, according to a report using research from a senior pollster to Tony Blair and Bill Clinton.

Downing Street is understood to have been briefed on the research, which has also been handed to allies of the potential leadership candidates Andy Burnham, Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:36

CEO of Danish shipping group says increased costs due to higher fuel bills passed on to customers

The boss of the shipping company Maersk has said the reopening of the strait of Hormuz would have a “limited impact” on cargo flows, as the industry grapples with a sharp rise in energy costs.

Vincent Clerc, the chief executive of the Danish shipping group, said its fuel bill had nearly doubled since the start of the conflict, adding as much as $500m (£367m) in costs per month, but it had passed this on to its customers through higher freight rates.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:35

I tested the current crop of compact cameras for travel, wildlife, underwater, better-than-your-phone shots and more.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:22

Ministers to mandate use of tools that record individuals’ cumulative exposure to harrowing incidents

Policing in England and Wales faces a reckoning over the levels of trauma experienced by officers and staff as “trauma tracker” tools are to be mandated by ministers to ensure the psychological toll caused by exposure to death, abuse and neglect is recorded.

A Home Office white paper published in January outlined a legislative push to make trauma monitoring systems mandatory across all 43 forces in England and Wales.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:22

Suspect accused of enrolling under false identity before arrest, in case echoing similar US incidents

A 28-year-old woman pretended to be age 16 and enrolled at a Bronx high school under a false identity before New York City police jailed her recently, according to officials.

Kacy Claassen pleaded not guilty to charges of criminal impersonation in the second degree as well as trespassing on 28 April, the day after her arrest, Bronx court records show.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:08

Since his second term started, President Trump has introduced a flurry of initiatives aimed at taming the excesses of the pharmaceutical industry.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 06:04

The acting attorney general is touting the administration's stepped-up denaturalization efforts.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:00

Powerful radar system is providing new data on city’s subsidence, which experts hope will draw more attention to it

Walking into Mexico City’s sprawling central Zócalo is a dizzying experience. At one end of the plaza, the capital’s cathedral, with its soaring spires, slumps in one direction. An attached church, known as the Metropolitan Sanctuary, tilts in the other. The nearby National Palace also seems off-kilter.

The teetering of many of the capital’s historic buildings is the most visible sign of a phenomenon that has been ongoing for more than a century: Mexico City is sinking at an alarming rate.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:00

Apple introduced the Alarm slider in November alongside iOS 26.1, but you can bring the Stop button back.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:00

The company says it's a limited test on a small set of users who frequently browse the site without logging in. There may be ways around it.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 06:00

At least a dozen states have proposed or adopted policies to curb screen time, such as time limits and allowing families to opt out of virtual instruction.

2026-05-07 12:04
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Why Should Delaware Care? 
With revenues decreasing and expenses rising, the city of Dover faces a multi-million-dollar budget shortfall heading into the next fiscal year. While city staff is sounding the alarm about dipping into the city’s savings as a way to close the gap, elected officials are divided as to whether they favor using the leftover funds, or levying a tax increase on residents.

Dover employees and elected officials are throwing a smattering of solutions at the wall, as the city seeks to close a $7 million shortfall in its budget for the 2027 fiscal year. 

But city officials are divided on whether a tax or electric fee increase will be necessary to make the finances work this year, and what Delaware’s capital city can do in the long term to make its budget more sustainable. 

The city has already proposed a number of cuts to departmental budgets, such as a hiring freeze, a postponement of new vehicle and equipment purchases, and a pause on capital improvement projects like repaving roads. 

These departmental cuts brought an initial $13 million budget gap down to $7 million, and city staff are still searching for additional ways to bring down the budget without taking away any of the services residents expect, like snow removal and trash pick up, acting city manager Sharon Duca said. 

Still, the city council will be forced to decide over the next month between dipping into the $10 million currently in budget reserves or raising taxes to resolve the rest of the deficit. 

Duca told Spotlight Delaware she and other city staff are warning city council against using the budget balance, as they have done in recent years to square the city’s finances, because the city needs some money in its reserves for costs that come up throughout the year. 

But city council members appear to be split as to whether they would rather use some of the budget reserves or levy higher taxes as a solution to the financial woes, saying they will need to come to an agreement as a group before the early June deadline. 

“I’m waiting to see what the figures are that [city staff are] going to bring down to us,” City Council President Fred Neil said. “How much would it cost on each penny if we have to raise the property tax? If we have to raise the electric rate?”

It remains unclear how much of the current $7 million shortfall the city would need to draw from either reserves or increased taxes, as city staff are still finalizing departmental budgets ahead of the May 12 deadline for them to provide a drafted budget to city council, Duca said. 

It is clear, though, that the city has faced substantial budget shortfalls in each of the past several years, and “we can’t continue on the path we have been,” she said.  

Council members have thrown around a number of ideas for how to remedy the gap between Dover’s revenue and expenses in the long term: building more homes to increase the property tax base, making nonprofit organizations pay for city-provided trash services, or hiring a grant writer to bring in more funds. 

But no one appears to have a concrete solution. 

‘You’re just kicking the can down the road’

A review of Dover’s preliminary fiscal year 2027 budget, which was presented to the city council finance committee in late April, shows relatively stagnant property tax revenue, and more substantial drops in revenue from both properties sold by the city to other entities and a citywide lodging tax

The document indicates that city revenues are projected to drop by 2.6%, or roughly $1.1 million, from last fiscal year. But Duca said city staff has been “further reviewing and analyzing” city revenues over the past several weeks and has now brought them to a “positive position.”

The draft budget outlines roughly $6 million in cuts to different departments’ budgets through a combination of removing unfilled positions and cutting down on travel and other technological or equipment upgrades. 

Duca said trimming the budget in these areas is necessary this year, but challenging because capital improvement upgrades to fire vehicles, roads and the sewer system will soon become dire, and costs for those improvements will only go up in future years.

“You’re just kicking the can down the road,” she said. “It becomes more of a backlog of issues that you have.” 

Notably, the only city department in the draft budget slated to receive a sizable increase in funds and add more positions is the police department. 

The draft lists an overall 8% increase in the police department budget, up from $25.7 million last year to $27.7 this year. The draft also calls for two new full-time positions — a total of 147 employees, including non-sworn officers. 

The Dover Police Department has been the subject of controversy over the past year. Last summer, the local police union publicly sought to remove Police Chief Thomas Johnson from his position. There also is an ongoing investigation into Mayor Robin Christiansen allegedly telling the union to attack city council members who criticized the police department. 

A spokesperson for the police department said it originally requested a personnel increase last fall to address inadequately high workloads among officers, before the department was aware of the city’s strained financial situation. 

Since then, the spokesperson said, the department has worked with city staff to pare back some other requests, like replacing uniforms and promoting more officers to supervisorial roles. 

“It’s really easy to stand up and say, ‘Hey, we need more cops. We need this. We need that,’” Mark Hoffman, the spokesperson, told Spotlight Delaware. “But at the end of the day, that comes with a price tag.” 

The budget balance — or the leftover dollars in the city’s general fund from previous years — currently sits at $10.2 million. However, Duca said, this balance has decreased by about $2 million each of the past two years, as city council members have opted to use those funds to balance the budget. 

The city charter requires the government to retain at least 8% of its total budget in the bank annually to cover costs that arise throughout the year before collecting any property taxes. 

In order to meet that threshold this year, the city would need to keep about $4.7 million in the bank. This would leave about $5.5 million that could be put toward closing the $7 million budget shortfall.

Acting Dover City Manager Sharon Duca has advised the council to tread carefully when considering whether to further dip into reserves to close a budget deficit. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

But Duca said she does not think simply pulling the maximum amount from the city’s extra funds is a sustainable solution to its budget stresses. 

“The warning signs are there,” she said. “We can’t continue on the path we’re on.”

City council responds

City council will be forced to make a decision within the next month about using last year’s budget balance or raising either property taxes or the city electric use fee in order to approve the budget. 

At the moment, however, council members appear reluctant to admit that a tax increase of some sort could be necessary. 

Two historically vocal council members, Brian Lewis and Roy Sudler Jr., told Spotlight Delaware they refuse to vote for a tax increase. Both councilmen want to look at any other possible avenues — including pulling money from the city’s Economic Development Fund or defunding the Dover Police Academy — in order to close the gap. 

“If the residents get a tax increase or [higher] electric fees, they’re going to go ballistic,” Lewis said. 

The city most recently passed a property tax rate and electric fee rate increase in Fiscal Year 2025, and a water bill rate fee increase at the start of this fiscal year, Duca said. 

Get Involved

The Dover City Council will hold public budget review meetings from May 19-21. The time and location of those meetings has not yet been determined. Council members will then formally introduce their proposed budget on June 8. They will vote on the proposal on June 22.

She said city staff are preparing example property tax, water and electricity bills to present to city council at the upcoming budget workshops in mid-May, so that they understand what the potential tax and rate increases would mean for citizens’ expenses. 

Neil, the council president, said he needs to “wait and see these figures” in order to determine the direction the council should go. 

Council Members Julia Pillsbury, David Anderson, Andre Boggerty and Tricia Arndt were similarly vague when asked by Spotlight Delaware whether they believe council should use the budget balance or levy a tax increase to balance the budget. 

“I don’t have specific thoughts on it right now, but I think as we work through the budget hearings and the discussions and listen to staff recommendations, we can get to where we need to be,” Arndt said. 

Council members Donyalle Hall and Gerald Rocha did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment. 

The council members agreed, however, that the options being considered this year are merely stop-gap measures, not permanent solutions to the city’s budget challenges. 

Their ideas about how the city can make long-term improvements range from relying on the success of the Downtown Dover Partnership in bringing in more business and residents, to starting budget planning earlier in the year, and taxing nonprofit organizations located within city limits. 

“The truth is, we’re just going to have to be a more attractive city for individuals to come do business in,” Boggerty said. 


Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.

The post Dover faces $7M budget shortfall, leaders mull tax increase appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 06:00

As communities push for publicly owned electricity, private utilities may be deploying dark money and local front groups to stop them

The utility industry is quietly dispatching a network of front groups to thwart the growing push for public power across the US – a push that comes amid mounting frustration over sky-high utility bills, electric outages, a slow transition to clean energy and private utilities’ soaring profits.

Communities from Ann Arbor, Michigan, to San Diego, California, and St Petersburg, Florida, are exploring municipalizing their grids to join the country’s approximately 2,000 public power companies.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-07 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
In 2024, Delaware passed a law to expunge low-level criminal records, removing a barrier that can keep people from accessing jobs, housing and education. The law was expected to clear nearly 600,000 records, but disagreements among state officials over which records qualify have delayed the process. Until that is resolved, thousands of Delawareans may continue to carry records that could block them from advancing in society.

Rebecka Ash is days away from finishing her bachelor’s degree in social work. Soon after, she will begin an accelerated master’s program.

But as she advances through her education – which comes after a period in which she spent in prison on drug charges – Ash said records that should have been expunged are still showing up on background checks and blocking her from internship opportunities and scholarships for school.

“I take full responsibility for what I did,” Ash said. “But I don’t know what else to do to show people that I’m trying to better myself.”

Her experience reflects a larger issue unfolding across the state. For thousands of Delawareans, a law meant to automatically clear low-level criminal records has yet to deliver as promised, with delays tied to state police processing that is slowing its rollout.

Kent County resident Rebecca Ash. | PHOTO COURTESY OF REBECCA ASH

Employers, landlords and educational institutions often use background checks to screen applicants, which can prevent people with minor charges, such as shoplifting or possession of drug paraphernalia, from accessing housing, jobs and education. 

In 2021, Delaware passed the Clean Slate Act, which promised to automatically expunge certain misdemeanors, as well as charges that had been dismissed and certain other criminal records.

State officials had three years to set up the automated expungement process before the law went into effect in August 2024. But nearly two years later, that has not happened, and of the 594,000 cases expected to be expunged, Delaware has cleared just over 25,000. 

Asked about the issue during a WHYY radio interview last week, Gov. Matt Meyer called the delay “reprehensible.” Other officials, such as his director of research, Matt Rosen, placed part of the blame on Meyer’s predecessor, John Carney, who was governor when the law was enacted. 

Carney’s office did not respond Tuesday to a request to comment for this story. 

‘Not in full alignment’

Currently, state officials are in disagreement about the number of cases that should be cleared under the new law.

Rosen described the situation as officials being “not in full alignment yet.”  

When the bill was passed in 2021, the Delaware Criminal Justice Information System (DELJIS) identified more than 290,000 adults with nearly 600,000 cases eligible for expungement.

But officials from the State Bureau of Identification, which is under Delaware State Police, say they believe the estimated caseload is inaccurate. 

The State Bureau of Identification is an office within the Delaware State Police.

In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, SBI spokesman Lt. Tyler Wright said agency officials found records within the DELJIS list of expungable cases “that were not eligible.” 

As a result, SBI officials began to manually evaluate each record up for expungement – a process that has resulted in delays. 

“SBI will continue to evaluate each record for accuracy, and we are working with all parties involved to create a more efficient process that minimizes errors and enables swifter review and expungement of records,” Wright said. 

Dominic Carretto, executive director of DELJIS, said that differences in determining which cases are eligible for expungement “are not unexpected in a multi-agency environment.” 

Those differences do not indicate limitations of the underlying system, he said, but instead may “reflect variations in how eligibility is interpreted or how individual records are reviewed.”

A national movement 

In recent years, a national movement has grown to encourage states to pass legislation ​​that “automates record sealing for people with eligible records,” according to the Clean Slate Initiative. 

Delaware was the fifth state to adopt a Clean Slate law when it passed its act in 2021. 

Today, a total of 13 states and Washington D.C. have passed similar legislation.

But recently Delaware’s law has been under fire from criminal justice advocates, who say the process is not meeting standards. 

“We are coming up on two years since the implementation of the Clean Slate Act, and thousands of Delawareans are still waiting on their second chance,” said Kailyn Richards, associate director of Tide Shift Justice Project, a local advocacy organization. 

Tide Shift and other advocacy groups have contrasted Delaware’s lack of progress to Pennsylvania, which expunged over 34 million cases during the first year of implementation of its similar Clean Slate Act

If SBI continues at its current review rate, it could take Delaware over 20 years to get through the backlog of potentially eligible expungements.

Before the Clean Slate Act passed, cases resolved in favor of a defendant, along with some low-level convictions, could be removed from a person’s record if they met certain criteria. But individuals had to go through a two-step application process and pay fees that start at $75.

Individuals are still able to use this process despite the Clean Slate Act being enacted, though some advocates stress that not everyone can afford the fees.

Rosen and Wright have not given a timeline about when the Clean Slate Act will begin to work to its full capacity.  

Ash, the student studying social work, said she began the manual expungement process in 2023, paying out of pocket to clear some charges, while others were supposed to be automatically removed under the Clean Slate Act. Years later, she’s still waiting, she said. 

As she has begun working in the social work field, the Kent County resident has seen other people who are also trying to navigate the expungement process. 

“I have charges, just like a lot of my clients do, and if I’m having a hard time navigating from a place of privilege … then it’s impossible for me to help them get through it too,” she said. 

The post Delaware’s Clean Slate law delayed, leaving thousands with low-level records appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-07 05:39

Powerful property and farming firm Grosvenor Group says knock-on effect of Iran war could arrive next year

Fertiliser shortages caused by the Iran war have driven up costs for UK farmers by up to 70% and will have a “dramatic” impact on food prices globally next year, according to one of Britain’s most powerful property and farming companies.

Mark Preston, executive trustee of the 349-year-old Grosvenor Group, controlled by the Duke of Westminster, said fertiliser “was already quite expensive” before the 50% to 70% surge in prices since the start of the Iran war in late February.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 05:00

In an exclusive interview from prison, Sadia Moalim Ali, a 27-year-old rickshaw driver, tells of her treatment after being arrested for demonstrating against the government

A woman being held in prison in Somalia for taking part in peaceful protests has described how she was tortured by her guards.

Sadia Moalim Ali, 27, told the Guardian she was stripped naked by two male guards in a room monitored by CCTV, kicked, beaten with a baton and left for two days in a small cell without food.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 05:00

World is approaching point where no one can shut down a rogue AI, says director of body behind research

It’s the stuff of science fiction cinema, or particularly breathless AI company blogposts: new research finds recent AI systems can independently copy themselves on to other computers.

In the doom scenario, this means that when the superintelligent AI goes rogue, it will escape shutdown by seeding itself across the world wide web, lurking outside the reach of frantic IT professionals and continuing to plot world domination or paving over the world with solar panels.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 05:00

The Philadelphia Eagles selected the Nigerian defensive lineman before he had even played a down of football. More teams should take risks on global talent

Uar Bernard has become a source of borderline indecent fascination in the NFL – the kind of prospect who underscores how athletes are identified and the inherent limits of pro football scouting itself. A swole 6ft 4in and 306lbs, Uar (pronounced OO-ar) Bernard doesn’t just look the part of a fearsome defensive lineman; fans post his shirtless photos next to ones of Myles Garrett, the game-wrecking Cleveland Browns pass rusher who set the regular-season sack record last year. Veteran NFL analyst Lance Zierlein described Bernard as “one of the rarest of physical specimens I’ve seen in the sport”. Other people who have spent their lifetimes in football say Bernard looks like a Marvel creation.

George Whitfield – who has been a private coach to pros such as Andrew Luck and Cam Newton – likened Bernard to the NBA’s 7ft 4in Victor Wembanyama, another sports star whose physical traits seem alien even among other professional athletes. Bernard’s testing numbers bordered on otherworldly: a 4.63-second 40-yard dash, a 39-inch vertical, the 10ft 10in broad jump – or 14in farther than the next-best defensive end prospect. Scouts were awestruck by Bernard’s 6% body fat – which would be considered low for a marathon runner – down from the 11% that he started with at the beginning of his draft training four months earlier.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 05:00

The new TrumpRx program relies partly on connecting consumers with discount coupons offered by drugmakers. For insured patients, though, using a coupon can prove dicey.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 05:00

President Donald Trump wants a lavish welcome in Beijing for a summit with Xi Jinping next week. But the specter of the war in Iran looms large.

2026-05-08 20:04
2026-05-07 05:00

A close-up video still in which a 1-year-old girl with red, puffy eyes looks at the camera while her mother kisses her on the cheek.
obtained by ProPublica from the Illinois Accountability Commission

The children were walking to school in Broadview, Illinois, or leaving a shopping center in Columbus, Ohio. They were at home in Minneapolis, or sitting in a stroller in Chicago, or at an afternoon protest in Portland, Oregon, alongside dogs on leashes and older people pushing walkers.

They were mostly going about their days when federal immigration agents shot tear gas or fired pepper spray near their homes and schools and into their family cars.

The chemicals blew through the air, sometimes for blocks. They seeped into bedrooms, forcing an asthmatic teen to gasp for air. They stuck to the skin of a young girl, who cried, “It burns!” They caused an infant to stop breathing.

ProPublica identified 79 children across the country who have been harmed by tear gas or pepper spray as immigration officers dramatically stepped up their use during President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

The Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly defended its use of the chemicals, asserting its agents aren’t to blame. The fault, a spokesperson said, lies with “agitators” in the crowds and parents who put their children in harm’s way.

But videos reveal the way agents use these weapons. One captures them releasing tear gas into a crowd with at least seven kids just before someone yells, “There’s children here.” Another shows them hurling tear gas canisters at protesters without apparent provocation; then, with the streets already flooded with white smoke, a Customs and Border Protection agent wearing a body camera shoots pepper balls before muttering, “Fuck yeah,” and shouting, “Woo!”

A CBP officer cheers after other agents threw tear gas canisters and shot pepper balls at protesters outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois. Obtained by ProPublica

A third shows what happened after an officer fired pepper spray through the driver’s side window of a family’s car, hitting a 1-year-old girl in the back seat; a bystander filmed her in tears, and her family later said she was struggling to breathe. A DHS spokesperson called the incident “a disgusting pepper spray hoax.” But a local pastor who was at the scene rebuked the claim, testifying at an Illinois state accountability commission that “there’s literally video evidence.”

Such scenes of billowing gas and tear-stained faces have prompted some historians to liken the scope and intensity of the agents’ deployment of chemical munitions to brutal crackdowns by Southern law enforcement during the Civil Rights Movement.

And the legality of their use has been challenged. In cities across the country, judges have excoriated both Immigration and Customs Enforcement and CBP, saying their officers used excessive force. One judge said the agents showed “deliberate indifference” to the risks, including to children. They ordered officers to limit the use of these weapons in areas that were the focus of lawsuits. But they had no power to curb the practice nationwide — and kids in other communities, ProPublica found, continued to get hurt.

The controversy over the chemicals has highlighted a lack of consistency in their use: No national standard governs the use of tear gas and pepper spray by law enforcement, and agency policies differ widely. As a result, agents working for DHS could more freely use tear gas in targeted cities like Minneapolis and Portland, where local police policies are stricter.

A Portland officer said in a court declaration that he and several colleagues were tear-gassed by federal agents while observing and patrolling a protest he deemed to be mostly peaceful. At another event, in which he served as incident commander, he said the agents’ use of tear gas was “excessive and disproportionate to the threat posed” and “affected hundreds of peaceful protesters.”

These weapons are toxic, especially to children, who breathe more rapidly, pulling in more contaminated air than adults relative to their body weight. That principle is why coal miners once brought canaries underground, as one emergency medicine doctor explained in a recent court declaration. Because of the birds’ quick breaths and small size, they would stop singing or die when the chemicals started affecting them, giving the miners time to escape. Children are also vulnerable because they have narrower airways and stand closer to the ground, where tear gas tends to pool.

The Trump administration’s use of tear gas has been so extreme — with some children exposed multiple times — that the only research ProPublica found that might approximate the impact is a 2018 survey of Palestinian refugees in the West Bank subjected to the chemicals by Israeli security forces. Kids reported rashes and chronic tonsillitis, but no one knows the extent of the long-term consequences.

ProPublica’s tally of kids harmed by tear gas or pepper spray is nearly four times the number cited in a recent congressional report that relied on news stories, yet it is likely still a vast undercount. We verified incidents by interviewing more than 40 victims or witnesses and reviewing officer-worn body camera footage, social media posts and lawsuits. We included only cases in which we spoke to parents or others with direct knowledge, found at least two news accounts confirming the incident or identified an episode from sworn testimony.

In many of the cases where children were harmed, a DHS spokesperson said, the officers were justified in using tear gas or pepper spray, but the agency did not address how the weapons affected bystanders, including children. “DHS does NOT target children,” the agency said in a written statement.

The spokesperson defended the department’s training and said ICE officers are taught to use “the minimum amount of force necessary to resolve dangerous situations.” That includes “considering the totality of circumstances when deploying crowd control measures” and training in “de-escalation tactics,” according to the statement. “But if you assault an officer or attempt to obstruct law enforcement activities you can expect to be met with an appropriate response. … This is why rioters and agitators should stop obstructing law enforcement operations” and “refrain from knowingly bringing their own children into potentially volatile situations.”

The department did not respond to detailed questions asking whether it had investigated or disciplined officers over their use of tear gas or pepper spray since last year. In January, Stephen Miller, a White House deputy chief of staff, addressed ICE officers in a segment on Fox News, saying, “You have federal immunity in the conduct of your duties.”

Three former DHS leaders said that the number of children exposed to tear gas and pepper spray indicates something is seriously broken in the department. John Roth, who served as its inspector general under President Barack Obama and for part of Trump’s first term, said ProPublica’s findings are a “bright red flag.”

“This should trigger a serious review of how it is that we train people on use of force,” he said.

“I Can’t Breathe”

Tear gas, a catch-all term for various chemical irritants, exists as a fine powder that settles over every surface, triggering nerve endings to feel like they’re on fire. The chemicals sear your lungs and throat, inflaming your airways until it feels like you’re breathing through a straw, while snot and tears stream down your face. They can cause vomiting, rashes and coughs that last for weeks. Pepper spray is made from compounds found in hot peppers and causes similar effects. 

The limited studies of tear gas use on adults have found lingering eye problems, bronchitis and other respiratory illnesses. Emerging research suggests an association between tear gas and abnormal menstrual cycles and miscarriage. In extreme cases, people have died.

How Tear Gas Affects the Body

Possible immediate symptoms

Clockwise from top left: A close-up illustration of a person’s face. Their eyes are red and tears are streaming down their cheeks. A person holds their throat with one hand and their chest with the other hand. Redness emanates from their chest. A person coughs into their hand. A person looks with an anguished expression at their hands, which are covered in a red rash.
Clockwise from top left: eye and facial pain, blurry vision, and strong production of snot and tears; burning sensation in lungs and throat, difficulty breathing, and respiratory illnesses like asthma exacerbated; nausea, vomiting and prolonged coughing; skin rashes, pain, irritation and sometimes chemical burns Isabel Seliger for ProPublica

Possible long-term symptoms

Clockwise from top left: A person reaches with one hand toward their eye, which is red. A diagram of a person in which we can see their lungs, which have a red glow. A person with their arms crossed over their abdomen, which has a red glow. A white EKG line against a black backdrop. The line raises twice at the start and then flatlines.
Clockwise from top left: corneal scarring; bronchitis and other respiratory illnesses; abnormal menstrual cycles and miscarriage; in extreme cases, death
Isabel Seliger for ProPublica

Dr. Sarita Chung, Dr. Rohini Haar, Sven Jordt and Dr. Benjamin Sanders provided scientific expertise for this graphic. Physicians for Human Rights and the American Academy of Pediatrics offer additional information on the health effects of tear gas and pepper spray.

Once the weapons are fired, it’s often difficult to control who gets hit. The canisters can roll along the ground, and the chemicals drift through the air. In Minneapolis, ProPublica found that tear gas traveled at least a quarter mile, entering a McDonald’s.

Families who live near an ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois, felt the effects inside their homes when officers tear-gassed the protesters who routinely gathered there.

Derrick Nash lives a block and a half east of the facility with his extended family, including four children ages 6 to 17. Each time the tear gas seeped in, the kids coughed, and their throats often burned. The eldest, a high school senior with asthma, would hide out in his second-floor bedroom. One evening, his face turned red as he coughed uncontrollably and sucked on his inhaler without relief.

“He was wigging out, saying, ‘I can’t breathe,’” Nash recalled. The family considered calling an ambulance, but the street was closed.

Nearby, two girls, ages 6 and 10, started wearing layers of surgical masks indoors, but that didn’t prevent their coughing fits.

“It was terrifying. My kids were scared,” said the girls’ mother, who asked not to be named out of fear of retaliation. “We felt it instantly. We were coughing. Our eyes were watering. Our noses felt funny.”

She worries the exposure to tear gas and pepper balls might have caused long-term damage. Since October, her youngest, now 7, has been coughing and wheezing a lot, especially at night. She’s taken the girl to urgent care about five times. “She’s been complaining about her throat,” she said. “It gets to the point she can’t breathe.”

Law enforcement officials have been dismissive of the effects of tear gas. In a lawsuit over the officers’ actions in the Chicago area, CBP supervisor Kristopher Hewson testified that the chemical irritant “doesn’t harm people” and that “after you leave it, it stops those effects within 10 seconds.”

But it’s undeniably toxic. A federal scientific panel in 2014 found that people could be harmed at even very low doses. Much of the research on health effects was conducted on men in the military; little is known about what happens to women, children, older adults and people with respiratory illnesses.

In the United States, some have been seriously hurt after a single exposure to tear gas.

In January, a Minneapolis family with six children was driving home from a youth basketball game when they encountered a protest and stopped for a while. As the situation escalated and they tried to leave, a tear gas canister rolled under their minivan, setting off the airbags and hampering their escape. Their 6-month-old son briefly stopped breathing.

“The baby is not responding. … Oh my god, come on,” a 911 caller said. The infant, who was given CPR, spent time in the hospital, along with two siblings who have severe asthma.

“Deliberate Indifference”

As Trump’s immigration crackdown moved from city to city, residents, journalists and protesters sued to stop the bombardments they said violated their constitutional rights.

Among dozens of declarations from Chicago and its suburbs, one witness in Broadview described seeing children covering their faces while walking to school; another in Brighton Park, who was 8 1/2 months pregnant, said she saw kids “coughing, wheezing, and crying” after tear gas was released.

“Tear gassing expectant mothers, children, and babies shocks the conscience,” U.S. District Court Judge Sara Ellis wrote in her ruling in November. She found that ICE and CBP officers used excessive force, deploying the weapons “without justification, often without warning” against people who didn’t pose a physical threat.

She ordered them to stop. But the injunction covered only the areas mentioned in the complaint.

In December, 15 days after Ellis’ written ruling, residents living diagonally across the street from an ICE facility in Portland filed their own suit. For months, they said, tear gas seeped into their apartments as federal officers fired it at the protesters gathered steps away. The residents filed their accounts to the court: While at home, one 12-year-old boy broke out in hives and suffered “chronic respiratory issues,” requiring an inhaler for the first time in his life. Two sisters, ages 7 and 9, slept inside a fort they made in a closet.

One neighbor, Mindan Ocon, told ProPublica that her 3-year-old daughter, Angelise, screamed and cried one night as the gas drifted in, holding her face as it burned her eyes. Over time, Ocon said, they developed a routine. Whenever Angelise coughed and rubbed her eyes, or when Ocon anticipated trouble, she took her daughter into the bathroom for a bubble bath. On certain days, she did this as many as four times. Angelise now prefers showers and says, “No bath!” when Ocon tries to put her in the tub.

A woman and her young daughter sit on a living room floor, in front of a doll house and surrounded by dolls. The woman is putting a gas mask on the girl.
Mindan Ocon with her daughter, Angelise Ocon, 3, at their home in Portland, Oregon. Ocon has relied on air purifiers and taking her daughter into the bathroom to hide from tear gas, and she’s prepared to use gas masks given to her by community members if it gets worse. Leah Nash for ProPublica

Angelise’s cough and eye irritation had subsided by the time she saw Dr. Benjamin Sanders, a pediatrician at Oregon Health and Science University, for treatment. But Sanders said he worried about the long-term effects, both physical and psychological. At this young age, Angelise was “laying down her emotional understanding of the world,” he said, which “includes some pretty dangerous stuff.”

U.S. District Court Judge Amy Baggio ruled that federal officers acted with “deliberate indifference,” a legal standard that means they knew of, but disregarded, a substantial risk of harm. She wrote that the clouds of tear gas made it difficult or impossible for residents inside the complex “to eat, sleep, or simply breathe normally while in their own homes,” and that DHS displayed a “protracted failure even to care.”

Another judge handled a lawsuit regarding what happened on Portland streets on Jan. 31, when thousands attended a Saturday afternoon rally. The event drew families — kids carrying band instruments, parents hoisting small children on their shoulders.

As the protesters marched past the ICE building, up to 50 “agitators” dressed in black tried to tie shut a vehicle gate and threw rocks and eggs at federal officers, according to DHS testimonies. Federal agents said they warned the crowd to move back and, within minutes, began launching weapons. These included Triple Chaser grenades that each separated into three tear gas canisters, dozens of pepper ball projectiles filled with chemical munitions, and “rubber ball grenades” that released stinging pellets, bright lights and loud sounds.

Federal agents fire tear gas into a crowd of protesters in Portland on Jan. 31. Courtesy of Kylie Cleveland

About a half block away, an 11-year-old boy thought those sounds were gunfire; then, the chemicals reached him. “I was coughing and hacking up phlegm and snot,” he told ProPublica. His father, who was with him and his brother, recalled their fear: “I think he really thought we were going to die, and so did I, because of the gas.” The boy’s 15-year-old brother said his eyes were sore for days. (The family asked us not to use names to protect the kids’ privacy.)

Matt Lembo, who went to the protest with his 14-year-old daughter, said the gas gave them sore throats and made their eyes water. “I saw at least a dozen kids,” he said, “getting their eyes washed out … seriously coughing, crying, spitting.”

A judge issued a temporary restraining order that forbade federal agents from using chemical munitions unless targeted at someone who posed “an imminent threat of physical harm.” CBP argued in a court filing that officers needed to be able to use the weapons in certain cases, like to break up a crowd of people blocking their vehicles.

These attempts to get relief in the courts have had limited success. Appellate courts have vacated the federal judges’ rulings in all three cases in Portland and Chicago, removing restrictions on how federal officers can use these weapons.

While DHS appears to have stopped using tear gas in Portland, its officers continued deploying it elsewhere, including in a residential area in South Burlington, Vermont, in March.

A child stands up against a wall in a parking lot with a sweatshirt draped over them, covering their head and body. A woman stands over the child, holding her hands up protectively. In the background are protesters and a cloud of tear gas in the air.
A mother protects her child who was exposed to tear gas deployed by federal agents in Portland on Jan. 31. Eli Imadali/Oregon Public Broadcasting

“Something Is Wrong”

The DHS policy on force says officers must use tactics that “minimize the risk of unintended injury” and should be guided by “respect for human life.” The CBP policy is more detailed; it says officers “should not use” pepper spray or “less-lethal” chemical munitions against “small children.” ICE’s policy says “the presence of other officers, subjects, or bystanders” are a factor in determining whether an officers’ use of force is reasonable.

Those policies fall short of more concrete reforms on tear gas and pepper spray use that many local police departments have been forced to adopt as a result of lawsuits or laws aimed at curbing excessive force. Portland’s police department requires officers to take into account their proximity to homes when considering tear gas use. Minneapolis forbids officers from using chemical munitions for crowd control unless authorized by the police chief — even when officers fear they will be physically harmed. Police in Akron, Ohio, were recently prohibited from using pepper spray “indiscriminately” to disperse a crowd and face other constraints on tear gas.

DHS officers also have historically been undertrained. In 2017, the department’s inspector general’s office found that agents did not appear to complete required training on weapons including tear gas and pepper spray. Four years later, another IG investigation into agents’ use of force while protecting federal buildings concluded that officers failed to complete required training. The report warned that “without the necessary policies, training, and equipment, DHS will continue to face challenges securing Federal facilities during periods of civil disturbance that could result in injury, death, and liability.”

DHS did not respond to ProPublica’s questions about whether it would examine its training or practices. “The pattern is NOT of law enforcement using force,” an agency spokesperson said in an email. “It’s a pattern of coordinated attacks and violence against our law enforcement.”

ProPublica’s findings make it clear that “something is wrong” with DHS’ use of force practices, said Edward Maguire, a professor of criminology and criminal justice at Arizona State University who advises law enforcement agencies on crowd control. “A responsible law enforcement agency … ought to be taking action to make sure these types of things don’t happen anymore.”

Requiring all law enforcement agencies to adopt uniform policies and training methods would go a long way, experts told ProPublica. These should include more extensive consideration of bystanders. When considering the use of tear gas or pepper spray in a crowd, for example, at least one officer should be assigned to conduct a collateral damage assessment to determine who may be inadvertently harmed, Maguire said. Then, the agency needs to be transparent about whether officers are following the policies.

To make that happen, various experts said, Congress would need to pass a bill mandating that federal law enforcement entities adopt such practices and incentivize local police departments to do the same.

Democratic lawmakers have repeatedly reintroduced the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which aims to strengthen use-of-force training and policies alongside more sweeping reforms on local policing. The latest versions, introduced in Congress last year, have not come up for a vote.

More recently, Congress members have drafted two bills narrowly tailored toward DHS and its use of these weapons. Both are with committees and have not been scheduled for hearings.

In the fall, three Democrats introduced a House bill that would strengthen DHS’ use-of-force policy, among other provisions. Notably, the bill would prohibit federal officers from carrying tear gas, pepper spray and other so-called less-lethal weapons unless they are arresting someone trying to enter the country illegally or have prior approval from their supervisor. “They don’t hold them to any standards like we would expect from local law enforcement,” said Rep. Scott Peters, a California Democrat who introduced the bill. “These are the kinds of reforms we need to make to restrain behavior.”

The Trump administration has said that any new restrictions would hamper immigration officers’ ability to carry out their work.

Rep. Delia C. Ramirez, a Democrat who represents Chicago, introduced a separate House bill in January. It would require DHS to publish a report every six months detailing each time officers used force and a summary of whether their actions complied with the department’s policy.

Ramirez said it shouldn’t fall to news outlets like ProPublica to document potential cases of excessive force. That is work “that we Congress members should be demanding from DHS.”

One of her co-sponsors on the bill, Rep. Seth Magaziner, D-R.I., called ProPublica’s tally of 79 kids harmed by tear gas and pepper spray a “horrific” finding. “I have two young children myself. I know how fragile young people can be, and not just physically but emotionally and mentally as well.”

Magaziner said Democrats in Congress may have a chance to question Markwayne Mullin, the secretary of Homeland Security, in a future budget hearing. When that happens, Magaziner said, he intends to ask, “When is there going to be accountability for the people who sprayed pepper spray into a moving vehicle that had a 1-year-old in it?”


About Our Findings

We learned that immigration officers stepped up their use of chemical munitions during President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown through a data analysis. The University of Washington Center for Human Rights obtained nearly three years of Significant Incident Report data from the Department of Homeland Security. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers are required to fill out such a report each time they use force, which includes deploying chemical agents. ProPublica analyzed the data and found that ICE officers reported a dramatic increase in their use of chemical munitions, comparing the year ending September 2025 with the prior two years.

The post Kids Are Being Harmed by Tear Gas, Pepper Spray Under Trump. There Could Be Long-Term Consequences. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 04:32

People gathered at dusk under the fig tree canopy of Sydney’s Hyde Park to pay tribute to the 32-year-old who died nearby and lay undiscovered for up to a week

No one should be left to die in the middle of Sydney, alone and unseen.

That was the powerful message delivered by homelessness support worker Erin Longbottom to a crowd gathered in Hyde Park to honour Bikram Lama.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 04:30

Enchanting and a little eerie, Moomintroll: Winter’s Warmth is the second great game in as many years based on the classic children’s books

Sleepy, happy-sad, and imbued with the mildest peril, Tove Jansson’s Moomin stories may seem an unlikely fit for the action-heavy medium of video games. Rather than embark on swashbuckling adventures, these milk-white, hippo-esque creatures prefer to potter about Moominvalley, only venturing further if the weather conditions are just right.

Yet a small Norwegian video game studio, Hyper Games, is now on its second exquisitely charming Jansson adaptation. The first, 2024’s Snufkin: Melody of Moomin Valley, put players in control of the wily free spirit, Snufkin, as he dismantled overly ordered nature parks (and evaded authority-loving wardens). The latest, Moomintroll: Winter’s Warmth, sees young Moomintroll wake up at night in the dead of winter. With his parents still hibernating, the creature is all alone, thrust into a cold and unfamiliar world.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 04:25
Time to evaluate the hardware

Hey, I’ve joined the OW community about a month ago, when I bought my first board. Got a used XR with 1800miles and I’m over 2100m now I love that thing!

Some parts started to peel off as you can see on the pictures. How bad is it ? I don’t know much about build & parts, I’d like to educate myself and upgrade the board over time.

1/ what’s that plastic thing that is peeling off ? Is it a kind of custom protection plate from previous owner or is that coming with the side part ? Should I peel it off completely, glue it or cut it ? Should I replace the whole thing ? There is also a plastic part that came off from the bottom too.

2/ how used is this tire ? How will I know it’s time to change it ?

Thank you 🙏

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 04:24
GTS making weird noise when going slow

Hey, just wondering if this noise my GTS is making is normal. I only notice it at really low speeds. It’s not the usual hum when riding, when I’m creeping slowly it has this kinda crunchy/grindy sound.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 04:00

For much of the quantum computing industry, scaling remains a physics problem. For Quantum Motion, it is increasingly being framed as a semiconductor manufacturing problem.

The UK-based company today announced a $160 million Series C round to advance its silicon transistor-based quantum computing architecture, which aims to build quantum processors using largely standard CMOS manufacturing techniques rather than highly specialized fabrication approaches.

Quantum Motion describes its strategy as quantum computing’s potential “transistor moment,” an attempt to move the field beyond laboratory-scale demonstrations and toward manufacturable systems that can scale through existing semiconductor supply chains. The company says its architecture could potentially reduce the cost, footprint and energy demands of large-scale quantum systems while fitting within conventional data-center infrastructure.

The financing round was co-led by DCVC and Kembara, with participation from the British Business Bank, Firgun and existing investors including Oxford Science Enterprises, Bosch Ventures and Porsche Automobil Holding SE.

Quantum Motion says the funding will support development of utility-scale systems designed around conventional semiconductor manufacturing methods and existing data center infrastructure. According to the company, its systems are being designed to operate within roughly three to five standard 19-inch data center racks rather than requiring dedicated facilities or large-scale custom infrastructure buildouts.

The company claims its silicon-based architecture could reduce the cost and physical footprint of large-scale quantum systems by roughly 100-fold while lowering energy consumption by as much as 1,000-fold compared with alternative approaches.

Unlike superconducting and trapped-ion systems that often rely on highly specialized fabrication and control infrastructure, Quantum Motion’s approach is built around adapting conventional silicon transistors into qubits using largely standard CMOS semiconductor processes.

James Palles-Dimmock

In an interview with HPCwire, CEO James Palles-Dimmock said the company’s long-term strategy is rooted in adapting technologies the semiconductor industry already knows how to manufacture at scale.

“We’ve taken what mankind does incredibly well,” he said. “We make transistors, and we make billions of them.”

That focus on manufacturability has become central to the company’s positioning within the broader quantum computing landscape. Rather than competing primarily on near-term qubit counts, Quantum Motion argues that the industry’s larger challenge will be scaling systems to the hundreds of thousands or millions of physical qubits likely needed for fault-tolerant quantum computing.

According to the company, silicon offers advantages beyond the qubits themselves. Because the architecture is built around transistor technology already used throughout the semiconductor industry, Quantum Motion says it can more naturally integrate classical control electronics alongside quantum components.

“It’s not just a story about qubits,” Palles-Dimmock said. “The integration of classical control electronics is critical to who we are as a business.”

Hugo Saleh

In the interview, Hugo Saleh, president and COO of Quantum Motion, contrasted the company’s approach with some competing quantum hardware efforts that require specialized process modifications or entirely bespoke fabrication techniques.

“We don’t want to be inventing new underlying hard-to-install capabilities,” he said.

Instead, the company’s approach is centered on adapting standard transistor structures already widely produced by the semiconductor industry, a strategy Saleh said is intended to reduce the engineering friction associated with scaling quantum hardware into manufacturable systems.

“It’s not about the science, it’s not even about the technology, it’s about making it useful.” he said. “Everyone else knows how to leverage this technology. And when I say it’s not about the technology— there isn’t even one single approach to silicon spin. Our approach [is] using the transistor like the transistor was meant to be used.”

“We’re going to stick to that building block, figure out how to use it, build the IP around that, and then scale it up like any other chip that Intel, Nvidia, AMD would put out.”

Quantum Motion’s manufacturing-focused roadmap has also generated external validation beyond investor backing.

In 2025, the company deployed what it described as the world’s first full-stack CMOS quantum computer at the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre, where the system has been used for early proof-of-concept quantum chemistry workloads.

Palles-Dimmock described the deployment as a milestone moment for silicon-based quantum computing.

“This was kind of like the ‘Hello World’ moment of the CMOS-based quantum computer,” he said.

Palles-Dimmock stressed that the significance of the system was less about raw performance than demonstrating that quantum programs could successfully run on a full-stack CMOS platform rather than isolated laboratory devices.

Quantum Motion’s NQCC deployment

He said the system had been used for early proof-of-concept quantum chemistry algorithms involving calculations such as molecular bond lengths, while emphasizing that the platform remains an early-stage research system rather than a commercially useful machine.

“I think everyone knows that at the moment, that point for quantum computing is still a little bit further out,” he said.

The company has also pointed to its advancement to Stage B of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative as additional validation of its long-term scaling strategy. DARPA’s QBI is designed to verify and validate whether any quantum computing approach can achieve utility-scale operation by 2033.

“The question DARPA asked isn’t, ‘Can you build a quantum computer?’” Palles-Dimmock said. “The question they asked is, can you build one that’s actually worth building?”

Quantum Motion’s new funding round also arrives during a period of growing scrutiny around commercialization timelines across the quantum computing industry, particularly as several quantum companies have entered public markets through SPAC deals or IPO plans.

Palles-Dimmock said the company has intentionally remained private in order to focus on long-term platform development rather than near-term revenue pressures.

“There’s a heck of a lot of risk in a SPAC and going public too early,” he said. “You go public too early, then you’ve got shareholder pressure to go out and make some too-early revenue. You don’t actually build the big product that everyone really knows is going to make the difference.”

