Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps said it was combing an area near where plane came down in south-western Iran
Iran has executed two men convicted of membership in a banned opposition group and carrying out disruptive actions aimed at overthrowing the Islamic republic, the judiciary said.
The executions on Saturday were the latest in a series targeting members of the banned People’s Mujahedin of Iran (MEK), after four other convicted members of the group were executed earlier in the week.
Continue reading...All men were charged Friday with arson and being reckless as to whether life would be endangered.
I know this has been asked and answered, but I don’t believe Facebook marketplace is going to find someone local that is willing to pay what my board is worth. Is there a more targeted place that people go when they are looking to upgrade to a better board? I will search the previous comments, but would love to hear from some people who have done this.
Meanwhile, a search-and-rescue mission for a downed fighter jet crew member is ongoing as the war in the Middle East rages on.
Frontenac, Kansas had everything it needed – except a public library. A mysterious donation changed that
Matthew Rodriguez, 18, was apprehended in Pennsylvania in connection to shooting that killed Kaori Patterson-Moore
A second suspect in the stray-bullet killing of a seven-month-old baby on a Brooklyn street was arrested on Friday, investigators said, two days after a shooting the New York police department (NYPD) commissioner called “a tragedy that truly shocks the conscience”.
Matthew Rodriguez, 18, was apprehended in Pennsylvania by NYPD detectives working with US marshals, according to authorities.
Continue reading...
RILEY FRANCK
Staff Reporter
There is no official rulebook for college hookups. Many people ask themselves: Should I just assume I will never see this person again? Is there anything even going on in the first place? Why do I feel worse after doing this?
Normalizing casual intimacy comes at a considerable cost, especially when these acts involve so much emotion, trust and physical vulnerability. People often walk away from these one-time encounters with “post-hookup distress,” particularly if it was more intense than expected. This emotional risk is higher than the reward of desire and pleasure.
Feeling somewhat emotionally attached to a guy you kissed at a party once is a candid event and we have to stop pretending it is not. College students are fed story after story about finding romance. It is only natural that they feel that a casual hookup could lead to something bigger.
After all, college students are humans who have feelings. There are many elements involved within hookup culture, but two main questions surrounding it are: Why do college students participate in it and what actually happens in their brains to make them attached to a person after a romantic encounter?
Intimacy in any form has two essential components: biological/physical and emotional. These elements work together and influence one another.
Physical intimacy can result in feeling attached to someone, including a casual hookup. The physical aspect can range from holding hands, cuddling and kissing to other sexual activities. When people engage in physical intimacy, their bodies produce oxytocin, often called the “feel-good” or “love” hormone.
Oxytocin, like endorphins or serotonin, promotes positive feelings. Think of oxytocin as a chemical messenger in the brain that has the sole purpose of delivering the feelings of trust, recognition and romantic attachment to the bloodstream. It has both circulatory and neurological functions, but in this case, the neurological function is crucial.
Oxytocin is one of the few hormones that operates through a positive feedback loop, meaning that once it is released, it triggers behaviors and physiological responses that cause the brain’s pituitary gland to release even more of it.
This is due to dopamine, a neurotransmitter triggered by compulsive behaviors and addictive substances. This is why the rush of a new romance can feel so addictive. Dopamine is involved in the sensations that cause intense desire, which can lead to things like insomnia and euphoria.
When hookups occur, they often involve alcohol, a substance that releases dopamine in the brain and lowers inhibitions and fear. It gives a sense of pleasure, but also makes the brain’s reward system more sensitive, so any form of physical touch feels more intense and rewarding than it normally would.
That “liquid courage” is a temporary illusion, but it is good enough to make risky social choices in the moment, like asking a guy to dance or approaching a girl you like. When alcohol is combined with heightened sexual desire, the two produce a powerful surge of dopamine, making individuals more susceptible to impulsive decisions and emotional misreading.
As the alcohol suppresses the brain’s prefrontal cortex — the part responsible for judgment and emotional regulation — people struggle to interpret tone, intention and gestures accurately. This can make casual affection feel like a genuine emotional connection.
To be frank, did that frat boy really like you, or was he just intoxicated enough to tell you about his family dynamics? Did he really like you, or was he just intoxicated enough to lecture you about how much of a feminist he is? The answer is most likely no and alcohol impairs the ability to have self-awareness.
While under the influence, that person does not understand that being intoxicated in his room while hooking up is not the place to spew past traumas and tribulations. The other participant cannot understand that he is just spewing random nonsense and that “charisma” is the “liquid courage” talking, not him.
The physical reaction that people’s bodies have to hookup culture is not the only reason why they may be addicted to or reliant on it. Kathleen Bogle, a professor of sociology and criminal justice at La Salle University and author of “Hooking Up: Sex, Dating and Relationships on Campus,” argues that this is partially due to social validation.
I sat down with Bogle to better understand collegiate hookup culture. Before speaking with her, I conducted a small study with 16 freshmen selected anonymously, with an equal number of females and males. Participants listed anonymous names of everyone they hooked up with, resulting in 109 sexual partners — about seven per person.
In the study, 70% of participants reported having no prior relationship with the person they hooked up with. This finding did not appear to shock Bogle.
“I think it’s part of that whole kind of script of hooking up,” Bogle said. “The idea that you go to a party, or you go to an event, you know, alcohol is flowing and is kind of facilitating things, and people are pairing off from there.”
This classic hookup “script” is “very nonverbal,” according to Bogle. Unlike the traditional dating culture, where someone can ask someone out on a random Tuesday night, hooking up is often unplanned and spontaneous.
Within the hookup “script,” there is an element of social validation. Imagine being in a fraternity basement with dozens of other people. With the female-to-male ratio being female-dominated in these spaces, it can feel like a win to be noticed by a cute guy.
This guy dances with you and your friends break away. Minutes later, you are kissing him in the corner of the basement with dozens of bystanders lurking nearby. It feels like a scene from a movie, a scripted performance seen countless times before.
Just like in the movies, they walk you home and claim to want to see you again. But the next morning, you wake up and are just another hookup. Almost everyone’s least favorite part of the “script” is the questions. Is it a one-time thing? Are you talking to anyone else?
This hookup could either ghost you or keep stringing you along. Each Snapchat notification feels like a rush, each beg to go to his frat feels like you are wanted, but in the end, you feel worse.
While your body may physically enjoy the pleasure it is receiving, your emotions do not. These emotional highs and lows fuel our craving for that person. At the end of the day, women end up in a position of little power.
The principle of least interest is where the inevitable emotional crash-out initiates.
“Whoever has the least interest in the relationship continuing, or escalating, is the one with all the power, because they don’t care, and you’re the person that cares more, right?” Bogle said.
Her research showed that often, it is the female who cares most.
When one person cares more about a connection than the other, the one who cares the least has less at stake. They have more control because they have less to lose by ending the relationship. Their breadcrumbing tactics feel less like a reward and more like an evident sign that the other party does not care. When a person is hurt or rejected, they often deflect and try “not to care.”
“Some people think they’re going to beat that because they’re going to ‘not care either.’ They’re not going to not care the way a guy doesn’t care,” Bogle said. “And I think that women tend to lose at that game overall.”
To take your mind off your hookup, you get a new one, continuing the vicious cycle. It feels self-sabotaging, destructive and like a road you will always go down, ending up feeling more hurt each time.
You are allowed to not like hookup culture. You are allowed to create physical and emotional boundaries for the sake of your mental health. You are also allowed to not entertain it at all. Biologically, physically and emotionally, we can not handle this culture –– and that is okay to acknowledge.
“It’s important to remember that you might feel like you’re the odd man out who doesn’t like hooking up,” Bogle said. “There’s actually been a ton of research on a lot of people feeling that way. And even more men feel that way than you might think.”
As voters head to polls, Washington support and alleged interference from Moscow raise questions about influence
The official announcement that JD Vance was to visit, days before Hungarians cast their ballots in a hotly contested election, was greeted by Budapest with no less than four exclamation marks and three emojis.
“!!Official!!” Viktor Orbán’s political director, Balázs Orbán, wrote on social media as he confirmed the news. The White House said Vance, along with his wife Usha, will land in Hungary on Tuesday, in what is widely seen as an attempt to bolster Orbán as he trails in the polls.
Continue reading...Alan Hayward James, who called himself ‘Al Capone’, admitted to rigging bids for IT contracts with Pentagon
A former US air force master sergeant who nicknamed himself “Al Capone” has pleaded guilty to defrauding the military branch out of $37m by inflating the cost of IT contracts – and giving some of the extra money to an individual he called “Godfather”.
Alan Hayward James, from Texas, ran a nine-year scam, beginning in April 2016, which also saw him funnel excess funds to himself, his family and his co-conspirators.
Continue reading...Washington, D.C., first responders said the building's structural integrity will be assessed once the bus is removed.
The former Little House on the Prairie star said husband was ‘last person in world who would hurt a child’
Melissa Gilbert has staunchly defended her husband and fellow actor Timothy Busfield in her first interview since New Mexico prosecutors charged him with child sexual abuse in early February.
In part of a conversation scheduled to be broadcast on Monday on Good Morning America but circulated in advance as a preview, Gilbert told ABC host George Stephanopoulos that she believed the Emmy winner whom she married in 2013 to be “the last person in the world who would hurt a child”.
Continue reading...The attacks came as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy traveled to Istanbul for talks with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Here are the highly rated series you should stream on HBO Max, plus new additions in April.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: When it comes to large language model-powered tools, there are generally two broad categories of users. On one side are those who treat AI as a powerful but sometimes faulty service that needs careful human oversight and review to detect reasoning or factual flaws in responses. On the other side are those who routinely outsource their critical thinking to what they see as an all-knowing machine. Recent research goes a long way to forming a new psychological framework for that second group, which regularly engages in "cognitive surrender" to AI's seemingly authoritative answers. That research also provides some experimental examination of when and why people are willing to outsource their critical thinking to AI, and how factors like time pressure and external incentives can affect that decision. Overall, across 1,372 participants and over 9,500 individual trials, the researchers found subjects were willing to accept faulty AI reasoning a whopping 73.2 percent of the time, while only overruling it 19.7 percent of the time. The researchers say this "demonstrate[s] that people readily incorporate AI-generated outputs into their decision-making processes, often with minimal friction or skepticism." In general, "fluent, confident outputs [are treated] as epistemically authoritative, lowering the threshold for scrutiny and attenuating the meta-cognitive signals that would ordinarily route a response to deliberation," they write. These kinds of effects weren't uniform across all test subjects, though. Those who scored highly on separate measures of so-called fluid IQ were less likely to rely on the AI for help and were more likely to overrule a faulty AI when it was consulted. Those predisposed to see AI as authoritative in a survey, on the other hand, were much more likely to be led astray by faulty AI-provided answers. Despite the results, though, the researchers point out that "cognitive surrender is not inherently irrational." While relying on an LLM that's wrong half the time (as in these experiments) has obvious downsides, a "statistically superior system" could plausibly give better-than-human results in domains such as "probabilistic settings, risk assessment, or extensive data," the researchers suggest. "As reliance increases, performance tracks AI quality," the researchers write, "rising when accurate and falling when faulty, illustrating the promises of superintelligence and exposing a structural vulnerability of cognitive surrender." In other words, letting an AI do your reasoning means your reasoning is only ever going to be as good as that AI system. As always, let the prompter beware.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Storm expected to cause Easter weekend travel disruption, though warm weather could return next week
Storm Dave is expected to cause travel disruption this Easter weekend, with warnings for heavy snow and gale-force winds issued across northern parts of the UK, but a reprieve from the cold snap could be on the way, with temperatures forecast to reach the mid-20s next week.
The Met Office has issued a yellow severe weather warning in Scotland for heavy snow and blizzards causing some travel and power disruption. Up to 30 centimetres of snow could fall. An amber weather warning for wind has been issued for parts of northern England, Scotland and Wales on Saturday evening.
Continue reading...The government's legal bid to continue East Wing construction has the hallmarks of President Trump's social media posts.
One price covers a combination of wireless phone service and broadband internet.
Jesse Watters gave a litany of reasons why women shouldn’t lead before denying he agreed. But peddling these ideas normalizes them
Oh dear, it looks like Jesse Watters’ mother needs to give him a good talking to again. The Fox News host regularly spouts so much deliberately provocative nonsense that his mum, a liberal, has called into his show to ask him to use his voice “responsibly”. Instead of listening to her, however, he’s told his audience of millions that men shouldn’t eat soup in public because it’s effeminate, shared his creepy fantasies about Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s sex life, and urged America to bomb or “maybe gas” the United Nations headquarters. This week, as Donald Trump (a man) presides over a disastrous, immoral, and unpopular war, Watters has been busy informing the world that women just aren’t cut out to be president.
What prompted this latest rant? The usual pathological desire to be noticed, I presume. And also a recent MS NOW interview with Nancy Pelosi, in which the former speaker of the House, 86, said a female US president is inevitable, but likely won’t happen in her lifetime.
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist
The assault on freedom with Mehdi Hasan and Arwa Mahdawi
On Monday 8 June, join Mehdi Hasan and Arwa Mahdawi to discuss the current seismic changes in geopolitics, the alarming rise of populism and nationalism, and its global implications. Live in London and livestreamed worldwide. Book tickets here or at guardian.live
Beyond rising costs of gas and air travel, experts say this is likely just beginning of higher prices amid global volatility
As consumers watch the price of gasoline and airline tickets rise, experts say that the war in Iran will continue to drive up prices across the economy.
“The good old days are gone,” said Christopher Tang, a professor at the UCLA Anderson School of Management who studies global supply chain management. “Right now we see the gasoline prices going up, but that is only part of the story. Everything will be more expensive.”
Continue reading...As Trump’s administration aims to bring ‘warrior culture’ back to the military, young service members express anxiety and snark online over potential deployment
If posts coming from the White House were to be believed, the US-Israel war on Iran looks something like scenes from Top Gun, Braveheart and Deadpool – or how a fifth-grade boy might imagine combat. The Trump administration has also presented Operation Epic Fury as a video game, borrowing gen Z parlance to describe the US armed forces as “locked in” on the conflict.
Such macho posturing squares with secretary of defense Pete Hegseth’s desire to bring “warrior culture” back to the military. The former Fox News host has railed against DEI, “fat troops” and “beardos” (troops with beards), and envisioned a military full of “the right people” who fit his imposed standards of virility and masculinity.
Continue reading...There's a Spicy Saja McMuffin, Derpy McFlurry, Ramyeon McShaker fries and two new dipping sauces, one of which is much better than the other.
Bluey is now in residence at Disneyland.
Janice Randle was found dead in her bed in 1992, but police couldn't make an arrest in the case until new information emerged.
Crew members can now see the moon, which one described as ‘a beautiful sight’, from their spacecraft’s docking hatch
The Artemis II crew are now closer to the moon than the Earth, Nasa has said, as the four astronauts completed the third day of their flight to the moon.
“We can see the moon out of the docking hatch right now. It’s a beautiful sight,” said an unnamed member of the crew, which Nasa shared in a post on X on Saturday morning.
Continue reading...Hey everyone, so I am planning on buying a Onewheel XR Classic (no-recurve, no bundles) soon. I wanted something bigger than the Pint series, but I don't think I will need the power of the GT. Not sure if the XRC is the right choice, but it is my plan for now. Any recommendations on the board before I buy it?
Also, I would hate to see my new Onewheel get scratched up, so I was planning to 3D print some different protective parts. I've been looking around, and I haven't seen as many files for the XRC specifically. I want to make sure whatever I print is compatible with the XRC. What will fit and what won't? I wasn't sure if some GT parts or original XR parts would fit, or if they redesigned the XRC? I planned to use TPU 95A and standard PETG.
Planned Prints:
Rail Guards: TPU
Float Plates: PETG? Higher walls and infill.
Bumpers: TPU or PETG? PETG would probably slide better?
I would be printing on a Bambu Lab A1, so no enclosure, but I do have a filament dryer. Does anyone have any recommendations for filament type or any models they could share?
Thanks!
Philadelphia's Ministry of Awe is a multilevel art installation and immersive house of oddities that uses AI in subtle and fascinating ways. I took a visit, and I'm totally coming back.
Iranian state media said “many people” are searching for the missing crew member after an F-15 fighter jet and an A-10 attack plane were lost to hostile fire.
Along with Dian Fossey and Jane Goodall, Biruté Galdikas, 79, made ground-breaking discoveries about one of humankind’s closest primate relatives.
Viral reviews of artisan cafes across the capital are sparking a debate over cost, culture – and who gets a slice of the city
The video that started it all was innocuous enough: a woman in her 20s posted on TikTok about how she spends a perfect weekend in north London. On her list were the bakeries Jolene and Gail’s, and the De Beauvoir Deli.
The reaction, however, was anything but. Many locals commented that they had never heard of the businesses she mentioned. One north Londoner, Moses Combe, 21, was equally incredulous. “If this is where all the north London girlies come in the morning, I’d be a bit surprised,” he said in a viral video.
Continue reading...Nurul Shah Alam, a nearly blind Rohingya refugee, was left alone in a Buffalo parking lot. His death has been ruled a homicide – what now?
On 19 February, the second day of Ramadan, Mohamad Faisal Nurul Amin and his family gathered to pray before sunrise in their apartment on the outskirts of Buffalo, New York. After nearly a year of waiting, they believed their family would be together again. Amin’s father, Nurul Shah Alam, 56, was coming home.
“For the first time since we arrived in America, I felt happy,” said Fatima Abdul Roshid, Shah Alam’s wife, speaking through an interpreter. “I thought my husband would be with our two sons and me for Ramadan.”
Continue reading...Researchers warn the high-pressure conditions could disrupt marine life and ecosystems if it continues
For more than a century, shoreline stations operated by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography have measured water temperatures along the California coast. This year, they are flashing a warning sign.
Over the last three months, several stations have repeatedly posted record-breaking daily high temperatures – with the La Jolla station registering temperatures a full 10F above historical average at one point last month.
Continue reading...President has affixed his name to institutions and edifices, and his visage now glowers from several federal buildings
The US has a history of naming things after its presidents.
Washington DC has the Ronald Reagan airport, while John F Kennedy international airport is New York’s main air transport thoroughfare. The Hoover Dam straddles Nevada and Arizona; Theodore Roosevelt is one of several former presidents to have a Washington DC building named after them; Franklin Delano Roosevelt has an island; Abraham Lincoln has the Lincoln Memorial; and George Washington has the nation’s capital and an entire state.
Continue reading...The crackdown on foreign-made routers labeled a "national security risk" affects most major router brands. If you plan on buying a router soon, read this first.
Last year's Razr Ultra was a strong foldable pick, but there are ways to make that $1,300 phone more enticing.
John Cantrell was enjoying his retirement until an unexpected condition forced him to choose between two kinds of heart surgery.
The US president seems to have turned his attention to Cuba in recent weeks, saying that it was 'next'. Officials from both countries have reportedly been in negotiations since February however the content of the discussions remains unclear. The Guardian spoke with professor emeritus of international relations Dr Philip Brenner about what the US might really want with the Island
Continue reading...The incident comes after a string of similar nighttime attacks across Europe that have heightened concerns over antisemitism.
As Israel expands its invasion of southern Lebanon, people are having to bury their dead in temporary graves
In Lebanon, the dead are usually given one last glimpse of their home town before they are laid to rest. Hoisted high above the heads of the living, their casket is slowly marched through the streets where they grew up.
It is the hands of their loved ones that guide them into their final resting place, already dug, and gently sprinkle dirt on their body.
Continue reading...The rightwing populist has been in power for 16 years but a new generation of voters are preparing to vote for his opponent, polls suggest
As he rushed to finish off his cigarette before heading to class, Ákos, 20, confessed that he has more at stake than most as Hungarians prepare to head to the polls in the coming days.
“If things remain the same, or get even worse, I can’t see a future here,” said the aspiring teacher. “There are many people who want to try living elsewhere, and that’s totally fine, but I’m not one of them. For so long I’ve dreamed of working and teaching here.”
Continue reading...Despite hostile rhetoric Trump let a Russian ship break his blockade – could it herald a Venezuela-style outcome?
When a sanctioned Russian oil tanker, the Anatoly Kolodkin, docked at Cuba’s Matanzas oil terminal on Tuesday, unloading 700,000 barrels of crude, it was not immediately clear why the ship had been allowed to pass through Donald Trump’s oil blockade.
In January, the US president had proclaimed on social media: “THERE WILL BE NO MORE OIL OR MONEY GOING TO CUBA – ZERO!” yet last week he told reporters, “If a country wants to send some oil into Cuba right now, I have no problem with it” – and waved the Russian ship through.
Continue reading...The president’s son-in-law is acting as an envoy even as he looks to secure billions for his company from foreign governments
After Donald Trump returned to the White House, his son-in-law and former senior adviser Jared Kushner declined to take a job in the new administration and instead planned to focus on running his Miami-based private equity firm. Kushner said he would also forgo raising more money for his company while Trump was in office, to avoid any appearance of a conflict.
But since last summer, Kushner has re-emerged as a high-level peace envoy for Trump, helping broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza; steering negotiations to end the war between Russia and Ukraine; and, most recently, playing a central role in the aborted negotiations between Iran and the US over Tehran’s nuclear program. Kushner still doesn’t hold an official government position – he’s a private citizen who has been negotiating some of the most important foreign policy agreements on behalf of the Trump administration, with a direct line to the president.
Continue reading...Strain found in 29 states and Puerto Rico carries spike mutations, but no data shows increased severity
BA.3.2, an Omicron variant of Covid-19 with dozens of new spike mutations, has been detected in 29 US states and Puerto Rico, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but experts say there is not yet evidence it is more severe than other recent variants.
“The right response to BA.3.2 is serious attention, not alarm,” says Dr Jake Scott, a Stanford professor and infectious disease expert who authored a systematic review of Covid vaccines for the New England Journal of Medicine.
Continue reading...Indigenous doulas are creating support networks for mothers who are at the highest risk of pregnancy-related death
Mary Sherbick found out she was pregnant at the height of the pandemic in 2020. Although she and her partner had planned it, the pandemic was anxiety-inducing and isolating. While scrolling on social media, she came across online talking circles for Alaska Native women, organized by Alaska Native Birthworkers Community (ANBC), who were pregnant or postpartum. Sherbick, who is Yupik, immediately signed up.
“A lot of us were also just concerned about the way that we would be treated, and some of our concerns of pain or our birth plans within a hospital setting,” Sherbick said. “I think a lot of the women that I talked to just were aware of the history of how Indigenous women, Indigenous people in general, have been treated, and the sterilization programs that have been done unknowingly to Indigenous people.”
Continue reading...Let's compare all the details so you can make the right choice for you.
Colorado is rolling out an average-speed camera system that tracks vehicles across multiple points instead of catching them at a single camera, making it much harder for drivers to dodge tickets with apps like Waze and Radarbot. Motor1 reports: The state's new automated vehicle identification systems (AVIS) use several cameras to calculate your average speed between them, and if it is 10 miles per hour or more over the limit, you get a ticket. No longer will you be able to slow down as you approach a camera and speed back up after passing it, not that you should be speeding on public roads in the first place. Colorado began deploying this new camera system after legislators changed the law in 2023, allowing AVIS for law enforcement use. The systems, installed on various roads and highways throughout the state, first began issuing warnings, but police began issuing tickets late last year. The most recent section of road to fall under surveillance is a stretch of I-25 north of Denver, which brought the state's growing panopticon to our attention. It began issuing tickets on April 2. The Colorado Department of Transportation installed the cameras along a construction zone. The fine is $75 and zero points for exceeding the speed limit, and the police issue it to the vehicle's owner, regardless of who is driving.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Videos broadcast by local television stations showed a large crowd of fans in the south stands amidst an explosion of fireworks.
Since the Trump regime launched its war on Iran, his administration has gotten a lot more biblical.
In the last few weeks, Trump and his circle have delivered a chorus of mandates — many sounding as if sent from the Almighty himself — from encouraging lawmakers to support legislation “for Jesus” to billing America’s 250th anniversary as a moment to rededicate the nation under a single, unified God.
Trump has surrounded himself with a constellation of evangelical advisers who not only support his policies but also frame them as divinely sanctioned. Their specific strand of evangelical theology interprets global conflict, especially in the Middle East, as a precursor to the end times. For Trump, this alignment may well be transactional, another way to energize and consolidate a critical voting bloc. But for many of the religious figures now orbiting him, the stakes are far more cosmic: The war is not simply geopolitical; it is eschatological.
And it’s already bleeding influence into America’s war machine. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has overseen a steady infusion of Christian symbolism and practice into military life — hosting prayer gatherings, elevating hard-line evangelical figures, and pushing a more overtly religious tone across the force.
Reporting shows his tenure has included efforts to reshape the chaplain corps and integrate his Christian worldview more directly into military culture. The aesthetic is not subtle: Hegseth has embraced Crusader iconography — he has tattoos of the Jerusalem cross and the phrase “Deus vult,” which means “God wills it” — while framing America’s conflicts in civilizational and religious terms. In a prayer given last week at the Pentagon, Hegseth asked God to aid in pouring down “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.”
Even some on the right have begun to voice their unease. One conservative commentator, reacting to the growing influence, bluntly described Trump’s leading faith adviser Paula White-Cain as a “psychopathic doomsday cultist,” warning about the theological currents shaping the administration.
As someone well-versed in Christianese — I was raised deep in the evangelical Bible Belt of Texas, and even met a young Paula White growing up — this dialect signals a real shift.
Suffering, in this worldview, is not merely tragic; it is necessary to actuate the return of Christ.
In evangelical media ecosystems, Iran is not just a strategic adversary but part of a prophetic story — one tied to interpretations of the Book of Revelation and the battle of Armageddon. Suffering, in this worldview, is not merely tragic; it is necessary to actuate the return of Christ.
And as White-Cain, now the head of the White House Faith Office, put it: “To say no to President Trump would be to say no to God.”
This tension — between political expediency and apocalyptic belief — is no longer theoretical. It is being operationalized.
Days after launching unilateral strikes on Iran, Trump convened nearly two dozen evangelical leaders for private counsel. The pastors stood around him, laying hands to pray for strength and protection for his latest military campaign. At the center of that circle is White-Cain, a longtime Trump ally who has served as his “spiritual adviser” since his first presidential run.
White-Cain’s rise is emblematic of the fusion now underway. Once a televangelist with deep ties to charismatic Christianity, she built a following through prosperity gospel preaching — a theology that links faith with material success — before being elevated as a key Trump confidant.
Early on, she rose to prominence through her connections to figures like Bishop T.D. Jakes and appearances on networks like BET, positioning her within both Black churches (which is where I met her) and evangelical media spaces alike. During his first term, Trump established the White House Faith and Opportunity Initiative and appointed White to lead the newly minted office.
But White-Cain is not just a political ally. She is part of a broader network of evangelical leaders who have long framed global conflict in explicitly prophetic terms. Figures in this sphere have publicly described Middle East wars as signs of the “last days,” argued that geopolitical upheaval fulfills biblical prophecy, and emphasized that spiritual warfare is inseparable from physical conflict.
White-Cain’s own writings and appearances wrap modern politics in stark, spiritually dispensationalist end-times framing. Dispensationalism, for the uninitiated, is a strain of evangelical Protestant theology that reads the Bible literally, divides history into distinct eras of God’s plan, separates Israel from the Church, and anticipates a coming rapture and a thousand-year kingdom on Earth.
In an April 2025 interview with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, White-Cain opened by asking whether the world was ready to kick off Armageddon itself.
“The Christian vision of the End of Days foretells of some profound transformation and redemption,” she said in the interview, as reported by the Times of Israel. “Based on the events that are unfolding today, do you feel that we are seeing these signs of that vision come to fruition?”
The stakes, by her telling, are nothing less than annihilation. This matters when those voices are whispering prayers into the decisions of a president directing military force.
She’s not alone. She’s brought others into Trump’s religious power network — including Alabama pastor Travis Johnson, who has been spotted around Trump’s religious events and moving in the same circles.
He presents himself as a global traveler spreading Christian “love” and “peace.” On X, he also told his followers, “Islam is not just a religion, but a system of military conquest” — casting American Christianity as a necessary bulwark against it.
After Israeli missile strikes — which coincided with the start of Ramadan — decimated Iranian leadership, Johnson posted with a glib jab: “Bye, Felicia. Khamenei has left the building.”
Robert Jeffress, pastor of megachurch First Baptist Dallas and one of Trump’s most visible religious defenders, is also among those lending supernatural support to the president. Jeffress has spent years advancing a worldview that injects Christian nationalism with cultural and religious exclusion. He has described Islam as “a false religion” that is “inspired by Satan,” and once declared, “America’s collapse is inevitable and there is nothing we can do to stop it.”
Others in Trump’s spiritual cadre push similar lines with parallel prophetic and apocalyptic bluster. California pastor Greg Laurie, another regular in Trump’s prayer closet, linked the assassination of Iran’s ayatollah to end times gospel in a video he posted on X.
“As far as I can see the next event on the prophetic calendar would be the rapture,” he told his audience. “Then of course the great tribulation period … culminating in the Battle of Armageddon.”
Laurie, like many evangelicals, reads Iran as biblical Persia, which is named in the book of Ezekiel as an ally of Magog, a prophesied war machine that will one day converge on Israel in the final chapter of human history.
There are those in Trump’s religious sphere who haven’t given up hope — but only because they see themselves as locked in a holy war for the soul of a nation. Josh McPherson, a rising voice in Christian nationalist circles, has been blunt in his preaching for a theocratic military force, often teaching in camouflage and combat boots. He has advocated that “godly righteous men and women submitted to the Heavenly Father” should be running the most powerful military in the world.
In a recent podcast interview, McPherson frames American Christians as a critical line of defense against the spread of Islam, which he describes as “demonic” and a “scourge” while advocating for mass deportations. If action isn’t taken now, he predicts the apocalyptic vision where future generations of Christians will have to respond to an “Islamic Jihadist invasion, where the only way to push back is with bullets and guns.”
Taken together, this is not a random assortment of fringe pastors. It is a coherent theological ecosystem, one that frames war as prophecy, opponents as demonic, and global collapse as necessary to bring about the return of Christ.
That convergence — of theology, rhetoric, and military power — is now drawing scrutiny on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers have formally called for an investigation into Hegseth and the Defense Department, warning that “extreme religious rhetoric” may be seeping into the chain of command and shaping how the war on Iran is being prosecuted.
The danger is not just metaphysical. There is a long body of research showing that when political power fuses with religious certainty, war intensifies. Religious framing makes wars far more difficult to end, not easier. Conflicts become existential, not negotiable. Identity replaces strategy. Destiny replaces diplomacy.
And for volunteer troops fighting in a pluralistic democracy, intention matters.
A soldier should not be asked to die for a religion he does not serve.
For a soldier, sailor, or Marine who pulls the trigger or launches the missile, it muddies the distinction between national defense and participation in what could amount to religious ethnic cleansing.
Where strategic decisions are guided not by how to end wars, but how to beget new prophetic ones.
Where the end result could mean dying not in service of your country, but instead as a preordained martyr.
A soldier should not be asked to die for a religion he does not serve, to usher in an ending he does not want, or to fight for a vision of the world rooted in prophecy rather than policy. That is not national defense; that is ideological conscription. And when a state begins to wage war on those terms, it is no longer defending itself — it is surrendering its power to something far more dangerous than any enemy abroad.
The post Far-Right Religious Leaders Advising Trump See Iran as an End Times Holy War appeared first on The Intercept.
Apple doesn't regularly release a critical update for previous iOS versions but DarkSword appears to be a serious threat.
Kareem’s Daily Quote: The 4th U.S. President could teach the 47th a thing or two.
Pam Bondi Out: When “you’re doing great!” means “pack your things.”
The Backbone Shows Up Late: Or, poor NATO, with friends like these…
Library: A 747 in the lobby, not a book in sight…Miami’s Newest “Library”
What I’m Watching: Cover-Up
Jukebox Playlist: Living For The City
“If men were angels, no government would be necessary.” James Madison
James Madison originally wrote that quote in Federalist 51, part of The Federalist Papers. I’m assuming the angels he was talking about were not strictly from the Christian point of view (where some are thought to be fallen), but maybe closer to the Muslim ideal of heavenly beings of light who are faithful to their Creator and the Creator’s tenets, who wouldn’t think of doing anything else. And yes, any being who falls short of those ‘angelic standards’ could probably use some reining in.
Including you and me.
You know how it is: if I accidentally swerve into someone else’s lane of traffic, I’ll right the wrong and quickly justify the action. I was tired. Someone swerved towards me. I had something in my eye. The other car was in my blind spot. But you just try to swerve into my lane…then there’s no excuse. You’re a lousy driver, period, and your license ought to be taken away.
In other words, we’re not terribly forgiving of one another’s shortcomings. And when we’re not, it’s good to know there’s an arbiter who will judge correctly, rationally, without prejudice.
In other words, government at its best.
The trouble is, we have to trust the arbiter. And the more a government (I won’t say which one) goes on recess when it should be working; or approves people to run huge and powerful sectors with no training, qualifications or even obvious intelligence; or goes belly up in the face of adversity (also known as “being primaried”); or refuses to legislate—to do its damn job!—we the people lose confidence in our elected and appointed officials, and it’s every man and woman for themselves.
Because, here’s another hard-to-believe fact: those same government officials are people too. They’re not a mind hive. They don’t automatically slip on the robe of righteousness the moment they get elected. Which means that they need to be governed as much as we the people do—I’d even say more, because they have more power and can therefore do more damage. A recent NY Times guest article by Mark Warner, Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, had this chilling line: “It is increasingly evident that the greatest threat [to our elections] now comes from inside our own government.”
Let that sink in for a moment. The very government who is supposed to be protecting us and our vote is trying to undermine this foundational tenet of how to make a government work. But why would people who made a vow to protect our Constitution do such a thing?
Because power changes people. It bends and tempts them. It whispers, “Hey, you’re different. You can handle it.” Which is usually the moment we (and they) stop handling it…and start getting our picture taken with a $50,000 Rolex on our wrist and cages of human beings as a backdrop. Or start talking about war as an “excursion” that’ll last a few weeks or maybe a month—oh, and have you seen sketches of my gargantuan ballroom? How about this terrific Arch of Triumph? (As they say, you can’t spell Triumph without Trump!)
Madison was right. Government exists because people will absolutely take advantage of a system if you let them. You give someone an inch, they’ll take a mile. You give them a mile, they’ll build a condo and start charging rent. And we the people exist not only to live our own lives and do our own thing but to make sure that government officials do what they’re supposed to do instead of taking advantage of our system.
And the sooner and the more thoroughly we do that, the quicker we’ll be able to believe in that system as the arbiter of justice once again.
Senior figures express concerns over medical union’s refusal of pay rise that is higher than offer to other NHS staff
Trade unions have privately expressed qualms about the forthcoming doctors’ strikes, expressing frustration at the conduct of the talks and the demands of the British Medical Association.
The BMA is pushing for a pay rise higher than the 3.5% offered to doctors by the government, with strikes planned for next week.
Continue reading...Initial reports suggested parts of arena’s wall had collapsed, but Alianza Lima says there were no structural failures
One person has been killed and dozens more injured at the Alejandro Villanueva Stadium in Lima, Peru, according to the football club Alianza Lima.
Hundreds of fans were attending a “flag-waving event” on Friday around the stadium, a day before a derby match between the home team Alianza Lima and local rivals Universitario de Deportes.
Continue reading...If the Eagles are to make a mark on their home World Cup in 2031, the hard-hitting Anthem RC lock could have a key role to play
Will Sherman may be the future of US rugby, but his roots are in the game’s American past. The 22-year-old standout second-row forward for Anthem Rugby Carolina in Major League Rugby is the son of Wade Sherman, a member of a champion Cal Berkeley team that included Mark Bingham, who on 11 September 2001 was one of the Flight 93 passengers who fought their hijackers and kept it from reaching Washington.
“There was a super old photo that my dad pulled up, and the first time I heard that story was from him,” Sherman said. “He was like, ‘That guy standing to my left is an American hero.’”
Continue reading...In the fifth week of the war, Trump continues contradicting himself on its objectives and how Americans are affected
When Donald Trump launched Operation Epic Fury alongside Israel on 28 February, his administration had settled on a set of stated, and broad, objectives: destroy Iran’s missiles, eliminate its navy, prevent a nuclear weapon.
Over a month later those objectives have multiplied, contracted and contradicted each other.
Continue reading...These are the best TVs I’ve reviewed for every budget, including top brands such as LG, Samsung and TCL.
Here’s how I make sure I don't lose sight of my goals -- and how you can, too.
Exclusive: research finds Jackdaw field would provide only about 2% of current demand, and Rosebank only 1%
Opening major new fields in the North Sea would make almost no difference to the UK’s reliance on gas imports, research has shown.
The Jackdaw field, one of the largest unexploited gasfields in the North Sea, would displace only 2% of the UK’s current imports of gas, which would leave the UK still almost entirely dependent on supplies from Norway and a few other sources.
Continue reading...The Trump administration takes pleasure in deploying dysphemism to describe the killing of Iranians
On 23 March, Donald Trump said that if things didn’t go to his liking in Iran, “we just keep bombing our little hearts out”. A week later the US president told journalists on Air Force One: “You never know with Iran because we negotiate with them and then we always have to blow them up.”
On 4 March, Pete Hegseth squirmed in pleasure as he described “death and destruction from the sky all day long”. Whatever happened to the subtle art of political euphemism?
Continue reading...A state visit intended to mark 250 years of U.S. independence could become a test of the British monarchy’s willingness to confront one of its most difficult controversies.
Private Chinese technology companies — some with ties to the military — are marketing detailed intelligence on movements of U.S. forces in Iran, even as Beijing seeks to keep its distance.
Lack of regulation for specialist classes leaves UK fitness enthusiasts at risk, say professional bodies
The boom in reformer pilates has created a “wild west” of studios where poor regulation has resulted in inexperienced teachers and a rise in injuries, professional standards bodies have warned.
Pilates is not formally or legally regulated, and as its popularity has surged, industry experts say, so too has the growth of packed reformer-based classes often led by instructors with limited training.
Continue reading...Riccione’s leftwing mayor, Daniela Angelini, says public purchase is victory for town and ‘act of love and vision’
An Italian council has bought a villa where Benito Mussolini spent his summer holidays, partly to avoid the property falling into the hands of “fascist nostalgics”.
Daniela Angelini, the leftwing mayor of Riccione, a town close to Rimini along Italy’s Adriatic coast, said the acquisition of Villa Mussolini through an auction was “an act of love and vision” and that bringing it back into public hands was a victory for the entire town.
Continue reading...Fears of Easter chaos over scaling up of new EU border system are eased, with no facial IDs for Eurotunnel and Eurostar passengers
Passengers crossing the Channel from the UK to France will not face new biometric checks in the coming weeks, despite an imminent deadline for the complete implementation of the EU’s entry-exit system (EES), ports say.
Airlines and airports across Europe have feared chaos over the Easter holidays.
Continue reading...An ultra-lightweight real-time operating system for resource-constrained IoT and embedded devices. Kernel footprint under 10 KB, 2 KB minimum RAM, preemptive priority-based scheduling.
↫ TinyOS GitHub page
Written in C, open source, and supports ARM and RISC-V.
Another major improvement in Redox: a brand new scheduler which improves performance under load considerably.
We have replaced the legacy Round Robin scheduler with a Deficit Weighted Round Robin scheduler. Due to this, we finally have a way of assigning different priorities to our Process contexts. When running under light load, you may not notice any difference, but under heavy load the new scheduler outperforms the old one (eg. ~150 FPS gain in the
↫ Akshit Gaurpixelcannon3D Redox demo, and ~1.5x gain in operations/sec for CPU bound tasks and a similar improvement in responsiveness too (measured through schedrs)).
Work is far from over in this area, as they’re now moving on to “replacing the static queue logic with the dynamic lag-calculations of full EEVDF“.
You’d think if there was one corner of the open source world where you wouldn’t find drama it’d be open source office suites, but it turns out we could not have been more wrong. First, there’s The Document Foundation, stewards of LibreOffice, ejecting a ton of LibreOffice contributors.
In the ongoing saga of The Document Foundation (TDF), their Membership Committee has decided to eject from membership all Collabora staff and partners. That includes over thirty people who have contributed faithfully to LibreOffice for many years. It is interesting to see a formal meritocracy eject so many, based on unproven legal concerns and guilt by association. This includes seven of the top ten core committers of all time (excluding release engineers) currently working for Collabora Productivity. The move is the culmination of TDF losing a large number of founders from membership over the last few years with: Thorsten Behrens, Jan ‘Kendy’ Holesovsky, Rene Engelhard, Caolan McNamara, Michael Meeks, Cor Nouws and Italo Vignoli no longer members. Of the remaining active founders, three of the last four are paid TDF staff (of whom none are programming on the core code).
↫ Micheal Meeks
The end result seems to be that Collabora is effectively forking LibreOffice, which feels like we’re back where we were 15 years ago when LibreOffice forked from OpenOffice. There seems to be a ton of drama and infighting here that I’m not particularly interested in, but it’s sad to see such drama and infighting result in needless complications for developers, end users, and distributors alike.
As if this wasn’t enough, there’s also forking drama in OnlyOffice land, the other open source office suite, licensed under the AGPL. This ope source office suite has been forked by Nextcloud and IONOS into Euro-Office, in pursuit of digital sovereignty in the EU. It’s also not an entirely unimportant detail that OnlyOffice is Russian, with most of its developers residing in Russia.
Anyway, the OnlyOffice team has not taken this in stride, claiming there’s a violation of the AGPL license going on here, specifically because OnlyOffice adds contradictory attribution terms to the AGPL. It’s a complicated story, but it does seem most experts in this area seem to disagree with OnlyOffice’s interpretation.
We’re in for another messy time.
The Artemis II crew has passed 100,000 miles from Earth and is now on a "free-return" path around the moon after a successful "translunar" injection burn. "Ladies and gentlemen, I am so, so excited to be able to tell you that for the first time since 1972 during Apollo 17, human beings have left Earth orbit," NASA's Dr Lori Glaze told a news conference. The Guardian reports: The astronauts -- the Americans Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, and a Canadian, Jeremy Hansen -- spent their first day in space performing checks on the spacecraft, which had never carried humans before. Later they had time to speak to US TV networks. "I've got to tell you, there is nothing normal about this," Wiseman told ABC News from the cramped interior of the capsule. "Sending four humans 250,000 miles away is a herculean effort, and we are now just realising the gravity of that." Orion will travel about 4,000 miles (6,400km) beyond the moon before turning back, providing unprecedented and illuminated views of the lunar far side. If all proceeds smoothly, the astronauts will set a record by venturing farther from Earth than any human before -- more than 250,000 miles. The mission is part of a longer-term plan to repeatedly return to the moon, with the aim of establishing a permanent base that will offer a platform for further exploration. After the final engine burn, NASA said Wiseman took two "spectacular" images of Earth. The first photo, called Hello, World, "shows the vast expanse of blue that is the Atlantic Ocean, framed by a thin glow of the atmosphere as the Earth eclipses the Sun and green auroras at either pole," reports the BBC. Another photo shows the view of Earth from inside the Orion spacecraft.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| I've had my pint s for a year now, I put about 700 miles on it since last ridden. I went to go ride it about a week ago now and I got about to 40% and I decided to go up this incline. It was all gravel, and about halfway up the onewheel slipped and nosedived; not hard, but enough for it to shut off. I went to go check in on it and of course it actually was off, so I went to go turn it back on. It didn't. Held button for 10 seconds, still didn't turn on, I even checked the app but all it told me was that is was reconnecting. I got home and decided to try and plug it in and do simple patterns of plugging it in and trying to turn it on. Nothing worked. I tore it apart, completely, to figure out what came loose or just when wrong but there was nothing out of the ordinary. Can anyone help? I have pictures of what looks out of the ordinary to me [link] [comments] |
This is the first of a series of articles in which you will learn about what may be one of the silliest, most preventable, and most costly mishaps of the 21st century, where Microsoft all but lost OpenAI, its largest customer, and the trust of the US government.
↫ Axel Rietschin
It won’t take long into this series of articles before you start wondering how anyone manages to ship anything at Microsoft. If even half of this is accurate, this company should be placed under some sort of external oversight.
Two people in police custody after a fatal incident in Cudworth area on Friday evening
Two people have been arrested on suspicion of murder after a man died after a collision in the Cudworth area of Barnsley.
Emergency services responded to reports of a collision between a Volkswagen Touareg and a pedestrian on Rose Tree Avenue about 4.55pm on Friday, South Yorkshire police said in a statement.
Continue reading...Man and woman released pending further enquiries after arrests at separate properties in state’s north-east on Saturday morning
Two people have been arrested as part of the investigation into how Porepunkah fugitive Dezi Freeman was able to survive on the run for seven months before he was shot dead on Monday.
A man and a woman were arrested at separate properties in north-east Victoria on Saturday morning around 7am, before being later released.
Continue reading...Reports on English policies seen in Wales as relating to whole of UK contribute to widespread confusion, researchers say
UK media is failing to report properly on devolved issues in Wales, leaving voters ill-informed about May’s Senedd elections, a report has found.
A Cardiff University study of more than 3,000 news items found repeated patterns in coverage across different broadcasters and platforms, including not signposting whether an issue was relevant to England or England and Wales only, widespread references to “the government” rather than “the UK government”, and the use of “you” and “your” in contexts that apply only to people living in England.
Continue reading...Use of unmanned ground vehicles has grown exponentially since 2024 turning the war into a technological contest
Victor Pavlov showed off Ukraine’s newest and most versatile weapon: a battery-powered land robot.
The unmanned ground vehicles come in various shapes and sizes. One runs on caterpillar tracks and resembles a roofless milk float. Another has wheels and antennas. A third carries anti-tank mines. Since spring 2024 their use has grown exponentially.
Continue reading...The brutalisation of global norms by figures like Pete Hegseth must be seen as an ethical issue. It’s a fight against chaos, and all major religions must play a role
That combative old hymn, Onward Christian Soldiers, is not much heard these days, though it was once a favourite with church congregations and school assemblies. Written in 1865 by Sabine Baring-Gould, an English clergyman and religious scholar, its belligerent refrain urges the faithful on to battle, victory and conquest: “Onward, Christian soldiers / Marching as to war / With the cross of Jesus / Going on before!” Its martial tone suited the Victorian zeitgeist but it made succeeding generations uneasy (though it was still sung in my primary school in the early 1960s). Nowadays, this sort of triumphalism gives religion a bad name.
Pete Hegseth, US defence secretary, and a leading Christian soldier, would certainly disagree. He probably hums it on his way to work. At a recent Christian worship service in the Pentagon – an irregular event, given the constitution’s dislike of anything smacking of state religion – Hegseth, referencing Iran, prayed for “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy”. Hegseth’s creed is killing. He describes Iranians as “religious fanatics”. And he should know. His intolerant brand of evangelical Christian nationalism is extreme even by US standards – yet has Donald Trump’s backing. Trump was a Presbyterian until 2020, when he abruptly declared he wasn’t. God knows what he is now.
Simon Tisdall is a Guardian foreign affairs commentator
Continue reading...Bruins to play for first championship in program history
Lauren Betts hit the play button over and over, forcing herself to watch last year’s Final Four blowout loss to UConn 10 times during the offseason.
The two-time All-American made sure there wasn’t a repeat performance in this year’s Final Four, swooping in for the biggest play in a game that sends the Bruins into the NCAA national championship game for the first time.
Continue reading...Gamecocks end Huskies’ winning streak at 54 games
South Carolina 8-13 UConn, 3:55 left, first quarter: And as I type that, Sarah Strong bails out her team with a 3-pointer as the shot clock nears zero. She scores again after another Okot miss, and the Huskies are already running away.
Tessa Johnson responds with a layup and then a jumper.
Continue reading..."Consumer PC parts aren't the only things being gobbled up by the 'AI' industry," writes PCWorld's Michael Crider. "A Starcraft-inspired strategy game is shutting down its multiplayer servers because the hosting company got bought out for 'AI.'" The game will still be playable offline for now, but the shutdown highlights the ripple effects of the AI boom on the gaming industry. Amid the ongoing hardware shortages, AI companies are basically gobbling up as much infrastructure as they can to repurpose it for AI workloads. From the report: The game in question is Stormgate, a crowdfunded revival of the real-time strategy genre that has languished in the last decade or so. The developer Frost Giant Studios told its players on Discord (spotted by PC Gamer) that it would be unable to continue multiplayer access past the end of this month. The "game server orchestration partner" was bought by an AI company -- the developer's words, not mine -- which means that the multiplayer aspects of the game will have a "planned outage." The devs say the game will be patched for offline play, presumably including its single-player campaign mode and co-op modes, but "online modes will not be available at that point." They're hoping to bring back online play in a later update, but that'll depend on "finding a partner to support ongoing operations." That sounds like old-fashioned player-hosted games with lobbies aren't in the cards, at least not yet. Frost Giant's server provider is Hathora, which was bought by a company called Fireworks AI last month. Fireworks describes its offerings as "open-source AI models at blazing speed, optimized for your use case, scaled globally with the Fireworks Inference Cloud." So, yeah, Hathora's infrastructure will likely be used for yet more generative "AI." And according to GamesBeat, it's planning to shut down the game service aspect of its company completely. That means Stormgate probably isn't going to be the last game affected. Hathora also provides online services for Splitgate 2, among others. I'm contacting Hathora for comment and will update this story if I receive a response.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
This blog is closed – our live coverage continues in a new blog here
Authorities in Abu Dhabi have reported two incidents of debris falling from intercepted aerial threats in the UAE capital, with one sparking a fire at a gas facility,
The official Abu Dhabi Media Office said authorities responded to an incident of falling debris at the Habshan gas facilities. “Operations have been suspended while authorities respond to a fire,” it said in a post on X, adding that no injuries were reported.
Continue reading...I tried my friends Stock GT and I love the feel of the footpads and was wondering if there are any footpads with similar feel for the OG XR. im fine with third party or FM
Datacentres ‘directly competing’ with possible residential builds near public transport, one council tells NSW inquiry, amid growing concerns
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Datacentre developments are crowding out opportunities for housing and job-rich industries across Sydney, a New South Wales inquiry has heard, with one local council reporting a rise in blackouts linked to the industry’s expansion.
Several Sydney councils, all facing an influx of datacentre developments, have raised concerns about the health, environmental and amenity impacts on their local communities in submissions to the state’s datacentre inquiry.
Continue reading...President Trump ordered the Department of Homeland Security to find a way to pay "each and every employee" of the agency.
Hello! Long time one wheeler - 3000m on my Pint, son is the same. New Pint S and X's for us, thousands of miles.
Last weekend I changed the tire on his onewheel, which I've done lots of times (to a Whisper Wide) and now it's making this sound. Would love some ideas. I think it's due to the tire being a different size but maybe not?
The four-person Artemis II crew has left Earth's orbit and is headed toward the moon. Here's everything you need to know about the momentous mission.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 4.
Stiff winds ‘spreading the smoke’ as Springs fire bears down on Moreno Valley while smaller Crown fire also burning
A pair of wildfires broke out in southern California on Friday, marking the region’s first significant burns in a spring that has seen a major heatwave.
The fires started in windy conditions that have caused them to spread quickly. The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory for parts of southern California through midday Friday, warning of gusts up to 50mph.
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed.
A reminder that my colleagues are covering the latest out of the Middle East at our dedicated live blog.
This includes Donald Trump’s recent comments on Truth Social that “with a little more time” he could open strait of Hormuz. The president added that reopening the vital passageway would allow the US to “TAKE THE OIL, & MAKE A FORTUNE. IT WOULD BE A ‘GUSHER’ FOR THE WORLD.”
Continue reading...UConn, on a 54-game winning streak, entered the Final Four undefeated for the ninth time in school history.
Gamecocks end Huskies’ winning streak at 54 games
Auriemma: ‘I said what I had to say. It was nothing’
Staley: ‘If I did something wrong to Geno, I had no idea’
UConn coach Geno Auriemma and South Carolina coach Dawn Staley had a heated exchange on the sideline after the Gamecocks beat the undefeated Huskies 62-48 in Friday night’s semi-final of the women’s NCAA Tournament.
South Carolina ended UConn’s winning streak at 54 games and secured a return trip to the national championship game.
Continue reading...Trump said Vance would focus on blue states and, without providing evidence, accused Democrat leaders of rampant ‘theft’ – key US politics stories from Friday 3 April at a glance
Donald Trump has given his vice-president, JD Vance, a new side gig: “fraud czar”.
The president this week announced a fresh crackdown on “fraud” in Democratic states and tapped Vance to lead the charge. Officials swiftly announced a string of arrests in California.
Continue reading...Russian advances slowing, thinktank’s data shows; 14 killed in Ukraine in massive drone and missile salvo. What we know on day 1,501
Russia’s army recorded almost no territorial gains on the frontline in Ukraine in March for the first time in two-and-a-half years, according to analysis of data from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) conducted by Agence France-Presse. The Russian army has been slowing in its advances since late 2025 – because of Kyiv’s localised breakthroughs in the south-east of the country. Across the entire frontline, the Russian army seized only 23 sq km (8.9 sq miles) in March, losing territory in some areas, according to the analysis. This figure excludes infiltration operations conducted by Russian forces beyond the frontline, as well as advances claimed by the Russian side but neither confirmed nor denied by the ISW.
The Russian army made 319 sq km of gains in January and 123 sq km in February, which was then the smallest advance since April 2024. Its advance in March was the smallest since September 2023. The ISW attributed the slowdown to Ukrainian counteroffensives, but also to “Russia’s ban on using Starlink terminals in Ukraine” and “the Kremlin’s efforts to restrict access to Telegram”. The messaging app – very popular among Russians, including those fighting on the front – has been barely usable in recent months due to blocks imposed by the authorities. As in February, Russia lost ground on the southern section of the frontline, between the Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions.
Russian strikes killed 14 people in Ukraine on Friday, officials said, as Moscow launched the latest in an increasing number of daytime barrages. Moscow has been firing aerial broadsides at Ukraine throughout its more than four-year invasion, mostly at night, but in recent weeks has stepped up daytime attacks. The Russian military used more than 500 drones and dozens of missiles in its salvo on Friday, according to the Ukrainian air force.
Russia’s Baltic oil export hubs at Ust-Luga and Primorsk remain unable to handle shipments after a series of Ukrainian drone attacks, prompting the country’s refineries to find alternative routes for export, industry sources said on Friday. The attacks have damaged port infrastructure and continued through the last two weeks of March, with at least five strikes on Ust-Luga in the space of 10 days. Sources said the export restrictions, along with disruptions at large refineries, could lead to a decrease in oil production in Russia. Traders said refineries had been unable to deliver diesel fuel to Primorsk for export since 22 March, leaving refineries in European Russia and Siberia without their most viable export route. Traders said refineries were having to consider more expensive rail transport routes to other export terminals.
A Ukrainian drone and missile attack on southern Russia killed at least one person, injured four others and sparked a blaze aboard a foreign-flagged vessel, Russian officials said on Saturday.
Zelenskyy has called on lawmakers to pass key legislation next week to avert a funding crisis, help Ukraine fight the war against Russia, and enact key reforms required for EU accession. Due to lagging reforms and slow legislative progress in late 2025 and early this year, Ukraine missed deadlines to unlock billions from its key lenders, economists said. With the need for external financing standing at $52bn this year – equivalent to about a quarter of annual economic output – the budget situation is desperate. “I have a list of key draft laws that are critical for securing funding,” the Ukrainian president said in remarks released on Friday. They range from strengthening the court system to reforming energy sector procedures. “I believe that members of parliament from all parties must understand the importance of these bills for Ukraine’s budget,” said Zelenskyy, who has a majority in parliament but its relations with his government have soured.
Continue reading...New Hampshire is one of the few states in the nation that doesn't have a dedicated school for the deaf.
Budget proposal released on Friday outlines president’s desire to revive former federal prison in San Francisco Bay
Donald Trump is asking for $152m to restore Alcatraz, a former federal prison off the coast of San Francisco, according to a budget proposal released on Friday for the 2027 fiscal year.
Last May, Trump first called upon the Department of Justice, the FBI and Homeland Security to rebuild the prison. He heaped praise on Alcatraz’s reputation in a Truth Social post.
Continue reading... | Anyone explain to me what are “recorded rides” in achievements please! [link] [comments] |
The Artemis II astronauts continued their long coast to the moon, capturing stunning photos along the way.
| GT-S. 160 miles on it. Rides like a dream. [link] [comments] |
| Took my XL out in the beach for the first time while down in St Augustine FL what a good time. [link] [comments] |
The ones im reffering to are the ones come over the foot on the top, blmy buddy is curious where they are sold. We live in Canada if that helps narrow down out options.
Pope Leo XIV carried a wooden cross for all of the 14 stations of the Way of the Cross at the Colosseum on his first Good Friday as pontiff, marking the first time in decades that a pope carried the cross to every station.
| I put them on front and back footpads :) [link] [comments] |
Misogynistic abuse of female staff is increasing, leaving teachers feeling ‘traumatised’ and ‘humiliated’
Teachers’ leaders have said a “masculinity crisis” is fermenting in schools across the UK, with misogynistic abuse of female staff on the increase, leaving victims “traumatised”, “demeaned” and “humiliated”.
Almost a quarter of female teachers who took part in a union survey said they have been the target of misogyny from a pupil over the past 12 months – the highest proportion in the last four years of surveys.
Continue reading...Ripple effects of oil and fertiliser shortage felt by farmers in India and Sri Lanka despite governments saying there is enough stock to go round
Gurvinder Singh never thought the war in Iran would touch his quiet corner of Punjab.
Yet looking out over his smallholding, where he alternates between wheat and rice crops in the state known as India’s breadbasket, the 52-year-old farmer can barely think of anything else. His anxiety over a conflict playing out thousands of miles away is crippling as he fears what will come of this season’s rice crop.
Continue reading...Iranian strikes have reportedly knocked out key AWS availability zones in Bahrain and Dubai, leaving parts of both regions effectively offline for an extended period and forcing Amazon to urge teams and customers to shift workloads elsewhere. "These two regions continue to be impaired, and services should not expect to be operating with normal levels of redundancy and resiliency," an internal Amazon communication memo reads. "We are actively working to free and reserve as much capacity as possible in the region for customers, and services should be scaled to the minimal footprint required to support customer migration." Big Technology reports: With the war now nearing its sixth week, Iran has made Amazon infrastructure in the Gulf an economic target and is now eyeing its peers. Amazon's Bahrain facilities have been hit multiple times, including a Wednesday strike that caused a fire. And its facilities in the UAE also sustained multiple hits. The IRGC is threatening multiple other U.S. tech giants, including Microsoft, Google, and Apple. Amazons infrastructure in Bahrain and Dubai each have three 'availability zones' or clusters of compute. Both Bahrain and Dubai have a zones that are "hard down" and and "impaired but functioning," per the internal communication. "We do not have a timeline for when DXB and BAH will return to normal operations," the internal post said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US president issues executive order as longest partial government shutdown in US history enters 49th day
Donald Trump issued an executive order Friday that declares all Department of Homeland Security employees will receive pay and benefits during the agency’s partial shutdown.
The “Liberating the Department of Homeland Security From the Democrat-Caused Shutdown” memo is similar to Trump’s executive order from last week which called for issuing pay to Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents during the shutdown.
In the order, Trump directed the homeland security secretary, Markwayne Mullin, to “use funds that have a reasonable and logical nexus to the functions of DHS” to pay “each and every employee of DHS”.
Continue reading...Hello! New rider here. Pint S. I am also pretty small (4'11" , 90lbs).
I can mount onto the board, I can lean forward enough so it starts moving but I can't get it to move forward more than 2-3mph. Because I'm going so slow I then start to wobble and lose balance and proceed to fall. Sort of like on a bike, in order to ride it you need to get some speed or you'll simply lose balance.
I'm trying to shift weight to my front leg but can't ever get enough force to move forward. Idk if I'm overthinking it, maybe my stance is wrong (i.e. too wide, too far back)?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Cheers.
NBA scoring leader hurt in Thursday’s loss to Thunder
LA have five games left before postseason begins
Absence may force Dončić out of individual awards race
Luka Dončić will miss the rest of the Los Angeles Lakers’ regular season with a Grade 2 strain of his left hamstring, the team announced Friday.
Dončić is the NBA’s top scorer and the driving force behind the Lakers’ surge into the third spot in the Western Conference standings, but he injured his leg during Los Angeles’ blowout 139-96 loss to Oklahoma City on Thursday. An MRI exam revealed the severity of the strain.
Continue reading...Catholic Timothy Broglio says ‘hard to cast this war as something that would be sponsored by the Lord’
The leader of all Catholic chaplains in the United States’ armed forces has questioned how righteous the US military’s campaign in Iran is, saying that “under the just war theory – it is not”.
Archbishop Timothy Broglio, head of the Catholic Archdiocese for the Military Services USA, told CBS News in an interview set for broadcast Sunday that while Iran “was a threat with nuclear arms”, waging war on the theocratic state constituted “compensating for a threat before the threat is actually realized”.
Continue reading...The AI giant recently said it would end its Sora image generator and put off a planned ChatGPT "adult mode" indefinitely.
I hear the board comes ready to ride out of the box but how do I mess with the head lights and other functions. What are the best apps to get ? fill me in!
US president makes baseless claims about fraud in blue states and says JD Vance will lead clampdown as ‘fraud czar’
Donald Trump announced a fresh crackdown on “fraud” in Democratic states and tapped JD Vance to lead the charge. Officials swiftly announced a string of arrests in California.
In a Truth Social post on Friday, the US president announced that his vice-president was now “in charge of ‘fraud’ in the United States”, claiming the problem is “massive and pervasive” and that Vance’s new role as “fraud czar” will be “a major factor in how great the future of our country will be”.
Continue reading...Microsoft plans to invest $10 billion in Japan from 2026 to 2029 to expand AI infrastructure, boost local cloud capacity, train 1 million engineers and developers, and deepen cybersecurity cooperation with the Japanese government. Reuters reports: The investment includes the training of 1 million engineers and developers by 2030, Microsoft said, which was unveiled during a visit to Tokyo by Vice Chair and President Brad Smith. In a statement, the company said the plan aligns with Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's goal to boost growth through advanced, strategic technologies while safeguarding national security. Microsoft will work with domestic firms including SoftBank and Sakura Internet to expand Japan-based AI computing capacity, allowing Ecompanies and government agencies to keep sensitive data within the country while accessing Microsoft Azure services, it said. It will also deepen cooperation with Japanese authorities on sharing intelligence related to cyber threats and crime prevention.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The members of a tiny Methodist church in Virginia are excited — if a little confused — that Vance’s memoir of his path to Catholicism has put them in the spotlight.
The executive order is designed to increase the NCAA's control over college sports, and threatens to remove federal funding for colleges and universities that don't comply with NCAA rules.
An F-15 fighter jet and an A-10 attack plane were lost to hostile fire. Two search-and-rescue helicopters also were hit, injuring the crews, before safely returning to their base, officials said.
Pep Guardiola's team aims to step closer to a second cup triumph as they host Arne Slot's Reds.
Met police investigate incident, removing five officers from frontline duties after member of the public discovers items
Armed police officers protecting the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, allegedly left a bag containing guns and a Taser on the street which was discovered by a member of the public.
The Metropolitan police said on Friday it was investigating the incident and five officers had been removed from frontline duties while inquiries were being carried out.
Continue reading...Over 20 attorneys general challenge the executive order and say it’s an unconstitutional move to disenfranchise voters
More than 20 Democratic attorneys general filed a lawsuit Friday challenging Donald Trump’s Tuesday executive order to restrict who can vote by mail.
In his order, Trump directed the US Postal Service to abstain from sending mail-in or absentee ballots to people who are not on a pre-ordained list of eligible citizens.
Continue reading...Goolsbee, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said mounting inflation risks "complicates the picture" on interest rates.
In a speech to what he called “the single largest gathering of American farmers that the White House has … ever had,” President Donald Trump distorted the facts on the estate tax, soybean exports and more.
The president spoke to farmers gathered on the South Lawn of the White House on March 27.
Trump falsely claimed that “we saved 2 million American farms from extinction by virtually ending the unfair estate tax.” There aren’t even quite 2 million farms in the U.S., and tax experts say the number of small farms that got estate tax relief from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act championed by Trump was vanishingly small.
Here’s what Trump said in his address to farmers:
Trump, March 27: Very importantly, we saved 2 million American farms from extinction by virtually ending the unfair estate tax. We’ve ended the estate tax, or as they call it, the death tax, and you can now keep your family farms in the family. … No, it was a big thing. I would see farmers and they pass away … and the children would get hit with this massive tax bill for the value of the farm. Sometimes the farm is very valuable, but the cash isn’t so readily available. And they go out to a bank and they’d borrow money and they’d borrow and borrow and borrow to pay the tax. They’d be working for 20 years to pay it off. If they had a bad season, they’d lose their farm. … And you’d have, actually, many, many suicides over it. They would actually commit suicide because they couldn’t stand the concept of losing their family farm.
Trump did not end the estate tax, which is a tax on inherited assets over a certain amount. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which Trump signed into law in 2017, doubled the assets threshold that would trigger an estate tax. That decreased, but did not entirely eliminate, the number of people subject to the estate tax. That provision was scheduled to expire at the end of 2025, but the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which Trump signed into law in July 2025, permanently extended the more generous exemptions for the estate tax. For 2026, the thresholds triggering the estate tax are $15 million for individuals and $30 million for married couples.
But more importantly, only a small fraction of farms pays any estate tax.
To back up Trump’s claim, a White House official pointed us to an April 2025 article from the American Farm Bureau Federation, an advocate for farmers, that stated, “The estate tax, also called the ‘death’ tax, turns a time of mourning into a race against time to pay a government bill. Exactly nine months after the death of a family leader, some farm families owe the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) up to 40% of their farm’s value above an exemption limit. Without an act of Congress this year, the estate tax exemption will drop by 50% to $7.61 million on Jan. 1, 2026, putting the future of thousands of farm families at risk.”
The article noted that in 2024, the USDA “estimated that if the estate tax exemption reverts to its pre-TCJA level, nearly twice as many farms in every sales class would have to pay estate taxes.”
That’s true, but according to that USDA estimate, “the share of farm estates estimated to owe Federal estate tax would increase from 0.3 to 1.0 percent.”
“The story he [Trump] tells is dramatic but almost entirely untrue,” Howard Gleckman, a visiting fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, told us via email.
Although the Tax Policy Center has not modeled the estate tax impact on farms recently, Gleckman noted that “we estimated that a total of 3,960 decedents paid the estate tax in 2023. Those were total deaths, including all occupations. Since the vast majority of family farms are worth much less than $15m/$30m, the impact on farms is vanishingly low, and TPC concludes that zero small family farmers paid the tax.”
“It also is worth noting that any business owner subject to the estate tax has many tools to avoid the tax,” Gleckman said. “For example, they can create trusts or buy life insurance, which effectively pays the tax.”
In an article published in the Iowa Law Review in May 2025, Kathleen DeLaney Thomas, a professor at the University of North Carolina Law School, explored what she called the “myth” of “the threat of taxing family farms out of existence.”
“In the minds of voters, the family farmer is a sympathetic taxpayer who is cash poor but holds valuable property,” Thomas wrote. “Federal taxes that are based upon property values (like a wealth tax or an estate tax), rather than on cash income, appear to pose a risk that the family farm would have to be sold to fund such a tax. Yet, there is no empirical evidence that any family farm has ever been sold in the United States to fund federal taxes.”
As an aside, we weren’t able to find any examples of American farmers who committed suicide because of the prospect of losing their farm due to the estate tax, let alone “many,” as Trump claimed. There was a widely reported case of a man who committed suicide in 2025 due to worry about inheritance tax changes, but that was in the United Kingdom.
Trump falsely said that “American soybeans are now being shipped to China in record amounts,” touting a figure that he said he negotiated with China’s president. But U.S. exports are not on track this year to reach a record. A trade deal the White House announced in November also doesn’t show an agreement for record exports.