With its latest funding round, Quantum Motion will have the means to patiently pursue what it believes could become quantum computing’s “transistor moment.” The company is betting that the future of quantum computing may ultimately depend as much on semiconductor manufacturing and infrastructure scalability as on advances in quantum physics itself.

 

The post Quantum Motion Targets Quantum Computing ‘Transistor Moment’ with $160M Series C appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 03:36
Onewheel Pint/X/S Drop Top fender 3D model

Hey!
Last week I was working on a drop-top fender for the Pint. There aren’t many models out there for it for some reason, so I though Pint owners may be interested.
Show Pint some love!

https://preview.redd.it/i1eyl7zu5ozg1.png?width=1280&format=png&auto=webp&s=5bbdb2a6d866cefb8ce09113eaed041e98539c7a

Here it the link
https://www.printables.com/model/1712951-onewheel-pintpint-xpint-s-drop-top-fender

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 03:00

A small study found that a single 25mg dose of psilocybin produced measurable brain changes that were still visible a month later, along with reported improvements in psychological insight, wellbeing, and mental flexibility. The Guardian reports: Evidence for the changes came from specialized scans that measured the diffusion of water along nerve bundles in the brain. They suggested that some nerve tracts had become denser and more robust after the drug was taken. While the findings are preliminary, the scientists said the opposite was seen in ageing and dementia. "It's remarkable to see potential anatomical brain changes one month after a single dose of any drug," said Prof Robin Carhart-Harris, a neurologist at the University of California, San Francisco, and senior author on the study. "We don't yet know what these changes mean, but we do note that overall, people showed positive psychological changes in this study, including improved wellbeing and mental flexibility." [...] Writing in Nature Communications, the researchers describe another key finding. Those who had the largest spike in brain entropy after psilocybin were most likely to report deeper psychological insight and better wellbeing a month later, underlining the link between flexible thinking and improved mental health. "It suggests a psychobiological therapeutic action for psilocybin," said Carhart-Harris. Prof Alex Kwan, a neuroscientist at Cornell University in New York, said studies in mice had shown that psychedelics can rewire connections between nerves, a form of "plasticity" that could underlie their therapeutic effects. The big question is whether the same occurs in humans. "This study comes closer than most to addressing that question, by giving evidence of lasting changes in brain structure after psychedelic use," he said. But while the results were "exciting," the study involved a small number of people and DTI provides an indirect and limited view of brain connections, he said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 02:00

Partnership between top startup DeepL and Amazon comes amid concern about Silicon Valley’s monopoly over digital infrastructure

AI companies in Europe risk losing their world-leading status in the field of machine translation, industry figures have said, after the decision by one of the continent’s leading startups to partner with Amazon’s cloud computing division provoked alarm.

While businesses in the EU have generally lagged behind the US and China in AI adoption, a small group of European companies have cornered the global market for high-quality machine translations for professional use.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 02:00

The two new processors could bring several flagship-phone features down to more affordable devices.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 01:38

Nobel laureate says he previously considered himself a supporter of Israel, but ‘the campaign of annihilation in Gaza has changed all that’

Nobel laureate JM Coetzee has declined to attend an upcoming literature festival in Israel, writing a excoriating letter to organisers citing the country’s “genocidal campaign” in Gaza, stating: “It will take many years for Israel to clear its name”.

The 86-year-old author, who was born in apartheid South Africa and lives in Australia, wrote to organisers of the Jerusalem international writers festival in November.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 00:05

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 00:00

Let’s not draw the wrong conclusions from Hungary’s election or the US president’s troubles

Viktor Orbán’s crushing defeat in last month’s Hungarian election has led to an outbreak of democratic optimism. Across the globe, democrats are drawing lessons from the results and speculating about the decline of the far right. There is simultaneously a consensus that Donald Trump has gone from inspiration to “liability” for the global far right.

While the fall of Orbán has great symbolic significance and important consequences for EU politics (see the EU-Ukraine deal), we should be very careful not to read too much into it for three reasons.

Cas Mudde is the Stanley Wade Shelton UGAF professor of international affairs at the University of Georgia, and author of The Far Right Today

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-07 00:00

A belligerent America is foiling Putin’s strategy.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-07 00:00

Al Nahyans’ control over farmland in Europe has meant they receive proportion of payments to farms

The United Arab Emirates’ ruling royal family is benefiting from tens of millions in EU subsidies to grow crops destined for the Gulf, it can be revealed.

A cross-border investigation by DeSmog and shared with the Guardian found subsidiaries controlled by the Al Nahyans collected more than €71m (£61m) in six years for farmland it controls in Romania, Italy and Spain.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 23:30

Sam Altman's management style came under scrutiny on the seventh day of Elon Musk's high-stakes OpenAI trial, as former OpenAI figures Mira Murati, Shivon Zilis, and Helen Toner took the stand to testify about their experiences working with him. Their testimony resurfaced many of the criticisms that first emerged during Altman's brief ouster as CEO in 2023. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Business Insider: The first witness was Mira Murati, OpenAI's former chief technology officer and now founder of her own AI shop, Thinking Machines Lab. Jurors watched a recorded video deposition of Murati, who was also OpenAI's interim CEO after the board briefly ousted Sam Altman. Murati's testimony focused on her concerns about Altman's "difficult and chaotic" management style. She said Altman had trouble "making decisions on big controversial things." He also had a habit of telling people what they wanted to hear. "My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and a completely different thing to another person, and that makes it a very difficult and chaotic environment to work with," said Murati. Murati said that her issue with Altman was not about safety, "it is about Sam creating chaos." She said she supported Altman's return to OpenAI because the company "was at catastrophic risk of falling apart" at the time of his ousting. "I was concerned about the company completely blowing up." Zilis said she was upset that Altman rolled out ChatGPT without involving the board. "It wasn't just me but the entire board raised concern about that whole thing happening without any board communication," she said. Zilis said she was also concerned about a potential OpenAI deal with a nuclear energy startup called Helion Energy because both Altman and Greg Brockman were investors. Although the executives had disclosed the investment to the board, Zilis said the deal talk made her uneasy. It "felt super out of left field," she said. "How is it the case that we want to place a major bet on a speculative technology?" In a video deposition, Helen Toner, a former member of OpenAI's board who resigned in 2023, said she first became aware of ChatGPT's release when an OpenAI employee asked another board member whether the board was aware of the development. [...] Toner also elaborated on why the board, including herself, voted to remove Altman as CEO in 2023. "There were a number of things -- the pattern of behavior related to his honesty and candor, his resistance of board oversight, as well as the concerns that two os his inner management team raised to the board about his management practices, his manipulation of board processes," said Toner. Recap: Brockman Rebuts Musk's Take On Startup's History, Recounts Secret Work For Tesla (Day Six) OpenAI President Discloses His Stake In the Company Is Worth $30 Billion (Day Five) Musk Concludes Testimony At OpenAI Trial (Day Four) Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company's Attorney (Day Three) Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two) Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 23:16

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has now left the intensive care unit, his spokesperson said, after being hospitalized with pneumonia.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 22:56

I just got an xrc and am absolutely loving it. But I noticed that at less that 3mph the board will sometimes randomly cut out. And I think its due to the sensors not being triggered. If anyone has any suggestions on how to fix this let me know. I got some adhesive grip tape but I'm not sure if that's the right move.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 22:40

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 7.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 22:08

Exclusive: Regime, which executed 243 people last year for drug offences, accused of investing in entertainment to whitewash its human rights record

The acclaimed Australian film-maker Phillip Noyce is being paid by the Saudi regime to make a feature film portraying the repressive state’s narcotics officers as heroes.

The Watchful Eyes, based on a real Saudi ministry of interior narcotics case, is billed as a dramatic depiction of the “heroism of security men in combating drugs”.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 22:02

This live blog is now closed.

It’s worth noting, ahead of Howard Lutnick’s closed-door testimony before House oversight committee members today, that the commerce secretary has refused to answer questions about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein from lawmakers during congressional hearings on Capitol Hill over the last month.

In April, Represenative Madeleine Dean, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, asked whether the president expressed “concerns” about the commerce secretary’s relationship with Epstein. Lutnick refused to comment.

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2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-06 21:55

Ex-TV star launches viral video a day before debate with mayor Karen Bass and city council member Nithya Raman

Spencer Pratt, a former reality TV star and current Los Angeles mayoral candidate, reposted a scathing AI-generated ad on X on Tuesday, which cast the city as a bleak hellscape under its current leadership.

In the viral video, created by film-maker Charlie Curran, flames engulf the Hollywood sign; a socialist militia patrols the streets; and California’s political brass, including the governor, Gavin Newsom, the mayor, Karen Bass, and Kamala Harris, the former vice-president, are depicted as royals who care little for their subjects’ plights.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 21:53

Argentina, where the MV Hondius cruise departed, consistently ranked by WHO as having highest incidence of hantavirus in region

Officials and experts in Argentina are scrambling to determine if their country is the source of a deadly hantavirus outbreak that has gripped an Atlantic cruise ship, amid reports that a number of passengers have already returned to their home countries.

Argentina, where the cruise to Antarctica departed, is consistently ranked by the World Health Organization (WHO) as having the highest incidence of the rare, rodent-borne disease in Latin America. Investigators there are working to contact trace the source of contamination.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 21:25

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 21:23

Trump warned Tehran to agree to deal or face attacks ‘at a much higher level and intensity’ than before – key US politics stories from 6 May 2026 at a glance

The US military fired on an Iranian-flagged oil tanker on Wednesday, shortly after Donald Trump issued a fresh ultimatum to Tehran, telling it to accept a deal to end the war or face a new wave of US bombing “at a much higher level and intensity than it was before”.

The US fighter fired several rounds and “disabled the tanker’s rudder” as it attempted to breach the US’s blockade of Iranian ports, US Central Command said in a social media post.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 21:01

Did your older AT&T wireless plan jump in price in April? Here's what's going on.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 21:00

As Snap Kitchen expands to 32 states starting May 15, we retested the meals to see how they hold up.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 20:55

The 16-page report was led by Trump-ally Sebastian Gorka, and places drug cartels in the Americas at the centre of counter-terrorism efforts

The Trump administration has accused Europe of being an “incubator” for terrorism fuelled by mass migration, in a new counter-terrorism strategy unveiled on Wednesday.

The strategy also focuses on rooting out “violent left-wing extremists” including “radically pro-transgender” groups, as Trump’s conservative administration steps up its political attacks on opponents.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 20:35

This blog is now closed

The UK work and pensions secretary, Pat McFadden, has warned that job losses “could happen” in Britain due to the economic impacts of the Iran war.

He said the UK economy was “going in the right direction” at the start of the year and unemployment figures for February showed a decline. He added that interest rates were expected to come down and the markets were pricing in cuts during the course of the year.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 20:27

Justice department targets MacArthur Park, which has long struggled with fentanyl use, overdoses and homelessness

Federal authorities arrested 18 people in Los Angeles in a crackdown on drugs in MacArthur Park, the Department of Justice announced on Wednesday.

The DoJ said it was targeting an “open-air drug market” in the park near downtown, which has long struggled with fentanyl use and overdoses and has at times had large encampments of unhoused people.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 20:25

The heavily Democratic Fulton county has been at the center of Trump’s false claims of election fraud in 2020

The federal government can keep the 2020 election ballots from Georgia’s Fulton county seized by the FBI from a warehouse near Atlanta, a judge ruled Wednesday.

US district judge JP Boulee’s decision came after lawyers for the county had argued that the ballots and other election materials, as well as any electronic copies the justice department has made, should be returned because the seizure was improper and unconstitutional.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 7, No. 1,783.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 05:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for May 7, No. 795.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for May 7, No. 1,061.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 05:00

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for May 7, No. 591.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 17:21

A proposed $250 million settlement would compensate millions of consumers who bought the iPhone 16, iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15 Pro Max.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 15:16

A former cellmate has previously claimed that the note was written by Epstein after a failed suicide attempt less than a month before his death.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-07 14:48

The airstrike on the Haret Hreik neighborhood targeted the leader of the Radwan forces, Hezbollah’s elite and battle-hardened fighting unit, Israeli authorities said.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 19:26

A federal judge in Georgia denied a motion by officials in Fulton County, Georgia, to return ballots and other materials from the 2020 election that were taken by the FBI earlier this year.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 19:13

If your apartment doesn't allow pets, you may want to consider owning a Familiar.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 19:11

Epstein’s cellmate in New York City says he found note after convicted sexual offender attempted suicide in July 2019

A federal judge unsealed an alleged suicide note written by Jeffrey Epstein on Wednesday, the first time the document has been made public.

Epstein’s cellmate at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City, Nicholas Tartaglione, said he found the note after Epstein unsuccessfully attempted suicide in July 2019, weeks before he was eventually found dead in his jail cell.

In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 800-273-8255. In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at www.befrienders.org.

In the US, Rainn offers support for survivors of sexual abuse or assault on 800-656-4673. In the UK, the National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, support is available at 1-800-RESPECT, or other places listed here.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 19:05

‘Clinical consensus statement’ also urges heart doctors to advise patients to not eat late at night, and chew slowly

Want to reduce your intake of ultra-processed food? If so, cook at home more often, don’t eat late at night and chew your food more slowly.

Those are among some of the tips doctors have offered to help people limit the amount of UPF they consume given the acute and growing danger it poses to human health worldwide.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 19:01

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will reduce federal Medicaid spending by more than $900 billion over a decade. But in a series of congressional hearings last month, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. misleadingly claimed that “there are no cuts to Medicaid” as a result of that 2025 law.

Kennedy said there are no cuts to Medicaid under the OBBBA because the CBO also estimated that federal spending on Medicaid will increase by “47% over the next 10 years.” But health policy experts told us that total spending on Medicaid is expected to still grow because of population changes and an increase in healthcare costs.

“[T]he notion that since Medicaid spending overall will continue to rise means that there are no cuts is simply false,” Michael S. Sparer, chair of the department of health policy and management at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University, told us in an email. “The rise in Medicaid spending would be far greater had HR1 not been enacted,” he said, referring to the OBBBA’s assigned bill number.

Kennedy testifies during a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing on April 22. Photo by Saul Loeb / AFP via Getty Images.

At the hearings, however, Kennedy repeatedly clashed with Democrats who said that the Republican legislation that President Donald Trump signed into law last summer made cuts to Medicaid and would reduce access to healthcare for millions of people.

For example, during an April 22 Senate Finance Committee hearing on the HHS budget, Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota, while talking about mental health services covered by Medicaid, said that the Trump administration and congressional Republicans had “pushed through the biggest cuts to Medicaid in the history of that program.” 

In response, Kennedy said that wasn’t the case. “First of all, there are no cuts in Medicaid,” he said. “I keep saying this. Here’s what the CBO said: In fiscal year 2025, $668 billion. Fiscal year 2036, $981 billion. That’s not a cut. It’s a 47% increase.”

Smith interjected, by saying: “Secretary Kennedy, a trillion dollars in cuts, according to the CBO. Seven million people losing their health insurance because of the Trump administration actions. That’s not debatable.”

Smith was largely correct about what the CBO said. It estimated a more than $900 billion reduction in Medicaid spending and an increase in the uninsured of 7.5 million people over 10 years.

Based on a CBO analysis, KFF, an independent health policy research organization, estimated that the OBBBA reduces federal Medicaid spending by precisely $911 billion. Most of the federal savings, KFF said, come from the law imposing new work requirements on individuals who became eligible for Medicaid due to an expansion of the program under the Affordable Care Act, as well as “limiting states’ ability to raise the state share of Medicaid revenues through provider taxes, restricting state-directed payments to hospitals, nursing facilities, and other providers, and increasing barriers to enrolling in and renewing Medicaid coverage.”

KFF said that those Medicaid spending reductions in the OBBBA would offset some of the costs of another part of the bill, which extended some expiring tax cuts for individuals.

Those spending reductions count as “cuts,” experts in health policy told us.

“By conventional budget scoring methods, including those used by CBO, as well as [Office of Management and Budget] and others, there were very large cuts to Medicaid in OBBBA,” Leighton Ku, director of the Center for Health Policy Research at George Washington University, said in an email. “CBO (and others) compare estimated federal Medicaid expenditures under OBBBA with the amount that would have been spent WITHOUT the legislation.”

Furthermore, Ku said, “A more telling sign of the impact of the cuts is that CBO estimated that the Medicaid and related CHIP cuts will cause the number of uninsured to rise by about 7.5 million people” by 2034. (CHIP is the Children’s Health Insurance Program for families that make too much money to qualify for Medicaid but can’t afford private insurance.)

We reached out to HHS about Kennedy’s claims, but haven’t received a response.

In an April 22 hearing before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, Kennedy said the statement that “we’ve cut Medicaid by a trillion dollars” was a Democratic talking point. He claimed that the CBO “disagrees” with Democrats, and referenced the agency’s estimate that federal spending on Medicaid will increase from more than $600 billion in fiscal 2025 to well over $900 billion 10 years from now. 

But Kennedy “is using smoke and mirrors here — everything gets more expensive over time, especially in health care,” Dr. Benjamin Sommers, a Harvard University professor of health care economics and medicine, told us in an email.

Akeiisa Coleman, senior program officer for Medicaid at the Commonwealth Fund, said in an emailed statement that, despite the projected spending reductions resulting from OBBBA, “federal spending on Medicaid is likely to increase over time to reflect changes in population and the cost of health care.”

Ku called Kennedy’s claim “misleading” because it “ignores the reality of medical care inflation, the aging of the population (which causes medical expenditures to rise even more) and other pressures.” He said “the reality is that people will receive much less health care under Medicaid because of these cuts,” and that “health care providers like hospitals, doctors’ offices and nursing homes will hurt financially because of the loss of revenue.”

Meanwhile, HHS has argued that some spending reductions were part of necessary changes to overhaul the Medicaid program.

“To be clear, HHS is taking steps to ensure Medicaid serves those it is intended to support,” Andrew Nixon, an HHS spokesman, told the Associated Press for an April 23 story about Kennedy’s claims. “These actions are not cuts — they are focused on addressing waste, fraud, and abuse to better position the program for those who rely on it.”

However, Sommers said “this is not simply cutting out waste and abuse,” since the CBO estimates that millions of people will lose health insurance because of eligibility restrictions and other changes that the law made to Medicaid.

“Any reasonable person would interpret that as a sizable cut to the program – particularly if you’re one of the millions of people expected to lose their health insurance under the law,” Sommers said.

We’ve explained before that while Republicans have said they are targeting able-bodied adults with the new Medicaid work requirements, health policy experts say that other groups would lose coverage as well due to paperwork burdens and other Medicaid provisions in the legislation.


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 Kennedy Denies the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s Spending Cuts to Medicaid appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 19:00

Longtime Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes: Security researcher Tom Joran Sonstebyseter Ronning has found that Microsoft Edge stores passwords in plaintext in RAM. After creating a password and storing it using Edge's password manager, Ronning found that he could dump the RAM and recover his password which was stored in plaintext. Part of the issue is Edge loads all passwords to all sites upon a single verification check, even if the user was not visiting a specific site. This is very different from Chrome, which only loads passwords for specific websites when challenged for the site's password. Also, Chrome will delete the password from memory once the password has been filled. Edge does not delete the passwords from memory once they are used. Microsoft downplayed the risk noting access would require control over a user's PC like a malware infection: "Access to browser data as described in the reported scenario would require the device to already be compromised," Microsoft said. Ronning countered that it was possible to dump passwords for multiple users using administrative privileges for one user to view the passwords for other logged-on users. "Design choices in this area involve balancing performance, usability, and security, and we continue to review it against evolving threats," Microsoft said. "Browsers access password data in memory to help users sign in quickly and securely -- this is an expected feature of the application. We recommend users install the latest security updates and antivirus software to help protect against security threats."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 18:58

Zilis, an executive at Musk’s brain implant startup Neuralink, served on OpenAI’s board from 2020 to 2023

Shivon Zilis, a Neuralink executive and the mother of four of Elon Musk’s children, took the stand on Wednesday as one of the most highly anticipated witnesses in Musk’s case against OpenAI. The ChatGPT maker has argued that, while Zilis worked with OpenAI from 2016 to 2023, she was also involved in a secret relationship with Musk, acting as an informant for him.

Musk’s case against OpenAI alleges that the company’s CEO, Sam Altman, and president, Greg Brockman, co-founders of the company with Musk, broke a founding agreement when they restructured it from a non-profit to a for-profit enterprise. The Tesla CEO accuses Altman and Brockman of unjustly enriching themselves and wants both removed from their positions at the startup, one of the most valuable in the world. He is also seeking the undoing of the for-profit restructuring and $134bn in damages to be redistributed to OpenAI’s non-profit arm.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:54

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche denied to CBS News that the Justice Department is engaging in a retribution campaign against President Trump's critics, pushing back on criticism from Barack Obama.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:51
3d printed FST block .STL files

Made some FST blocks that work with the stock hardware for the FST system. They feel like the the Crux Pro but I'd love to see remixes, files provided for free to the community and are a work in progress. Don't mind the printing error on the longer version there. 5 options in the link!

https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:7348631/files

submitted by /u/mikehtiger
[link] [comments]

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:45

Blink's security line adds doorbells with 2K resolution at prices under $50.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:37

It looks like a remake of StarFox 64, but the visuals look impressive.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:26

Michael Marx was shot by authorities multiple times and then taken to a hospital after bystander was wounded

A man accused of firing a gun at law enforcement officers near the Washington monument this week was walking along the path of JD Vance’s motorcade before the shooting and made a vulgar remark about the White House after the confrontation, according to a court filing on Wednesday.

Michael Marx, 45, of Midland, Texas, was shot multiple times during Monday’s confrontation and was in the back of an ambulance on his way to a hospital when he said: “‘F—k the White House’ and ‘Kill me, kill me, kill me’”, a Secret Service agent said in an affidavit.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:18

The AI-generated search results will offer related information and include first-person advice from Reddit and other online forums.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:07
Joining the cool folks group

My first one wheel, I weight ~285 lbs so I went with the biggest size 🫡

Any tips for big boys?

I surf, and have snowboarded in the last. I also have an electric skateboard that I'm very comfortable with.

Ive only taken out the one wheel a few times and it's def not as pick up and go as in expected lol but I did successfully take it around the block

submitted by /u/angelmxc
[link] [comments]

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 18:00

Google is updating AI Overviews and AI Mode to more prominently surface "Expert Advice" from public discussions, social platforms, forums, blogs, and Reddit. Engadget reports: Via a new "Expert Advice" section that can appear in AI responses, Google will display "a preview of perspectives from public online discussions, social media and other firsthand sources." In the sample screenshot the company provided, quotes from forums, WordPress blogs and Reddit were arranged above links to their respective sources. Google plans to add more context to these links, too, showing "a creator's name, handle or community name," so you can judge what you might want to click through and read from a glance. Google will also start recommending in-depth articles at the end of AI responses for further exploration of a given topic, and link to more sources directly in its generated answers rather than just at the end. If you subscribe to any publications, AI responses will also highlight sources from the subscriptions you link to your Google account.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 17:53

University of California at Los Angeles says admissions are ‘based on merit’ and it complies with state and federal laws

The US Department of Justice found on Wednesday that the medical school at the University of California, Los Angeles illegally considered race in admissions as the Trump administration ramps up scrutiny of colleges’ processes for selecting students.

The finding escalates the Trump administration’s ongoing standoff with UCLA, which has focused mostly on the main campus’s response to allegations of antisemitic harassment.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 17:51

British guide Martin Anstee among those evacuated from MV Hondius, which is now heading for Canary Islands

Three people with suspected hantavirus have been medically evacuated from a cruise ship.

They include a British man who was an expedition guide onboard the ship, the MV Hondius. He was named on Wednesday evening as Martin Anstee, 56.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 17:50

During a White House small business summit, President Donald Trump said the economy is strong and his policies are satisfying Americans.

"Consumer confidence is way up," Trump said at the May 4 event.

Three standard measurements of consumer satisfaction — from the University of Michigan; a business group called the Conference Board; and an aggregation of public polling data — show the opposite. They reveal that people are less satisfied with the economy now than at the end of President Joe Biden’s tenure, and at least one of the metrics puts consumer confidence near an all-time low.

The White House pointed to retail spending data to support his statement, but that isn’t a clear-cut measure of consumer confidence when other economic factors are at play.

University of Michigan measure is near all-time lows

Every month since 1978, University of Michigan researchers have asked Americans a series of questions to gauge their feelings about the economy. The results for the main question on consumer sentiment historically have ranged mostly between 50 and 110 on an index scale, with 112 indicating the highest confidence levels recorded.

The score for March 2026, the most recent month, was 53.3. That’s the ninth-lowest score since the survey first went monthly. Of those nine lowest marks, five have come during Trump’s second term. (Two happened during 40-year-high inflation under Biden in 2022 and two came during even higher inflation under Jimmy Carter in 1980.)

Conference Board measurement shows Trump on worse footing than Biden

The Conference Board, a nonprofit research group for member businesses, has also surveyed consumer sentiment for decades. In recent years, its ratings have ranged from about 80 to 130 on an index scale, and they have been lower during Trump’s second term than under Biden.

In Biden’s final full month in office, the rating was 109.5. In April 2026 under Trump, it was 92.8. During Biden’s final 16 months, the metric averaged 104.3. During the 16 months of Trump’s second term, it has averaged 94.6.

Polls show public approval of Trump’s economic policies is falling

One widely used aggregator of public opinion polls is compiled by Silver Bulletin, a website published by FiveThirtyEight.com founder Nate Silver.

The site does long-term tracking of presidential net approval ratings in a variety of public polls. Net approval refers to the share of respondents saying they approve minus the share saying they disapprove. A positive net approval number means the president has more approvers than disapprovers; a negative net approval number means they have more disapprovers than approvers.

During his second term, net approval for Trump’s handling of the economy has cratered. It began in positive territory when he was inaugurated in January 2025 but turned negative the next month. Since then, his net approval has continued to sink; in early May, disapproval exceeded approval by 24 percentage points.

One metric is potentially more favorable to Trump’s assertion

When we asked the White House for evidence of improving consumer confidence, spokesperson Kush Desai pointed to "the hard data of actual consumer spending and retail sales figures," which he said "have consistently shown that American consumers are resilient and continue to spend."

Looking at the White House’s two favored metrics — consumer spending and retail sales — presents results.

One way to measure consumer spending is using personal consumption expenditures, a federal statistic that tracks Americans’ spending patterns. We looked at this metric’s year-over-year change during the final 15 months of Biden's presidency and the first 15 months of Trump's second term. (We used 15 months because the data for Trump’s 16th month hasn’t been released yet.)

The data shows spending adjusted for inflation generally increased during Biden’s final 15 months but has mostly fallen since Trump’s return to the White House. 

The second metric, retail sales, is more favorable to Trump. Retail sales have generally been higher during Trump’s tenure than during the latter part of Biden’s. 

The year-over-year monthly change in retail sales averaged 2.47% during Biden’s final 14 months. During the first 14 months of Trump’s second term, the increase has averaged 3.75%. (Only Trump’s first 14 months are available for this statistic.)

Dean Baker, co-founder of the liberal Center for Economic and Policy Research, told PolitiFact that it’s valuable to look at what people do, not only how they respond to survey questions, and that would be reflected in retail sales data. However, Baker said the retail sales figure has a weakness: It is not adjusted for inflation, and the increased sales might reflect inflation from Trump’s tariffs. 

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the center-right American Action Forum, said the personal consumption expenditures is "a more comprehensive and reliable measure of household spending." That, combined with the consumer sentiment surveys, "is easily more important than retail sales," he said.

Our ruling

Trump said, "Consumer confidence is way up."

Three traditional metrics — two long-running consumer surveys and an aggregation of public opinion poll questions about the president’s handling of the economy — show that consumer confidence ranges from low to a near an all-time low. Inflation-adjusted consumer spending has also been trending downward.

Retail sales, meanwhile, have been strong during Trump’s second term, but it’s not clear whether this stems from consumer optimism; it could reflect higher prices from Trump’s tariffs.

We rate the statement False.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 17:30

As Labour faces record-breaking losses in Thursday’s local elections, prime minister says rivals are unfit to lead

Labour is braced for record-breaking losses in Thursday’s local elections in England, which could be decisive for Keir Starmer’s future as prime minister.

In a message to voters on Thursday, Starmer said Reform’s Nigel Farage and the Greens’ Zack Polanski were “not fit to meet this moment of great global instability” and that only Labour was putting the national interest first.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 17:27

Police say they arrested 18-year-old man after weekend mass shooting at lake party promoted across social media

Police announced on Wednesday that an 18-year-old man has been arrested in connection with a mass shooting that left one woman dead and 22 other people wounded during a night-time party beside an Oklahoma lake.

Police in Edmond announced that the man was arrested earlier in the day on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon in the wake of Sunday night’s shooting, which erupted following an argument amid a large crowd gathered at Arcadia Lake in that Oklahoma City suburb.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 17:17

Police said they have arrested an 18-year-old in connection with a shooting Sunday during a party that left one woman dead and 22 other people injured.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 17:12

The Justice Department alleges Colorado’s ban on large-capacity ammunition magazines violates the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms “in common use for lawful purposes.”

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 17:03

President tells Iran to accept deal to end war or face new wave of bombing at ‘much higher level and intensity’

The US military fired on an Iranian-flagged oil tanker on Wednesday, shortly after Donald Trump issued a fresh ultimatum to Tehran, telling it to accept a deal to end the war or face a new wave of US bombing “at a much higher level and intensity than it was before”.

The US fighter fired several rounds and “disabled the tanker’s rudder” as it attempted to breach the US’s blockade of Iranian ports, US Central Command said in a social media post.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 17:00

Valve has released CAD files for the new Steam Controller and its Puck under a Creative Commons license. "The idea is to let enterprising modders create their own Steam Controller add-ons, like skins, charging stands, grip extenders or smartphone mounts," reports Digital Foundry. From the report: The Valve release includes files for the external shell ("surface topology") of the Controller and Puck, with a .STP, .STL and engineering diagram of each device, with the latter showing areas that must remain uncovered to let the device maintain its signal strength and otherwise function as designed. Valve has previously released CAD files for its Steam Deck handheld, Valve Index VR suite and even the original Steam Controller a decade ago, so this release is welcomed but not unexpected. The release is under a fairly restrictive Creative Commons license which allows for non-commercial use and requires attribution and sharing of designs back to the community. However, the license also suggests that commercial entities interested in making accessories for the Steam Controller or its Puck can contact Valve directly to discuss terms. You can find the files here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 16:42

CNET experts have tested these desks for hours to find the best selections for your office, game room or hobby room.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 16:39

Hello All,

Im looking to sell my pint X with 367 miles on it. I installed rail guards on the first day I got the onewheel so if you remove them, the blue part of the board looks brand new. Also installed a bumper set. Im based in London UK, im thinking £765 as a starting price.

Thanks for any input!

submitted by /u/AccurateSoft4955
[link] [comments]

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 16:38

PARIS, May 6, 2026 — TotalEnergies, in collaboration with Dell Technologies and NVIDIA, has announced the signing of a contract for the design and installation of Pangea 5, its next high-performance supercomputer. Hosted at the Jean Féger Scientific and Technical Center (CSTJF) in Pau, in the South of France, Pangea 5 will multiply the Company’s computing power by six. It represents an investment of over 100 million euros.

A Significant Increase in Computing Power to Support TotalEnergies’ Projects

With this increase in processing speed, Pangea 5 will:

  • Expand the deployment of advanced seismic engineering to enhance the accuracy of subsurface imaging and accelerate exploration to support the Company’s strategy for low-cost and low-emission hydrocarbon production;
  • Support R&D uses of AI and meet growing digital needs to optimize computing times and deepen the understanding of complex phenomena like integrated power models.

Controlled Energy Consumption and CO₂ Emissions

Pangea 5 will rely on specialized processors, capable of massively parallel computations, offering greater energy efficiency than previous versions. At equal performance, Pangea 5’s energy consumption will be reduced by approximately 40%, and its associated cooling system’s consumption will be cut by a factor of five. The residual heat generated by the supercomputer will be recovered and used to help heat the buildings of the CSTJF, which host more than 2.500 people.

Pangea 5 will be first commissioned in 2027.

“Artificial intelligence and digital technology are strategic drivers of our energy transition. By increasing our computing power sixfold, we are strengthening our leadership in high-performance computing ensuring that our experts teams continue to have the means to push the envelope to support the development of our activities and meet the growing global demand for energy,” said Namita Shah, President, OneTech at TotalEnergies.

“TotalEnergies is pushing the boundaries of high-performance computing, and we’re delighted to be part of that journey. Pangea 5 will give TotalEnergies the computing power to accelerate discovery, increase efficiency and drive the energy transition forward – that’s exactly the kind of outcome our collaboration is built for,” said Adrian McDonald, President, Dell Technologies EMEA

“NVIDIA Compute, network and software platforms will provide Pangea 5 with exceptional parallel computing power, accelerating scientific workloads and opening new opportunities in artificial intelligence. With this choice of NVIDIA GPUs, CPUs and InfiniBand TotalEnergies is adopting an architecture capable of meeting the most demanding industrial and energy challenges, both today and in the years to come,” said John Josephakis, Vice President HPC & AI at NVIDIA.

About TotalEnergies

TotalEnergies (Paris:TTE) (LSE:TTE) (NYSE:TTE) is a global integrated energy company that produces and markets energies: oil and biofuels, natural gas, biogas and low-carbon hydrogen, renewables and electricity. Our more than 100,000 employees are committed to providing as many people as possible with energy that is more reliable, more affordable and more sustainable. Active in about 120 countries, TotalEnergies places sustainability at the heart of its strategy, its projects and its operations.


Source: TotalEnergies

The post TotalEnergies Selects Dell and NVIDIA for Pangea 5 Supercomputer in France appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 16:38

Yelick is a distinguished academic and national lab leader with deep expertise in artificial intelligence and high-performance computing.

May 6, 2026 — The University of California Board of Regents has approved Katherine Yelick as the next director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). Her appointment as director begins on July 1.

Katherine Yelick. Credit: Marilyn Sargent/Berkeley Lab.

Yelick is a leading computer scientist with a highly distinguished research and leadership career at UC Berkeley and Berkeley Lab. She is currently the Vice Chancellor for Research and the Robert S. Pepper Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at UC Berkeley, and a senior faculty scientist at Berkeley Lab. She served as Associate Laboratory Director for Berkeley Lab’s Computing Sciences Area from 2010 through 2019, and was the director of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at Berkeley Lab from 2008 to 2012.

The Board of Regents approved Yelick’s appointment following a national search and acting on the recommendation of UC President James Milliken. The University of California operates Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department of Energy.

“Dr. Yelick is an exceptional leader with outstanding scientific credentials,” said President Milliken. “Her deep expertise in computing and AI, combined with her proven ability to lead complex scientific organizations, will enable Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to pursue new discoveries in an era of rapid technological change.”

Yelick will be the ninth director of Berkeley Lab since it was founded in 1931. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory managed by the University of California for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science. Its groundbreaking research is focused on discovery science and solutions for abundant and reliable energy supplies. The Lab’s expertise spans materials, chemistry, physics, biology, earth and environmental science, mathematics, and computing. Berkeley Lab and its scientists have been recognized with 17 Nobel Prizes.

“I am honored to serve as director of Berkeley Lab, an institution that has long stood at the forefront of scientific discovery and innovation,” Yelick said. “At a time when advances in AI and data science are transforming how science is done, Berkeley Lab is uniquely positioned to lead. I look forward to working with the lab’s extraordinary community to advance its mission and deliver solutions to the nation’s most pressing challenges.”

“There is no better place to make an important impact on the nation’s science and technology challenges than Berkeley Lab. And there is no better person to lead Berkeley Lab than Kathy Yelick,” said current Berkeley Lab Director Mike Witherell.

“Dr. Yelick brings deep expertise in high performance computing and machine learning, along with a strong track record in research management,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil. “I look forward to working with her at this pivotal moment for the nation’s scientific leadership, not only in artificial intelligence and quantum information science, but across the full spectrum of big science at the DOE National Labs that drives American innovation in discovery, energy security, and more.”

Yelick has played a lead role in several DOE Office of Science and Berkeley Lab initiatives. On the national stage, she worked with senior managers across the DOE national lab complex to launch the Exascale Computing Initiative, which ran from 2016 to 2024 and developed the critical applications and software needed to make effective use of exascale-capable hardware. She has also been instrumental in helping DOE develop strategies for artificial intelligence and big data research.

At Berkeley Lab, she oversaw the financing and construction of Shyh Wang Hall, which opened in 2015 as home to DOE’s Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) and NERSC, and many researchers in Computing Sciences. She also led the launch of the Lab’s Machine Learning for Science initiative, which developed and applied AI/ML methodologies to address important scientific challenges. This initiative was important foundational work that informed the development of DOE’s Genesis Mission, a national effort to harness AI for energy, science, and security.

Her research focuses on high performance computing, programming languages, compilers, and parallel algorithms. She has worked on interdisciplinary teams developing scientific applications ranging from simulations of chemistry, fusion, and blood flow in the heart to analysis problems in phylogenetics and genome assembly. She led the ExaBiome project, a multi-institutional effort that applies exascale computing to microbiome analysis, significantly advancing the biological science programs of the Office of Science.

She is a member of National Academy of Engineering and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a fellow of both the Association for Computing Machinery and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She earned her Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT and has been a professor at UC Berkeley since 1991 with a dual appointment as a faculty scientist at Berkeley Lab since 1996.

Yelick will replace departing director Mike Witherell, who led the Lab for a decade through a historic period of scientific achievement and operational excellence, with a deep commitment to developing the next generation of scientists.

More from HPCwire

About Berkeley Lab

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is committed to groundbreaking research focused on discovery science and solutions for abundant and reliable energy supplies. The lab’s expertise spans materials, chemistry, physics, biology, earth and environmental science, mathematics, and computing. Researchers from around the world rely on the lab’s world-class scientific facilities for their own pioneering research. Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest problems are best addressed by teams, Berkeley Lab and its scientists have been recognized with 17 Nobel Prizes. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.


Source: Berkeley Lab

The post UC Names Katherine Yelick to Head Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 16:28

Craig Berry, 53, was found dead on Wednesday of an apparent gunshot wound, the Stewart County Sheriff's Office said.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 16:25

Upgrade your setup to include a standing desk and do away with the days of stiffness and fatigue.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 17:47

Democrats sharply criticize the US commerce secretary’s testimony, saying he was ‘dishonest’ and should resign

The US commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, appeared before the House oversight and reform committee on Wednesday to answer questions over his past ties to Jeffrey Epstein.

Lutnick agreed in March to sit for a transcribed interview with the committee after the justice department’s release of millions of documents related to Epstein, which included documents showing that Lutnick continued correspondence with Epstein after the disgraced financier had been convicted of soliciting prostitution from a minor. The session is part of the committee’s broader investigation into Epstein.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 16:56

The last time a horse won the Triple Crown was in 2018.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 21:29

A hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship has killed three people and infected multiple others, officials said.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 19:32

An FBI spokesperson said in a statement that an investigation is ongoing and there is no threat to public safety.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 18:01

As talks continue and proposals are exchanged, Washington and Tehran still disagree on what has been agreed.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 16:00

Morgan Stanley is adding crypto trading to E*Trade, with a pilot now underway and a broader rollout planned for the platform's 8.6 million customers later this year. The bank is reportedly undercutting rivals with a 50-basis-point trading fee as it bets traditional finance and DeFi will converge. "By contrast, Robinhood Markets' (HOOD) fees start at 95 bps, Coinbase Global's (COIN) begins at 60 bps, and Charles Schwab (SCHW) will charge 75 bps," notes Seeking Alpha. Morgan Stanley's head of wealth management, Jed Finn, told Bloomberg: "This is much bigger than trading crypto at a cheaper rate. In a way, the strategy is disintermediating the disintermediators."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 16:00

Snapmaker has made some wild 3D printers over the years, but the new U1 might be the best yet.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 16:00

No matter what you're looking for in a 3D printer, we've found the best around in 2026.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 15:58

The AI lab has taken a minority stake in the gaming company behind the incredibly complex 23-year-old space simulator.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 15:55

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a key achievement of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the federal agency tasked with protecting American workers from employment discrimination, sued the New York Times on behalf of a white man claiming the company discriminated against him based on his race and sex.

The lawsuit is signed not just by the agency’s acting general counsel and deputy general counsel, but also Benjamin North, who The Intercept reported was hired earlier this year as assistant general counsel.

Related

EEOC Quietly Hired Lawyer Who Crusaded for Cases of Discrimination Against Men — Including His Own

North was suspended as a college student over a rape allegation in a case that he claimed violated his civil rights; he has consistently denied the charges. North went on to do work arguing that Title IX, which prohibits gender discrimination at federally funded institutions, has been used to discriminate against the rights of men.

North’s signature on the new lawsuit against the New York Times could mean he wrote it, said Chai Feldblum, a former EEOC commissioner.

Asked about North’s role, EEOC spokesperson Victor Chen referred The Intercept to the complaint.

The suit comes as part of President Donald Trump’s campaign against diversity, equity, and inclusion policies across the country, including his administration’s efforts to use the EEOC to these ends.

The new EEOC suit, filed Tuesday on behalf of an unnamed man whose identity New York Magazine speculated about, alleges that the employee was passed over for a position because he is a white man.

The claimant applied for a job as a deputy real estate editor in January 2025 but, the lawsuit claims, despite meeting all the requirements for the position, he didn’t get it because he “did not match the race and/or sex characteristics NYT sought to increase in its leadership.” Instead, the job went to a multiracial female candidate who the lawsuit alleges was not qualified.

“There is no actual evidence that he was more qualified than her.”

Feldblum, the former EEOC commissioner, was skeptical of the agency’s legal argument.

“There is no actual evidence that he was more qualified than her,” Feldblum said. Of the EEOC, she said, “They’re putting out their best facts in this complaint, and the facts are pathetic.”

Particularly for leadership positions, she pointed out, there are many aspects that go into deciding who is the most qualified candidate.

“Their assertion that she was less qualified than him is based on their view of the facts,” she said. “We’ll see what the facts actually say.”

In a statement, the New York Times said it has merit-based employment practices.

“The New York Times categorically rejects the politically motivated allegations brought by the Trump administration’s EEOC,” said Times spokesperson Danielle Rhoades Ha. “Throughout this process, the EEOC deviated from standard practices in highly unusual ways. The allegation centers on a single personnel decision for one of over 100 deputy positions across the newsroom, yet the EEOC’s filing makes sweeping claims that ignore the facts to fit a predetermined narrative.”

Diversity Without Discrimination

The EEOC’s lawsuit claims that the company has “engaged in unlawful employment practices” since at least October 2024 through its diversity, equity, and inclusion policies. It cites the company’s self-published diversity goals, including a 2021 document setting a goal for increasing Black and Latino leadership by 50 percent within four years.

The Times was making “employment decisions on the basis of race and sex to achieve its desired demographic goals,” the lawsuit alleges. “A necessary consequence of NYT’s intent to increase the percentage of non-White leaders would be a decrease in the percentage of White leaders.”

The assertion that the company has engaged in illegal racial and sex discrimination and is making employment decisions solely on those bases “is simply not borne out by the evidence,” Feldblum argued. The EEOC would instead have to have found evidence that hiring decisions were made expressly and intentionally based on such characteristics.

Related

Trump Administration Texted College Professors’ Personal Phones to Ask If They’re Jewish

Instead, the actions the New York Times took are “the most basic, acceptable, legal ways to try to increase diversity in a workplace,” Feldblum said. “There is literally nothing illegal in anything that the EEOC has detailed.”

The only place where the Times could have potentially run into legal trouble, she said, was when it was requiring diverse candidate pools for jobs. But if done carefully, she said, that can follow the law as well — for example, by expanding a pool of candidates without removing any qualified white or male ones.

“One can include diversity as an employer without discriminating against white people,” Feldblum said. 

Kalpana Kotagal, the sole Democratic commissioner on the EEOC after Trump fired the others contra statute, said she voted against authorizing the lawsuit against the New York Times “because I disagree with the substance of the case and don’t believe it’s a good use of scarce agency resources.”

She added that “a commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA), without more, is not evidence of discrimination.”

As a reporter at the Times told New York Magazine, “I’m sorry, there are plenty of white guys at the top of the New York Times. Not really something that’s holding you back.”