“Thanks to our trade deals, you’re now sending over $40 billion in American soybeans to China,” the president said. “I want to thank President Xi of China, because we had a deal at 20, and I said, ‘Could you do me a favor? It’s a big place, could you double it?’ … He said, ‘All right, I’ll do it,’ and you got 40 instead of 20.” Trump went on to make his claim about “record amounts” of soybeans now going to China.
Data from the USDA show that soybean exports to China, as of March 19, are about half the amount they were last year. “We’re not looking at record export sales, at least so far this year,” Chad E. Hart, a professor, extension economist and crop markets specialist at Iowa State University, told us.
Mindy L. Mallory, an associate professor of agricultural economics at Purdue University, similarly said that “we are not even close to normal buying, let alone record buying.”
U.S. soybean exports to China totaled 11.2 million metric tons for the marketing year as of March 19, according to the USDA data. That’s about half the amount exported to China over the same period the year before, which was 21.8 million metric tons. (The marketing year is Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, covering the harvesting of the crop and what happens to it before the subsequent harvest, Hart explained. So, last year would be Sept. 1, 2024, to Aug. 31, 2025, and the current marketing year started Sept. 1, 2025.)
Typically, just over half of U.S. soybean exports go to China, Mallory told us. But exports dropped considerably in 2025, due to Trump’s policy of increasing tariffs on U.S. imports from China and China’s subsequent retaliatory policies for goods it gets from the U.S. For several months, China didn’t import any U.S. soybeans.
In early November, the White House announced that Trump and Xi had made a deal on trade. A Nov. 1 White House fact sheet said: “China will purchase at least 12 million metric tons (MMT) of U.S. soybeans during the last two months of 2025 and also purchase at least 25 MMT of U.S. soybeans in each of 2026, 2027, and 2028.”
Those amounts wouldn’t be records, either. Mallory said 25 million metric tons for a year would be “just below the average of the prior six years.”
In a Nov. 17 paper published on farmdoc daily, a website run by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, other Purdue agriculture economists wrote, “If China purchases at least 25 million tons of U.S. soybeans in each of 2026, 2027, and 2028, that volume would still be 14% lower than the five-year average of 29 million tons of soybean shipments to China from 2020 to 2024. The ten-year average was 27 million tons.” A chart in that paper shows that, over the previous 10 years, annual exports to China only dipped below 25 million metric tons in 2019 (22.6 MMT) and 2018 (8.2 MMT), during another trade disagreement in Trump’s first term.
It’s unclear if Trump is suggesting that he had secured a commitment from Xi for a larger amount of exports than the White House announced. The White House didn’t respond to our request for clarification of how much China had agreed to and when it would import $40 billion of soybeans, as Trump said. When we asked about the president’s claim, a White House official said: “China has agreed to increase its purchases of U.S. soybeans by millions of metric tons, in addition to increasing purchases of other commodities.”
For the marketing year, Hart said, exports to China are typically in the range of $16 billion to $20 billion, depending on prices. He said the president’s $40 billion figure must be a cumulative figure for multiple years, noting that the U.S. announcement concerned export amounts for several years.
Trump said that the price of beef “is starting to come down.” But there’s little to no indication of that. He went on to falsely claim that “the number of cattle was way down” due to an environmental regulation concerning “gas permeating throughout the air,” adding that “we got rid of that one, too.” A White House official said he was referring to the Green New Deal, a nonbinding congressional resolution that didn’t pass.
We’ll start with beef prices. They have been high, due to several factors, which we’ll explain. The price of a pound of ground beef was an average $6.74 in February, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That’s down a mere penny from January, and it’s up $1.19 since January 2025. The price had gone up 52 cents from January 2024 to January 2025.
Uncooked beef steaks cost $12.74 per pound in February on average. That’s up 44 cents from January and up $1.83 from January 2025. Uncooked beef roasts were $8.93 per pound on average last month, down from a high of $9.29 in November. But the latest figure is still $1.21 more than the average price in January 2025.
Beef prices “are far from coming down,” Bob Chudy, a consultant for the beef industry, told us in an email. Chudy pointed to USDA figures for choice cutout, which he called “the best measure of wholesale beef prices.” Using a monthly average of weekly prices the USDA provides, Chudy said that choice cutout “jumped from an average of $3.69/lb in February to $3.94/lb in March.” That’s an increase of 25 cents. “And we are going into a period of seasonally stronger demand, with spring and summer grilling season around the corner.”
Chudy said that “beef supplies are historically low. There is nothing this administration can do to reduce beef prices for the balance of 2026 and extending into 2027 and likely 2028. Any short term deviations to the contrary are just that.”
As we’ve explained before, drought conditions in the U.S. over the past few years affected the feed for cattle and led to a slow reduction in the cattle herd, Bernt Nelson, an agricultural economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation, told NBC News last summer. In a February Farm Bureau report drawing on USDA data, Nelson said the U.S. cattle inventory on Jan. 1 was 0.3% lower than in 2025, beginning the eighth year of contraction and “with little opportunity for meaningful expansion until at least 2028.”
“Tighter cattle supplies will contribute to higher prices and volatility for cattle and beef in 2026,” Nelson wrote.
Also, last year, the USDA suspended imports of live cattle from Mexico because of cases of New World screwworm, a parasite that kills host animals. Chudy called that “a huge factor” that “has choked off a valuable supply of animals raised in USA feedlots.”
And there are also demand issues. Altin Kalo, head economist with the Steiner Consulting Group, which focuses on the food industry, told us, “Beef demand has been exceptional in recent years and has been a big contributor to the rise in beef prices in recent years. Indexes that ag economists use to track the shift in demand over time show that in 2025 demand was up 8% vs. previous year and near 27% from pre-COVID levels.” Kalo cited several factors for the increase in demand, including income and employment, high quality of beef products and a shift to higher-protein diets, and consumers eating more meals in restaurants than in the past.
In November, Trump scrapped 50% tariffs he had placed on Brazilian imports, including beef.
After mentioning prices, Trump made his claim about environmental concerns reducing the number of cattle.
Trump: Beef was, it was an amazing thing, I was told by [Agriculture Secretary] Brooke [Rollins]. I said, I don’t really believe it. They wanted to have less cattle in the country for environmental reasons. … These are sick people. No, they want less cattle for environmental reasons. It has something to do with gas permeating throughout the air. And we actually — and that’s what happened. And these, the number of cattle was way down. I said, what happened? They were mandated. They were restricted for that reason. These people are crazy. But anyway, we — we got rid of that one too. That was an easy one.
When we asked what environmental regulation Trump was referring to, a White House official told us: “President Trump is including the insane Green New Scam provision that sought to limit cow herds in order to reduce methane emissions,” linking to a 2019 New York Post article about the Green New Deal resolution, which was introduced by Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez that year.
That resolution, which was nonbinding, never passed. The number of cattle wasn’t “mandated” or “restricted” under the resolution, so there was nothing for Trump to get rid of, either.
The president has made a similar claim about the Green New Deal before, falsely saying in 2019 that it would “eliminate” all cows. Ocasio-Cortez did express concern about greenhouse gas emissions from cows, as have other environmentalists. (Methane emissions from agricultural livestock contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, as the Environmental Protection Agency says.) But as a nonbinding resolution, the Green New Deal was a broad vision for addressing climate change. If it had passed in Congress — which it didn’t then, nor when introduced in later years — lawmakers would have needed to propose separate legislation on steps to take to reach the resolution’s goals for emissions.
As we explained in 2019, the resolution doesn’t say anything about limiting cows. But two FAQ documents from the resolution’s supporters mentioned cows, garnering a lot of attention at the time. A fact sheet said: “We set a goal to get to net-zero, rather than zero emissions, in 10 years because we aren’t sure that we’ll be able to fully get rid of farting cows and airplanes that fast.” A blog post on Ocasio-Cortez’s website expressed a similar idea.
Trump again claimed that $12 billion in aid provided to farmers was paid from increased tariff revenue, but the funding came from regular appropriations.
Trump said: “To further help farmers recovering from the Biden catastrophe, we use money taken from tariffs, the tariffs — we’ve taken in hundreds of billions of dollars from the tariffs, and as I said, we gave you $12 billion in farm relief. And that happened just recently because you were hurt by certain countries unfairly. And I said you were unfairly hurt and we gave you $12 billion and that — that made up for it.”
The $12 billion bailout for American farmers came soon after China slashed its purchase of American soybeans in 2025 following Trump’s imposition of additional tariffs on imports from China.
“The Soybean Farmers of our Country are being hurt because China is, for ‘negotiating’ reasons only, not buying. We’ve made so much money on Tariffs, that we are going to take a small portion of that money, and help our Farmers,” Trump posted on Truth Social on Oct. 1.
But as we have written, the $12 billion was paid for by the Commodity Credit Corporation, a government-owned corporation that provides funding for agricultural programs and gets regular appropriations from Congress, according to a press release from the USDA.
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A Rome court ruled that several Netflix price hikes in Italy were unlawful because the company's contracts didn't adequately explain or justify future pricing changes. As a result, Netflix has been ordered to issue refunds that could total roughly 500 euros for some long-term subscribers. Ars Technica reports: The lawsuit was brought by Italian consumer advocacy group Movimento Consumatori, which alleged that the price hikes violate the Consumer Code, Italian legislation that aims to protect consumer rights. The Consumer Code says it's unlawful for a "professional to unilaterally modify the clauses of the contract, or the characteristics of the product or service to be provided, without a justified reason indicated in the contract itself," according to a Google-provided translation. The court's April 1 ruling determined that Netflix's contracts were required to explain in advance why prices or other terms might change in the future. Because the price hikes were found to be imposed without providing customers with valid justifications, the court ruled that the new prices are invalid and ordered Netflix to refund affected subscribers. This comes despite Netflix reportedly providing a 30-day advance notice of the higher fees and allowing customers to cancel their subscriptions to avoid price hikes. The court gave Netflix 90 days to inform millions of current and former customers via email, mail, its website, and Italian newspapers of their right to refunds or else face a penalty of 700 euros per day, Italian newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore reported today. Per Italian law, price increases that Netflix has issued or will issue beyond April 2025 are legal. At that time, Netflix adjusted its terms to state that contract terms could one day change due to technological, security, or regulatory needs, to clarify clauses, or to provide changes to the service, Il Sole 24 Ore reported.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
"That's us!" NASA says in a post showing one of the photos taken on the lunar journey.
April 3, 2026 — Yongtao Liu is an R&D staff member at Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (CNMS). In the Data NanoAnalytics Group, he is helping nanomaterials research move toward experiments that can run with far less handholding. His goal sounds simple but is tough in practice: What changes when an experiment can keep “thinking” after the scientist steps away? He is developing AI-driven “closed-loop” experiments that can plan measurements, read results as they come in and choose the next step, faster than a person could.

Yongtao Liu, an ORNL R&D staff member, uses AI-guided scanning probe microscopy to run experiments and analyze results with less hands-on work. Credit: Carlos Jones/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy.
For Liu, the point is not to take scientists out of the process. It is to remove the slow, repetitive work that keeps good questions waiting in line. His guiding principle is balance. Autonomy should speed up exploration, while expert oversight and clear, explainable reasoning keep results reliable. “Autonomy can help us explore faster,” he said, “but it must stay interpretable. We need to understand its choices and whether we should trust it.”
Liu came to ORNL in 2021 as a postdoctoral scientist and soon took on a leadership role. In 2024 he became project lead for physics-informed and data fusion approach for cross-facility autonomous experiments. The motivation for this work grew from the fact that materials development and scientific discovery rarely depend on a single experiment but instead rely on correlating multiple experiments that provide complementary insights. “This principle also applies to autonomous experimentation” he said.
Turning Nanoscience into a Closed-Loop, Self-Improving Experiment
Many nanoscience experiments follow a manual loop. A researcher sets a condition, measures a response, adjusts and measures again, often hundreds of times. In scanning probe microscopy, a family of microscopes that “feel” a surface with a tiny tip, that loop can become especially repetitive.
Liu’s approach replaces much of that repetition with software. Automation runs the instrument and collects data. A type of AI that finds patterns in data evaluates the results in real time and chooses the next best measurement. The goal is not only to generate more data, faster, but also to create an experiment that adapts as it learns.
“The AI can analyze the results in real time and automatically decide what you can do next,” Liu added. That speed matters, but so does sensitivity. Algorithms can notice small, consistent changes that are easy to miss when a person is staring at a flood of plots and images.
When ‘Novelty’ Might Mean Noise Rather Than New Science
One major thread in Liu’s work is “novelty discovery.” The idea is to teach an autonomous experiment to recognize when something looks truly unusual, not just statistically different. In the best case, novelty points to new physics. It can reveal behavior in materials that existing explanations do not cover.
A concrete example comes from Liu’s earlier work on halide perovskites. These materials are promising for devices like next-generation solar cells and light emitters. They are also known for complex, sometimes unstable behavior. In conductive atomic force microscopy, often called conductive AFM, his team used novelty detection to flag unusual current-voltage “hysteresis” behavior. Hysteresis means the electrical response depends on the path taken, not just the final setting. It is similar to how bending a paperclip one way changes how it behaves when it is bent back.
The algorithm noticed something specific. The opening of the hysteresis loop happened at different voltages depending on the local grain structure of the thin film. Grains are small crystalline regions, and their boundaries can change how electricity flows. Because this pattern was not well understood, the team applied representation learning, a type of analysis that helps reveal hidden structure in complex datasets. The result was a “partial knowledge map” that linked microstructure and electrical behavior. Some patterns fit existing ideas, while others still do not, and they now point to what should be studied next.
That experience shaped Liu’s view of autonomy. Speeding up measurement is only half the job. Autonomous labs also generate massive datasets, and scientists need better tools to interpret them without fooling themselves.
False novelty is a real risk. “The most common false novelty is measurement noise, or experimental artifacts,” Liu said. These are glitches caused by the instrument, the environment, or the sample, rather than true material behavior. AI can shine a spotlight on anomalies, but people still must decide whether the spotlight is on a discovery or a mirage.
From Materials Training to Machine-Guided Discovery
Liu earned his bachelor’s degree at Nankai University and completed his doctorate in materials science and engineering at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. During graduate school, he ran into a problem that many materials researchers face. The material is complicated, and the number of possible experiments can be overwhelming.
A formative moment came while studying halide perovskite thin films. Researchers believed that many nanoscale features could affect how the films absorb light and conduct charge. Those features included grains, grain boundaries, crystal facets and internal “domain walls,” which are borders between regions with different internal structure. The trouble was scale. Manually checking each feature and all their combinations was practically impossible.
“I remember thinking that a better approach would be to explore these structures automatically,” he said, “rather than relying on human search.” That realization pushed him toward AI-driven autonomous microscopy aimed at finding new structures and behaviors that would otherwise be too slow to uncover.
Building Systems That Span Instruments, Disciplines and Time Scales
CNMS is a Department of Energy user facility, where visiting researchers from around the world rely on its tools. Because the same instruments support many different projects, CNMS especially values methods that “travel well” — software and workflows robust enough to work reliably across a wide range of experiments.
Liu’s work sits at the intersection of materials science, instrument engineering and AI. He argues that autonomy works only when those perspectives stay connected. Materials scientists understand what signals are physically plausible and what could be an artifact. Instrument engineers know how measurements can fail or drift. AI researchers build models that can learn from messy, real data without collapsing.
Liu said interdisciplinary teamwork works best when each group brings a complementary strength. Humans define the scientific questions and constraints. AI expands the team’s ability to search. In a closed-loop system, that partnership can scan a vast parameter space — testing countless experimental settings and material variations — so the system can continue exploring and refining its approach autonomously, long after the researcher has left the controls.
Linking instruments across facilities into one learning workflow
Liu also leads efforts to build cross-facility closed-loop experiments that connect different tools into one decision-making chain. Such a workflow might include synthesis tools, such as autonomous pulsed laser deposition, which grows thin films by blasting material off a target with laser pulses. It may also include combinatorial growth systems that produce many material variants in a single run. Those samples can then be studied using autonomous scanning probe microscopy.
The central challenge is timing. Microscopes can make decisions in seconds. Making a new sample can take hours or even days. “It’s like trying to run a loop while some parts respond instantly and others only update once per hour or per day,” Liu said. The engineering problem is to keep the fast tools efficient while still making smart use of the slow ones. He wants the whole system to keep learning, rather than waiting.
Tools for Autonomy That Scientists Can Trust
Two of Liu’s contributions focus on making autonomy practical and trustworthy in the real world. They are AEcroscopy and the Gated Active Learning Framework.
AEcroscopy is a software-hardware system that controls microscopes while standardizing data acquisition, data processing and experiment logging for automated and autonomous runs. In plain terms, it helps turn a long, repetitive measurement routine into a reliable script. Instead of a person changing a setting and taking the same measurement repeatedly, the system can step through conditions automatically, process the results, and record exactly what happened. This improves both speed and reproducibility, which is the ability to repeat an experiment and get consistent results.
The Gated Active Learning Framework addresses a different risk. AI can be fast enough to multiply a mistake. If the system assumes the data should look a certain way, it can misread results that do not fit. For example, the analysis may assume a signal has one clear peak. The real material might produce two peaks under certain conditions. If the AI is not built to notice the mismatch, it can “learn” the wrong lesson and reinforce its own error.
Liu’s gating idea acts like a safety filter. The model is trained only on data that match its assumptions. Strange or out-of-family cases are held back for separate review. In his opinion, this helps autonomy stay honest. “The computer model should do what it can,” he added, “instead of pretending it can do everything.”
What AI Should Never Do, and What It Makes Possible
Liu is direct about the limits. “AI should never hide its reasoning or replace critical scientific judgment,” he says. If a system cannot explain why it chose an experiment, and if humans cannot question and validate the choice, then the lab is moving fast without knowing where it is going.
At the same time, he sees a unique strength in AI. It can explore enormous experimental landscapes systematically and adaptively, learning which paths are promising while the experiment is still running. “It lets us search spaces that are too big for any one person, or even a whole team, to cover by hand,” he said.
His long-term vision is not AI that only predicts — he wants AI that helps scientists reason. In that future, the system proposes tests, spots patterns and challenges assumptions. People keep the work grounded in physical reality.
Training the Next Kind of Scientist
Liu also thinks about what autonomy means for early-career researchers. His advice starts with fundamentals. Build domain knowledge first and learn how the experiment works with your own hands.
“When new students or postdocs enter an AI-enabled lab, the most important mindset is domain-knowledge-driven critical thinking,” he said. Before relying on AI, they should learn to run the measurements themselves. That hands-on experience teaches a researcher to recognize when a surprising result is real, and when it is noise, drift, or a software assumption breaking in the wild.
Outside the Loop
Even in a career built around autonomous science, Liu’s daily work still depends on human choices. He chooses when to focus deeply on coding, when to step back and question a “novelty” and when to bring in collaborators to interpret a confusing result. The end goal may be greatly accelerated, self-driving experiments, but the destination is not science without people. It is science where people spend less time repeating steps and more time asking better questions.
Source: Scott Gibson, ORNL
The post ORNL Work Explores AI-Guided Experiments That Adapt in Real Time appeared first on HPCwire.
U.S. consumers are starting to feel the financial impact of the Iran war. Here's how the conflict is seeping into the economy.
Strong is Huskies’ first winner since Paige Bueckers in 2021
‘Low-key superstar’ has led undefeated team to Final Four
Sarah Strong of UConn was named the Associated Press women’s basketball Player of the Year after leading the Huskies to an undefeated season, setting the stage for a run to the Final Four.
Strong became just the fifth player to win the award in her sophomore year, joining Oklahoma’s Courtney Paris (2007), UConn stars Maya Moore (2009) and Breanna Stewart (2014) and USC’s JuJu Watkins, who won it last year. The AP started giving out the award in 1995.
Continue reading...New Publication Fills Crucial Need for Rapid Publication of AI Research Results
NEW YORK, April 3, 2026 — ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, has published the inaugural issue of ACM AI Letters (AILET). AILET aims to be the premier venue for rapid, impactful, and timely AI research. Bridging a crucial gap between traditional conferences and journals, AILET will feature short, peer-reviewed contributions that accelerate knowledge dissemination across academia and industry.
AI research output has grown exponentially, with publication volume increasing by approximately 80% in just three years. Billions of dollars in funding are driving thousands of new papers and submissions each year across an ever-expanding landscape of subfields. Yet the traditional journal and conference cycle, often requiring months from submission to publication, creates a significant lag between discovery and dissemination. This delay can impede the translation of ideas into practice and slow the collective progress of the field.
The style of the new publication is rigorous yet accessible, with a focus on articles that bring contemporary and fast-moving AI research to the fore.
AILET welcomes concise summaries of work in areas including reports on theoretical breakthroughs in AI, descriptions of significant algorithmic and scientific advances, as well as accounts of novel or deployed applications of AI in real-world settings. Applied settings might include areas such as healthcare, finance, robotics, and autonomous systems. Multidisciplinary work is especially welcome.
Complementing its coverage of the technical aspects of the discipline, ACM AI Letters will also include research about how these new technologies are shaping the world. In this vein, the editors are encouraging submissions on societal challenges such as the United Nations Sustainable Developmental Goals, AI ethics, policy, governance, and responsible AI.
With their broader goal of building a vibrant community around AILET, the editors are encouraging researchers to engage with each other by submitting opinions and briefs on public policy, the latest advances in the field, and comparative assessments.
In keeping with ACM’s ongoing commitment to open access publishing, AILET authors will not be charged publication fees for the first three years.
Articles in the inaugural issue of ACM AI Letters include:
The Co-Editors-in-Chief of ACM AI Letters are Nitesh Chawla, University of Notre Dame (USA); Barry O’Sullivan, University College Cork (Ireland); and Richa Singh, IIT Jodhpur (India). AILET is developed with an extensive editorial team which includes 52 Editorial Board Members, 27 Associate Editors, and a 16-member Advisory Board. Reflecting its mission of serving the global AI research community, AILET editorial team members hail from many countries including Austria, Belgium, Canada, China, Czech Republic, France, Germany, India, Italy, Ireland, The Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Vietnam.
About ACM’s Publications Program
ACM publishes more than 60 scholarly peer-reviewed journals in dozens of computing and information technology disciplines. ACM’s high-impact journals constitute a vast and comprehensive archive of computing innovation, covering emerging and established computing research for both practical and theoretical applications. ACM journal editors are thought leaders in their fields, and ACM’s emphasis on rapid publication ensures minimal delay in communicating exciting new ideas and discoveries.
About ACM
ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society, uniting educators, researchers, and professionals to inspire dialogue, share resources, and address the field’s challenges. ACM strengthens the computing profession’s collective voice through strong leadership, promotion of the highest standards, and recognition of technical excellence. ACM supports the professional growth of its members by providing opportunities for life-long learning, career development, and professional networking.
Source: ACM
The post ACM AI Letters Journal Publishes First Issue appeared first on HPCwire.
| My Onewheel GTS Rally has the battery temperature error and will not let me ride it. It still charges well and was working completely fine before this error. I sent the board in for repair under warranty. I figured the issue was the temperature sensor (although the app says the temperature of the battery is around 64F ). They responded and said I need a new battery as mine is out of warranty. My Onewheel is 1.5 years old, GTS has 2 year warranty and 1 year on the battery. I don't understand why they won't just charge me for a sensor or something and are trying to charge me $800+ for such a minor issue. Has anyone had this happen before? Could I argue with them or fix this on my own? Looking for any advice. [link] [comments] |
Son of NBA star Carlos Boozer led Blue Devils to 35 wins
Other freshmen winners went No 1 or No 2 in NBA draft
Cameron Boozer was at the center of everything for Duke this season.
The 6ft 9in forward proved tough enough to score through physical play. Rangy enough to space the floor and shoot from outside. Deft enough as a passer to find teammates, whether against constant double teams coming for him as the top name on every scouting report or while running the entire offense from up top.
“You just want to affect winning in whatever way you can,” Boozer said.
The high-end NBA prospect did that all season for a team who won 35 games, reached No 1 in the Associated Press Top 25 poll, claimed the top overall seed for March Madness and reached the NCAA Tournament’s Elite Eight. Now he’s the AP’s men’s college basketball national player of the year, only the fifth freshman to earn the honor and the second in a row for a Duke program that keeps adding to the longest list of winners in the country. Sarah Strong of UConn was named the women’s player of the year.
Democrat Tammy Duckworth writes letter to TSA calling on agency to reinstate the shoes-off airport security policy
Nine months after US airports allowed passengers to pass through scanners without taking off their shoes, rescinding the stringent policy after almost two decades, a top senator claimed the “reckless” move could put passengers in danger.
The policy amounts to a “potentially catastrophic security deficiency”, according to Tammy Duckworth, Democrat for Illinois, and ranking member of the Senate commerce, science and transportation (CST) aviation subcommittee.
Continue reading...As memory constraints and energy costs are currently testing the limits of AI scaling, compression is becoming one of the industry’s most active areas of research. As we reported earlier this week, Google’s recent TurboQuant release targets the key-value cache, one of the most memory-intensive components of inference. Now, a new startup is aiming to compress the model itself.
PrismML, founded by Caltech researchers, has emerged from stealth this week with a $16.25 million seed round and an open source release of what it describes as a “1-bit” large language model family. The company says its approach can dramatically reduce model size and energy consumption while maintaining performance comparable to standard 16-bit models.

The benchmark scores of 1-bit Bonsai 8B compared to other models in the same parameter class (Credit: PrismML)
The Bonsai model family’s flagship model is Bonsai 8B, an 8-billion-parameter model trained on Google v4 TPUs. According to PrismML, the model achieves competitive performance on benchmark suites including MMLU Redux, MuSR, GSM8K, HumanEval+, IFEval, and BFClv3, but with a memory footprint of roughly 1GB, compared to about 16GB for a typical 16-bit equivalent. PrismML is also releasing 1-bit Bonsai 4B and 1.7B models, with 0.5GB and 0.24GB memory footprint, respectively.
PrismML says its models are fully binarized end to end, with all weights constrained to a single bit across embeddings, attention layers, and MLP blocks, with “no higher-precision escape hatches.” While quantization is widely used, pushing it to 1-bit across the entire network has historically degraded model quality, particularly for reasoning tasks. The company attributes its results to a new mathematical framework developed at Caltech, but has not yet detailed the training methods or stabilization techniques that would be required to make such extreme compression viable.
PrismML CEO Babak Hassibi, a computer scientist and mathematician at Caltech, described the approach as a new paradigm for AI that will adapt to diverse hardware environments. “We spent years developing the mathematical theory required to compress a neural network without losing its reasoning capabilities,” Hassibi said in a release. “We see 1-bit not as an endpoint, but as a starting point.”

PrismML founders from left: Sahin Lale, Babak Hassibi, Omead Pooladzandi, and Reza Sadri (Credit: PrismML)
The company claims its 1-bit models can deliver up to eight times faster processing and reduce energy consumption by as much as 75 to 80% on existing hardware. PrismML also predicts that future hardware optimized for 1-bit operations could further improve efficiency by replacing complex multiplications with simpler arithmetic.
Vinod Khosla of Khosla Ventures, which participated in PrismML’s seed round, described the work as a “mathematical breakthrough” with the potential to reshape how AI systems are deployed.
“AI’s future will not be defined by who can build the largest datacenters. It will be defined by who can deliver the most intelligence per unit of energy and cost. PrismML represents that kind of breakthrough,” he said in a statement.
That perspective reflects the idea that AI will not remain confined to data centers but will instead be deployed across edge devices and local environments. PrismML says its models are designed to run on consumer and edge devices, potentially enabling more capable AI applications in smartphones, wearables, and robotics without relying on cloud infrastructure.
PrismML’s claim that a fully 1-bit model can match the capabilities of higher-precision systems remains unproven outside the company’s own benchmark results. Extreme quantization techniques have historically struggled to preserve accuracy in complex reasoning tasks. Independent third-party benchmarks and real-world deployments will be critical in determining whether PrismML’s approach represents a true breakthrough or a more limited optimization.
In a blog post, PrismML describes what it calls “intelligence density,” a metric that attempts to capture how much capability a model delivers per unit of size. By that measure, the company says its 1-bit models redefine the tradeoff between model size and performance, maintaining competitive results at a fraction of the footprint. However, the metric depends on the company’s benchmark choices and definition of the metric itself, and has not yet been independently validated. Whether it proves to be a meaningful way to compare models or remains a company-specific metric will depend on how it holds up under further scrutiny.
For now, the release is another example of efficiency-driven AI design as the industry looks for alternatives to the escalating costs of scaling model size and infrastructure. While recent research like Google’s TurboQuant focuses on compressing specific components of inference, PrismML’s ambitious model compression could greatly expand where AI models can realistically run and how they are deployed.
The post PrismML Emerges From Stealth With 1-Bit LLM Family appeared first on HPCwire.
Veteran justice, 76, was treated for dehydration in March; a retirement would give Trump new chance to shape court
US supreme court justice Samuel Alito was reportedly taken to a hospital after becoming sick at a Federalist Society dinner in Philadelphia in March, further fueling speculation that Donald Trump could have more chances to shape the land’s highest court through new appointments.
A CNN report said Alito was checked by medical staff and given fluids due to dehydration. He later returned to his home in Virginia that same night with his security detail. In the weeks since, Alito has resumed his duties, including participating in oral arguments.
Continue reading...I have about 1500 miles on my GT. I ride fairly low speed with a mix of paved and single track trails. I want to do a VESC conversion. I don't need more range or speed. I'm looking to optimize riding for rugged single track trails with more torque. I have the VRH for added clearance and off road and the ability to drop for paved riding. I would be open to changing the motor out down the road, but want to start something like the GTFO or GTV kits. I'm interested to know what people would rec for my riding style. Thanks in advance.
I assume I don’t have to explain the difference between big-endian and little-endian systems to the average OSNews reader, and while most systems are either dual-endian or (most likely) little-endian, it’s still good practice to make sure your code works on both. If you don’t have a big-endian system, though, how do you do that?
When programming, it is still important to write code that runs correctly on systems with either byte order (see for example The byte order fallacy). But without access to a big-endian machine, how does one test it? QEMU provides a convenient solution. With its user mode emulation we can easily run a binary on an emulated big-endian system, and we can use GCC to cross-compile to that system.
↫ Hans Wennborg
If you want to make sure your code isn’t arbitrarily restricted to little-endian, running a few tests this way is worth it.
The search for the second crew member, a weapons system officer, is continuing, two U.S. officials said.
Archive of Our Own (AO3) is officially dropping its "beta" label after 17 years. The Organization for Transformative Works, the nonprofit behind the fanfiction site, said the site will keep evolving with new improvements even though it's no longer technically in beta. "As the AO3 software has been stable for a long time, the change is mostly cosmetic and does not indicate that everything is finalized or perfectly working," the organizations says. "Exiting beta doesn't mean we'll stop continuing to improve AO3 -- our volunteer coders and community contributors will still be working to add to and improve AO3 every day." Some of the features it's introduced over the years include a tag system, offline fanworks downloads, privacy settings that let creators restrict access to their work, and new modes for multi-chapter works. As it stands, the site says it has more than 10 million registered users and 17 million fanworks.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 4, No. 1,750.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 4, No. 1,028.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 4, No. 558.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 4, No. 762.
Officials from 23 states and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit seeking to block President Trump's executive order that aims to restrict mail voting.
The Lyrids and Eta Aquariids are coming soon to a sky near you.
SEATTLE, April 3, 2026 — Amazon Web Services (AWS) has expanded its business collaboration with Siemens Energy, a global leader in energy technology. The deal establishes AWS as a strategic cloud provider for Siemens Energy, delivering cloud services solutions to advance its digital transformation and innovation efforts. As part of this collaboration, Amazon and Siemens Energy will also explore new ways to manage energy solutions and deliver energy infrastructure for Amazon data center development and scaling.
Using AWS AI and machine learning services — including Amazon Bedrock for generative AI and agentic workflows, Amazon SageMaker for building and deploying ML models, and AWS IoT SiteWise as the foundation for industrial data collection and monitoring — Siemens Energy will enhance its capabilities in smart manufacturing and project delivery, supply chain and resource optimization, and autonomous plant operations. By leveraging AWS cloud infrastructure and AI solutions, Siemens Energy can scale its digital solutions more efficiently and securely.
“Siemens Energy’s understands the specific requirements of data center customers and has developed an extensive portfolio of technologies to address these needs,” said Frederik Doye, senior vice president of Siemens Energy in Europe. “Our strategic collaboration with AWS accelerates our efficiency and digital transformation while we deliver stable, reliable and more sustainable infrastructure that gets power to the right place at the right time.”
“This collaboration represents the future of energy technology—where cloud and AI are already transforming how energy companies operate and innovate,” said Joseph Santamaria, general manager, Energy and Utilities at AWS. “Together with Siemens Energy, we’re turning decades of operational expertise into intelligent systems that drive better performance, greater efficiency, and more sustainable energy solutions for customers worldwide.”
Under this agreement, Siemens Energy and Amazon will also explore expanded offerings across a broad scope of solutions to power data centers globally. Siemens Energy will continue to provide turnkey substation solutions to enable connectivity of Amazon’s data centers to the grid, while also exploring gigawatt-scale power generation, microgrids, sustainable backup power concepts, and other grid technologies to support growing data center demand and other critical Amazon infrastructure globally. The company will also leverage AWS to improve delivery management and ensure timely and high-quality infrastructure delivery. Together, Amazon and Siemens Energy will collaborate on systems to support data center power demand growth while incorporating grid and load stability considerations and leveraging grid and power technologies provided by Siemens Energy.
This agreement builds upon an already successful relationship between the two companies. AWS and Siemens Energy have collaborated on Siemens Energy’s IoT Connected Factory platform, which has transformed manufacturing operations by connecting assets from Siemens Energy’s global factories to AWS Cloud. The platform enables seamless integration between operational technology (OT) and IT, allowing for real-time monitoring and predictive maintenance powered by AWS’s scalable compute and storage services — driving significant improvements in operational efficiency and manufacturing productivity.
About Amazon Web Services
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is guided by customer obsession, pace of innovation, commitment to operational excellence, and long-term thinking. By democratizing technology for nearly two decades and making cloud computing and generative AI accessible to organizations of every size and industry, AWS has built one of the fastest-growing enterprise technology businesses in history. Millions of customers trust AWS to accelerate innovation, transform their businesses, and shape the future. With the most comprehensive AI capabilities and global infrastructure footprint, AWS empowers builders to turn big ideas into reality.
Source: AWS
The post AWS and Siemens Energy Team Up to Advance Energy Sector Digital Transformation appeared first on HPCwire.
The annual sales extravaganza is reportedly being rescheduled. Here's the scoop on what we've learned so far.
@wheelwizard It really was. I completely detoured to get a good vantage point for it ^-^
Alan Hayward James, 51, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, bribery, and conspiracy to rig bids.
Dayton Webber is accused of shooting Bradrick Michael Wells twice in the head during an argument
A quadruple amputee professional cornhole player acted in self-defense when he shot and killed a passenger in his Tesla during a heated argument, his attorney has said.
Dayton Webber, 27, appeared in Charles county district court via videoconference for a bail review on Wednesday, where Judge Patrick Devine noted that he left Maryland after the 22 March shooting of 27-year-old Bradrick Michael Wells. Devine ordered Webber to remain jailed without bail.
Continue reading...Google Quantum AI recently announced it is expanding its quantum computing efforts to include neutral atom systems, moving beyond its longstanding focus on superconducting qubits.
In a blog post announcing the news, Founder and Lead Hartmut Neven struck a confident tone, pointing to steady progress toward commercially relevant quantum systems by the end of the decade and framing the addition of neutral atoms as a complementary path toward that goal. Neutral atom systems bring a different set of capabilities than superconducting qubits, including the potential for large qubit arrays and flexible connectivity, with tradeoffs in areas such as gate speed.
Neven outlined three focus areas for Google’s neutral atom program: quantum error correction, modeling and simulation, and experimental hardware development.
As part of the effort, Adam Kaufman will lead Google’s neutral atom program from Boulder, Colorado, expanding the company’s presence in a region with deep expertise in atomic, molecular and optical physics, anchored by organizations such as Elevate Quantum, NIST, JILA and the University of Colorado Boulder. He will continue as a JILA Fellow and CU Boulder faculty member.
“We are delighted that Google Quantum AI has engaged Adam Kaufman to lead this important work in Boulder,” said Massimo Ruzzene, CU Boulder senior vice chancellor for research & innovation and dean of the institutes. “This partnership strengthens Boulder’s nationally recognized quantum landscape, supported by major federal investments including the NSF Q‑SEnSE Institute, the National Quantum Nanofab and the U.S. EDA Quantum TechHub.”
The neutral atom effort follows Google’s October 2025 acquisition of Atlantic Quantum, which expanded its superconducting roadmap with fluxonium-based qubit designs aimed at improving coherence and reducing error rates. Having extended its superconducting roadmap, Google is now broadening its efforts to additional qubit modalities.
Google’s announcement comes as interest in neutral atom quantum computing has grown across the industry, with companies such as QuEra, Infleqtion, Pasqal, Atom Computing and Oratomic frequently in the spotlight. Recent work emerging from Caltech, which underpins Oratomic’s launch, has examined how neutral atom architectures could support quantum computation at cryptographically relevant scales, while noting that substantial engineering challenges remain.
Google is positioning its expansion into neutral atoms alongside continued investment in superconducting systems, framing the two approaches as complementary paths toward scalable quantum computing.
“The road ahead reflects these distinct starting points: an outstanding challenge for neutral atoms remains demonstrating deep circuits with many cycles, while the next task for the superconducting modality is to demonstrate computing architectures with tens of thousands of qubits,” Neven explained. “Investing in both approaches increases our ability to deliver on our mission, sooner. By advancing both, we cross-pollinate research and engineering breakthroughs, and can deliver access to versatile platforms tailored to different types of problems.”
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Scary highlights include The Menu and Smile 2.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Today at a hearing of the Colorado Senate Business, Labor, and Technology committee, lawmakers voted unanimously to move Colorado state bill SB26-090 -- titled Exempt Critical Infrastructure from Right to Repair -- out of committee and into the state senate and house for a vote. The bill modifies Colorado's Consumer Right to Repair Digital Electronic Equipment act, which was passed in 2024 and went into effect in January 2026. While the protections secured by that act are wide, the new SB26-090 bill aims to "exempt information technology equipment that is intended for use in critical infrastructure from Colorado's consumer right to repair laws." The bill is supported by tech manufacturers like Cisco and IBM, according to lobbying disclosures. These are companies that have vested interests in manufacturing things like routers, server equipment, and computers and stand to profit if they can control who fixes their products and the tools, components, and software used to make those upgrades and repairs. They also cite cybersecurity concerns, saying that giving people access to the tools and systems they would need to repair a device could also enable bad actors to use those methods for nefarious means. (This is a common argument manufacturers make when opposing right-to-repair laws.) [...] During the hearing, more than a dozen repair advocates spoke from organizations like Pirg, the Repair Association, and iFixit opposing the bill. YouTuber and repair advocate Louis Rossmann was there. The main problem, repair advocates say, is that the bill deliberately uses vague language to make the case for controlling who can fix their products. [...] The Colorado Labor and Technology committee advanced the bill, but it still needs to go through votes on the Colorado Senate and House floors before going into effect. Those votes may take place as early as next week. Regardless of how the bill goes in the state, it's likely that manufacturers will continue their push to alter or undo repair legislation in other states across the country. "The 'information technology' and 'critical infrastructure' thing is as cynical as you can possibly be about it," says Nathan Proctor, the leader of Pirg's US right-to-repair campaign. "It sounds scary to lawmakers, but it just means the internet." The current wording of the bill "leaves it up to the manufacturers to determine which items they will need to provide repair tools and parts to owners and independent repairers and which ones they don't," says Danny Katz, executive director CoPIRG, the Colorado branch of the consumer advocate group Pirg. "This is a bad policy and would be a big step back for Coloradans' repair rights." iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens said in the hearing: "There's a general principle in cybersecurity that obscurity is not security," iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens said in the hearing. "The money that's behind the scenes, that's what's driving the bill."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Officials say other remains missing in first downing of US fighter plane since start of war
One US service member has been rescued after a US F-15E Strike Eagle fighter was shot down over Iran, prompting a frantic effort to locate its two-strong crew, in the first such incident since the war began almost five weeks ago.
US officials familiar with the situation said one crew member was still missing late on Friday, after Iranian state media released images of a tail fin and other debris accompanied by an initial claim that an advanced US F-35 had been hit by a new air defence system over central Iran.
Continue reading...California House members tour Otay Mesa center, which has faced allegations of poor conditions and sexual assaults
Two California lawmakers conducted an oversight visit on Thursday at Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Otay Mesa detention center, an immigrant detention facility that has faced allegations of overcrowding, poor conditions and sexual assaults.
The visit had been previously scheduled. But Mike Levin, a Democratic congressman, told the Guardian he planned to conduct more unannounced visits following a federal court ruling that struck down the Trump administration’s policy of forcing members of Congress to announce oversight visits seven days in advance.
Continue reading...Pooh Shiesty among those accused of robbing and kidnapping three men after dispute involving record label
Federal prosecutors on Thursday accused rapper Pooh Shiesty and eight others of robbing three men at gunpoint and kidnapping them in January in Texas after a contract dispute involving rap star Gucci Mane’s record label.
The US attorney’s office in Dallas declined to name the victims and an FBI affidavit attached to a criminal complaint only refers to them by their initials. One victim, RD, is described as the owner of 1017 Records – the label belonging to Gucci Mane, whose legal name is Radric Delantic Davis.
Continue reading...PARIS, April 3, 2026 — On the occasion of an official visit by Sébastien Martin, minister of state for Industry of France and Anne Le Hénanff, Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Affairs of France in its R&D center in France, Bull today unveiled a major recruitment plan to hire 500 employees in 2026.
Now an independent company under the shareholding of the French State, Bull is pursuing this strategic investment reflects as part of its strong growth trajectory, with a 16% revenue increase from 2024 to 2025 and its continued acceleration across the full spectrum of advanced computing and artificial intelligence (AI).
The targeted profiles will primarily include R&D specialists, data scientists and HPC-AI experts, as well as talents to strengthen Bull’s services, general functions and business teams in support of its continued growth. These recruitments will accelerate Bull’s innovation programs and strategic priorities – particularly in key components and in support of Bull’s flagship HPC‑AI-quantum initiatives – while further enhancing the company’s AI platforms and use‑case expertise.
As a tech player deeply committed to innovation, Bull invests 13% of its revenue in R&D, operates four research centres, and holds more than 1,600 patents, also providing a unique foundation to advance Data & AI platforms and use cases alongside its current community of 300 data scientists. With a more agile structure, a clear innovation roadmap and strong investment in talent, Bull is entering a new phase of acceleration, to drive the future of advanced computing and AI technologies.
Sébastien Martin, Minister for Industry of France, said: “This plan to hire 500 new employees demonstrates Bull’s ability to embark on a new phase of growth, driven by a renewed leadership team and a strong industrial vision dedicated to serving France. By investing in talent and innovation, the company is making a significant contribution to strengthening our digital sovereignty and global competitiveness.”
Anne Le Hénanff, Minister-Delegate for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Affairs of France, said: “I welcome Bull’s revival and the announcement of 500 new hires in 2026, a significant share of which will be based at its Les Clayes-sous-Bois site. These recruitments respond to a major challenge: building in France the skills of the future that we need to safeguard our technological sovereignty. This is exactly the path we want to support, that of a France investing in its future.”
Emmanuel Le Roux, CEO of Bull, commented: “We are opening a new chapter for Bull, as an independent company, driven by strong ambitions. A key symbol of this new phase is our ability to attract new talent to complement our existing key expertise to support our growth and our technological leadership. We want to welcome professionals who seek technological excellence, digital sovereignty as well as sustainable and open innovation.”
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About Bull
Leveraging nearly a century of innovations, Bull is a global leader for High-Performance Computing, Artificial Intelligence and Quantum technologies with c.720m€ in revenue and 3,000 professionals operating in 32 countries. Built on an open, end-to-end and trusted approach, Bull designs, deploys and operates hardware, software and strategic services that unlock enterprise value, accelerate scientific research and advance society. Driven by world-class R&D, backed by 1,600 patents, manufacturing excellence and data sciences expertise, Bull enables nations and industries to fully control their AI and data and to drive progress for the benefit of the planet.
Source: Bull
The post Bull Targets 500 New Roles in 2026 Across R&D, Data Science and HPC-AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was treated for dehydration after falling ill at an event in Philadelphia on March 20, the court's public information office said.
Customs and Border Patrol agents were helping rescue two boaters whose vessel capsized when they themselves were put in danger.
| Person selling said it has between 900 and 1000 miles on it, holds battery and no issues. It would be my first onewheel. I have experience with skateboards and long boards and cycling so I feel I’ll pick it up easier. [link] [comments] |
OSAKA, Japan and IRVINE, Calif., April 3, 2026 — A joint research team between the Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Biology (QIQB) at The University of Osaka and Fixstars Corporation has demonstrated one of the world’s largest classical simulations of iterative quantum phase estimation (IQPE) circuits for quantum chemistry on up to 1,024 GPUs, surpassing the previous 40-qubit limit. The result expands the scale of molecular systems available for the development and validation of quantum algorithms for future fault-tolerant quantum computers, supporting progress toward industrial applications in drug discovery and materials development.