The complaint comes after EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas directly solicited complaints from white men alleging that they were discriminated against based on their race and/or sex. She has also instructed agency officials to focus on cases that are in line with her personal priorities, which include “rooting out unlawful DEI-motivated race and sex discrimination,” and cases claiming reverse racism have been “accelerated through the process,” the New York Times recently reported, even though staff are struggling to find complaints with merit.

Feldblum argued that the lawsuit is “quite an inappropriate use of EEOC resources.” The agency’s staffing is currently at its lowest level in decades, so any focus on a particular issue comes at the expense of others.

She said, “It is truly a sad day for anyone who cares about civil rights to see what the EEOC is spending its resources on today.”

Correction: May 6, 2026, 9:24 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to correct a reference to Chai Feldblum’s past position at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. She is a former commissioner. An errant reference to the law that established the EEOC has also been corrected; it was the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The post Lawyer on EEOC’s New York Times Lawsuit Has History Battling Discrimination Against Men appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 15:48

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is being questioned Wednesday before the House Oversight Committee as part of its investigation related to Jeffrey Epstein.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 15:42

One of the great innovators of television who founded CNN, the first 24-hour cable news channel, and built a vast media empire

If Orson Welles’s 1941 film Citizen Kane had been made as a TV movie 60 years later, its Kane would have been Ted Turner. Thanks to Welles, the figure of William Randolph Hearst, who dominated the American media world in the early part of the 20th century, is now better remembered for the flamboyant personal life portrayed on film.

Turner, who has died aged 87, was luckier. Although his good looks were often compared to Clark Gable’s playing Rhett Butler and his personal life was equally interesting, he is likely to be remembered primarily as one of the great innovators of television.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 15:39
Dropping today…

premiering 5pm PST on The Float Life Youtube channel

submitted by /u/TheFloatLife
[link] [comments]

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 15:12

Are you looking for a fast way out of credit card debt? Credit card debt forgiveness might help. Here's how.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 15:11

Shabana Mahmood has announced plan to cut leave to remain from five years to 30 months, to concern of UN refugee agency

Two Sudanese asylum seekers are challenging a central element of Labour’s plans to strip refugees of basic rights, rejecting the home secretary’s accusation that they are “asylum shoppers”.

Shabana Mahmood has announced plans to halve refugees’ leave to remain in the UK, from five years to 30 months. Previously, people could apply for permanent settlement after five years but now refugees will have to wait 20 years before being eligible.

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2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-06 15:02

With gas more than $6 in state, delivery of about 2m barrels is last planned shipment to pass through strait of Hormuz

The average price of a gallon of gas in California already stands at more than $6, but more uncertainty looms as the last oil tanker from the Middle East arrived in the Golden state this week.

The Los Angeles Times reported on Sunday that the New Corolla, which left the Middle East for California before the war broke out, is delivering about 2m barrels of crude oil from Iraq to Long Beach. It was the last planned shipment to pass through the strait of Hormuz.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: At its Code with Claude developers' conference, Anthropic has introduced what it calls "dreaming" to Claude Managed Agents. Dreaming, in this case, is a process of going over recent events and identifying specific things that are worth storing in "memory" to inform future tasks and interactions. Dreaming is a feature that is currently in research preview and limited to Managed Agents on the Claude Platform. Managed Agents are a higher-level alternative to building directly on the Messages API that Anthropic describes as a "pre-built, configurable agent harness that runs in managed infrastructure." It's intended for situations where you want multiple agents working on a task or project to some end point over several minutes or hours. Anthropic describes dreaming as a scheduled process, in which sessions and memory stores are reviewed, and specific memories are curated. This is important because context windows are limited for LLMs, and important information can be lost over lengthy projects. On the chat side of things, many models use a process called compaction, whereby lengthy conversations are periodically analyzed, and the models attempt to remove irrelevant information from the context window while keeping what's actually important for the ongoing conversation, project, or task. However, that process, as I described it, is usually limited to a specific conversation with a single agent. "Dreaming" is a periodically recurring process in which past sessions and memory stores can be analyzed across agents, and important patterns are identified and saved to memory for the future. Users will be able to choose between an automatic process, or reviewing changes to memory directly.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:57

Reform UK leader has registered wide range of financial interests on top of his Commons salary since July 2024

Nigel Farage’s income since he was elected as an MP has now reached £2m on top of his parliamentary salary, analysis of the register of MPs has shown.

Farage’s earning power sets him alongside a small number of MPs who have been able to leverage their status for external income alongside their day jobs – drawing comparisons to Boris Johnson, who made about £5m on top of his MP’s salary in the six months after he resigned as prime minister.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:57

After two years in parliament, the Reform UK leader has brought in £2m on top of his Commons salary

“There’s no money in politics,” Nigel Farage complained almost a decade ago, describing himself as “53, separated and skint”.

He has since proved himself wrong. After two years in parliament, Farage has brought in £2m, including hospitality, through speeches, presenting, writing news articles, promoting gold bullion – and even recording modestly priced Cameo clips for his fans. It seems that every £70 video counts when it comes to making cash.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:38

The interest earnings on a CD of this size will be significant (and they'll be available relatively quickly, too).

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:37

Video shows ‘looksmaxxing’ influencer shooting an apparently already dead alligator in the Everglades

A controversial social media influencer known as Clavicular is facing charges in connection with a live stream showing him shooting an apparently already dead alligator in the Everglades, local Florida media has reported.

Clavicular, whose real name is Braden Eric Peters and is known for the practice of “looksmaxxing”, faces charges of unlawfully discharging a firearm in a public place or residential property, according to legal files obtained by television station ABC6 in South Florida. The charges stem from his alleged actions in a 26 March live stream.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:37

Microsoft is shelving the idea of bringing Copilot AI to all its gaming platforms.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:26

The company will start paying the quarter-billion-dollar sum to settle a lawsuit over delayed and missing AI features.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 14:26

LOS ANGELES, May 6, 2026 — Q-CTRL today announced it has achieved a 3,000 times speedup on a problem of commercial relevance using the IBM Quantum Platform. Q-CTRL has achieved evidence of practical quantum advantage over performance-optimized industry-standard classical software on a known, practically useful problem in materials science, marking the first achievement of practical quantum advantage.

Quantum computer outputs for the simulation of interacting electrons at size scales (120 qubits), evolution times, and resolution beyond any prior demonstration. Credit: Q-CTRL.

At a scale beyond the reach of exact calculation, Q-CTRL used the native integration of its performance-management software on the IBM Quantum Platform to successfully run a quantum algorithm and return results with accuracy meeting industry-standard expectations. The quantum algorithm took just two minutes to run, while the same problem took over 100 hours using the best classical tools to execute on classical hardware.

With approximately one-third of global supercomputer time currently dedicated to chemistry and materials simulation, delivering new computational capabilities can be transformative for applications critical to the future of energy. However, these applications remain constrained by massive computational bottlenecks.

Quantum computers often follow the same quantum physics as the problems being simulated, making these prime candidates for quantum acceleration.

The Q-CTRL team compared its quantum calculations, focused on how electrons in materials give rise to the properties we use for energy transmission, storage, and generation, to the best implementation of a state-of-the-art, industry-standard software package from the materials-science community.

The two approaches agreed, up to a point. To improve the agreement, the team had to increase the resolution of the classical simulation, at the cost of a major blowout in execution time: the classical simulation increased to over 3,000 times longer than the time required by the IBM quantum computer.

“Scientists and engineers dedicate thousands of hours to performing materials simulations in their efforts to unlock the future of energy, from photovoltaics to fusion,” said Michael J. Biercuk, CEO and Founder of Q-CTRL. “These results mark the beginning of an era of positive ROI from today’s widely available quantum computers on problems that early adopters truly care about. That’s the nature of Practical Quantum Advantage.”

Despite their promise, quantum computers can be limited by noise and errors, which can degrade performance and prevent users from achieving useful results on relevant problems. Q-CTRL’s performance-management infrastructure software addresses this problem and expands the capabilities of today’s most advanced machines.

The specific infrastructure software configuration used for these demonstrations will soon be publicly accessible on the IBM Quantum Platform as a new Qiskit Function, so anyone can build off of these results and incorporate quantum computing directly into their chemistry and materials R&D.

“We’ve moved past the question of whether quantum computers have utility and onto the question of how to use them well,” said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research and IBM Fellow. “IBM has built the largest quantum computing ecosystem in the world, and we’re putting increasingly capable systems in the hands of the people doing the work. Results from partners like Q-CTRL are showing how these systems contribute to scientific workflows.”

This outcome follows just one year after Q-CTRL demonstrated commercial quantum advantage in navigation, producing a GPS-free quantum navigation system that outperformed the best like-for-like classical alternative by 100 times. These milestones highlight how Q-CTRL’s focus on quantum control infrastructure software as a quantum-hardware enabler has proven key to advancing the entire quantum industry.

To learn more about the demonstration, read the technical manuscript here.

About Q-CTRL

Q-CTRL is the pioneer in AI-powered infrastructure software for quantum technology, offering a hardware-agnostic software platform that makes quantum machines thousands of times more powerful. This opens many parallel market verticals in computing, sensing, and health, making Q-CTRL a truly diversified quantum opportunity based on a single unique technology.

The company’s marquee product is an unjammable, unspoofable, undetectable quantum navigation system that works when GPS is unavailable, is 100 times better than the best alternative, and is being deployed on commercial aircraft with Airbus, in defense with Lockheed Martin, and on unmanned drones.

The company’s breakthroughs have been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and Newsweek. Founded
in 2017 by Professor Michael J. Biercuk, Q-CTRL operates globally from offices in Sydney, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Huntsville, Berlin, and Oxford.


Source: Q-CTRL

The post Q-CTRL Claims 3,000x Quantum Speedup for Materials Science Simulations on IBM Quantum Platform appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 14:26

RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C., May 6, 2026 — Simulations Plus, Inc., a global leader in model-informed and AI-accelerated drug development that advances biopharma innovation, today announced the launch of a technical collaboration with NVIDIA focused on enabling GPU-accelerated simulation and AI-assisted workflows for computationally intensive modeling applications within the drug development lifecycle.

Simulations Plus has announced the launch of a technical collaboration with NVIDIA

The collaboration brings together Simulations Plus’ validated scientific engines across physiologically-based pharmacokinetics (PBPK), pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics (PK/PD), and quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) with NVIDIA AI infrastructure to accelerate and scale simulation cycles, parameter exploration, and virtual population studies. Together, these capabilities address two core constraints in model-informed drug development (MIDD): reducing manual, expertise-driven work and enabling large-scale exploration of model structures and parameters in parallel—shifting modeling from a sequential process to a more iterative, data-informed workflow operating at program-relevant timelines.

NVIDIA contributes advanced computing infrastructure and expertise in accelerated inference and GPU-native optimization to improve simulation performance and enable interactive, AI-assisted workflows. NVIDIA also brings access to its life sciences ecosystem, including the NVIDIA BioNeMo platform and a global network of pharmaceutical partners, supporting broader engagement and adoption.

“For three decades, Simulations Plus has helped pharmaceutical and biotechnology organizations apply modeling and simulation with confidence across drug development. Our collaboration with NVIDIA brings together validated science, accelerated computing, and AI capabilities in a way that expands what scientific teams are able to explore and accomplish,” said Shawn O’Connor, Chief Executive Officer of Simulations Plus.

The collaboration is initially focused on three areas:

Next-Generation Scientific Engines

Simulations Plus has begun developing GPU-optimized simulation capabilities for QSP and PK/PD applications, reducing runtimes and enabling broader exploration of complex biological systems. This enables scientists to evaluate a broader range of hypotheses without pre-pruning models, increasing confidence in model selection and supporting more robust program decisions.

AI-Assisted Scientific Workflows

Simulations Plus is applying AI-assisted approaches, informed by NVIDIA’s expertise in accelerated inference and agentic AI, to support model construction, parameter fitting, diagnostics, and refinement—reducing manual effort and accelerating iteration from question to analysis. By reducing manual, time-intensive steps, these workflows will allow scientists to focus more on scientific interpretation and decision-making, significantly accelerating iteration cycles within drug development programs.

Advancing Quantitative Systems Pharmacology

Simulations Plus is prioritizing QSP workflows—one of the most computationally demanding areas in drug development—by applying GPU acceleration and AI-assisted methods to improve simulation efficiency and expand practical use in pharmaceutical R&D. Current testing shows up to a 75% reduction in time required for end-to-end QSP modeling, enabling faster iteration and expanding the practical use of QSP within program timelines.

As part of the collaboration, the companies plan to engage select pharmaceutical partners to evaluate these capabilities in real-world drug development workflows, with initial focus on high-complexity modeling use cases.

“Scientific teams are asking for faster iteration, greater scale, and better ways to work across increasingly complex modeling problems. By combining our validated scientific engines with AI-assisted workflows and accelerated computing, we are extending our platform into a more integrated modeling ecosystem—where workflows scale across domains like QSP while remaining grounded in reproducible, scientifically validated outputs,” said Erik Guffrey, Co-Chief Product and Technology Officer of Simulations Plus.

“Biopharma teams need platforms that can connect mechanistic modeling, AI, and high-performance simulation into workflows scientists can actually use. By bringing NVIDIA accelerated computing and AI infrastructure together with Simulations Plus’ deep expertise in model-informed drug development, we can help researchers run more complex models, explore larger design spaces, and move from insight to decision faster,” said Anthony Costa, Director of Digital Biology and Health, NVIDIA.

About Simulations Plus, Inc.

Simulations Plus (Nasdaq: SLP) is a global leader in model-informed and AI-accelerated drug development. We create value for our clients by accelerating the discovery, development, and commercialization of pharmaceuticals and other products through innovative science-based software and consulting solutions. For more information, visit www.simulations-plus.com.


Source: Simulations Plus

The post Simulations Plus and NVIDIA Collaborate to Scale GPU-Accelerated, AI-Assisted Modeling Workflows appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:14

May 6, 2026 — The University of Southern Denmark (SDU), in collaboration with Danfoss and HPE, is bringing a new national AI supercomputer online, enabling Danish universities to handle large data volumes and advanced AI models within a single shared infrastructure. At the same time, the project demonstrates a new model for how AI infrastructure can be built more energy-efficiently at global scale by integrating data centers into energy systems and reusing waste heat.

In a partnership, SDU, Danfoss, and HPE have combined research expertise, industrial decarbonization leadership, and data center technology to establish a new supercomputer.

The system will be used for research and teaching within artificial intelligence, data analytics, and advanced computing across academic disciplines. It will be available to researchers and students at universities throughout Denmark, enabling work on larger and more complex challenges within a single shared infrastructure.

At the same time, the supercomputer strengthens innovation ecosystems around Danish universities. Startups and spin-out companies will gain access to advanced AI and data analytics, providing improved opportunities to rapidly develop, test, and scale new solutions, products, and services.

-Digital infrastructure is a strategic resource for both research and education. Researchers and students now have much better opportunities to work with larger datasets and more advanced models across institutions than has previously been practically possible in a shared Danish infrastructure. This creates a stronger foundation for research, talent development, and collaboration, which is crucial for both scientific quality and societal value, said Professor Claudio Pica, Director of the SDU eScience Center.

The facility was inaugurated at Alsion in Sønderborg, Denmark, and is from today part of the national research infrastructure. Access is provided through the research platform UCloud, developed in collaboration between SDU, Aalborg University, and Aarhus University. UCloud currently has more than 23,000 users and is among the largest research cloud platforms in Europe and globally. UCloud is a European, sovereign solution in which data, software, and computations remain under national and European control — a key consideration at a time of increasing focus on digital sovereignty.

A key element of the project is its integration with the local energy system. The supercomputer uses advanced liquid cooling with full heat recovery. Waste heat is reused as part of Sønderborg Municipality’s ambition to create a fully CO₂ neutral energy system.

-In Denmark, we have a unique strength in bringing together research communities, industry players, and technology providers around shared solutions. Here, we have created a unique supercomputing solution that contributes positively across several areas: it delivers both high computational power and acts as an active part of the energy system. This makes it possible to work with data volumes and AI models at the scale required to develop and deploy advanced artificial intelligence not only in Denmark but also internationally. At the same time, it ensures the energy from the supercomputer is reused in the local heating system, contributing to more energy efficient operations. Ultimately, this serves as inspiration, demonstrating that sustainability, technological development, and commercially attractive initiatives can go hand in hand, said Sune Tornbo Baastrup, Chief Information Officer at Danfoss.

HPE is the technology partner that supplied the underlying infrastructure to the supercomputer. Carsten Nielsen, Vice President and Managing Director for the Nordic Cluster at HPE, said:

-HPE is proud to collaborate with the University of Southern Denmark and Danfoss in establishing AI and supercomputing infrastructure for Danish research. This project demonstrates what becomes possible when research, industry, and technology providers work together with a shared ambition. This new system is among the most advanced in Denmark for generative AI workloads and represents a significant technological upgrade of the national AI infrastructure. We look forward to the scientific results that Danish researchers will achieve using this new platform.

The supercomputer has been named Bitten, after Bitten Clausen, who played a major role in Danfoss’ early development and was among the first female chairpersons in European industry. The name reflects the values behind the system: vision, responsibility, and the courage to break new ground.

The name also reflects the supercomputer’s strong Danish roots and the ambition to promote greater diversity within technology and research environments, where women remain underrepresented.


Source: University of Southern Denmark

The post University of Southern Denmark, Danfoss and HPE Launch National AI Supercomputer ‘Bitten’ appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:11

While we've already seen multiple phone launches so far, Samsung, Apple and Google are gearing up for some very exciting announcements (including an all-new wide-screen Galaxy Fold) this year.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:07

Multipath Reliable Connection — a new transport protocol proven first and optimized on NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet hardware — is now open to the industry.

May 6, 2026 — The race to build the world’s most powerful AI factories demands networking that keeps pace with the ambitions of AI itself.

NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet scale-out infrastructure stands at the forefront of that race as the most advanced AI networking technology available today, deployed by industry leaders who can’t afford to compromise on performance, resilience or scale.

Credit: Shutterstock

That includes OpenAI, Microsoft and Oracle.

Companies including NVIDIA, Microsoft and OpenAI have demonstrated industry leadership by introducing Multipath Reliable Connection (MRC), an RDMA transport protocol. MRC enables a single RDMA connection to distribute traffic across multiple network paths, improving throughput, load balancing and availability for large-scale AI training fabrics.

Think of it as replacing a single-lane road spanning a town with a cleverly laid-out street grid system paired with an on-the-fly traffic app, enabling drivers to reroute around slowdowns and road closures.

“Deploying MRC in the Blackwell generation was very successful and was made possible by a strong collaboration with NVIDIA,” said Sachin Katti, head of industrial compute at OpenAI. “MRC’s end-to-end approach enabled us to avoid much of the typical network-related slowdowns and interruptions and maintain the efficiency of frontier training runs at scale.”

In addition, Microsoft and NVIDIA have a longstanding collaboration focused on advancing the infrastructure required for the next generation of AI. Microsoft’s Fairwater and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI’s) Abilene data center, two of the largest AI factories purpose-built for training and deploying leading-edge frontier LLMs, rely on MRC to deliver on performance, scale and efficiency requirements. NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet is suited for this environment, helping provide the network foundation needed to run large-scale AI models and applications with confidence.

Proven first in production with performance optimized on NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet hardware and now released as an open specification through the Open Compute Project, MRC demonstrates the power of the Spectrum-X Ethernet platform: purpose-built hardware, deep telemetry and intelligent fabric control working together to take a new protocol — a set of rules that controls how data moves between two systems across a network — from concept to gigascale AI production.

MRC delivers high levels of GPU utilization by load-balancing traffic across all available paths, enabling every GPU to get the bandwidth it needs throughout a training run. It sustains high bandwidth even under congestion by dynamically avoiding overloaded paths in real time.

When data loss occurs, intelligent retransmission enables rapid, precise recovery, minimizing the impact of short-lived interruptions to long-running jobs, helping avoid GPU idle time.

Administrators also gain fine-grained visibility and control over traffic paths, simplifying operations and accelerating troubleshooting at scale.

MRC, deployed on Spectrum-X Ethernet, is optimized and engineered for resilience at massive scale. Its failure bypass technology can — in just microseconds — detect a network path failure and reroute traffic automatically in hardware.

This failure bypass technology matters for AI training clusters where thousands of GPUs must stay synchronized, as even a brief network disruption can slow or interrupt an entire training job. Spectrum-X Ethernet prevents that by responding at hardware speed, keeping traffic flowing along precise pathways across gigascale AI fabrics.

Another innovation key to achieving gigascale AI factories is multiplanar network designs, which OpenAI deploys with Spectrum-X Ethernet in conjunction with MRC. A multiplane network consists of multiple independent network fabrics, or planes, with each providing an alternate communication path between GPUs.

The NVIDIA Spectrum-X Multiplane capability enhances this network architecture by supporting hardware-accelerated load balancing across the planes, boosting resiliency and scale without sacrificing performance. This keeps latencies predictably low while scaling to hundreds of thousands of GPUs.

With Spectrum-X Ethernet, customers are provided with a choice of RDMA transport models. Both Spectrum-X Ethernet Adaptive RDMA and MRC protocols, as well as other custom protocols, run natively across NVIDIA ConnectX SuperNICs and Spectrum-X Ethernet switches and support multiplanar network designs at gigascale.

In this way, the Spectrum-X Ethernet hardware and software infrastructure that powers today’s largest AI clusters gives customers the flexibility to choose the right transport for their workload.

The MRC transport protocol is the latest example of how the industry is using Spectrum-X Ethernet as a flexible, composable platform that integrates across the full breadth of modern AI infrastructure.

As AI factories continue to scale, the network must do more than move data quickly. It must be intelligent, resilient and based on open standards. NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet delivers on all three, and with MRC, it continues to set the standard for advanced AI networking.

NVIDIA collaborated on MRC development with AMD, Broadcom, Intel, Microsoft and OpenAI.

Learn more about NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet on the webpagedatasheet and technical whitepaper


Source: Gilad Shainer, NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA Highlights OpenAI, Microsoft Deployments of Spectrum-X Ethernet with MRC appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 14:00

jeditobe writes: Developers of ReactOS told Phoronix that the project has introduced a unified BootCD, replacing its previously separate installation media and LiveCD images. The new image combines the traditional text-mode installer with a LiveCD mode in a single medium. Within this unified BootCD, the updated LiveCD mode now includes an option to launch a first-stage GUI installer. The graphical interface is intended to make installation more approachable for new users compared to the long-standing text-based setup process. In a separate development, the project has also merged a new ATA storage driver that has been in progress since early 2024. The plug-and-play aware storage stack supports SATA, PATA, ATAPI, AHCI, and even SCSI devices, potentially expanding the range of hardware on which ReactOS can successfully boot. Following recent improvements to graphics driver support, the project continues to make incremental progress across core subsystems, though its long development timeline remains a point of discussion. Will these usability and hardware compatibility improvements be enough to broaden ReactOS adoption beyond its current niche? Please note that all new features are not present in version 0.4.15 and are available for testing in the latest nightly test builds.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:59

As Reform vows to block solar and windfarms, energy leaders say renewables offer most secure future, insulating UK from hostile forces

May elections: What’s at stake across England, Wales and Scotland?

The defining issue of Thursday’s local elections, feedback from doorsteps suggests, will be the UK’s soaring cost of living. But voters should be told about the links between inflation and the effects of fossil fuels and the climate crisis – or the remedies they choose – may make the situation worse, green campaigners have warned.

Ami McCarthy, the head of politics at Greenpeace UK, said: “With people’s bills and prices soaring from yet another fossil fuel crisis, these local elections have a global context – driven by the Iran war.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:51

A debt collector may be able to freeze your bank account, but if it's a joint account, the rules get complicated.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:50

Plus, Fubo says it's launching an AI assistant in the fall.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:49

Steve Roth was responding to the announcement by New York’s mayor of tax on second homes worth more than $5m

The phrase “tax the rich” can be “just as hateful as some disgusting racial slurs”, according to the New York City billionaire Steve Roth, who said that the top 1% should be “praised and thanked”.

Speaking on his company’s quarterly earnings call on Tuesday, Roth, the CEO of Vornado Realty Trust, expressed his support for fellow billionaire and the CEO of Citadel, Ken Griffin, who was singled out in the 15 April announcement by New York’s mayor, Zohran Mamdani, of the state’s first “pied-à-terre” tax on second homes valued at more than $5m. In a video, Mamdani announced the policy in front of Griffin’s penthouse, which he said was purchased for $238m.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:43

Almost two-thirds of respondents said US used to be a great place for immigrants but no longer is

Donald Trump’s aggressive and wide-reaching immigration-enforcement agenda has convinced increasing numbers of adults that the US is no longer a welcoming country for outsiders, a new poll has found.

About six in 10 respondents to the Associated Press-NORC poll, conducted last month, say the country used to be a great place for immigrants, but no longer is.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:43

Mother's Day is almost here, but finding an amazing last-minute gift for Mom isn't totally impossible. Check out these outstanding gifts, all hand-picked by our expert editors.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:30

Want to protect your retirement from inflation? These top gold IRA picks and tips can help you invest smarter now.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:10
  • Cocodona 250 will go on in runner’s honor, organizers say

  • Race includes more than 38,000ft of elevation gain

A runner at the Cocodona 250 ultramarathon in Arizona has died after a medical emergency, organizers said on Tuesday.

According to a statement posted on Instagram, a participant experienced a “serious medical emergency” during the 253-mile endurance race, which began Monday and continues through Saturday.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:02

Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro raised $3.6 million over five weeks, an aide said.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 13:00

Five major publishers and author Scott Turow have sued Meta and Mark Zuckerberg, alleging that Zuckerberg "personally authorized and actively encouraged" massive copyright infringement by using pirated books, journal articles, and web-scraped material to train Meta's Llama AI systems. Meta denies wrongdoing and says it will fight the case, arguing that courts have recognized AI training on copyrighted material as potentially fair use. Variety reports: "In their effort to win the AI 'arms race' and build a functional generative AI model, Defendants Meta and Zuckerberg followed their well-known motto: 'move fast and break things,'" the plaintiffs say in their lawsuit. "They first illegally torrented millions of copyrighted books and journal articles from notorious pirate sites and downloaded unauthorized web scrapes of virtually the entire internet. They then copied those stolen fruits many times over to train Meta's multibillion-dollar generative AI system called Llama. In doing so, Defendants engaged in one of the most massive infringements of copyrighted materials in history." The suit was filed Tuesday (May 5) in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York by five publishers (Hachette, Macmillan, McGraw Hill, Elsevier and Cengage) and Turow individually. The proposed class-action suit seeks unspecific monetary damages for the alleged copyright infringement. A copy of the lawsuit is available at this link (PDF). [...] the latest lawsuit alleges that Meta and Zuckerberg deliberately circumvented copyright-protection mechanisms -- and had considered paying to license the works before abandoning that strategy at "Zuckerberg's personal instruction." The suit essentially argues that the conduct described falls outside protections afforded by fair-use provisions of the U.S. copyright code.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:56

Utz issues voluntary recall for certain varieties of Zapp’s and Dirty potato chips over contamination linked to seasoning

Utz has issued a voluntary US recall of two potato chip brands after concerns that they could be contaminated with salmonella, a type of bacteria that can lead to food-borne illness.

Certain varieties of Zapp’s and Dirty potato chips may contain contamination linked to the seasoning used on the products, according to the US Food and Drug Administration in a recall issued on Monday. The recall applies to three flavors of Zapp’s chips sold in various bag sizes, along with three flavors of Dirty chips packaged in 2-ounce bags.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:55
Clicking noise from rear pad

Just got a new Pint X and its making a clicking noise when I put weight on the rear pad. Is this a normal sound to indicate weight on it?

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:55

The Prime Video series premieres this summer.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:51

The Justice Department charged a Texas man who allegedly fired his gun toward a Secret Service agent and wounded a bystander on the National Mall.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:47

Though Trump’s popularity has dwindled, staying loyal to him seems to still be a winning strategy among the GOP

By just about every measure, Donald Trump’s sway with US voters has slipped since he won re-election in 2024, but there’s one place where his power remains unmatched: within the Republican party.

The latest evidence of his ability to control who’s in and who’s out in the GOP came on Tuesday, when primary voters in Indiana ousted five of seven state senators who had last year defied the president’s demand to redraw the state’s congressional maps and gerrymander the state’s last two Democratic representatives out of their seats.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:45

May 6, 2026 — The HPC User Forum (HPCUF), taking place May 5–6 in Austin, Texas, will once again bring together leaders from national labs, academia, and industry to discuss the future of high-performance computing. AMD is proud to participate as a sponsor and contributor to this important community event, reinforcing its role at the forefront of HPC and AI convergence.

Credit: AMD

AMD Instinct MI430X GPU: A New FP64 Performance Class

Today, AMD is previewing the upcoming AMD Instinct MI430X GPU, which is designed to redefine the limits of what a GPU can offer to future HPC systems. Projected to deliver more than 200 TFLOPs of native FP64 performance, the MI430X represents a new class of accelerator for simulation, modeling and AI-driven science. MI430X is projected to provide more than six times the FP64 performance of the next-gen NVIDIA Rubin architecture, positioning it to become the highest performance FP64 GPU ever built.

For AI Gigafactories and high-performance computing centers, where numerical fidelity and throughput are mission-critical, MI430X is designed to be a step change in capability. The training data for next generation artificial intelligence models will be built on high fidelity simulations. Beyond traditional simulation workloads, this capability is increasingly central to the future of artificial intelligence itself. Many next-generation AI models will rely on training data generated from high-fidelity scientific simulations, from climate and materials science to nuclear engineering and fluid dynamics. As AI systems evolve toward surrogate models, automated laboratories, and closed-loop discovery pipelines, the quality of the data used to train those systems becomes the limiting factor. Models trained on low-precision or numerically unstable data inherit those limitations; models trained on accurate physical simulations can capture the true structure of the underlying science. As scientific teams push toward AI‑driven discovery, one question keeps coming up: can tomorrow’s infrastructure still be trusted to produce correct answers at scale?

Ultimately, accelerators such as the AMD Instinct MI430X, which is designed to provide leadership FP64 and low precision AI capabilities, in a single package, is planned to be the foundation of the emerging AI-for-science ecosystem.

Engaging the HPC Community in Austin

This year’s HPCUF agenda reflects the rapidly evolving landscape of HPC—where AI, simulation, and hybrid computing models are increasingly intertwined. Attendees can expect a range of technical sessions and panels covering middleware innovation, hybrid workflows, and domain-specific HPC applications.

A highlight of the event will be an industry panel in which AMD will participate in discussing “The Future of Precision in HPC: FP64, Reduced Precision, and Emulation”, where industry, national lab, and academic experts will discuss this evolving HPC landscape, the requirements of future systems, and the role software-based emulation techniques will play.

Powering the Next Wave of Supercomputers

AMD’s leadership in HPC is not theoretical—it is already being realized in major global deployments powered by AMD Instinct GPUs and the next-generation systems below to be powered by the AMD Instinct MI430X GPU.

Discovery

The upcoming Discovery system is planned to be deployed in 2028 in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) at ORNL under the Genesis Mission, which is a national program designed to expand America’s leadership in artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC). It is expected to be the DOE’s next flagship system and will help drive breakthroughs in energy, biology, advanced materials, national security, and manufacturing innovation. Discovery will leverage AMD Instinct MI430X GPUs alongside next-generation AMD EPYC CPUs to enable large-scale AI training and inference, agentic AI, and scientific simulation. It is expected to represent one of the first “AI factory” supercomputers in the United States.

Alice Recoque

In Europe, the Alice Recoque system, which is expected to be Europe’s new supercomputer, will be powered by next-generation AMD Instinct MI430X GPUs and AMD EPYC CPUs. It is being deployed in cooperation with Grand équipement national de calcul intensif (GENCI), operated by Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA).

Alice Recoque is designed to deliver exascale-class performance for both AI and traditional HPC workloads, emphasizing energy efficiency and scientific throughput. It will tackle Europe’s most pressing societal, scientific, and industrial challenges by combining large-scale simulations, data analysis, and AI. Alice Recoque is expected to deliver more than one exaflop of HPL performance.

These deployments highlight the AMD growing footprint across sovereign AI and HPC infrastructure, enabling nations and institutions to build open, high-performance computing ecosystems.

Looking Ahead

As the HPC community gathers in Austin, the AMD message is clear:

  • Precision matters — FP64 is foundational for scientific discovery
  • Convergence is here — infrastructure must support both HPC and AI-for-Science
  • Performance leadership — with AMD Instinct MI430X GPU setting a new bar

From thought leadership at the HPC User Forum to powering the world’s next-generation supercomputers, AMD is helping shape the future of computing—one breakthrough at a time.

To reach an AMD HPC expert, email HPC@AMD.com.

More from HPCwire

About AMD

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing.


Source: AMD

The post AMD Highlights Instinct MI430X GPU, Future HPC Systems at HPC User Forum appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:38

Rami Elghandour tells Guardian in exclusive interview that cancellation sends ‘dangerous’ message to students

Rutgers University abruptly rescinded its invitation to a prominent alum who was slated to deliver a graduation speech next week after some students complained about social media posts he had published about Palestine.

Rami Elghandour – a tech entrepreneur, graduate of Rutgers’ School of Engineering, and executive producer of the Oscar-nominated film The Voice of Hind Rajab – was set to deliver a graduation address at the school’s campus in New Brunswick, New Jersey on 15 May.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:35

Demonstrators, angered by Russia’s inclusion at arts festival, shouted ‘Curated by Putin, dead bodies included’

The Russian pavilion at the Venice Biennale was forced temporarily to shut its doors on the second day of the preview after the activist group Pussy Riot staged a chaotic protest against the country’s inclusion in the art festival.

Wearing pink balaclavas, the protesters ran towards the Russian pavilion where they gathered outside and lit pink, blue and yellow flares while playing punk music and shouting slogans, including “Blood is Russia’s Art”.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 12:15

Chedrick Greene will have to defend his new perch in midterms, as Republican challenger vows to run again

Chedrick Greene, a Democratic firefighter and marine veteran, won a special election in Michigan on Tuesday, allowing Democrats to retain control of the state senate for the remainder of the year.

In the race for Michigan’s 35th senate district, a constituency that former vice-president Kamala Harris won by only a single percentage point in 2024, Greene beat the Republican Jason Tunney – clinching more than 58% of the vote, compared with Tunney’s 39%, according to local results. The district includes parts of Bay and Saginaw counties, purple areas of the state.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:14

Telemundo's FIFA coverage on the platform will also include free-to-watch matches.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:10

Pope Leo said on Tuesday he hoped to spread the Christian message by speaking about peace, but that people were free to criticise him. Donald Trump has accused the pontiff of 'endangering a lot of Catholics' with his stance on the Iran war. Leo said he believed it was much better to enter into dialogue than to support the arms industry. The pope is preparing to meet the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, in the Vatican on Thursday

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:09

The AI-generated search results will include related but unasked-for info and first-person advice from Reddit and other online forums.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 12:13

Pontiff responds after US president accuses him of ‘endangering a lot of Catholics’ with stance on Iran war

Pope Leo has said he has never supported nuclear weapons and that those who criticise him need to speak the truth, in response to Donald Trump’s latest tirade accusing him of “endangering a lot of Catholics” with his stance on the Iran war.

Speaking to journalists on Tuesday night after leaving the papal retreat in Castel Gandolfo, near Rome, the first US-born pontiff said: “The mission of the church is to preach the gospel, to preach peace.”

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 12:58

US president says war will end if Tehran agrees to deal, but that ‘bombing starts’ again if it does not

Oil prices fell and stock markets rose as Donald Trump said the war with Iran would end and the strait of Hormuz would be “open to all” if Tehran struck a deal with Washington.

The US president posted on social media: “Assuming Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to, which is, perhaps, a big assumption, the already legendary Epic Fury will be at an end, and the highly effective Blockade will allow the Hormuz Strait to be OPEN TO ALL, including Iran.”

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 13:59

Gas prices are now 52% higher than prior to the Iran war, with drivers paying $1.56 more per gallon, data shows.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-07 09:54

In a new lawsuit, two California residents allege that Cento Fine Foods doesn't use real San Marzano tomatoes in one of its products.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-07 03:04

Trump threatens Iran with "higher level" strikes if it won't accept a peace deal, but says it's too soon for direct talks after reporting diplomatic progress.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-07 07:46

Three passengers have been evacuated from a cruise ship hit by a hantavirus outbreak, as related cases are confirmed in Switzerland and South Africa.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 19:56

Ted Turner built a media empire that included cable channels CNN, TBS and TNT, and he owned the Atlanta Braves for 20 years.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 12:03

Hi folks,

I've recently seriously sprained my wrist during a trail ride. I was wearing my f(x)nction Sender gloves, but landed with my hand like this 👍, hitting the ground with the bottom of the «emoji», so to speak. Therefore the palm impact dampener on my gloves was useless, they also have almost no padding around the wrist, and no splint for preventing wrist flex, so there is definitely room for my PPE improvement.

I'm currently researching my options. Full Sender f(x)nction gloves at least are double-splinted, but still have no padding around the wrist. Triple eight hired hands also are double splinted, and at least look a tiny bit beefier in the wrist area, although they do not cover the fingers fully.

Demon Flexmeter Double-Sided looks like the best option in terms of impact dampening and especially preventing wrist flex, but I will have to combine it with some ordinary gloves.

So I would like to ask, did I miss any good options? Especially interested in double-splinted full-finger gloves with some decent padding around the wrist.

submitted by /u/pineapple-1001
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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:03

A new counterterrorism strategy, signed by President Trump on Tuesday, seeks to crack down on Islamist terror groups, drug cartels and violent domestic political groups.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:01

Dozens killed despite ceasefire announced by Zelenskyy, after Moscow asked for Saturday truce for military parade

Kyiv has criticised Russia for attacking several Ukrainian cities overnight with more than 100 combat drones and three missiles in spite of a unilateral 24-hour ceasefire called by Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Ukraine’s president had announced the truce after the Kremlin said it wanted a ceasefire on Saturday during its annual military parade in Red Square, but he said he would reciprocate if Vladimir Putin broke Ukraine’s ceasefire, which ends at midnight on Wednesday.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:01

May 6, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science has allocated supercomputer access to 77 computational science projects for 2026 through its Innovative and Novel Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment, or INCITE, program. DOE is awarding 60 percent of the available time on the leadership-class supercomputers at DOE’s Argonne and Oak Ridge national laboratories to accelerate discovery and innovation.

Credit: Argonne

The program will support a broad range of high-impact, computationally and data intensive research campaigns in a vast array of science, engineering and computer science domains.

Jointly managed by the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF) and the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF), the INCITE program is the primary means by which the facilities fulfill their mission to advance science by providing the scientific community with access to their powerful supercomputing resources. The ALCF and OLCF are DOE Office of Science user facilities.

The ALCF’s resources include Aurora, an Intel-HPE Cray EX supercomputer recognized as the world’s fastest AI machine and the second DOE system to break the exascale barrier. Additionally, ALCF is awarding time on Polaris, an HPE Apollo 6500 Gen10+ system that delivers 44 petaflops of Tensor Core FP64 performance. The OLCF’s system is the 2 exaflops peak Frontier, an HPE Cray EX supercomputer that debuted in May 2022 as the world’s fastest supercomputer.

“We’re excited to once again support these trailblazing research campaigns and groundbreaking exascale-class projects with our leadership computing systems,” said Arjun Shankar, director of the National Center for Computational Sciences, which houses the OLCF. “INCITE has enabled countless scientific breakthroughs over the years, and the supercharging with AI and emergence of quantum computing promise to accelerate the pace of discovery. The OLCF has a proud tradition of more than two decades of excellence in high-performance computing, and we look forward to assisting users in another fruitful year.”

Open to any researcher or research organization in the world with a computationally or data intensive project, INCITE’s application process is highly competitive. Over a four-month period, INCITE proposals are assessed by peer-review panels composed of international experts, with each panel representing a different scientific discipline. The proposals are also evaluated on a technical level by each computing facility for technical readiness. The INCITE awards committee makes its final selections based on peer-review outcomes, combined with the technical readiness. This year, the committee received 143 total proposals with researchers requesting more than 141 million node-hours across all three systems. Additionally, the INCITE committee commits 10 percent of allocatable time to an early career track aimed at researchers within 10 years from earning their doctorate. This year, 14 early career projects were awarded.

“ALCF is proud to continue supporting the mission-critical scientific campaigns advanced through the INCITE program,” said Michael Papka, director of the ALCF. “Our leadership-class systems have continued to grow in capability, bringing simulation, data-driven methods, and AI together at unprecedented scale. The INCITE projects are defining the next era of computational science, enabling teams to confront complex challenges with the combined power of advanced simulation, data-driven approaches, and AI-accelerated discovery.”

Highlights of the 2026 allocations include:

  • Brant Robertson of the University of California, Santa Cruz received 470,000 node-hours on Frontier to probe new physics with the intergalactic medium.
  • Rama Ranganathan of the University of Chicago received 550,000 node-hours on Aurora and 90,000 node-hours on Polaris to explore the natural language prompt-guided design of functional de novo proteins.
  • Rommie Amaro of the University of California, San Diego received 1,228,800 node-hours on Frontier to study the in situ dynamics of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein.
  • Anouar Benali of Qubit Pharmaceuticals received 1,300,000 node-hours on Aurora to establish ab initio foundation models for riboswitch inhibitors in RNA-targeted therapeutics.
  • William Collins of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory received 210,000 node-hours on Polaris to build huge ensembles of weather extremes using machine learning algorithms.
  • Michael Borghi of NASA Glenn Research Center received 654,937 node-hours on Frontier and 780,000 node-hours on Aurora to develop revolutionary insights into turbomachinery analysis.
  • Noah Mandell of Type One Energy received 1,100,000 node-hours on Frontier to study impurity transport and core-edge integration in a stellarator fusion pilot plant.
  • Robert Hager of Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory received 1,000,000 node-hours on Aurora and 250,000 node-hours on Polaris to develop AI-facilitated global profile predictions in tokamak plasma.
  • Mitchell Wood of Sandia National Laboratories received 1,000,000 node-hours on Frontier, 200,000 node-hours on Aurora, and 300,000 node-hours on Polaris to study mechanisms of non-equilibrium ion dynamics in radiation-tolerant alloys.
  • Venkatasubramanian Vishwananath of the University of Michigan received 1,000,000 node-hours on Aurora to build multi-modal foundation models for materials.

For details on all of the 2026 INCITE awardees, view the project fact sheets here.


Source: Nils Heinonen, Argonne

The post INCITE Program Awards Supercomputing Time to 77 High-Impact Projects appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Silicon Valley investors such as Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel have bet hundreds of millions of dollars on deploying AI data centers powered by waves in the middle of the world's oceans -- a move that coincides with tech companies facing mounting challenges in building AI data center projects on land. The latest investment round of $140 million is intended to help the company Panthalassa complete a pilot manufacturing facility near Portland, Oregon, and speed up deployments of wave-riding "nodes" designed to generate electrical power, according to a May 4 press release. Instead of sending renewable energy to a land-based data center, the floating nodes would directly power onboard AI chips and transmit inference tokens representing the AI models' outputs to customers worldwide via satellite link. Each node resembles a huge steel sphere bobbing on the water with a tube-like structure extending vertically down beneath the surface. The wave motions drive water upward through the tube into a pressurized reservoir, where it can be released to spin a turbine generator that produces renewable energy for the AI chips on board. Panthalassa claims the node's AI chips would also get cooled using the surrounding water, which could offer another advantage over traditional data centers. "Ocean-based compute might offer a massive cooling advantage because the ambient temperature is so low," Lee said. "Land-based data centers use a lot of electricity and fresh water for cooling." The newest node prototype, called Ocean-3, is scheduled for testing in the northern Pacific Ocean later in 2026. The latest version reaches about 85 meters in length and would stand nearly as tall as London's Big Ben or New York City's Flatiron Building, according to the Financial Times. Panthalassa has already tested several earlier prototypes of the wave energy converter technology, including the Ocean-1 in 2021 and the Ocean-2 that underwent a three-week sea trial off the coast of Washington state in February 2024. The company's CEO and co-founder, Garth Sheldon-Coulson, said in a CBS interview that he hopes to eventually deploy thousands of the nodes.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 12:00

While some are using AI to tailor programs better suited to their needs, others warn ‘it can be wrong, confidently so’

People have mixed feelings about AI. While many people regularly use it – 62% in the US and 69% in the UK – trust in the technology is low. In the US, only 26% of people have a positive view of AI, according to one NBC poll, and in the UK, 78% say they worry about negative outcomes from AI.