Large-scale classical simulation of IQPE quantum circuits demonstrated in this work. Larger qubit counts and more Hamiltonian terms result in deeper circuits and longer simulation times.
Overcoming unresolved challenges in drug discovery and developing new materials to address climate change will require advanced quantum chemical calculations beyond the reach of current technology. Against this backdrop, fault-tolerant quantum computers (FTQC) are widely anticipated as a key enabling technology, making it increasingly important to develop and validate, ahead of their deployment, the quantum algorithms that will eventually run on such systems.
Quantum phase estimation (QPE) serves as a core subroutine in many quantum algorithms and, in quantum chemistry, is expected to enable analyses that are difficult for current classical computers. The research group, consisting of Professor Wataru Mizukami, Assistant Technical Staff Shoma Hiraoka, and Assistant Technical Staff Sho Nishida at QIQB, and Yusuke Teranishi of Fixstars Corporation, focused on Iterative QPE (IQPE), a QPE-based method that requires fewer qubits, and implemented it in the quantum circuit simulator for quantum chemistry, “chemqulacs-gpu.”
The group also developed and applied a new parallel computing technology to maximize the performance of large-scale GPU clusters. As a result, they exceeded the previous limit of 40 qubits for state-vector-based quantum circuit simulations for quantum chemistry reported in earlier studies and successfully carried out one of the world’s largest such simulations. The simulations achieved the following results:
To achieve this result, the team implemented IQPE in the quantum chemistry simulator “chemqulacs-gpu” and developed a parallel computing method optimized for large-scale GPU clusters. Using up to 1,024 NVIDIA H100 GPUs on AIST’s ABCI-Q system, the researchers overcame conventional computational bottlenecks and extended quantum circuit simulations of quantum algorithms for quantum chemistry beyond the previous 40-qubit limit.
This achievement expands the range of molecules that can be targeted in the development and validation of quantum algorithms and supports further progress toward more complex and realistic molecular simulations on future fault-tolerant quantum computers.
“Large-scale simulation of quantum circuits using 1,024 GPUs in unison is technically demanding, and within the limited 48-hour computation window we repeatedly encountered unexpected issues. I am delighted that the team, led by two young researchers, Yusuke Teranishi and Shoma Hiraoka, persevered throughout the effort, and that, with prompt support from the ABCI-Q operations staff, we were able to achieve one of the world’s largest results. I hope this accomplishment will help accelerate the development of quantum algorithms.”
Research Collaboration
This research was conducted as a collaborative study based on the research plan of Professor Mizukami at QIQB. QIQB led the research and development of methods for classically simulating IQPE quantum circuits on GPU clusters, and implemented the interface connecting the quantum chemistry layer to the simulation layer. Fixstars Corporation provided GPU performance profiling and optimization technologies, and was responsible for optimizing the simulation code and tuning its performance on ABCI-Q. This work resolved complex inter-GPU communication bottlenecks and enabled highly efficient circuit simulation.
Summary
A joint research team between the Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Biology (QIQB) at The University of Osaka and Fixstars Corporation has demonstrated one of the world’s largest classical simulations of iterative quantum phase estimation (IQPE) quantum circuits for quantum chemistry on up to 1,024 GPUs, surpassing the previous 40-qubit limit. The result expands the scale of molecular systems available for the development and validation of quantum algorithms for future fault-tolerant quantum computers, supporting progress toward industrial applications in drug discovery and materials development.
Reference URLs
Professor Wataru Mizukami Researcher Profile: https://rd.iai.osaka-u.ac.jp/en/3df5398d10c44be6.html
About The University of Osaka
The University of Osaka was founded in 1931 as one of the seven imperial universities of Japan and is now one of Japan’s leading comprehensive universities with a broad disciplinary spectrum. This strength is coupled with a singular drive for innovation that extends throughout the scientific process, from fundamental research to the creation of applied technology with positive economic impacts. Its commitment to innovation has been recognized in Japan and around the world. Now, The University of Osaka is leveraging its role as a Designated National University Corporation selected by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology to contribute to innovation for human welfare, sustainable development of society, and social transformation.
About Fixstars Corporation
Fixstars is a technology company dedicated to accelerating AI inference and training through advanced software optimization solutions. It supports innovation in healthcare, manufacturing, finance, mobility, and other industries.
Source: Fixstars
The post University of Osaka and Fixstars Advance IQPE Quantum Chemistry Simulation on 1,024 GPUs appeared first on HPCwire.
The new feature makes it easier to exchange media across the two mobile ecosystems.
Northern Irishman bristles at suggestions he has peaked as he returns to Augusta with the same intensity as always
It was an opening which depicted more than a decade of toil. “I’d like to start this press conference with a question,” said Rory McIlroy. “What are we all going to talk about next year?”
The wait was over. McIlroy had not only won the Masters, not only ended an 11-year wait for a fifth major, and not only become the sixth man in history to complete a grand slam. The ticking of all three boxes at once and in extraordinary circumstances was why the scenes at Augusta National in 2025 are unlikely to be matched as the 90th Masters staging approaches.
Continue reading...Some users are finding the change frustrating, but here's how to turn it off.
The Wall Street Journal shares the "wild behind-the-scenes story" of how the world's largest and most destructive botnet was uncovered and taken down, writes Slashdot reader sturgeon. "At times, the network known as Kimwolf included more than a million compromised home Android devices and digital photo frames -- enough DDoS firepower to disrupt internet traffic across the U.S. and beyond." From the report: Sitting in his dorm room at the Rochester Institute of Technology, Benjamin Brundage was closing in on a mystery that had even seasoned internet investigators baffled. A cat meme helped him crack the case. A growing network of hacked devices was launching the biggest cyberattacks ever seen on the internet. It had become the most powerful cyberweapon ever assembled, large enough to knock a state or even a small country offline. Investigators didn't know exactly who had built it -- or how. Brundage had been following the attacks, too -- and, in between classes, was conducting his own investigation. In September, the college senior started messaging online with an anonymous user who seemed to have insider knowledge. As they chatted on Discord, a platform favored by videogamers, Brundage was eager to get more information, but he didn't want to come off as too serious and shut down the conversation. So every now and then he'd send a funny GIF to lighten the mood. Brundage was fluent in the memes, jokes and technical jargon popular with young gamers and hackers who are extremely online. "It was a bit of just asking over and over again and then like being a bit unserious," said Brundage. At one point, he asked for some technical details. He followed up with the cat meme: a six-second clip that showed a hand adjusting a necktie on a fluffy gray cat. Brundage didn't expect it to work, but he got the information. "It took me by surprise," he said. Eventually the leaker hinted there was a new vulnerability on the internet. Brundage, who is 22, would learn it threatened tens of millions of consumers and as much as a quarter of the world's corporations. As he unraveled the mystery, he impressed veteran researchers with his findings -- including federal law enforcement, which took action against the network two weeks ago. Chad Seaman, a researcher at Akamai, joked at one point that the internet could go down if Brundage spent too much time on his exams.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
April 3, 2026 — In its MLPerf Inference 6.0 submission, AMD did not simply revisit familiar benchmarks with a faster GPU. It expanded into first-time workloads, crossed the 1-million-tokens-per-second threshold at multinode scale and showed that partners can reproduce the results across a broader ecosystem.
That combination matters because AMD customers no longer evaluate inference platforms on one metric alone. They want competitive single-node performance, efficient scale-out, faster bring-up on new models, reproducible results across partner systems and confidence that the software stack can keep pace. MLPerf Inference 6.0 let AMD show all of that in one submission.
Just as important, AMD showed that these results are not isolated. A broad partner ecosystem submitted across four AMD Instinct GPU types that closely reproduced numbers submitted by AMD and the first three-GPU heterogeneous MLPerf submission demonstrated that AMD hardware and AMD ROCm software can orchestrate meaningful inference throughput even across systems in different geographies.
AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs: Designed for Inference from the Ground Up
AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs are built on AMD CDNA 4 architecture with a 3nm process, bring 185 billion transistors, add FP4 and FP6 support, and pair all of that with up to 288GB of HBM3E memory.
With up to 10 petaflops of FP4 and FP6 performance, support for models up to 520 billion parameters on a single GPU and an industry-standard UBB8 node available in both air-cooled and direct liquid-cooled configurations, AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs are built to deliver more than speed. They also are designed to deliver large-model capacity and deployment readiness in one platform.
Defining Moments from the AMD MLPerf Inference 6.0 Submission
MLPerf Inference 6.0 results from AMD go well beyond a single proof point, revealing meaningful progress across performance, model coverage, scale and reproducibility. Several breakthroughs stand out:
1. AMD Breaks the 1M Tokens/Sec Barrier in MLPerf Inference
One of the biggest milestones in this round is that for the first time, AMD surpassed 1 million tokens per second in the MLPerf Inference benchmark. AMD crossed that threshold on Llama 2 70B in both Server and Offline benchmarks, and on GPT-OSS-120B in Offline – all at multinode scale on AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs.
The industry increasingly evaluates inference at cluster scale, where aggregate throughput and time-to-serve determine whether infrastructure is ready for deployment. Surpassing 1 million tokens per second demonstrates production-class inference throughput.
2. AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs Deliver a Clear Generational Leap vs. Previous Gen
AMD also demonstrated a major generational uplift on Llama 2 70B Server. The AMD Instinct MI355X GPU delivered 100,282 tokens per second, displaying 3.1x more throughput than the previously submitted AMD Instinct MI325X GPU results.
That is a meaningful jump in six months, and it reflects the power of the full stack: AMD CDNA 4 architecture, high compute density, support for FP4 and FP6, large HBM3E capacity and AMD ROCm software optimizations tuned for modern large language model inference.
3. Llama 2 70B Shows Broad Single-Node Competitiveness
On Llama 2 70B, the most recognized large language model benchmark in MLPerf, the AMD Instinct MI355X Platform delivered highly competitive single-node results against both NVIDIA B200 and B300 GPUs. Against B200, the AMD Instinct MI355X platform tied in Offline, delivered 97% of Server performance and reached 119% of Interactive benchmark performance. Against B300 single-node, the AMD Instinct MI355X platform reached 93% in Server, 92% in Offline and 104% in Interactive.
Especially important is the breadth of the results. This is not a one-scenario story. AMD shows competitiveness across batch throughput in Offline, sustained throughput in Server and responsiveness in Interactive.
4. GPT-OSS-120B Demonstrates Fast First-Time Model Bring-Up
GPT-OSS-120B is among the most exciting parts of this Inference 6.0 submission because it was a workload run in MLPerf for the first time. First-time model enablement is difficult – the model must be brought up, optimized, validated for accuracy and pushed to competitive performance inside MLPerf timing.
Even with that complexity, the AMD Instinct MI355X platform delivered 111% of B200 Offline performance and 115% of NVIDIA B200 Server single-node performance. Against NVIDIA B300 single-node, the AMD Instinct MI355X platform reached a competitive 91% in Offline and 82% in Server.
5. Wan-2.2-t2v Extends AMD into All-New Text-to-Video Inference
MLPerf Inference 6.0 also let AMD expand beyond large language models (LLMs) into text-to-video generation with a first-time submission on Wan-2.2-t2v. This benchmark has two tests: Offline and Single Stream. For this submission AMD focused its effort on the Single Stream scenario and as a result the submission is in the Open category rather than Closed (which requires both Offline and Single Stream). However, AMD’s Single Stream run did satisfy the Closed submission rules and thus can be directly compared to scores in Closed division.
Even so, the result is impressive for a first-time AMD effort on a brand-new workload category: The AMD Instinct MI355X platform achieved 93% of NVIDIA B200 single-node performance and 87% of NVIDIA B300 single-node performance in Single Stream. After the deadline, additional tuning moved Single Stream to 108% of B200 and parity with B300, while unofficial Offline results reached 111% of B200 and 88% of B300. Post-deadline numbers were not part of the official MLPerf submission and were not verified by MLCommons, but they clearly show how quickly performance improved once AMD had more time to tune.
6. Multinode Inference Shows Efficient Scale-Out
Interest in multinode inference is rising as models get larger, deployments become more demanding and the industry lays the groundwork for rack-scale systems such as the AMD Helios solution. AMD’s MLPerf Inference 6.0 submission shows that the AMD Instinct MI355X is ready for that transition.
On Llama 2 70B, AMD scaled from one node to 11 nodes and stayed remarkably close to ideal linear scaling.
At 11 nodes and 87 AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs, AMD delivered 1,042,110 tokens per second in Offline, 1,016,380 tokens per second in Server and 785,522 tokens per second in Interactive. Scale-out efficiency reached 93% in Offline, 93% in Server and 98% in Interactive. Offline scale-out is the more standard path, but Server and Interactive are harder because they must maintain latency requirements as the cluster grows, which makes these results especially compelling.
Multinode results continue on GPT-OSS-120B. These results become even more interesting since this was AMD’s first GPT-OSS multinode submission. The question was not whether the model could be enabled, but whether it could be scaled efficiently across a real cluster. At 12 nodes and 94 AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs, AMD delivered 1,031,070 tokens per second in Offline and 900,054 tokens per second in Server. Just as important, AMD stayed close to ideal 12x scaling, with 92% efficiency in Offline and 93% in Server. That made GPT-OSS the second model on which AMD crossed the 1-million-tokens-per-second mark at multinode scale.
Ecosystem Scale and Reproducibility Across Partner Submissions
Another major highlight for AMD in the MLPerf Inference 6.0 submission is ecosystem momentum. This round resulted in a tie for most partners submitting on AMD Instinct hardware with nine: Cisco, Dell, Giga Computing, HPE, MangoBoost, MiTAC, Oracle, Supermicro and Red Hat.
Those submissions spanned four AMD Instinct GPU types: MI300X, MI325X, MI350X and MI355X. It shows that the ecosystem is not limited to one flagship configuration; it covers multiple generations and multiple deployment models across OEM, ODM and cloud-style platforms.
This reproducibility is especially powerful. On AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs, partner results landed within 4% of submission made by AMD, and some landed within 1%, even on workloads run for the first time. That is a very strong signal that these numbers are not fragile lab artifacts; they are reproducible across real partner systems thanks to predictable AMD hardware and AMD ROCm software.
First 3-GPU Heterogeneous Submission Demonstrates Flexible Inference Across Geographies
One of the most forward-looking results is the first MLPerf heterogeneous submission built across three AMD Instinct GPU types: MI300X, MI325X and MI355X. Submitted by Dell and MangoBoost, the configuration reached 141,521 tokens per second on Llama 2 70B Server and 151,843 tokens per second on Llama 2 70B Offline.
An especially important detail is geography. The AMD Instinct MI355X platform was located in Dell’s lab in the United States, while the Instinct MI300X and MI325X platforms were in Korea. That makes this more than a mixed-generation inference story, it is also a proof point for orchestration across systems in different geographies.
Final Takeaway
The AMD MLPerf Inference 6.0 submission marks a major step forward for AMD and its generative AI story. Across all-new workloads, AMD Instinct MI355X GPUs delivered highly competitive single-node results, incredibly efficient multinode scale-out performance, first-time model bring-up on GPT-OSS-120B and Wan-2.2-t2v, and a milestone of delivering more than 1 million tokens per second at cluster scale.
At the center of all of this is AMD ROCm software, and a disciplined annual roadmap cadence. From the AMD Instinct MI300X GPU to the MI325X GPU to the MI350 Series featuring the AMD Instinct MI355X GPU, AMD is moving quickly, expanding model support, and building the software and systems foundation needed for future rack-scale AI deployments. With the AMD Helios rack-scale solution powered by the AMD Instinct MI400 Series and future AMD Instinct generations on the horizon, MLPerf Inference 6.0 reinforces a clear message: AMD is not just participating in the generative AI inference transition, it is helping define what production-ready GenAI infrastructure looks like.
More from HPCwire: MLCommons Releases New MLPerf Inference v6.0 Benchmark Results
Source: AMD
The post AMD MLPerf Submission Highlights MI355X Gains, Multinode Inference Performance appeared first on HPCwire.
Best known for voice-acting in Bob’s Burgers, Mirman was injured after his vehicle struck a toll plaza and ignited
Bob’s Burgers voice actor Eugene Mirman says he is “extraordinarily thankful to the heroic people” that pulled him from the wreckage of his fiery car crash on Tuesday at a New Hampshire toll plaza – an accident that reportedly left him with serious injuries.
The 51-year-old comedian expressed his gratitude in an Instagram post late on Friday morning, which also described his being emotionally buoyed up by “the well wishes, love and kind messages from friends and strangers” in the wake of the wreck.
Continue reading...Finding the right mortgage lender can save you thousands of dollars while simplifying the homebuying process.
Bodycam footage of Tiger Woods’s arrest for DUI shows the golfer looking surprised when he was handcuffed by police officers at the scene of a vehicle crash last week and telling a deputy he had spoken to 'the president' on the phone after the incident. Woods told officers he was looking down at his phone and changing the radio station before the incident, in which his Land Rover clipped a truck and rolled on to its side. Woods pleaded not guilty to DUI and demanded a jury trial. In the bodycam footage he denies drinking any alcohol that day but admitted he had taken 'a few medications'. Woods took a breath test after the crash, which showed no signs he had drunk alcohol, but police said he refused a urine test. He was released on bail eight hours after his arrest. His case is due back in court on 5 May for a hearing
Continue reading...Ukraine’s Emergency Services posted images of rescue workers trying to save the animals — in one instance administering CPR to a dog — at the clinic in Chabany.
A federal judge on Friday rejected efforts by the Justice Department to revive two subpoenas it served to the Federal Reserve.
PM gets widespread backing after president’s mocking impersonation takes US-UK relationship to new low
Keir Starmer has been warned his relationship with Donald Trump may be beyond repair after the US president derided the prime minister for consulting his team about military decisions, in a mocking impersonation.
In a new low for UK-US relations, Trump appeared to imitate Starmer in a weak voice during an Easter lunch speech at the White House, and said the UK was “not our best” ally.
Continue reading...Aria Fani of University of Washington’s Middle East Center is latest critic of Israel to lose position at US university
A University of Washington professor was removed as head of the school’s Middle East Center after reportedly using newsletters from the center to criticize the US and Israel’s war on Iran and describe Zionism as “cancerous”.
His case is one of at least three incidents in the past month in which higher education faculty members have faced suspension or dismissal after voicing opposition to US-Israeli actions in the Middle East.
Continue reading...U.S. Customs and Border Protection is set to order a vast arsenal of chemical grenades, sprays, projectiles, and other weapons, according to procurement materials reviewed by The Intercept. The purchase follows months of abuse of these very munitions on American streets.
CBP will spend up to $50 million on what it refers to as “Less Lethal Specialty Munitions,” a euphemism for weapons intended to merely hurt or disable a target rather than killing them. The agency is looking for a vendor who can supply vast quantities of 123 different types of munitions across 10 different categories, the contracting document says.
“When there’s so many different kinds, it makes you question, tactically, what’s the goal there?”
“The sheer quantity and the myriad different weapons is the most remarkable thing to me,” Rohini Haar, an emergency physician and researcher of less lethal ordnance told The Intercept. “When there’s so many different kinds, it makes you question, tactically, what’s the goal there?”
Federal agents’ indiscriminate use of “less-lethal” chemical weapons against the nonviolent demonstrators became a hallmark of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Contract documents show the Department of Homeland Security will continue to stockpile a massive arsenal of tear gases and projectile weapons. (Neither CBP nor its parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, immediately responded to requests for comment.)
Haar questioned whether the Department of Homeland Security will be able to suitably train federal agents to use such a wide variety of weapons.
“Each of them has a different sort of technical spec or specifications,” she explained. “Some of them are handheld grenades that you have to know to throw, but not hit people’s heads. Some of them are fired from a weapon, like a launcher, and so you have to be standing farther away than you would be with a grenade.”
The shopping list includes a litany of different ways to hit people and objects with two common types of tear gas: chlorobenzalmalononitrile, or CS, a chemical weapon previously used by the U.S. in Vietnam but now banned for military use, and oleoresin capsicum, or OC, derived from chili peppers.
CBP agents already regularly use CS and OC-based weapons in the field, including against protesters. The procurement document shows that armed federal officers will continue to wield the threat of chemical agents against the public despite ample documentation of misuse.
Some of CBP’s desired weapons are designed to spread these chemical weapons indiscriminately. Included on the wish list are quart containers of liquid CS and OC meant to be spread through thermal “foggers,” dispersal devices meant to create mists with microscopic droplets of liquid. Defense Technology, a longtime chemical weapons vendor for CBP and U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement, says its Golden Eagle Pepper Fogger Generator can output 100,000 cubic feet of tear gas in 26 seconds.
Both chemicals are potent chemicals that can cause health effects far beyond debilitating pain.
“Greater exposure to chemical agents,” a 2023 study by the University of Minnesota School of Public Health found, “was significantly associated with higher odds of an adverse reproductive health outcomes.”
The outcomes included “uterine cramping, early menstrual bleeding, breast tenderness and delayed menstrual bleeding.”
The procurement list includes smoke grenades in four different colors and 12 different varieties of tear-gas grenades.
The weapons will be ordered in enormous volumes. CBP projects purchasing over 242,000 munitions from the “Hand Delivered Pyrotechnic Canisters” category and over 100,000 rounds of “impact munitions” fired from grenade launcher-style tubes.
The latter category includes foam-tipped “sponge cartridge” ammunition designed to either release a tear gas-style chemical upon hitting someone or merely harm them through sheer force of impact.
Fired at close enough range, so-called less lethal rounds can easily kill or maim their target.
Anti-ICE demonstrator Kaden Rummler lost sight in his left eye after he was shot in the face by a federal officer in January. After the Los Angeles Police Department fired one such round directly into the face of another protester last summer, he was injured so seriously that he required surgery and had his jaw wired shut for six weeks.
“Distraction devices,” which emit loud sounds, bright lights, or other effects to stun targets, were also on CBP’s wish list, with plans to purchase 13,000 of them. The procurement document required the weapons be capable of emitting a sound of 175 decibels, louder than a gunshot or jet engine. The National Hearing Conservation Association warns of sound of 140 decibels can case permanent damage and “death of hearing tissue” begins at 180 decibels.
“In addition to injuries caused directly by the primary blast wave, such as ear-drum rupture or lung injury, secondary and tertiary injuries can also occur as a result of these explosive devices,” says a 2023 publication by Physicians for Human Rights that was co-authored by Haar.
CBP’s inclusion of rubber-ball grenades and scattershot projectiles alarmed Scott Reynhout, a researcher who also co-authored the PHR paper. When such grenades are thrown or launched at people, they release a burst of small rubber fragments akin to shrapnel in every direction and can be configured to simultaneously release tear gas.
“The procurement of the latter weapons is worrying as these have not seen widespread use yet by CBP/ICE in protests,” said Reynhout, referring to the scattershot projectiles, which he said were akin to “rubber buckshot.”
Such weapons were used by Chilean security forces against protesters six years ago, he said, resulting in more than 400 cases of partial or full-blindness, and are also employed extensively by Iranian police and paramilitaries in their crackdowns on demonstrations.
“If it can go through glass, particle board, and walls, it can go through a body.”
Weapons designed to pierce building materials were also included in the wish list.
CBP plans to purchase over 12,000 “ferret rounds,” projectiles filled with powdered or liquified chemicals that punch through barriers and spread tear gas on the other side.
Haar said, “If it can go through glass, particle board, and walls, it can go through a body.”
The post DHS Launches Massive “Less Lethal” Chemical Weapons Buying Spree appeared first on The Intercept.
Tony Isaac shares a report from NPR: When it comes to using AI, it seems some lawyers just can't help themselves. Last year saw a rapid increase in court sanctions against attorneys for filing briefs containing errors generated by artificial intelligence tools. The most prominent case was that of the lawyers for MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who were fined $3,000 each for filing briefs containing fictitious, AI-generated citations. But as a cautionary tale, it doesn't seem to have had much effect. The numbers started taking off last year, and the rate is still increasing. He counts a total of more than 1,200 to date, of which about 800 are from U.S. courts. "I am surprised that people are still doing this when it's been in the news," says Carla Wale, associate dean of information & technology and director of the law library at the University of Washington School of Law. "Whatever the generative AI tool gives you -- as in, 'Look at these cases' -- you, under the rules of professional conduct, you have to read those cases. You have to read the cases to make sure what you are citing is accurate." "I think that lawyers who understand how to effectively and ethically use generative AI replace lawyers who don't," she says. "That's what I think the future is."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Rates on HELOCs and home equity loans are near multi-year lows, but the better pick depends on more than the rate.
UConn men and women are both in the Final Four
20,000 customers of Jordan’s Furniture could be repaid
College basketball players aren’t the only ones poised to win big in this year’s March Madness.
A New England furniture chain is offering to reimburse customers for products bought earlier this year if both the UConn men’s and women’s basketball teams reach the championship games.
Continue reading...Crisis in the Middle East, a Russian drone attack in Kharkiv, a Saharan dust storm in Crete and the launch of Artemis II – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists
Warning: this gallery contains images some readers may find distressing
Continue reading...Grandson of Reese’s cups inventor claims Hershey faked a pledge to switch back to original chocolate recipes
The grandson of HB Reese, the inventor of Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, has accused the chocolate giant Hershey of faking a pledge to investors to switch back the recipes of its popular products – including KitKat – to the original milk and dark chocolate ones.
A confectionary-focused dust-up between Brad Reese and the $42bn Pennsylvania-based company began in February when Reese, 70, accused the company of “quietly replacing” the ingredients – or “architecture” – in his grandfather’s invention with cheaper “compound coatings” and “peanut-butter-style crèmes”.
Continue reading...Democrats rebuke White House’s ‘bleak and unacceptable’ view of priorities after 10% cuts proposed to other programs
Defense spending would surge to its highest level in decades under a budget proposal put forward by the Trump administration on Friday, while other government programs would face cuts totaling 10%.
The document prepared by the White House office of management and budget (OMB) is a starting point for negotiations that will probably occupy Congress’s appropriators in the coming months, and is unlikely to be enacted in full.
Continue reading...Academics and youth workers say cuts to services and lack of public space help explain recent unrest in south London
It started with a flyer sent around on Snapchat. Teenagers were invited to gather at a south London basketball court to celebrate the start of the Easter holidays. They were told to bring their own weed and laughing gas because it was going to be a late one.
What followed in the hours after was chaos. Hundreds of young people came to the “link-up” last Saturday, and then gathered on Clapham High Street.
Continue reading...The president’s outbursts on allies and Nato were further confirmation that Europe cannot wait to bolster security – and Britain must play its part
“She had no more surprises for him; the unexpected in her behaviour was the only thing to expect,” Henry James wrote in his novel Daisy Miller. Leaders dealing with Donald Trump surely recognise the sentiment. James’s character was a young American out of her depth in Europe, falling victim to prejudices. Mr Trump is a real-world problem, and this time, Europe is battered by the prejudices and vengefulness of the American.
This week alone the US president has publicly mocked the British prime minister and armed forces (as weak), the French president (over his marriage), told allies to get their own oil – having set the Middle East on fire – and said leaving Nato was “beyond reconsideration”. Mr Trump’s wishful thinking has hit reality in Iran, where the war that he and Benjamin Netanyahu began will not be easily ended. His resulting frustration, concern about domestic political repercussions and desire to distract the public are matched by vindictiveness towards allies who rightly refused to join in.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Bondi, reportedly ousted due to her botched handling of Epstein files, is still set to testify before Congress on 14 April
As news emerged this week presaging Donald Trump’s dismissal of Pam Bondi, one of his motivations reportedly related to her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein investigative files.
While the new acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, insisted he had “never” heard the president say “that anything that happened to her had anything to do with the Epstein files”, it’s clear the issue has dogged Bondi throughout her tumultuous tenure.
Continue reading...Gold has fallen dramatically from its January peak. Here's what investors should consider before making a move.
Knowing today's mortgage rates can help new homebuyers and homeowners looking to lock in a good deal.
Eghosa Ogbebor, 14, was fatally shot on Thursday.
Our test results were a wake-up call to take our hearing health seriously. Here's why you should, too.
Hiring was much stronger than expected in March, with employers adding roughly three times the number of jobs economists predicted.
President Trump's new budget proposal asks Congress for $1.5 trillion in defense spending — a 42% increase — while cutting nondefense spending by $73 billion, or 10%.
The photo shows the entire planet, as well as the Northern and Southern lights.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
Havana makes a Holy Week ‘humanitarian’ gesture as Russian tanker is allowed to reach oil-starved island
Cuban authorities have begun to free prisoners after announcing they would pardon 2,010 inmates, the second release in less than a month as the country faces heightened US pressure.
More than 20 inmates emerged from La Lima penitentiary in east Havana on Friday, holding their release papers, crying and hugging relatives who had been waiting for them all morning.
Continue reading...Despite hundreds of billions of dollars in investment, nearly half of planned U.S. data center projects are being delayed or canceled. "One major reason behind these setbacks is the availability of key electrical components -- such as transformers, switchgear, and batteries -- that are used both at data center sites and outside of them," reports Tom's Hardware. "Meanwhile, grid infrastructure is also stressed by electric vehicles and electrified heating systems." Tom's Hardware reports: Approximately 12 gigawatts (12 GW) of data center capacity is expected to come online in the U.S. in 2026, according to data by market intelligence firm Sightline Climate cited by Bloomberg. Yet only about one-third of that capacity is currently under active construction because of various constraints. Electrical infrastructure represents less than 10% of total data center cost, but it is as vital as compute hardware. A delay in any single element of the power chain can halt the entire project, which makes transformers, switchgear, and similar devices critical items despite their relatively small share of CapEx. Due to high demand, lead times for high-power transformers have expanded dramatically in the U.S.: delivery typically took 24 to 30 months before 2020, but waiting periods can stretch to as long as five years today, according to Sightline Climate cited by Bloomberg. For AI data centers, this is a catastrophe as their deployment cycles are under 18 months. To address shortages, companies are turning to global markets. As a result, Canada, Mexico, and South Korea became the biggest suppliers of high-power transformers for AI data centers to AI data centers. At the same time, imports of high-power transformers from China surged from fewer than 1,500 units in 2022 to more than 8,000 units in 2025 through October, according to Wood Mackenzie data cited by Bloomberg. The volatility of exports from China does not end with transformers, as the PRC accounts for over 40% of U.S. battery imports, while its share in certain transformer and switchgear categories remains near 30%, according to Bloomberg.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Residents in at least 10 states are organizing campaigns to tax wealth in order to fund schools and other social services
Karen Sanchez likes to meet new people at trivia nights or concerts at her local brewery at the edge of Los Angeles county. Her opening line: “How do you feel about taxing the rich?”
Sanchez is volunteering to collect signatures to put a contentious “billionaire tax” on California’s November ballot, sponsored by her union, SEIU – United Healthcare Workers West. The proposal would impose a one-time 5% wealth tax on the state’s 200-plus billionaires to cover lost federal funding for California hospitals and emergency services and to fund public education and food assistance programs. She says most people have been eager to sign on – and want to see more of it.
Continue reading...OLED and mini-LED are two of the best TV technologies. Which is better? Which should you get? Here are their pros and cons.
Iran shot down a U.S. Air Force F-15 fighter jet, U.S. officials said on Friday. At about the same time, a second U.S. plane, an A-10 Warthog, crashed near the Strait of Hormuz.
Both aircraft had two-person crews, U.S. officials told The Intercept, and in both cases, one crew member was rescued and one remains missing.
The downing of the U.S. plane undermined an assertion of strength President Donald Trump made in a nationally televised speech earlier this week.
“They have no anti-aircraft equipment. Their radar is 100 percent annihilated,” Trump said Wednesday. “We are unstoppable as a military force.”
A month ago, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Iranian leaders were “looking up and seeing only U.S. and Israeli air power every minute of every day until we decide it’s over.” He continued: “Iran will be able to do nothing about it. B-2s, B-52s, B-1s, Predator drones, fighters controlling the skies, picking targets, death and destruction from the sky all day long.”
Neither the White House nor the Pentagon responded to requests for comment on how Iran could down an advanced U.S. aircraft when the country supposedly no longer possesses anti-aircraft weaponry.
The loss of the F-15 is the first known instance of an American combat aircraft shot down in Iran since the war began in late February. It comes after Trump repeatedly threatened critical infrastructure in Iran and the U.S. struck the B1 bridge outside of Tehran, which killed eight people and wounded 95, according to Iranian news media.
Last week, at least 15 U.S. troops were wounded in an Iranian attack on a Saudi air base that hosts American troops.
The U.S. military has previously provided misleading and stale casualty statistics, in what a defense official who spoke with The Intercept called a “casualty cover-up.”
At least 15 U.S. troops in the Middle East have died since the beginning of the Iran war, including six personnel who were killed in a drone strike on Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, and a soldier who died due to an “enemy attack on March 1, 2026, at Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia.” More than 520 U.S. personnel have also been injured, according to an Intercept analysis.
On Friday, Iranian state media published pictures and videos that they claimed show parts of the downed plane and one of the ejection seats.
Update: April 3, 2026, 12:45 p.m. ET
The article has been updated with additional information about the surviving crew member who was located.
Update: April 3, 2026, 2:58 p.m. ET
This article has been updated with news of a second U.S. military plane that crashed near the Strait of Hormuz.
The post Iran Shoots Down F-15 Fighter Jet After Trump Bragged They Had No Capability appeared first on The Intercept.
Ten years after the Brexit vote, Trump’s disdain and insults are fuelling the belief that the UK should renew ties with Europe
Going anywhere nice this summer?
No, me neither, judging by the warning from the Ryanair boss, Michael O’Leary, that a global shortage of jet fuel caused by the Iran war may soon lead to cancelled flights. Suddenly a week in Cornwall looks a safer bet, though even that will be a stretch for some families as the cost of long car journeys heads through the roof. When the representatives of more than 40 countries held talks in London earlier this week to discuss unblocking the strait of Hormuz, they convened virtually, not in person. This is no time to be seen boarding a private jet.
Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist
Guardian Newsroom: Can Labour come back from the brink?
On Thursday 30 April, join Gaby Hinsliff, Zoe Williams, Polly Toynbee and Rafael Behr as they discuss how much of a threat Labour faces from the Green party and Reform UK – and whether Keir Starmer can survive as leader. Book tickets here
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...The price of silver saw major swings in the first quarter of 2026. Here's everything investors need to know now.
The move, described by the communist government as a “humanitarian and sovereign gesture,” comes as the U.S. enforces a crippling oil blockade on the island.
April 3, 2026 — With its unparalleled infrastructure and extensive expertise, Forschungszentrum Jülich (FZJ) is at the forefront of harnessing the full potential of key technologies.

Graphic of the FZJ stand at HANNOVER MESSE 2026. The CUPITER AI demonstrator will be expanded at the stand to include three themed zones focusing on future computing, energy and Jülich’s research infrastructures. Image credit: Martin Sinken / GROSSE8 visuelle Kommunikation GmbH & Co.KG.
At HANNOVER MESSE 2026 from April 20 to 24, Forschungszentrum Jülich will showcase current projects, start-ups, and exhibits in the fields of artificial intelligence, high performance computing (HPC), research infrastructures, and sustainable energy systems.
Discover AI with CUPITER
The centerpiece of Forschungszentrum Jülich’s exhibition stand is the AI demonstrator CUPITER. This interactive exhibit brings to life key research topics at Forschungszentrum Jülich in the context of artificial intelligence. Many of these data- and computation-intensive applications are made possible by high-performance infrastructures such as JUPITER, the first European exascale supercomputer, which is based at Forschungszentrum Jülich. CUPITER is complemented by three themed zones focusing on future computing, energy, and research infrastructures. Here, researchers will present current projects and opportunities for collaboration.
Experts on Stage
In addition to its stand, Forschungszentrum Jülich also features in the HANNOVER MESSE conference program. Chair of the Board of Directors Prof. Dr. Astrid Lambrecht is a speaker on the panel discussing the topic of “Quantum technologies for the sovereignty and competitiveness of the European industry”. The speakers from science, industry, and politics will take a look at how quantum technologies can be brought from research to application more quickly as well as the steps required to strengthen Europe’s technological competitiveness.
Where Innovation and Collaboration Convene
HANNOVER MESSE is the most important trade fair in the world and a key platform for future technologies. Forschungszentrum Jülich will use this occasion to strengthen its role as an experienced and reliable partner for business and industry, expanding collaborations and advancing the practical application or research results.
Visitors will find Forschungszentrum Jülich in Hall 11, Stand B22.
For an overview of FZJ projects and start-ups, general information about the exhibition, , and the FZJ stand, click here.
Source: Forschungszentrum Jülich
The post Jülich Takes AI, Energy, and Research Infrastructures to HANNOVER MESSE 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
Effort to curb grade inflation, by limiting top marks to 20% of students in a course, is opposed by most students
Harvard’s faculty is set to vote next week on a faculty committee proposal to cap the number of A grades per course in an effort to curb grade inflation.
The proposal, which was first reported earlier this year by the Harvard Crimson, Harvard’s student newspaper, would cap A grades to 20% of students in a course, with an allowance for four additional As. It also would introduce a new internal “average percentile rank” system, which would rely on raw scores rather than grade point average (GPA) to determine honors and awards.
Continue reading...If debt collectors can sue but can't collect, you may have more leverage than you think. Here's how to tell.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Perplexity's AI search engine encourages users to go deeper with their prompts by engaging in chat sessions that a lawsuit has alleged are often shared in their entirety with Google and Meta without users' knowledge or consent. "This happened to every user regardless of whether or not they signed up for a Perplexity account," the lawsuit alleged, while stressing that "enormous volumes of sensitive information from both subscribed and non-subscribed users" are shared. Using developer tools, the lawsuit found that opening prompts are always shared, as are any follow-up questions the search engine asks that a user clicks on. Privacy concerns are seemingly worse for non-subscribed users, the complaint alleged. Their initial prompts are shared with "a URL through which the entire conversation may be accessed by third parties like Meta and Google." Disturbingly, the lawsuit alleged, chats are also shared with personally identifiable information (PII), even when users who want to stay anonymous opt to use Perplexity's "Incognito Mode." That mode, the lawsuit charged, is a "sham." "'Incognito' mode does nothing to protect users from having their conversations shared with Meta and Google," the complaint said. "Even paid users who turned on the 'Incognito' feature still had their conversations shared with Meta and Google, along with their email addresses and other identifiers that allowed Meta and Google to personally identify them." "Perplexity's failure to inform its users that their personal information has been disclosed to Meta and Google or to take any steps to halt the continued disclosure of users' information is malicious, oppressive, and in reckless disregard" of users' rights, the lawsuit alleged. "Nothing on Perplexity's website warns users that their conversations with its AI Machine will be shared with Meta and Google," Doe alleged. "Much less does Perplexity warn subscribed users that its 'Incognito Mode' does not function to protect users' private conversations from disclosure to companies like Meta and Google."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Golfer has pled not guilty to DUI charges in Florida
Footage shows Woods’s shock: ‘I’m being arrested?’
Hydrocodone pills found in pocket following arrest
Bodycam footage of Tiger Woods’s arrest for DUI shows the golfer looking surprised when he was handcuffed by police officers at the scene of a vehicle crash last week and telling a deputy he had spoken to “the president” on the phone after the incident.
“I do believe your normal faculties are impaired, and you’re under an unknown substance, so at this time you’re under arrest for DUI,” Martin County Sheriff’s deputy Tatiana Levenar told Woods after officers conducted a series of field sobriety exercises on the 50-year-old.
Continue reading...
Bruce Blakeman, a Long Island Republican running for governor, said his actions as Nassau County executive have "made" Nassau County the safest county in America.
In a recent Instagram post, Blakeman wrote, "As Nassau County Executive, I hired 600 new law enforcement officers and made Nassau the safest county in America." His website says he "turned Nassau County into the #1 safest county in America." Blakeman has touted what he calls his "no-nonsense" approach to fighting crime in his statewide campaign to unseat Gov. Kathy Hochul.
Blakeman, who defeated Democratic incumbent Laura Curran in 2021 and assumed office in 2022, bases his "safest county" claim on a U.S. News and World Report designation. The media outlet periodically publishes a list ranking counties on crime, injuries and public safety capacity. Nassau County, home to 1.4 million people, was named the safest county in 2022 and 2024, during his tenure.
But it was also named the safest county under Curran in 2020 and 2021.
We checked Blakeman’s claim that he hired 600 new "law enforcement officers."
Blakeman’s spokesperson provided PolitiFact with a list of 638 new hires across seven job titles during Blakeman’s tenure in the police, corrections, probation, and fire departments. They include: 396 police officers, 178 correction officers, 16 deputy sheriffs, 24 fire marshals and marshal trainees, and 24 probation officers and trainees.
We asked whether the new employees replaced retirees but did not receive a response.
The Nassau County comptroller keeps records of each filled position, through 2025. Between 2021 and 2025, the records show increases in total department employment in police (111 positions), fire (40 positions), corrections (110 positions), and probation (34 positions), for a total of 295 new positions. But from 2022, Blakeman's first year, to 2025, there’s a loss of 396 positions in the police department and a loss of five positions in corrections.
There is no evidence of 600 new "law enforcement officers."
The number of jobs in some categories went up, but fell in others, according to the data, which does not include hires in 2026. The number of police officers decreased overall. There were 1,937 police officers in 2021. The number increased to 2,193 in 2022, but fell to 1,932 in 2025. The number of police detectives and sergeants increased by five and 15, respectively from 2021. But the number of police lieutenants and sergeant-detectives decreased by 19 and six, respectively. There were 34 more corrections officers and 26 more corrections corporals. There were also 11 more deputy sheriffs in 2025 than in 2021.
To give this claim context, we looked at crime statistics in Nassau County. There are seven index crimes: murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft. The rate of index crimes increased by 28% from 2021, just before Blakeman took office, to 2024, according to the most recent data available.
The rate of violent crimes went up by 18% since 2021, and the rate of property crimes increased by 29%. Since 2022, the murder rate has steadily increased, while the murder rate statewide has decreased. Still, Nassau’s murder rate in 2024 was one-third the rate of the entire state. The rate of all index crime in Nassau has fallen by 13% between 2022, Blakeman’s first year in office, and 2024, while the rate of all violent crime has remained flat. Historic fluctuations in the rate for all index crimes Nassau are similar to fluctuations statewide. However, statewide rates are higher, and since 2022, the statewide rate has fallen by just .6%, much less than Nassau's drop of 13%.
Our ruling
If Blakeman had said he kept Nassau County the "safest county" in America, or that he hired 638 additional law enforcement officers, the ruling would be favorable toward him.
But that is not what he said as he presses his case on the campaign trail.
His office claims 638 new hires in public safety, but many appear to be filling positions of people who left or retired.
And the county employs fewer police officers than when he took office, according to 2025 data.
Indeed, Nassau County earned the "safest county" designation under Blakeman’s watch. But Nassau County had that designation in the two years before he took office, so his predecessor had those bragging rights, too.
His statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression, so we rate this claim Mostly False.
St. Bonaventure University students Conor Amendola and Ryan Lombardi contributed to this report.
Your robot vacuum isn't broken; you may be hurting its performance. CNET spoke with experts to learn simple fixes for getting your bot back to peak cleaning condition.
Petrol has risen 19% and diesel 35%, while in England the north has had the sharpest increases
Fuel prices have risen faster in Northern Ireland than in any other UK region since the beginning of the Iran war.
Analysis of official data shows petrol has jumped by 19% in Northern Ireland since the end of February, and diesel is now 35% more expensive. The rises are among the largest in Europe.
Continue reading...The telco’s sweeping price changes and the closure of its cheaper ‘starter’ plan risk putting off many of its loyal customers
Telstra has long traded on its claim to have better – and far more expansive – mobile coverage than its rivals to justify a steep pricing premium that has accelerated in recent years.
But the telco’s latest changes, which include steep price hikes and the closure of its cheaper “starter” plan to new users, combined with a dramatic rejection of its coverage claims by the industry regulator, risk putting off many of its traditional customers, according to consumer advocates.
Continue reading...The interest-earning potential of a $25,000 2-year CD is sizable, but it's not the only savings account to consider.
Proposal, a win for RFK Jr’s Maha movement, is a ‘first step’ toward tackling plastic pollution, advocates say
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed on Thursday to include microplastics and pharmaceuticals on a list of contaminants in drinking water for the first time, a step that could lead to new limits on those substances for water utilities.
Lee Zeldin, the EPA administrator, said the agency was responding to Americans who have worried about plastics and pharmaceuticals in their drinking water. The gesture also aims to hand a win to health secretary Robert FKennedy Jr’s Maha movement, which for months has pressured Zeldin to further crack down on environmental contaminants.
Continue reading...NASUWT says full entitlement should be increased to 26 weeks and paternity pay also improved
Full maternity pay for teachers across the UK should be increased to 26 weeks to help stem the exodus of women in their 30s from classrooms, a union leader has said.
Matt Wrack, the general secretary of the NASUWT teachers’ union, said it was a “national scandal” that so many teachers who quit said inadequate maternity support was one of the reasons.
Continue reading...The 62-year-old was arrested for wearing a penis costume to an Alabama No Kings protest — then prosecutors doubled down.
Looking to buy a home or refinance your current one now? These are the mortgage interest rates you'll need to know.
Alan Turing Institute told by funder to offer better strategy and more value for money after board was reminded of legal duties by watchdog
The UK’s leading AI research institute has been told to make “significant” changes by its main source of taxpayer funding.
The Guardian revealed last week that the board of the Alan Turing Institute was reminded of its legal duties by the charity watchdog after a whistleblower complaint.
Continue reading...CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 3, 2026 — CavilinQ, a quantum hardware startup, has announced it has raised $8.8 million in seed funding to develop the interconnect hardware necessary to scale quantum computers beyond today’s single-processor limits. The round was led by QVT, with participation from Safar Partners, MFV Partners, Serendipity Capital, and Harper Court Ventures.

From left: Brandon Grinkemeyer, Co-Founder, CTO; and Shankar Menon, Co-Founder, CEO. Credit: CavilinQ.
The quantum industry has reached exciting milestones by performing verifiable calculations that challenge classical supercomputers. However, achieving broad, reliable real-world impact remains limited by the scaling challenge. To address this, CavilinQ is developing cavity-enhanced photonic links that enable individual quantum processors to operate together as modular, high-performance clusters.
“While we’ve seen impressive demonstrations of quantum utility on specialized tasks, solving real-world problems has been limited by the physical limits of current isolated processors,” said Shankar G. Menon, CEO of CavilinQ. “We are building the interconnects that unify isolated processors into one distributed processor, providing the infrastructure to make large-scale, fault-tolerant computing a reality.”
The company’s approach leverages high-fidelity light-matter interfaces, a field pioneered by its scientific co-founders Mikhail Lukin (Harvard University) and Hannes Bernien (University of Chicago / University of Innsbruck). While the technology is platform agnostic, CavilinQ will initially demonstrate integration with neutral atom quantum processors, a leading modality for large-scale quantum processing.
“With recent advances toward full-scale, fault-tolerant quantum processors, networking has become an increasingly important priority,” said Arthur Chu, Managing Partner at QVT. “We believe that CavilinQ’s technology will support multiple orders of magnitude increases in networking speed compared to other quantum networking technologies.”
The seed funding will support the establishment of a specialized laboratory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the expansion of a team, and the demonstration of key technology milestones.
“Even classical computing as we know it is built on the premise that processors are more powerful connected than isolated,” said Brandon Grinkemeyer, CTO of CavilinQ. “Quantum computing will be no different, and every path to meaningful scale will require a modular architecture. We have the right team and the right technology to push quantum computing to utility scale.”
Visit the CavilinQ website for more information.
Source: CavilinQ
The post CavilinQ Secures $8.8M Seed Round to Develop Quantum Interconnects for Scalable Systems appeared first on HPCwire.
International law experts ‘seriously concerned’ about ‘strikes on schools, health centres and homes’ in contravention of Geneva conventions
Donald Trump, other senior US officials and their cheerleaders appear to be embracing attacks – and threats of attacks – on Iranian civilian infrastructure, which legal experts say appears to constitute serious war crimes under international law.
In a rambling national address on Wednesday, the US president warned that if Iran did not reach an unspecified deal with him, US forces would “hit each and every one of their electric-generating plants” and “bring [Iran] back to the stone ages – where they belong”.
Continue reading...Decisions on the White House ballroom, public media and journalists’ access to the Pentagon are heartening. But restoring our institutions is up to us
In another one of those strange and unprecedented moments of the Trump years, the president of the United States showed up at the supreme court the other day. No other presidents have done so, probably because they – to varying degrees – respected the separation of power among the three branches of US government.
But Trump has not shown himself to share in that basic principle.
Continue reading...Shop around, coast downhill, band together – drivers tell of how they’re dealing with the costliest gas in the US
Jack Nooney has pretty much made peace with the traffic since moving to Los Angeles five years ago, but recent soaring gas prices have certainly added another layer of insult to his daily commute. The musician and full-time grocery deli employee drives from his San Fernando Valley apartment to Santa Monica daily. While it’s just nine miles each way, with LA traffic that often equates to a whole gas-burning hour.
Nooney, who makes $20/hour, says it’s become glaringly clear that fuel costs will eat up more of his already tight budget. Angelenos are now paying on average nearly $5.90 a gallon – and some stations are charging a shocking $8 a gallon. The outsized prices are directly related to the Iran war, which has created the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, according to the International Energy Agency.
Continue reading...Research for TUC analyses link between job quality and economic inactivity, as UK youth unemployment rises
Young people in the UK are more likely to leave their job for health reasons and become economically inactive when they work in insecure, low-paid sectors, a study has found.
Research carried out for the Trades Union Congress by the consultancy Timewise charts a connection between the jobs young people are most likely to do – in hospitality, retail and care, for example – and the proportion of people leaving because of ill health.
Continue reading...TAIPEI, Taiwan, April 3, 2026 — COMPUTEX 2026 will take place from June 2 to June 5 at Taipei World Trade Center Hall 1 and Nangang Exhibition Center Halls 1 and 2. TAITRA, the co-organizer, is proud to announce that Cisco, a global leader in networking and computing, will join the COMPUTEX Keynote lineup for the first time. Jeremy Foster, Senior Vice President, will deliver a keynote address on June 1, sharing how a full-stack approach can help organizations transform AI from a concept into a mission-critical reality.

Cisco Makes Its Debut at COMPUTEX Keynote: SVP Jeremy Foster to Unveil “A Full Stack Approach to AI”
In this keynote, Jeremy Foster will discuss “A Full Stack Approach to AI.” He will share insights on how Cisco is helping organizations move AI from proof-of-concept to mission-critical deployment, where the challenge shifts from accessing compute to effectively utilizing it. In an environment demanding greater performance, density, and efficiency, he will discuss how a secure, full-stack approach from the data center to the edge enables higher throughput, faster deployment, and more efficient resource utilization. Additionally, he will provide perspectives on building production-ready architectures that deliver predictable, measurable performance while reducing operational risk and complexity at scale.
Global Tech Leaders Gather at COMPUTEX 2026 – Registration Open in mid-April
In addition to Cisco’s debut appearance, global technology leaders including Qualcomm, Intel, Marvell, MediaTek, and NXP will explore the future of AI.
Meanwhile, early-bird registration for the COMPUTEX Forum is now available. Those who purchase tickets by April 20 will gain access to all 29 forum sessions with a single pass and have the opportunity to enter an exclusive early-bird drawing to win an AI laptop.
COMPUTEX 2026, themed “AI Together,” is scheduled to take place from June 2 to June 5 at the Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center Halls 1 & 2 and Taipei World Trade Center (TWTC). This year’s event features a grand scale, expecting to host 1,500 exhibitors across 6,000 booths, focusing on three core pillars: AI & Computing, Robotics & Mobility, and Next-Gen Tech.
Cisco Keynote details:
For more exhibition information:
More from HPCwire
About COMPUTEX
COMPUTEX was founded in 1981. It has grown with the global ICT industry and become stronger over the last four decades. Bearing witness to historical moments in the development of and changes in the industry, COMPUTEX attracts more than 40,000 buyers to visit Taiwan every year. It is also the preferred platform chosen by top international companies for launching epoch-making products. Taiwan has a comprehensive global ICT industry chain. Gaining a foothold in Taiwan, COMPUTEX is jointly held by the Taiwan External Trade Development Council and Taipei Computer Association, aiming to build a global tech ecosystem. COMPUTEX has become a global benchmark exhibition for AI and startups, connecting global pioneers and enabling new sparks of breakthrough technology.
Source: COMPUTEX
The post Cisco Joins COMPUTEX 2026 Keynote Lineup with Focus on Full-Stack AI appeared first on HPCwire.
The eye drops — sold under multiple brands — have been recalled over concerns about sterility, according to the FDA.
We ran the numbers to find which meal kit service offers the most value for your money compared to grocery store prices.
Employers added 178,000 new jobs in March and unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, ahead of economists’ predictions
The US labor market picked up in March as employers showed signs of resilience amid the US-Israel war in Iran.
After an extraordinary contraction in February, employers added 178,000 jobs last month, ahead of economists’ expectations of about 70,000.
Continue reading...Pam Bondi and Kristi Noem only two cabinet members to be fired despite string of scandals facing male officials. Plus, why New Yorkers are swapping gas for induction stoves
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Good morning.
Donald Trump has been accused of running a “misogynistic administration” after Pam Bondi became the second woman to be fired from a cabinet already dominated by men.
Who will replace Bondi? Trump said Todd Blanche, her deputy, would serve as acting attorney general. Lee Zeldin, a former New York congressman who now leads the Environmental Protection Agency, is said to be a top contender to replace Bondi.
How badly has Iran been affected? At least 1,900 people have been killed and 20,000 injured in Iran since the start of the war, according to a rough estimate by the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
Continue reading...As casualties mount, those who share a home state with the deceased in Iowa, Kentucky or Ohio question war’s legality
Upon the headstones at the Dayton National Cemetery in south-west Ohio are the names of the numerous wars fallen soldiers buried here have fought in: Korea, Vietnam and Iraq.
At the center of this sprawling, manicured cemetery for veterans and service members, ground staff and three machines this week have cleared space for a new grave site. It will be the place where one of the first victims of a new US conflict – the 2026 war on Iran – will be laid to rest on Friday.
Continue reading...Enjoy all the best savings without having to put in any of the work.
Atlanta rapper Gucci Mane was lured to a Dallas studio for a meeting, then allegedly kidnapped and robbed by a group including rappers Pooh Shiesty and Big30.
A key senator is demanding the TSA reverse its decision to let travelers keep their shoes on while passing through airport screening, a controversial policy at the center of a classified security warning.
Nearly a year after her husband Harold Allen died, Marsha Allen's Indiana home was burglarized. The burglar alleged her daughter, Ashley Jones, was behind it all.
The Cuban government says it has pardoned and released 2,010 prisoners, a sweeping move that comes as the island nation grapples with pressure from the Trump administration.
Some Trump aides and supporters cloak the war on Iran in religious terms, but the Chicago-born pope said that God “does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.”
CNET reporters look back on how Apple shaped our childhood, and what it was like covering the tech giant.
You don't need a fancy fix to reduce reliance on your device. Your iPhone has built-in settings to find calm again.
Decision came after hearing in which Subramanyam Vedam, 64, said he didn’t kill Thomas Kinser when he was 19
A judge has cleared the way for the potential release of an Indian citizen who was taken into Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody last year after his Pennsylvania murder conviction was overturned following four decades in prison.
The decision came the day after the four-hour hearing in which Subramanyam Vedam insisted he did not fatally shoot Thomas Kinser in 1980 and was questioned by a US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) lawyer. Vedam participated in the hearing remotely from the Moshannon Valley processing center in Philipsburg, Pennsylvania.
Continue reading...Re:Zero, One Piece and Classroom of the Elite? Better sign up for your subscriptions.
For this year’s Formula Student competition, the UK’s most prestigious university team are designing the fastest race car possible
At the Oxford Brookes Headington campus, more than 100 students are busy building the fastest, best designed race car possible for this year’s Formula Student competition.
Oxford Brookes Racing (OBR) is the UK’s most prestigious Formula Student team. They’ve won more design awards than any UK university, and frequently occupy the international race’s top spots.
Continue reading...Pentagon announces Randy George retiring from role as US army chief of staff, ‘effective immediately’
Randy George, the US army’s top officer, is stepping down from his role after the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, reportedly requested that he retire immediately. The Pentagon confirmed on Thursday that George, who had been serving as the army’s 41st chief of staff, was retiring.
“General Randy A George will be retiring from his position as the 41st Chief of Staff of the Army effective immediately. The Department of War is grateful for General George’s decades of service to our nation. We wish him well in his retirement,” the Pentagon chief spokesperson, Sean Parnell, said in a statement shared on social media.
Continue reading...U.S. immigration authorities followed "clues" shared by China's narcotics control commission to repatriate the fugitive, Beijing's public security ministry said.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Energy experts and lawmakers are scrambling to ensure reliability for Delaware’s electric grid, and some downstate Republicans have pointed to NRG Energy’s Indian River Power Plant as a site that could be part of the solution.
The Indian River Power Plant shut down the last coal-fired energy generators in Delaware a year ago, but the hulking industrial site near Millsboro has emerged at the center of a debate over whether it could factor into the state’s energy future.
As new, high-demand energy users like hyper-scale data centers seek to soak up more electricity while aging infrastructure raises concerns about future power grid reliability, energy experts and elected officials alike are brainstorming ways to meet future demand in a region of declining energy supply.
Inside Legislative Hall, lawmakers have debated the promise of offshore wind, solar farms and even modular nuclear reactors as potential energy generation solutions.
But in recent months, Republicans have repeatedly pointed toward NRG Energy’s now-retired power plant as a potential solution to Delaware’s growing energy woes.
The Indian River plant was Delaware’s only generator of power used to meet everyday demand, known as baseload electricity, until it went offline in February 2025. Whether it could once again become a backbone of Delaware’s energy needs is a question of investment and best uses.
In regulatory filings, NRG blamed economics rather than politics or regulations for the need to close the Indian River power plant, noting that it had incurred financial losses for two consecutive years.
In June 2021, the company announced that it would close three different coal-fired power plants after revenue from the springtime energy auction dropped below $50 a megawatt per day, or a decline of more than 60% from the prior year.
That came at a time of great excess in energy supply when new natural gas-fired plants and renewable energy resources like solar and wind were pushing down costs for now comparatively small energy demands coming out of the COVID pandemic. This was also a time before the current rush to build hyper-scale data centers.
Coal is also a more expensive energy source, from the raw material to operation of the plant and disposal of the coal ash produced in its waste to implementation of scrubbers to reduce air pollution. By operating a coal-fired plant rather than building more efficient plants running on cheaper inputs, NRG was effectively cutting into its revenues – so it pulled the plug.
J. Scott Holladay, an associate professor of economics at the University of Tennessee who is familiar with the Indian River plant, said the demise of coal plants is simple economics.

“On the fuel side, it’s hard to imagine coal competing in the current environment,” he said. “It’s not so much that [coal has] gone up in cost, but that the cost of everything else has gone down.”
The power plant included four generating units, each made up of large pieces of industrial equipment that once burned coal to generate electricity.
Burning coal first created steam. That steam then powered turbines that would spin to generate electricity. It was a less efficient process than modern-day natural gas plants, which act like massive jet engines and no longer rely on steam as a middle man, or solar panels that convert solar energy into useful electrons.
The first two 80-megawatt coal-fired units at the plant went online in the late 1950s, followed by a third 165-megawatt unit in 1970 and a fourth 440-megawatt unit in 1980.
The first three units shut down in the 2010s. The final, most-modern unit shut down in February 2025 after more than four decades in operation.
And while Holladay said it would be unlikely for NRG’s southern Delaware power plant to come back online using coal, he did not rule out the possibility of its resurrection entirely.
“The thing that could save Indian River, and maybe other older plants, is big increases in electricity demand, driven by AI load,” he said.
A spokesperson for NRG Energy declined to comment on future plans for Indian River, saying they currently are “undetermined.”
But the spokesperson, Erik Linden, told Spotlight Delaware restarting the Indian River Power Plant in its original capacity — as a coal-fired operation — is not on the table. The company has no plans to restart any coal units at the facility, he said.
A small, 16-megawatt oil-burning plant remains active at the site as a “peakload” generator, which kicks on only in times of great energy demands. But even that unit is slated for decommissioning this June.
The power plant site spans nearly 1,200 acres, and it once had a total generation capacity of 780 megawatts. That wattage would have supplied just more than half the power demanded by the proposed, hyper-scale Delaware City data center.
According to a recent report from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which compiles data from different regional energy transmission authorities including the PJM Interconnection which serves Delaware, future projections show that energy demand will increase while supply decreases.
That is due, in part, to power plants — including the Indian River Power Plant — shutting down while high-energy users, like large-scale data centers, plan to come online.
Republican lawmakers in Dover have wondered if restarting operations at the facility could help close the gap.

State Sen. Bryant Richardson (R-Seaford) has publicly pointed to the site as “an ideal location” for a small nuclear modular reactor, while Senate Minority Leader Gerald Hocker (R-Ocean View) and Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown) “are actively working with stakeholders” to figure out the plant’s future.
Pettyjohn told Spotlight Delaware that he and Hocker plan to meet with NRG officials during the General Assembly’s spring break with the goal of making Indian River a natural gas plant.
According to the National Pipeline Mapping System, the nearest natural gas transmission line is more than 2 miles away on U.S. Route 113. That means that extending service to the Indian River plant would likely cost $10 million or more, based on industry averages of recent projects.
Who would cover that cost and whether Delaware would incentivize it remain open questions about such a solution.

Then there’s the question of whether NRG would invest in new natural gas turbines at the Indian River plant, because they couldn’t just convert the old coal turbines. That investment would likely cost tens of millions of dollars per turbine, and those costs have been rising quickly in recent years as demand for the equipment has risen too.
But Holladay, who specializes in environmental and energy economics, said he is seeing “a lot of cases” of retiring coal plants converting to natural gas.
In Delaware, NRG has already proven that it can be successful.
More than a decade ago, it converted a unit at its Dover Energy Center from coal to combined-cycle natural gas, which captures both the combustion and heat from burning natural gas to spin two different turbines. The Dover plant was hailed as evidence of smart business as well as being environmentally friendly, as it removed significant sums of air pollutants that came from burning coal.
The Markell administration also incentivized that conversion project with a $500,000 grant from the state’s Energy Efficiency Investment Fund.
And while future plans for Indian River remain unclear, Holladay said the site could be ripe for conversion.
The Delmarva peninsula in particular, he said, is a “more isolated” part of the larger PJM electric grid. There are not many electric or natural gas interconnections on the peninsula, but since that access is integral to power plants, the existence of any such infrastructure at the NRG site would be its most valuable asset.
“It’s ruinously difficult to get access to the electricity grid,” he said.
He called the idea of using the Indian River site to house modular nuclear reactors, however, “far-fetched.”
“It’s really hard to justify building a nuclear plant in a floodplain with an unproven technology relative to the other options they have,” Holladay said.
The Indian River site has been in the news more lately because of its proximity to a planned interconnection for the U.S. Wind offshore wind farm that has been hamstrung by lawsuits and opposition by the Trump administration.
The site’s decades-long run as a power plant is exactly what made it so attractive as a place for offshore wind farms to connect to the grid.
“That, to me, is the most valuable asset that Indian River has,” Holladay said.
In fact, NRG was among the first companies interested in offshore wind development along Delaware’s coast. In 2009, NRG Energy acquired Bluewater Wind, an offshore wind developer that sought to build a project that could have produced up to 200 megawatts of electricity. That project was ultimately abandoned.

A substation site on former power plant land along the Indian River has also been identified as the proposed point of interconnection for a different offshore wind project, the 121-turbine US Wind farm that is slated to be built about 10 miles off the Delmarva coast. That project has been embroiled in litigation and efforts from the Trump administration to halt all American offshore wind efforts.
The Indian River Power Plant site is close to integral power grid infrastructure, but it also is directly in the path of rising tides, as Holladay noted.
According to the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) flood planning tool, much of the Indian River Power Plant sits directly in a flood zone. Its highest points are no more than 30 feet above sea level.
A recent study published by the nonprofit Climate Central and scientists at the University of California estimates some industrial sites pose additional hazards to nearby vulnerable communities as climate change continues to accelerate rising sea levels and exacerbate weather events like coastal storms.
According to Climate Central’s data, the Indian River plant is expected to experience about four flood events annually by mid-century, making it one of the most at-risk industrial sites in the state.
Increased flood risks also mean toxic coal ash storage pits are likely to face future inundation as well. While such toxic waste disposal sites are typically capped and lined to prevent environmental impacts, adding salty water to the mix could test those barriers, Holladay said.
“Flooding concerns would be a big deal, potentially,” he said.
For years, environmentalists have warned that power plant waste landfilled along the river’s edges has already released hazardous chemicals and metals into the nearby waterways and groundwater.
DNREC said in an email, however, that landfills at the site are “in good standing” when it comes to permitting and maintenance.
In 2019, the Environmental Integrity Project released a study about contamination linked to coal-fired power plants across the country, citing problems with coal ash contaminant levels detected specifically at the Indian River site. According to the report, data indicated unsafe levels of arsenic and other heavy metals in area water sources.
The post Could the Indian River power plant be restarted? appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
I spent several weeks testing the re-released Teforia smart tea infuser to see if it's a modern kitchen must-have for tea drinkers.
Whatever flavor of sci-fi you're into, Netflix has you covered.
St Michael’s Mount and the people who live near it are still healing from the scars left by storm’s 100mph winds
Three months after Storm Goretti battered St Michael’s Mount in Cornwall, the signs of the storm’s power are still evident in the scars left by uprooted trees, piles of logs and the shaking of heads from islanders who have lived there for decades and never seen the like.
“It really was something,” said Jack Beesley, a senior gardener. “We were shocked the morning after when we saw what had happened. We had been caring for these trees for years and to see so many of them down was very sad. We’ve worked hard to get the place ready for the Easter visitors but it will still be a month or more until we’re back straight.”
Continue reading...Country is torn between those who hope for end to Tehran’s influence and those loyal to Islamic republic
Of all the countries being pulled into the US-Israeli war on Iran, it is Iraq – a country that still bears the emotional and physical scars of the last time the Americans tried to reshape the region by force – where the conflict has exposed some of the deepest rifts.
The war is dividing those who see the attacks on Iran as a way to end Tehran’s longstanding influence over Iraqi politics from the self-declared loyalists of the Islamic republic, and cutting through state institutions, armed forces and Shia Islamist parties.
Continue reading...Some of these word and puizzle games are more casual, while others can be pretty difficult.
The following is the full transcript of the interview with Archbishop Timothy Broglio of the Archdiocese for the Military Services U.S.A. a portion of which will air on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on April 5, 2026. The interview was taped on April 2, 2026.
Archbishop Timothy Broglio, who heads the Catholic Archdiocese for the Military Services USA, told CBS' Ed O'Keefe that the war is likely not justified under the Just War Theory.
Longtime Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot writes: CU Boulder researchers are reporting that they have discovered an appetite-suppressing compound in python blood that helps the snakes consume enormous meals and go months without eating yet remain metabolically healthy. The findings were published in the journal Natural Metabolism on March 19, 2026. Pythons can grow as big as a telephone pole, swallow an antelope whole, and go months or even years without eating -- all while maintaining a healthy heart and plenty of muscle mass. In the hours after they eat, research has shown, their heart expands 25% and their metabolism speeds up 4,000-fold to help them digest their meal. The team measured blood samples from ball pythons and Burmese pythons, fed once every 28 days, immediately after they ate a meal. In all, they found 208 metabolites that increased significantly after the pythons ate. One molecule, called para-tyramine-O-sulfate (pTOS) soared 1,000-fold. Further studies, done with Baylor University researchers, showed that when they gave high doses of pTOS to obese or lean mice, it acted on the hypothalamus, the appetite center of the brain, prompting weight loss without causing gastrointestinal problems, muscle loss or declines in energy. The study found that pTOS, which is produced by the snake's gut bacteria, is not present in mice naturally. It is present in human urine at low levels and does increase somewhat after a meal. But because most research is done in mice or rats, pTOS has been overlooked. "We've basically discovered an appetite suppressant that works in mice without some of the side-effects that GLP-1 drugs have," said senior author Leslie Leinwand, a distinguished professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology who has been studying pythons in her lab for two decades. Drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy act on the hormone glucagon-like petide-1 (GLP-1).
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bondi and Kristi Noem the only two cabinet members to be removed despite string of scandals involving male officials
Donald Trump has been accused of running a “misogynistic administration” after making Pam Bondi the second woman to be fired from a cabinet already dominated by men.
The US president dismissed the attorney general on Thursday amid mounting frustration with her performance, especially over the release of files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Continue reading...Biggest rises were in vegetable oil and sugar prices, which increased by 5% and 7% respectively
Food prices rose sharply in March as war in the Middle East drove up energy prices and freight costs around the world, a UN report says.
An index of food commodity prices by the UN’s food and agriculture organisation increased by 2.4% in March, its second consecutive monthly rise.
Continue reading...Starmer should just admit we’re being held to ransom by Trump – but instead he’s making the king go on a state visit
Donald Trump has suggested that the war with Iran will be over in two to three weeks. The rest of the world just shrugs. We’ll believe it when we see it. The US president has said so many contradictory things over the past few weeks, it’s hard to take anything that seriously.
Continue reading...Ethan Dietz died on Nov. 25 after being hit in the head during a basketball game in Texas three days earlier.
Min Aung Hlaing seized control five years ago and plunged Myanmar into conflict and economic chaos
Min Aung Hlaing, the military general who plunged Myanmar into conflict and economic chaos when he took power in the 2021 coup has been appointed president, months after widely condemned sham elections.
Min Aung Hlaing, who is wanted by the prosecutor of the international criminal court for crimes against humanity against the Rohingya Muslim minority, was voted president by lawmakers on Friday. Myanmar’s parliament is dominated by the pro-military party, which won a landslide in one-sided elections earlier this year.
Continue reading...Ibrahim Traoré, who took power in 2022 coup, tells state broadcaster ‘we must tell the truth, democracy isn’t for us’
People in Burkina Faso should forget about democracy as it is “not for us”, the military president, Ibrahim Traoré, told the country’s state broadcaster.
Traoré took power in a coup in September 2022, toppling another junta that had taken power just nine months earlier. He has since stifled opposition and in January banned political parties outright.
Continue reading...Brady Ebert, a former member of the Grammy-winning US hardcore band, allegedly hit the father of Brendan Yates with his car
Brady Ebert, the former guitarist of the Grammy-winning US hardcore band Turnstile, has been charged with attempted second-degree murder after allegedly hitting the father of the band’s frontman, Brendan Yates, with his car.
On 29 March, police found William Yates outside his home with “trauma to his lower extremities”, with a broken bone protruding from his leg, according to the Baltimore Banner.
Continue reading...Footage shows US president saying UK ‘should be our best’ ally and accusing PM of prevarication over sending ships
Footage has emerged of Donald Trump mocking Keir Starmer by claiming the prime minister said he would have to consult his team before deciding whether to send UK aircraft carriers to the Middle East.
In a new low for UK-US relations, Trump appeared to impersonate Starmer during an Easter lunch speech at the White House.
Continue reading...Hachette scraps the US release of Mia Ballard's Shy Girl after multiple allegations of AI-generated content.
As Trump suggests Middle East oil disruption is not his problem, experts say talk of US ‘energy independence’ is a smokescreen – with consumers paying the price
A month has passed since the US and Israel’s war on Iran all but closed the strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil supplies typically flow. Prices have surged, amid fears of sustained disruption to global supplies.
Donald Trump argues this is not his country’s problem. “Go get your own oil!” the president urged countries, including the UK, earlier this week. The US has “plenty”, he added. The US is “totally independent” of the Middle East, the president claimed in a prime-time address on Wednesday. “We don’t need their oil.”
Continue reading...It's a dazzling and heavy-duty (emphasis on "heavy") showcase of laptop technology for deep-pocketed gamers.
Experts don't expect military action soon. But actual regime change is complicated.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen’s absence from recent city meetings, which some council members say they were not notified about, has resulted in questions about whether he should be removed from office. His absence also comes as city council faces its latest in a string of recent hurdles.
Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen’s absence from city meetings over the past month, amid controversy over a homeless shelter in the city and the ousting of the city manager, has raised eyebrows in the capital city.
Both residents and city council members expressed concerns that Christiansen’s prolonged absence violated the city charter — justifying his removal from office. But Christiansen rebuffed the claims of his wrongdoing, and a Spotlight Delaware review of city code revealed stipulations in the policy that could support the mayor’s claims.
Christiansen last attended a city council meeting on Jan. 12. He was not present for the three subsequent meetings on Feb. 25, March 9 and March 23.
This three-meeting absence is what critics say is cause for Christiansen’s removal. According to the city charter, the mayor forfeits his office if he “fails to attend three consecutive regular meetings of the council without being excused by the council.”
But Christiansen said his absences were, in fact, excused. He contracted the flu in late February, he said, which turned into other illnesses and forced him to spend more than a week in the hospital.
Christiansen said he disclosed this information to City Council President Fred Neil, excusing his three absences. He declined to provide more details, but Neil confirmed he had been in communication with the mayor about reasons for missing recent meetings.
Still, Christiansen said, he continued performing his duties from the hospital, like maintaining regular communication with Police Chief Thomas Johnson, so there was no need for him to temporarily give the mayorship to someone else.
During Christiansen’s absence, Neil took over some public duties for him, like presenting a tribute to the family of the late former City Council member William Hare, and welcoming a group of foreign students to the state capital, Neil said.
While some city council members have raised alarms that they were not informed about the circumstances of the mayor’s absence, Christiansen and Neil said they handled the situation in line with city rules.
Neil wrote in an email to Spotlight Delaware, on which Gov. Matt Meyer was copied, that he communicated with Christiansen’s assistant that he would be available “should an emergency occur,” while the mayor was in the hospital.
Christiansen has used the attention surrounding his illness as a chance to comment on what he described as city council’s “drama and lack of professionalism” in recent months.
He has taken issue with both members of the public coming to meetings to comment on “speculations and untruths,” and some of the shouting and finger-pointing he has heard among council members.
“I’m from the old school,” Christiansen said. “I got elected to council in 1983. Never have I seen the public’s business put aside and handled so willy nilly.”

Christiansen plans to sit in the audience, instead of on the dais with other city leaders, at the next city council meeting on April 13 — his first in roughly two months.
The mayor does not vote on matters that come before city council, but he is able to veto ordinances after they are passed — a power Christiansen said he “won’t hesitate to use” going forward.
Since last fall, Dover city council has faced a slew of controversies.
Beginning with resident and police officer concerns about Police Chief Thomas Johnson’s leadership, city leaders then faced months of internal divisions and community pushback over a proposed anti-panhandling ordinance. More recently, one of the city’s few homeless shelters has been the subject of council scrutiny after nearby residents raised concerns about neighborhood blight.
Christiansen missed the meetings in which council members voted to reject the panhandling ordinance, opted to deny funding for the People’s Church of Dover, and placed City Manager Dave Hugg on administrative leave following concerns about his performance.
When asked by Spotlight Delaware about having missed these discussions, Christiansen said he had been keeping up with the meetings remotely, but he declined to comment on both the homeless shelter and Hugg’s ousting.
Residents have expressed their concern about Christiansen’s unannounced absence during the March 25 city council meeting, in emails with council members, and in op-eds published in the Daily State News.
“Why hasn’t the Mayor been here a couple of times?” Dover resident Bill Faust asked at the March 25 council meeting. “You usually say, ‘This person is sick, this person is on military leave.’ Radio silence.”
Some city council members said they share similar concerns about Christiansen’s absence, and the communication surrounding it.
“I would hope in the future there is better communication between the council and the mayor and vice versa,” Councilman Brian Lewis told Spotlight Delaware.
Council members David Anderson and Julia Pillsbury said they agreed communication about the mayor’s illness was poor, but they do see truth in Christiansen’s argument about establishing better decorum.
Anderson said he believes the city’s open forum section of its council meetings, which has come under fire in the past for being cut short and not being livestreamed, sometimes turns into a “theatrical performance,” instead of residents civilly communicating their concerns.
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 mayor’s prolonged absence draws concern, questions appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
If the idea was to shed some of the liabilities of the Epstein scandal by firing Bondi, the move seems likely to backfire
It was only a matter of time. The writing has been on the wall for months for Pam Bondi, Trump’s attorney general, who was unceremoniously fired on Thursday after 14 months leading the justice department. Trump was rumored to be unhappy with Bondi; frustrated at the slowness and failures of some of her prosecutions of his political enemies, angry that she could not make the Epstein scandal go away, and disappointed by her rather wooden performances on TV.
For a while, it looked like Bondi would be the first cabinet secretary that Trump fired in his second administration – something he has been much more reluctant to do since returning to office in early 2025. But in October, when she was called to testify before a Senate subcommittee, Bondi made sure to issue vicious insults to her Democratic interrogators in front of the news cameras; she made a similar performance in February at a House judiciary committee hearing, where she lobbed ad hominem attacks on Democrats, including calling Representative Jamie Raskin “a washed-up loser lawyer.” These performances evidently endeared Bondi to Donald Trump enough that he decided to keep her around for a while; Kristi Noem, his onetime secretary of homeland security, became the first cabinet member to be fired in his second term. But the Epstein story persisted, and so did Trump’s dissatisfaction with his own mounting unpopularity ahead of the November midterms. He is not capable of blaming himself, and so he looked around for someone else to punish for his own failures. Pam Bondi was there.
Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...Richard Blumenthal says company acts like it has ‘get-out-of-jail-free card’ as records show it upping fees to cut losses
Senators slammed Ticketmaster for raising ticket fees following a regulatory crackdown on hidden charges as revealed in a report by the Guardian last week.
The Federal Trade Commission last May began requiring Ticketmaster to disclose concert ticket fees upfront – a practice known as all-in pricing. The company eliminated the order processing fee it charged at the the end of a transaction to comply with the rule.
Continue reading...After more than a month into the U.S.–Israel conflict with Iran, President Donald Trump addressed the nation directly for the first time on Wednesday about why he dragged the country into an unprovoked illegal war. During his wide-ranging speech, Trump made numerous false claims, including repeatedly emphasizing the nuclear threat Iran posed.
The reasons the Trump administration have given for partnering with Israel in this war have been varying and at times include religious undertones, especially from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Hegseth regularly infuses Christian right rhetoric in how he speaks about the war on Iran and the military more broadly.
During a recent religious service at the Pentagon, Hegseth prayed for God to give U.S. troops “wisdom in every decision, endurance for the trial ahead, unbreakable unity, and overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.”
“Hegseth belongs to a denomination called the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches. … [He] believes that he is carrying out a spiritual and actual war to vanquish a Christian nation’s enemies and protect and promote a Christian nation,” explains investigative journalist Sarah Posner, who covers the religious right, on The Intercept Briefing. “For Hegseth, biblical law is the only law he feels obligated to obey. The law of war, international law governing military conflicts, and human rights and civilian rights in war — he believes don’t apply to him.”
This week on the podcast, Posner speaks to host Jessica Washington about how various factions of the Christian right are shaping U.S. foreign and domestic policies.
“I don’t think the mainstream media has ever taken the Christian right seriously enough. They have consistently viewed Trump’s relationship with white evangelicals as ranging from harmless to purely transactional. When in fact, I think that they’re very deeply ideologically embedded with one another,” she says.
Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.
Jessica Washington: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.
Akela Lacy: And I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter at the Intercept and co-host of the Intercept Briefing with Jessie.
JW: Before we jump into the news of the week, we have some news too. The Intercept Briefing has been nominated for a Webby Award for best news and politics podcast; help us win by voting for us, please.
AL: Yes, definitely vote for us if you like what we’ve been doing with this podcast. We’ve been working really hard to make it better for you, so show us some love.
JW: You’ll make our day. We will add a link to vote in our show notes.
Now onto the news.
On Wednesday evening, President Donald Trump addressed the nation directly for the first time about why he dragged the U.S. into an unprovoked, illegal war with Iran.
During his rambly 20ish-minute speech, he made numerous false claims, including repeatedly emphasizing the nuclear threat Iran posed. Trump’s own intelligence agency reported last year that “We continue to assess Iran is not building a nuclear weapon.”
Akela, what did you make of Donald Trump’s speech?
AL: He sounded less energetic than he typically does. The overall tone was, again, as you said, rambling, non-committal, and saying obviously extreme things with this very apathetic tone, which I found interesting. There’s a lot of rumors that he’s not in the best of health, so that was running through my mind through this.
But stepping back a little bit, thinking about what was the purpose of this speech, it was obviously an attempt to agenda set and shape the tone on this war — saying that we’re winning the war, that Iran is decimated, both of which we know are not true, but part of the administration’s attempt to control the narrative on this issue and also combat criticism that the president who has campaigned and thrust himself forward as anti-interventionist is doing exactly the opposite.
JW: The war clearly has been getting to Donald Trump. You can see it in his energy, as you just mentioned. We can also see gas prices are rising. Obviously, the Strait of Hormuz being closed as a result of this war is something that is having catastrophic financial impacts. We also have midterms going on.
This is definitely having a broader political impact. Last week, I did a story on Melat Kiros, who is being endorsed by the Sunrise Movement as a part of their broader anti-war campaign. We’re definitely seeing candidates latch onto this idea that you can’t take AIPAC and defense money and be meaningfully anti-war.
Akela, how are you seeing it play out in the midterms and in politics more broadly?
AL: This is becoming a huge midterm issue. There’s a wave of insurgent candidates who have been vocal against the war on Iran and challenged both Democratic leadership and incumbents on their stances, including support from the leading pro-Israel lobbying group, which has backed Trump’s war on Iran, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
We’ve also reported on the effort by progressive groups to get Democrats to exploit what is a growing rift among Republicans, both on Iran and on Israel. We reported that the pro-Palestine group Institute for Middle East Understanding Policy Project has been urging Democrats on this issue. They’re also planning to spend $2 million on ads this cycle, hitting Republicans in toss-up districts on Israel, but using that as part of a broader strategy to hit Republicans on rifts on foreign policy, which is obviously the bulk of that being on criticism on Iran right now.
This group, IMEU Policy Project, is one of the groups that met with the Democratic National Committee over concerns about how Gaza could hurt Kamala Harris’s 2024 presidential campaign. This was part of that big story from Axios on Democrats having this secret autopsy on Gaza. Progressive groups are really looking at how to take advantage of this issue in the midterms and take over what they see as a vacuum where Democrats are refusing to do that and leaving opportunities on the table.
That sort of investment on ads from this group is one of the biggest investments from pro-Palestine groups on ad spending this cycle in a cycle where we’ve seen unprecedented levels of outside spending in midterm races where these issues are playing a big role with voters.
JW: You’re right. We’re really seeing this play out in so many different races, this cycle. And Akela, I believe you had a story out this week that also touches on that.
AL: We reported exclusively that Sen. Bernie Sanders endorsed State Assembly Member Claire Valdez on Thursday in New York’s 7th District Democratic Primary, which is of interest to our audience because it is really one of the biggest contests where progressives and socialists and various factions of the left in New York City are battling over who will determine the future of the left under [Mayor] Zohran Mamdani.
So this race has pit progressive groups against each other. Outgoing Rep. Nydia Velázquez has endorsed Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, who has backing from progressive groups like the New York Working Families Party, New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, and several city council members.
Then on the Sanders side, where he just jumped in the ring on the side of the socialist faction of the left, which is backing Valdez, including Mamdani, Democratic Socialists of America, and United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain.
This race is not heavily focused on Iran, but Claire Valdez and Reynoso have both been very vocally opposed to the Iran war. We know Bernie Sanders has long been vocal against this war as well. It’s just another example of how this is becoming a new litmus test — again, for mostly progressives, but they’re also using it to put pressure on the broader party.
JW: It’s clear from your story and other reporting from The Intercept over the last month that the war on Iran is really creating political pressure for Republicans and Democrats.
Obviously, we’re mostly talking about a lot of those divisions on the left. But on the right, there are also these real religious pressures that we haven’t spoken about as much. But on the podcast today, I spoke to Sarah Posner, an investigative journalist who covers the religious right about how the Christian right’s apocalyptic views of end times are shaping U.S. foreign and domestic policies.
Sarah is a contributing writer at Talking Points Memo, host of the podcast Reign of Error, and author of the book “Unholy: How White Christian Nationalists Powered the Trump Presidency and the Devastating Legacy They Left Behind.”
This is our conversation.
Sarah, welcome to the Intercept Briefing.
Sarah Posner: Thanks for having me.
JW: There’s so much I want to talk to you about, so let’s dive in. The U.S.–Israel war on Iran has been going on for more than a month now, and its end appears illusive.
Last week, during a religious service at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth shared a prayer a chaplain gave to the team who raided Venezuela and kidnapped the former President Nicolás Maduro and his wife. Let’s hear a clip.
Pete Hegseth: Grant this task force clear and righteous targets for violence. Surround them as a shield. Protect the innocent and blameless in their midst. Make their arrows like those of a skilled warrior who returned not empty-handed. Let every round find its mark against the enemies of righteousness and our great nation. Give them wisdom in every decision, endurance for the trial ahead, unbreakable unity, and overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.
JW: So Hegseth regularly infuses Christian rhetoric in how he speaks about the war on Iran and the military more broadly. And here, he prays for overwhelming violence and no mercy.
Can you talk about the religious messaging that Hegseth has invoked throughout this war and in other military missions the Trump administration has taken?
SP: Hegseth belongs to a denomination called the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches. It is a denomination that adheres to the tenets of a Christian movement called “Christian Reconstructionism.” They believe that the Bible — and in particular, what they consider to be biblical law — governs every aspect of life: your personal life, your life at work, your life as a public figure, your life in civilian life, your life in military life, all of it. It’s a very aggressive Christian supremacist ideology in which Hegseth believes that he is carrying out a spiritual and actual war to vanquish a Christian nation’s enemies and protect and promote a Christian nation.
So for Hegseth, biblical law is the only law he feels obligated to obey. The law of war, international law governing military conflicts, and human rights and civilian rights in war — he believes don’t apply to him.
He expects — I think, through his public statements and these monthly prayer gatherings that he has at the Pentagon auditorium — to have the military follow not just Christianity, but his particular brand of Christianity.
JW: What you just said is really interesting to me. Obviously, muscular Christianity, war-mongering Christianity isn’t new; we can go back to the Crusades. But is there something new, though, in what Hegseth and his ilk are talking about?
SP: It’s not new in terms of the religious right. This idea of Christians taking dominion, not only of America, but the world, has been a driving force of the Christian right’s view of foreign policy and their role in politics domestically. But I think what’s new about Hegseth is how unabashed he is about declaring this in public spaces and enforcing it, or attempting to enforce it in the military.
Another big difference is that we are more accustomed to hearing the popularized Christian Zionist message of “We need to go to war with Iran because they’re an enemy of Israel, and it’s our biblical obligation to defend Israel, and potentially, this is one piece of a series of events that will trigger the end times and the return of Jesus.”
Hegseth comes from a slightly different religious tradition where they don’t adhere to that rapture, tribulation, Armageddon narrative. Instead, they believe that they are on a divine mission to establish God’s kingdom on Earth, and then Jesus will come back.
So for him, it’s a much more muscular, aggressive, imperialist kind of messaging. So when you hear him talk about the military action in Venezuela or potentially Greenland and now in Iran, it’s much more focused on that, as opposed to something that centers Israel and centers the Armageddon narrative as the reasons why we might be doing this.
JW: I want to dive deeper into that side of things, the kind of Christian Zionist side. You’ve written about John Hagee, a televangelist and founder of Christians United for Israel, who thanked Trump for entering the war while he was standing behind a sign that read “God’s Coming … Operation Epic Fury.”
Who is Hagee, and how does he view the war, and how widely held is that view among the Christian right?
SP: So I think Hagee’s view is more widely held than Hegseth’s view. So Hagee is an 85-year-old megachurch pastor and televangelist from San Antonio, Texas. He’s extremely influential in the evangelical world, and he has been extremely influential in Republican politics.
In 2006, he founded the organization Christians United for Israel, which is the political side of his religious arguments about why Christians should “support Israel.” For many years, he’s argued that Christians have a biblical obligation to support Israel, and by that he means support an Israeli right-wing government, support settlers, and occupation, support the war on Gaza, et cetera.
All of this is very tied up in his view of a Bible prophecy about the sequence of events that will happen prior to Jesus’s return. Now, he would argue that he’s not trying to hasten that return, that all of that will happen on God’s timing, but he’s been arguing that the United States should go to war with Iran for at least 20 years.
The political side of the argument is Iran is acquiring a nuclear weapon. He has argued that whether it was true or not. Then, on the religious side, he argues that a war with Iran will trigger a series of events that will lead to the second coming of Jesus. So he has played both sides of this very successfully.
So he makes the religious plea from his pulpit, and sometimes the political plea from his pulpit too. But then through CUFI — through Christians United for Israel — he makes these political arguments as to why it’s the U.S. obligation to defend Israel from aggression from Iran, or go to war with Israel to preempt aggression from Iran.
But he has built this organization in 20 years to encompass many, many evangelicals who are predominantly Republican voters across the country. He had the ear of the Bush White House, and he had the ear of the first Trump White House. He delivered the benediction when they had a ceremony, when Trump moved the American embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
He has boasted of his strong connection to Trump, and that Trump understands the importance of centrality of Israel, not only to American foreign policy, but to this religious narrative in which Hagee argues that when Jesus comes back, he will rule the world for 1,000 years from a throne on the Temple Mount.
JW: I came across Hagee for the first time covering Daystar, which I’m sure you’re very familiar with. For those who don’t know, it’s essentially an evangelical Christian broadcasting network that hosts a bunch of different televangelists. They’ve got various scandals over the years that we won’t get into, but the important thing to know about them is they’re very much a part of the kind of constant drumbeat of pro-Israel, of this is a sign of the end times, and very much pushing U.S. foreign policy in a direction that is pro-Israel and fueling war in the Middle East. I guess, at least that’s what they’re pushing.
But my question is, how influential are these people, really? How much is this kind of prophesizing around the end times actually pushing U.S. foreign policy?
SP: Evangelicals and particularly charismatic evangelicals like Hagee, people who believe in these prophetic statements, believe that they can receive direct prophecies from God. People who believe that in our midst are modern-day prophets and apostles who are receiving revelations from God that they need to then carry out in their personal or public life. This is a very significant part of the Republican base, and in particular, a very significant part of the Trump base.
In contrast to other Trump supporters and other religious Trump supporters, they’re far more devoted to Trump. They are probably the most loyal to Trump, in part because they believe that he has been very loyal to them, and because they believe that he’s anointed by God to save America and the world.
Those two things are actually very tied together because of the way that both his presidencies have been very influencer, celebrity-driven. Being close to Trump for a burgeoning charismatic influencer is very important, because if you get a little boost from Trump, then more people will watch your YouTube, and more people will follow you on X, or whatever your social media platform is.
Those things are very tied together. It’s not just a one-way street. But Trump is very intermingled with that world. His top religious adviser and director of the White House Faith Office, Paula White, she comes from that world of televangelism and prosperity, gospel preaching, and signs and wonders and miracles — that charismatic Christian world.
So in many ways they are the most influential religious block on Trump, and that obviously is causing a little bit of consternation in the MAGA base currently.
“Being close to Trump for a burgeoning charismatic influencer is very important, because if you get a little boost from Trump, then more people will watch your YouTube.”
JW: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. One question I have, and this is a little bit of an aside, but is there a penalty for these people to continuously predict the end times?
That seems to be a large part of what we’re talking about with wars in the Middle East. Does anyone pay a price for that?
SP: Almost never. Typically, in this world, once somebody is considered a prophet and they make a prophecy, sometimes they’re right and sometimes they’re wrong. I think that’s why somebody like Hagee is so careful to say this is all God’s timing. A lot of them are careful to say things like, is this a sign of the end times? Might we be experiencing the end times? They phrase it in the form of a question instead of saying, “This is the thing that is definitely going to trigger the end times.”
I think from a marketing standpoint, consistently raising it as a question, it generates a little bit more anticipation and excitement. They’ve been doing this for decades, not just with regard to what’s going on in Iran, but just other things that might be a sign of the end times. So nobody really pays a price because their followers are invested in this world where anticipating and getting ready for, and thinking about and wondering when the end times will happen is just very much embedded in their culture.
JW: I’ve been wondering about the end times and these predictions. My mom is a former Catholic, so I was raised a little bit Catholic, a little bit Unitarian. So there was not all this lore.
SP: Yes, this is definitely very much an evangelical thing and not a Catholic thing, and that is part of the reason why there is friction in the MAGA base over not just the Iran war, but Trump’s closeness with Netanyahu.
JW: You can see this growing division on the right more broadly among some of the loudest MAGA voices, questioning Israel’s influence in American politics. That criticism has been increasing as the Trump administration pursues its illegal war on Iran.
Recently you wrote about Candace Owens and Joe Kent, the former director of the National Counterterrorism Center, who resigned in opposition to the war.
Sarah, what do you make of the growing number of critical MAGA voices, and how they’re framing their opposition. What do you make of Owens in particular and her messaging? What’s the end game?
SP: Candace Owens is a raging antisemite. Every discussion of Owens needs to acknowledge that. So when she talks about being anti-Israel or being anti-Zionist, her criticisms are not just legitimate criticisms of the Israeli governments and the Israeli military’s actions. All of her criticisms are imbued with antisemitic conspiracy theories and rank antisemitism, Holocaust denial, that sort of thing. Just so that we’re on the table with that.
JW: Good disclaimer.
SP: But I think that she and some of her colleagues and allies in the far-right Catholic MAGA world are trying to do a sort of horseshoe thing, where they want leftists who are anti-Zionist or anti-Israel, to give them a pat on the back for being the right-wingers who have come out against Israel’s actions and Israel’s policies, and the American relationship with Israel. Owens and her allies are making this not just about Israel, but also about Catholics and evangelicals.
For most mainstream Catholics, even conservative ones — ones who you might think of as being George W. Bush Republicans, they’re anti-same-sex marriage, anti-abortion, that sort of thing — but the Israel stuff just isn’t that important to them. She is trying to make it important to far-right Catholics. So she’s trying to make it important by starting a little intra-MAGA war between Catholics and evangelicals over this issue.
She and her allies have tried to make the argument that it’s a violation of their religious freedom to have to submit to or agree with these kinds of policies that Christian Zionists promote because that is not part of their Catholic faith.
Now, it’s true that the whole end-times scenario that someone like John Hagee promotes is not part of the Catholic faith, but Owens always doubles down on the antisemitism on top of that. So it’s a complicated world.
“White evangelicals make up a huge part of a very important part of Trump’s base, and they’re very homogenous in this way.”
The other thing about trying to determine how big is this MAGA rift, really. One thing that’s important to understand is that white evangelicals make up a huge part of a very important part of Trump’s base, and they’re very homogenous in this way. Eighty percent of white evangelicals voted for Trump, and a huge segment of them are Christian Zionists.
Catholics are more split 60-40, 50-50 on whether they’re Democrats or Republicans. And Catholic converts like Candace Owens, who are extremely far right, make up a very small segment of Catholics as a whole, even a small segment of Republican Catholics.
So I think when we’re trying to assess her influence, in a way we’re comparing apples and oranges because we’re trying to compare someone who has had a podcast and a huge following on Twitter for a few years with a movement that has spent decades making this end times theory, or this end times narrative, a core part of what their followers believe.
[Break]
JW: So now I want to talk about another kind of Christian right influencer: the Heritage Foundation, obviously the people behind Project 2025, but their new report is receiving less attention. It’s called “Saving America by Saving the Family: A Foundation For The Next 250 Years.”
This report outlines a vision that “restores” what they call the “natural family,” defined as marriage between a man and a woman, and how that mission is fundamental to saving America’s future. Can you talk about how we’re seeing that vision show up in policymaking and in bills like the SAVE [Safeguard American Voter Eligibility] Act?
SP: In terms of policymaking, I think that they’re trying to [push] a lot of small bore things through, say, the Department of Health and Human Services or the FDA. They want to try to ban mifepristone so that abortion will be inaccessible to people. They want to do things to promote adoption by Christian families instead of non-Christian families or instead of same-sex couples.
Every anti-LGBTQ policy is a furtherance of this “natural family” policy in that Heritage Foundation document. They want to, through anti-abortion measures, enforce motherhood for women and also create an image of the “natural family marriage between a man and a woman.”
It’s an explicit anti-LGBTQ agenda, and they’ve been extremely, explicitly anti-trans. From their perspective, trans people threaten their whole idea of a binary sex — men and women, and that’s it. It explains a lot about why they’re going so hard after trans people’s rights.
With regard to the SAVE Act, I’m not sure what they’re doing there. Because the SAVE Act would punish women who took their husband’s names because then you wouldn’t be able to register to vote unless you got your birth certificate, which then your birth name wouldn’t match your current name. So it creates a whole host of problems. That to me is an odd thing for them to be pushing right now, but it’s also in line with a segment of the religious right, including Pete Hegseth’s pastor that believes that women shouldn’t even vote. But I feel like they’re stepping all over themselves with what they’re proposing in the SAVE Act.
JW: Yeah, and I wanted to get into that. The report doesn’t explicitly mention transgender people. They just say gender ideology throughout their entire Save the Family report. But it’s essentially just ragging on transgender people, queer people. A lot of ragging on feminists, birth control.
There’s obviously discussion of how to have more families, more kids. But it almost seems more focused on enemies than it does on actually promoting kids and families. Should we understand it as a document that actually is trying to push for more kids and families, or is this about mandating a specific type of Christian lifestyle?
SP: The latter. In order to do that, they have to marginalize other people. So in their view, if trans people exist, then there is no binary between men and women in which these gender roles are very clearly defined and delineated.
JW: To you, it’s much more about, OK, how do we make people live the lives that we want them to live? And how do we find enemies who we can terrorize to make that happen?
SP: Well, think about it this way, that what they are proposing runs counter to the way American culture has been for the last 50 or 60, 70 years and runs counter to — not Dobbs, obviously, that’s an exception — but it runs counter to things that have become more accepted, like marriage equality and I wouldn’t include trans rights in that category because it hasn’t been accepted. I think that is what is driving them to create enemies, in order to make this “traditional family” seem more appealing to people or seem under threat by something.
“I think that is what is driving them to create enemies, in order to make this ‘traditional family’ seem more appealing to people or seem under threat by something.”
If the traditional family is the ideal — where there’s a man and a woman and kids, and the woman stays home and doesn’t go to work and all of that — then all of these other people, women who don’t get married, single moms, trans people, same-sex couples, they’re a threat to that. They see it as a threat. They would consider a threat to their religious freedom because they think that their religion demands these kinds of family relationships. And so it’s a very radical document. I think that there are people within the administration who take it very seriously.
JW: We haven’t discussed race yet, and I think that’s always the kind of underlying thing in the corner when you’re talking about Christian nationalism, specifically white Christian nationalism. In this document they only mention Black people so much as to say, not enough Black people are getting married, that’s a problem, and then leave that to the side. They don’t mention race generally, but how do you view race in this vision?
SP: Overall, the Trump regime has attempted to completely eviscerate civil rights for Black people. I mean completely. Dismantling the Civil Rights Division at the Department of Justice, dismantling the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. So I think within the context of this pro-natalist argument, it’s a paternalistic view. “It would be better for Black people if they also adhere to this traditional family structure.” I feel the 1980s are hovering over us right here, and that was when a lot of this pro-family, pro-natalist stuff of the modern religious right was hatched.
But I think that it is a clear broadside just against any kind of culture that they consider to be non-compliant with their idea of the traditional family whether that’s women who have chosen not to get married, moms who’ve chosen not to get married. When you see how they’ve tried to marginalize, say, trans people from public life, this gives you a lot of insight into how they view, let’s say, non-complying people with their view of what America should be.
JW: While we’re talking about the Save the Family and the religious right’s views on marriage and family and race, in that regard, I also wanted to ask you about their views on immigration and race. How do you perceive the Christian right when it comes to this issue?
SP: White evangelicals are among Trump’s staunchest supporters when it comes to immigration. When you look at the polling data about their views of his position on immigration, in general, and in particular, the ICE crackdowns in Minneapolis and other cities, white evangelicals are among his staunchest supporters. And this is very much tied into their view of what a Christian nation is, and their acceptance of the argument, their embrace of the argument that undocumented people are necessarily criminals because just the act of having come here “illegally” is a crime. That is very much tied into their perception that America was founded as a Christian nation. Somehow that was taken away from us by many things that happened over the course of the 20th century, including immigration, including the Civil Rights Act, including women’s rights, LGBTQ rights, all of that. So when they talk about restoring the Christian nation, what they’re really talking about is restoring a white Christian nation.
JW: I want to get into the deeper, the broader impact of these groups. Your podcast Reign of Error illustrates how the Christian right isn’t a fringe movement, but how its various figures, groups, and sects are in the halls of power shaping policies and remaking America from local offices to the White House.
Can you talk about the infrastructure the Christian right has been able to build over the years to wield that level of influence and policymaking?
SP: I think a lot of people think of the religious right as being a lot of megachurch pastors at the pulpit telling people how to vote and that it’s just people getting instructions every November and going to the polls and hitting the lever for the Republican candidate.
“They have built mechanisms for creating and enforcing this political ideology, not only in their churches, but through television shows, conferences, books … YouTube, X, TikTok.”
It’s much thicker and deeper than that because they have built mechanisms for creating and enforcing this political ideology, not only in their churches, but through television shows, conferences, books, and with the advent of social media, of course, YouTube, X, TikTok, all of the social media that they have at their disposal, and so you have that element of it. You have political organizations that work with religious leaders to recruit religious people, and even pastors to run for office and to organize voters to go to the polls on Election Day.
You have organizations that were created to counter institutions that liberals and the left had built. So to counter the ACLU, they founded the Alliance Defending Freedom, which has litigated most of the cases, producing some of the Supreme Court’s worst precedents in recent years, including the Dobbs decision. ADF was behind challenging the ban on conversion therapy in Colorado that the Supreme Court ruled on recently.
So you have all of these things together. You have the Heritage Foundation, which was created back in the 1970s to counter the Brookings Institution — which is not really like a leftist organization by any stretch of the imagination, but that’s how they perceived it. So you have these different layers of convincing people and keeping them engaged in the political project and the political process.
Then you also have on the legal front, not just these legal organizations, but Christian law schools that are educating the next generation of Christian lawyers who will go out and litigate these cases, maybe become judges. So they have built an infrastructure, a multi-layered infrastructure that is intended to be intergenerational, that’s intended to last for decades. That’s not intended only to run from election cycle to election cycle.
They spent 50 years to overturn Roe vs. Wade. They didn’t give up. They chipped away for many decades. When you think about that, they worked at the state level to chip away at it. They worked the legal process to chip away at Roe at the state level. They chipped away at abortion rights.
At the same time, when I talk about the multi-layered, they had institutions and organizations that helped train judges to rule from these right-wing perspectives, that would advocate for judges that were nominated to the bench by George W. Bush or Donald Trump to become District Court judges, appellate judges, Supreme Court justices. That’s what I’m talking about when I say it’s a multi-layered infrastructure because you have all of these things working together. There’s never a sense of victory like, “Oh, we got that done, yay us, and now we’re gonna take a break.” No, they did not even stop for a minute after they overturned Roe vs. Wade. Now they’re on to trying to ban mifepristone.
It’s important for people to understand that they never see any victory as their final achievement. It’s just one piece in a long road that they’re very dedicated to trotting.
JW: Given this relentlessness that you’re describing and the level of influence that we’re talking about here, especially even within the Trump administration, do you think that mainstream media is taking the Christian rights seriously enough?
SP: I don’t think the mainstream media has ever taken the Christian right seriously enough. They have consistently viewed Trump’s relationship with white evangelicals as ranging from harmless to purely transactional. When in fact, I think that they’re very deeply ideologically embedded with one another.
It’s partially a function of a little bit of nervousness about even touching religion, that they don’t want to be seen as being critical of somebody’s religious beliefs or religious practices. But I think it has taken a long time for the media to wake up to how extreme they are and how successful they’ve been at capturing, not just the Republican Party but Trump in particular.
JW: That was really informative and pretty alarming, but we’re going to leave it there. Thanks, Sarah, for joining me on the Intercept Briefing.
SP: Thank you, Jessica.
JW: To keep up with how the Christian right is shaping policy in the U.S. today, follow Sarah’s work at Talking Points Memo and her podcast Reign of Error, which I highly, highly recommend.
Before we go, we’d love it if you helped The Intercept Briefing win its first Webby Award for best news and politics podcast. So please vote for us. We’ll add a link to vote in our show notes. Thanks so much!
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. Will Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.
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Until next time, I’m Jessica Washington.
The post Trump’s Holy War Abroad and at Home appeared first on The Intercept.
Created in Italy and made with elderflower liqueur, the cocktail is sweeter than Aperol spritz and lower in alcohol
Pub gardens and bar terraces have been awash with a sea of orange in recent years as Italy’s love of Aperol spritz spread to the UK. But this year the cocktail’s cousin, a Hugo spritz, will be the drink of the summer, according to supermarkets and bars.
It is already being served across the country, including at Sea Containers on the banks of the Thames and Mayfair’s swanky Claridge’s hotel in London, 20 Stories bar in Manchester and the Bridge Tavern in Newcastle. Wetherspoons has the cocktail on its menu nationwide.
40ml St‑Germain elderflower liqueur.
60ml prosecco.
60ml sparkling water.
8-10 mint leaves.
Lime wedge for garnish.
Mint sprig for garnish.
Fill your glass with ice cubes.
Add in the mint leaves.
Pour sparkling wine and sparkling water over ice.
Add St‑Germain elderflower liqueur.
Gently stir.
Garnish with a mint sprig and lime wedge.
Continue reading...This next-generation network technology won't just make our phones faster; it'll unlock new capabilities in robots, turning them into all-sensing, always-learning fleets.
Bosses write to home secretary and London mayor listing series of incidents staff have faced in past week
Marks & Spencer has called on the government and London’s mayor to crack down on retail crime, saying it has become “more brazen, more organised and more aggressive”, after reporting an increase in shoplifting and violence at its stores.
The M&S chief executive, Stuart Machin, has written to the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, and its retail director, Thinus Keeve, has written to the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, saying greater resources are needed for police to tackle the crime effectively and target repeat offenders and crime hotspots.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 3 No. 557.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 3 #1027
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 3, No. 761.
South-east Italy also affected by heavy rain, and snow at higher altitudes, while deadly flooding hits Afghanistan
Parts of the Mediterranean have been lashed by Storm Erminio this week. Heavy rain, thunderstorms and occasional bursts of hail affected much of Greece throughout Wednesday and Thursday, with the most severe conditions across south-eastern parts of the mainland and several islands in the southern Aegean Sea, including Crete, with streets flooded and vehicles stranded.
Some of the heaviest rain fell on Wednesday across Attica, a region encompassing Athens, with one weather station near the city’s international airport recording 132mm (5.2 in) in 24 hours. The most intense downpours were overnight, when the coastal town of Nea Makri was particularly badly affected; an unofficial weather station recorded about 50mm falling within just two hours. One person died in the town; a man found beneath a car was believed to have been swept away as he escaped his flooding basement home.
Continue reading...From a subtle Princess Peach lip jelly to a Yoshi egg that’s been traumatising children, the cosmetic chain’s latest tie-in is out of this world
When The Super Mario Bros Movie came out in 2023, it came with a rather unlikely tie-in: a range of skincare and bathing products from cosmetics chain Lush. The store, known for its devotion to natural ingredients and support for social justice causes, didn’t seem like the obvious partner for a major video game franchise. Because of this, I thought I should try them out, assuming that my dalliance with beauty journalism would be short-lived.
I was wrong. The collection was so successful, Lush later released a Minecraft range, which I also reviewed, and now there’s a Super Mario Galaxy range to tie in with the new movie. Somehow, I have become the Guardian’s Lush correspondent and it seems I am now trapped in a sweet-smelling cycle of video game-branded toiletries. There are definitely worse fates, so I’m just going with it.
Continue reading...A new book explores how technology and a host of maverick innovators have given rise to an exceptional crop of baseball players
In a 1940 publicity stunt, the Cleveland Indians’ flamethrowing pitcher, Bob Feller, tested which was faster: One of his own blazing deliveries, or a motorcycle. Feller’s pitching won, hands down. But today, Feller’s once-remarkable speed has become commonplace, even bettered, as major leaguers routinely pass triple figures on the radar gun. The secret to this arms race? The advances in pitching analytics,often authored by people without any previous baseball pedigree.
That’s part of the narrative of Unhittable, a new book by one such individual – Rob Friedman, more commonly known to his online followers as PitchingNinja. The book’s subtitle says it all: How Technology, Mavericks and Innovators Engineered Baseball’s New Era of Pitching Dominance.
Continue reading...Mauricio Pochettino faces several tough decisions to name a squad for the 2026 World Cup hosts
A full 24 matches into the Mauricio Pochettino era, we have arrived at the moment of truth. The US men’s national team’s 2026 World Cup roster will be named on 26 May, and the team’s two recent friendlies (a 5-2 loss to Belgium and a 2-0 loss to Portgual) have given Pochettino plenty to think about as he makes his selection.
We here at the Guardian have made our picks as well – based a little on our own preference, but still within the realm of what Pochettino may do. Separately, the three of us made our 26-man rosters. Any player who we agreed on got the “on the squad” designation. Anyone we differed on is listed as “up for debate”, with other notable exclusions listed as “out of the picture”.
Continue reading...Just under three years ago, the Food and Drug Administration deemed 19 peptide drugs too unsafe to be dispensed by compounding pharmacies, which mix components of approved drugs to create bespoke medication for people who have trouble taking commonly available products.
Now, under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the agency is poised to reverse itself. That’s despite few clinical studies supporting the effectiveness or safety of these peptides, which are amino acid chains meant to help regulate functions in the body and have become popular among fitness and longevity enthusiasts.
In February, Kennedy said the FDA acted illegally in 2023 when it categorized 19 peptides as too unsafe for compounders, whose final products aren’t tested or approved by the FDA. Kennedy, who described himself as a “big fan” of peptides, has used the therapies himself.
“It was illegal because they’re not supposed to do that unless there’s a safety signal,” Kennedy said on “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast, referring to adverse events related to medications. “And they didn’t have a safety signal. They’re not allowed to look at efficacy. They’re not allowed to say, ‘Well, we don’t believe these are efficacious,’ or whatever. They can only look at safety.”
But three former FDA officials closely familiar with how the agency created the criteria to assess the peptides in the first place say Kennedy has mischaracterized their work. The agency’s 2023 decision to ban certain peptides was supported by numerous documented safety concerns, they said. FDA regulations also require the agency to assess both safety and effectiveness before approving a substance for compounding.
“It would be a disruption of the societal pact we have had since 1962 that drugs will be studied to see if they work before they are marketed in the U.S.,” said Janet Woodcock, a former FDA acting commissioner.
If Kennedy justifies reversal of the previous work by suggesting there were no safety concerns, it would give a false imprimatur of safety to more than a dozen unapproved, untested drugs, the officials said.
There’s been little new science on the 19 peptides since the FDA’s 2023 decision to categorize them as unsafe. But demand for the drugs has exploded as influencers have flooded social media with promises of sculpted physiques, glowing skin, luscious hair, rapidly healing injuries, youthful energy and blazing sex lives.