So it is perhaps no surprise that readers’ responses to our callout about AI and fitness were varied. Some said they rely on AI to shape their workouts and diets while others said they refuse to use it at all because of its impact on the economy and the environment. And many were somewhere in between – they found it a useful tool, but were less than thrilled about the technology’s impact overall.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 11:59

SAN JOSE, Calif., May 6, 2026 — Super Micro Computer, Inc. (NASDAQ: SMCI), a Total IT Solution Provider for AI, Cloud, Storage, and 5G/Edge, has announced unaudited financial results for its third quarter of fiscal year 2026 ended March 31, 2026.

Third Quarter Fiscal Year 2026 Highlights

  • Net sales of $10.2 billion versus $12.7 billion in Q2’26 and $4.6 billion in Q3’25.
  • Gross margin of 9.9% versus 6.3% in Q2’26 and 9.6% in Q3’25.
  • Net income of $483 million versus $401 million in Q2’26 and $109 million in Q3’25.
  • Diluted net income per common share of $0.72 versus $0.60 in Q2’26 and $0.17 in Q3’25.
  • Non-GAAP gross margin of 10.1% versus 9.7% in Q3’25.
  • Non-GAAP diluted net income per common share of $0.84 versus $0.31 in Q3’25.
  • Cash flow used in operations for Q3’26 of $6.6 billion and capital expenditures and investments of $97 million.

“Supermicro’s transformation into a total datacenter infrastructure provider is accelerating,” said Charles Liang, Founder, President and CEO of Supermicro. “Our margin recovery and the rapid growth of our DCBBS business demonstrate that our business remains robust. With the addition of our new US manufacturing facilities in Silicon Valley, we are exceptionally well-positioned to meet the massive demand for various AI and enterprise verticals.”

As of March 31, 2026, total cash and cash equivalents was $1.3 billion and total bank debt and convertible notes were $8.8 billion.

Business Outlook

The Company expects net sales in the range of $11.0 billion and $12.5 billion for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2026 ending June 30, 2026, GAAP net income per diluted share of $0.53 to $0.67 and non-GAAP net income per diluted share of $0.65 to $0.79. The Company’s projections for GAAP and non-GAAP net income per diluted share assume a tax rate of approximately 19.4% and 20.4%, respectively, and a fully diluted share count of 695 million shares for GAAP and fully diluted share count of 712 million shares for non-GAAP. The outlook for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2026 GAAP net income per diluted share includes approximately $95 million in expected stock-based compensation, net of related tax effects of $30 million that are excluded from non-GAAP net income per diluted share.

For fiscal year 2026, the Company expects net sales in the range of $38.9 billion to $40.4 billion.

About Super Micro Computer, Inc.

Supermicro (NASDAQ: SMCI) is a global leader in Application-Optimized Total IT Solutions. Founded and operating in San Jose, California, Supermicro is committed to delivering first-to-market innovation for Enterprise, Cloud, AI, and 5G Telco/Edge IT Infrastructure. We are a Total IT Solutions provider with server, AI, storage, IoT, switch systems, software, and support services. Supermicro’s motherboard, power, and chassis design expertise further enables our development and production, enabling next-generation innovation from cloud to edge for our global customers. Our products are designed and manufactured in-house (in the US, Taiwan, and the Netherlands), leveraging global operations for scale and efficiency and optimized to improve TCO and reduce environmental impact (Green Computing). The award-winning portfolio of Server Building Block Solutions allows customers to optimize for their exact workload and application by selecting from a broad family of systems built from our flexible and reusable building blocks that support a comprehensive set of form factors, processors, memory, GPUs, storage, networking, power, and cooling solutions (air-conditioned, free air cooling or liquid cooling).


Source: Supermicro

The post Supermicro Announces 3rd Quarter Fiscal Year 2026 Financial Results appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 11:58

Ahead of Paramount Skydance merger with Warner Bros Discovery, Amanpour talks ‘ideological realignment of CBS’

One of CNN’s most recognizable and influential voices, chief international anchor Christiane Amanpour, has voiced concerns about CBS News parent company Paramount Skydance’s acquisition of CNN parent company Warner Bros Discovery and what it might mean for the cable news network.

Speaking at the Truth Tellers summit honoring the late English journalism pioneer, Sir Harry Evans, Amanpour said: “Clearly I’m concerned, and I’m not sure how much I’m allowed to say about a corporate thing that’s under way, but I am obviously, as a person, as a journalist with a record, concerned, and I’m concerned based on what’s happened to the other things that [Paramount Skydance chief executive, David Ellison, has] taken over already, like CBS News.” Amanpour noted how the network had done since it came under the control of Skydance last summer and nodded to reports about major changes coming to the Sunday show, 60 Minutes.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 11:58

SANTA CLARA, Calif., May 6, 2026 — AMD (NASDAQ:AMD) has announced financial results for the first quarter of 2026. First quarter revenue was $10.3 billion, gross margin was 53%, operating income was $1.5 billion, net income was $1.4 billion and diluted earnings per share was $0.84. On a non-GAAP basis, gross margin was 55%, operating income was $2.5 billion, net income was $2.3 billion and diluted earnings per share was $1.37.

Credit: Shutterstock

“We delivered an outstanding first quarter, driven by accelerating demand for AI infrastructure, with Data Center now the primary driver of our revenue and earnings growth,” said Dr. Lisa Su, AMD chair and CEO. “We are seeing strong momentum as inferencing and agentic AI drive increasing demand for high-performance CPUs and accelerators. Looking ahead, we expect server growth to accelerate meaningfully as we scale supply to meet demand. Customer engagement around MI450 Series and Helios is strengthening, with leading customer forecasts exceeding our initial expectations and a growing pipeline of large-scale deployments providing us with increasing visibility into our growth trajectory.”

“First quarter results reflect strong performance across all key financial metrics, with accelerating revenue growth, earnings expansion and record quarterly free cash flow,” said Jean Hu, AMD executive vice president, CFO and treasurer. “These results highlight continued momentum and execution across the business, demonstrating the leverage in our operating model as we invest for accelerated growth while expanding profitability.”

Segment Summary

  • Data Center segment revenue was $5.8 billion, up 57% year-over-year, driven by strong demand for AMD EPYC processors and the continued ramp of AMD Instinct GPU shipments.
  • Client and Gaming segment revenue was $3.6 billion, up 23% year-over-year. Client business revenue was $2.9 billion, up 26% year-over-year, primarily driven by strong demand for leadership AMD Ryzen processors and continued market share gains. Gaming business revenue was $720 million, up 11% year-over-year, driven by solid demand for AMD Radeon GPUs partially offset by lower semi-custom revenue.
  • Embedded segment revenue was $873 million, up 6% year-over-year, as demand strengthened across several end markets.

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 2026, AMD expects revenue to be approximately $11.2 billion, plus or minus $300 million. The mid-point of the revenue range represents year-over-year growth of approximately 46% and a sequential increase of approximately 9%. Non-GAAP gross margin is expected to be approximately 56%.

More from HPCwire: AMD Highlights Instinct MI430X GPU, Future HPC Systems at HPC User Forum

About AMD

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing.


Source: AMD

The post AMD Reports 1st Quarter 2026 Financial Results appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 11:51

Latest proposal, derided by Tehran as a ‘wishlist’, could yet be a way out – but with 5,000 dead, it comes at an awful price

Another day, another hairpin turn in the world of Donald Trump’s foreign policy.

The weekend was all about war, and Trump insisting Iran had not yet “paid a big enough price”. Tuesday was Project Freedom, styled as a grand “humanitarian gesture” to allow trapped ships and their crews to escape the Gulf, but also aimed at weakening Iran’s chokehold on the strait of Hormuz.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:49

The Minnesota DNR is keeping a three-walleye daily limit in place for Mille Lacs Lake starting with the May 9 fishing opener, with harvested fish required to be at least 17 inches and only one allowed over 20 inches.

2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-06 11:36

The unstoppable force of AI innovation has met its immovable object: not regulation, not grid power, but hardware capacity.

The competition for GPUs was already intense, with demand outpacing supply since the start of the AI boom. Now, as agentic AI quickly transforms from a promising experiment to a competitive necessity, enterprises require even more compute power to continue their AI transformation. In response, already sky-high GPU prices are spiking. According to the Ornn GPU Price Index, GPU cost-to-rent has gone up 48% in the last two months. This is just a baseline: costs fluctuate like stocks, making it difficult for enterprises and hardware brokers to calculate and standardize their budgets.

There is simply not enough gear to go around. And there is no overnight fix, either. Deploying more hardware is a long, costly process. Data centers take years to build, and numerous projects have been stalled or abandoned, either due to a lack of resources or growing consumer resistance. In the U.S. alone, half of the data center projects planned for the next year have been canceled. Meanwhile, pending capacity is booked solid, and more efficient, next-generation hardware is still in manufacturing.

Various countermeasures are underway to combat the crunch. Data center builders are pledging sustainability and cost-reduction measures to build goodwill with communities. Venture dollars are pouring into upstart cloud infrastructure companies to accelerate hardware deployment, while hyperscalers and major firms have instated a loop of circular financing to sustain innovation and expansion – but this also creates major vulnerabilities if the cycle were to break.

Even so, the cracks are widening. Under current hardware constraints, AI services are struggling to maintain uptime, disrupting workflows as more professionals rely on them and more businesses stake their bottom lines on AI-related efficiency gains. The days of running up token use on a company scoreboard are over.

To sustain the pace of innovation and remain competitive, anyone deploying AI will need to be infinitely more resource-efficient with their hardware, looking beyond pure silicon and data center residency to redistribute workloads across a wider, more diverse terrain of computing infrastructure.

The AI boom is creating a bubble. When will it pop? (hx4Stock-team/Shutterstock)

The Cost of the Crunch

As GPU limitations threaten the pace of AI development, two looming uncertainties have everyone on edge: Are we in an AI bubble and, more importantly, is that bubble about to burst? The hardware shortage may feel like a portent of collapse. After all, businesses have invested astronomical amounts of money to adopt AI at scale – $37 billion went to generative AI investments in 2025 alone. That figure doesn’t include non-generative programs that still require robust hardware to function, nor these organizations’ overall cloud budgets.

What’s happening is that both the technology itself and the pressure to adopt it are evolving faster than the physical infrastructure. AI is the defining technology of our era, and for enterprises, to delay adoption is to crystallize their operations in the past. If they cannot generate ROI from their AI initiatives, then they have lost collective billions to a future they may not get to be a part of. Enterprises have to iterate faster, collect results, retrain models, and refine strategies, all within a helplessly tight GPU depreciation window.

In the face of extreme demand, GPUs have become something of a luxury good, and the downstream effects could harm the course of future innovation. Left unaddressed, rising prices and limited supply will lead to fewer developers making AI apps, and therefore less potential for new use cases and efficiencies. There is much we stand to lose if hardware limitations narrow accessibility to only the biggest and wealthiest organizations.

Enterprises shouldn’t have to put their AI transformation on hold due to hardware limitations. While they cannot defy the laws of physics, they can find more efficient ways to manage their GPU-intensive workloads.

The Inference Flashpoint

The entire AI lifecycle puts strain on GPUs, but inference, the process of running an AI model, is what truly tests their mettle. Inference is also where organizations extract the most value from their AI initiatives. However, many organizations are running AI systems across fragmented infrastructure, limiting their ability to deliver real-time inference. The hardware shortage will only expose the gaps in these systems faster.

Massive new data centers are being built to house AI workloads (Matthew-G-Eddy/Shutterstock)

Some users are turning to on-device inference to run models locally. However, this creates serious governance issues and could expose sensitive personal or company information, if users are running inference on personal, unsanctioned devices. Furthermore, were it to become standard practice, it could create an unfair precedent to offload more enterprise AI costs to employees.

The actual cost of inference is a moving target, but it’s less about the average cost than what enterprises can do to economize inference across their full computing ecosystem.

Enterprises must be able to scale inference automatically based on user demand. This means they will have to adopt comprehensive operational stacks to modulate inference traffic, support revenue-friendly tokenomics, and ensure more resource-efficient orchestration. For many, this will mean departing the single-provider infrastructure model to adopt a more agile multi-cloud strategy. Cascading deployment across more diverse infrastructure can also open up new software accelerations to further optimize inference, from reducing computational redundancies to promoting integration with existing stacks.

Restructuring for Efficiency

A new report reveals 69% of CFOs believe between 10-30% of their cloud budget is wasted. As hardware costs continue to rise, enterprises must work diligently to get that percentage down to 0%. With many cloud contracts up for renewal this year – including a rash of those signed at the first curve of the AI boom – economizing inference and maximizing GPU utilization should be top of mind.

Think of AI workloads as just that: physical loads, balanced on the shoulders of infrastructure. Place all the load on one carrier, one body, and that carrier must exert much more force to sustain it. Distribute the load across a team of carriers, and the burden becomes much easier to bear. At the same time, if a load is small enough, maybe only one or two carriers are needed.

The point is, efficiency happens when infrastructure use is proportional to the workload. Hyperscalers, even though they offer a wide variety of solutions, are not always the most efficient option. Having diverse infrastructure via a multi-cloud strategy allows enterprises to optimize AI training and inference in line with its exact hardware needs, reducing both energy use and financial strain while also ensuring security, consistent performance, and sustainable scale. A single provider typically cannot guarantee all of these outcomes.

Shutterstock 1606064203

Retaining the ability to move workloads will help customers weather the AI boom and hardware shortage (Shutterstock)

Composability is the path to efficiency, but it requires deep strategic work to compose the infrastructure that modern AI systems require. This is the time to put energy behind the knowledgeable people driving AI innovation: platform engineering and developer teams that enable the process of operationalizing efficiency. By developing these AI “centers of excellence,” enterprises extract the most value possible from their current and future hardware ecosystem. Then, as the GPU crunch begins to ease, they will have a firm foundation for continued innovation at scale.

Finding Relief in an Open Ecosystem

The path to more efficient AI compute is already in the tech industry’s DNA: open-source.

Open-source AI models save time and compute power because much of the initial training and testing is already done. Organizations have the flexibility to innovate without forcing additional training loads onto their infrastructure; any training and refinement happens on a reliable foundation. Many open-source models are also battle-tested for compliance and security, reducing the potential for additional financial penalty.

Similarly, the deployment of small-language models (SLMs) and other highly specialized models promotes hardware efficiency, especially when bolstered by data storage improvements. Open partnerships exist between storage providers and hardware providers, which enterprises can take advantage of to optimize deployment and save costs.

Open-source models and software can also help enterprises to optimize their existing infrastructure capacity. The combination of the right hardware and software can boost GPU efficiency to ensure AI development proceeds at a sustainable pace.

While the walls of the walled garden may be breaking, they have not come all the way down. A truly open ecosystem is what will enable enterprises to build the custom hardware and software apparatus to reach their specific AI goals. This is not a breakdown of competitive practices, but building the foundation for competition to thrive. If there is any silver lining to the current hardware availability crisis, it’s that it will push innovators to work together to make AI deployment less burdensome on existing hardware.

About the author: Kevin Cochrane is the Chief Marketing Officer at Vultr, a provider of high performance compute in the cloud. 

The post Navigating Hardware Limitations Amid the Agentic AI Rush appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 11:27

Reimagining pandemic prevention, preparedness and resilience 27 May 2026 — 13:00 TO 14:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Why breaking the inequality-pandemic cycle is the missing link in global health security.

Why breaking the inequality-pandemic cycle is the missing link in global pandemic prevention and preparedness

The world today is marked by persistent inequality and increased risk of disease outbreaks and pandemics. Recent systematic analysis by the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics has demonstrated that the COVID-19 pandemic, the global HIV epidemic and other high-impact epidemics have revealed there is a mutually reinforcing cycle, where inequality within and between countries both drives outbreaks to escalate into pandemics and worsens their impact, further widening inequalities.

This cycle is undermining the ability of scientific advances to keep the world safer from pandemics. It poses a threat to global prosperity and security, highlighting the need for an approach to pandemic prevention, preparedness and response that can interrupt the cycle, despite the pressures on international cooperation and competing priorities.

While experts have produced numerous recommendations in the aftermath of COVID‑19, global attention has shifted elsewhere, raising the question of whether urgency around pandemic readiness has been lost amid overlapping crises. One critical weakness in policymaking is the failure to face the reality that inequalities between countries globalise pandemic vulnerability.

This session challenges conventional, top‑down approaches to pandemic prevention and preparedness by focusing on the social foundations that determine outcomes in practice. By placing structural inequality at the centre of pandemic resilience, the Council offers a fresh and practical framework to help decision-makers tackle the threat of the next global health crisis more effectively.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:25

Conservative leader says her party ‘are willing to work with people who will help deliver Conservative policies’

Labour has criticised Zack Polanski for saying he was concerned about how the suspect in the Golders Green stabbings was treated when he was arrested by the police.

Referring to what Polanski said about this in his Today interview this morning (see 9.33am), a Labour party spokesperson said:

Our brave police ran towards a suspected terrorist and tackled him while he was still carrying a knife and before they could handcuff him.

The fact that Zack Polanski is still sympathising with this individual is utterly astounding. For the Green party leader to be litigating the case for the defence against the police shows whose side he is truly on.

The latest unemployment figures for February showed a fall, interest rates were expected to come down, the markets were pricing in a couple of cuts during the course of the year.

The truth is, with the effect of the Iran war, we can’t count on any of that at the moment. There is likely to be an effect on prices, which feeds through from energy costs, and there may well be labour market implications.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:25

Finding would explain why type of stroke affecting about 35,000 a year in UK is not as responsive to some medication

The cause of a type of stroke that affects about 35,000 people across the UK each year has been uncovered by researchers and may explain why some medications are ineffective as treatment.

Lacunar strokes, which account for a quarter of all strokes in the UK, had been linked to the blockage of arteries in the brain by fatty deposits. However, a study published on Wednesday suggests they are not caused by blocked arteries but by the enlargement and widening of arteries in the brain.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:25

Approval for exploration in 70 new areas prompts fierce backlash from fossil fuel opponents

The Norwegian government has been heavily criticised for approving plans to reopen three North Sea gasfields nearly three decades after they were closed to help fill the gap in energy supplies created by the Middle East war.

Amid sharp price rises in oil and gas since the US and Israel’s attack on Iran in February, Oslo has also given its approval for oil and gas companies to explore in 70 new locations in the North Sea, Barents Sea and Norwegian Sea.

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2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 11:24

For You pages prioritized pro-Republican content in three states, researchers say, but TikTok says study does not reflect real user behavior

A study published Wednesday in the journal Nature finds that TikTok’s algorithm systematically prioritized pro-Republican content in three states leading up to the 2024 US elections.

Researchers created hundreds of dummy accounts and conditioned them to mimic real users’ behavior by watching a set of videos either aligned with the US Democratic or Republican parties. Then, they tracked the videos TikTok recommended on these accounts’ For You pages, TikTok’s main feed.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:19

If you’re on vesc I highly recommend you check out the new updated floaty 3.0. Lots of new features and more to come I’ve heard.

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[link] [comments]

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:07

Commentary: For tech execs such as Jeff Bezos, there really is nothing money can't buy. Nothing, that is, except true cultural capital.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:04

The animal was a fin whale, the second-largest animal in the world, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association said.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:00

Councillor announces plan to withdraw from government-funded programme on eve of local elections

The Reform-led Lancashire county council will withdraw from the government’s refugee resettlement scheme, one of its cabinet members has said.

Joshua Roberts announced plans for Lancashire to leave the scheme, which would make it the first local authority to do so. It would mean Lancashire would no longer participate in the UK Resettlement Scheme (UKRS) and the Afghan Resettlement Programme (ARP).

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:00

Kash Patel is placing blame on local officials in Arizona over their handling of the investigation into the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, but the Pima County sheriff says some of the FBI director's claims are inaccurate.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 11:00

Microsoft is winding down Xbox Copilot on mobile and ending development of Copilot on console, reversing plans to bring the gaming-focused AI assistant to current-generation Xbox consoles this year. "The move follows [new Xbox CEO Asha Sharma's] reorganization of the Xbox platform team earlier on Tuesday, which added executives from Microsoft's CoreAI team -- where Sharma worked before taking over Xbox -- to the Xbox side of the company," reports The Verge. Sharma said in a post on X: Xbox needs to move faster, deepen our connection with the community, and address friction for both players and developers. Today, we promoted leaders who helped build Xbox, while also bringing in new voices to help push us forward. This balance is important as we get the business back on track. As part of this shift, you'll see us begin to retire features that don't align with where we're headed. We will begin winding down Copilot on mobile and will stop development of Copilot on console. Since taking over for former Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer in February, Sharma has scrapped the Microsoft Gaming brand and cut the price of Xbox Game Pass.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 11:00

The software company said in February it would cut 2,000 jobs but, as it touts new technology, workers are still waiting to hear which roles will go

Staff at WiseTech have been waiting almost three months to be told if they are among the 2,000 people the logistics software company is to cut due to advances in AI, with workers criticising the wait as stressful and “ridiculous”.

The comments come as its founder on Tuesday told investors an AI agent could learn a human’s job in just 15 minutes, according to the Australian Financial Review.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:59

Clifton George admits manslaughter but denies murder of Annabel Rook, whom he stabbed at least 22 times

A man fatally stabbed his partner and then triggered a gas explosion at their north-east London home last summer, a court has heard.

Clifton George, 45, is accused of murdering 46-year-old Annabel Rook during an argument at their home in Stoke Newington on 17 June 2025. George has pleaded guilty to manslaughter but denies murder.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 10:51

The death of the media mogul who transformed TV news was confirmed by his family and reported by CNN

Ted Turner, the media mogul who founded CNN, has died aged 87, CNN reported on Wednesday, citing a news release from Turner Enterprises.

In a statement, Mark Thompson, the chair and CEO of CNN Worldwide, said that “Ted was an intensely involved and committed leader, intrepid, fearless, and always willing to back a hunch and trust his own judgment.”

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:44

I’ve spent several weeks testing the three-in-one Shark ChillPill personal fan. Here’s how it compares to its Dyson counterpart.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:43

The Venice Biennale, Eurovision and Cannes are framed as artists representing their nations. But in a fractured world, national identity seems increasingly futile

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Are the arts being drowned out by politics? A few days before the biggest week of the year in Europe’s cultural calendar, that impression may be hard to avoid. The Venice Biennale opens its doors to the public on Saturday, but talk in the run-up to the world’s largest contemporary event has focused little on the works that will go on display inside the national pavilions, and a lot on which pavilions are going to open their doors, or shouldn’t.

The building housing the Russian national representation was open for press previews on Tuesday, pumping out techno, for the first time since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. It’s a decision the biennale president, Pietrangelo Buttafuoco, seems to have made against the wishes of the Italian government that appointed him, and could cost the festival €2m in EU funds for a breach of its ethical standards. Russia has not participated in the past two editions due to its war in Ukraine. Its pavilion’s doors will be closed to the public when the biennale opens fully on 9 May, which a Ukrainian official told the Guardian was a “meaningful step”, after the biennale’s jury resigned en masse in April, in objection to entries from countries whose leaders are subject to international arrest warrants.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:39

Looking to buy a home or refinance your existing one? These are the mortgage interest rates to know right now.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:39

His sprawling legacy encompassed conservation, philanthropy and professional sports, and his bravado earned him the nickname “Mouth of the South.”

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:25

A $200 million gift from venture capitalist Mark Stevens and his wife, Mary, will build on USC’s strengths by leveraging AI to accelerate breakthroughs in the health sciences, security, business and the arts.

LOS ANGELES, May 6, 2026 — The University of Southern California has announced a new initiative that will leverage AI to accelerate innovation, breakthroughs and discovery across USC, including in the health sciences, security, business and the arts.

Shutterstock 1927423355

Credit: Shutterstock

Launched with a $200 million gift from venture capitalist, NVIDIA board member and USC Trustee Mark Stevens and his wife, Mary, this new university wide effort will recruit world-class AI researchers seeking to expand the frontiers of knowledge, develop new therapeutics, enhance our security, transform the world of business and enhance human creativity.

In recognition of their generosity and vision, the USC School of Advanced Computing, which sits within the USC Viterbi School of Engineering, will be renamed the USC Mark and Mary Stevens School of Computing and Artificial Intelligence.

“As AI becomes ever more powerful, it creates enormous opportunities to improve lives and solve some of our greatest challenges, if used the right way,” USC President Beong-Soo Kim said. “Mark and Mary Stevens’ generosity will allow USC to leverage our existing interdisciplinary strengths and capitalize on these new opportunities at a critical inflection point for our society. As a top destination for AI talent, USC can accelerate our mission of educating future leaders, addressing real-world problems and enhancing human values and agency.”

“We know the next great universities will be those that invest in computing,” said Mark Stevens. “This is a key moment. I am confident that USC has the leadership and direction to run quickly and stake our position as the trailblazer.”

USC already ranks in the top five in federal research support in areas related to computer science and offers more than 30 AI- and computing-related majors, minors and graduate degree programs that enroll thousands of students, with a new Bachelor of Science in Artificial Intelligence being introduced this fall. After graduation, Trojan alumni are leading the AI era: USC is the nation’s top producer of computer and information sciences graduates and the second-most common alma mater in Silicon Valley.

One of those Trojans is Mark Stevens, a tech venture capitalist legendary for investing early in the people, ideas and businesses that go on to transform the world. As a partner at Sequoia Capital, he was part of the team that made early-stage investments in Google, Yahoo, YouTube and NVIDIA, which landed him on Forbes’ Midas List.

Trojans like Stevens have led era-defining technological impact for nearly 60 years. USC faculty and alumni are responsible for the algorithm that made digital communication like GPS and cellphones possible; the .com, .edu, .gov and .org internet naming standards; and even the technology that gave us films like The Matrix and Avatar.

Today, USC researchers, faculty and students are using AI to better understand and treat neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, prevent suicides among college students and active-duty military members, and create high-tech, interactive virtual settings for film, TV and games.

The newly named USC Mark and Mary Stevens School of Computing and Artificial Intelligence is the university’s nexus for interdisciplinary research, teaching and innovation in AI. The school was established in 2024 with a founding investment from the Lord Foundation of California and the opening of the award-winning Dr. Allen and Charlotte Ginsburg Human-Centered Computation Hall.

“Mark and Mary’s generosity will have incalculable impact,” said Gaurav Sukhatme, inaugural director of the USC Stevens School. “The timing of their gift — which builds on the momentum of our launch, the opening of Ginsburg Hall and the rapidly growing impact of computing and AI on every field — has positioned USC to be a national and global leader for decades to come.”

Because of the USC Stevens School’s unique interdisciplinary model, the Stevenses’ investment will power research and education across the university. Their gift will scale existing efforts like those in the USC Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, where researchers are using AI to analyze thousands of brain scans and uncover the genetic patterns that help diagnose neurodegenerative diseases early, and the USC Institute for Creative Technologies, a University Affiliated Research Center of the U.S. Army that uses cutting-edge AI for military applications such as safe, immersive training.

Interdisciplinary faculty expertise has also been key to launching efforts like USC’s new degree in Artificial Intelligence for Business, which trains students to bring the power of AI into business settings and applications; the USC Institute on Ethics and Trust in Computing, which connects USC philosophers, computer scientists, journalists, doctors, policymakers and others to explore how society can balance innovation with the responsible use of AI; and the USC Center for AI in Society, one of the first “AI for Good” centers, which focuses on the use of computing to support vulnerable people and communities.

AI is even supporting students’ creative work in places like USC’s No. 1-ranked game design program as well as the USC School of Cinematic Arts, where emerging filmmakers use cutting-edge technologies to film with virtual production.

“Mark and Mary have always understood the myriad opportunities that exist at the intersection of technology and domain expertise,” said Yannis Yortsos, dean of USC Viterbi. “Their generosity at this pivotal time, when we enter the transformative Age of AI, will lead to breakthroughs, innovation and thought leadership here on the USC campus and around the world. We are grateful for their extraordinary gift.”

About USC

Founded in 1880, the University of Southern California is one of the world’s leading academic research institutions with 23 schools, a multi-billion-dollar health enterprise and a vast research and development engine. The university enrolls 46,000 highly accomplished undergraduate and graduate students and employs 4,600 faculty who are members of major national academies, and MacArthur, Academy Award and Pulitzer Prize winners, among many others. USC has a nationally recognized athletic program and a passionate global network of 500,000 alumni — the Trojan Family. Located in the heart of Los Angeles, USC is a powerhouse of innovation and impact with a global reach.


Source: USC

The post USC Renames Computing School Following $200M Gift for AI Expansion appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 10:25

China will benefit from the Iran war, regardless of any deal between Trump and Tehran Expert comment jon.wallace

China will not displace the US as regional security guarantor, but it could play an important role building a new regional order, as Gulf states rethink their security strategies.

A giant screen outside a shopping mall shows Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan meeting President Xi Jinping in Beijing on 14 April 2026.

The war in Iran has made China’s future posture in the Gulf more uncertain. Some analysts have rushed to conclude that the war has revealed China’s absence and proved that the US is the only reliable security partner for the Gulf states. Others claim that the war has pushed Gulf states closer to China as US predominance has declined.  

This binary outlook overlooks a key factor in Beijing’s Middle East policies: they are not built on a balancer or security provider model. In fact, China lacks a clear direction for navigating geopolitical shifts in the region. But it could reap political, normative, and reputational wins where dissatisfaction with Washington, and reorganized priorities across the Gulf, allow it to intervene at the expense of the US. 

The war’s main effect has not, therefore, been to set China on a path to replace the US as the region’s security provider. But it may have created the conditions for Beijing to play a role in shaping a new regional order.

New Gulf security dynamics

The war in Iran revealed three key dynamics for Gulf security and future alignment. 

First, US military power has limits, and escalation is not necessarily a substitute for deterrence. For the Gulf, US military bases may have become a liability, not a source of security. And Gulf states did not choose this war. Indeed, the US ignored their calls to avoid it. The country that was supposed to ensure Gulf security, therefore, imperilled it – even if largely US-made defences deployed by Gulf States were critical in shielding their populations from missile and drone attack.

Second, Iran has shown that its missile and drone capabilities, coupled with its use of the Strait of Hormuz as leverage, can create a balance of deterrence with the US and Israel – one that allows Tehran to extract valuable concessions in tactical and political terms.  

Third, the US and China don’t compete over matters of war and peace in the Gulf. In fact, their interests have been shown to align.     

China’s position on ending the blockade has been eye-catching for its clarity. In a phone call with Saudi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman, President Xi Jinping called for Hormuz ‘to remain open to normal passage, as this serves the common interests of regional countries ‌and ⁠the international community’. 

Beijing is well positioned to facilitate dialogue between the Gulf and Iran and foster a working relationship in the medium term. 

The call came days after Xi met with Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled Bin Mohamed bin Zayed in Beijing. Xi has made no such direct contact with Iran’s leadership, although Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, in Beijing this week to discuss the war. After the meeting the Chinese called on both Iran and the US to open the Strait. 

China has been sending a subtle message of discontent to Iran for its closing of the strait – and to the US for its blockade of Iranian shipping – while signalling convergence with Gulf priorities. But its desire to open the Strait does reflect Trump’s stated priority – laying the groundwork ahead of the forthcoming Xi–Trump summit. 

These dynamics have accelerated shifts in Gulf strategic thinking. One immediate effect has been a push by Gulf states to reduce reliance on US protection by creating domestic, cutting-edge defence technology capabilities. Deals reportedly signed with Ukraine, providing fuel in exchange for drone defence expertise, are likely part of that effort. 

Diversified procurement

That reflects a move in the long term towards a more diversified procurement model based on industrial and technological multi-alignment with partners including the US – but also the UK, Ukraine, Pakistan, Turkey and South Korea. 

Previous doctrine, based on acquiring expensive US defence platforms to purchase leverage in Washington, will likely shift towards addressing the threat of Iran’s missiles and drones by procuring relatively cheap platforms produced at scale.

China can play a part in that effort. True, Chinese dual-use material exports and satellite access has reportedly helped support the Iranian war effort. 

But Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are already among the biggest buyers of Chinese drones and other defence technologies – and they may calculate that enhancing defence cooperation with China in areas that are not perceived as a security threat in Washington might be a prudent post-war strategy, to boost influence in Beijing and counter Iranian diplomacy.  

Facilitating dialogue – and investment

But diversifying security cooperation can’t guarantee sustained peace across the Gulf. Regardless of any peace deal between the US and Iran, the Gulf states and Iran will, at some point, have to reckon with uncomfortable realities by agreeing to establish an inclusive regional security framework. As UAE official Reem Al Hashimy said on 3 May, ‘geography prevails… we’re going to have to live with each other, the Gulf states and Iran’.

Here, China can play a crucial role. Along with Pakistan, Turkey, and some European powers (including the UK), Beijing is well positioned to facilitate dialogue between the Gulf and Iran and foster a working relationship in the medium term. 

China may use the second China-Gulf Summit in June to promote its normative model for a Gulf security framework, built on the Global Security Initiative’s principles, which align with these new dynamics. 

During his meeting with Sheikh Khaled, Xi affirmed Chinese principles for creating stability in the Middle East – saying Beijing is ready to ‘support Gulf states in improving their ties, work to build a common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security architecture’ in the Gulf. While not new, these principles may look more realistic and appealing to countries in the region in the absence of absolute security commitments from the US. 

Buying into China’s ideas for regional security complements a shift in Saudi officials’ thinking. Riyadh is now prioritizing an effort to become the central node for mitigating Hormuz risks, creating infrastructure that can bypass the strait and link the Gulf with the Red Sea. 

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:19

Sarah Schloegl was unable to board flight home from Spain as 11-month-old had invalid documentation under new rules

A British woman from Aberdeen has been stranded abroad after her 11-month-old baby was prevented from boarding a flight because of new rules regarding dual nationals.

Sarah Schloegl was refused board on a Ryanair flight from Alicante last week after she went to Spain for a short break with her Austrian husband, Philipp, their three-year-old daughter and 11-month-old baby.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:16

More than 140 people remain on the Hondius, which will take about three days to reach the Spanish archipelago for screening. A local official has criticized the plan.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:13

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy has announced the strait of Hormuz could reopen following the end of ‘threats from aggressors’

Job vacancies in the UK bounced back in March but remained near a five-year low, and openings for graduates slumped more than a third.

UK job vacancies showed signs of recovery in March, rising 3.74% month-on-month to 752,711 – the second monthly increase after an extended period of decline, according to the job matching platform Adzuna. Yet despite this tentative rebound, the overall picture remains tough for job seekers. Vacancies are still 13.60% lower than in March 2025, and the market remains near its weakest level since 2021.

Like BP last week, these are unearned windfall profits driven by Trump’s war with Iran.

Equinor now wants to cash in even more by developing the Rosebank oil field, which would be a terrible deal for the UK. This government must put the needs of the British public – for affordable energy and a safe climate – ahead of this Norwegian oil giant’s relentless pursuit of profit.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:08

The Trump-backed biotech entrepreneur will face Democrat Amy Acton in a competitive November contest

Vivek Ramaswamy, a Republican former presidential candidate, won his primary race for Ohio governor on Tuesday, setting up a closely watched contest in November’s election.

The biotech entrepreneur, who was endorsed by Donald Trump and briefly co-led Trump’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) with Elon Musk at the start of the president’s second term, beat Casey Putsch, the internet personality, to land the nomination.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 10:00

James Bond games have always fallen short of capturing the precise feel of the classic movies. But Amazon’s first dip into the 007 mythology seems to have a character of its own

In the wake of the last James Bond movie, No Time to Die, there was a surge of articles asking whether it should spell the end for Ian Fleming’s secret agent. In that movie, Daniel Craig played the character as a fading force, mentally and physically exhausted, and out of touch. “The world has moved on,” Lashana Lynch’s younger agent told him at one point, and in a lot of ways she was right. A product of the cold war era, 007 was a sociopathic misogynist addicted to booze and amphetamines – Craig tried to play all that down, creating a more rounded character and, controversially, giving Bond the ultimate redemption arc at the end of his final outing.

But five years later, with the franchise’s new owner Amazon still trying to pull the next film together, we’re about to get what looks to be the best Bond game since GoldenEye. Created by the Danish developer IO Interactive, famed for its Hitman series of anarchic open-ended assassination sims, 007 First Light follows a fresh-faced Bond from his early career as an aircrewman to his first mission as a double-0 operative. The games press was recently given a three-hour hands-on demo to play, and reports suggest that it combines elements of the Hitman games (Bond navigating a gala event, either sleuthing or punching his way to the mission objective) with major set-piece shootouts, chase scenes and miraculous gadgets. (For more on its making, read this piece about how developer IO Interactive brought it together.)

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 10:00

The Supreme Court is heading into its home stretch with the conclusion of oral arguments for its 2025-2026 term. With many major decisions due and three big cases already decided, all eyes will be on the nine justices as decisions are released through late June (and possibly early July).

Front of United States Supreme Court BuildingThe Court started the current term on October 6, 2025, hearing arguments in Villarreal v. Texas, where the justices considered a Sixth Amendment case about an attorney from talking to his client during an overnight recess. It concluded on April 29, 2026, with Hikma Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. v. Amarin Pharma, Inc., a dispute over generic drug labeling and patent infringement.

The justices heard a total of 58 cases in seven months with 29 opinions released. The list of major cases already decided includes opinions on conversion therapy, the Voting Rights Act, and the president’s tariffs powers. Remaining are at least 10 major decisions, including birthright citizenship, mail-in voting, transgender athletes’ rights, campaign finance, the ability of the president to fire federal officers, the Fourth Amendment, and immigration. Here is a list of the major cases decided and those still to come.

Major Cases Decided

Tariffs

Learning Resources v. Trump

In a 6-3 decision, the Court ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorize the president to impose tariffs. In his majority opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that “against that backdrop of clear and limited delegations, the Government reads IEEPA to give the president power to unilaterally impose unbounded tariffs and change them at will. That view would represent a transformative expansion of the President’s authority over tariff policy.”

In the main dissent, Justice Brett Kavanaugh believed President Donald Trump could use IEEPA “in light of the statutory text, longstanding historical practice, and relevant Supreme Court precedents.”

Voting Rights Act

Louisiana v. Callais

A divided Supreme Court in a 6-3 decision narrowed the ability of states to use race as a determining factor in creating election districts. The decision focused on Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (or VRA), a landmark achievement of the Civil Rights Movement.

In his majority opinion in Callais, Justice Samuel Alito wrote a Louisiana law went against the purpose of the VRA. “Because the Voting Rights Act did not require Louisiana to create an additional majority-minority district, no compelling interest justified the State’s use of race in creating SB8, and that map is an unconstitutional racial gerrymander,” Alito said.

In her dissenting opinion, Justice Elena Kagan was deeply skeptical of the majority opinion, which Kagan labeled as the “latest chapter in the majority’s now-completed demolition of the Voting Rights Act.”

Conversion Therapy

Chiles v. Salazar

Colorado and 20 other states have laws prohibiting mental health professionals from using conversion therapy on minors because it is considered unsafe and ineffective. The purpose of conversion therapy is to change a person’s gender identity or sexual orientation. Talk therapy with that purpose fell under Colorado’s prohibition.

In an 8-1 decision, Justice Neil Gorsuch held that Colorado’s law regulated speech based on viewpoint, violating the First Amendment. “The First Amendment stands as a bulwark against any effort to prescribe an orthodoxy of views, reflecting a belief that each American enjoys an inalienable right to speak his mind and a faith in the free marketplace of ideas as the best means for finding truth,” he concluded.

In her dissent, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said “Colorado’s decision to restrict a dangerous therapy modality that, incidentally, involves provider speech is presumptively unconstitutional. In concluding otherwise, the Court’s opinion misreads our precedents, is unprincipled and unworkable.”

Cases Argued and Awaiting Decisions

Transgender Athletes

Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J.

In two cases scheduled heard separately on the same day, the Court considered the extent to which gender identity and biological assignment at birth can be used as factors in scholastic sports competitions. In Little, the Idaho Legislature enacted the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, which bases competition on biological assignment at birth. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the law violated the 14th Amendment Equal Protection rights of “transgender women and girls.” In the case from West Virginia, a parent sued on behalf of her child, B.P.J., arguing that a state law banning biological boys who identify as girls from competing on girls’ teams was unconstitutional. The district court ruled in favor of the state on Equal Protection Clause and Title IX grounds. A divided Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the district court decision in favor of the student on the Title IX claim and ruled against the state on the Equal Protection questions.

The Second Amendment

Wolford v. Lopez

The state of Hawaii passed a law making it a crime for a person with a concealed carry permit to carry a handgun on private property unless they have been "given express authorization to carry a firearm on the property by the owner, lessee, operator, or manager of the property." The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the state. The petitioners cite a Second Circuit ruling on the same question regarding a similar law that the court struck down.

United States v. Hemani

On a different Second Amendment question, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals invalidated a federal law that prohibits the possession of firearms by a person who “is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance,” concluding that the law violated the Second Amendment in most instances. The Solicitor General argued that the Supreme Court should uphold the law upheld because of “narrow circumstances in which the government may justifiably burden” firearms possession, including when “habitual illegal drug users with firearms present unique dangers to society.”

Presidential Removal Powers

Trump v. Slaughter

The Court is considering a dispute over the ability of the president to fire Federal Trade Commission (FTC) members. In March 2025, President Trump removed Rebecca Kelly Slaughter from her position as a commissioner for the FTC. Slaughter countered by suing Trump and others, claiming her dismissal violated the terms of the Federal Trade Commission Act.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia found that Slaughter’s firing violated a precedent set in Humphrey’s Executor v. United States (1935), which established the constitutionality of the FTC’s removal protections. The questions at the Court are:

1) Whether the statutory removal protections for members of the FTC violate the separation of powers and, if so, whether Humphrey’s Executor v. United States should be overruled.

(2) Whether a federal court may prevent a person’s removal from public office, either through relief at equity or at law.

Trump v. Cook

The Supreme Court also will decide if it should stay a district court ruling preventing President Trump from firing Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Cook started serving a 14-year term in the board in 2023 and President Trump tried to fire Cook this year, alleging mortgage fraud by Cook before her appointment. Under the Federal Reserve Act, the president can only remove members of the Federal Reserve Board “for cause.”

Birthright Citizenship

Barbara v. Trump

In June 2025, the Supreme Court first considered the birthright citizenship question in the context of national injunctions related to President Trump’s executive order on birthright citizenship. The justices did not rule on the merits of Trump’s order then. But now the Court will consider the executive order’s claim that the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment was adopted to confer citizenship on formerly enslaved people and their children, not on the children of aliens temporarily visiting the United States or of illegal aliens. Wong Kim Ark and other precedents have held that a child born in the United States is entitled to all the rights and privileges of citizenship regardless of their nationality, with limited exceptions.

Absentee Federal Election Ballots

Watson v. Republican National Committee

This case considers whether a federal law or a state law determines when absentee federal election ballots can be counted if they are mailed before election day and arrive late. Under Mississippi’s statute, it requires that ballots for federal offices be cast— marked and submitted to election officials—by that day. Mississippi allows mail-in absentee ballots to be counted if they are received by election officials within 5 business days after election day. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the federal election-day statutes require ballots be cast by voters and received by election officials by election day and Mississippi’s law was pre-empted by the federal statute.

Cellphone Data Access

Chatrie v. United States

A Virginia man claims a detective did not reasonably obtain the search warrants required by the Fourth Amendment to track down his cellphone location data. The government later used this data to convict him of a crime. Law enforcement had asked for a geofence warrant from a magistrate. Geofence warrants set a distance from a certain physical point from which service providers must provide data to law enforcement about mobile phones users’ activities.

While the Court is only asked in Chatrie to consider the specific execution of the geofence warrant in the case, its decision could shape the Fourth Amendment protections established for cellphone users in Carpenter v. United States (2018).

Immigration

Mullin v. Doe

In the case, the Supreme Court will decide whether the Trump administration can end the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program for approximately 6,100 Syrian and 350,000 Haitian nationals.

The administration argues that federal law bars courts from reviewing any Department of Homeland Security determination regarding TPS terminations. The Syrian challengers argued that the DHS needed to follow the rules set by Congress, while attorneys for the Haitian challengers argued that the decisions were based on “racial animus towards non-white immigrants and bare dislike of Haitians, in particular.”