The demand has given rise to a burgeoning gray market, where wellness spas, multilevel marketers and telehealth websites ply the public with vials of “research grade” peptides labeled “not for human use.”
“More people want to use them,” said Lauren Colenso-Semple, a muscle physiology researcher and science communication specialist who follows scientific studies of peptides as part of her work. “That’s what’s changed.”
FDA-approved peptide drugs such as insulin and oxytocin have been available for decades. Newer ones such as semaglutide and tirzepatide, broadly known as GLP-1s, have exploded in popularity for weight loss and have shown promise for treating other conditions, such as addictions and neurodegenerative and liver diseases. The popularity of these drugs has led the public to become more comfortable with injectables and has helped drive attention to other gray-market peptides.
Last year, at a Las Vegas conference promising radical life extension, two women became critically ill after being injected with peptides the FDA had categorized as unsafe. Although Nevada regulators investigated and fined the health practitioners involved in administering the peptides, investigators weren’t able to determine the exact cause of the reaction. The doctor who ran the booth where the women became ill said he didn’t believe that the peptides caused their reactions but apologized for the incident and said he would review his practices.
The Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding, one of the largest industry associations lobbying for the FDA to change its stance on peptides, acknowledges it knows little about the safety of individual peptides being sold to the public. (Its CEO says it is an advocacy organization, not a scientific one.) But the group argues the public would be safer if peptides were handled by regulated compounding pharmacies instead of the gray market. The FDA should forgo the usual human clinical trials in order to bring about this shift, a spokesperson for the alliance said.
“Where we don’t have research, clinical trials, what we’ve got a ton of, is, shall we say, testimonials, patient affidavits, attesting to the wonders of the drug,” said Scott Brunner, the alliance’s chief executive officer. “And RFK Jr. is one of those testifiers.”
On the Rogan podcast, Kennedy wasn’t clear on exactly how the FDA would let compounders start dispensing peptides, describing it only as “some kind of action” to make “about 14” peptides “more accessible.” Nor has he specified which peptides he wants to make available. (Neither the FDA nor HHS responded to ProPublica’s requests for more information.) But several regulatory shortcuts exist and, ultimately, Kennedy could simply declare the ingredients are legal.
“He has all of the authority,” said Woodcock, likening such a declaration to former HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’ unilateral 2011 reversal of the FDA’s decision to lift age restrictions on the emergency contraception Plan B. (A judge ultimately found Sebelius’ move to be arbitrary and capricious and nullified it.)
“The secretary can do anything they want.”

The FDA’s road to regulating compounding pharmacies — and by extension the peptides they seek to dispense — has been long and tedious. Much of the regulatory fight has focused on which ingredients compounders should be allowed to use.
Under a 1997 law, the first passed by Congress to regulate the industry, compounders can only use ingredients that are a component of an approved drug, have what’s known as a USP monograph (essentially a third-party certified recipe for a drug used mainly by manufacturers of generics), or are listed as approved substances by the FDA.
This FDA list, known as “the bulks list,” is at the center of the ongoing peptide debate.
Litigation and pressure from the industry and lawmakers delayed for decades the creation of the bulks list, leaving compounders in limbo on scores of substances, not just peptides.
“Everything was a fight. It was a huge fight,” said one former FDA official who has spent more than 30 years working on compounding policies. The former official asked not to be named to avoid a public debate with the industry.
The need for the list took on new urgency in 2012, when more than 60 people died from fungal meningitis infections contracted from a drug produced at a compounding facility and dispensed to hundreds of people. Congress passed another law further regulating large compounders that sell medications to doctors’ offices and hospitals rather than individual patients. The new law also prompted the agency to move more quickly on establishing the bulks list.
The FDA asked the industry to nominate substances for inclusion on the list. It did so, nominating thousands of ingredients, including, for example, purified water and asparagus.
“They put in everything,” the official said. “Literally thousands of nominations with absolutely no justification for why it needed to be there.”
Each substance would have to be reviewed individually before it could be added to the bulks list. The agency would have to solicit public comment and an advisory committee of health and pharmacy experts would have to review the FDA’s research.
Reviewing them “was a massive effort. The agency proceeded glacially, but really we were speeding as fast as we could,” the official said.
In 2017, under pressure to move more quickly, the FDA came up with an interim solution. It substantially narrowed the list of nominated ingredients, quickly reviewed each remaining substance and placed them into three categories. The first was substances with enough of a safety track record that the agency felt comfortable letting compounders use them while the final list was assembled. The second category included substances considered too risky for compounding. And the third included those without enough supporting information for the FDA to make an informed decision and therefore wouldn’t be used for compounding.
This categorization didn’t constitute a formal regulation; rather the agency was using its discretion not to go after compounders who used ingredients it deemed safe — those from the first category.
In 2023, the FDA placed 19 peptides in Category 2, which already included a handful of substances the agency considered to be dangerous.
This is what Kennedy has called “the war on peptides.”
In explaining its decisions, the FDA pointed to well-established research in peptide drug development that injectable peptides carry the risk of causing immune reactions. Such reactions can range from responses with “no clinical manifestations” to irritating rashes to life-threatening conditions such as anaphylactic shock, which constricts breathing and impairs motor function.
Peptides occur naturally in the body but break down quickly after serving their purpose. Peptide drugs, on the other hand, are manufactured to last longer in the body to create a therapeutic response, such as controlling appetite or promoting the growth of new blood vessels, bone density or muscle.
“Now that it’s been tweaked to make it something else, the immune system can recognize it as foreign and there’s the potential issue of having an unwanted immune response,” Colenso-Semple said.
The manufacturing process can also introduce impurities — like bacteria or heavy metals — into peptide drugs. They also are sensitive to environmental conditions and can change chemical composition if stored at the wrong temperatures or shaken too vigorously, increasing the risk of an immune response or decreasing their effectiveness. And when a substance is injected, as opposed to taken orally, it bypasses most of the body’s natural defenses.
The risk of an immune response is common to peptide drugs in general. But individual peptides also present specific potential risks.
The FDA reviewed data to assess these risks and found limited human studies on a few peptide therapies; most have only been studied in animals or in clinical populations like HIV patients. What human data the FDA did find for individual peptides indicated the potential for harm. Subjects in studies of six individual peptides — growth hormone releasing peptide-2, ibutamoren mesylate, ipamorelin, CJC-1295, AOD-9604 and melanotan II — experienced adverse events, including death. (It wasn’t proven whether the deaths were caused by the peptides or by something else.) Ultimately, the FDA decided not enough data existed to allay the known safety concerns.
“Of course any adverse event can be a flag,” said another former FDA official who worked in the compounding division when the peptides were categorized as unsafe. The former official asked not to be named because they work in public health and don’t want to antagonize the current administration. “Also, if there is no clinical data for a substance, and an awareness that the substance has the propensity for harm, that could make it an appropriate placement on the Category 2 list.”

Putting the peptides on the unsafe list didn’t change much for compounders. Because those peptides aren’t components of an approved drug and don’t carry a USP monograph, compounders weren’t allowed to dispense them anyway.
“All that did was put an exclamation point on it,” Brunner said. In the months after the FDA’s announcement, his organization repeatedly warned its members not to dispense peptides.
But the listing prompted at least two peptide companies to sue the FDA, arguing it was dragging its feet on creating the bulks list of allowed compounding substances. To date, only six substances have made it through the process to be put on the list, none of which are peptides and none of which are injectables. As the lawsuit wound its way through federal court, the FDA agreed to accelerate the review of four peptides named in the lawsuit: CJC-1295, AOD-9604, thymosin-alpha and ipamorelin acetate. It also decided to move forward on two other peptides not listed in the complaint: kisspeptin and ibutamoren mesylate. Online marketing claims these peptides help with, among other things, weight loss, muscle-building, anti-aging, insomnia, tissue repair and sexual dysfunction. Marketers also claim thymosin-alpha, one of the more studied peptides, can help with immune function, Lyme disease and COVID-19.
In the final months of the Biden administration, the FDA convened the expert advisory committee and presented its research on the six peptides. In reports up to 158 pages long, the agency detailed the science behind the immune response risk in synthetic peptides, listed documented adverse events associated with the drugs and summarized the limited research on human subjects. In each case, the FDA recommended against putting the peptide on the bulks list for compounders.
“I can’t imagine anybody looking at this data and being comfortable” making these available to the public, Colenso-Semple said.
The peptide industry was given just 10 minutes before the committee to present arguments that the six peptides were safe. Speakers offered anecdotal evidence from their own and others’ practices. Even though peptides can’t legally be used by compounders, many were dispensing the drugs because the FDA has been lax in enforcing its regulations.
“Many of the peptides that have been placed on Category 2 have been used successfully by thousands of our practitioners treating hundreds of thousands of patients who utilize these compounds to energize cellular function and give the body what it needs to help address sickness and disease, including obesity, diabetes and addiction,” said Dan DeNeui, CEO of one of the peptide companies that sued the FDA.
His wife, Terri DeNeui, a nurse practitioner and founder of their company Evexias Health Solutions, presented information from a survey of 508 patients treated with various peptides that said 19% reported uncomfortable side effects and less than 1% experienced an adverse event.
They also contended peptides would be more safely dispensed by regulated compounders than on the gray market — the argument now being made by the Alliance for Compounding Pharmacies. The active ingredients in the drugs would be manufactured at an FDA-registered facility subject to inspection, and compounders are overseen by state boards of pharmacies to ensure sterile conditions.
That’s “a heck of a lot better than what many consumers are doing,” getting advice in chat rooms and “ordering some substance that purports to be a peptide and may or may not be,” Brunner told ProPublica.
While that argument addresses quality-control concerns associated with the gray market, it doesn’t confront the fundamental question of whether peptides are safe.
“They’re totally unapproved drugs,” said one of the former FDA officials. “Would you let a pharmaceutical company do this? No. No way.”
In the end, the advisory committee sided with the FDA and endorsed its initial decision that the six peptides were too risky to be dispensed to the public.

Unhappy with the advisory committee’s decision, the compounding industry has amplified its argument that the FDA review process for the bulks list is broken. The advisory committee had few working compounders on it and didn’t give those who opposed the decision on peptides enough time to present its arguments, industry advocates say.
With a new administration, whose health secretary has used peptides himself and is trying to advance alternative health practices, they see an opportunity. They hope the FDA will appoint more members with compounding experience to the committee and ease enforcement on peptides while it continues the established regulatory process.
“Given the scale of demand — demand that is going to be met, if not by a state licensed compounding pharmacy, then by the black and gray markets — we believe the lens that the FDA is using related to these peptides, at least some of the peptides, is the wrong lens,” Brunner said. “They’re wanting research, clinical trials. They’re wanting a certain amount of certitude that, frankly, is appropriate for most drugs, but not for this moment.”
Regulatory shortcuts exist that would allow the FDA to skip the more laborious approval process. The FDA could simply remove the peptides from Category 2, those it considers unsafe. It could place them in Category 1, allowing them to be used in compounding. Or it could announce it’s changing its enforcement strategy and not going after compounders who work with these substances.
None of that would be safe for the public, Woodcock contends. Congress intended for the FDA to “refer to a substantive body of evidence about the safety and effectiveness” of ingredients put on the bulks list, she said.
“This wasn’t supposed to be a route for unapproved drugs to get into the market,” she said. “Not even Congress was thinking that.”
The post RFK Jr. May Reverse a Peptide Ban He Calls “Illegal.” Former FDA Officials Say He Mischaracterized Their Work. appeared first on ProPublica.
The president says Iran’s remaining leaders are more reasonable. But assassinations have left in place an emboldened government driving a hard bargain, officials say.
People leaving Iran for Turkey tell of impact of bombs and internet blackouts, while others are travelling the other way to be closer to relatives in peril
He could not help but splutter out a laugh at the question. Amir, whose name has been changed for his safety, had just crossed the Kapıköy border point in eastern Turkey, a mountain pass between snow-topped peaks that is one of the few gateways to the west from Iran.
Until a few weeks ago, this was a busy place, popular among Iranian daytrippers coming across to Turkey to do some shopping in the lively city of Van, a further two hours drive west, or to spend a couple of nights out in its discreet Iranian-only nightclubs and bars serving alcohol.
Continue reading...Renewables made up nearly half of global installed electricity capacity by the end of 2025, "accounting for 85.6% of global capacity expansion," reports the Register, citing the International Renewable Energy Agency's (IRENA) 2026 Renewable Capacity Statistics report. "Per IRENA's data, that aforementioned 85.6 percent share of new power capacity additions was actually a decrease from 2024, when renewables were about 92 percent of global capacity additions. Yes, the share of total installed power capacity in 2025 rose again, but non-renewable capacity additions also rebounded sharply last year." From the report: Solar, in turn, was the dominant renewable technology, accounting for nearly three-quarters of last year's renewable capacity additions. Those additions totaled 692 GW in 2025, lifting installed renewable capacity by a record 15.5 percent year over year, IRENA noted. By the end of last year, renewables accounted for 49.4 percent of global installed electricity capacity, while variable renewable sources such as solar and wind represented roughly 35 percent of total capacity. For reference, it was only in 2023 that renewable energy sources crossed the threshold of generating 30 percent of the world's electricity.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The engine firing provided a slingshot-like boost to the Orion capsule, speeding it to 24,500 mph, the velocity needed to break free of Earth's gravitational clasp for a trek to the moon.
Plan for three nuns who escaped from care home last year to go to Rome thought to be positive sign of Vatican’s decision
Three nuns who escaped from a care home to return to their convent in a castle close to Salzburg where they had spent most of their lives are a step closer to being able to stay there, sources close to them say.
Sisters Bernadette, Regina and Rita, who are in their early to late eighties, broke into their convent home in Elsbethen last September with the help of former pupils of the Catholic school at which they had taught and other supporters. Their case became a cause célèbre, attracting attention from around the world.
Continue reading...From farms in New Zealand to factories in Delhi, the effects of the oil crisis triggered by the Iran war are rippling across Asia
Continue reading...An Israeli assault is pushing the fragile country to the brink.
A deal Tehran could take.
Tania Warner is fitted with ankle monitor and released along with seven-year-old daughter Ayla Luca after being deemed not a flight risk
A Canadian woman and her seven-year-old daughter, who were held for nearly three weeks in a notorious detention center by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), were released on Thursday evening after posting a bond of $9,500.
Tania Warner and her daughter Ayla Luca, originally from British Columbia, are both Canadian citizens. Warner moved to the US in 2021 when she married Edward Warner, a US citizen. “Very happy to have my family home … it’s been a whirlwind day,” said Edward Warner.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: Responding to public health concerns about microplastics and pharmaceuticals in the nation's drinking water, the Trump administration for the first time has placed them on a draft list of contaminants maintained by the Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA announced the move Thursday, touting it as a "historic step" for the Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement, which often raises concerns about toxic chemicals and plastic pollution in our food and environment. Also Thursday, the Department of Health and Human Services announced a $144 million initiative, called STOMP, to develop tools to measure and monitor microplastics in drinking water and in a later stage, to remove them. The Safe Drinking Water Act requires the EPA to publish an updated version of its Contaminant Candidate List every five years. This is the sixth iteration of the list. Microplastics and pharmaceuticals appear in the draft of the upcoming list, alongside per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, and dozens of other chemicals and microbes. Their inclusion on the list gives local regulators a tool to evaluate risks in their water supply, the EPA says, and it can set the stage for more research and regulatory action -- but doesn't actually guarantee that will happen.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I’m getting ready to make a purchase on either a gt or xrc which should I go with? Other than range is there any other benefits for the gt being a big dude? Thanks brothers
For years, California leaders accused oil companies of price gouging at the pump, but a state investigation found no evidence of that. Instead, a CBS News California investigation found what's really driving the highest gas prices in the U.S.
President Trump warned the U.S. "hasn't even started destroying what's left in Iran," and previewed that strikes on bridges and power plants could be next.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 3.
This blog is now closed. You can read about the latest major development in the conflict here.
Trump has claimed that Iran was “right at the doorstep” of gaining a nuclear weapon.
Earlier on Wednesday the president said he did not care about Iran’s stock of highly enriched uranium (HEU), arguing it was deep underground and could be monitored by satellite.
From the very beginning my campaign for president in 2015, I said I would never allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon. This regime has been chanting death to America, death to Israel.
Continue reading... | Hey all, I’m looking at buying a used onewheel GT with plenty of skate/snowboarding experience but not onewheel experience. I found a used GT with 506 miles and have two questions.. 1) is this line in the center of the tire anything to be concerned about? 2) does this look like normal wear and tear for the mileage? Thanks, looking forward to riding! [link] [comments] |
This live blog is now closed.
During its brief pro forma session today, the US House took no action on the funding bill to end the historic DHS shutdown, after Senate-passed legislation was sent to the lower chamber earlier today.
The House’s next procedural meeting will be on Monday, meaning the lapse in funding for several subagencies will continue until at least next week. However, Republican House speaker Mike Johnson may even wait until lawmakers return from a two-week recess to ensure the measure, that his party rejected last week, can pass.
Continue reading...Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says he will allow service members to carry personal weapons onto military installations.
Dose the X7SC have so much more power than the X7LR that it’s worth having less range, or is it close enough in power to justify the trade off for a lot more range?
US attorney general Pam Bondi failed to please a president fixated on prosecuting political enemies – key US politics stories from Thursday 2 April at a glance
Spring cleaning has begun at the White House.
Donald Trump on Thursday fired Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, dismissing a loyalist who reshaped the justice department but still failed to please a president fixated on prosecuting political enemies and frustrated with the politically explosive release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Continue reading...Drone-maker backed by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr tries to win contracts with Gulf countries protected by US
A drone-maker backed by Donald Trump’s two oldest sons is trying to sell to Gulf countries while they are under attack by Iran and dependent on the US military led by their father.
The sales drive by Florida-based Powerus – which announced a deal last month to bring aboard Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr – positions the company to potentially benefit from a war that their father began.
Continue reading...I’m trying to buy a used Onewheel but I’m not finding a whole lot of listings online for used ones. All of the ones on Facebook marketplace seems like a scam or overpriced. Any recommendations?
ENSCHEDE, Netherlands, April 2, 2026 — QuiX Quantum, a leading provider of photonic quantum computing hardware, today announced it has demonstrated “below threshold” error mitigation for the first time on a photonic quantum computer, suppressing physical qubit errors to the level compatible with scalable, fault‑tolerant quantum computing.
The achievement marks the first time a European company has demonstrated a production-ready method of error reduction, demonstrating the scalability of the QuiX quantum computing platform based on photonics. The project was conducted on the QuiX BiaTM Cloud Quantum Computing Service in collaboration with NASA’s Quantum Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, the University of Twente, and Freie Universität Berlin.
Quantum information is fragile, and without error correction, a computation of any user-relevant size will be impossible. For this reason, the ability to control errors in the quantum state is seen as a crucial milestone for any of the competing computing platforms. Increasingly, experts consider the ability to deal with such errors as the crucial differentiator between different technological approaches.
For such a protocol to be meaningful, it must meet two conditions: it must remove more errors than it introduces, and it must not impede the operation of the rest of the computer. QuiX is the first party in photonics to demonstrate a protocol that meets both requirements simultaneously. The findings are described in a paper available at https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.05947 which is currently undergoing peer review.
“Below-threshold, physical error mitigation has never been implemented in a photonic quantum computer. This achievement marks a significant milestone and places QuiX Quantum at the forefront of progress toward fault-tolerant photonic quantum computing,” said Stefan Hengesbach, CEO of QuiX Quantum. “We believe the most resource-efficient strategy is to reduce errors early rather than correct them at great expense — and by demonstrating net positive error mitigation on real hardware, we’ve taken a foundational step that showcases European leadership in accelerating quantum technologies toward powerful, large-scale systems.”
“This paper represents an important jump forward towards large-scale photonic quantum computing,” said David DiVincenzo, director of the Institute of Theoretical Nanoelectronics at the Peter Grünberg Institute at the Forschungszentrum Jülich. “By using a multimode optical Fourier transform, the authors have established experimentally an elegant photon distillation scheme that would significantly slash required resource costs in the future photonic quantum processor. This work takes a big step forward on one of the most stubborn bottlenecks in creating indistinguishable photons, giving a hint of a scalable path towards quantum fault tolerance.”
Photonic quantum computers use photons – particles of light – as their information carriers. The photons move around on an optical chip and entangle with each other because of their quantum particle statistics. However, the sources producing these particles are imperfect, and any path information inherent in the particles will destroy the entanglement, resulting in distinguishability errors.
Photon distillation is a hardware level, coherent technique for error reduction that improves the quality of single photons before computation. Using quantum interference among multiple imperfect photons, the method creates a cleaner, more indistinguishable photon without heavy qubit redundancy or classical post-processing.
Using a programmable 20‑mode photonic processor, the team demonstrated a photon distillation gate that makes photons measurably more alike, reducing photon indistinguishability error by a factor of 2.2. And despite additional noise introduced by the gate, the device still delivered a 1.2X net reduction in total error, demonstrating net‑gain mitigation.
The research also shows that combining photon distillation with quantum error correction may significantly reduce system level resource demands. Modeling with current photon source performance and photonic architectures, the approach could reduce the number of photon sources required per logical qubit by up to a factor of four, lowering system complexity and cost.
“For any quantum computer modality to scale, you have to prove you can remove more error than you add while the computer is still able to run, and that’s what we’ve shown here,” said Jelmar Renema, Chief Scientist at QuiX. “Our photon distillation gate is compatible with running real computations and delivers net gain error mitigation once all gate noise is included. That’s why this is a major achievement for photonics and quantum computing in general.”
The project was partially funded by the Netherlands Ministry of Defense’s Purple NECtar Quantum Challenges initiative.
About QuiX Quantum
QuiX Quantum is a leading provider of photonic quantum computing hardware driving innovation across Europe in the development of its Universal Quantum Computer. The first system, already sold and contracted for delivery, underscores the impact of QuiX Quantum’s market-leading hardware and renowned quality. Following its expansion across Europe and UK, QuiX Quantum pushes the boundaries of quantum technology and industry, strengthening Europe’s international competitiveness, leveraging a wide network of partners while serving a growing global customer base.
Source: QuiX Quantum
The post QuiX Quantum Demonstrates Below-Threshold Error Mitigation in Photonic Quantum Computing for First Time appeared first on HPCwire.
A doctor on trial on allegations he attempted to murder his wife on a hiking trail in Hawaii last year took the stand in his own defense.
A former FBI agent who was prosecuted for his alleged role in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol and later hired by the Trump-era Justice Department has left his government post, he announced Thursday.
‘Ukraine has expertise concerning sea waterways, and the defence and reopening of maritime traffic,’ says president. What we know on day 1,500
Volodymyr Zelenskyy offered on Thursday to provide Ukraine’s expertise in dealing with freedom of navigation in the Black Sea to those countries considering how to keep the strait of Hormuz open amid the conflict in the Middle East. The Ukraine president, speaking in his nightly video address, said the foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, had taken part in a virtual meeting devoted to reopening the strait of Hormuz, attended by about 40 countries. “Ukraine has relevant expertise concerning sea waterways, and the defence and reopening of maritime traffic,” he said. “If [our] partners are ready to act, we will consider how we can strengthen them, how we can apply our expertise, knowledge and technological potential.”
Russia’s army recorded no territorial gains on the frontline in Ukraine in March, for the first time in two and half years, AFP analysis of data from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) showed. The Russian army’s advances have been slowing since late 2025 due to Kyiv’s localised breakthroughs in the south-east, and losing ground in March and February on the southern section of the frontline, between the Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions, the analysis showed. Across the entire frontline, Ukrainian forces managed to recapture 9 sq km in March.
North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, gave “field guidance” at the Memorial Museum of Combat Feats at the Overseas Military Operations, which is under construction , state media KCNA said. The museum in Pyongyang will be a place to commemorate the fallen soldiers sent to support the Russian army in the war in Ukraine. The construction of the museum is almost complete and Kim said the opening ceremony would be held in mid-April, marking the first anniversary of the deployment of the North Korean soldiers.
Six Ukrainian children will be returned from Russia to their families in Ukraine, the White House said on Thursday, citing efforts by Melania Trump to expedite their return. A seventh Ukrainian child will also be returned to their family later this month, the first lady’s office said in a statement. Ukraine says almost 20,000 children have been illegally sent to Russia and Belarus, where they are sometimes subject to military training and forced to fight against their own country’s troops.
Russian strikes across Ukraine on Thursday killed at least two people and wounded dozens, officials said, as Moscow stepped up its attacks amid stalled peace talks. In the south-eastern Kherson region, Russia attacked “with artillery, mortars and UAVs”, the regional prosecutor’s office said on social media. A 42-year-old man was killed when a drone hit a civilian car, and 16 others – including a teenage boy and three police officers – were wounded in air attacks and artillery shelling, it added. In the Chernihiv region, north of the capital Kyiv, Russia attacked with a ballistic missile, the head of Chernihiv’s military administration, Dmytro Bryzhynsky, said on Telegram.
Russian forces maintained a daylong barrage of drone strikes on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second largest city, on Thursday, injuring at least two people, local officials said. Kharkiv’s mayor, Ihor Terekhov, posted reports on Telegram throughout the day and well into the evening, noting strikes in four city districts. One city official said there had been at least 20 drone strikes. He said some had triggered fires and two people had been injured in an evening attack, including an eight-year-old girl.
Russian forces carried out 129 attacks on Ukrainian gas and heating facilities during the recent 151-day heating season, the state oil and gas firm Naftogaz said on Thursday. “The Russians hit pipelines, gas production, underground storage facilities, heating systems – everything that Ukrainians depend on for heat and gas,” it said in a statement.
Continue reading...Health minister Mark Butler says federal government is ‘not negotiating’ when it comes to removing price protections on common medications
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Australia will not cave in to pressure from pharmaceutical giants and the Trump administration by removing consumer price protections on common medications, the health minister, Mark Butler says.
Donald Trump imposed a new 100% tariff on branded pharmaceuticals imported into the US overnight, Australian time, trying to force manufacturers to agree to drug-pricing deals or commit to making their products domestically.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 3, No. 1,749.
One of the sources said Hegseth wants someone in the role who will implement President Trump and Hegseth's vision for the Army.
A federal judge in New York has tossed out actor Blake Lively's sexual harassment claims against actor Justin Baldoni over their roles in the movie "It Ends With Us," but left intact a claim for retaliation.
YouTube is rolling out Stations, music video-themed FAST channels curated by the artists and creators you love.
The new surcharge will be added to fees paid by third-party sellers in the US and Canada.
The balance of power in Lebanon may be shifting. In a few days, I will again be involved in discussions with a Middle Eastern client on regional developments. Without disclosing anything sensitive, it is possible to outline the core analytical framework that underpins my advisory work in this case. Clients rarely pay for history lectures. They pay for interpretation, and ultimately for actionable guidance derived from that interpretation. The purpose of this piece is therefore not to provide a comprehensive history of Lebanon, but to explain the structural realities that shape what is, and is not, possible in the current
The post Lebanon: Beirut and the Polycentric Reality appeared first on Lima Charlie World.
| I road my board up to the store for a drink. when I got to the store, I picked it up without turning it off, walked in and got my drink then walked out just like I always do but this time the board is not responding. tried turning it off and on but it won't register the foot pads. [link] [comments] |
United did not say why it was raising its prices, but the move follows JetBlue also hiking its checked bag fees earlier this week, citing "rising operating costs."
schwit1 shares a report from the Kathmandu Post: In Nepal, helicopter rescue on high altitude is, by any measure, a genuine lifesaving operation. At high altitude, where oxygen thins and weather changes without warning, the ability to airlift a stricken trekker to Kathmandu within hours has saved countless lives. But threaded through that legitimate system, exploiting its urgency, its opacity, and its distance from oversight, is one of the most sophisticated insurance fraud networks in the world. Nepal's fake rescue scam is not new. The Kathmandu Post first exposed it in 2018. Months later, the government convened a fact-finding committee, produced a 700-page report, and announced reforms. In February 2019, The Kathmandu Post published a long investigative report. Last year, Nepal Police's Central Investigation Bureau reopened the file, and what they found is that the fraud did not stop -- instead it was growing. The mechanics of the fake rescue racket are straightforward: stage a medical emergency, call in a helicopter, check a tourist into a hospital, and file an insurance claim that bears little resemblance to what actually happened. But the sophistication lies in how each link in the chain is compensated, and how difficult it is for a foreign insurer -- operating from Australia and the United Kingdom -- to verify events that occurred at 3,000 metres in a remote Himalayan valley. The CIB investigation identifies two primary methods for manufacturing an "emergency." The first involves tourists who simply don't want to walk back. After completing a demanding trek -- an Everest Base Camp trek, for instance, can take up to two weeks on foot -- guides offer an alternative: pretend to be sick, and a helicopter will come. The guide handles the rest. The second method is more troubling. At altitudes above 3,000 meters, mild symptoms of altitude sickness are common. Blood oxygen saturation can drop, hands and feet tingle, headaches develop. In most cases, rest, hydration or a gradual descent is all that is needed. But guides and hotel staff, according to the CIB investigation, have been trained to terrify trekkers at precisely this moment. They tell them they are at risk of dying, that only immediate evacuation will save them. In some cases, investigators found that Diamox (Acetazolamide) tablets, used to prevent altitude sickness, were administered alongside excessive water intake to induce the very symptoms that would justify a rescue call. In at least one case cited in the investigation, baking powder was mixed into food to make tourists physically unwell. Once a "rescue" is called, the financial choreography begins. A single helicopter carries multiple passengers. But separate, full-price invoices are submitted to each passenger's insurance company, as if each had their own dedicated flight. A $4,000 charter becomes a $12,000 claim. Fake flight manifests and load sheets are fabricated. At the hospital, medical officers prepare discharge summaries using the digital signatures of senior doctors who were never involved in the case. In some cases, these are done without those doctors' knowledge. Fake admission records are created for tourists who were, in some documented instances, drinking beer in the hospital cafeteria at the time they were supposedly receiving treatment. In one case, an office assistant at Shreedhi Hospital admitted that he had provided his own X-ray report taken about a year ago at a different hospital, to be used as a case for treatment of foreign trekkers to claim insurance. The commission structure that holds the network together was described in detail during police interrogations. Hospitals pay 20 to 25 percent of the insurance payment to trekking companies and a further 20 to 25 percent to helicopter rescue operators in exchange for patient referrals. Trekking guides and their companies benefit from inflated invoices. In some cases, tourists themselves are offered cash incentives to participate.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A county board near Nashville voted to dismiss Luanne James, who said she stands by her decision, in the latest clash in a national debate over access to books.
Ryan Bridge is co-founder of Raise the Colours, which has been criticised for anti-immigrant rhetoric
The leader of a flag campaign group has been arrested on suspicion of causing religiously and racially aggravated harassment.
Ryan Bridge is the co-founder of Raise the Colours, which has put up hundreds of union and Saint George flags across England and attracted criticism for spreading anti-immigrant rhetoric. He was arrested on Tuesday and released on police bail the following day.
Continue reading...Commentary: If there's one company capable of making genuinely stylish wearable tech, it's British indie darling Nothing.
Attorneys for Salah Sarsour, a Palestinian-born US green card holder, say he was targeted for criticizing Israel
The president of Wisconsin’s largest mosque was detained by federal immigration agents, drawing accusations from local officials and religious leaders that the arrest was motivated by his statements against Israel.
Salah Sarsour, a Palestinian-born legal permanent resident of the United States, was taken into custody by nearly a dozen US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on Monday in Milwaukee after he left his home, according to the Islamic Society of Milwaukee.
Continue reading...Britain’s Keir Starmer hosts a meeting of world leaders for talks on the waterway amid mounting pressure from the Trump administration to join the Iran war.
| Just received my XRC and installed the wood footpads. The hybrid fender delete doesn't sit flush with the wood footpad. There is a lip from the wood to the plastic. Is my footpad defective or is there something I can do to fix this? [link] [comments] |
OpenAI is acquiring tech news podcast TBPN, a fast-growing daily show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays. OpenAI says TBPN will keep its editorial independence, even though the acquisition is widely viewed as part of a broader effort to influence public discourse around AI. CNBC reports: In the announcement, OpenAI CEO of AGI Deployment Fidji Simo wrote that their mission of bringing artificial general intelligence comes with a responsibility to have a space for "constructive conversation about the changes AI creates." Altman has appeared on TBPN multiple times and is a frequent presence across media and podcasts, even hitting NBC's "Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" in December. The announcement says TBPN will maintain editorial independence and continue to choose its own guests. "TBPN is my favorite tech show. We want them to keep that going and for them to do what they do so well," Altman wrote in a post on X. "I don't expect them to go any easier on us, am sure I'll do my part to help enable that with occasional stupid decisions." OpenAI did not disclose the terms of the deal but said TBPN will be housed within its strategy organization. "While we've been critical of the industry at times, after getting to know Sam and the OpenAI team, what stood out most was their openness to feedback and commitment to getting this right," wrote Hays in a statement. "Moving from commentary to real impact in how this technology is distributed and understood globally is incredibly important to us."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
SINGAPORE, April 2, 2026 — From 2025 until the end of 2029, Microsoft is on track to spend $5.5 billion to power Singapore’s AI future, Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith announced yesterday, alongside the expansion of Microsoft Elevate programs to provide AI tools and skills to tertiary students, teachers and nonprofits with responsible AI to uplift all communities in the AI era.
Microsoft is announcing a $5.5 billion USD investment in cloud and AI infrastructure and ongoing operations in Singapore during the five years from 2025 through 2029. As part of Microsoft’s commitment to enabling individuals and economies through technology, talent and trust, every tertiary education student in Singapore also now has free access to Microsoft 365 Premium with Copilot and the company’s suite of productivity tools, while all educators will be provided free AI training through Microsoft Elevate for Educators, and Microsoft Elevate for Changemakers will upskill nonprofit leaders. Together, these programs strengthen the education, workforce, and social impact systems for communities so more people can learn, work, and thrive in the AI economy.
Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith was in Singapore to make these announcements and deliver a keynote at today’s Asia Tech x Inspire event, alongside IMDA Chairman Russell Tham, Senior Minister of State at the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment, Dr. Janil Puthucheary, local leaders from public and private sectors along with students from across Singapore’s universities and vocational institutions.
“Our ongoing investment in cloud and AI infrastructure reflects Microsoft’s long-term confidence in Singapore as a global digital leader,” said Brad Smith, Vice Chair and President of Microsoft. “Together, we’re focused on helping people and organizations use AI by strengthening skills, increasing cybersecurity and resilience, and advancing trusted governance so technology delivers real benefits for Singaporeans.”
These announcements to expand AI skilling and workforce readiness nationwide to put people at the centre of the AI opportunity are aligned to Singapore’s rapid adoption of AI, reinforcing its ranking at #2 globally in the recent AI Diffusion Report from the Microsoft Research AI Economy Institute.
Dr. Janil Puthucheary, Senior Minister of State at the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment in Singapore, said: “Baseline AI skills are increasingly becoming as fundamental as digital literacy. By equipping students with a hands on experience using AI tools, and supporting our educators to adopt them confidently, we are strengthening the foundations for Singapore’s future workforce, and training them to use AI with confidence, discernment and trust.”
Powering Singapore’s AI Future
As part of its commitment to spend $5.5 billion in Singapore over five years to power the nation’s ambitions and AI future, Microsoft will invest in cloud and AI infrastructure and ongoing operations in Singapore. Microsoft will continue strengthening AI skills across sectors and communities, while increasing cybersecurity, resilience and trusted governance.
Empowering Every Tertiary Student with Free, Trusted AI Tools
Microsoft 365 Premium with Copilot will be free for 12 months to every tertiary student in Singapore. The more than 200,000 students enrolled in university and vocational training institutions will have access to Microsoft 365 productivity tools with Copilot, Microsoft’s AI assistant, built right in – including in Outlook, Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. Tertiary students can sign up to access this free offer (valid tertiary email address required) from this Microsoft site.
Access to useful, trusted, secure AI built right into the flow of work will give students an edge as they further their education, and ultimately improve their employability in the evolving job market. This expansion follows the announcement of the offer for students in the United States at the White House’s AI Education Task Force meeting in recent months.
New Microsoft Elevate Programs for Educators and Nonprofit Leaders
As AI adoption accelerates, readiness remains uneven. Many institutions and communities lack the skills, guidance, or capacity to adopt AI responsibly and effectively. Microsoft Elevate helps address these gaps by bringing together trusted technology, free credentials, professional communities, and system level capacity building, delivered through partnerships that support long term, inclusive impact.
To build AI confidence in classrooms, Microsoft has expanded Microsoft Elevate for Educators to Singapore, a new program helping educators build confidence in using AI responsibly in the classroom – from primary and secondary schools to Institutes of Higher Learning. Aligned with Singapore’s National AI Strategy 2.0, the initiative supports AI literacy and trusted, inclusive adoption through foundational training, virtual workshops and a global educator community.
To strengthen nonprofit leadership with responsible AI, Microsoft Elevate for Changemakers has been introduced in Singapore to support nonprofit and social impact leaders driving real world AI adoption in service of their communities. Designed to meet organizations where they are, the program builds practical skills with free AI readiness credentials while strengthening internal capacity for responsible and effective use.
These targeted efforts build on Microsoft’s long-term commitment to upskilling the people of Singapore, including through initiatives delivered in partnership with Singapore Government agencies and organizations that have reached hundreds of thousands of workers across every sector.
Latest Advice for Students, Job-Seekers, Employees and Leaders
New Economic Graph data from LinkedIn – a Microsoft company – shows that demand for AI literacy skills has grown in Singapore over 70% year-on-year. The latest insights released by LinkedIn today in the new book Open to Work; How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI, with a foreword contributed by Microsoft’s Brad Smith, show AI fluency has become a baseline expectation across organisations, regardless of role or function. The regions that pull ahead will ensure widespread access, widespread adoption, and widespread ability to innovate – including by prioritizing lifelong learning and public-private partnerships, as Singapore does.
“The significant commitment Microsoft is making to Singapore reinforces its pivotal role as an AI innovation hub in Asia. We’re all-in on Singapore’s AI future, and access and skills will be fundamental to fully realizing this nation’s ambitions. By embedding AI literacy into everyday learning and in how every sector from enterprise to nonprofits operate, we’re building on the National AI Strategy 2.0 to drive inclusive, trusted AI adoption for genuine impact,” said Wee Luen Chia, Managing Director, Microsoft Singapore.
About Microsoft
Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT”) creates platforms and tools powered by AI to deliver innovative solutions that meet the evolving needs of our customers. The technology company is committed to making AI available broadly and doing so responsibly, with a mission to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more.
Source: Microsoft
The post Microsoft Plans $5.5B Investment in Singapore Cloud and AI Infrastructure Through 2029 appeared first on HPCwire.
According to Jonathan the tortoise's vet, there was also a crypto donation request from the same account that falsely announced the tortoise's death.
From attempts to prosecute president’s foes to claims of a cover-up, attorney general endured tumultuous tenure
Analysis: Bondi firing a reminder that even ultra-loyalists get dumped by Trump
Democrats cheer Trump’s firing of Pam Bondi and attack Epstein files ‘cover-up’
Donald Trump fired Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, on Thursday, removing the nation’s chief law enforcement officer after months of mounting frustration over her handling of the Epstein files and her faltering attempts to prosecute the president’s political enemies.
“We love Pam, and she will be transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector, to be announced at a date in the near future,” Trump wrote in a social media post on Thursday. He said she would be replaced by her deputy, Todd Blanche, on an interim basis.
Continue reading...Judge Lewis Liman dismissed 10 of Lively’s 13 claims against Baldoni, including claim of sexual harassment
A federal judge has thrown out the majority of Blake Lively’s claims against Justin Baldoni.
In a court ruling on Thursday, Judge Lewis Liman dismissed 10 of the 13 claims in Lively’s lawsuit against her co-star and director of the domestic violence film It Ends With Us.
Continue reading...Interest rates for a typical home loan jumped Thursday to 6.46%, the highest level since September 2025. House-hunters aren't pleased.
New tax will hit branded drugs and active ingredients while exempting generics for at least one year
Donald Trump is threatening 100% tariffs on pharmaceutical companies that have not struck deals to lower US drug prices.
The new tariff will only apply to branded drugs and their active ingredients. Generic drugs, which make up more than 90% of medicines sold in the US, will be exempted from tariffs for at least one year. Orphan, veterinary and other specialty drugs are exempt if they are from trade deal countries or meet urgent public health needs.
Continue reading...Stocks rebound after sliding in early-day trade, with investors buoyed by reports that Iran and Oman could monitor ship traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.
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A month after the U.S. and Israel launched airstrikes on Iran, President Donald Trump addressed the nation in a prime-time speech on April 1, saying the military operation was “getting very close” to completing its mission. Trump repeated some false and questionable claims we’ve written about before.
The president said the U.S. “totally obliterated” three nuclear facility sites in Iran last June in a U.S. airstrike operation called Midnight Hammer. Experts and a classified U.S. intelligence report said the sites were damaged and Iran’s uranium enrichment program was set back, but the sites and the country’s nuclear capabilities weren’t completely destroyed.
In a March 18 congressional hearing, however, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard backed up Trump’s claim, saying that it was the assessment of the Intelligence Community that last year’s airstrikes “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear enrichment program.
Trump has repeatedly used the description “totally obliterated” in describing the success of the operation, starting the night of the attack in a televised address. As we’ve written, a five-page, preliminary, classified report from the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency said the bombing sealed off entrances of two facilities and set back Iran’s nuclear program by a few months, CNN and the New York Times reported last June.
On June 25, CIA Director John Ratcliffe issued a statement saying it would take “years” to rebuild key facilities. “CIA can confirm that a body of credible intelligence indicates Iran’s Nuclear Program has been severely damaged by the recent, targeted strikes,” he said. “This includes new intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years.”
Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, a nonpartisan organization that provides analysis on arms control and national security issues, told us in March that “it is clear that it would take Iran years to fully rebuild its enrichment plants” that were “severely damaged” in June. But the operation didn’t “remove or help account for 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent U-235 that Iran already had stockpiled, and that the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] reported this week is buried [at] Iran’s nuclear complex near Isfahan,” one of the three sites hit in last year’s airstrikes.
To be weapons-grade, the uranium would need to be enriched to 90%.
The president went on to say that Iran “sought to rebuild their nuclear program at a totally different location, making clear they had no intention of abandoning their pursuit of nuclear weapons.” He said the country was “right at the doorstep” of “a nuclear bomb, a nuclear weapon, a nuclear weapon like nobody’s ever seen before.”
The phrase “right at the doorstep” is vague, but arms control experts have said that there’s a lack of evidence that Iran was rebuilding its nuclear program before the U.S./Israeli military operation and that a nuclear weapon wasn’t “imminent.”
As we reported last month, Kimball told us that “[w]hile Iran’s nuclear program remains a medium- to long-term proliferation risk, there was and is no imminent Iranian nuclear threat; Iran is not close to ‘weaponizing’ its nuclear material so as to justify breaking off negotiations and launching the U.S.-Israeli attack.”
Eliana Johns, a senior research associate with the nuclear information project at the Federation of American Scientists, told us that “if Iran enriches uranium to weapons-grade, they will need to weaponize the material and develop a nuclear device with other sensitive components. It’s relatively easy to put various payloads on a missile; however, while Iran certainly has ballistic missiles that could theoretically be used for this purpose, there are still challenges with designing a nuclear device that can be mated with the intended missile, will detonate when desired, survive reentry, and arrive accurately at its target.”
In her prepared remarks for the March 18 congressional hearing, Gabbard said: “As a result of Operation Midnight Hammer, Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was obliterated. There has been no efforts since then to try to rebuild their enrichment capability. The entrances to the underground facilities that were bombed have been buried and shuttered with cement. We continue to monitor for any early indicators on what position the current or any new leadership in Iran will take with regard to authorizing a nuclear weapons program.”
Asked by Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff whether it was “the assessment of the Intelligence Community that there was an ‘imminent nuclear threat posed by the Iranian regime,'” as the White House had said, Gabbard said, “The intelligence community assessed that Iran maintained the intention to rebuild and to continue to grow their nuclear enrichment capability.” Under repeated questioning on the issue, Gabbard said that the president was “the only person who can determine what is and is not an imminent threat.”
Trump claimed that before the U.S. attacked, Iran was “rapidly building a vast stockpile of conventional ballistic missiles, and would soon have had missiles that could reach the American homeland, Europe and virtually any other place on earth.” But arms control experts have disputed Trump’s claim about missiles “soon” reaching the U.S.
As we wrote when Trump made a similar comment in his State of the Union Address on Feb. 24, while “soon” is a subjective term, experts say the threat of Iran developing an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of reaching the mainland of the United States was not particularly imminent. One expert put the time frame at several years, while others have said it would take Iran a decade or more to develop a functioning ICBM.
“Iran’s missile arsenal remains one of the pillars of its security strategy,” Emma Sandifer, program coordinator at the nonpartisan Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told us in an email. “However, there is little evidence that Iran could build missiles that reach the United States in the near future. Recent estimates determined that not only does Iran have no intercontinental ballistic missile capability, but the country appears to have maintained its self-imposed missile range limit of 2,000 km.”
Pushing back against the president’s claim, some Democrats have pointed to a Defense Intelligence Agency report released last May that stated, “Iran has space launch vehicles it could use to develop a militarily-viable ICBM by 2035 should Tehran decide to pursue the capability.” The report, which assessed missile threats that might be faced by a Trump-proposed “Golden Dome” missile defense shield, projected Iran could have 60 ICBMs by 2035.
“So basically, the U.S. intelligence agencies have said that Iran would need 10 years to build ICBMs capable of hitting the United States militarily if they chose to do so,” Rosemary Kelanic, director of the Middle East program at Defense Priorities, a Washington-based think tank advocating restraint in U.S. foreign policy, told us. “And it did not necessarily say that there was evidence that Iran had chosen to do so.”
However, Jeffrey Lewis, an expert on global security at Middlebury College, warned that many were misreading the context of the DIA report.
“The question wasn’t ‘When will Iran have an ICBM’, it was ‘What will the threat environment look like in 2035 when Golden Dome is to be fully operational,’” Lewis wrote on X.
A March 2 article in the Wall Street Journal reported that Lewis “said that even if Tehran wanted to pursue building the weapons, it would likely take two to three years at least to build a single missile based on the history of how other nations developed similar missiles.”
“US officials have been saying since the late 1990s that Iran is a little over a decade away from developing an ICBM and is pursuing that capability,” Johns, of the Federation of American Scientists, told us. “However, building an ICBM capable of accurately striking the US mainland would require overcoming substantial technical hurdles with propulsion, guidance, and reentry, among other things. And there is little evidence to indicate that Iran has this capacity or intends to pursue it.”
The president again criticized a multilateral nuclear agreement negotiated by former President Barack Obama’s administration that was intended to restrict Iran’s uranium enrichment program. Trump, who withdrew the U.S. from the agreement in his first term, said the nuclear deal “would have led to a colossal arsenal of massive nuclear weapons for Iran. They would have had them years ago, and they would have used them.”
As we’ve written before, we can’t say what would have happened if the agreement had remained in place, and Trump noted that this was his “opinion.” But the deal, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and also signed by China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and Germany, put restrictions on uranium enrichment by Iran for 15 years and required inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities. In exchange for Iran abiding by the deal, the other countries agreed to lift sanctions on Iran.
The agreement took effect in 2016, but Trump withdrew the U.S. from it in 2018.
The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation estimated that Trump withdrawing from the agreement led to Iran accelerating its nuclear program. As of November 2024, the center estimated that the “breakout time,” or the time Iran would need, if it chose to do so, to produce weapons-grade uranium that could then be used for one bomb, was two to three months before the nuclear agreement and was 12-plus months during the agreement. After the U.S. withdrew, the breakout time was a couple of weeks.
However, as we’ve explained, after producing the highly enriched uranium, it would take much longer for Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.
Trump also said that “Obama gave them $1.7 billion in cash … in an attempt to buy their respect and loyalty but it didn’t work.” As we explained in a 2016 article, the $1.7 billion payment, made in 2016, settled a claim that Iran had filed against the U.S. in an international tribunal in The Hague. It concerned a decades-old dispute over Iran paying the U.S. $400 million for military equipment, and the U.S. refusing to provide it after the Shah of Iran was overthrown during the Iranian Revolution in 1979.
The $1.7 billion included the original $400 million and “a roughly $1.3 billion compromise on the interest,” according to a statement by John Kerry, the secretary of state at the time.
Trump falsely suggested that the U.S. became the world’s top producer of oil and natural gas because of him.
“Under my leadership, we are No. 1 producer of oil and gas on the planet, without even discussing the millions of barrels that we’re getting from Venezuela,” Trump said. “Because of the Trump administration’s policies, we produce more oil and gas than Saudi Arabia and Russia combined. Think of that. Saudi Arabia and Russia combined, and that number will soon be substantially higher than that.”
As we’ve written, the U.S. has been the world’s No. 1 producer of petroleum, which includes both crude oil and refined petroleum products, such as gasoline, since 2013, and it has produced the most crude oil, including lease condensate, since 2018, as was long predicted. The International Energy Agency said in a 2012 energy outlook report that the U.S. was projected to become “the largest global oil producer” by “around 2020” due to advances in shale extraction technology.
Meanwhile, the U.S. has been the leader in natural gas production even longer — since 2009, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The U.S. overtook Russia to become the top producer of natural gas, and it has produced more of it than Russia and Saudi Arabia, combined, in all but one year since 2014.
Saudi Arabia and Russia had produced the most petroleum and crude oil until the U.S. surpassed them years ago. The U.S. has produced more petroleum than Saudi Arabia and Russia together since 2024, but it does not produce more crude oil than those two countries combined.
Trump repeated his false claims about turning around a country that was “dead and crippled” economically.
“We built the strongest economy in history,” he said. “We’re going through it right now, the strongest in history. In one year, we’ve taken a dead and crippled country, I hate to say that, but we were a dead and crippled country after the last administration, and made it the hottest country anywhere in the world by far, with no inflation, record-setting investments coming into the United States over $18 trillion and the highest stock market ever, with 53 all-time record highs in just one year.”
Trump didn’t create the “strongest” economy in his first or second term as president. Economists generally measure a nation’s health by the growth in real (meaning inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product. In his first year back in office, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said that real GDP grew at an annual rate of 2.1% in 2025, which was down from the annual rate of 2.8% in 2024 under his predecessor.
In addition, as of February, the unemployment rate in the U.S. had increased to 4.4% — up from 4% when Trump took office in January 2025, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
There is also still inflation, even though the annualized rate, based on the Consumer Price Index, did decline from 3% in January 2025 to 2.4% as of February. Overall prices may have increased further since then. The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland is predicting that the annual inflation rate in March was back up to 3%, largely because of the impact that the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran is having on energy prices.
And Trump continues to inflate the total amount of investments he has secured from foreign companies and countries. The White House’s own website puts the figure at $10.5 trillion — not $18 trillion. But as we’ve written, even that number cannot be substantiated because it includes pledges and planned investments that may not materialize, as well as some investments that may not be due to Trump.
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The post FactChecking Trump’s Prime-Time Address on Iran appeared first on FactCheck.org.
April 2, 2026 — As advanced discovery tools flood U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) laboratories with data, scientists are facing a critical challenge: Humans can’t keep up with the sheer volume and speed of information being generated.

Tao Zhou of the CNM explains the capabilities of the 26-ID beamline, jointly operated by CNM and the APS. Image credit: Mark Lopez/Argonne National Laboratory.
Modern X‑ray, microscopy and neutron facilities produce vast streams of high‑value imagery, yet tools to interpret this data at scale have not kept pace. Researchers are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence (AI) to rapidly turn these massive datasets into usable insight.
As part of DOE’s Genesis Mission, a historic national effort to transform American science and innovation through the power of AI, DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory is contributing to several important projects that will strengthen U.S. technological leadership and global competitiveness.
One of those projects is the Synergistic Neutron and Photon Science – Intelligence (SYNAPS-I) AI platform, which will integrate data from neutron, X-ray and microscopy experiments across national labs into a single model. This model will analyze information across scales and accelerate understanding of complex systems in real time.
The SYNAPS-I project is led by Alexander Hexemer, senior scientist at DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL). The project also includes members from these DOE national laboratories: Brookhaven National Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).
The rapid data analysis platform is built to accelerate breakthroughs in microelectronics, medicine, advanced manufacturing and energy security. The goal is to advance DOE laboratories with next‑generation, AI‑driven research capabilities.
“SYNAPS‑I is envisioned not just as a tool for analysis and automation, but as a cognitive partner for scientists — capable of generating hypotheses, detecting subtle correlations and helping turn DOE facilities into truly intelligent, self‑driving laboratories,” said Mathew Cherukara, an Argonne computational scientist, group leader and leader of the Argonne SYNAPS-I team.
SYNAPS‑I Enables Real‑Time AI Imaging at Beamline Scale
The SYNAPS-I project aims to develop an AI‑driven imaging engine capable of turning vast scientific data streams into rapid insight. One challenge is scale: SYNAPS‑I seeks to train a multimodal, billion‑parameter foundation model on data from more than 100 beamlines across seven DOE facilities, far surpassing today’s archive of 50 billion images. “Multimodal” means the model can process different types of data, such as text and images, and “billion-parameter” refers to the billions of internal variables the system adjusts as it learns.
Beamlines are experiment stations built to deliver and shape X‑ray beams for scientific measurements.
To build and test the platform, the team started with ptychography, an X-ray technique that gathers overlapping diffraction patterns — the distinctive ways X-rays scatter after interacting with a material — and uses computation to reconstruct sharp, high‑resolution images.
“The use of ptychography is expanding rapidly, driven by major light source advances such as Argonne’s Advanced Photon Source (APS) Upgrade and the Advanced Light Source (ALS) Upgrade at Berkeley Lab,” said Alec Sandy, associate director of Argonne’s X-ray Science division. “Converting raw ptychography data into human and AI‑interpretable results in real time maximizes DOE’s investment in these facilities and makes the measurements immediately relevant for technology development.”
Researchers chose ptychography because it “feels almost magical,” said Tao Zhou, a scientist at Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM) and a member of the SYNAPS-I team. “Scientists have pushed traditional X‑ray optics to their physical limits. Ptychography sidesteps those limits by using physics and computational reconstruction to achieve detail finer than the beam itself can reveal.”
This level of resolution has been achieved before, but not this rapidly.
SYNAPS-I accelerates the entire workflow, delivering high‑resolution ptychographic images fast enough to keep pace with experiments and surpass the limits of conventional optics. The platform uses the advanced computing resources of the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF) and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at LBNL. The APS, CNM, ALCF, ALS and NERSC are DOE Office of Science user facilities.
At Argonne’s APS, the world’s brightest synchrotron X-ray source, a coherent beam scans nanoscale samples such as microelectronics and other manufacturing‑relevant materials. SYNAPS‑I captures the resulting diffraction patterns and reconstructs them into high‑resolution images in real time.
“SYNAPS-I is a rapid‑analysis method that delivers insights at the pace data is generated, compressing hours or days of analysis into seconds,” said Aileen Luo, an Argonne assistant computational scientist and lead developer of the SYNAPS-I model for ptychography.
Behind that speed is an AI platform engineered to think like the imaging tools themselves.
“By building the physics of coherent imaging directly into the model, we’re giving AI the same knowledge a scientist would use,” said Emon Dey, a postdoctoral researcher in Argonne’s Mathematics and Computer Science division and member of the SYNAPS-I team. “That built‑in understanding makes it far more accurate and efficient when handling the massive data volumes produced at DOE facilities.”
The platform works across domains, speeding progress in microelectronics, biomedical research, advanced manufacturing and energy security. SYNAPS-I cuts imaging analysis from years to days and enables real‑time, AI‑driven materials design for next‑generation U.S. manufacturing.
The platform could deliver substantial economic gains by using real-time AI to cut research delays, eliminate costly bottlenecks and speed innovation, boosting U.S. competitiveness and driving growth across multiple industries.
Testing Reveals Order-of-Magnitude Gains
Argonne recently successfully tested the new rapid‑analysis data method, running the full SYNAPS‑I workflow on microelectronics and quantum samples at a shared APS/CNM beamline.
The platform captured data and displayed the imaging results instantly for real‑time viewing at the beamline. Simultaneously, the saved data was moved to the ALCF, where high performance computing resources were used to refine the models.
“The test opened the door to real-time identification of defects in materials, for example, to guide manufacturing processes and enable autonomous discovery campaigns to discover new technologically impactful materials,” said Sandy. Autonomous discovery campaigns are largely self-driving research efforts in which AI systems help design experiments, analyze results and determine the next steps, accelerating the search for promising new materials.
The results of the test at the 26-ID beamline of the APS (operated by CNM) showed ptychography capabilities that were 10 times higher in resolution and contrast and 100 times faster than similar experiments without using AI workflows. SYNAPS-I enabled the analysis of 1.3 terabytes of data on one graphical processing unit (GPU) in real time, whereas a similar experiment without AI would take 2,500 GPU hours to process.
SYNAPS‑I: The Road Ahead
As the APS expands its coherent imaging capabilities, the team plans to deploy SYNAPS‑I across the facility and other DOE light‑source and neutron facilities.
The capabilities under development could support 10 APS beamlines and many more across the DOE complex, Sandy said.
The team also aims to extend SYNAPS‑I beyond ptychography, expand it with new partners, test it in real experimental settings and refine it continually as it scales.
To do that, the Argonne team is drawing on the unparalleled strengths of the DOE user facilities, including the APS.
“We’re fortunate to have one of the brightest, most advanced synchrotron facilities in the world at the APS, and that’s a big part of what makes this project possible,” Luo said.
Along with Cherukara, Sandy, Zhou, Dey and Luo, the Argonne SYNAPS-I team includes Ming Du, Peco Myint, Jeffrey Klug, Antonino Miceli, Xiangyu Yin, Sinisa Veseli, Tekin Bicer, Varuni Sastry, Yijiang Li and Kibaek Kim.
SYNAPS-I is a public-private partnership uniting Argonne with LBNL, Brookhaven, ORNL, SLAC, university researchers and AI leaders with key industry innovators.
Work performed at the CNM and APS was supported by the DOE Office of Basic Energy Sciences.
Source: Beth Burmahl, Argonne National Laboratory
The post DOE Labs Develop SYNAPS-I AI Platform for Real-Time Beamline Data Analysis appeared first on HPCwire.
I tested dozens of headphones and headsets to find the most comfortable models with strong call quality and solid PC compatibility for video meetings. Here are my top picks.
The mother of the last remaining Afghan detained at Guantánamo Bay is pleading with the Trump administration to free her son, who has been held in detention for nearly two decades without ever being charged with a crime.
In a letter shared exclusively with The Intercept, Safora Yousufzai calls on President Donald Trump to release her son, 60-year-old Mohammad Rahim, citing his poor health and “advanced age” and arguing that “his prolonged detention has significantly affected both his physical and psychological well-being.”
Yousufzai points out that Afghanistan’s government released 64-year-old linguistics researcher Dennis Walter Coyle last month, after he spent over a year in captivity. His family had urged the Taliban to “look upon him with leniency” in a letter, which Afghanistan’s foreign ministry cited in their announcement of his release.
The Trump administration claimed credit for negotiating Coyle’s return — and proclaimed its commitment to “ending unjust detentions overseas.”
Now, Yousufzai is hoping to hold the administration to that promise.
“In light of recent humanitarian actions undertaken in comparable circumstances — such as the release and repatriation of detainee Dennis Coyle to his family, I respectfully express my hope that similar consideration may be extended in my son’s case,” wrote Yousufzai. “Such actions reflect not only legal discretion but also a broader commitment to human dignity and humanitarian values.”
U.S. forces detained Rahim in Pakistan in 2007 and transferred him to the notorious military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, in 2008. The U.S. government accused the Afghan national of being an interpreter and courier for Osama Bin Laden in Al Qaeda, but he was never charged or tried for any crimes.
The Biden administration reportedly offered to release Rahim in exchange for a prisoner swap including Mahmood Habibi, a U.S. citizen who was reportedly arrested in Afghanistan in 2022, after the U.S. killed Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. That deal never went through, and the Taliban has reportedly continued to request Rahim’s release. The Taliban publicly denies holding Habibi, who is still in custody, saying that they are unaware of his whereabouts.
The White House and State Department did not respond to requests for comment.
The CIA tortured Rahim while he was in its custody, according to the Senate Intelligence Committee’s report on the CIA’s use of torture. Rahim was subjected to “extensive use of the CIA’s enhanced-interrogation techniques,” the 2014 Senate report reads. According to their records, he was subjected to facial slaps, diet manipulation, and eight sleep deprivation sessions. During one of the sessions, he was kept awake for six straight days. Not sleeping for even three days can have lasting and profound negative impacts on cognitive health.
While he was being intentionally deprived of sleep, he was “usually shackled in a standing position, wearing a diaper and a pair of shorts,” the report adds. While in custody in 2007, he was provided a diet that “was almost entirely limited to water and liquid Ensure meals.”
Administration officials have not spoken publicly about whether they would consider releasing Rahim. However, according to the New York Times, a senior U.S. official said that Rahim would not be a part of future deals with the Taliban.
“At a minimum,” his mother wrote to Trump, “universally recognized human rights principles and norms call for a careful reassessment of his situation, with due consideration given to his age, health, and length of detention.”
In her letter, Yousufzai also pleaded with the Trump administration to think of Rahim’s daughter, who she said has “been deprived for years of the care, affection, and guidance of her father.”
“As I approach the later stages of my life, the opportunity to see my son again remains my most earnest and final hope.”
Yousufzai, who is elderly herself, wrote that she hopes the Trump administration will allow her to see her son at least one last time before her death.
“As I approach the later stages of my life, the opportunity to see my son again remains my most earnest and final hope,” she wrote. “I respectfully urge your administration to take a thoughtful and humane step toward resolving his case, consistent with the values of justice, mercy, and respect for human dignity.”
The post Mother of the Last Afghan in Guantánamo Bay Begs Trump to Free Her Son appeared first on The Intercept.
Rodney Ward returned debris instead of pets’ ashes and stored animals’ bodies in hearse or threw them out on road
A Baltimore county man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after being found guilty of defrauding pet owners through his fake crematorium business, returning rocks and sand to grieving victims instead of ashes.
On Tuesday, 56-year-old Rodney Ward was also ordered to pay $12,510 in restitution to victims. He had pleaded guilty to one count of felony theft and five counts of malicious destruction of property over $1,000, according to the Baltimore county state’s attorney’s office.
Continue reading...Attorney general was key part of effort to go after enemies but even she could not satisfy whims of mercurial president
Pam Bondi’s swift dismissal on Thursday underscores a reality that has met Trump loyalists from Jeff Sessions to Kristi Noem – no amount of loyalty is enough to save oneself from being dumped by Donald Trump.
Since the president assumed office last year, there have been few people more important to his effort to remake government than Bondi, his longtime friend.
Continue reading...A wealthy labor lawyer shoots his high-profile wife from the backseat of their SUV -- he says it was an accident -- prosecutors say otherwise
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Amazon will start charging sellers who use its shipping services a 3.5% "fuel and logistics" surcharge later this month, joining the ranks of shipping companies raising prices as the war in Iran pushes oil prices higher. The fees take effect on April 17 for customers of the company's Fulfillment by Amazon service -- which is used by many of the independent sellers who list their products on Amazon's retail sites -- in the US and Canada. Items shipped by Amazon on behalf of merchants who sell on their own sites or at other retailers will carry the surcharge beginning May 2. "Elevated costs in fuel and logistics have increased the cost of operating across the industry," Ashley Vanicek, an Amazon spokesperson, said on Thursday. "We have absorbed these increases so far, but similar to other major carriers, when costs remain elevated we implement temporary surcharges to partially recover these costs." Vanicek notes that the fee will apply to the sum Amazon charges to ship an item, not the product's sale price. Last month, USPS announced that it would impose its first-ever fuel surcharge on packages.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Houston, we have a potty problem. A team effort restored the Orion spacecraft's bathroom, to astronauts' relief.
April 2, 2026 — Designing metamaterials consisting of engineered lattices whose geometry gives them unusual strength, flexibility, or energy absorption typically requires long cycles of trial‑and‑error simulation. The challenge becomes even harder when the structure combines multiple materials and must handle real-world behavior such as large deformations, plasticity, and contact, where many different designs can produce similar mechanical responses, deemed unsolvable by classical computational design methods.

For a given target input stress-strain curve, the AI “thinks in reverse.” A video diffusion model de-noises from random noise into a plausible sequence of evolving internal mechanical fields, then a structure-identifier converts those fields into a manufacturable multi-material lattice — bypassing classical inverse computational design methods that are intractable.
Researchers from MechSE and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) have now introduced a generative AI workflow that is trained on NCSA’s DeltaAI high-performance computing system to reverse the process. Instead of starting with a design and predicting what it does, the method starts with the desired stress-strain curve and generates candidate multi‑material architectures that can deliver it.
The approach adapts video diffusion models, which are best known for producing images and videos for animated clips on social media. Through the process of noising and de-noising, the diffusion model learns how mechanical solution fields evolve during loading for a given stress-strain response, and an additional “structure identifier neural network” converts those fields into manufacturable multi‑material layouts.
This novel research was recently published in the Journal of Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence. It builds on research by Professor Dennis Kochmann’s group at ETH Zurich, which focused on a single-component material.
The ability to quickly propose many candidate structures with tailored nonlinear behavior opens doors to impact‑energy absorption for automotive and aerospace applications, soft‑robotics actuators that undergo large deformations, and bio-inspired materials that mimic tissue-like mechanics for implants, prostheses, and tissue engineering — all areas where customizable, nonlinear responses are crucial. MechSE Professor Iwona Jasiuk’s group is already moving toward the fabrication and testing of AI‑designed samples.
Jaewan Park led the project, co-advised by Jasiuk and Seid Koric, MechSE Research Professor and Senior Technical Associate Director at NCSA.
Other members of the team include former MechSE PhD students Diab Abuiedda, Junyan (Jimmy) He, and Shashank Kushwaha, as well as Qibang Liu, a research scientist at NCSA.
About Delta and DeltaAI
NCSA’s Delta and DeltaAI are part of the national cyberinfrastructure ecosystem through the U.S. National Science Foundation ACCESS program. Delta (OAC 2005572) is a powerful computing and data-analysis resource combining next-generation processor architectures and NVIDIA graphics processors with forward-looking user interfaces and file systems. The Delta project partners with the Science Gateways Community Institute to empower broad communities of researchers to easily access Delta and with the University of Illinois Division of Disability Resources & Educational Services and the School of Information Sciences to explore and reduce barriers to access. DeltaAI (OAC 2320345) maximizes the output of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) research. Tripling NCSA’s AI-focused computing capacity and greatly expanding the capacity available within ACCESS, DeltaAI enables researchers to address the world’s most challenging problems by accelerating complex AI/ML and high-performance computing applications running terabytes of data. Additional funding for DeltaAI comes from the State of Illinois.
Source: Grainger College of Engineering Mechanical Science & Engineering, University of Illinois
The post NCSA, MechSE Develop GenAI Workflow for Metamaterial Design on DeltaAI appeared first on HPCwire.
Rumors have been circulating about Apple's next iPhone for quite some time. Here's what we know about the iPhone 18 so far.
Foundayo is the first oral GLP-1 weight loss pill that doesn't require fasting.
It's the second straight year that black won't be available on Apple's flagship phone.
Three-time champion ‘out for extended period’
‘It is the most special week. I will be watching’
Phil Mickelson has announced he will not compete at next week’s Masters due to an ongoing “family health matter”.
The six-time major winner, who won the Masters in 2004, 2006 and 2010, missed the first four LIV Golf events of the year and said he will remain “out for an extended period of time”.
Continue reading...The commission, which is chaired by a White House staffer, voted 9 to 1 to approve the design, which includes a ballroom with seating for 1,000 guests.
Body camera video has been released of Tiger Woods' arrest, after a car crash in Florida. He has been charged with driving under the influence.
President Trump has ousted Pam Bondi as attorney general, saying she will be taking a job in the private sector.
IBM and Arm are teaming up to let Arm-based software run on IBM Z mainframes. Network World reports: The two companies plan to work on three things: building virtualization tools so Arm software can run on IBM platforms; making sure Arm applications meet the security and data residency rules that regulated industries must follow; and creating common technology layers so enterprises have more software options across both platforms, IBM said in a statement. IBM has not said whether the virtualization work will happen at the hypervisor level, through its existing PR/SM partitioning technology, or via containers -- a question enterprise architects will need answered before they can assess the collaboration's practical value. IBM described the effort as serving enterprises that run regulated workloads and cannot simply move them to the cloud, the statement said. IBM mainframe customers have largely missed out on the efficiency and price-performance gains Arm has already delivered in the cloud. "Arm says close to half of all compute shipped to top hyperscalers in 2025 runs on Arm chips, with AWS, Google, and Microsoft deploying their own Arm silicon through Graviton, Axion, and Cobalt, respectively," reports Network World. That gap is precisely what IBM and Arm's collaboration intends to address. "This is a mainframe adjacency play," says Rachita Rao, senior analyst at Everest Group. "The intent is to extend IBM Z and LinuxONE environments by enabling Arm-compatible workloads to run closer to systems of record. While hyperscalers use Arm to lower their own internal power costs and pass savings to cloud-native tenants, IBM is targeting the sovereign and air-gapped market."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Data shows 209 cases recorded as assisted dying referred to CPS by police between 1 April 2009 and 31 March this year
Thirteen cases of suspected assisted dying are being considered by prosecutors in England and Wales, according to the latest data.
Encouraging or assisting the suicide or attempted suicide of another person is against the law in England and Wales, under the Suicide Act 1961.
In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org
Continue reading...Bondi earned president’s ire over handling release of Epstein files and failing to prosecute his political enemies
Donald Trump has fired Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, dismissing a loyalist who reshaped the justice department but still failed to please a president fixated on prosecuting political enemies and frustrated with the politically explosive release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social: “Pam Bondi is a Great American Patriot and a loyal friend, who faithfully served as my Attorney General over the past year. Pam did a tremendous job overseeing a massive crackdown in Crime across our Country, with Murders plummeting to their lowest level since 1900. We love Pam, and she will be transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector, to be announced at a date in the near future.”
Continue reading...Headlining set for Netflix Is a Joke festival marks first outing with major streamer since misconduct allegations in 2017
Netflix is welcoming Louis CK back into its fold.
The comedian, long subject to questions regarding rehabilitation and so-called “cancel culture”, will headline a show at the Hollywood Bowl next month as part of the streamer’s Netflix Is a Joke festival – his first major outing with a streamer since allegations of sexual misconduct at the height of the #MeToo movement. Later this summer, Netflix will also premiere CK’s new special, Ridiculous, which he directed and executive-produced.
Continue reading...By constitutional design, the press is antagonistic to the government. As the late Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black wrote in his opinion defending the publication of the Pentagon Papers more than 50 years ago, “Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government.”
Such a free and unrestrained press requires a cohort of committed legal advocates. Whether to counter the federal government’s repeated insistence on ignoring freedom of information laws, or the Trump administration’s overt hostility and retaliation against news organizations that confront and debunk its unconstitutional narratives, a robust network of attorneys is needed to protect the press’s constitutional function.
That’s why President Donald Trump’s unconstitutional executive order aiming to punish preeminent United States law firms over their pro bono clients represents an unacceptable attack on the legal profession and poses a threat to an independent press. And that is why 42 media organizations and press freedom advocates, led by The Intercept’s Press Freedom Defense Fund, filed an amicus brief Thursday urging the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to affirm four District Court decisions. All four lower courts found the Trump administration’s executive order that imposed sanctions on law firms for representing President Donald Trump’s political opponents unconstitutional.
The amicus brief, authored by Andrew Sellars and Kendra Albert of Albert Sellars LLP, argues that the press plays an essential role as both a proxy for the public and a check on government power. This role requires an oppositional relationship with government interests. The president’s executive orders targeting lawyers with clients opposed to his agenda severely restricts press organizations’ access to legal counsel, particularly for outlets relying on pro bono or reduced-fee representation.
“An independent media requires First Amendment champions to guarantee citizens access to the information necessary to hold our government accountable,” said David Bralow, PFDF’s legal director. “This is why The Intercept’s Press Freedom Defense Fund, legal advocates, and other partner organizations nationwide filed an amicus brief to prevent the administration’s unconstitutional efforts to intimidate lawyers fulfilling their professional oaths.”
The coalition includes news organizations, press associations, advocacy groups, media law firms, and individual attorneys with over five centuries of collective experience in First Amendment and press freedom issues.
“We are honored to represent this august group of news outlets, advocacy organizations and First Amendment attorneys at the D.C. Circuit. The public needs the press, and the press needs independent counsel, who cannot be subject to sanction because the president dislikes their clients,” said Kendra Albert, partner at Albert Sellars LLP.
“The Press Freedom Defense Fund exists for moments like this one. Alongside 42 coalition partners, we are drawing a clear line: a free press is not a privilege this or any administration may revoke,” said Annie Chabel, The Intercept’s CEO. “It is a constitutional right — and so is the independent counsel required to defend it.”
The post The Intercept’s Press Freedom Defense Fund Leads Cohort Fighting Trump’s Unconstitutional Media Attacks appeared first on The Intercept.
The Environmental Protection Agency also added microplastics to its contaminant candidate list for the first time.
A $10,000 6-month CD combines profitability and flexibility. Here's how much interest savers can earn by acting now.
Hakeem Jeffries predicts Pete Hegseth could be next as party alarmed by damage done by ‘terrible’ attorney general
With quips, memes and jabs, Democrats cheered Donald Trump’s firing of attorney general Pam Bondi on Thursday, while the president’s Republican allies praised her relatively brief tenure overseeing the justice department.
Trump announced Bondi’s departure on Truth Social, saying: “We love Pam, and she will be transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector, to be announced at a date in the near future.” Her deputy, Todd Blanche, will take over as acting attorney general.
Continue reading...‘Partnership’ on drug pricing also gives patients in Britain greater access to potentially life-extending treatments
British drug exports to the US will escape tariffs imposed by Donald Trump as part of a controversial UK-US medicines deal that critics fear will mean less money for the NHS.
The deal will also give patients in Britain greater access to potentially life-extending drugs because the rules have been relaxed to allow the NHS to pay more for particular treatments.
Continue reading... | Omg the beauty! Just from first touch & holding of the board this bad boy is built so solid. [link] [comments] |
Picking the right processor for a particular workload will always be important. But when it comes to AI–and more specifically, AI inference–the selection of any individual chip is less important than how the whole system is architected. Today’s acquisition of GigaIO’s data center business by d-Matrix, as well as Nvidia’s $2 billion investment in Marvell earlier this week, show this to be true.
d-Matrix originally made a name for itself by developing a novel digital in-memory compute (DMIC) technology that it delivers as a chiplet that plugs directly into the PCI bus. Its latest in-memory compute offering, dubbed Corsair, incorporates three-dimensional digital in-memory compute (3DMIC) that fuses the processor directly into SRAM modules connected to PCIe Gen5. Corsair was developed specifically for AI inference utilizing large language models, and delivers 150 TB/s of memory bandwidth, which helps AI models connect with data and deliver better results quicker.
The Santa Clara, California company, which raised $275 million in a Series C round last November and has raised a total of $450 million since it launched in 2022, announced its first acquisition today. d-Matrix is buying the data center business of Carlsbad, California-based GigaIO, which develops a composable infrastructure, dubbed FabreX, that connects GPUs, FPGAs, and other XPUs using PCI and CXL standards. GigaIO uses FabreX with its SuperNODE platform, which connects up to 32 XPUs to a single node.

d-Matrix’s Corsair processor incorporates in-memory compute in a 3D-stacked chiplet form-factor
The acquisition shows that d-Matrix understands that AI inference requires more than just a fast chip. “Inference is bigger than any one chip,” said Sid Sheth, founder and CEO of d-Matrix. “It’s now a systems problem.”
Succeeding with AI in the future will mean breaking workloads up into smaller tasks that run across a variety of different processor types, including CPUs, GPUs, and inference accelerators, Sheth said.
“That means data must move efficiently across chips, nodes, racks, and entire data centers in real time,” he said. “This acquisition accelerates our ability to deliver infrastructure built for this new reality, where low latency, efficiency, and scale all matter at once.”
GigaIO plans to continue as an independent entity focused on edge computing. The company recently announced the Gryf, which it positions as a “portable supercomputer” that can fit in the overhead bin of a jetliner.
Nvidia is also moving beyond chips. Big Green became the world’s most valuable company as a result of its powerful GPUs, which have been in high demand since soon after OpenAI sparked the current AI boom by releasing ChatGPT in late 2022. Its roadmap calls for ever-more powerful GPUs, with today’s Blackwell giving way to Rubin in 2026, to be followed by the Feynman GPU in 2028.