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:48

In an interview on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," former President Barack Obama had some pointed words about the power of the executive branch.

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2026-05-06 09:47

BOISE, Idaho, May 6, 2026 — Micron Technology, Inc. has announced it is now shipping the 245TB capacity Micron 6600 ION SSD, the world’s highest capacity commercially available SSD. The drive marks a major step forward in rack-scale storage density for data centers and is designed to support AI, cloud, enterprise and hyperscale workloads, including next-generation AI data lakes and cloud-scale file and object storage.

45TB capacity Micron 6600 ION SSD

The 245TB Micron 6600 ION E3.L requires 82% fewer racks to achieve equivalent raw storage capacity compared to HDD-based deployments. Built with Micron G9 QLC NAND that is at least one generation ahead of any competing QLC used in data center SSDs, the 245TB Micron 6600 ION redefines high-capacity data center storage. Customers can now store and process significantly more data in far less space, while reducing power and cooling demands without sacrificing the performance required for large-scale, data-intensive workloads.

“AI workloads are driving massive growth in shared data, continuing the shift of data center storage share from HDDs toward SSDs. With 245TB in a single SSD, the Micron 6600 ION makes solid state storage the clear choice for modern data centers,” said Jeremy Werner, senior vice president and general manager of Micron’s Core Data Center Business Unit. “This breakthrough capacity gives data center operators a critical new lever to improve rack-level total cost of ownership, especially as power availability becomes a defining constraint for AI infrastructure scale.”

“Rapid AI dataset growth is shifting storage economics from individual drives to rack-level efficiency,” said Jeff Janukowicz, research vice president of solid state drives and enabling technologies at IDC. “Operators need more usable capacity per rack while staying within strict power and cooling constraints. Micron’s 245TB drives deliver the density required to scale AI data pipelines without increasing data center footprints. Predictable performance, energy efficiency and higher capacity are essential to building cost-effective AI infrastructure.”

New Economics for Data Center Storage at Quarter-Petabyte Scale

The 245TB Micron 6600 ION SSD is available in both U.2 and E3.L form factors for massive storage capacity. The smaller physical footprint and increased capacity per drive enables operational and data center management simplicity and reduces failure points and maintenance needs.

Power consumption is equally transformative. The 245TB Micron 6600 ION SSD consumes up to 30 watts (W) at maximum power, only half the power consumed of a comparable-capacity HDD deployment. Additionally, these energy efficiency gains can support data center sustainability initiatives by helping reduce energy usage, cooling requirements and carbon emissions — key priorities for global operators under increasing environmental and cost pressures.

“AI workloads are pushing data center capacity to the limit, and when you can fit significantly more storage into every rack, the math changes: less power, less floor space, less operational overhead,” said Travis Vigil, senior vice president, ISG product management, Dell Technologies. “That’s what 245TB drives in Dell storage systems for AI will deliver. It’s a meaningful reduction in total cost of ownership for customers building out AI and large-scale data center environments.”

Setting New Performance and Efficiency Benchmarks for Sustainable Scale

The Micron 6600 ION SSD is built to support extreme-capacity deployments demonstrating superior AI workload performance and energy efficiency at scale versus data centers utilizing HDDs. Testing in Micron labs demonstrates dramatic gains in energy efficiency, throughput and latency versus HDD‑based systems:

  • For AI workloads: The 245TB Micron 6600 ION provided up to 84 times better energy efficiency, 8.6 times faster AI preprocessing and 3.4 times better ingest throughput, with up to 29 times lower latency.
  • Object storage workloads: The 245TB Micron 6600 ION demonstrated up to 435 times better throughput per watt, 96 times faster time to first byte and 58 times better aggregate throughput.

At scale, 1.9 times more energy is required for an HDD deployment versus 245TB Micron 6600 ION SSDs in a 1EB deployment. These at-scale energy efficiency gains can translate into measurable sustainability impacts, such as:

  • CO2 savings equivalent to the amount of CO2 absorbed by over 9,000 mature trees per year
  • 438 metric tons (MT) per year of CO2 reduction
  • 921 megawatt-hours (MWh) per year of energy saved
  • HVAC cooling savings of over 3.14 billion British thermal units (Btu) per year

The Micron 6600 ION 245TB SSD will be on display in the Micron booth (#226) at Dell Tech World, May 18 – 21, 2026. Stop by to see the Micron 6600 ION in a 40-slot Dell PowerEdge server optimized for data lake storage.

About Micron Technology, Inc.

Micron Technology, Inc., is an industry leader in innovative memory and storage solutions, transforming how the world uses information to enrich life for all. With a relentless focus on our customers, technology leadership, and manufacturing and operational excellence, Micron delivers a rich portfolio of high-performance DRAM, NAND and NOR memory and storage products. Every day, the innovations that our people create fuel the data economy, enabling advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and compute-intensive applications that unleash opportunities — from the data center to the intelligent edge and across the client and mobile user experience. To learn more about Micron Technology, Inc. (Nasdaq: MU), visit micron.com.


Source: Micron

The post Micron Ships 245TB 6600 ION SSD for Rack-Scale AI Storage appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:46

Mamata Banerjee says Narendra Modi’s party ‘forcefully captured’ election that ended her party’s 15 years in power

A political showdown is taking place in the Indian state of West Bengal as the chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, India’s most powerful female politician, has refused to resign after she lost elections to the prime minister’s party this week.

Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) won an overwhelming victory on Monday in state elections in West Bengal, where Banerjee and her Trinamool Congress party (TMC) have been in power for 15 years.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 09:27

It’s the third consecutive month that multiple models have predicted that a potentially record-breaking El Niño could drive global temperatures to new highs.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:15

National park closes areas near Old Faithful after attack by one or more bears, with incident under investigation

Two hikers were injured in a bear attack on Monday on a trail in Yellowstone national park, park officials said.

The National Park Service said in a statement on Tuesday that the hikers sustained injuries on Monday by “one or more bears” on the Mystic Falls trail near Old Faithful in Yellowstone national park. Officials did not specify which species of bear.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:13

Leading newspaper La Nación calls US’s barring of board members ‘indirect attack on press freedom’

The US state department has cancelled tourist visas for more than half of the board members of Costa Rica’s leading national newspaper, La Nación, which has been a critical voice against the country’s president, Rodrigo Chaves, an ally of Donald Trump.

During Chaves’s 2022 presidential campaign, La Nación published several articles documenting allegations of sexual harassment against him that had forced him out of his job at the World Bank. The paper also reported on allegations of illegal campaign financing, which Chaves denied.

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2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 09:11
  • Fan groups have called prices a ‘monumental betrayal’

  • Fifa collects 30% cut on resale market

Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, has defended World Cup ticket prices, insisting that football’s global governing body was obliged to take advantage of US laws that allow tickets to be resold for thousands of dollars above face value.

Fifa has faced searing criticism over the cost of World Cup tickets, with the fan organization Football Supporters Europe (FSE) calling the pricing structure “extortionate” and a “monumental betrayal”. FSE filed a lawsuit with the European Commission in March targeting Fifa over “excessive ticket prices” for the tournament.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:07

Full-stack platform combines agentic AI with proprietary middleware that helps build and solve complex problems faster with fewer computational resources on today’s quantum hardware

NEW YORK, May 6, 2026 — Haiqu, a leading developer of quantum middleware, today announced the launch of its Agentic Quantum Operating System (OS), the first full-stack quantum intelligence platform for enterprise and scientific quantum R&D.

Currently, quantum development is impeded by the time and costs it takes to design the right application, execute the experiment, and iterate on the results.

Haiqu’s Agentic Quantum OS is designed to bring new performance standards to quantum R&D teams. It combines quantum research agents with Haiqu’s proprietary software stack to help teams identify the right problem, design executable quantum experiments, and run them efficiently on real quantum hardware.

Coupled with additional performance and execution layers, the platform is designed to help enterprise R&D teams get usable results faster, spend less money per experiment, train new researchers more easily, and turn early ideas into testable prototypes faster.

“The bottleneck for quantum R&D teams is often not access to a QPU. It is the time and expertise required to identify the right problem, structure the work and get credible application prototypes,” said Richard Givhan, CEO and Co-founder of Haiqu. “With our first Agentic Operating System, we are giving R&D teams effective tools to achieve commercial applications as systems become more powerful.”

Haiqu’s end-to-end platform equips quantum engineers to guide application development using natural language through business questions or exploratory research ideas to produce an execution-ready quantum application plan using three key pillars:

  • Agentic Intelligence — built on Haiqu’s proprietary quantum algorithm research, domain-specific workflows, and a curated quantum theory knowledge base, that automates application design and guides users to optimal approaches.
  • Haiqu SDK — developer tools built using agents with users in mind that can be easily deployed in agentic development workflows to maximize performance through data loading, algorithmic optimization and error mitigations, enabling users to extract more value from every quantum operation.
  • Haiqu Runtime — an orchestration engine that streamlines how applications execute with an optimal infrastructure layer, reducing cost and time required to iterate on quantum applications.

In recent tests completed by the company on a quantum system, a molecular dynamics simulation that previously required $30,000 and more than nine hours to run was reproduced for about $25 in roughly 30 seconds by optimizing execution on the Haiqu platform. Similar results or better were found for optimization algorithms, quantum machine learning models, and probability distributions.

HaiquOS also demonstrated that agentic quantum workflows can translate advanced scientific problems into executable experiments. The system prepared simulations of the single-impurity Anderson model, a foundational model for strongly correlated electron systems, from scratch and built a Haiqu OS/SDK pipeline for simulating neutron-scattering experiments on one-dimensional quantum magnets. The pipeline reproduced experimentally observed signatures of magnetic materials, showing that today’s quantum computers, when paired with the right software stack, can already support meaningful scientific simulations. Learn more about these results here.

A number of enterprises already received early access to the OS, including Capgemini and Deloitte.

Dr. Kristin Milchanowski, Chief AI & Quantum Officer at BMO and Founding Director of the BMO Institute for Applied Artificial Intelligence & Quantum, said research into emerging quantum software platforms can help inform how the industry addresses foundational scalability challenges.

“As quantum hardware continues to evolve, foundational challenges such as data loading and efficient utilization of limited qubits remain critical hurdles,” said Milchanowski. “Observing research into tools like Haiqu’s middleware allows for a deeper understanding of how these bottlenecks might eventually be addressed. These early-stage, research-driven insights are vital for informing the long-term direction of the quantum landscape and understanding the future scalability of the technology.”

For a more in-depth look at HaiquOS, please visit Haiqu’s website.

More from HPCwire

About Haiqu

Haiqu is an emerging leader in quantum software that supports the notion that near-term, commercially viable quantum applications are achievable with the right software, even on current hardware. Haiqu’s hardware-agnostic software can run applications with up to 100x more operations on current devices compared to competitors. Headquartered in New York City in the United States, Haiqu’s expert team operates from US, Canada, Ukraine, UK, EU, and Singapore, contributing to the company’s mission to make quantum computing practical as soon as possible.


Source: Haiqu

The post Haiqu Launches Agentic Quantum Operating System for Enterprise Applications R&D appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:01

My brother has a one wheel xr and its battery is starting to go, doesn’t get the range he should and it will often times give him haptic feedback out of nowhere going like 8-10 mph. I have a Gt with the gtv kit on my board and he likes it a lot. So what I’m wondering is what would be the best route to go to get a better battery and convert the board to Vesc? I’m very inexperienced on this don’t know if I should replace the battery first then get the xrv kit later or just save up to get both done at one time. Any help is appreciated!

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:01

Instead of optimizing for simple routes, Mindtrip is focused on the complicated scenarios travelers actually face every day.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 09:00

Yes, you should absolutely marathon them.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:59

LONDON and NASHVILLE, May 6, 2026 — ORCA Computing, a leading quantum computing company, and SiC Systems, a leader in physics-informed multi-agent AI for industrial process systems, today announced a strategic partnership to apply hybrid quantum–classical computing to industrial agentic AI for chemical and biomanufacturing process design, control and maintenance. This collaboration represents the first-time quantum computing is being integrated into industrial agentic AI systems for real-world process design and operation.

The collaboration combines ORCA’s quantum computing capabilities with SiC’s AI-driven physics-informed platform to enhance modeling, optimization, and continuous operation of complex chemical and biological systems across global manufacturing environments.

As companies increasingly prioritize efficiency and scalability in manufacturing, the ability to accurately model, design and continuously optimize complex processes is critical. Traditional EPC (Engineering, Procurement, Construction), an industry with 1 trillion dollars of projected plant design and construction over the next decade, often involves extensive iterative modeling, multi-scale simulations and optimization loops that can delay project timelines and limit responsiveness during live operations.

The integration of ORCA Computing’s photonic quantum processors with SiC Systems’ SiC Suite and their model-based agentic ‘hives’ platform creates a hybrid quantum–classical high-performance computing framework powered by autonomous agentic AI workflows.

Building on SiC’s existing GPU-driven capabilities, the solution enhances process design, simulation, and optimization while also supporting continuous monitoring and adaptive control during operations. By combining quantum-generated data with classical AI models, the approach improves how complex chemical and biological systems are modeled—enhancing decision quality, enabling real-time responsiveness, and delivering measurable performance gains.

“This collaboration shows how optimization can become both autonomous and explainable. By integrating quantum-accelerated computing with our agentic AI platform, we are empowering engineering teams to accelerate the design of new chemical and biological plants— adding to already proven savings of over 20,000 hours in a typical project while delivering higher accuracy and resilience. This capability is essential for modern manufacturing programs globally,” said Dr. Christopher Savoie, Co-Founder and CEO of SiC Systems.

In a typical new chemical or biological plant design project, SiC Suite has demonstrated the capability to save over 20,000 hours of engineering time. By automating repetitive tasks, enhancing physics-informed simulations, and orchestrating intelligent agent-driven decision-making, the platform reduces design cycles, mitigates scale-up uncertainties, and improves overall process robustness. These are factors that are particularly vital for establishing competitive new facilities.

“When combined with SiC Suite’s multi-agent AI, ORCA’s hybrid quantum–classical approach enables a fundamentally different way to model and optimize complex chemical and biological systems,” said Per Nyberg, Chief Commercial Officer at ORCA Computing. “By applying quantum computing to models grounded in real-world systems, we can capture complex interactions that are difficult to simulate classically improving the fidelity of both design and operational decision-making in dynamic industrial environments.”

This partnership builds upon the award-winning technology developed by ORCA Computing and SiC Systems in collaboration with the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) and Novo Nordisk. The initiative received the 2025 HPC Innovation Excellence Award from Hyperion Research, underscoring its potential to deliver substantial engineering, scientific, and economic impact in industrial applications as the first instance of a quantum computing solution being given this award.

“This work demonstrates how agentic AI can transform industrial processing. Our physics-informed platform, enhanced by quantum acceleration, addresses the multi-scale complexities of plant design, delivering substantial engineering time savings and enabling the rapid deployment of safe, efficient, domestic production facilities,” said Dr. Seyed Soheil Mansouri, Co-Founder and Chief Scientist of SiC Systems.

By enabling faster and more accurate engineering design, the combined solution supports both accelerated facility development and improved ongoing operational performance, enabling organizations to reduce time-to-market, improve efficiency, and scale complex manufacturing processes globally.

About SiC Systems, Inc.

SiC Systems develops full-stack physics-informed multi-agent AI systems, including SiC Suite for design, control and maintenance of next-generation manufacturing facilities. Headquartered in Nashville and additional operations in Copenhagen, the company delivers safe, adaptive, and high-efficiency solutions for the design and operation of chemical and biomanufacturing facilities, as well as other high-stakes industrial applications. The company spun out of the Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering at the Technical University of Denmark. For more information about SiC Systems and SiC Suite, please visit www.si-c.io.

About ORCA Computing

ORCA Computing, headquartered in London, UK, with offices in the United States, is a leading developer and provider of full-stack photonic quantum computing systems. The company delivers an innovative approach to quantum computing, providing robust, high-performance, and data center-standard systems for machine learning, generative AI and optimization workloads. ORCA Computing has successfully delivered ten on-premises quantum computers to leading global customers, including the UK National Quantum Computing Centre, Montana State University, and the Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center. For more information about ORCA Computing, please visit orcacomputing.com.


Source: ORCA Computing

The post ORCA Computing, SiC Systems Partner on Hybrid Quantum-Classical AI for Industrial Process Design appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:56

Despite already having the Ring Pro on its own site for preorder, Ultrahuman launched a Kickstarter campaign for the smart ring.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-06 08:56

Charles Sumner spent nearly a quarter-century in the United States Senate insisting that the federal government had the power and the moral obligation to abolish slavery, and for that conviction, he was nearly beaten to death on the Senate floor in 1856. He lived to help push President Abraham Lincoln toward emancipation and to shepherd the Reconstruction amendments through Congress, though his fuller vision of “the centralism of liberty … [and] the imperialism of equal rights” stayed beyond the nation’s reach for generations.[1]

Sumner was born in Boston on Jan. 6, 1811, as the eldest of nine children. His father, Charles Pinckney Sumner, was a lawyer and county sheriff who harbored antislavery views unusual for his time and class. After graduating from Harvard College in 1830 and Harvard Law School in 1833, Sumner spent two years traveling and studying in Europe before returning to Boston to practice law.

Sumner initially devoted himself to reform causes rather than electoral politics, writing and lecturing on prison conditions, public education, and the peace movement. In 1845, he delivered a Fourth of July address in Boston attacking the Mexican-American War as an instrument of slaveholder expansion. “War crushes with bloody heel all justice, all happiness, all that is Godlike in man,” he said. “In our age there can be no peace that is not honorable; there can be no war that is not dishonorable.”[2] Sumner aligned first with the Conscience Whigs and then with the Free Soil Party before a coalition of Free Soilers and Democrats elected him to the U.S. Senate in 1851.

Sumner’s Political Career

Sumner arrived in the Senate as part of a Free Soil-Democratic coalition and quickly established himself as the chamber’s most unsparing antislavery voice. In his 1852 speech, “Freedom National, Slavery Sectional,” he argued that the Constitution nowhere recognized property in man and that slavery was a purely local institution with no legitimate claim on federal protection, declaring himself “painfully convinced of the unutterable wrongs and woes of slavery” and that it could “find no place under our National Government.”[3] When Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, repealing the Missouri Compromise and opening new territories to slavery, Sumner helped organize the opposition that coalesced into the Republican Party.

On May 19, 1856, Sumner rose in the Senate to deliver what would become the most consequential speech of his career. “The Crime Against Kansas” was a two-day assault on the pro-slavery violence convulsing the territory and the senators whom he held responsible. He described Southerners’ effort to force slavery on Kansas as “the rape of a virgin Territory” and mocked Sen. Andrew Butler of South Carolina for taking as a mistress “… the harlot, Slavery.”[4] Two days later, Butler’s cousin, Rep. Preston Brooks, entered the Senate chamber and violently assaulted Sumner with a metal-tipped cane, leaving him with such severe neurological damage that he did not return to Congress for three years.

During the Civil War, Sumner argued from the first day of fighting that Lincoln had the authority to order emancipation under martial law. He met with the president frequently, pressing him to abandon proposals for gradual emancipation and to make the abolition of slavery the war’s central objective. In an 1864 letter to Lincoln, he wrote that “freedom once given could not be reclaimed, & that the country was solemnly bound to the immediate present freedom of every slave in the rebel states.”[5] As chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he drew on his long friendships with British liberals Richard Cobden and John Bright to navigate the Trent Affair, persuading Lincoln to release two captured Confederate diplomats and defuse a crisis that might have brought Britain into the war on the Confederate side.[6]

Activities during Reconstruction

The Reconstruction era (1865-77) brought Sumner to the height of his influence and the outer limits of his radicalism. He fought for full civil and voting rights for freed people, insisting that the Constitution, read alongside the Declaration of Independence, demanded for African Americans the protections afforded to any citizen. His guiding conviction, which historian Eric Foner identified as central to the entire Reconstruction project, was that the federal government was “the custodian of freedom,” a direct rebuke to the antebellum view that states alone determined the rights of their citizens.[7]

The culminating fight of Sumner’s career was the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which he had first introduced in 1870 and described as the “crowning work” of Reconstruction.[8] The bill forbade racial discrimination in all forms of public accommodation — transportation, hotels, theaters, schools, and cemeteries — and criminalized the exclusion of Black citizens from jury duty. It was the most ambitious civil rights legislation the country had ever seen. One critic argued that Sumner’s legislation would force “social equality with an inferior race,” to which Sumner replied that if his belief in liberty and equality as the “God-given birthright of all men” was an error, then “it is an error which I love; if this be a fault, it is a fault which I shall be slow to renounce.”[9]

Before he died in March 1874, Sumner’s final words to Frederick Douglass and others at his bedside were, “Don’t let the bill fail.”[10] Thousands of mourners paid their respects at the Massachusetts State House, where his coffin rested before his funeral at King’s Chapel; the procession then followed his flower-draped coffin for the five-mile walk from Beacon Hill to Mount Auburn Cemetery. Among his pallbearers were Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and John Greenleaf Whittier.

Congress passed a weakened version of the Civil Rights Act the following year, though it stripped out all references to equal and integrated education to make it more palatable to white voters. In 1883, the Supreme Court struck down the act’s public accommodations provisions entirely, ruling that the 14th Amendment restrained only the states, not private individuals. It would take another century and another civil rights movement to continue what Sumner had started.

Anna Salvatore is a Content Fellow at the National Constitution Center and a graduate of Princeton University.

Notes

[1] Charles Sumner, quoted in C.N. Douglas, comp., Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical (New York: Halcyon House, 1917), Bartleby.com, https://www.bartleby.com/lit-hub/forty-thousand-quotations-prose-and-poetical/authors/charles-sumner/.

[2]  Excerpt taken from Charles Sumner, The True Grandeur of Nations: An Oration Delivered before the Authorities of the City of Boston, July 4, 1845 (Boston: American Peace Society, 1845).

[3] Charles Sumner, “Freedom National, Slavery Sectional,” speech delivered in the United States Senate, August 26, 1852, EmersonKent.com, https://www.emersonkent.com/speeches/freedom_national_slavery_sectional.htm.

[4] Charles Sumner, “The Crime Against Kansas,” speech delivered in the United States Senate, May 19–20, 1856, in The Works of Charles Sumner, vol. 4 (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1875).

[5] Charles Sumner to Abraham Lincoln, November 20, 1864, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, reproduced at United States Capitol Visitor Center, https://www.visitthecapitol.gov/artifact/letter-charles-sumner-abraham-lincoln-november-20-1864.

[6]  “Charles Sumner,” Encyclopaedia Britannica, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Charles-Sumner.

[7] Eric Foner, “The Strange Career of the Reconstruction Amendments,” Bloomberg, August 17, 2010, https://ericfoner.com/articles/08172010bloomberg.html.

[8] “Civil Rights Act of 1875,” Encyclopedia.com, https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences-and-law/law/law/civil-rights-act-1875.

[9] Charles Sumner, speech on the Civil Rights Bill, United States Senate, 1866, autograph quotation reproduced at Raab Collection, https://www.raabcollection.com/american-history-autographs/sumner-famous-speech-civil-rights-bill.

[10] “Landmark Legislation: Civil Rights Act of 1875,” United States Senate Historical Office, https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/generic/CivilRightsAct1875.htm, citing David Donald, Charles Sumner and the Rights of Man (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1970).

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:38

Can someone confirm this makes sense.

I have a GT. Plan is to upgrade to a mte 5" Hub now, and get either a gtv kit and or a new stator in the future.

Im speaking beyond my knowledge here, but would the superflux, hyperflux, or 5uperflux all compatable with the mte 5" Hub?

Thanks!

Also, goal is for more traction and squish on trails now, and more torque to be added next year.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:32

i went out for a ride this morning, despite the bubble being in my tire, i wanted a coffee. i went for a ride, picked up milk. and stopped to grab my coffee. this is what dosent make sense, i was at 75% when i left the house. as i'm about to go up a hill to go back home my fucking board nosed on me and i went down and my new coffee went flyin. i think im more pissed about my coffee cuz im too broke to get another one. but when i looked at my phone to see what caused my board to dive on me, the only notification was OVERCHARGED. it threw me on the hill because it said it had too much juice. it makes zero sense and its a problem i keep having with this board. i wont chrge it the night before but decide in the morning to do a ride so i charge it up a little bit. then partway thru the ride it shoots to a hundred. it makes zero sense and i take care of the battery. i have it on the charger now to try and balance whatever is fucked cuz i know its not full. anybody have this battery issue?

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-06 08:31

The news is stressful. Talking about it doesn’t have to be. Join the Guardian’s Kai Wright and Carter Sherman for conversations with the best journalists and biggest thinkers. New episodes every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Starting 13 May

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 12:25

Police say both shootings were connected and stemmed from a financial dispute between the suspect and the victims.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-07 13:38

Career experts say workers and job seekers should take charge of their own AI education. Here's how to get started.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-07 17:26

Imagery published by Iranian state-affiliated media and verified by The Post shows damage to at least 228 structures or pieces of equipment at U.S. military sites.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:02

Attorneys criticize closure and say it sows ‘a lot of chaos’ as Trump administration claims shuttering is ‘cost effective’

The Department of Justice shuttered a major San Francisco immigration court last week, a decision attorneys say could exacerbate the Bay Area’s immigration case backlog.

Early in the year, news reports emerged of the closure of the courthouse on 100 Montgomery Street slated for January 2027. Over the last year, the Department of Justice had fired 20 of the court’s 22 judges (the Trump administration has been accused of culling certain immigration judges, in favor of those more amenable to its ongoing mass deportation agenda).

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:01

The Remarkable 2 replacement is still the same price, coming in early June. It feels even better now, and I'm not the only one who appreciates it.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:01

Entertainment venue Cosm is reimagining Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone with immersive 3D graphics. I learned how it all came together.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:00

Researchers say 481-metre wave in fjord was triggered by rockslide linked to climate crisis

A mega tsunami in Alaska last year in a fjord visited by cruise ships is a stark warning of the risks of coastal rockslides and glacier retreat fueled by the climate crisis, a new study warns.

Scientists recorded the world’s second-tallest tsunami after it struck the Tracy Arm fjord in south-east Alaska last August after a massive rockslide around the toe of a glacier. The tsunami reached 481 metres (1,578ft) in height; by comparison the Eiffel Tower is 330 metres (1082ft).

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:00

Biologists had guessed coyote paddled a shorter distance to former prison in the San Francisco Bay earlier this year

A lone coyote stunned biologists and others when earlier this year it paddled its way to the remote Alcatraz Island, a former federal prison in the San Francisco Bay surrounded by swift, choppy waters notorious for thwarting prisoners’ escapes.

At the time, biologists guessed the coyote swam from San Francisco, which is a little over 1 mile (1.6km) from the fortress. But it turns out the male coyote actually made an even longer swim from nearby Angel Island, 2 miles away.

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 08:00

We had our parents and grandparents live with and review ElliQ, a multipurpose robot that serves as a digital assistant, social companion and health advocate.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:58

Waddup everyone I am looking for footpads for my Pint X. Preferably bigger once then the stock, with a kick and concave. Maybe softer once. And I am currently living in Portugal.

Does anyone know where I can get any? The company needs to ship from Europe.

I know TFL has a European store and they have the kush nug low and high. I am considering these. Does anyone have experience with these?

These are also back footpads and I also want a concave front footpad.

What do y’all recommend?

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:51

The FDA announced its first authorization of fruit-flavored electronic cigarettes intended for adult smokers, a major policy shift after months of appeals to President Trump from the vaping industry.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:47

Team of 100 extra officers is aimed at providing ‘more consistent model of protection’ for Jewish communities

The number of antisemitic hate crimes recorded in April in London was the highest in two years, data has revealed, as the Metropolitan police commit to deploying 100 extra officers to protect Jewish communities.

The force says a “community protection team” will be set up, combining neighbourhood policing with counter-terrorism capabilities, as British Jews face “some of the highest levels of hate crime alongside significant terrorist and hostile state threats”.

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:35

Employment watchdog accuses the New York Times of violating federal law by passing over a White male journalist for a job.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:32

Jordan Linden sentenced to 18 months for string of crimes committed over 10 years between 2011 and 2021

A former SNP council leader has been sentenced to 18 months in prison after being found guilty of a string of sexual offences against young men and teenagers as young as 14.

Jordan Linden, once considered a rising star in the SNP, was convicted of five sexual assaults on young men after a trial at Falkirk sheriff court in March, which heard that the SNP had “downplayed or ignored” complaints about his behaviour.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 07:28

Looking for a new mobile-phone plan is a complicated endeavor. We've put together our picks for the top postpaid and prepaid plans from AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Mint Mobile, US Mobile and others.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 07:25

Medical evacuations from vessel as Spain gives permission to dock at Canary Islands. Plus: the Mexico City nightclub that charges Americans 90% more

Good morning.

Three people, including two crew members, on the MV Hondius have been medically evacuated to the Netherlands following a suspected hantavirus outbreak that is believed to have killed at least three passengers. The evacuation means the ship, with close to 150 people onboard, can now continue on its three-day journey to the Canary Islands after Spanish authorities gave permission for the vessel to dock.

What is hantavirus? It is a rare disease that is usually spread from infected rodents, typically through urine, droppings and saliva.

What is the plan for the ship? It is sailing to Spain’s Canary Islands, where the Spanish health ministry will work alongside the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and World Health Organization to examine and treat the crew and passengers before repatriating them to their respective countries.

On Wednesday, the Canary Islands government said it opposed the plan and was requesting a meeting with the Spanish prime minister.

What did Project Freedom achieve? The defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, said the US had successfully secured a path through the waterway and that hundreds of commercial ships were lining up to pass through. So far, however, only two merchant ships are known to have passed through, with hundreds more – carrying up to 23,000 crew members – bottled up in the Gulf.

What is the US end game? Rubio said that for peace to be achieved, Iran must agree to Trump’s demands on its nuclear program and to open the strait.

This is a developing story. Follow the live blog here.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:23

We look at whether FC Thun’s championship victory rivals Leicester City’s in 2016, and what the future holds for Michael Carrick and two Hollywood stars

A decade on from Leicester City’s still sensational Premier League title, the memory has been evoked by a team in Switzerland. In some ways, FC Thun have exceeded the Foxes’ achievement because not even Leicester won the title immediately after promotion in the way the new Swiss champions did.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:17

Chair Tim Martin says pub chain could miss expectations, in latest sign UK hospitality sector buckling under higher bills

The boss of JD Wetherspoon has said the pub chain could miss profit expectations because of rising costs, in the latest sign the UK hospitality industry is buckling under the pressure of higher energy, food, labour and tax bills.

The company’s chair, Tim Martin, told investors on Wednesday: “As many hospitality operators, including Wetherspoon, have reported, there have been substantial increases in costs.”

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:00

Amazon's Ring offers some of the most advanced security doorbells. I tested them out to find the best.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:00

Mobile plans that work for one person often don't work for a family. We look at plans from Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:00

If you want to experiment with microcurrent devices, this is what the professionals say about them.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 07:00

New submitter spazmonkey writes: From a hidden GPS tracker polling your location every 4.5 minutes to JavaScript loaded from a random GitHub account, no SSL certificate pinning, and an in-app browser that silently strips cookie consent dialogs and paywalls from every page you visit, the new White House app seems to have a little bit of everything. A security researcher pulled the APK apart to discover the cybersecurity vulnerabilities. "The app is a React Native build using Expo SDK 54, with WordPress powering the backend through a custom REST API," reports Android Headlines. "That's pretty normal, as nearly 42% of all websites on the internet are powered by WordPress. But that's just the start; now the nightmare begins..." From the report: To start, the app has a full GPS tracking pipeline compiled in. Essentially, it's set to poll your location every 4.5 minutes in the foreground, and 9.5 minutes in the background. It's syncing latitude, longitude, accuracy, and timestamp data to OneSignal's servers. These location permissions aren't declared in the AndroidManifest, but they are hardcoded as runtime requests in the OneSignal SDK. Some have noted that the tracking only kicks in if the developer enables it server-side and the user grants permission, but it is there, ready to go. And it gets even stranger. Apparently, the app is loading JavaScript from a random person's GitHub site for YouTube embeds. Yes, you read that right, it's just loading JavaScript from a random GitHub site. So if that account ever gets compromised, arbitrary code could run inside the app's WebView. There's also no SSL certificate pinning, meaning that traffic can potentially be intercepted on compromised networks like sketchy public WiFi or corporate proxies. The app also injects JavaScript and CSS into every page you visit in the in-app browser. This strips away cookie consent dialogs, GDPR banners, login walls, and paywalls. There's also leftover dev artifacts in the production build, including a localhost URL to the Metro bundler.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 07:00

Lawmakers to convene for special session to redraw state supreme court districts at building with racist history

When Mississippi lawmakers met in 1861 and voted to secede from the union in an effort to continue enslaving people, they did so in what is now known as the Old Capitol Museum. From 1839 to 1903, lawmakers met at a building that witnessed some of the state’s most racist history.

And now, on 20 May, when members of Mississippi’s house convene for a special session to redraw state supreme court districts, they will do so at the Old Capitol, ostensibly because of renovations in the house chamber.

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 06:35

A 13-year-old student admitted carrying out the attack at the public school Instituto Sao Jose in Rio Branco, officials said.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 06:19

Five years ago, a Nevada state senator helped kill a crypto tycoon’s vision of a blockchain city in the Reno desert. Now, that lawmaker is running for higher office, and the crypto mogul is bankrolling her primary opponent to the tune of millions.

The battle playing out in the state attorney general’s race is one example of many of the crypto sector trying to elect industry-friendly officials. In Nevada, it’s also a story of an eccentric multimillionaire whose money threatens the political ascent of a woman who helped deny his dream.

The spending by crypto entrepreneur Jeffrey Berns is “meaningful money, especially at this early stage in the primary,” said Kenneth Miller, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “And we don’t know if this only represents an initial investment and will be followed up by more.”

Spending Big

Berns has donated at least $2.5 million since 2023 to a political action committee controlled by Nevada State Treasurer Zach Conine, who is running for attorney general against state Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro.

That is more than twice the $1.2 million that Conine received from individual donors to his personal campaign account over the same period.

After receiving money from Berns, Conine’s PAC in turn donated more than $1.8 million to a newly created campaign outfit called Safe and Strong Nevada PAC, which rolled out a website and video advertisement attacking Cannizzaro.

Both Cannizzaro and Conine are Democrats on the June 9 primary ballot. They have settled on similar campaign themes as fighters who will take on President Donald Trump — a reliable message in an election year with an energized Democratic base.

“It is not typical for a campaign to be almost entirely propped up by one wealthy megadonor.”

Neither candidate has made cryptocurrencies a focus of their campaigns. Yet Berns’s donations make him by far the largest donor to Conine’s campaign organizations. Miller, the political science professor, said the scale of Berns’s donations reflected a larger trend.

“All semblance of constraints on political donations have eroded away in the past couple decades, and the amount of money it takes to be impactful in a Nevada primary election is well within reach for a lot of wealthy individuals,” he said. “Campaigns around the country often have one or two super PACs involved that are funded by one or just a handful of people. It is not typical for a campaign to be almost entirely propped up by one wealthy megadonor, but it does happen sometimes.”

A Dream Denied

While Berns did not respond to a request for comment on why he is intervening in the race, he has a tangled history with Cannizzaro. Five years ago, she helped kill his vision of building what his company called a “smart city” near Reno.

Berns was formerly a California plaintiff’s lawyer who won huge settlements taking on the banking industry. He was also an early investor in the Ether token, a leading competitor to bitcoin.

His multiplying fortune allowed him buy waterfront properties in ritzy destinations including Lake Tahoe, where he bought and sold a $47.5 million mansion, and Turks and Caicos, where he recently listed for sale at $35 million a beachfront property that was once featured on the Netflix reality dating show “Too Hot to Handle.”

He also founded a company called Blockchains, which in 2018 purchased 67,000 acres of land in Storey County in northern Nevada near the Tesla “Gigafactory” for the sum of $170 million.

Storey County has flexible development rules, but not flexible enough for Berns. Instead, he and his company wanted to build an entire city running on blockchain that operated independently from the county.

“I want to create a place where we can rethink things. Where we can democratize democracy,” Berns told the BBC.

Berns won the support of a critical backer: then-Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat who endorsed the idea in his 2021 State of the State address.

Opponents noted that Berns had donated tens of thousands of dollars to Sisolak and smelled an end-run around regular democratic governance. They also raised concerns about more mundane issues such as lost tax revenue and water rights.

The idea would have needed approval from the Nevada Legislature. Berns’s push for legislative approval was damaged by the revelation that he was being sued by his children’s nanny for allegedly trying to force her into a sexual tryst with him and his wife. Berns said the plaintiff was a disgruntled former employee, and he settled the case the next year without admitting wrongdoing, according to the Reno Gazette-Journal.

Despite Sisolak’s support, the smart city idea was ultimately doomed to die the bureaucratic death of a study committee. One of the key players who helped kill the proposal was Cannizzaro, the state’s first female Senate majority leader.

A lobbyist involved in the discussions confirmed that Cannizzaro was instrumental in shelving the idea. In a statement, her campaign also said that she opposed the idea.

“Like nearly all of her legislative colleagues in both parties, Majority Leader Cannizzaro was extremely skeptical of the idea of letting private corporations run their own governments and siphon off millions of taxpayers’ dollars,” said Peter Koltak, a campaign spokesperson. “Ultimately, she informed the Governor’s staff and the bill’s supporters that there wouldn’t be legislative support for the concept.”

Berns was so disappointed by the process that his company pulled out of the study process, prompting its staff to declare that there was no point in exploring the idea further.

Berns Shifts Gears

While Berns vastly expanded his wealth by investing in cryptocurrency, he is not a household name in the industry. Many of the wealthiest crypto companies and venture capital firms have backed a national super PAC called Fairshake that has hundreds of millions to spend on federal elections. Berns has not donated to that effort, federal campaign finance records show.

Instead, he has focused his giving on Nevada, supporting politicians on both sides of the aisle. Berns gave $5,000 to Republican Gov. Joseph Lombardo in 2024 and $250,000 to the Democratic Party of Washoe County in 2022, campaign finance records show. He also gave $5,000 to Cannizzaro in 2020 before the smart city proposal died in the legislature.

Despite the pushback the smart city proposal drew, it has not made him a particularly controversial donor.

“In Las Vegas, not a month goes by without an artist’s rendering of a proposed resort, arena, or other project popping up,” said Miller. “Some of them happen, and many of them don’t. I don’t expect that the smart city proposal left much of an impression on many Nevada voters.”

While neither Conine nor Berns responded to questions about the latter’s donations, Conine has signaled that he is friendly to crypto.

During the smart city debate, Conine promoted the idea of allowing government entities to accept payments in stablecoin. In 2024, he attended an event sponsored by a crypto industry trade group.

Cannizzaro, for her part, does not appear to have staked out any major public positions on the crypto industry. Since the start of 2024, she has raised $2.2 million between her personal campaign account and a PAC she controls. Her campaign said she will not be deterred by Berns’s spending.

“Leader Cannizzaro has always defended Nevada from big corporations and wealthy special interests, and an unaccountable tech billionaire dumping his millions into this race is certainly not going to stop her,” said Koltak, the spokesperson.

The post She Opposed His Plan for a Blockchain City. Now He’s Bankrolling Her Primary Opponent. appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-06 08:04
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New emoji and video podcasts are just a couple features the update brought to your device.

2026-05-06 08:04
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Experts worry that the legislation may lead to websites prohibiting access from all VPN addresses due to technical limitations.

2026-05-06 08:04
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With most major European cities well-served by trains and buses, bringing US transit up to par would cost $4.6tn

The only train station in Houston, the US’s fourth-largest city and one of the fastest-growing conurbations in the country, is a diminished, morose sight. Intercity trains arrive at this squat, shed-like Amtrak building, which cringes in the shadows of roaring highways, just three times a week.

That such a meager train station could ostensibly serve a metropolitan area of about 7 million people is a stark symbol of how the sprawling, car-dominated US has fallen behind cities around the world where people can rely on extensive, high-quality public transport to get around.

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2026-05-06 08:04
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Owner of Japan nightclub says ‘This is a response to a year of insults directed at us – as a country – by the United States’

A Mexico City nightclub has gone viral for charging Americans a nearly $300 cover charge, while citizens from any other country pay just $20 for access, and Mexicans and other Latin Americans pay only $14.

The Instagram announcement from the nightclub Japan in the Roma Norte neighborhood has been liked over 26,000 times and received more than 200 comments, mostly supporting the policy as part of a broader revolt in the capital against what many see as a US takeover.

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2026-05-06 08:04
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The league’s new CBA has made some players millionaires. After years of instability, they’re now able to take control of their future

The WNBA is entering its 30th season, a milestone worthy of as big of a celebration as its players could muster – and this year, they mustered up a lot. The Women’s National Basketball Players Association (WNBPA) negotiated a landmark collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the league that, among other things, introduces a revenue sharing system and an estimated average salary of $583,000.

This season, all players will make the minimum of $270,000, up from $66,000; others may make as much as $1.4m. It’s money that Alysha Clark, a veteran forward for the Dallas Wings and vice-president of the WNBPA, describes to the Guardian as “amazing”. One of the most incredible aspects of the new deal, she says, is having the ability to pave the way for future generations of WNBA players.

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2026-05-06 08:04
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Vibe Check, a free and anonymous alternative to AI, talks teens through consent, boundaries and apologies

Val Odiembo volunteers at her former high school a few times a month, teaching teens about consent and healthy relationships. Now a sophomore at Rhode Island College, 19-year-old Odiembo isn’t much older than the students she’s teaching – which she thinks makes it easier for the high schoolers to come to her with their questions. But she knows she isn’t the only source they’re consulting.

“A lot of them confide in AI,” she said. A recent UK study found that one in 10 young adults has consulted AI for sexual health information, and a 2025 Pew Research Center report showed that one in five teens have had a romantic relationship with a chatbot.

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A painted, colorful illustration shows a doctor wearing a white lab coat with his hand to his face, standing over an empty infant bed in a hospital nursery. A man and woman holding an infant walk out of the room in the background.
Matt Rota for ProPublica

They entered the world the way babies should, with piercing cries announcing their arrival. They passed their newborn screening tests. Some made it to their 2-week wellness visits without concern.

Then, without warning, their systems began to shut down. A 7-week-old boy in Maryland developed sudden seizures. An 11-pound girl in Alabama stopped breathing for 20 seconds at a time. A baby boy in Kentucky vomited before becoming lethargic. A brown-haired girl in Texas, not yet 2 weeks old, bled around her belly button.

Desperate to save them, records show, doctors inserted tubes into their airways and hooked them up to IVs. They ordered blood transfusions. They spent half an hour trying to resuscitate one boy until his parents told them they could stop. They shaved another boy’s soft locks to embed a needle directly into his skull to reduce the pressure in his brain.

None of it was enough.

At the morgue, the babies were brought in with their diapers and blankets and with their hospital ID bracelets still wrapped around their tiny ankles. The pathologists’ findings were like those you would typically see in ailing adults, not newborns — the kind of bleeding seen during strokes or brain tissue loss similar to what happens when radiation is administered to treat cancer.

Their autopsies, which took place over the last several years, all came to the same conclusion: The deaths were caused, in whole or in part, by a rare but potentially fatal condition known as vitamin K deficiency bleeding.

In almost every case, the babies’ deaths could have been prevented with a long-standard vitamin K shot. But across the country, families — first in smatterings, now in droves — are declining the single, inexpensive injection given at birth to newborns to help their blood clot.

Many of them are doing so out of a well-meaning but ill-informed abundance of caution. In the hopes of safeguarding their newborns from what they see as unnecessary medical intervention, they have shunned fundamental and scientifically sound pharmaceutical intervention. The trend is also fueled by a contradictory pairing: families’ fierce desire to protect their babies and a cascade of false information infused into their social media algorithms.

Although it is not a vaccine, the vitamin K shot has been swept up in the same post-pandemic tide that has led to a drop in key childhood vaccines, including for measles and whooping cough.

The vitamin K shot is one of the three main interventions, along with the hepatitis B vaccine and an antibiotic ointment in the eyes, that newborns typically receive before leaving the hospital. Leading American institutions and the World Health Organization recommend that newborns get the shot.

In December, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stopped recommending that all newborns get the hepatitis B vaccine, which has been highly effective at fighting a virus that can lead to lifelong infections and liver cancer. A federal judge in March temporarily blocked the revised childhood vaccination schedule that included that recommendation. Some families are also rejecting the eye ointment.

Two weeks ago, at a House subcommittee hearing, Rep. Kim Schrier, D-Wash., pressed Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to reassure parents that the vitamin K shot is safe. He refused and pushed back.

“I’ve never said, literally never said, anything about it,” Kennedy said.

“That’s exactly the point,” responded Schrier, who is a doctor. “You don’t say anything about it, but the doubt you’ve created about all of medicine and science is causing parents to make dangerous decisions.”

An HHS spokesperson did not respond to questions but in an email blamed the administration of former President Joe Biden for the rise in parents rejecting vitamin K shots. “Vitamin K at birth,” the spokesperson added, “remains the standard of care.”

Meanwhile, families continue to be inundated with advice from self-proclaimed experts using medical terms incorrectly and misunderstanding science to convince parents that getting the shot could put their newborns at risk of grave harm.

Nearly a century’s worth of research and medical advancements shows the opposite to be true.

Babies who don’t get the vitamin K shot, research shows, are 81 times more likely than those who do to develop late vitamin K deficiency bleeding, where in many cases oxygen can’t reach their brains and blood pools around their skulls. Perhaps most alarming is that, according to the CDC, 1 in every 5 babies with vitamin K deficiency bleeding will die.

Determining precisely how many babies have died or suffered severe brain damage because of a lack of vitamin K is difficult. State and federal agencies don’t track data around vitamin K injection refusal or subsequent bleeding, which impedes their ability to quantify and track outcomes, including death.

The number of deaths directly attributed to vitamin K deficiency bleeding appears to be small — fewer than a dozen annually — but has started to climb in recent years, according to death certificate data from federal and state agencies.

But those numbers capture only a fraction of deaths, which often are classified only by other, more immediate causes, such as bleeding in the brain. In 2024, for example, more than 700 newborns died from spontaneous bleeding in their brains, which could have been complicated by liver disease or prematurity. Still, six medical specialists and one official at the CDC said a meaningful portion of those deaths likely were caused by vitamin K deficiency. Many more babies survive the bleeding but suffer massive brain bleeds and lasting injuries.

“A lot of the providers don’t have this on their radar,” said Dr. Jaspreet Loyal, a pediatric hospitalist at Yale Medicine. “The lack of data is almost acting like a reassurance for families that this risk is worth taking.”

Although it is difficult to quantify deaths attributable to vitamin K deficiency, there is clearly a large jump in the number of parents declining the vitamin K shot. Some hospitals have seen refusal rates more than double. A national study of more than 5 million births, published in December, found that the rate of U.S. babies not receiving vitamin K at birth topped 5% in 2024 — up 77% from 2017.

More Newborns Are Not Getting Vitamin K Shots

More than 5% of newborns in the U.S. did not receive vitamin K shots in 2024.

Source: “Trends in Vitamin K Administration Among Infants,” JAMA

The success of the shot has been so remarkable that it nearly eliminated vitamin K deficiency bleeding altogether. The science was settled decades ago.

“This was not something we even bothered to spend much educational effort on,” said Dr. Allison Henry, the director of newborn medicine service at Cedars-Sinai Guerin Children’s in Los Angeles, “because there was this simple, safe intervention.”


A cluster of cases 13 years ago was one of the first major signs that something was amiss.

Four babies were rushed to a Nashville, Tennessee, children’s hospital after they suddenly fell ill months apart. Stunned, doctors ran tests that revealed severe bleeding and reached out to Dr. Robert Sidonio Jr., their blood disorder specialist. They learned that the parents had declined vitamin K shots for the babies, each of them between 6 and 15 weeks old.

Once they realized that, the medical team moved quickly to treat them, injecting them with vitamin K and hoping it wasn’t too late. Much to the relief of doctors, they all survived. Only one infant had developmental delays.

The parents explained that they had declined the shot for a number of reasons: a concern, based on long-debunked claims, that the shot could cause leukemia; a belief that the shot wasn’t necessary; and a desire to reduce their baby’s exposure to “toxins.”

The CDC and the state health department opened an investigation and later published a report that found that when the parents declined the shot, their awareness about the risk of bleeding was “incomplete or absent.”

Dr. Anna Morad, a pediatrician at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville, said she had witnessed a gradual rise in families refusing vitamin K leading up to the hospitalizations.

She and her colleagues went into the Nashville community to speak at birthing centers and advise families about the benefits of vitamin K. One mother who had refused the shot for her newborn partnered with Morad and described how she came to realize that the shot can save lives.

More than a dozen pediatricians interviewed by ProPublica said they strongly recommend all three of the typical newborn interventions but agreed that the vitamin K shot is the most vital. 

“I’m picking vitamin K every day,” Morad said. “Absolutely.”

With time, the number of families who turned down the shot dropped. As the need for the community outreach waned, Morad lost touch with the mother she had teamed up with and refocused her energy on directing the newborn nursery at Vanderbilt Health.

“I’ll be honest, I thought we had turned the corner,” Morad said. “Naively, I thought that would be enough.”

A woman with long red hair, wearing a white lab coat, stands with her arms crossed in a pediatric hospital room.
Dr. Anna Morad, a pediatrician at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville, says the vitamin K shot is the most essential of three interventions that newborns are typically given. “I’m picking vitamin K every day. Absolutely.” Stacy Kranitz for ProPublica

All newborns lack vitamin K. No matter how much vitamin K a mother consumes, it doesn’t sufficiently pass through the placenta, and breast milk contains only small amounts. That puts babies who are exclusively breastfed at a higher risk for vitamin K deficiency bleeding. Formula is fortified with vitamin K, but even with that, experts agree, babies should still get the shot.

Doctors have yet to understand why some babies who don’t get the vitamin K shot are fine while others bleed uncontrollably. But they do know that the risk increases dramatically. For babies who don’t get the shot, the risk for vitamin K deficiency bleeding from a week after birth to 6 months ranges from 1 in 14,000 to 1 in 25,000 births. With the shot, the research shows, the risk drops to less than 1 in 100,000.

The role of vitamin K is so crucial that researchers were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1943 for their discovery of its ability to form clots and stop bleeding in babies. The official presenting the award called the discovery the vitamin’s “greatest practical importance” and lauded it among the discoveries that have been of great benefit to humankind.

In 1961, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended that all newborns in the U.S. get a shot of vitamin K. The CDC has supported newborns getting the shot as well, devoting several pages online to raising awareness around vitamin K deficiency bleeding and writing that babies may bleed “into their intestines, or into their brain, which can lead to brain damage and even death.” For decades, medical textbooks and lectures have presented the vitamin K injection as an example of a public health policy success.

After reports that vitamin K deficiency bleeding was on the rise, the American Academy of Pediatrics updated its policy statement in 2022 to stress the shot’s safety and efficacy. The paper included talking points for pediatricians to help them respond to common misconceptions: “Vitamin K injection does not contain mercury. Vitamin K does not cause cancer. The vitamin K injection used in newborns is safe. The dose is not too high for newborns.”

“We’re a victim of our own success,” said Dr. Ivan Hand, the director of neonatology at Kings County Hospital Center in New York and the co-author of the American Academy of Pediatrics statement. “Since we’ve been treating babies with vitamin K, we haven’t seen much deficiency bleeding, so people think it doesn’t exist.”


Seeing photos online of healthy babies who didn’t get the vitamin K shot and reading comments from parents who felt justified in their refusal, it’s easy to think that the risk of bleeding isn’t real, or at the very least that it’s exaggerated.

On Facebook, comments about the shot include: “Don’t do it!” “Huge lie!” and “It’s a scare tactic.” One person wrote, “Never will I ever inject my baby with poisons from big pharma.”

Families have also pointed to a 2023 episode about vitamin K shots by conservative podcaster Candace Owens, who said, “What Big Pharma is saying is that we realize that babies were born wrong. They don’t have enough vitamin K, and so we’re going to give them what they always needed. God designed us wrong.”

Owens did not respond to a request for comment.

Hidden is the agony of parents mourning the loss of their babies. Some are still in denial.

ProPublica spoke with five of those families, but none of them wanted to be identified publicly.

The obituaries, social media posts and GoFundMe pages capture the utter despair of the families, though none of them reckon with the decision not to get the vitamin K shot.

“No one could’ve prepared us for the heartbreak we faced 6 weeks after our little miracle was born,” one mother wrote. “She had a spontaneous unexplained brain bleed that led to brain death.”

“We miss his sweet smell,” another family wrote.

A third family, who made their decision after reading about vitamin K on social media and talking with their midwife, dismissed the vitamin K shot altogether. Instead, the father expressed outrage at the hospital for not delaying the clamping of the umbilical cord. He said he believed doing so would have allowed his son to be infused with vitamin K from the cord blood, a popular theory on social media. Research, however, shows that while delayed cord clamping can raise the baby’s hemoglobin levels, it does not have the same effect on vitamin K.

“I figured the hospital was already pissy with me because we didn’t vaccinate at all,” he told ProPublica. “They lost out on all the money from that.”

The family’s anger has subsided some since the baby’s death, in part because of their trust in God’s plan.

“I can sit here and be upset and sad, but this brought me closer to God,” the father said. “I just can’t wait to be with him.”

Two of the families who went on to have other children found themselves facing the same decision: Would they decline the vitamin K shot again? Both got the shot for their newborn.

Two heavily redacted autopsy reports portrayed side by side, one with the highlighted lines “1: Vitamin K deficiency bleeding” and “2: Postnatal prophylaxis not received” and the other showing a baby’s footprints.
Autopsy reports reviewed by ProPublica, like these two from children in Minnesota and Arizona, have notes from coroners citing vitamin K deficiency as a cause of death. Obtained and redacted for privacy by ProPublica

Morad watched as the number of families declining vitamin K climbed over the last year.

In January, she reached out to Sidonio, her former colleague who first recognized the 2013 cluster of cases there, for advice. Sidonio, now a pediatric hematologist oncologist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and professor at Emory University School of Medicine, said he’s more worried than ever.

During that cluster, Sidonio recognized the need to collect data on how often parents decline the shot and what happens to those babies. But in discussions with the CDC, he said, he was told that it would be too difficult.

More than a decade later, nothing has come of it. In a recent email to ProPublica, federal officials said vitamin K deficiency bleeding has never been submitted for consideration as a notifiable condition.

“If you don’t track it, you don’t document it,” said Sidonio, frustration building in his voice. “They have to make it a reportable health condition, just like a new measles case. That’s the only way it’s going to change.”

Like him, Dr. Kristan Scott, the lead author of the national study that found a jump in the number of babies not receiving vitamin K, also landed on a need for a robust system to monitor vitamin K refusals and any subsequent consequences.

“We don’t have a clean data repository provided by public health systems or the state that would allow us to be able to track this in a more systematic fashion,” said Scott, who is a neonatologist at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

Some doctors failed to recognize the role of vitamin K when a baby came into their emergency rooms, let alone knew how to reverse the damage from the declined shots. Many of them encountered the condition only in medical school textbooks.  

Some hospitals have started to run their own numbers, but the effort is scattershot. The data is also usually kept in house, so there’s not a wider knowledge of the problem. Recognizing the urgency of the matter, officials at a handful of hospitals agreed to share their data with ProPublica.

Doctors at St. Louis-based Mercy, which runs birthing hospitals in Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, began noticing an uptick in families turning down the vitamin K shot during the pandemic. Last year, 1,552 babies across all Mercy hospitals didn’t get the injection. In 2021, that number was 536.

And at Idaho’s largest hospital system, the refusal rates have gone up every year since the start of the pandemic, and in some cases have more than doubled. In 2020, 3.8% of families across St. Luke’s Health System declined the vitamin K shot for their babies. In 2025, that figure jumped to 9.8%. One hospital even reached 20% of babies not getting vitamin K shots.

At least two babies treated at St. Luke’s died within the last year from complications related to vitamin K deficiency bleeding, hospital officials confirmed. But Dr. Tom Patterson, a pediatrician who treats newborns at some St. Luke’s hospitals and is among the most vocal in warning about the climbing refusal rates, suspects there may be more.

Patterson recently pleaded with a family to allow their baby to get the shot. The father refused and shocked the doctor by going even further. He approached the nurses to complain about Patterson pushing the matter.


How We Reported This Story

As part of our reporting, ProPublica contacted 55 hospitals and birthing centers around the U.S.; interviewed more than 30 doctors; and filed nearly 90 public records requests with state and local health departments, medical examiners and other agencies. ProPublica also analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and examined hundreds of pages of medical and autopsy records.


Are You a Family Member, Doctor, Nurse or Midwife?

I want to understand more about why families decline a vitamin K shot. I know how difficult it is to talk about losing a child and how hard it can be to process this kind of grief. Words can’t express how sorry I am for your loss. ProPublica’s goal is to give the public the best, most trustworthy information. If you have a story to share, I hope you will reach out to me when you’re ready.

Duaa Eldeib

Send me your tips, stories and documents. Reach me by email or securely on Signal at 312-730-4797. I take the protection of my sources extremely seriously.


The post Babies Are Bleeding to Death as Parents Reject a Vitamin Shot Given at Birth appeared first on ProPublica.

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Why Should Delaware Care?
Proposals to build at least five data centers in New Castle County have raised concerns that the subsequent energy demand could overwhelm a regional power grid that is already straining from a supply crunch. Over the past year, those concerns have also sparked one of the biggest political mobilizations in the state. 

Last month, Spotlight Delaware held its “Spotlight On: Data Centers” event at Wilmington University in Dover. It featured local and regional experts speaking about the impacts of those energy-hungry facilities on local economic development, energy infrastructure and environmental sustainability.  

One panel discussion, led by land-use reporter Olivia Marble, focused on the infrastructure needs of the massive facilities, and how that will impact the supply and demand of electricity. 

The panelists were Delaware Public Advocate Jameson Tweedie, who is responsible for representing the public in state decisions about energy policy; former-Virginia Energy Director Glenn Davis, who now leads Davis Energy & Infrastructure Strategy Group, and Jeffrey Sturla, vice president of critical facilities at Wohlsen Construction.  

Below is a transcript of Olivia’s conversation with the panelists. It has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Jameson, what did you find in your research about how data centers in Delaware would affect power bills compared to data centers that are located in other parts of the PJM grid?

Tweedie: The best way I can think about trying to categorize them is that data centers can have potential impacts on reliability — will your lights turn on when you need them to turn on; transmission, those are the big power lines that move power within the region; distribution, those are the local power power lines and infrastructure in Delaware; and then energy costs …

Reliability is the first thing, if there is enough transmission and distribution assets. That’s basically a regional problem. So whether the data center is here or somewhere else doesn’t really matter… The problem is, if there’s not that infrastructure to be able to do that, it becomes a local problem. 

A new analysis of Delaware’s electricity market suggests that the construction of new data centers could cause power bills in Delaware to spike.l. | PHOTO COURTESY OF NIKOLA JOHNNY MIRKOVIC, UNSPLASH

Transmission costs are socialized. Now, what does that mean? That means they’re spread across the region, but the costs are concentrated in the places that benefit … So if a data center is located in Delaware and transmission investments are needed, then the costs are going to be concentrated in Delaware and surrounding zones …

On the distribution side, that’s the local power lines and infrastructure … We’re in the midst of a large load tariff docket that will determine how Delmarva handles the interconnection of large loads. And what Delmarva has proposed is that … any distribution infrastructure would be the responsibility of the data center itself. And therefore those costs, fingers crossed, would not get socialized across to other Delawareans…

We are seeing cost increases in real time. It’s largely a regional cost, but you can get hyper-localized impacts, especially if the infrastructure isn’t there. So those are reflected in what are called locational marginal prices of energy. That is the price of energy in a particular place at a particular point in time, and in the joint comments that we submitted last week [to the Public Service Commission], the expert consultants had looked at this. This is not a prediction, but this is an analysis trying to identify the scope of risk. And those comments indicated that, at a 1.2 gigawatt scale of data center development in Delaware, you could get a 9% increase above baseline in locational marginal prices across the state. At 2.4 gigawatts, which is roughly what Delmarva is studying… that would be an 82% increase in energy costs above the baseline.

At 2.4 gigawatts, which is roughly what Delmarva is studying … that would be an 82% increase in energy costs

Jameson tweedie

We touched on, during our last panel, the fights between the union members who really, really want these jobs to come in, and people who were worried about the environment and energy impacts. [Jeff Sturla,] is that something you saw in Lancaster City?

Sturla: We developed a community benefits agreement, which both my developer and the city signed. It was very transparent … I will say, transparency is a two-way street. You can’t be a government official and say, “Well, if you give me information, I’m going to use it against you,” because they won’t give you any more information. So it was a very transparent collaborative process that happened.

My developer is giving a $20 million fund to Lancaster City to use for both economic development, workforce development, education and sustainability. We signed a community benefits agreement that uses 100% clean power. I’m not allowed to have any of the noise … that leaves the site at anything greater than what the ambient is.

Right now, I’m down at 43 decibels, which is quite quiet. I use no water. Of the 700 mergawatts that we’re using — it’s distributed between four buildings — each one of those buildings uses about the same amount of water as a restaurant. It’s about the same as an Olive Garden. So the bottom line on it is, yes, you can make these work.

To any of you, is it a concern you have, in terms of potential emissions, that data centers may need to use backup generators more often?

Davis: When you start looking at backup generators, historically, those backup generators hardly run at all during the year. They get checked once a quarter, just make sure they work, and then maybe a handful of hours a year if they come on during a storm.

And what you’re seeing now also is some transition from the diesel generators to batteries. But I would say that, looking at the backup generators, they hardly run today. The reason why you hear more talk about them maybe running in the future, is because of the warnings from PJM [the regional electric grid operator] that if PJM does not fix the situation we’re having, you can see rolling blackouts through PJM, but it’s going to be fixed.

If you look at what PJM is doing today, what the governors are doing, the support from the White House … It’s being fixed. We’re going to be OK, and we shouldn’t have that problem.

Children practice soccer on a field that sits in front of a data center in Fairfax County, Virginia. Fairfax neighbors Loudoun County, known as America’s “data center alley.” | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

So your prediction is just that the backup generator issue, in terms of emissions, is just not going to be an issue. 

Davis: If you have a problem with it running a few hours a year, then you have a problem with it going forward, but you’re not going to see it running more than a few hours a year, plus every quarter to test them.

Tweedie: If reliability gets worse, then you may need to run these more often, the more often you need to run them, the more impact there is. In addition, there is contemplation of potentially trying to require these to run not only for reliability purposes, but if prices spike. So if in particular moments during the year, the cost of energy skyrockets, one option would be to require data centers to use their backup generators instead of pulling power from the grid, so that you can shift that supply demand balance a little bit and push down costs.

But the consequence of that would be running these much more often and resulting in the emissions that these backup generators would have. I will say, not all data center developers are choosing to go the route that Jeff [Sturla] is in terms of using tier four backup generators. So if you’re using a less efficient backup generator, then the emissions are going to be worse. If you’re running an enormous data center, then you could have hundreds of these backup generators all coming on at once.

If you had a natural gas power plant, that would have a smokestack that would emit those emissions, you know, high into the air, hopefully, where they’re going to get dispersed, they’re not going to be a local impact. These are not that, right? These are on the ground backup generators, so that, if they are all running at once, you have the potential to get a ton of local air emissions. And if that could be quite consequential if this is in a neighborhood or is near residential areas.

Sturla: But it’s not data centers’ choice to run them or not. It’s not at their discretion. They can’t just decide to turn them on. We are bound by the federal DEP … I’m limited to run those generators like 50 hours. Each generator can only run 50 hours a year, unless there is a catastrophic event where they need to turn on, in what is deemed by DEP as a catastrophic event … So understand that it’s not my decision to go out and say to the power company, ‘I’m going to provide you with power.’ If the power company can’t provide me with power, and it’s not a catastrophic event, I’m not allowed to turn them on.

Tweedie: That will depend on regulations that any particular data center is under. There are examples of data centers across the country where they have been running much more than originally anticipated on their backup generation with all the consequences… When we had really severe power demands over the winter, the Department of Energy had actually issued an order that could have required data centers to switch to backup generation to alleviate constraints on the grid. So it could cut both ways of data centers needing to go or being told to use backup generation with whatever the consequences of that might be. 

Davis: But the alternative is a rolling blackout. And if you look at Texas, what happened in the winter storm, people died. If you have a huge catastrophic event, and you’ve got two choices, does your grandparents’ heat stay on? Or does it not stay on? And we get the impacts that we had in Texas, you make a decision. I will also mention that state legislatures also need to be careful, because sometimes legislators — and look, I was legislator for 10 years, city councilman for five years. We don’t know everything at the time we’re doing things. Sometimes they talk about demand response [reducing or shifting power usage during periods of high demand], and they’re like, data centers should have a certain amount of demand response during these hours. And what they don’t realize is it forces them on the backup generation, which then forces them onto their generators, which is not the desired outcome. So legislators all need to be careful of doing things that force that type of outcome to occur. 

Tweedie: I don’t disagree with any of that, other than that, it’s not a binary choice, right? We can shape policy in a way that decides what the backup for these systems should be, how much on site generation they have. Should it include batteries? Should it include technologies that aren’t heavy local emitters? There are lots of policy options we can choose. So it is not a binary choice between power at your grandparents versus heavy emissions.

The post Data Center Q&A: How will the facilities really impact power bills? appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
In 2018, the Delaware NAACP and Delawareans for Educational Opportunity filed a lawsuit claiming that the state’s education system did not provide an adequate education to all students. Nearly 10 years later, the state has officially taken its first step toward changing the more than 80-year-old funding formula. 

Two bills that would lay the groundwork for Delaware to implement a new school funding system advanced out of a Senate committee Tuesday, two years after a state commission launched an effort to analyze whether public education in the state was sufficiently serving all students.

One of the bills, sponsored by State Sen. Laura Sturgeon (D-Brandywine Hundred), would enable the Delaware Department of Education to begin implementing a so-called hybrid public school funding model, which calls for more money to go to schools with large numbers of low-income students or English-language learners.

The legislation, Senate Bill 302, also includes a provision that would mandate that no school receive less money under the model than it would have under the previous funding model. 

If the bill passes, the hybrid model would be implemented during the 2028 fiscal year. 

Delaware’s Public Education Funding Commission — tasked with recommending reforms to Delaware’s 85-year-old school funding system — voted unanimously last year to approve a recommendation to lawmakers to move forward with the hybrid framework.

Sturgeon, who serves as chair of that commission, also introduced Senate Bill 303, which establishes it as a permanent body to continue studying and evaluating the state’s funding formula in the years to come. 

Both bills passed out of the Senate Education Committee on Tuesday, and now advance to the Senate Finance Committee.

In opening remarks Tuesday, Sturgeon said her legislation was not about fully implementing the hybrid funding formula, but about preparing the state to implement it.

“Before [a hybrid funding formula] can happen, the Department of Education needs time to build the foundation for this long-overdue overhaul,” she said. 

Also during the committee hearing, Republican committee members expressed concern about how broader changes to the funding system could affect taxpayers. 

State Sen. Dave Lawson (R-Marydel) expressed concern about where the state would find the funding to fully support a new school funding model. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

“I just don’t know how much more the taxpayer can take,” State Sen. Dave Lawson (R-Marydel) said. “Where are you going to find a million dollars or another billion dollars to fund education?”

Lawson’s remarks were likely in reference to a recommendation made by the American Institutes for Research — an organization contracted to assess education funding in Delaware — that the state increase public education spending by upward of $1 billion.

While Sturgeon’s bills do not fund schools through a future implemented hybrid formula, SB 302 would cost the state nearly $2.5 million in Fiscal Year 2027, according to the bill’s fiscal note

Sturgeon said state education officials would spend the money on system upgrades and on staff training, so that the department is ready to implement the hybrid model.

Also on Tuesday, the ACLU of Delaware sent a letter to state leaders, stating “Delaware’s treatment of multi-language learners is unconstitutional and structurally discriminatory.” The civil liberties organization said the state must immediately remedy the situation to avoid a lawsuit. 

The News Journal reported that ACLU of Delaware Executive Director Mike Brickner also criticized Sturgeon’s bills, saying “they kick the can down the road another year, when the legislature may or may not put more dollars in.” 

What led to Tuesday’s vote? 

Delaware’s current funding formula was established in 1940, with the state and federal governments providing about 70% of the funding while 30% is generated through district-level property taxes that residents vote on during referendums

The formula is based on what officials call a “unit count system,” which distributes money to districts based on the number of students enrolled, without considering additional factors, such as poverty or special needs.

But in 2018 the Delaware NAACP and Delawareans for Educational Opportunity sued the state, stating its education funding system did not provide an adequate education to all students. 

Following the settlement of the lawsuit, Delaware contracted with the American Institutes for Research, which later issued its $1 billion education spending recommendation.

The hefty price tag then sparked concerns from both Democratic and Republican lawmakers, who later created the Public Education Funding Commission to examine the recommendation.

Last spring, the commission introduced an example of what it called a new “hybrid formula,” giving a glimpse of what an overhaul of the funding system could look like.

The formula shown would combine the unit count system with new “Opportunity” and “Flex” categories that direct dollars based on student needs while giving schools more control over how funds are used. 

The hybrid formula was only based on state funding and did not account for dollars raised by Delaware’s 19 school districts through property taxes.

The post Bills to implement new school funding model pass out of committee appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 06:00

College leaders and students are organizing phone-free spaces to foster real-life connections and address the negative impacts of technology.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-06 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
A federal law requires that insurance companies do not impose additional costs onto those seeking mental health and addiction treatments. But a recent change to that law which expanded protections for patients and placed more responsibility on insurers to maintain strong treatment networks is likely to be rolled back by the Trump administration. Delaware hopes to implement its own version of the protection. 

Delaware state senators advanced a bill out of committee on Tuesday that would bolster mental health and addiction treatment by requiring insurers improve the number of providers in their networks. The bill also includes language hamstringing insurers’ ability to deny care. 

Senate Bill 22, introduced by Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark), would codify parts of a federal law currently being challenged in court by insurers. That law likely will be rewritten by the Trump administration. 

During a Senate Health and Social Services Committee hearing on Tuesday, multiple trade organizations and health nonprofits expressed support for SB 22 and how it could help people access treatment sooner.

A representative from Highmark, Delaware’s largest health insurer, opposed the bill during public comment, claiming the changes could reduce quality of care and worsen health outcomes for patients.

In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, a Highmark spokesperson said the insurer is “committed to caring for the mental health of all Delawareans,” but challenged SB 22 on the grounds it is based on federal regulations that are currently under review. 

“We are reviewing the bill closely and look forward to continued collaboration with legislators and stakeholders,” the spokesperson said.

Lawmakers ultimately advanced SB 22 out of committee Tuesday afternoon, sending the bill to the full Senate for further consideration.

Senate Bill 22 comes as lawmakers also consider another bill that would bolster how the state funds its primary care infrastructure — an attempt to build out more preventative healthcare options and avoid costly emergency room trips.

And while SB 22 looks to improve access to mental health treatment in the state, there are still questions about its impact on the quality of care. Delaware relies on its inpatient facilities for many of the state’s most acute mental health needs.  

But Spotlight Delaware has recently reported on two of the state’s largest inpatient mental health facilities, and how some patients felt they left treatment worse than when they entered.

What is mental health parity?

Delaware’s proposal aims to strengthen what is called “mental health parity,” which is a federal rule that was created to ensure patients had equal access to mental health and medical services.  

JoAnn Volk, a research professor at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University, said the Mental Health Parity Act was created in the late 1990s requiring insurers to not impose higher costs for mental health treatments compared to other medical procedures. 

By 2008, federal lawmakers expanded the law to include addiction treatments, creating what is now the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA). 

Volk said the goal of the bill was to not only prevent financial barriers to seeking care, but also prevent insurers from putting treatment limits on patients, like the amount of days they spend in an inpatient setting or at doctor’s visits. 

And in late 2024, multiple federal departments under the Biden administration approved changes to the MHPAEA that required insurers to measure outcome data and ensure their policies for mental health and addiction treatments do not reduce access to care. 

By the time the Trump administration took over in 2025, it said it would not enforce Biden’s changes to the MHPAEA. 

Volk said in response to the Trump administration’s pause, some states have charged ahead with their own legislation that mirrors that 2024 change, regardless of what the federal government decides to do with the change. 

She added that Delaware’s law includes some stronger consumer protections like requiring insurers to cover an out-of-network trip if there are not appropriate in-network services. 

Delaware Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro supports strengthening the protections for consumers despite the concerns of commercial insurers. | PHOTO COURTESY OF COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE

Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro said in an interview with Spotlight Delaware that Senate Bill 22 would require insurers to maintain a provider network that allows patients with non-urgent mental health needs to receive treatment within 10 days. 

Should those providers not have availability or be able to provide care in a timely manner, insurers must offer “single-case-agreements” that allows patients to receive care out of network at no additional cost. 

Navarro added that Delawareans are five times more likely to go out of network for mental healthcare, citing a 2024 study from the Research Triangle Institute

“There’s a shortage of certain types of intensive treatment, where people have had to leave the state for the appropriate care, not any fault of their own,” Navarro said. “And they shouldn’t be penalized for that.”

Committee hearing testimony

Discussion about SB 22 took up most of Tuesday’s committee meeting, with testimony from nurses, a mental health nonprofit and an outside policy organization that helped to draft the bill. 

The policy professional, David Lloyd of Inseparable, said SB 22 drills down on specific language to prevent insurers from denying claims because they do not perceive them as medically necessary.

David Lloyd, Chief Policy Officer at Inseparable, helped to write the proposed legislation, arguing that parity should help to ultimately lower insurance costs. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

He also said that when patients take care of their mental health, it helps to bring down other medical costs treating chronic diseases. Lloyd also said other states that implemented similar legislation saw insurance denials for treatment go down.

State Sen. Eric Buckson (R-South Dover) expressed his support for the bill, citing his experience with addiction in his family and athletes he knows who have lost their lives to suicide. 

“This is an absolute positive step in the right direction,” Buckson said during the hearing. 

He also asked about the potential costs on taxpayers. In response, Lloyd reiterated his point about costs coming down for insurers when people seeking mental health treatment are able to better manage chronic illnesses.  

Anastasia Robinson, a school nurse with the Indian River School District, said she has helped students and families navigate an insurance system that is “often working against them.” She said in recent years, mental health for children has become more complex and acute. 

In preparation for Tuesday’s hearing, Robinson called multiple families she knew to ask them about their experiences trying to access treatment for addiction, experiences she called “nightmare stories.” 

She added that delays in approving care can lead them to not seek treatment in the future. 

“What sort of desperation do these parents feel as they wait on some insurance company to essentially agree to save their child’s life?” Robinson said.

Committee members advanced SB 22 with five favorable votes. The bill will now be debated and voted on by the full Senate, but it is unclear when that vote will take place.

The post Senate considers insurance reforms for mental health, addiction treatment appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 05:39

Ilya Remeslo was put in a psychiatric hospital after criticizing Vladimir Putin. Now free, he said that he will not stop his crusade against the Russian president.

2026-05-07 12:04
2026-05-06 05:07

US at 250: Trade vs. Protectionism – America’s enduring economic debate 16 July 2026 — 12:00 TO 13:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join us at Chatham House for the second in the US at 250 mini-series. This discussion assesses America’s struggle to balance independence, openness, and strategic competition in the global economy.

Join Chatham House for the second in the US at 250 mini-series. This discussion assesses the struggle to balance America’s independence, openness, and strategic competition in the global economy.

As the United States marks its 250th year, the debate over trade, protectionism, and America’s economic role in the world remains as alive as it was at the founding. The argument over whether the US economy should prioritise national self‑reliance or global integration began with Hamilton and Jefferson and has shaped American economic policy ever since. From early disputes over manufacturing and markets, through the post‑war liberal order, to today’s tariff battles, industrial policy revival, and strain on the WTO system, America’s economic history reveals the future direction of US trade policy — and the implications for allies, partners, and the global economy.

This session explores how that long arc of economic thought informs the current moment of strategic competition with China, renewed industrial policy, and growing scepticism of globalisation among Americans. Speakers will assess what these shifts mean for the future of US trade policy, how allies and partners should interpret Washington’s evolving economic posture, and what the next phase of American leadership — or retrenchment — could mean for the global economy and the institutions built to sustain it.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 05:00

The Cal State Northridge player has attracted millions of views for his hair flicks and dismissive waves. He says navigating the fallout has been a career of its own

“I think people are really enamored with me because you don’t often see someone like me – animated, flamboyant – but still able to back it up on the volleyball court,” says Jordan Lucas, the outside hitter for Cal State Northridge’s men’s team.

Although college volleyball has a devoted following and can attract big crowds – 92,000 fans went to see Nebraska take on Omaha in 2023 – it doesn’t usually attract the same attention as basketball or football. That changed last month though when clips of Lucas’s “flamboyant” play – he’s fond of celebrating with a flick of his hair or a dismissive wave at his opponents – went viral, amassing millions of views on social media. College athletes enjoying social media fame is hardly new: stars such as Paige Bueckers, Harper Murray, Olivia Dunne and Shedeur Sanders all had their viral moments. But Lucas’s case is different. It isn’t just about the highlights, it’s about the conversation surrounding them. Lucas is gay, and that fact has become inseparable from how audiences engage with his game.

Continue reading...

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 05:00

Cassian Joubert was partially delivered at 25 weeks for procedure and placed back in mother’s womb before birth

A Florida infant is said to have been born twice after undergoing what was an innovative, likely life-saving surgery that involved a partial delivery weeks before his mother then gave birth to him.

Cassian Joubert’s remarkable story was recently first told publicly by his mother and father – Keishera and Greg Joubert – in a 1 May video published on social media by the Orlando Health Women’s Institute, which employs the surgeon that led the baby boy’s prenatal operation.

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2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-06 05:00

Three white crosses stand in the ground under a canopy of trees near a river on a cloudy day.
Crosses mark the spot where Beth and Hutch Bryan and Martha Crawford were staying during the floods on July 4, 2025, in Kerr County, Texas.

The sound of construction machinery filled the air as Kylie Nidever walked past properties ravaged months earlier by floodwaters.

Nidever’s home was among those in her Bumble Bee Hills neighborhood untouched by last year’s July 4 flood, one of the deadliest disasters in Texas history. The 35-year-old understood the draw of the tranquil Kerr County subdivision, where she played as a child in a nearby creek that fed the Guadalupe River. But she was taken aback by how enthusiastic most of her neighbors were to rebuild.

Nidever wondered why the government had let people build in any areas long known to be dangerous and whether leaders would intervene now.

“Is somebody going to come in and stop us?” said Nidever, who has considered moving. “If it happens again and it’s worse next time, people will die in this neighborhood.”

After last summer’s disaster, some Texas legislators scolded local officials for their decision not to invest in flood warning sirens and for the chaotic emergency response. Other elected leaders excused the storm as so massive that no one could have prepared for it.

But lawmakers failed to address the underlying problem: They have repeatedly rejected bills that could protect residents in the state’s most dangerous, flood-prone areas, an investigation by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found.

The majority of the 137 people confirmed to have died across five counties in the July 4 tragedy were staying in places identified by the federal government as being at risk for flooding, the newsrooms found. These were places where state lawmakers had a chance to curb development, but didn’t.

The newsrooms reviewed nearly 60 years of legislation and identified over five dozen flood safety bills rejected by lawmakers.

The most consequential measures, experts said, could have saved lives by stopping construction in the areas at greatest risk for flooding, including where people later died on July 4.

A woman wearing a black T-shirt with a yellow graphic and gray pants stands in a road through a residential neighborhood.
Kylie Nidever’s house in the Bumble Bee Hills neighborhood of Kerr County was among those left undamaged by the floods.

“Had the state enacted any of that legislation, we might not have had the excruciating loss,” Char Miller, a Texas environmental historian who now teaches at Pomona College in California, said after learning of the newsrooms’ findings. “The continued inability of the state to pass legislation to protect its citizens means it’s not doing the one thing it’s supposed to do, which is defend the health and safety of those who call Texas home.”

Lawmakers also didn’t pass measures that would have forced buildings in flood-prone areas to be elevated; blocked certain types of structures, such as solid waste facilities, from being built close to bodies of water; or granted local leaders additional authority to curb potentially unsafe development.

Texas has more buildings in flood-prone areas — at least 650,000 structures — than any other state besides Florida, according to a ProPublica and Tribune analysis of Federal Emergency Management Agency data. The analysis shows that only eight other states have a higher share of structures in flood-prone spots than Texas.

More people have died from floods in Texas, and more national flood insurance claims have been paid out here since 1980, than in nearly any state with the exception of Florida and Louisiana. Yet Texas trails at least 29 other states, including Florida, that have passed development standards that force structures to be built higher in flood-prone areas, according to a 2020 FEMA report.

“We need to resist this narrative that this disaster was unpreventable,” said Michael Slattery, director of the Institute for Environmental Studies at Texas Christian University. “The disaster is just shaped by policy choices made over what I thought were just years.” Instead, Slattery said, it was decades.

The need for stronger flood protections only grows more urgent, scientists say, as climate change makes heavy storms previously considered once in a lifetime more likely.

After this latest catastrophe, Gov. Greg Abbott called Texas politicians back for two special legislative sessions and tasked them with addressing aspects of the disaster. The only buildings legislators banned from flood-prone areas were youth camps, and only after intense lobbying by the grieving parents of 25 children and two counselors who died on July 4 at Camp Mystic. (Its executive director also died.)

Large stone buildings with green roofing are set back from a river, with trees in the background and tall grass in the foreground.
Camp Mystic, where 25 campers and two counselors died from the flooding. Its executive director also died.

Some Texas lawmakers over the years have pointed to protecting landowners’ rights to evaluate their own property risk as a reason not to pass additional regulations. At a hearing more than a month after the flood, Republican Rep. Wes Virdell, who represents Kerr County, said rural areas “enjoy the freedom to take our risk and build as we would like to.”

None of the top state leaders — Abbott, Lt. Gov Dan Patrick or House Speaker Dustin Burrows — responded to the newsrooms’ questions about whether legislators should enact stricter statewide building rules. Abbott’s office said he has addressed flooding issues by funding mitigation projects to lessen the storms’ impact.

Burrows’ office declined multiple interview requests, and Patrick’s office didn’t answer the newsrooms’ emails.

Without major changes, the same federal, state and local rules that permitted residents to construct their homes so close to the Guadalupe River in the first place are allowing many to build there again.

That includes 82-year-old Joan Connor and her husband, David Stearns, who live near Nidever in Bumble Bee Hills.

The couple had recently returned from an RV trip when last summer’s flood hit.

Water rose to Connor’s chest as she hollered to her 98-year-old husband. They needed to get out of their house. Connor and Stearns survived by wading and swimming out to their front yard, where the river transported them onto their pergola ledge and they clutched the wood structure’s roof supports.

The river’s muck filled the house. But they’d paid off the home. They didn’t fear another storm.

“It never crossed our mind to not rebuild,” Connor said.

An older woman and man, wearing jeans and jackets and smiling at each other, stand in a grassy area near some houses. An American flag blows in the wind behind them.
Joan Connor and David Stearns survived the floods by hanging onto the roof supports of their pergola.

A Critical Juncture

The homes that now belong to Connor and Nidever didn’t exist in the 1960s.

Back then, Kerr County was a small community nestled in the rolling hills of Central Texas, 65 miles northwest of downtown San Antonio. Youth camps operated on the river. Family homes passed through generations. Then, the expansion of Interstate 10 in the following decade helped unlock a wave of development in the area, known as the Hill Country. Homes went up along the Guadalupe River, though longtime residents knew it could flood viciously and with little warning.

A national initiative to address the effects of floods was also just beginning. In 1968, Congress launched the National Flood Insurance Program, which offered federally backed insurance to residents in cities or counties that voluntarily joined. In exchange, the program would require local governments to use federal maps that identified regions at risk of floods. Joining also ultimately meant that cities and counties had to enforce specific development rules in those areas, such as requiring buildings to be high enough to withstand a certain level of flooding.

In Texas, the program triggered skepticism from some state lawmakers, local leaders and landowners. They viewed the flood regulations as an infringement of their property rights and worried flood risk maps would cause their property values to plummet.

Amid this resistance, two Democrats put forward what flood experts characterized as a radical proposal in 1973, after a deadly flood struck the Hill Country. The measure would have prohibited all construction of structures “for use by humans” in the floodway, including the area flanking the river where the most dangerous flooding often occurs. That would not only mean houses but also hospitals, schools and nursing homes. The state proposal would go further than the federal rules, which still allowed people to build in the floodway in some instances.

But when the day arrived to discuss the proposal in its first public hearing, one of the bill’s authors handed out a revised version that removed the strict floodway regulations.

Under the updated measure, the state would still have to create its own flood maps to define what areas were most at risk during a deluge, rather than wait for the federal government to draw them.

State lawmakers scoffed at the price tag, at least $16 million.

“I don’t think there’s a chance in the world that you’re going to get this kind of money and tax all people in the state of Texas to do this kind of work, at least not right now,” said state Rep. John Wilson, a Democrat on the committee considering the bill, which did not pass.

And so homes continued to be built in the floodway.

Today, Kerr is one of the Texas counties with the highest share of buildings in that dangerous zone, according to the newsrooms’ analysis, which ranks it eighth in the state.

Roughly half of those who died during last year’s floods were staying in the floodway, according to the latest FEMA map. Many buildings went up after legislators filed the 1973 bills that could have prevented their construction, a review of county appraisal data found.

“This is the biggest shame, that we weren’t able to pass those back then,” said Rachel Hanes, policy director of the Greater Edwards Aquifer Alliance, a nonprofit representing parts of the Hill Country that has pushed for stringent statewide standards. “It would have just made a drastic difference in lives saved and billions of dollars in damage avoided over the past 50 years.”

On one idyllic half-mile stretch that winds along the Guadalupe, at least 27 people died. Sixteen of them were staying in homes in the floodway, the ProPublica and Tribune analysis found.

That part of the river became one of the deadliest spots across the Hill Country that weekend.

It included a home belonging to Beth and Hutch Bryan’s family.

An aerial view of a rural river scene shows concrete slabs where houses once stood among scattered trees and yellow grass. Rolling hills and forests are in the distance.
Concrete slabs are the only thing left from a stretch of homes that once stood along the Guadalupe River.

Dan and Martha Crawford, longtime friends of the Bryans, slept in the property’s guesthouse the morning of July 4. The Crawfords loved to spend weekends here, enjoying the peaceful setting away from their Houston home. Martha Crawford considered it her “happy place.” Their daughter and son grew up going to camp down the road, like the Bryans’ kids.

Around 3:30 a.m., the Crawfords were trying to get to safety as the water rushed around their bodies, roaring like an airplane engine. Dan Crawford, a 63-year-old landman, reached for the lattice on a second-floor deck, but his wife of nearly 30 years got swept away.

The lattice broke. Crawford grabbed a bush that gave way and then climbed a neighbor’s tree, which eventually broke on top of him. He fell into the river. He emerged only for the water to rush him toward a nearby home, where he used the gutters to heave himself onto a slick metal roof.

Later, he would have to tell his grown children: “I can’t tell you where Mom is.”

Martha Crawford and the Bryans died. Concrete slabs now line the roadway where homes once stood. Three white crosses mark the spot where the Bryans stayed. When Crawford went back to see the property months later, he drew hearts on each one of the crosses and wrote their names.

“I’m never going to understand this,” said Crawford, who has leaned on his faith in God. “I’ve got to try to just move forward, but it’s still been hard.”

Still, Crawford believes the government shouldn’t stop people from rebuilding altogether.

A man with gray hair, wearing a light-blue button-down shirt and tan trousers, stands in a room with shelves and artwork behind him. He has his hands in his pockets and is looking to his right.
Dan Crawford lost his wife, Martha, in the floods while on vacation from Houston.

Behind the Nation

As the turn of the century neared, Texas lawmakers passed up two other major opportunities to strengthen protections in flood-prone areas.

In 1989, after 10 campers died in a flood in the Hill Country, state Sen. Ted Lyon proposed banning youth camps with buildings or tents within 150 feet of a body of water or in areas designated as flood-prone

Lyon believes that had his bill passed, at least some children and staff staying at youth camps on July 4 could have survived. FEMA identified areas of Camp Mystic and Heart O’ the Hills, a camp where one person died, as flood-prone in a 2011 map, its most recent countywide assessment.

“That’s so haunting to me,” the former lawmaker said. He later added, “They should have implemented these rules to protect those kids.”

Former Heart O’ The Hills owner Kathy Ragsdale said the building where the camp’s director — her daughter, Jane Ragsdale — died had never flooded in the more than 50 years that the family owned it. The camp’s new owners plan to relocate to a new site outside the flood plain. 

Camp Mystic declined to comment but pointed reporters to previous statements in which it disputes being in a designated flood-prone area, because it successfully petitioned FEMA to exclude it in 2013. The change meant Lyon’s proposed ban may not have applied to the camp  at the time of the flood. Camp Mystic will not reopen this summer, according to its leaders.

Catastrophic flooding that swept across the eastern half of the state spurred another measure in 1993. Longtime Democratic state Sen. Carl Parker of Port Arthur offered a bill that would have forced all cities and counties to enroll in the federal flood insurance program.

Participating in the federal program meant that all new residential construction in the so-called 100-year flood plain, areas with a 1% chance of flooding in any given year, must be elevated to a certain height above ground. Parker’s bill, however, would have gone even further than the federal standard by requiring buildings to be a foot higher than that.

The bill was quickly tabled in its first public hearing after one county official testified that the decision to raise the height standard should be left to local leaders.

Only in 1999 did Texas legislators pass a law requiring all cities and counties to adopt the federal flood insurance program’s elevation requirement and other minimum standards.

But they didn’t assign a state agency to enforce it. Roughly 1 in 10 Texas cities and counties reported to the state that they still had not adopted those minimum standards or any other related regulations as of 2024.

Lawmakers never passed the higher elevation requirements that Parker’s bill proposed. (Parker died in 2024.)

After Hurricane Harvey devastated the Houston area in 2017, the Legislature, again, chose other solutions. That included a measure requiring Texas to create a statewide plan to study how to better prepare for floods. The plan recommended that buildings be constructed to a higher elevation, as Parker attempted decades prior. To date, state lawmakers have not required it.

“The legislature is very reactionary, not visionary,” said Robert Puente, a former state representative who served until 2008. “We react and try to resolve it, and invariably, we don’t.”

Without a state mandate in Texas, counties and cities must individually decide whether they should require new construction to be built at higher elevations.

Some local governments waited years after Parker’s proposal to pass higher standards. Kerr County, for example, passed its rule by 2011. Most Texas cities and counties have not strengthened their regulations, the 2024 state flood plan found.

“A lot of local communities just don’t have the capacity to undertake all these huge code changes, or the political willpower,” said Joel Scata, an attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council, a nonprofit that has pushed to raise standards at the federal level.

An empty courtroom with five large leather chairs behind the judge’s bench. An American flag and a Texas flag frame a large state seal on the wall.
The room where Kerr County commissioners meet to decide on local policies. The county bolstered construction standards by 2011.

That’s why, experts say, Texas needs statewide requirements.

Most states have implemented additional elevation requirements for buildings in flood-prone areas.

New Jersey passed two major provisions that Texas didn’t: It has blocked development of new homes in floodways since 1975 and required extra building elevation starting in 2007. It also started drawing its own expanded flood maps in the 1980s, long before Texas. Nebraska and Wisconsin banned building habitable structures in floodways and required an extra foot or two of height for homes by 1986.

Sarah Galster, the National Flood Insurance Program coordinator for Wisconsin, said Texas lawmakers should push for stricter regulations in the aftermath of last year’s flood. If they don’t, Galster said, then communities should.

“Now is the time before everybody forgets, while people are still having this conversation,” Galster said.

In the months since July 4, the Texas Legislature formed two new committees to continue investigating the disaster. But at the first joint two-day hearing last week, they only focused on what happened at Camp Mystic.

Some flood experts argue that no regulation short of preventing construction in flood-prone areas would truly guarantee safety. One engineer’s model estimates that the Guadalupe River in Kerr reached more than 30 feet in some places, flowing up to twice the strength of Niagara Falls.

But the flood experts also stress the importance of reducing risk through stronger building standards. The American Society of Civil Engineers has pushed for builders to construct homes more than 2 feet higher than the national standard and design for more ferocious rainstorms.

“The obvious thing is that we shouldn’t be developing in flood plains, but that’s not the answer that anybody wants to accept,” said Kimberly Meitzen, a geography and environmental studies professor at Texas State University.

“Looking back, any legislation we could have passed that could provide at least minimal protection would be helpful,” she later added. “And looking towards the future, this is something a lot of folks are working towards, trying to get this into the next legislative session, but it’s an uphill battle.”

“Not Going Anywhere”

In the absence of stricter state rules after last summer’s devastating floods, some local governments adopted their own, including limiting RV use in flood-prone areas. At least 48 people died in RV campgrounds last July. 

Kerr County, however, has not changed its rules in any significant way.

The county has already allowed more than 100 residents to start rebuilding or renovating in flood-prone areas.

County commissioners and Kerr’s top county executive did not respond to the newsrooms’ interview requests and questions.

Katharine Deely and her husband, Pat, sold their Kerr County home after last summer’s storm. They bought the funky vacation house with hand-me-down furniture and maroon linoleum floors from his father and stepmother, not far from where the Crawfords and Bryans fought the river’s current. Usually, Pat Deely spent July 4 there, but instead, he went fishing with a former law firm colleague — a decision his wife believes saved his life.

The damaged house withstood the flood, but the couple, in their late 70s, didn’t have the heart to fix it up. Katharine Deely said it was as if her husband’s fond memories of the many visits there with family washed away with the disaster.

“I’m amazed people are rebuilding there,” Deely said. “Seems like it’d be like living in the graveyard.”

For many, those memories are part of what makes it hard to leave behind properties — places they’ve invested in, where they’ve delighted in watching the sun rise over the river and cherished time swimming and playing with family.

Joan Connor and her husband moved back into their home in Bumble Bee Hills before Christmas.

Connor only managed to save a few items: her loom, chairs her father made, her mother’s granite table. She left many of the rebuilding decisions to her daughter, like what light fixture to install. Volunteers filled the cupboards with dishes, draped towels in the bathroom and hung pictures on the wall.

“We’re not going anywhere,” Connor said. “We don’t think a thing like that will happen again in our lifetime.”

But if it does, Connor said, they will do what they did before.

They’ll face the flood.

Emergency Managers: Help ProPublica Prepare to Report on the Next Disaster

If you are a part of the network of disaster response and recovery partners, we need your help to build a comprehensive picture of the real conditions across the country.

The post Texas Lawmakers Repeatedly Failed to Pass Legislation That Could Have Protected Residents From Deadly Floods appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 04:44

The Climate Briefing: Making the global circular economy transition happen Audio thilton.drupal

Anna and Elizabeth speak to Jocelyn Blériot (Ellen MacArthur Foundation) and Dr Patrick Schröder about what needs to happen, nationally and internationally, to accelerate the transition to a circular economy.

Today’s ‘take–make–dispose’ economy operates in a linear way: resources are extracted, turned into products, used, and then discarded – with severe consequences for the climate and environment. Transitioning to a circular economy means replacing this system with one that keeps materials in circulation through reuse, repair, remanufacturing, and recycling.

But what needs to happen – both internationally and within countries – to enable a transition to a circular economy at the global level? To find out, Anna Åberg and guest co-host Elizabeth Adetoye speak with Jocelyn Blériot (Executive Lead for Policy and Institutions at the Ellen MacArthur Foundation) and Dr Patrick Schröder (Senior Research Fellow at Chatham House).

About The Climate Briefing  

The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world. 
 
You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify 
 

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 03:31

The third day of hearings of the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion heard further evidence from Jewish Australians

Violent antisemitic abuse was allowed to proliferate across a Jewish political candidate’s social media as part of a broader trend designed to intimidate Jewish Australians from public life, a royal commission has heard.

Joshua Kirsh launched a campaign as an independent candidate for the New South Wales upper house in late 2025 but found his advertisements online bombarded by antisemitic tropes, abuse and threats.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 03:00
  • Federations have concerns over men’s World Cup model

  • FA works with Uefa to freeze ticket prices for Euro 2028

The Football Association and US Soccer Federation have joined forces to lobby Fifa to alter its proposed organisational model for the 2031 and 2035 Women’s World Cups.

Both federations are understood to be seeking more local control after concerns that have arisen over the organisation of this summer’s men’s World Cup, particularly regarding the cost of tickets and financial disputes with some US state and city authorities.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 03:00

Atmospheric carbon dioxide hit a new record in April, averaging about 431 parts per million at NOAA's Mauna Loa Observatory. That's up from under 320 ppm when the site began measurements in 1958. Scientific American reports: Greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, are measured as a proportion of the total atmosphere. The numbers are presented as the number of molecules of a particular gas out of a million total molecules, or ppm. Climate scientist Zachary Labe of Climate Central, a nonprofit that researches climate change, says the new record is "depressing" but not unexpected. "It's just another sign that carbon dioxide continues to increase in our atmosphere as our planet continues to warm," he says. "For many climate scientists, this is just 'here it is again, another record in the wrong direction.'" Labe explains that the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere tends to peak in April each year as decaying plants release greenhouse gases after winter. Some of that CO2 gets reabsorbed by plants as they grow during the warmer months. But NOAA's data show a worrying trend, with the average monthly amount of CO2 steadily increasing. [...] Although the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has continued to rise, there was a reduction in U.S. emissions in 2023 and 2024. That trend, however, was reversed in 2025, at least partially because of the increased electricity demand from artificial intelligence data centers. Still, Labe says there are reasons for optimism as the use of renewable energy sources such as solar and wind expands.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 02:00

Bargains are disappearing and the cost of gadgets such as MacBooks and PS5s is rising as AI competes for memory chips

The end of the cheap laptop, the bargain phone and affordable games consoles may be on the horizon. Not because new models are more hi-tech, but because the cost of computer components has shot up.

Recently, the biggest manufacturers of laptops and phones, including Microsoft, Samsung and Dell, started putting up prices and pulling cheaper models – which is going to make finding budget phones and laptops under £400 much harder.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 02:00

Financial Stability Board report reveals tech, healthcare and services sectors as the biggest borrowers

The private credit industry’s role in fuelling the AI boom could backfire, with a sharp correction leading to “sizeable” losses, the Financial Stability Board has warned.

A new report on private credit by the global watchdog, which monitors financial authorities including central banks in 24 countries, found that the healthcare, services, and tech sectors have become the biggest borrowers of private credit.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 01:47

In today’s newsletter: ​The brief US effort to ​s​teer trapped vessels through the ​waterway ​put the fragile ceasefire under strain

Good morning. Uncertainty once again reigns in the Middle East. The uneasy ceasefire between the US and Iran threatened to disintegrate after Donald Trump launched an initiative – dubbed “Project Freedom” – to help thousands of sailors stranded in the Gulf by the war to pass through the strait of Hormuz.

To Iran, the announcement was a cynical provocation. Flurries of fighting restarted as Iran sought to maintain its grip on the critical passageway out of the region.

UK politics | Zack Polanski falsely claimed to be a spokesperson for the British Red Cross while campaigning for the Green party leadership, the charity has said.

Fuel shortages| Two million airline seats have been cut from this month’s schedules as airlines redraw their operations because of soaring jet fuel prices amid the Middle East conflict.

UK news| A British crew member who became ill after a suspected outbreak of hantavirus on luxury cruise ship the MV Hondius is to be medically evacuated, officials have said.

Tax | An increased windfall tax should be imposed on the UK’s largest banks, say trade union leaders, after the big four lenders reported almost £14bn in first-quarter profits, partly fuelled by market turbulence amid the Iran war.

Society | People from black backgrounds in England are twice as likely to experience strokes as their white counterparts, while also being less likely to receive timely care, according to the largest study of its kind.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 01:26

Under new guidelines caning will only be used in schools for male students aged nine and above

Male school students who bully others, including through cyberbullying, will face caning as a “last resort” under new guidelines introduced in Singapore.

Male students can face up to three strokes of the cane under the new rules, which were discussed in parliament on Tuesday.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 01:10

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 01:00

Objection after museum removes word ‘Palestine’ from list of countries of ancient Levant and Egypt and from some explanatory panels

The Palestinian ambassador to the UK has called for Foreign Office intervention after the British Museum removed references to Palestine from its exhibits.

The UK recognised the state of Palestine in September 2025, but the same year the museum removed the name “Palestine” from a panel listing the present-day countries encompassed by the ancient Levant, and replaced it with Gaza and the West Bank.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 01:00

Wastewater from nearly 40,000 people and businesses pumped straight into sea as territory still has no treatment plant

Raw sewage from nearly 40,000 people and businesses is being pumped straight into the sea because the British overseas territory of Gibraltar does not have, and has never had, a wastewater treatment plant.

For decades, untreated sewage has poured into the Mediterranean from the southern tip of the peninsula at Europa Point, where the government of Gibraltar says there are “high levels of natural dispersion”.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 01:00

Glyphosate is currently sprayed on cereal and pulse crops to dessicate them and make them easier to harvest

A new trade deal with the EU could lead to restrictions on the use of the controversial weedkiller glyphosate on UK food crops.

The full-spectrum herbicide, which kills almost every plant it touches, is often sprayed on wheat, oats and other cereal and pulse crops shortly before harvest to desiccate them and make them easier to handle.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 00:34

Republican and Democratic candidates met again in race shaped by Eric Swalwell’s exit and Xavier Becerra’s rise

Seven of the leading contenders in California’s unexpectedly dramatic race for governor faced off on Tuesday night, in a feisty, high-stakes showdown that arrived as voters begin casting ballots in the state’s nonpartisan primary.

The heightened tenor of the two-hour scrap matchup reflected how important the candidates viewed the debate, which aired on CNN to a national audience.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 00:01

It's getting more important to verify a job listing is real and to watch out for tricks.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 00:00

Europe punished Russian billionaires over the war in Ukraine. It should do the same to those abetting an ecocidal regime

The ecological disasters of the US-Israel war with Iran are already bad enough. The noxious smoke from bombed oil facilities, spills in the Gulf’s waters, the contamination of farmland and groundwater with toxic chemicals unleashed by explosions and their debris, the millions of additional tons of CO2 spewed into the atmosphere. But as bad as it is, the Iran war hides another conflict: the ecological war that Donald Trump’s US is waging against the rest of the world.

When the EU and UK imposed individual sanctions, travel bans and asset seizures on Russian oligarchs, it wasn’t because most of them were individually responsible for Vladimir Putin’s colonial war of aggression against Ukraine. They were targeted because, as a class, they were viewed by many as inextricable from the apparatus of corruption and levers of power of the Russian state threatening global stability.

Alexander Hurst writes for Guardian Europe from Paris. His memoir Generation Desperation is out now

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 00:00

Can ideology prevent war in East Asia?

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-06 00:00

How America can protect itself—and the global economy.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-06 00:00

Jet fuel has doubled in price since the start of the war on Iran. How bad will the disruption get and could this accelerate the route to jet zero?

What happens to flights if the world runs out of oil? Well, obviously they will be grounded. To be more specific, is it possible, if the war in Iran does not resolve and the strait of Hormuz remains blocked, that airlines will simply run out of aviation fuel?

It’s not a question anyone has had to ask before. Air travel has hit some hurdles this century that nobody could have seen coming – Covid, of course, but also the Icelandic volcano in 2010, which closed much of European airspace for eight days, cost an estimated €3.75bn (£3.2bn) and caused untold supply chain chaos. There have been problems contained within a country or region – the Heathrow substation outage and the Iberian energy crisis, both last year, both closing airports – but since air travel began, it has never been globally impeded by a fuel shortage.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 23:31

President Trump had backed challengers to Indiana state senators who voted against his redistricting plan — and on Tuesday, most of them won.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: OpenAI President Greg Brockman concluded his testimony on Tuesday, where he largely rebutted Elon Musk's account of the early years of the startup and negotiations that occurred at the company. Brockman testified that he never made any commitments to Musk about the company's corporate structure, and he never heard anyone else make them. He emphasized that OpenAI is still governed by a nonprofit. "This entity remains a nonprofit," Brockman said, referring to the OpenAI foundation. "It is the best-resourced nonprofit in the world." [...] Brockman, who spoke from the witness stand in federal court in Oakland, California, over the course of two days, also revealed that Musk had enlisted several OpenAI employees to do months of free work for him at Tesla, Musk's electric vehicle company. That work mainly included efforts to overhaul the company's approach to developing self-driving technology as part of the Autopilot team there in 2017. During his two days on the stand, Brockman answered questions about his personal financial ambitions, his understanding of OpenAI's structure and Musk's involvement at the company, which they co-founded with other executives in 2015. In Musk's testimony last week, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO said that the time, money and resources he poured into OpenAI had been integral to the company's success. He repeatedly said that he helped recruit the company's top talent. Brockman said Tuesday that while Musk was helpful in convincing some employees to take the leap to join OpenAI, he was a polarizing figure for others. "Elon had a reputation of being an extremely hard driver," Brockman said. He added that "certain candidates were very attracted" by Musk's involvement at OpenAI, and that "certain candidates were very turned off." Musk testified last week that a former OpenAI researcher named Andrej Karpathy joined Tesla, but only after he had planned to leave the startup already. Brockman said that Musk, after he hired Karpathy, approached him with "an apology and a confession," about the hire, and that neither Musk nor Karpathy had told him the researcher planned to leave OpenAI before that. Musk was generally not very available for meetings and conversations, Brockman said, so he relied on employees, including Sam Teller and former OpenAI board member Shivon Zilis, as proxies. Brockman testified that open sourcing OpenAI's technology was "not a topic of conversation" during Musk's time with the nonprofit, despite Musk's claims that it was supposed to be central to the organization. He also described tense 2017 negotiations over a possible for-profit arm, saying Musk became angry when equity stakes were discussed. "He said Musk declined the proposal during an in-person meeting, then tore a painting of a Tesla Model 3 car off the wall, and began storming out of the room," reports CNBC. He also demanded to know when the cofounders would leave the company. Brockman further said Musk wanted control of OpenAI because he disliked situations where he lacked control, citing Zip2 and SolarCity as examples Musk had raised. He also testified that Musk partly wanted control to help fund his broader SpaceX ambition of building a "city on Mars." CNBC notes the trial will resume at 8:30 a.m. PT on Wednesday, with Shivon Zilis expected to testify. She is the mother of four of Musk's children and a former OpenAI board member. Recap: OpenAI President Discloses His Stake In the Company Is Worth $30 Billion (Day Five) Musk Concludes Testimony At OpenAI Trial (Day Four) Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company's Attorney (Day Three) Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two) Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 23:28

Derek Merrin won the GOP primary in Ohio's 9th Congressional District on Tuesday, setting up a rematch against longtime Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur in what's expected to be one of the most contested House races of the year.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 23:20

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump has issued a fresh verbal attack against Pope Leo XIV, accusing the pontiff of “endangering a lot of Catholics” because “he thinks it’s fine for Iran to have a nuclear weapon”.

The remarks come two days before Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, meets Leo at the Vatican in an effort to ease the tensions sparked by Trump’s previous broadside against the Chicago-born pontiff over his condemnation of the US-Israeli war on Iran.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 23:15

I have a OneWheel+ that I was gifted. It works great, but it's got quite a bit of wear and tear and I want to find replacement parts and potential upgrades to give it a bit of a facelift.

I don't see a OneWheel+ section on the official website. Which model would I pick from the drop-down menu to look for the parts I want?

Thanks in advance 😊

submitted by /u/PhilosopherAbject665
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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 23:05
Used board help

Hey all, i’ve been considering buying a used Onewheel and am looking for a second opinion. This is one of the better looking boards in my area for sale. What do you think about pricing? Thanks.

submitted by /u/lanecd
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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 22:58

The attack came a day after U.S. forces struck an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean Sea, killing two people.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 22:56

Hello fellow OW riders. I have an original XR with only 60 miles on it. It’s been great and I love riding it although I don’t ride it much these days. however, the last two times I pulled it out to ride, it has struggled to move. The motor takes a bit to kick in when I step on it, and it has a hard time getting going once I’m on it. If there’s even the slightest incline it barely moves. The battery is fully charged and at 100%. I’ve put on a few pounds but I’m not that heavy lol. Anyone know what could be going on?

submitted by /u/mrshifty667
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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 22:28

with tfls new sale, what should i get 1st for my stock-ish xrc??

submitted by /u/RaspberryAmazing692
[link] [comments]

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-05 22:28

HAMBURG, Germany, May 5, 2026 — ISC High Performance is pleased to announce that Devesh Tiwari of Northeastern University, USA, has been selected to receive the 2026 Jack Dongarra Early Career Award. This award recognizes his contributions to advancing sustainable high performance computing and to developing post-Moore computing systems, including hybrid quantum-classical high performance computing.

Devesh Tiwari. Credit: Northeastern University College of Engineering

The ISC Jack Dongarra Early Career Award has been in place since 2023 to honor an early- to mid-career researcher who has been a catalyst for scientific progress through exceptional work in fields such as high performance computing (HPC), system software, and emerging computing paradigms. The award includes a monetary prize of 5,000 euros, sponsored by ISC Group.

Tiwari was selected for his outstanding contributions to research and mentorship, as well as for his impact on the advanced computing community. His work has advanced emerging areas in HPC, including hybrid quantum-classical systems, environmentally sustainable computing, and system software for large-scale infrastructures. His group has been among the first to implement system-level innovations on real quantum hardware platforms, effectively bridging the gap between theoretical advancements and practical deployment.

Additionally, Tiwari has also made significant contributions to the broader HPC ecosystem by developing open-source software and large-scale datasets that support research across academia and industry. He is widely acknowledged for his commitment to mentoring the next generation of researchers, many of whom have advanced to academic positions at prestigious institutions.

This ISC award commemorates Professor Jack Dongarra’s lifelong contributions to HPC and the global research community. The award recipient was selected by an international committee of experts in the field, led by Professor Michela Taufer, who holds the Jack Dongarra Professorship in High Performance Computing at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Tiwari is currently the Associate Vice Provost for Research Computing and Director of the Goodwill Computing Lab at Northeastern University. He is widely recognized for his leadership and service to the HPC community, including his roles as co-chair of the steering committee for the ACM International Symposium on High Performance Parallel and Distributed Computing and as a member of the ACM/IEEE Supercomputing Conference Steering Committee.

Among his many accolades, Tiwari is the recipient of the NSF CAREER Award, the IEEE TCSC Middle Career Researcher Award, and, most recently, the IEEE TCPP Outstanding Service and Contributions Award. In recognition of his teaching and mentoring efforts, he has received the Northeastern College of Engineering Outstanding Teaching Award. He has mentored students who have gone on to receive prestigious honors and faculty positions at leading institutions.

The award will be presented on Wednesday, June 24, at 10:45 a.m. in Hamburg by Jack Dongarra himself, followed by a lecture by Tiwari. His address will be published in Future Generation Computer Systems, a leading peer-reviewed scientific journal.

Join ISC High Performance 2026 in #ConnectingTheDots

ISC 2026 returns to the Congress Center Hamburg from June 22 to June 26 for its 41st edition. Since its inception in 1986, it has been recognized as the world’s oldest and Europe’s most attended event for HPC, AI, and quantum professionals and organizations interested in performance, energy efficiency, and cost-effectiveness.

More from HPCwire

About ISC High Performance

ISC High Performance is the leading global event for high performance computing, artificial intelligence, data analytics, and quantum computing. It brings together researchers, technology providers, and industry leaders to explore the latest advancements and practical applications shaping the future of computing.


Source: ISC

The post ISC Names Devesh Tiwari 2026 Jack Dongarra Early Career Award Recipient appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-05 22:27

Expansion strengthens QM’s presence in one of Europe’s leading quantum hubs, setting up its new site in Delft

DELFT, Netherlands, May 5, 2026 — Quantum Machines (QM) today announced the acquisition of TU Delft spin-off QHarbor and the opening of a new office in Delft, the Netherlands. The move establishes a local base in one of Europe’s leading quantum ecosystems and supports the continued expansion of QM’s software platform.

Alberto Tosato (L) and Stephan Philips, co-founders of QHarbor

Quantum Machines develops the hardware and software systems that power QM’s Orchestration Platform, a comprehensive solution for real-time control of quantum processors. The platform is designed to lead the industry’s shift toward hybrid quantum-classical computing across all major qubit modalities, including superconducting, neutral atom, trapped ion, and spin-based platforms.

The addition of the QHarbor team reflects Quantum Machines’ focus on building a strong presence in Delft by attracting top local talent and by working closely with the broader quantum community.

“As an American company, this step reflects our deep investment in Europe’s quantum future and our commitment to being an integral part of this thriving ecosystem,” said Itamar Sivan, CEO and co-founder of QM. “By establishing a home in Delft, we are investing our resources and expertise in one of Europe’s most significant quantum hubs.”

The QHarbor team will form the foundation of QM’s Delft office, contributing to the company’s work on software-defined experimentation, data management, and system-level integration for quantum computing. “Joining Quantum Machines allows us to take our work further and integrate it into a broader platform used across the quantum ecosystem,” said Alberto Tosato, one of QHarbor’s co-founders, now joining QM. “We look forward to contributing to the development of technologies that support the scaling of quantum systems.”

The Delft office, located in Hubbz Delft and planned to open on May 5, will support research and development activities and serve as a base for collaboration with local partners, including institutions within the House of Quantum and the wider Dutch quantum ecosystem. This expansion builds on Quantum Machines’ growing presence in Europe, with existing operations in Denmark, Germany and France. Together with Delft, these locations place QM within several of Europe’s key quantum hubs and enable closer collaboration across the region.

About Quantum Machines

Quantum Machines (QM) is the leading global provider of hybrid quantum-classical control solutions. The company’s flagship Orchestration Platform harmonizes quantum and classical operations to eliminate friction and optimize performance across the entire stack. By providing a unified hardware and software infrastructure that supports any qubit modality, QM empowers researchers and builders to iterate at speed, resolve setbacks, and scale systems previously thought impossible. Learn more at: https://www.quantum-machines.co.


Source: Quantum Machines

The post Quantum Machines Acquires QHarbor to Strengthen Its Software Platform and Expand European Footprint appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-05 22:24

SIEGEN, Germany and HAMBURG, Germany, May 5, 2026 – eleQtron, a developer of trapped-ion quantum computers, has successfully closed a €57 million Series A funding round. This funding round marks a significant step towards the industrial scaling of eleQtron’s technology and underscores the growing momentum in the global race to commercialize quantum computing. It ranks among the largest Series A funding rounds in quantum computing worldwide and clearly positions eleQtron as one of the most ambitious European players in the international arena.

eleQtron CEO Jan Henrik Leisse and CTO Michael Johanning

The round is led by Schwarz Digits, the IT and digital division of Schwarz Group, an international leader in the retail industry. The EIC Fund of the European Innovation Council (EIC) is also among the key investors.

Additional participation comes from existing investors such as Earlybird, as well as new investors including French VC firm Ankaa Ventures, laser equipment specialist Precitec, and development banks NRW.BANK (Düsseldorf) and IFB Innovationsstarter GmbH. The funding package also includes individual grants.

eleQtron already has an order backlog of more than €54 million, underlining growing commercial demand and placing the company among the few quantum computing players with meaningful commercial traction.

The new capital will be used to build scalable production capacity, expand cloud-based access to eleQtron’s systems, and further advance development of its hardware platform.

In parallel, eleQtron is advancing its proprietary MAGIC technology (Magnetic Gradient Induced Coupling), which enables highly precise control of trapped ions using miniaturized microwave technology — providing a clear path toward scalable quantum computers.

“Quantum computing is transitioning from a research-driven technology to an industrially usable infrastructure. With this funding, we are accelerating that transition and building systems that will solve real-world industrial problems,” said Jan Henrik Leisse, CEO and Co-founder of eleQtron.

Scaling Technology for Industrial Applications

Founded in 2020, eleQtron combines research-based technology development with a strong focus on industrial scaling and commercialization. Quantum computing is increasingly being recognized as a critical component of digital infrastructure — comparable to data centers, networks, or AI platforms. This investment strengthens eleQtron’s position as a provider of scalable quantum computing systems for industrial applications. With the capital from the consortium around the companies of Schwarz Group as lead investor, the commercialization of the product’s transition from the laboratory environment to industrial practice will now be significantly accelerated.

“Digital sovereignty is a top priority for us and our partners. Following our strategic decisions in the areas of cloud and artificial intelligence, the investment in eleQtron is a logical building block. We want to ensure that we remain independent in key technologies and actively shape forward-looking, secure IT infrastructures right here in Germany,” said Christian Müller, Co-CEO of Schwarz Digits.

“eleQtron combines a clearly differentiated technology with a compelling approach to scaling and commercializing quantum computing. In particular, the combination of proprietary technology and cloud-based access demonstrates how research can translate into real-world applications. We are excited to continue supporting the company in its next phase of growth,” said Dr. Hendrik Brandis, Co-Founder & Partner, Earlybird.

“Quantum computing is entering a crucial phase of industrialisation. Companies such as eleQtron, which combine scientific excellence with a clear focus on scalable systems, are key to translating Europe’s strengths into globally competitive technologies,” said Svetoslava Georgieva, Chair of the EIC Fund Board.

More from HPCwire: Jülich and Startup eleQtron Collaborate on the EPIQ Project for Next-Gen Quantum Computing

About eleQtron

eleQtron was founded in 2020 as a spin-off from the University of Siegen and develops quantum processors based on trapped ions. Its proprietary MAGIC technology (Magnetic Gradient Induced Coupling) enables highly precise and scalable control of qubits using microwaves. eleQtron employs more than 100 people and partners with leading European research and computing centers to advance the industrial use of quantum computing.

About Schwarz Digits

Schwarz Digits is the IT and digital division of Schwarz Group and offers impressive digital products and services that meet the high German data protection standards. With the aim of achieving the greatest possible digital sovereignty, Schwarz Digits provides the IT infrastructure and solutions for the extensive ecosystem of Schwarz Group’s companies and develops it for the future. Schwarz Digits’ sovereign core services include Cloud, Cyber Security, Data and AI, Communication and Workspace. In addition, Schwarz Digits creates optimal conditions for the development of trend- setting innovations for end customers, companies, and public sector organizations.

About EIC Fund

The European Innovation Council Fund from the European Commission is a deep tech investor across all technologies. The EIC Fund aims to fill a critical financing gap, to support companies in the development and commercialisation of disruptive technologies. With its large network of capital providers and strategic partners it shares risk and crowds in market players.


Source: eleQtron

The post eleQtron Lands €57M Series A as Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing Efforts Expand appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 22:06

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 6.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 22:00

The Project Demonstrated a 100× Performance Improvement Compared to Existing Quantum Approaches, While Simulating Vast Areas at Extremely High Resolution

NESS ZIONA, Israel, May 5, 2026 — Quantum Art, an Israeli trapped-ion quantum computing company providing full-stack solutions, today announced the results of a joint project with a leading Israeli governmental research and development agency. The project focuses on developing quantum algorithms for modeling electromagnetic wave propagation and demonstrates the potential of quantum computing to address complex physical problems at scales beyond the practical limits of classical computing.

As part of the project, an algorithm was developed to simulate electromagnetic wave propagation generated from multiple sources across volumes spanning tens of cubic kilometers, at centimeter-level resolution and beyond. This capability enables highly accurate wireless coverage planning and improves the reliability of mission-critical communication systems.

Models at this level of detail require on the order of ~10¹⁸ sampling points. Classical supercomputers struggle to efficiently process problems of this magnitude, forcing trade-offs between coverage area, model accuracy, computation time, and energy consumption.

The algorithms were developed based on Quantum Art’s architecture and its multi-qubit gate capabilities, enabling efficient solutions of partial differential equations (PDEs) used in large-scale wave propagation modeling. PDEs form the foundation of models across numerous scientific and engineering domains, including communications, aerospace, automotive, finance, and defense.

By compressing complex operations into fewer computational steps, the multi-qubit architecture reduces quantum circuit depth and enables advanced algorithms to run efficiently even on systems with a relatively small number of qubits. Benchmarking results showed more than a 100× performance improvement compared to a leading superconducting quantum computing platform, and over a 10× improvement compared to another trapped-ion approach.

According to Prof. Roee Ozeri, Chief Scientific Officer at Quantum Art: “When attempting to model complex wave behavior at this scale and centimeter-level resolution, classical systems impose trade-offs that limit either accuracy or coverage. The quantum algorithms we developed preserve high precision at scales that were previously impractical, and this advantage is expected to grow as quantum hardware continues to advance.”

Due to the exponential scaling of quantum computation, a grid containing approximately 10¹⁸ sampling points can be represented using only ~60 qubits, placing simulations of this scale within reach of near-term quantum systems.

More from HPCwireQuantum Art Extends Series A Funding to $140M as It Targets Commercial-Scale Quantum Systems

About Quantum Art

Quantum Art is an Israeli company founded in 2022 by Dr. Tal David, Dr. Amit Ben Kish and Prof. Roee Ozeri as a spin-off from the Weizmann Institute of Science. The company develops trapped-ion quantum computing systems and advanced computational solutions for complex problems in optimization, simulation, and high-performance computing. Recently, the company completed a Series A funding round of $140 million, aimed at accelerating the development of its 1,000-qubit Perspective platform and expanding its multi-core architecture. Among its demonstrated technological milestones is a 200-ion linear trapped-ion chain, representing a significant step in its scalability roadmap.


Source: Quantum Art

The post Quantum Art Develops Quantum Algorithms for Large-Scale Electromagnetic Wave Simulations appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 22:00

Alliances, a bloody rampage and a sweet reunion capped off this season.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 21:45

Without offering details or evidence, US Southern Command describes the people killed as ‘narco-terrorists’

The US military said on Tuesday it had struck a vessel in the eastern Pacific, killing three people, in the latest such attack that rights groups label as “extrajudicial killings” and Washington describes as targeting “narco-terrorists”.

US Southern Command posted about the strike on social media Tuesday evening, alleging that the vessel struck on Tuesday was operated by “Designated Terrorist Organizations” that it did not identify.

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2026-05-06 08:04
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2026-05-05 21:34

What are your guys’s opinions on fenders? Are they a must have ? Been running without one but wondering if it’s worth it to get one.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 21:02

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for May 6 No. 590.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 21:00

Police suspend ‘extensive’ six-day air and ground search in Nova Scotia, citing ‘no new information’

Teams in eastern Canada have called off an “extensive” six-day air and ground search of a rugged park for a missing Australian hiker.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said this week it had suspended operations after an effort involving dogs, 100 people, aircraft and ground crews yielded “no new information” in the whereabouts of Denise Ann Willams.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 20:17

Ohio’s Senate seat is one Democrats have prioritized in the party’s bid to retake control of the chamber

Democratic senator Sherrod Brown and Republican senator Jon Husted won their party’s nominations in Ohio’s primary elections on Tuesday, according to the Associated Press – teeing them up for what is expected to be a high-profile and expensive Senate race in November’s midterm elections.

Husted ran unopposed, while Brown had a single opponent whom he handily outraised.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 20:08

Those who bought select iPhone models could collect up to $95 each.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-05 20:05

Vivek Ramswamy will face Democrat Amy Acton, a former Ohio Department of Public Health director, in November.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 19:25

Etsy's current foray into ChatGPT may be less about making money and more about learning how to develop its own AI tools.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 19:24

To get the benefits of using an electric toothbrush, such as cleaner, whiter teeth, you'll want to make sure you're using it correctly.

2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-05 19:14

Settlement, which includes no admission of wrongdoing, covers roughly 36m eligible devices in class-action lawsuit

Apple on Tuesday agreed to pay $250m to settle a class-action lawsuit accusing it of misleading millions of iPhone buyers by falsely touting artificial intelligence capabilities for its Siri voice assistant in late 2024.

Plaintiffs accused the California tech company of having “promoted AI capabilities that did not exist at the time, do not exist now, and will not exist for two or more years” in order to boost iPhone sales, according to the suit. Apple’s more “personalized” version of Siri still has not been fully released despite its announcement nearly two years ago.

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2026-05-06 12:04
2026-05-05 16:59

US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission files suit claiming newspaper passed over employee due to ‘diversity aspirations’

In what appears to be a new front in the Trump administration’s pressure campaign against the media, the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the New York Times, charging that the news organization improperly passed over a white, male employee for promotion because of his race or sex.

The employee believed he had been passed over for a promotion to deputy real estate editor, a position that had been listed in January 2025, despite believing himself to be a “significantly” more qualified candidate.

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2026-05-06 16:04
2026-05-05 16:49

A Tarrant County jury sentenced Tanner Horner to death for the 2022 kidnapping and murder of 7-year-old Athena Strand.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-05 16:45

Accused White House Correspondents' Dinner attacker Cole Allen was indicted Tuesday on four charges, including a new charge of assaulting a federal officer.

2026-05-07 12:04
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A roving real estate expo for land sales in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories held an event at a New York synagogue on Tuesday, drawing a rebuke from Mayor Zohran Mamdani over the potential for land sales that violate international law.

The Great Israeli Real Estate Event — a showcase that advertises its services in helping people in the United States, Canada, and the U.K. purchase land in Israel and the West Bank — hosted the event at Park East Synagogue in Manhattan’s Upper East Side on Tuesday. The expo helps potential buyers navigate taxes, education concerns, and other issues that arise during relocation to Israel.

Ahead of the event, Mamdani spoke out against the possibility of potentially illegal land sales being facilitated within the city.

“Mayor Mamdani is deeply opposed to the real estate expo this evening that includes the promotion of the sale of land in settlements.”

“Mayor Mamdani is deeply opposed to the real estate expo this evening that includes the promotion of the sale of land in settlements in the Occupied West Bank,” said Sam Raskin, a spokesperson for Mamdani, in a statement to The Intercept. “These settlements are illegal under international law and deeply tied to the ongoing displacement of Palestinians.”

The website for the expo includes a reference to Gush Etzion, a cluster of some 20 settlements in the West Bank, southeast of Jerusalem, that are considered illegal under international law. Lara Friedman, president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, said the inclusion of Gush Etzion was a telling reminder of the claim made on all of the Occupied Territories by the pro-settlement movement.

“Gush Etzion is the Israeli term for an area of the West Bank located south of Jerusalem on which, under international law, all Israeli construction, all Israeli communities are considered illegal under international law,” Friedman said. “The pro-settlement movement around the world, and most Israelis, do not make any distinction between Israel and the West Bank. The idea is that all of this is Eretz Yisrael” — Hebrew for “the land of Israel” — “and it belongs to the Jews because God gave it to them.”

The Intercept attended the event Tuesday. Just inside the synagogue, a large welcome sign specified that the event was for “information purposes only.” More than a dozen tables advertised the services of real estate companies, most of which promoted glitzy luxury buildings in Tel Aviv, Netanya, and other cities inside Israel’s internationally recognized borders.

At least one company, Harey Zahav, displayed a map of properties in Kfar Eldad, Karnei Shomron, and other Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Brochures at the Harey Zahav table offered detailed looks at properties in these settlements.

Past Discrimination Allegations

The expo is being sponsored by a group called Home in Israel, but it isn’t the only organization putting on events of this sort. In recent years, real estate fairs put on by similar groups have popped up in New York and other North American cities, including Baltimore, Montreal, and others, including at synagogues.

Israeli settlements in the West Bank are widely considered to be open only to Jewish residents. At one real estate event in suburban New Jersey in 2024, protesters said they were explicitly asked about their religious affiliations when they tried to register for the fair, potentially implicating anti-discrimination laws. The New Jersey Civil Rights Division reportedly questioned realtors about their practices. (The New Jersey Civil Rights Division not immediately respond to requests for comment.)

Pal-Awda, a pro-Palestine group, announced plans on social media for a protest on Tuesday outside the Park East Synagogue.

“We will not be silent as ethnic cleansing is being actively promoted in our neighborhoods,” the group wrote.

Related

The Companies Making It Easy to Buy in a West Bank Settlement

Self-proclaimed supporters of the synagogue have circulated a flyer on social media announcing a counter-protest. “All members of the Jewish community need to come out and protect the synagogue,” says the flyer. Though it includes the social media handles of the synagogue, the call for a counter-protest did not appear to come from Park East Synagogue itself. (A spokesperson for the synagogue declined to comment.)

Past events have led to sometimes violent confrontations between protesters and counter-demonstrators.

In light of the dueling protests planned outside Park East Synagogue, Raskin, the mayoral spokesperson, called for both the safety of eventgoers and respect for the free-speech rights of the protesters.

“Our administration has also been clear that we are committed to ensuring safe entry and exit from any house of worship,” he said, “and that such access never be in question while all protesters are able to exercise their First Amendment rights.”

Protests at Park East

Park East Synagogue has already been the site of one anti-Zionist protest that raised hackles in New York.

In November, Pal-Awda organized a demonstration against an event hosted by Nefesh B’Nefesh, a group that facilitates migration to Israel, sparking howls of protest from then-Mayor Eric Adams and other political leaders in the city.

Related

Kathy Hochul’s Israel Trip Bankrolled by Group Funding Illegal Settlements

That protest, along with others across New York City, were part of the impetus behind a bill introduced this year in the City Council aimed at creating a so-called buffer zone to keep demonstrators at a distance from any house of worship.

Despite the opposition of free-speech advocates, a version of that bill — requiring the New York Police Department to provide a plan for protecting houses of worship but without the buffer zone provision — passed in March and became law on April 25 after Mamdani declined to sign or veto it. The bill gave the New York Police Department 45 days to provide a proposed plan of action and 90 days to give a final plan, meaning it is not yet in full effect.

A related bill proposing buffer zones for universities and other educational institutions passed the City Council but was vetoed by Mamdani, who criticized the bill as overbroad and a threat to free speech.

Update: May 5, 2026, 6:45 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to include reporting from inside the Great Israeli Real Estate Event on the promotion of property for sale in Israeli settlements that are considered illegal under international law.

The post Mamdani Condemns NYC Expo Promoting Property Sales in Israeli West Bank Settlements appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 15:24

GAINESVILLE, Va., May 5, 2026 — The Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC), the trusted global leader in computing benchmarks, today announced the availability of the SPEC CPU 2026 benchmark suites, a significant update to the industry-standard for vendor-neutral metrics measuring compute-intensive performance. For 37 years, the SPEC CPU benchmark suites have been a key tool for server buyers in assessing computing system requirements based on the performance of today’s CPU, memory, and compiler options running real-world application workloads. The updated SPEC CPU 2026 benchmark suites reflect the significant evolution of today’s modern hardware and software.

The development of the SPEC CPU 2026 benchmark suites is the result of a collaborative effort by representatives from across the technology industry. Committee members evaluated more than 70 candidate applications, ultimately selecting 38 applications resulting in 52 benchmarks that represent a broad spectrum of real-world use cases. The process included increased engagement with the open source community, one of the many methods SPEC uses to ensure the benchmarks remain representative of modern software ecosystems.

“Every industry today requires highly performant computing systems, which means the need has never been greater for a vendor-neutral benchmark that enables users to assess the performance of today’s CPU, memory, and compiler options,” said Frédérique Silber-Chaussumier, Chair of the SPEC CPU committee. “The SPEC CPU 2026 benchmark suites provide the relevant, unbiased insight buyers need to make the most of their technology investments. While primarily for servers, the benchmark suites provide valuable insights for workstations, laptops, tablets, and smartphones as well. This makes the SPEC CPU 2026 benchmarks suites an indispensable tool for hardware performance evaluation.”

“The SPEC CPU benchmark suites have a well-deserved reputation for enabling organizations across industries to understand computing performance and productivity and make smarter purchasing decisions regarding their hardware needs,” said Jason Lowe-Power, an associate professor of computer architecture research at the University of California, Davis. “But the benchmark has value that goes beyond simple measurement. For example, thousands of users of gem5, a tool for designing new processors, can use the real-world workloads in the SPEC CPU benchmark suites to gain insights into the benefits of their architectural ideas. These assessments have the potential to significantly improve the quality of future processors.”

“In recent years, the number of server CPU silicon vendors and instruction set architectures has increased dramatically,” said David Reiner, President of SPEC. “To understand the true performance of these CPUs, whether for on-prem or cloud deployments, it is essential to use the most up-to-date version of the industry’s gold-standard measuring stick, the SPEC CPU 2026 benchmark suites.”

What’s New

  • Comprehensive Suite Expansion – Includes 52 benchmarks, up from 43, with more than two times the lines of source code, designed to stress a system’s processor, memory hierarchy, and compilers. The benchmarks are derived from real-world applications, ensuring authentic performance measurement across the broadest spectrum of modern hardware. New benchmarks include an LLVM optimizing compiler, a Python interpreter, a neural machine translator, a state-of-the-art chess engine, a solar coronal magnetic field modeler, a computer architecture simulator, and several more.
  • Multidisciplinary Domain Growth  Expanded applicability to a wider array of applications and domains, from scientific areas such as astrophysics, neutron transport, image compression, and flight dynamics, to general-purpose areas such as AI, electronic design automation, databases, and graph analytics.
  • Cross Platform Modernization – Enabled portability across a wider range of modern architectures, operating systems, and compilers. Ensured compliance with evolving language standards in C++17, C18, and Fortran 2018.
  • Open Source Collaboration – Integrated widely used open source applications and introduced a new compiler category in the report to encourage benchmarking and publication using open source compilers to reflect the growing needs of the open source ecosystem.
  • Next-Gen Scalability & Parallelism – Advanced the SPECspeed Integer benchmarks by integrating additional explicit parallelism to leverage high-core-count CPUs. To support the scaling, memory utilization was quadrupled from 16GB to 64GB, ensuring suite remains relevant for new, high-density hardware.
  • Expanded Datacenter Support – Formalized methodologies for running and reporting bare-metal cloud platforms, increasing the flexibility of submissions and the availability of performance data for diverse datacenter environments.

SPEC CPU committee members include AMD, Ampere Computing, Arm, Dell Technologies, HPE, IBM, IEIT Systems, Intel Corporation, NVIDIA, Oracle and SiFive. For information on joining SPEC, visit the SPEC membership page.

Available for Immediate Download

The SPEC CPU 2026 benchmark suites are available for immediate download. Pricing is $3,000 for new customers, with a reduced price of $2,000 for current licensees available until November 3, 2026. Pricing is $750 for qualified non-profit organizations, with no charge for accredited academic institutions.

About SPEC

SPEC is a non-profit organization that establishes, maintains and endorses standardized benchmarks and tools to evaluate performance for the newest generation of computing systems. Its membership comprises more than 120 leading computer hardware and software vendors, educational institutions, research organizations, and government agencies worldwide.


Source: SPEC

The post SPEC Releases SPEC CPU 2026 Benchmark Suites to Address Latest Advances in CPU, Memory, and Compiler Tech appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 14:30

Greg Brockman has faced questions about his emails, texts and writings in his personal diary in second week of the trial

As Elon Musk’s case against OpenAI entered its second week, focus shifted to the company’s president, Greg Brockman. Over the course of several hours on Monday and Tuesday, Brockman faced questions about his emails, texts and one piece of evidence that has become central to the trial: his personal diary.

Musk’s lawsuit revolves around his allegation that Brockman, OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, violated the founding agreement of the artificial intelligence firm by turning it into a for-profit entity. Musk argues that Altman and Brockman also unjustly enriched themselves in the process, essentially taking Musk’s money while deceiving him about their true intent for the business. He is seeking Altman and Brockman’s removal, the undoing of the for-profit restructuring and $134bn, which Musk wants distributed to OpenAI’s non-profit.

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2026-05-05 14:10

May 5, 2026 — The University of Utah (U) and the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) National Laboratory of the Rockies (NLR) have signed a memorandum of understanding to strengthen the U.S. energy system.

University of Utah President Taylor Randall and National Laboratory of the Rockies Director Jud Virden signed the MOU on Monday, May 4, at the NLR facility in Golden, Colorado. The following day, DOE’s Assistant Secretary for Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation (CMEI) Audrey Robertson celebrated the agreement during the laboratory’s annual partner forum, a flagship gathering of energy leaders focused on critical minerals.

Left to right: VP for Government Relations Jason Perry; Professor of metallurgical engineering Michael Free; Director of the Utah Office of Energy Development Emy Lesofski; VP for academic affairs Mitzi Montoya; Utah Mining Association President Brian Somers; U President Taylor Randall, NLR Director Jud Virden; Associate NLR Director Andrea Watson; Chief Research Officer for academic affairs Anshuman Razdan; and Associate Vice President for research Jakob Jensen.

“This partnership comes at a pivotal moment, when strengthening the nation’s energy resilience is more important than ever,” said Randall. “Together, we’re more capable of tackling the toughest scientific challenges.”

The MOU advances long-standing partnerships between individual U faculty and laboratory researchers in areas including data visualization and high-performance computing at a national scale. The three-year agreement will enable even greater collaboration through shared facilities, joint proposal development, visiting scholar programs, student internships and career pathways to national labs and more.

As part of the MOU, NLR will work with U researchers to bolster energy security by strengthening supply chains. Technologies like batteries, cellphones, semiconductors and defense systems require components made from critical materials and rare earth elements, many of which are imported from abroad. To reduce supply-chain risk, the U.S. is rapidly expanding domestic sources of critical minerals.

The monumental effort will require cooperation from all sectors—and the MOU unites two leaders well-positioned to align key players. Pending approval of the Utah Board of Higher Education, the U’s proposed Institute for Critical & Strategic Minerals (ICSM) would bring together interdisciplinary experts to drive innovation at every stage of critical mineral development while also addressing broader related challenges. Together with its external advisory board of industry and governmental partners, the institute will advance critical minerals research from geological discovery to real-world application.

“NLR has outstanding researchers and excellent facilities that compliment those at the University of Utah. This collaborative and synergistic effort from both institutions will help to facilitate greater progress and innovation in meeting some of our country’s critical needs,” said Michael Free, professor of metallurgical engineering at the U, proposed director of the ICSM and special advisor to NLR.

“For more than a century, the University of Utah has trained engineers, geologists and other scientists who have powered energy research in the region,” added Mitzi Montoya, executive vice president for academic affairs for the U. “This agreement will allow us to build on that legacy and existing partnerships in new ways. We look forward to working with the NLR in these key areas for many years to come.”

The partnership is well-positioned to draw on the region’s expertise and long history in energy development. Recently, a U-led team that includes Colorado School of Mines and other regional universities was awarded $9.6 million by the DOE to characterize critical minerals in unconventional sources across the Rocky Mountain area, including old coal mines and other waste.

“Our partnership with the University of Utah combines unique facilities and capabilities and outstanding people to advance this mission. These integrated capabilities, along with a world-class student pipeline and partnership with U.S. industry, will help transform our nation’s competitiveness in critical minerals research, workforce development, and technology demonstration,” said Virden.

More from HPCwire


Source: Lisa Potter, University of Utah

The post University of Utah, DOE’s National Laboratory of the Rockies Sign MOU on Energy, Critical Minerals appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 13:05

Hachette, Macmillan and others allege that Meta pirated millions of works from textbooks to novels for Llama model

Five major publishers sued Meta Platforms in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday, alleging that the tech giant misused their books and journal articles to train its artificial intelligence models.

Elsevier, Cengage, Hachette, Macmillan and McGraw Hill, as well as author Scott Turow, alleged in the proposed class-action complaint that Meta pirated millions of their works and used them without permission to train its Llama large language models to respond to human prompts.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 12:49

Researchers say findings are not reason to shy away from restrictions as MPs consider ban in England’s schools

Strict bans on mobile phones in schools have “close to zero” impact on student learning and show no evidence of improvements in attendance or online bullying, a study has found.

Researchers at US universities including Stanford and Duke looked at nearly 1,800 US schools where students’ phones were kept in locked pouches and found little or no differences in outcomes compared with similar schools without strict bans.

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2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 12:37

May 5, 2026 — On the eve of IWOCL 2026, the Khronos OpenCL Working Group has released OpenCL  3.1, bringing widely deployed, field-proven capabilities into the core specification to expand functionality, including SPIR-V ingestion, that developers will be able to rely on across conformant implementations.

The new specification arrives into a growing OpenCL ecosystem, with implementations from multiple silicon vendors, particularly in mobile and embedded markets, and higher-level frameworks including SYCL and chipStar increasingly targeting OpenCL as an acceleration backend. The open-source compiler and runtime ecosystem around OpenCL also continues to mature with layered implementations of OpenCL over Vulkan and DirectX 12 — widening OpenCL’s cross-platform availability, including on platforms without native drivers.

OpenCL Evolution Methodology

Features now mandated by OpenCL 3.1 have been deployed as extensions or optional capabilities. This is by design. The OpenCL working group evolves the specification by proving features in the field as extensions first, watching how they get used across multiple implementations, refining them based on developer feedback, and only then graduating them into the core specification.

Features mandated by OpenCL 3.1 will be reliably available across all conformant implementations, eliminating the need for capability checks or fallback paths in application code.

Mandated SPIR-V Ingestion

Every conformant OpenCL 3.1 implementation will be required to consume SPIR-V kernels — a feature that has been one of the most requested by developers.

SPIR-V is Khronos’s portable intermediate representation, produced by a wide range of open-source compilers, including Clang/LLVM, the SPIR-V LLVM Translator, and the newer SPIR-V LLVM backend. Beyond enabling source language flexibility, SPIR-V also allows kernels to be distributed in pre-compiled, optimized intermediate form rather than as source — protecting kernel IP, reducing application startup times, and enabling ahead-of-time specialization.

OpenCL 3.1 additionally requires support for the SPIR-V query extension, which enables applications to enumerate the SPIR-V capabilities, extensions, and versions that a device supports, simplifying the adoption of new SPIR-V features as they become available.

“Mandatory SPIR-V ingestion is the most consequential change in OpenCL 3.1. SPIR-V has become the natural compilation target for a growing class of higher-level languages and frameworks, including SYCL, ChipStar, and a wide range of domain-specific compilers. Making ingestion a guaranteed capability across every conformant implementation removes the last remaining barrier for these tools to fully commit to OpenCL as a runtime. Combined with the working group’s extensions-first methodology, which has ensured that every feature mandated in 3.1 is already shipping in the field today, OpenCL 3.1 strengthens the dependable, portable runtime substrate that modern heterogeneous compute needs,” said Neil Trevett, OpenCL Working Group Chair.

Building Blocks for AI and HPC Workloads

Several features essential to HPC and AI kernels are also now mandatory in the core OpenCL 3.1 specification:

  • Subgroups, including shuffles, rotations, and an expanded set of supported data types. A fundamental building block for tuned reductions, scans, and matrix kernels.
  • Integer dot products, including saturating and accumulating variants, together with extended bit operations: Both map directly to dedicated hardware instructions on a wide range of modern silicon, and both are common building blocks for matrix multiplications and the low-precision arithmetic central to inference workloads.
  • A new query for the suggested local work-group size. This gives applications and profilers a runtime hint for the optimal work-group size for a given kernel and device, eliminating the need for manual tuning or repeated size calculations across multiple enqueues and improving performance predictability on diverse hardware.
  • A standard device UUID query, matching Vulkan’s VkPhysicalDeviceIDProperties::deviceUUID. This allows applications to correlate the same physical device across APIs, which is essential for multi-device systems and for external memory-sharing scenarios that span OpenCL and Vulkan.

Streamlining Development

OpenCL 3.1 also includes refinements that improve everyday development:

  • Developers can use new language features without relying on extensions. This means cleaner, more portable kernel code that compiles reliably across all conformant implementations without vendor-specific extension guards.
  • The OpenCL C printf implementation now supports z (size_t) and t (ptrdiff_t) length modifiers. This closes a long-standing portability gap with standard C, allowing device-side debug output to correctly format pointer-sized and difference-type values without casts or format string workarounds.
  • CL_DEVICE_HOST_UNIFIED_MEMORY has clarified semantics and can now be used to distinguish integrated from discrete GPUs. Applications can now reliably use this flag to select memory allocation strategies at runtime — for example, skipping explicit buffer copies on integrated GPUs where host and device share the same physical memory.
  • Local memory kernel arguments may be set to zero to indicate no local memory is needed. This enables kernels that opportunistically use local memory to be dispatched without a separate code path for configurations where none is required.
  • Observing that an event is CL_COMPLETE is now a synchronization point, removing the previous need for an explicit wait. This eliminates a subtle correctness hazard in which code polling an event’s status could race against memory visibility, making event-driven synchronization both simpler and formally safe.
  • The memory model’s “inclusive scopes” rule has been relaxed so that scopes no longer need to match exactly. This means a finer-grained scope can now satisfy a coarser-grained synchronization requirement.

Although individually small, these changes collectively eliminate long-standing friction points in OpenCL development.

Implementations in Progress

OpenCL 3.1 has been released with multiple implementations in flight from silicon vendors including Arm, Imagination, Intel, Mesa, and Qualcomm, together with the Rusticl, PoCL, and CLVK open source implementations, spanning desktop, mobile, and embedded markets across Windows, Linux, and Android.

Layered implementations are an increasingly important part of how OpenCL is made available across platforms. OpenCLOn12 layers OpenCL over DirectX 12, providing OpenCL on Windows PCs and cloud instances. CLVK, Ancle, and Rusticl layer OpenCL over Vulkan and Zink, covering Android and the Mesa ecosystem. These layered approaches continue to evolve and play a key role in ensuring broad OpenCL availability across platforms, including when a native driver may not be available.

What’s Next

The extension pipeline that drove OpenCL 3.1 remains active, setting the stage for future core releases. Today’s extensions are a strong indicator of what may become tomorrow’s core specification. Extensions currently in flight include:

  • Command Buffers for low-overhead replayable workloads. By recording a fixed sequence of commands once and replaying it many times, Command Buffers eliminate the per-submission host overhead that limits throughput in inference serving, simulation loops, and other high-frequency dispatch scenarios.
  • Unified Shared Memory for simplified pointer-based memory management. USM replaces explicit buffer objects and copy commands with standard pointer semantics, making it significantly easier to port existing CPU code to GPU and to integrate OpenCL into frameworks that assume a unified address space.
  • Cooperative Matrix operations for high-performance matrix multiplication. These operations map directly to the hardware matrix engines found in modern AI accelerators and GPUs, enabling the dense GEMM performance that is central to both neural network inference and HPC workloads such as molecular dynamics and climate simulation.
  • New AI data types covering low-precision formats; and improvements to external memory sharing and image tiling controls. Low-precision types such as int4 and fp8 reduce memory bandwidth and compute cost for AI inference workloads, while the external memory and tiling improvements make it easier to interoperate with Vulkan, DirectX 12, and platform media pipelines.

Beyond extensions, the working group is actively exploring OpenCL’s role as a substrate for higher-level programming models, in safety-critical markets, and on emerging device classes including NPUs and RISC-V accelerators.

Two Takeaways

OpenCL is widely deployed and actively evolving. OpenCL’s implementation ecosystem spans native and layered approaches across all major platforms, and the working group has an active roadmap of new functionality in development.

OpenCL 3.1 brings significant, proven functionality into the core specification, most notably mandatory SPIR-V ingestion, meaningfully expanding what developers can rely on across every conformant implementation and laying the groundwork for the next wave of language and compiler innovation built on OpenCL.

Feedback from the developer community drove OpenCL 3.1, and continues to drive what comes next. File issues and proposals on the OpenCL specification GitHub, and join the conversation on the Khronos Discord. Attendees of IWOCL 2026 are encouraged to give feedback as well.

More from HPCwire: Khronos Group Releases OpenCL 3.0


Source: Khronos Group

The post Khronos Releases OpenCL 3.1 with New Core Features for Heterogeneous Compute and AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 12:28

Largest private round by a dedicated quantum processor company, Intel Capital and IQT participating

DELFT, Netherlands, May 5, 2026 — QuantWare today announced a $176 million (€152 million) Series B round following the announcement of VIO-40K, a quantum processor architecture for 10,000 qubits, 100x larger than the state of the art today. The company is building KiloFab, the world’s largest dedicated quantum open architecture fab, increasing the company’s production capacity by 20x to meet strong global customer demand.

QuantWare co-founders Matthijs Rijlaarsdam (CEO) and Alessandro Bruno (CTO), pictured outside of QuantWare’s KiloFab facility in Delft, Netherlands.

QuantWare is the only company that designs, fabricates, and integrates modular quantum processors on an open architecture at an industrial scale. Its proprietary VIO technology — a modular Quantum Processor Architecture — allows the creation of the world’s most powerful quantum processors that provide the most compute per Watt.

Designed as an open platform that can scale the qubit chiplets and designs of third parties, VIO unlocks the most powerful quantum processing units (QPUs) for the entire industry. QuantWare serves the global quantum supply chain through QuantWare-designed QPUs, foundry services, and chiplet packaging— enabling all quantum computing companies to scale on QuantWare’s VIO architecture.

To date, QuantWare has shipped to more than 50 customers across 20 countries, making it the world’s largest commercial QPU supplier by volume. QuantWare’s customers span quantum computing companies, national technology institutes, and major global technology conglomerates.

New investors joining the round include Intel Capital, IQT and ETF Partners, with existing investors participating including FORWARD.one and Invest-NL Deep Tech Fund, QDNL Participations, and Graduate Ventures. The round was heavily oversubscribed and is the largest private round raised by a dedicated quantum processor company to date.

“In superconducting quantum computing, scale is increasingly constrained by routing, packaging, and manufacturability—not just qubit design,” said Kike Miralles, Intel Capital. “QuantWare recognized that early and built VIO to address it. That combination of technical ambition and execution positions them to become the company on which the future of superconducting quantum systems will be built.”

“Quantum computing is on the verge of an inflection point, and is a strategic priority for nations around the world,” said J.D. Englehart, Senior Director, IQT. “QuantWare has both the breakthrough scaling technology in VIO, as well as the requisite industrial capability in KiloFab. The company is poised to play a key role in shaping the global quantum supply chain.”

“The promise of quantum computing, capable of solving humanity’s intractable challenges, can only happen once it can be manufactured and deployed at scale. That is exactly what we are building,” said Matt Rijlaarsdam, CEO and co-founder of QuantWare. “VIO-40K will deliver 10,000-qubit processors on an open architecture that the entire ecosystem can build on, and KiloFab gives us the industrial production capacity to meet rapidly growing global demand. This fundraise accelerates QuantWare, and in doing so, advances the entire ecosystem toward hyperscale quantum compute.”

More from HPCwire: QuantWare Unveils VIO-40K QPU Architecture Aimed at 10,000-Qubit Scale

About QuantWare

QuantWare is the industrial quantum processor company. Founded in 2021 by Matt Rijlaarsdam and Alessandro Bruno as a spinout from QuTech at TU Delft, the company designs, fabricates, and integrates quantum processors on VIO — the QPU architecture to scale superconducting qubits to utility-scale quantum computing — for the entire ecosystem. QuantWare has shipped more quantum processors than any other commercial supplier, serving more than 50 customers across 20 countries. QuantWare is funded by investors including Intel Capital and IQT and is headquartered in Delft, the Netherlands.

About Intel Capital

Over three decades, Intel Capital has invested more than US $20 billion in the future of compute, funding standout, early-stage startups across four key areas of the tech ecosystem; Silicon, Frontier, Devices and Cloud. Intel Capital-funded companies created more than US $170 billion in market value in the past 10 years.

About IQT

IQT is the not-for-profit strategic investor the U.S. national security community and America’s allies have relied upon for 25+ years to anticipate their technology questions and needs and achieve solutions. IQT identifies, evaluates, and leverages emerging commercial technologies to deliver best-in-class capabilities, insights, and other services to government partners through a unique global investment platform. For more information visit www.iqt.org.


Source: QuantWare

The post QuantWare Raises $176M as It Builds KiloFab and Targets Utility-Scale Quantum Processors appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-05 11:28

Is Putin losing control of his war in Ukraine? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sfarrell.drupa…

Is the initiative on the Ukraine war slipping out of Russian president Vladimir Putin’s hands? And how has the US-Israel war on Iran affected Moscow?

Is the Ukraine war beginning to bite for the average Russian? The economic crisis is tightening, and Moscow and St Petersburg are increasingly subject to lengthy internet and mobile blackouts.

Fearing Ukrainian drone attacks, Russia has vastly scaled down its traditional celebration of military power – the Victory Day parade – while Putin is reported to be increasingly isolated, micromanaging the war from an assortment of bunkers.

Is the initiative on the Ukraine war slipping out of Putin’s hands? And how has Trump’s attack on Iran changed Moscow’s calculus in the Middle East? Bronwen Maddox talks to Grégoire Roos, director of Chatham House’s Europe and Russia and Eurasia programmes, and associate fellow John Lough.

Produced by Podmasters for Chatham House, with thanks to Stephen Farrell.

About Independent Thinking

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 and Spotify.

Explore our other Chatham House podcasts.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-05 08:14

A cluster of cases aboard the ship off Cape Verde may be linked to a type of hantavirus found in Argentina that can spread from person to person, the World Health Organization said.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-05 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Whether to put restrictions on gun sales and ownership is one of the most controversial issues in the country. Proponents of Senate Bill 300 argue it is necessary to stop guns from ending up in the wrong hands, while critics argue it would put a financial strain on gun shop owners. 

A new bill meant to curb illegal gun trafficking is already sparking pushback from gun rights advocates and Republican lawmakers.

And those opponents might have a shot at halting the bill’s progress in the heavily Democratic legislature because it needs a supermajority vote to pass. 

Senate Bill 300 would implement an enhanced state licensing system for gun shop owners. If passed, firearm dealers would have to buy a state license to sell guns, complete bi-annual Delaware State Police training courses and install surveillance systems. 

“[The bill] will lower the probability of gun violence and gun trafficking and hold our firearm dealers accountable for potentially reckless business practices,” Senate President Pro-Tempore David Sokola said during a virtual meeting Monday that was designed to rally support for the bill. 

The bill would also give the Delaware State Police authority to penalize and fine gun shop owners who break the law. Sokola — a Newark Democrat and the bill’s sponsor — said the enforcement provision is necessary in the face of weakening federal enforcement. 

Senate President Pro Tempore David Sokola, seen here addressing the crowd at Spotlight Delaware’s 2026 Legislative Summit. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DE SENATE DEMOCRATS

The proposal comes less than a week after the Trump administration announced an effort to roll back a number of federal gun control regulations, including a Biden-era requirement that forced firearm dealers to run background checks on buyers at gun shows. 

“This tells us why state inspections and regulations of the industry are so important,” said Josh Scharff, general counsel for gun violence prevention nonprofit Brady United, at the virtual event. 

This bill follows other strict gun legislation in Delaware enacted during the past nine months, including one bill that required permits to purchase, and another that raised the age to hunt with firearms and without adult supervision from 18 to 21. 

In September, a Kent County Superior Court judge struck down the hunting supervision rule on constitutional grounds. 

In recent days, several gun shop owners and gun rights advocates have decried Sokola’s latest bill as an attempt to put Delaware firearm retailers out of business. They argue that it is illegal firearms sellers who supply guns to people who use them in crimes. 

“They’re putting all this onus on the gun stores when we’re not the problem,” said Ron Hagan, owner of Best Shot, a gun store in Lewes. “We’ll essentially be losing money in order to operate a business to sell guns.” 

Best Shot gun shop in Lewes
Several pistols are on display at the Best Shot gun store in Lewes. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

Hagan said he and other licensed firearms retailers in the state recently formed an organization, so that they can jointly be a plaintiff in “any civil litigation that might arise from this [bill].”

It remains unclear exactly how much the state license would cost, but the drafted legislation says it would be proportional to how many firearms a retailer sells each year.

Sokola acknowledged that the licensing fees likely won’t cover the entire cost of enforcing his bill, noting that taxpayers would have to pay the additional costs. 

He said he is not sure yet how much the enforcement of the proposed regulations would cost the state each year.

Is this bill necessary?

While opponents of the gun-control bill say it could drive them out of business, proponents say it would prevent illegal gun trafficking.

Marianna Mitchem, a senior industry advisor with Everytown for Gun Safety, argued at the virtual event Monday that the bill is necessary because too many guns in Delaware are falling into the hands of the wrong people. 

She cited a 2020 case in which Dover resident Jordan Harmon bought a total of 19 semi-automatic pistols from the same gun shop within a six-month period — a sign that he was probably selling the guns to people without a permit. 

Police found those guns at several crime sites and alerted the gun shop owner, she said, but the shop continued selling him weapons for an additional two months. 

Harmon was later convicted and sentenced to federal prison. 

Mitchem said that case is a clear example why the training requirements and fines that SB 300 would implement are necessary.

Gun shop owners say that both the federal government and the individual stores already mandate extensive training for their employees about how to recognize people trying to make illegal purchases.

They also say the majority of guns used for criminal activities are not being shoplifted or purchased from gun shops, rendering the addition of surveillance cameras and other security measures to the shops a waste of money. 

“Nobody steals from a gun shop,” Jeff Hague, president of the Delaware NRA-affiliate group said. “This is killing a mosquito with a sledgehammer.” 

Hagan, the owner of the Lewes-area gun shop, said the added licensing and training fees from the legislation will force stores to raise the price of guns to break even. But then, he said, nobody will purchase firearms in Delaware because they will be too expensive. 

An email newsletter sent by the Republican House caucus indicated that its members also opposed the bill. 

Three-fifths of both chambers would need to vote in favor of SB 300 for it to pass — a threshold that Democrats currently control. They could only afford two defections in either the House or Senate to meet the requirements though.

A hearing on the bill has not yet been scheduled.

The post New bill boosting regulations on gun shops under fire appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-05-06 20:04
2026-05-04 17:20

An ad attacking Sen. Susan Collins in Maine claimed that she voted “to raise healthcare costs and raise insurance premiums,” as well as give President Donald Trump “a blank check for his war in Iran.” But neither claim fully explains Collins’ more nuanced position on those issues.

For the healthcare claims, the ad cites her vote in September against a Democratic bill to, among other things, temporarily fund the federal government and permanently extend enhanced Affordable Care Act health insurance subsidies beyond 2025. But Collins did support extending the subsidies with some restrictions — however, she said the extension should be addressed separately from spending bills proposed to prevent or end a government shutdown.

As for the Iran war, Collins initially voted against multiple war powers resolutions filed by Democrats to require the Trump administration to get congressional authorization to continue the joint U.S.-Israeli operation that began with airstrikes on Iran in late February. But she also signaled that she would change her vote to require authorization by Congress if the conflict with Iran lasted longer than 60 days — and she did. That resolution ultimately failed.

The anti-Collins ad is being sponsored by Majority Forward, a nonprofit registered with the IRS as a 501(c)(4) issue advocacy organization. Majority Forward is aligned with Senate Democrats who hope to defeat Collins in the race for her long-held Senate seat in Maine.

Semafor reported that the liberal group is spending $600,000 to run the 30-second ad statewide. It began airing on April 23, according to AdImpact, which tracks political advertising.

Health Insurance Premiums

The ad begins with the narrator telling Mainers: “You’re already getting squeezed, because Susan Collins voted with Donald Trump to raise healthcare costs and raise insurance premiums. Now, Susan Collins voted to give Trump a blank check for his war in Iran.”

We’ll get to the Iran claim later. As we indicated, the claims about healthcare costs are not the whole story.

The ad suggests that Collins was opposed to extending the more generous insurance subsidies — which are actually premium tax credits — for those buying coverage on the ACA marketplaces. The enhanced subsidies were first passed by Democrats in 2021 as part of pandemic relief legislation. But that wasn’t the case, according to Collins, who said she favored continuing them – at least for certain people, for a limited period of time.

It’s true that she voted against a continuing resolution that Democrats proposed to fund the government, permanently extend the ACA enhanced subsidies and other things. In fact, she voted against that resolution on multiple occasions between Sept. 19 and Oct. 9.

Around that time, Collins explained her position by saying that she thought the ACA subsidies – which didn’t officially expire until year’s end – should be handled apart from a must-pass spending bill to keep the government open.

For example, addressing the subsidies in a statement to the Maine Morning Star for a Sept. 26 story, Collins said, “It is clear that we need to act on this issue, but our focus right now needs to be on avoiding a harmful government shutdown that would cause disruptions to vital programs that many Americans rely on every day.” 

And in a post on Facebook on Oct. 1, Collins encouraged her fellow senators to support the “House-passed clean, short-term funding measure” from Republicans instead of the “alternative proposal” from Democrats that she said was “full of significant partisan policy changes.”

She wrote: “We must end the government shutdown, continue our bipartisan negotiations on the annual appropriations bills, and work to find a path forward on the enhanced premium tax credits.”

In an email to us, Shawn Roderick, a spokesperson for the Collins campaign, said that during this period, the senator “was working around the clock to fund government and put an end to the harmful government shutdown” while Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer “was focused on forcing these performative messaging votes” that were “full of partisan poison pills.”

In addition to temporarily funding the government and permanently extending the enhanced ACA subsidies, the spending bill introduced by Democrats would have repealed healthcare provisions in the Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act, restored certain funding being withheld by the Office of Management and Budget, and limited OMB’s authority to withhold other congressionally authorized funding. Democrats attempted to get those policy initiatives enacted by attaching them to a spending bill to fund the government.

Collins, as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, would go on to help write the funding bill that ended the 43-day shutdown in November. But that bill did not extend the subsidies in question.

Then, in December, as time to act on the subsidies was getting short, Collins joined with a Republican colleague, Sen. Bernie Moreno of Ohio, to propose legislation to temporarily extend the subsidies for two years, while capping the household income threshold for eligibility at $200,000 and requiring a $25 minimum monthly premium.

“This bill would help prevent unaffordable increases in health insurance premium costs for many families by extending the Affordable Care Act enhanced premium tax credits for two years and putting a reasonable income cap on these subsidies to ensure they are going to the individuals who need them,” she said in a statement about the proposal.

That same month, Collins also voted to advance legislation introduced by Schumer that would extend the tax credits for three years. But that bill — which Collins sought to amend to include income limits — failed to receive the 60 votes necessary to move to final consideration.

In 2025, 86% of the more than 62,000 people insured through Maine’s state-based marketplace received premium tax credits, according to the health policy research organization KFF.

Lauren French, a spokesperson for Majority Forward, made the argument to us that Collins’ previous votes matter more than her words.

“The Senate doesn’t offer a lane for Sen. Collins to enable outcomes she claims to oppose and then skip accountability for her votes increasing the cost of health care and giving Donald Trump unchecked authority to wage war,” French said in an email.

Iran War

The Iran war claim is based on Collins’ previous votes against war powers resolutions that would stop military operations in Iran until Congress officially declared war or authorized the use of force. The ad cites one particular vote in March, but Collins voted against the war powers resolution multiple times.

In congressional testimony on April 29, the Pentagon’s comptroller, Jay Hurst, told Congress that the war has cost approximately $25 billion so far. But other estimates put the cost at closer to $40 billion to $50 billion, according to news reports citing unnamed U.S. officials.

In a statement released on March 4, Collins said she didn’t vote to stop the military operation that began days earlier because it was important not to allow Iran to have nuclear weapons and to show support for U.S. troops.

“Passing this resolution now would send the wrong message to Iran and to our troops,” Collins said. “At this juncture, providing unequivocal support to our service members is critically important, as is ongoing consultation by the Administration with Congress.” 

But Collins later indicated in mid-April that her position would “very likely” change if the conflict continued for more than 60 days, which, under the War Powers Act of 1973, would then require the approval of Congress.

And as the war approached the two-month mark, Collins, on April 30, voted for a war powers resolution sponsored by Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff to halt military actions against Iran unless approved by Congress. (The ad began airing before this vote, but it was still running in Maine as of at least May 3, according to AdImpact.)

“As I have said since these hostilities began, the President’s authority as Commander-in-Chief is not without limits,” Collins said in a statement put out by her Senate office. “The Constitution gives Congress an essential role in decisions of war and peace, and the War Powers Act establishes a clear 60-day deadline for Congress to either authorize or end U.S. involvement in foreign hostilities. That deadline is not a suggestion; it is a requirement.”

The statement continued: “Further military action against Iran must have a clear mission, achievable goals, and a defined strategy for bringing the conflict to a close. I voted to end the continuation of these military hostilities at this time until such a case is made.”

Collins was one of just two Republicans to vote for the resolution, but it failed 47-50.


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The post Democratic Ad Attacks Collins on Healthcare, Iran War appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-05-07 08:04
2026-05-04 04:04

President Trump announced the U.S. would "guide" ships not involved in the war with Iran out of the Strait of Hormuz. A U.S.-led task force says it has started the operation.

2026-05-06 08:04
2026-05-04 02:00

Exclusive: amid unrest, President William Ruto promised to give all Kenyans access to healthcare. But the algorithm favours the rich, an investigation has found

An AI system used to predict how much Kenyans can afford to pay for access to healthcare, has systemically driven up costs for the poor, an investigation has found.

The healthcare system being rolled out across the country, a key electoral promise of President William Ruto, was launched in October 2024 and intended to replace Kenya’s decades-old national insurance system.

Continue reading...

2026-05-07 16:04
2026-05-01 07:53

How the Iran war is reshaping Saudi strategy: From Hormuz and Houthis to the UAE’s OPEC exit Expert comment LToremark

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has revealed a key threat to Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 strategy and plans for economic transformation.

Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman.

The US–Israel war against Iran has presented many challenges for Saudi Arabia, including the Strait of Hormuz closure, a deepening rift with the UAE, and the latter’s exit from the oil cartel OPEC. The war has also given Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, or MBS, pause for thought.

Before MBS, Saudi policy was slow and consensus driven – and largely predictable. The crown prince energized the domestic environment and pursued a far more assertive and, at times, unpredictable foreign policy that got Saudi Arabia into hot water.

However, the Iran war has once again slowed the kingdom’s decision making process as the leadership reassesses its long-term strategy. It is acutely aware that whatever the outcome of the conflict, it will determine the region’s future for at least the next two decades.

From the Strait of Hormuz to the Red Sea

Unsurprisingly, Saudi Arabia’s reassessment now centres on the Strait of Hormuz, through which most of its oil exports and other goods pass. Although the kingdom has long recognized its exposure to disruption at this chokepoint, a sustained closure was historically viewed as highly unlikely. The closure has revealed a key vulnerability not only for trade, but also for the success of the country’s Vision 2030 strategy.

Now that Hormuz has been closed once, there will always be the risk that it could happen again. This poses a long term threat to Saudi Arabia’s trade flows and economic transformation plans. Repeated or prolonged disruption would weigh on revenues, investor confidence, and the kingdom’s ability to present itself as a stable hub for trade, logistics and finance. The ambitions of Vision 2030 and its successor frameworks depend on predictable energy – and revenue – flows and a secure maritime environment.

Hence, the kingdom is beginning to reassess its economic geography, reducing its dependence on Hormuz and reorienting policy towards the Red Sea. Projects along Saudi Arabia’s western coastline, including ports, industrial zones and tourism developments, will now become key priorities. The country’s two coastlines give it a significant geographical advantage over its neighbours, which it will look to capitalize on to distinguish itself – especially from the UAE – as the region’s main export and logistics hub.

Its westward shift means the national oil company Saudi Aramco will need to reorient crude exports to the Red Sea or at least build capacity to convey 7 million barrels a day to match pre-war exports. It is currently transporting around 4 million barrels per day of crude by pipeline from east to west and exporting it via the Yanbu terminal on the Red Sea. While current exports are lower, Saudi Arabia is in a stronger position than many of its Gulf neighbours, whose exports remain locked into the Gulf. With oil prices at around $120 per barrel, roughly double pre war levels, Riyadh retains a degree of financial resilience.

However, significant long-term investment will be needed in infrastructure that allows goods – especially oil – to move between the Red Sea and major urban centres across the Gulf if Saudi Arabia is to establish itself as a regional trading hub. Longer timelines and higher costs will be unavoidable, but the structural nature of the Hormuz problem leaves Saudi Arabia with little choice.

But rerouting away from Hormuz will not eliminate risk, only relocate it. Attacks on Red Sea shipping by the Iran-aligned Houthis show that maritime insecurity will become a central constraint on Saudi Arabia’s westward reorientation, not a secondary concern.

Iran war has renewed rift with the UAE

The threat of maritime insecurity to its Red Sea ambitions helps explain Saudi Arabia’s reluctance to engage directly in the war against Iran and its lobbying against further escalation. The leadership recognizes that a kinetic response to Iranian strikes would not only increase risks to its energy assets and critical infrastructure but could also draw the Houthis more directly into the conflict. That, in turn, would place Saudi Arabia’s alternative export routes under threat, undermining its essential diversification away from Hormuz.

This also helps explain the different positions taken by Saudi Arabia and the UAE towards the war, and the growing tensions between them. Abu Dhabi has taken a strong line against Iran, with a position much closer to the US and Israel than to its Gulf neighbours. Senior Emirati officials have criticized both the Iranian leadership for striking targets on UAE soil and regional partners for failing to respond more forcefully or show greater support.

2026-05-08 08:04
2026-05-01 06:00

An illustration shows FBI agents removing boxes from a warehouse.
Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

When President Donald Trump attempted to overturn the 2020 election, the institutional guardrails of American democracy held — but just barely.

If faced with the same tests today, those guardrails and the people who held the line would largely be missing, a ProPublica examination found.

At least 75 career officials who once held roles at federal agencies related to election integrity and safety are gone. Two dozen appointees — including many who either actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote or are associates of such people — have been hired to replace them. And once-fringe actors now have access to vast powers.

As the midterms approach, current and former government officials and election security experts expressed concerns that Trump appointees who’ve espoused debunked conspiracy theories about balloting are now in positions to control the narrative around the vote’s soundness.

It’s hard to debunk false claims “coming with the seal of the federal government,” said Derek Tisler, counsel and manager with the Brennan Center for Justice’s elections and government program. “I certainly worry what damage that could do to voters’ confidence.”

Here are some of the key things you should know about the Trump administration’s efforts to, as the president said, “take over” the midterms. Read the full investigation here.

1. In 2020, institutional guardrails helped to prevent Trump from overturning the election.

Following his defeat in the 2020 election, Trump pushed for federal officials to uncover proof that he had, in fact, beaten Joe Biden at the polls. Election cybersecurity experts with the Department of Homeland Security relayed to Attorney General William Barr that the election fraud claims that they looked into were false. Barr then told the president what he didn’t want to hear: The election had not been hacked.

Barr was one of many federal officials — most of them Trump appointees — who refused to bend to the president’s demands, which only intensified in the weeks leading up to Jan. 6, 2021. Despite the violent uprising at the Capitol on that day, the election results held firm.

2. Less than 18 months into his second term, Trump has dismantled many of those same guardrails.

Since the start of his second term, Trump and his appointees have made significant changes at federal agencies tasked with helping to safeguard elections. In all, at least 75 career officials who’d played important roles in elections work at DHS, the Department of Justice and other agencies have left, been fired or been reassigned, ProPublica found.

In their place are roughly two dozen people Trump has installed in positions that could affect elections. Ten of them actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote, and the rest are associates of those people. In some cases, ProPublica found, officials have been hired from activist groups that are pillars of the election-denial movement.

3. Among the first agencies Trump gutted after returning to office was one that had repeatedly disproved his stolen-election claims.

Officials at DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency had provided research to the first Trump White House that disproved many theories claiming that the 2020 election had been hacked. CISA also played a crucial part in publicly countering these claims by producing a “Rumor Control” website to rebut them.

Then, only weeks into Trump’s second term, DHS leadership put employees focused on countering disinformation and helping safeguard elections on leave. They also froze CISA’s other election security work, which included assessing local election offices for physical and cybersecurity risks. Eventually, all CISA employees specializing in elections were fired or transferred.

A DHS spokesperson told ProPublica that the changes at CISA were in response to “a ballooning budget concealing a dangerous departure from its statutory mission,” which included “electioneering instead of defending America’s critical infrastructure.”

FBI Director Kash Patel dismantled the agency’s public corruption team, which had previously been deployed to help monitor possible criminal activity on Election Day. The Foreign Influence Task Force, which aimed to combat foreign influence in U.S. politics, was also disbanded.

(An FBI spokesperson said the bureau “remains committed to detecting and countering foreign influence efforts by adversarial nations.”)

The voting section of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division had enforced federal laws that protect voting rights, particularly those that combat racial discrimination. But now, nearly all of the section’s roughly 30 career lawyers have resigned or been moved. Trump then filled the section with conservative lawyers, including at least four who participated in challenging the 2020 vote or have worked with people who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election.

5. Trump has replaced ousted career specialists with “Team America.”

In the summer of 2025, after the Trump administration had forced out most of the career specialists, a small group of political appointees — which once called itself “Team America,” according to sources familiar with the matter — began convening at DHS headquarters, looking for federal levers it could pull to realize a March 2025 executive order, in which Trump tried to exert greater federal control over aspects of voting.

Among the core members of the group was David Harvilicz, a DHS assistant secretary tasked with overseeing the security of election infrastructure, including voting machines, and three of his top staffers. As ProPublica has reported, Harvilicz co-founded an AI company with an architect of Trump’s claims about election hacking in Michigan.

Heather Honey, who serves under Harvilicz in a newly created position focused on elections, is a source of the false claim that more ballots were cast in Pennsylvania than there were voters in the 2020 presidential election — a claim Trump cited on the morning of Jan. 6, 2021.

At least 11 administration appointees, including Honey, have ties to the Election Integrity Network, a conservative grassroots organization led by Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who tried to help Trump overturn the 2020 election. Since moving into government, Honey has maintained close ties to Mitchell’s organization, and she and at least two other federal officials have given its members private briefings.

6. Team America members are using a powerful Homeland Security Investigations tool to try to identify noncitizen voters.

The DOJ has been demanding that states turn over confidential voter roll information, and it has sued around 30 states for this data.

Meanwhile, DHS has urged states to upload their voter rolls to its tool, called the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements system.

The goal in both efforts has been to find noncitizens on the voter rolls. But the SAVE tool has come up short, often identifying citizens as noncitizens, as ProPublica has reported, and officials have faced other roadblocks with its use.

More recently, according to two people familiar with the matter, Team America has worked to harness a more powerful tool used by another branch of DHS, Homeland Security Investigations, to increase its ability to search for noncitizen voters and bring criminal charges against them.

In response to questions sent to DHS, Harvilicz and Honey, a DHS spokesperson disputed that they were seeking to use the department’s powers to advantage Trump. In response to questions about their ties to the election denial movement, the spokesperson wrote, “To meet the diverse and evolving challenges the Department faces, we hire experts with diverse backgrounds who go through a rigorous vetting process.”

7. Trump’s head of election security is behind the FBI’s seizure of 2020 election ballots in Georgia.

Attorney Kurt Olsen once worked to try to overturn Trump’s 2020 loss in court and was later sanctioned by judges for making baseless allegations about Arizona elections. He is now Trump’s director of election security and integrity and is the driving force behind the January raid of the election center in Fulton County, Georgia.

Toward the end of 2025, Olsen flew to Georgia to meet with Paul Brown, the head of the FBI’s Atlanta field office, according to people familiar with the matter. Olsen wanted the FBI to seize ballots from the Democratic stronghold, and he gave Brown a report he claimed would justify the extraordinary action. Brown’s team submitted an affidavit to superiors at the DOJ that did not make a strong enough case to move forward with what Olsen wanted. Afterward, Brown was given a choice: retire or be moved to a new office. Brown retired. The raid went forward under his replacement, based on an affidavit that cited information from the report Olsen provided to Brown.

Olsen did not respond to requests for comment.

An FBI spokesperson said that Brown “elected to retire” and that its “work in the election security space is entirely consistent with the law.”

8. The DOJ’s Public Integrity Section could have tried to block the administration’s Georgia voting investigation.

In the months following Trump’s return to office, the DOJ’s Public Integrity Section, which had been responsible for making sure the department’s inquiries weren’t improperly influenced by politics, was eviscerated. Resignations, firings and transfers reduced the 36-person section to two.

Multiple former lawyers for the section said they likely would have tried to block the Fulton County investigation because it lacked strong evidence, had a clear political slant and went against department directives that actions should not be taken “for the purpose of giving an advantage or disadvantage to any candidate or political party.”

John Keller was principal deputy chief of the section from 2020 to 2025 and was acting chief when he resigned in early 2025. He worries that allegations of irregularities in the upcoming election will be handled on a partisan basis.

“Without that review and without apolitical, objective, honest brokers involved in the process, there is a much greater risk for intentional manipulation or inadvertent interference,” Keller said.

The post 8 Things You Should Know About Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections appeared first on ProPublica.

Errors

200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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200:The data retrieved from this URL could not be understood as a feed.
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200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
  http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot → https://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot
200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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403:The feed has gone.
  https://www.mlb.com/mets/feeds/news/rss.xml
200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL.
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The data retrieved from this URL could not be understood as a feed.

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