NVLink Fusion connects other vendors’ AI accelerators to Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform
But even Nvidia recognizes that one GPU does not good AI make. Its recent GPU Technology Conference was full of news about other types of chips, including its new Vera CPU and the Groq language processing unit (LPU), the IP for which it paid $20 billion to acquire in December. CEO Jensen Huang was adamant that successful AI requires all seven of its chips, which it now refers to as its Vera Rubin platform.
“Most people forget that Nvidia’s business is much, much more diversified than a chip company,” Huang said during a Q&A with the press at GPC in March. “And the reason for that is because we’re full stack and we can help people build AI factories anywhere.”
Nvidia doubled-down on that move this week when it announced that that it’s investing $2 billion into Marvell, the $8 billion custom chipmaker based in Santa Clara. Marvell develops a variety of custom silicon, including ASICs for AI accelerators, switches, storage controllers, gaming consoles, and silicon photonic devices. It worked with AWS to develop its Trainium XPUs for AI model training. It has also worked with Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.
The $2 billion investment from Nvidia is geared toward improving Marvell’s integration with NVLink Fusion, which is Nvidia’s plans to build an open ecosystem around its proprietary scale-up NVLink interconnect. According to Nvidia, Marvell will provide custom XPUs and NVLink Fusion-compatible scale-up networking components. Nvidia, meanwhile, will provide the reset of the stack, including Vera CPU, ConnectX NICs, BlueField DPUs, and the NVLink interconnect and Spectrum-X switches, as well as “AI compute” (i.e. GPUs).
“Our expanded partnership with Nvidia reflects the growing importance of high-speed connectivity, optical interconnect and accelerated infrastructure in scaling AI,” said Matt Murphy, chairman and CEO of Marvell. “By connecting Marvell’s leadership in high-performance analog, optical DSP, silicon photonics and custom silicon to Nvidia’s expanding AI ecosystem through NVLink Fusion, we are enabling customers to build scalable, efficient AI infrastructure.”
In December, Marvell spent $3.25 billion to acquire Celestial AI, which was developing a scale-up optical interconnect. Celestial AI was building Photonic Fabric, a scale-up optical interconnect that could deliver up to 16 terabits per second of bandwidth. Marvell was expected to incorporate the Celestial AI interconnect with its support for UALink. But now that it’s working with Nvidia and its NVLink Fusion interconnect architecture, it will be interesting to see how that UALink evolves.
Whether it’s UALink, NVLink Fusion, or Ultra Ethernet that becomes the vehicle for breaking down the memory wall, it’s clear that pushing the limits in AI inference these days requires a whole-of-system approach that goes beyond the capabilities of any individual chip.
Related Items:
Nvidia’s Shift from GPUs and AI ‘Inference King’ Economics
Agentic AI Is Driving Workloads and Infra On-Prem and to the Edge
d-Matrix Takes On AI ‘Memory Wall’ with 3D Stacked In-Memory Compute
Editor’s note: d-Matrix has raised $450 million, not $429 million. HPCwire regrets the error.
The post Forget About Chips. It’s the System That Matters For AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Eight people reported killed in attack on newly completed suspension bridge after strike splits structure in half
Donald Trump claimed responsibility for destroying Iran’s largest bridge, a day after he threatened to bomb the country “back to the stone ages” if a deal to end the five-week-long war he started was not reached.
The US president shared footage of part of the newly built 136 metre-high $400m B1 suspension bridge between Tehran and Karaj collapsing dramatically on to the causeway below amid a rising plume of black smoke.
Continue reading...Owe money for taxes but expecting a refund? Here's what could happen and how you can protect what's yours.
In need of extra financial support now? Here's what the monthly payments will look like for a $30,000 personal loan.
A Radio-Canada reporter noticed his maple syrup tasted odd; testing revealed it was adulterated with cane sugar
An investigation by Canada’s national broadcaster has found that a major Quebec producer has been diluting its maple syrup with cane sugar and selling the fraudulent product to grocery chains.
In a sting operation that involved false identities and covert recordings, journalists from Radio-Canada’s Enquête programme found that a low-cost syrup sold in major grocery store chains was heavily diluted.
Continue reading...AmiMoJo shares a report from Phoronix: Raspberry Pi prices are going up yet again due to the continued memory squeeze on the industry. To help offset the memory prices for some use-cases, Raspberry Pi also announced the introduction of the Raspberry Pi 4 3GB model at $83 to help fill the void between the 2GB and 4GB options. The 3GB Raspberry Pi 4 was announced at $83.75 USD for those not needing quite 4GB of RAM and looking to save some memory given the ongoing price increases. The Raspberry Pi 4 and Raspberry Pi 5 4GB models are seeing new $25 price increases, the 8GB models seeing $50 price increases, and the 16GB Raspberry Pi 5 is going up by $100. The Raspberry Pi 500+ is seeing a $150 price increase. The Raspberry Pi Compute Modules are also seeing increases from $11.25 to $100 USD.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Government must ‘come down very hard’ on online trade in knives and weapons, says policing and crime minister Sarah Jones
Children are setting up online businesses selling knives in the same way they trade clothes, the policing and crime minister has said.
Sarah Jones heard how children as young as 12 were buying and selling the weapons on the internet and social media, at the opening of the new National Knife Crime Centre in Bloomsbury, central London, on Thursday.
Continue reading...Most of Google's cloud storage plans come with extra access to AI tools like video generation.
Blessing from NCPC comes just days after judge ruled work on project cannot proceed without congressional approval
Donald Trump’s White House ballroom project received the approval of Washington’s planning authorities on Thursday, two days after a judge ruled work cannot proceed without Congress’s approval.
The National Capital Planning Commission, which is chaired by one of Trump’s former lawyers, gave the green light to the “East Wing Modernization Project” on Thursday, describing the ballroom as just the latest stage over two centuries of continuous changes.
Continue reading...The opinion from the Office of Legal Counsel said that because it believes the Presidential Records Act is unconstitutional, President Trump does not need to comply with it.
Yvette Cooper hosts virtual summit of more than 40 countries to consider coordinated action in face of closure of vital shipping lane
More than 40 countries gathered to discuss “every possible diplomatic, economic and coordinated measure” to pressurise Iran into reopening the strait of Hormuz, the UK foreign secretary has said.
After chairing a virtual summit on Thursday, Yvette Cooper said coordinated action was needed as Iran’s “reckless strikes” on international shipping and efforts to “hijack the global economy” were hitting nations from across the globe “who played no part in this conflict”.
Continue reading...The US president couldn’t give a single coherent reason for why this aggressive war of choice must still be prosecuted
Donald Trump’s self-congratulatory speech on Iran on Wednesday night was as puzzling as it was divorced from reality. I had hoped he would declare victory and end the war. Some feared he might provide cover for a ground invasion. Instead, he told us in essence to be patient, that he is almost done, but he was utterly unclear about what more there is to accomplish.
If there was ever a purpose to the war, it was to curtail Iran’s capacity to develop a nuclear weapon. Trump harped on that goal repeatedly in his speech, noting that he had long vowed that he “would never allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon”. But he didn’t mention that Iran has long agreed to eschew a nuclear weapon. If that is the only goal, this entire war has been pointless.
Continue reading...I have never been able to experience this, but I heard that the X7 is such a smooth board. I love watching videos and everyone in the reviews are saying that this is a way more powerful board than future motion S series. Looking for some feedback before my purchase, I am planning on buying the full complete board and not buying the parts individually
About to be the first in my local onewheel group to go vesc. I ride a S series right now and i have complete trust in the boards power.
I want the x7 but i have never rode one. The website says that this is more powerful than a S, yet lighter. Just looking for some feedback and comparison, or spec.
Company refocuses on bringing datacenter-class computing directly to the edge with Gryf.
CARLSBAD, Calif., April 2, 2026 — GigaIO today announced the sale of its SuperNODE platform and patented PCIe Gen 5-based AI fabric FabreX to low-latency AI inferencing pioneer d-Matrix. The sale is the logical culmination of the companies’ strategic partnership to deliver inference solutions for AI at scale.
In April 2025, the two companies announced the integration of d-Matrix’s Corsair inference platform into GigaIO’s SuperNODE architecture to create a solution that supports dozens of Corsair accelerators in a single node. This collaboration became the industry’s most scalable AI inference platform, with an integration that enabled end users to deploy ultra-low-latency batched inference workloads at a new scale.
With the sale, d-Matrix has also acquired key rack-scale engineering talent from GigaIO, providing additional resources to rapidly deploy complete solutions for high-performance inference to data centers.
“We have worked closely with d-Matrix for more than a year to create rack-scale systems with industry-leading, high-performance inferencing,” said Alan Benjamin, CEO of GigaIO. “We are excited to see our world-class FabreX technology extend to full system capability and believe that d-Matrix, in combining its inference engines with our fabric, is the ideal company to challenge the existing hegemony.”
Moving forward, GigaIO will focus on bringing datacenter-class computing directly to the edge. Powered by FabreX and designed with SourceCode, GigaIO’s Gryf is unique in its ability to scale to the performance of a field supercomputer within such a small, portable form factor, providing real-time intelligence and analytics that were previously impossible without massive infrastructure.
“The edge market has a huge upside, with increased need to deploy new, modern, meaningful compute closer to the users, and that’s what GigaIO is going to be focused on,” said Benjamin. “As AI becomes an increasingly integrated part of daily business and life, the ability to execute sophisticated workloads closer to data inputs and outputs becomes ever more essential. We are excited to rethink the long-standing paradigm of stripped-down capabilities at the edge and instead deliver a new approach with mobile datacenter-class hardware that can execute increasingly complex use cases wherever they are needed.”
Gryf has enabling users to dynamically deploy applications anywhere, at any time. Organizations can process critical data on site without the latency issues from data transfers, accessing computing power in a ruggedized, field-ready design that can be deployed virtually anywhere. GigaIO has cited strong interest in Gryf from defense and intelligence, sports and media organizations, and the energy sector.
More from HPCwire
About GigaIO
GigaIO redefines scalable AI infrastructure, seamlessly bridging from edge to core with a dynamic, open platform built for every accelerator. Its flagship product, Gryf, is the world’s first suitcase-sized AI supercomputer that brings datacenter-class computing power directly to the edge.
About d-Matrix
d-Matrix is pioneering accelerated computing for AI inference, breaking through the limits of latency, cost and energy. Its Corsair compute accelerators, JetStream IO accelerators, and Aviator software deliver fast, sustainable AI inference at data center scale. Learn more at www.d-matrix.ai.
Source: GigaIO
The post GigaIO Sells SuperNODE and FabreX AI Fabric to d-Matrix appeared first on HPCwire.
SAN DIEGO, April 2, 2026 — Cohu, Inc., a global supplier of equipment and services optimizing semiconductor manufacturing yield and productivity, today announced that two customers have placed follow-on orders totaling $30 million for the Eclipse platform configured with active thermal control for testing of next generation high-performance computing (HPC) processors.
The orders, which are expected to be delivered over the next couple of quarters, expand Cohu’s presence in the fast-growing HPC market and reflect rising demand for scalable, high performance test solutions as processor complexity, power density and thermal constraints continue to increase. Together, these production-level engagements underscore the increasing importance of scalable, thermally precise test architectures as HPC devices push the limits of performance.
Within these follow-on orders, one customer is subscribing to Cohu’s PAICe Prescriptive software analytics – worth a potential of $330 thousand in annual subscription fees – to help drive higher overall equipment efficiency (OEE) in production at its outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) partner. PAICe Prescriptive continuously analyzes equipment signals and behavior patterns to predict issues before they impact production and provides guided repair recommendations to reduce troubleshooting time, improve productivity and lower mean time to repair (MTTR).
“These follow-on orders reinforce the strong customer momentum we are seeing for Eclipse, including continued demand projected in the second half of this year. Additionally, other customers are qualifying the Eclipse for their processor test needs over the next couple of quarters,” said Luis Müller, Cohu President and CEO. “We are fast expanding in the high-performance computing market and estimate delivering results toward the higher end of our $60 million to $85 million guidance for this segment in 2026.”
About Cohu
Cohu, Inc. (NASDAQ: COHU) was founded in 1947 and is a global technology leader supplying test, automation, inspection & metrology products, software analytics solutions and services to the semiconductor industry. Additional information can be found at www.cohu.com.
Source: Cohu
The post Cohu Announces $30M Follow-On Orders for High Performance Computing Test appeared first on HPCwire.
London mayor says more arrests will be made after young people stormed into shops as part of social media trend
Sadiq Khan has warned against any repeat of “utterly unacceptable” scenes of disorder in Clapham earlier this week, saying culprits who assault and intimidate shop workers will face the full force of the law.
The mayor of London said more arrests would be made in the coming days, and urged anyone considering more violence over the Easter weekend to think again.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Google's Gemini AI models have improved by leaps and bounds over the past year, but you can only use Gemini on Google's terms. The company's Gemma open-weight models have provided more freedom, but Gemma 3, which launched over a year ago, is getting a bit long in the tooth. Starting today, developers can start working with Gemma 4, which comes in four sizes optimized for local usage. Google has also acknowledged developer frustrations with AI licensing, so it's dumping the custom Gemma license. Like past versions of its open-weight models, Google has designed Gemma 4 to be usable on local machines. That can mean plenty of things, of course. The two large Gemma variants, 26B Mixture of Experts and 31B Dense, are designed to run unquantized in bfloat16 format on a single 80GB Nvidia H100 GPU. Granted, that's a $20,000 AI accelerator, but it's still local hardware. If quantized to run at lower precision, these big models will fit on consumer GPUs. Google also claims it has focused on reducing latency to really take advantage of Gemma's local processing. The 26B Mixture of Experts model activates only 3.8 billion of its 26 billion parameters in inference mode, giving it much higher tokens-per-second than similarly sized models. Meanwhile, 31B Dense is more about quality than speed, but Google expects developers to fine-tune it for specific uses. The other two Gemma 4 models, Effective 2B (E2B) and Effective 4B (E4B), are aimed at mobile devices. These options were designed to maintain low memory usage during inference, running at an effective 2 billion or 4 billion parameters. Google says the Pixel team worked closely with Qualcomm and MediaTek to optimize these models for devices like smartphones, Raspberry Pi, and Jetson Nano. Not only do they use less memory and battery than Gemma 3, but Google also touts "near-zero latency" this time around. The Apache 2.0 license is much more flexible with its terms of use for commercial restrictions, "granting you complete control over your data, infrastructure, and models," says Google. Clement Delangue, co-founder and CEO of Hugging Face, called it "a huge milestone" that will help developers use Gemma for more projects and expand what Google calls the "Gemmaverse."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
U.S. NSF ACCESS simulations using TACC’s Stampede3 system shed light on hemolysis risks in blood pump conditions
April 2, 2026 — For patients with heart failure, blood pumps can be lifesaving. But the very forces that sustain circulation can also harm it damaging red blood cells through hemolysis and compromising the body’s oxygen supply.
Now, supercomputer simulations are revealing how red blood cells deform under stress, offering new insights that could lead to safer, more effective blood pump designs.
“Supercomputing infrastructure is critical to advancing healthcare and scientific knowledge,” said Keefe Manning, Ph.D., who holds joint positions in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, and the Department of Surgery, Penn State College of Medicine.
“We’re able to create more complex environments and parameterization now because of supercomputers. Their value in science cannot be understated. As we apply concepts such as a digital twin and as we improve the infrastructure, we can modify the physiological models in a way that we never could before and accelerate our understanding.”
Manning is the corresponding author of a study on computational modeling of red blood cells, published January 2026 in the Annals of Biomedical Engineering. In it, he and colleagues lay the foundation for understanding hemolysis, the red blood cell destruction associated with blood pumps, referred to as mechanical circulatory support devices (MCSDs).

Workflow and imaging platform for in vitro red blood cell deformation experiments. Credit: DOI: 10.1007/s10439-026-04000-4
The science team was awarded supercomputing allocations on the Stampede3 system at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) by the U.S. National Science Foundation-funded Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which provides support for thousands of scientists across the nation.
The Red Blood Computational Model
Manning and colleagues’ model advances beyond earlier methods that used simplified stress calculations and lacked mechanistic predictability for complex flow conditions.
Instead, they adapted the governing droplet deformation evolution equation to scale to the complex, multidimensional flow environment characteristic of MCSDs in a continuum approach that uses the open source computational fluid dynamics software OpenFOAM.
The authors calibrated the model’s constitutive parameters to reproduce human red blood cell data with reasonable mean absolute error.
Data and Post-Processing
On the data side, the scientists collected blood samples from a dozen people. They ran the blood through microfluidic channels, capturing images that were post-processed to reveal the extraordinary shape-changing of red blood cells. While many people are familiar with their ubiquitous biconcave disc shape, red blood cells can also be squished flat like a folded parachute or stretched out like a torpedo as they squeeze through tiny capillaries.
“The novelty of our study lies in the volume of experimental data that we collected internally to calibrate the droplet model,” Manning added.
Accelerating Science Through Supercomputing
This research marks a step forward in understanding the biophysics of red blood cell behavior in very thin layers, behavior at the flow fields that has been hard to reproduce in simulations.
“A simple laptop computer won’t be able to do the computation, “Manning said. “ACCESS resources have been critical for Hannah Palahnuk, my PhD student, to get this work done. Having OpenFOAM supported within ACCESS is important for our research in helping improve healthcare of our nation’s population and create future technology that will be less harmful to red blood cells.”
“I utilized the ticketing system when I needed help, and the staff were responsive and helpful,” said study co-author and principal investigator Hannah Palahnuk, a Ph.D. candidate in Biomedical Engineering at Penn State University.
“TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer provided a much higher core-hour allocation, allowing high-fidelity, high-resolution simulations in reasonable amounts of time. This was extremely helpful as the resources are free and they are driving forward important research in the biomedical engineering field,” she added.
Bringing Simulations Closer to Reality
Moving forward, the research will model more realistic physiological conditions for red blood cell concentrations and translate these advances into direct hemolysis measurements.
“Once validated at scale across real-world fluid environments, this work could deepen our understanding of hemolysis in blood pumps, and help save lives in the process,” Manning concluded.
About the Research
The study, “Modeling Red Blood Cell Deformation at Supraphysiological Strain Rates Using a Droplet Framework,” was published January 2026 in the Annals of Biomedical Engineering. The study authors are Hannah P. Palahnuk, Nicolas A. Tobin, and Keefe B. Manning of The Pennsylvania State University. Funding was provided by the Walker Assistantship program at the Penn State Applied Research Laboratory and grant U54 TR002014-05A1 from the National Institutes of Health, with computational support from ACCESS allocation MDE 24001.
Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC
The post TACC: How Supercomputing Reveals Early Red Blood Cell Damage appeared first on HPCwire.
April 2 is International Fact-Checking Day, purposefully set the day after April Fools’ Day (when mistruths are encouraged). The day was launched in 2016 by the International Fact-Checking Network, which calls it “a global celebration of truth and accuracy.”
This year’s International Fact-Checking Day theme is: “We Stand for Facts.”
We’ve been doing that for more than 20 years. FactCheck.org has been holding politicians accountable for the claims they make — and providing the facts to our readers — since our launch in 2003.
To commemorate this day, we gathered various mentions of our work over the years by politicians of both parties. Social Media Manager Josh Diehl searched the Congressional Record and dug up clips from C-Span to produce it. We include, of course, then-Vice President Dick Cheney, during a 2004 vice presidential debate, mistakenly calling us “FactCheck.com” (instead of FactCheck.org), a mention that nonetheless essentially put us on the map. Since then, lawmakers have periodically cited our work on the House or Senate floor.
FactCheck.org is a signatory of the International Fact-Checking Network, along with more than 180 fact-checking organizations around the world. Signatories adhere to a code of journalistic ethics and principles rooted in nonpartisan and transparent work. FactCheck.org Director Lori Robertson is a member of the IFCN advisory board.
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 Happy International Fact-Checking Day appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Federal agency, which normally supports state and local public health labs, has been hobbled by staff departures
The US federal agency responsible for monitoring diseases has temporarily halted certain diagnostic testing, including those for rabies, human herpesvirus and several other infectious illnesses.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a list on Monday showing that more than two dozen types of testing are now unavailable.
Continue reading...Daniel Kebede tells his members that detail in new policies ‘just does not deliver’ and schools are ‘running on empty’
The leader of the UK’s biggest education union has torn into the government’s record on schools, accusing Labour of letting down the nation’s children and failing to deliver on its promises for education.
Daniel Kebede, the general secretary of the National Education Union (NEU), was unsparing in his criticism of the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson’s policies in a speech to delegates at the NEU’s annual conference in Brighton on Thursday.
Continue reading...A great effort will be needed to undo the damage once the US president has gone. But with the constitution unable to bring him to order now, that is what we must do
The US is extraordinary. One day it goes to the far side of the moon and revives the space age. On the same day, its president is looking to the far side of the Earth and says he will take Iran “back to the stone ages”. It may be a giant leap for mankind, but in what direction?
There can be no point other than prestige in sending humans to the moon, which is why more than 50 years have passed since they last went there. Robots can perform all we need in space. Returning the Iranians to the stone age is a different matter. The last time the US made the same boast was against Vietnam in a typical threat (much misquoted) by Gen Curtis LeMay. Vietnam crushed the US in the ensuing war.
Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Selling silver? Here's how the timing, your strategy and your buyer choice can impact your final payout.
Tina Peters, an election denier, was found guilty in 2024 of allowing unauthorized access to county’s voting equipment
A Colorado appeals court on Thursday ordered the resentencing of a former state election official who was found guilty of allowing unauthorized access to her county’s voting equipment, the latest development in a closely watched case that has attracted considerable attention from Donald Trump and other election deniers.
Tina Peters, a former clerk in Mesa county in western Colorado, was sentenced to nine years in prison in 2024 after a jury found her guilty on three counts of attempting to influence a public servant, conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation, first-degree official misconduct, violation of duty and failure to comply with the secretary of state. Peters was the county clerk in 2020 and later allowed an unauthorized person to access the county’s Dominion voting machines. Sensitive information from the machines later wound up on the internet.
Continue reading...Speaking in South Korea, the French president defended the transatlantic alliance and called for return to peace
Emmanuel Macron has sharply criticised Donald Trump’s inconsistent and often contradictory pronouncements on the Iran war and Nato, saying if “you want to be serious” it was better not to come out with something different every day.
“There is too much talk … and it’s all over the place,” the French president said on Thursday during a state visit to South Korea. “We all need stability, calm, a return to peace – this isn’t a show!”
Continue reading...Former government adviser Polly Billington urges bigger steps to shield people in UK from effects of Iran war
Keir Starmer should convene a global energy summit of the same order as Gordon Brown’s response to the 2008 financial crisis and put Britain on a “war footing” to reduce its exposure to fossil fuels, a Labour MP and former government adviser has said.
Polly Billington, who was an aide in Brown’s government, warned that economic pain was “hurtling down the tracks” and a bigger response was needed to protect the British people from the consequences of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
Continue reading...Wizards apologize over half-time April Fools’ prank
Promotion that appeared to trick fan draws backlash
Team issues statement saying stunt was pre-planned
The Washington Wizards apologized on Thursday after an April Fools’ Day in-game promotion during their loss to the Philadelphia 76ers prompted criticism on social media.
During Wednesday night’s game at Capital One Arena, a fan was brought on to the court for a blindfolded half-court shot promoted as being worth $10,000. The shot missed, but arena staff and performers reacted as if it had gone in and briefly presented the fan with a ceremonial check as part of what later was revealed to be a scripted skit.
Continue reading...The autopsy results for Nurul Amin Shah Alam sparked fresh calls to investigate the circumstances surrounding the visually impaired refugee’s death, which provoked outrage in Buffalo.
Former UK foreign secretary among 3,000 signatories of open letter to Isaac Herzog after spate of killings
The former British foreign secretary Malcolm Rifkind is among leading members of the Jewish diaspora urging the Israeli president, Isaac Herzog, to intervene to stop “attacks by Jewish extremists” on Palestinians in the West Bank.
An open letter to Herzog facilitated by the London Initiative – a liberal Zionist network of 360 people, including eminent Jewish, Israeli and Israeli Palestinian figures – has attracted more than 3,000 signatories, including diplomats, philanthropists, rabbis and academics from Australia, Canada, across Europe, South Africa the UK and US. It follows a spate of killings and arson attacks by settlers on Palestinian civilians in March.
Continue reading...BERKELEY, Calif., April 2, 2026 — Rigetti Computing, Inc. has announced that it has sold a 9-qubit Novera QPU to the University of Saskatchewan (USask). The Novera QPU, which was shipped in March, will be at the core of USask’s first quantum computing system. The system will be managed by USask’s Centre for Quantum Topology and its Applications (quanTA), an interdisciplinary institute devoted to advancing quantum science and quantum technology development.
“By providing hands-on access to real quantum computing hardware, academic institutions like USask are enabling students and researchers to pursue groundbreaking advances in quantum science and technology. We are delighted that USask has selected a Rigetti Novera QPU for their quanTA Centre and congratulate them on this exciting new phase of quantum technology exploration and innovation,” said Dr. Subodh Kulkarni, Rigetti CEO.
“At quanTA, our goal is to make Western Canada a competitive force in quantum science and quantum technology development. The establishment of a quantum computing testbed is fundamental to providing the USask community with the resources needed to embark on innovative research in areas including quantum materials, quantum algorithms, and quantum computing architecture. With the Novera QPU at the core of our first quantum computing system, we are excited to embark on this next era of discovery,” said Dr. Steven Rayan, quanTA Executive Director and USask Mathematics and Statistics Professor.
“This remarkable milestone is a monumental achievement that positions USask as a key player in quantum research on the world stage. As we step into the future, USask is continuing to establish itself as a cutting-edge institution and a hub for national and international quantum-focused research that will propel work in agriculture, health sciences, defense technologies and more across the Prairies,” said Vince Bruni-Bossio, USask President and Vice-Chancellor.
The fully assembled quantum computing system combines hardware from companies who are all members of the Novera QPU Partner Program — an ecosystem of quantum computing hardware, software, and service providers whose technologies are compatible with the Novera QPU. The Novera QPU will be installed in a Zero Point Cryogenics dilution refrigerator, Qblox control systems will be installed for operating the qubits, and QuantrolOx software will be integrated for automated qubit bring-up, characterization, and tuning.
While the Novera QPU can be integrated with our partners’ technology, customers can also purchase full-scale quantum computing systems based on Rigetti’s modular Cepheus architecture ranging from 36 to 108 qubits. These systems include a sourced dilution refrigerator, Rigetti’s control systems, and QCS Outpost, a comprehensive software operating environment for administering, monitoring, integrating, and using a Rigetti quantum computer. Rigetti can manage the entire delivery and installation process to ensure a fully operational quantum computing system.
Rigetti QPUs are manufactured in Rigetti’s Fab-1, the industry’s first dedicated and integrated quantum device manufacturing facility.
About Rigetti
Rigetti is a pioneer in full-stack quantum computing. Rigetti quantum computers are based on superconducting qubits, which are widely believed to be the leading qubit modality given their maturity, clear path to scaling, and fast gate speeds. Current Rigetti quantum computing systems achieve gate speeds of 50-70ns, which is about 1,000 times faster than other modalities such as ion traps and neutral atoms.
Rigetti sells on-premises 9-qubit to 108-qubit quantum computing systems, supporting national laboratories and quantum computing centers. Rigetti’s Cepheus 36-qubit to 108-qubit systems are based on the Company’s proprietary chiplet-based technology and include the Company’s control electronics. Rigetti’s 9-qubit Novera QPU supports a broader R&D community with a high-performance, on-premises QPU designed to plug into a customer’s existing cryogenic and control systems.
The Company operates quantum computers over the cloud through its Rigetti Quantum Cloud Services (QCS) platform, enabling global enterprise, government, and research clients to pursue R&D. The Company’s proprietary quantum-classical infrastructure provides high-performance integration with public and private clouds for practical quantum computing.
Rigetti developed the industry’s first multi-chip quantum processor for scalable quantum computing systems. Leveraging this proprietary technology, Rigetti deployed the industry’s largest multi-chip quantum computer in 2025 with Cepheus-1-36Q, based on four 9-qubit chiplets tiled together. The Company designs and manufactures its chips in-house at Fab-1, the industry’s first dedicated and integrated quantum device manufacturing facility. Learn more at https://www.rigetti.com.
Source: Rigetti
The post Rigetti Announces Novera QPU Sale to the University of Saskatchewan appeared first on HPCwire.
Even on NASA's Artemis II mission around the moon, astronauts apparently still have to deal with broken Microsoft Outlook. One of the crew members, Reid Wiseman, jokingly reported that he had "two Microsoft Outlooks" and neither worked. 404 Media reports: On April 1, four astronauts from the U.S. and Canada embarked on a 10-day flight to loop around the moon. Spotted by VGBees podcast host Niki Grayson on the NASA livestream of live views from the , around 2 a.m. ET, mission control acknowledges an issue with a process control system and offers to remote in -- yes, like how your office IT guy would pause his CoD campaign to log into Okta for you because you used the wrong password too many times. One of the astronauts, Reid Wiseman, says that's chill, but while they're in there: "I also see that I have two Microsoft Outlooks, and neither one of those are working." Astronauts are trained for decades in some of the most physically and mentally grueling environments of any career. They're some of the smartest people on the planet, and they have to be, before we strap them to 3.2 million pounds of jet fuel and make them do complex experiments and high-stakes decisions for days on end. And yet, once they get up there, fucking Outlook is borked.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Prosecutors have charged a man allegedly connected to two deaths tied to the "Texas Killing Fields," a site where dozens of bodies have been found since the 1970s.
Just got a used onewheel and the person I bought it from told me I should buy motorcycle gear. Is this valid, or overkill? Is knee pads, elbow pads and a helmet okay for a beginner?
Ps-it needs a new tires. How hard is it to DIY a tire change? Is kart tires fine or is it worth paying extra for a onewheel one?
Prosecutors unveil artefact linked to lost Dacian civilisation after it was stolen from Dutch museum last year
A priceless ancient gold helmet from Romania that was stolen last year from a museum in the Netherlands, has been recovered as part of a plea deal reached with the suspects.
Under the guard of balaclava-wearing police, prosecutors unveiled the 2,500-year-old Coțofenești helmet, which is considered a cultural icon of Romania, during a news conference on Thursday in the eastern Dutch city of Assen.
Continue reading...US president’s 19-minute Wednesday address at the White House was met with bewilderment from commentators
Donald Trump’s primetime nationwide address on the war with Iran caused widespread bewilderment, with commentators voicing shock at his vow to continue bombing to “bring them back to the stone ages”.
Speculation before Wednesday’s speech from the White House Blue Room suggested that the president might be about to signal a winding up of the US military effort, which began on 28 February.
Continue reading... | Just wanted to update y'all, I ordered the X7 supercharged 2 days ago. Its out for delivery today. That's actually unbelievable! I was thinking a month maybe. Shout out to the fungineers team, they are crushing it. I know a lot of people are getting them within a week or two now so they have definitely been working there asses off to make us happy. Which I think deserves a shit ton of credit. 🙏🏻 [link] [comments] |
Dozen people arrive under new deal but legal challenges expected with scheme criticised as ‘dehumanising process’
A flight carrying people being deported from the US has landed in Uganda, as Donald Trump’s administration pushes on with its strategy of expelling migrants to countries they have no ties to.
The deported people would stay in the east African country as “a transition phase for potential onward transmission to other countries”, an unnamed senior Ugandan government official told Reuters.
Continue reading...The court ruled 8-1 against a Colorado law banning ‘conversion therapy’ for youths. What does it mean for other states, and why did two liberals side with conservatives?
The US supreme court ruled 8-1 this week against a Colorado law banning “conversion therapy” for youth, in a case that could have major consequences for transgender and queer youth across the US, and for healthcare more broadly.
Colorado’s 2019 law prohibits licensed clinicians from seeking to change the gender identity or sexual orientation of youth patients under 18. It is one of 23 states with similar restrictions.
Continue reading...Private credit investment firm’s move is latest sign of crumbling confidence in unregulated lending market
A major private credit investment firm, Blue Owl Capital, has imposed a cap on withdrawals after investors tried to pull $5.4bn from two key funds, in the latest sign of crumbling confidence in the unregulated lending market.
The New York-headquartered firm released filings on Thursday that showed a surge in redemption requests, with investors asking to take back 21.9% of the cash stored in Blue Owl’s $20bn (£15bn) Credit Income Corp fund between January and March. Meanwhile, investors requested 40.7% of funds from its $3bn tech lending fund.
Continue reading...You don't need a scanner to sign, scan and send official documents. Just use the iPhone in your pocket.

Off and on during the Iran war, President Donald Trump has threatened U.S. attacks on civilian infrastructure if the Iranian government fails to meet certain demands.
On March 21, Trump wrote on Truth Social that "if Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST!"
Although Trump later extended that deadline twice, he said March 30 on Truth Social that "if the Hormuz Strait is not immediately ‘Open for Business,’ we will conclude our lovely ‘stay’ in Iran by blowing up and completely obliterating all of their Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and (the oil distribution hub) Kharg Island," and "possibly all desalinization plants."
Trump said such targets have "purposefully" not yet been targeted in U.S. strikes, but that such attacks could be made "in retribution for our many soldiers, and others, that Iran has butchered and killed over the old Regime’s 47 year ‘Reign of Terror.’"
In his April 1 prime time address, Trump said, "If there is no deal, we will hit each and every one of their electric generating plants very hard and probably simultaneously."
Since Trump’s initial threat, non-governmental groups and Democratic lawmakers have urged him not to strike civilian infrastructure, saying it would go against international law.
Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass. — who is running for Senate this year — said on MS NOW March 24 that "bombing civilian power infrastructure is a war crime."
Experts in international law said Moulton’s assertion is well supported, though there is some gray area in determining whether such attacks would be legal under international law. In addition, experts said it is unlikely that Trump or any other U.S. official would be brought to account if they made such a move, because neither the U.S. nor Iran is a member of the International Criminal Court.
Moulton’s campaign did not provide evidence for his statement.
The most directly relevant provision of international law comes from Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions, specifically three portions of the agreement. They say:
All parties to a conflict "shall at all times distinguish between the civilian population and combatants" and "shall direct their operations only against military objectives."
"Acts or threats of violence, the primary purpose of which is to spread terror among the civilian population, are prohibited."
Attacks on military targets are those that "make an effective contribution to military action and whose total or partial destruction, capture or neutralization … offers a definite military advantage."
Together, these provisions would make the bombing of civilian targets, including those in Iran, "a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law," said Milena Sterio, a Cleveland State University law professor who specializes in international law. The bombing of a civilian target "would give rise to a war crime," she said.
Even though the U.S. has not ratified Protocol I, the agreement has "the status of customary law, which is binding on all states," Sterio said. "It doesn't not matter that the U.S. is not a member of the protocol."
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres told Politico that "if there are attacks either on Iran or from Iran on energy infrastructure, I think that there are reasonable grounds to think that they might constitute a war crime."
There is some nuance in the rules dictating how the attacks are classified by the UN, however. Targets with both military and civilian uses are known as "dual use."
An attacking state could argue that an otherwise civilian target is serving a military purpose, making it a legitimate military target, Sterio said.
Under that argument, another provision of Protocol I — the "principle of proportionality" — comes into play.
"You would still have to weigh the military advantage anticipated against the civilian harm your attack will cause," Sterio said. "When it comes to cutting off power for thousands or tens of thousands of individuals, it may be argued that the civilian harm outweighs the military advantage."
The proportionality principle "is only relevant if the targets are being attacked as military targets — to provide a quantifiable military advantage to the attacker," said Stuart Ford, a University of Illinois-Chicago law professor. By contrast, if they are being attacked as a way to punish the civilian population, Ford said, "then it doesn't matter whether they are dual use targets. You can never intentionally attack an object with the purpose of causing civilian harm."
Such a military advantage "must be the real reason behind the strike, and not simply a pretext to terrorize the civilian population," said Pace University law professor Alexander K.A. Greenawalt.
The specific type of infrastructure targeted might matter, too.
Kenneth Roth, a former executive director of Human Rights Watch, told CNN that desalination plants — which produce more than half the drinking water for U.S.-allied Qatar and Bahrain, though less for Iran — "are purely civilian infrastructure. There is no legal argument whatsoever for attacking them."
Other types of infrastructure, such as power plants, might be more legally justifiable as targets, depending on how extensive their military use is.
"Whether a power plant would constitute a military objective or civilian object would depend on the facts and circumstances, but the president’s categorical statement represents a threat to target even civilian objects regardless of the requirement for distinction, which would be a war crime," Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer, told The New York Times.
In a statement to PolitiFact, a White House spokesperson did not directly address the question of whether such attacks would constitute war crimes.
"The terrorist Iranian regime has committed egregious human rights abuses for 47 years, including brutally killing its own people for merely speaking out against its oppressive rule," the statement said. "By achieving the military objectives stated under Operation Epic Fury, President Trump is making the entire region safer and more stable by eliminating Iran’s short- and long-term threats to our country and our allies."
The International Criminal Court, as seen in The Hague, Netherlands, Dec. 9, 2025, prosecutes people for serious international crimes such as genocide and war crimes. (AP)
It’s unlikely that Americans would be prosecuted for bombing civilian infrastructure, experts said. Theoretically, the International Criminal Court would be the relevant prosecutor; the court, for example, has issued arrest warrants for Russians accused of intentionally attacking civilian targets in Ukraine.
But a prosecution can proceed only if the alleged crimes take place on the territory of a member state or are carried out by a national of a member state. Neither the United States nor Iran are members of the International Criminal Court. The United Nations Security Council also has the authority to refer a case to the ICC. But the U.S. has veto power on the Security Council, so it would be able to block such a referral.
"Possibly the U.S. could investigate itself, but countries are typically not good at investigating their own behavior and imposing accountability on themselves," Sterio said.
And that option is even less likely now that the U.S. Supreme Court has given the president legal immunity for official acts, Greenawalt said, because the president would likely be able to establish that he is waging the war in his official capacity.
Moulton said, "Bombing civilian power infrastructure is a war crime."
This is a widely accepted interpretation of international law. However, the U.S. could argue that a particular attack is justified because the infrastructure had a dual civilian-military use and that the benefit from the enemy’s military setback was greater than the harm to civilians.
U.S. officials are unlikely to be prosecuted for any alleged war crimes because neither the U.S. or Iran is a member of the International Criminal Court.
The statement is accurate but needs additional information, so we rate it Mostly True.
They were the first in a series of arrests planned Thursday, federal officials told CBS News.
Understanding the pricing trends and dynamics of the gold market is crucial for making sound financial choices.
Christina Marie Plante was last seen on May 19, 1994, after leaving home on foot to go to a stable where her horse was kept.
Nvidia has begun rolling out a beta feature that automatically compiles game shaders while a PC is idle. It won't eliminate shader compilation the first time a game runs, but Ars Technica reports it could help reduce those repeated wait times. From the report: Nvidia's new Auto Shader Compilation system promises to "reduc[e] the frequency of game runtime compilation after driver updates" for users running Nvidia's GeForce Game Ready Driver 595.97 WHQL or later. When the feature is active and your machine is idle, the app will automatically start rebuilding DirectX drivers for your games so they're all set to roll the next time they launch. While the feature defaults to being turned off when the Nvidia App is first downloaded, users can activate it by going to the Graphics Tab > Global Settings > Shader Cache. There, they can set aside disk space for precompiled shaders and decide how many system resources the compilation process should use. App users can also manually force shader recompilation through the app rather than waiting for the machine to go idle. Unfortunately, Nvidia warns that users will still have to generate shaders in-game after downloading a title for the first time. The Auto Shader Compiler system only generates the new shaders needed after subsequent driver updates following that first run of a new title.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Do price hikes and content choices have you stuck? Our rundown can help you sort through the best options.
A new batch of A24 films including Problemista, Under the Skin and Dream Scenario are available this April on free streaming services.
Central American country to receive up to 25 migrants a week expelled as part of Trump’s immigration crackdown
The Costa Rican government has agreed to receive up to 25 deported migrants a week from the United States, the latest deal in the Trump administration’s unprecedented efforts to deport scores of people to “third countries”.
With the new agreement, Costa Rica seeks a closer alliance with Donald Trump’s government, which has been securing cooperation from other Central American countries in accepting deportees from other nations who have been detained by US immigration agents.
Continue reading...Brent crude rises 8% as US president vows to hit Iran ‘extremely hard’ over coming weeks
Oil prices have soared after Donald Trump vowed in a televised speech to hit Iran “extremely hard” over the coming weeks, knocking hopes of a near-term end to the conflict in the Middle East.
Brent crude prices jumped by as much as 8% on Thursday to $109.74 a barrel, reversing Wednesday’s drop when hopes of a de-escalation in the Iran war pushed the international benchmark below the $100-a-barrel mark at one point.
Continue reading...Wage garnishment doesn't happen overnight, but the timeline may be shorter than you think.
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Trump claims Iran war ‘nearing completion’ and seeks to justify conflict in prime-time address
Middle East crisis live: Macron criticises Trump and says opening strait of Hormuz by force ‘unrealistic’
Stock markets are falling across Europe, as investors react to Donald Trump’s special address last night, in which he vowed to send Iran “back to the stone ages”.
Frankfurt’s stock market has started the day with a bump; Germany’s DAX share index is down 1.5%.
“In what might be the most dramatic April Fools’ of recent years, Donald Trump did nothing of what was expected in his speech. Instead of ‘no more war’, we got ‘no, more war!’, with heavier strikes expected and a fresh warning of attacks on power plants.
This leaves markets back where they were last week, and now we have to price in hundreds of millions of barrels of oil that aren’t coming out any time soon. The gloomy predictions of last week would have been perhaps misplaced if Trump had signalled a quick end, but now markets are back to pricing in economic catastrophe.”
Continue reading...President Trump said he would sign an order to pay all DHS employees as a plan to reopen most of DHS and pursue additional funding moves forward in Congress.
According to a top Shapiro campaign official, the total more than doubles the previous benchmark for a Pennsylvania gubernatorial race at this stage.
Sexual violence is a widespread weapon of war in Sudan. “Survivors frequently and clearly identified the perpetrators as RSF fighters,” Doctors Without Borders says.
Thom Tillis joins McConnell in warning withdrawal would aid rivals and threaten US security
A second Republican senator spoke out in defense of Nato on Thursday, joining Mitch McConnell and the Democrats, after Donald Trump said that he was “absolutely” considering withdrawing from the alliance after it refused to take part in the joint assault with Israel against Iran.
“Nato stood by America when we were under attack and came to our aid after the September 11th attacks. Their soldiers fought and died alongside our troops in Afghanistan,” said Thom Tillis, a Republican, and Jeanne Shaheen, a Democrat, who co-chair the Senate Nato observer group.
Continue reading...My Pint doesn’t turn on at all. I haven’t updated the firmware since 2021.
I see mixed reviews about the Quart, some saying it’s awesome, some say you’re crushing cells and poor quality. I also see it might be possible to put a Pint X battery in there?
I have no soldering experience and no speciality tools, 3D printer, etc., just a drill and bits. Obviously I’d prefer more range but I’m open to sending to FM for a stock battery if the other options are too difficult or costly.
Post your questions below to get insight from the Guardian’s politics live blogger on the future of Labour and the role of the political reporter
Q: Do you agree with the Tories about wanting more oil and gas drilling from the North Sea?
Davey says Kemi Badenoch claims she can get an extra £2.5bn in tax revenue by allowing more exploration in the North Sea. He says she is “just lying”. He says everyone knows that that is not realistic.
Continue reading...The new food delivery features showcase Alexa Plus's latest integrations with third-party apps.
Robbers used firework bombs to break into the Drents Museum in 2025, stealing the 5th-century BC golden Helmet of Cotofenesti and three gold bracelets.
This blog is now closed
Back to Trump’s frustration with European allies – although it doesn’t involve a Nato member this time – Austria is the latest country to risk the US president’s wrath after a defence ministry spokesperson confirmed it denied all US requests for military overflights related to the Iran war.
“There have indeed been requests and they were refused from the outset,” Col Michael Bauer told AFP, adding that every time a similar request “involves a country at war, it is refused.”
Continue reading...Nasa mission enters second day, with crew hoping to become first people to orbit moon in more than 50 years
Four astronauts are preparing to leave Earth’s orbit and slingshot towards the moon as Nasa’s Artemis II mission enters its second day.
The high-stakes 10-day voyage is expected to mark the first time in half a century that humans will return to the vicinity of the moon. It is a crucial test of Nasa’s ambition to land humans back on the lunar surface this decade, and stay there permanently.
Continue reading...Ocasio-Cortez says Israel can fund its own defense and she will oppose any new US aid amid human rights concerns
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a US representative, said on Wednesday that she will oppose any future US military aid to Israel, including for defensive systems.
In a statement on social media, Ocasio-Cortez said that Israel was fully capable of funding “Iron Dome and other defensive systems”, and that “consistent with my voting record to date, I will not support Congress sending more taxpayer dollars and military aid to a government that consistently ignores international law and US law”.
Continue reading...Just curious how many of us out there have bad knees? How do you deal with it? Have any riders gone through knee surgery? How was the recovery? Did it make riding better afterwards?
Just a little back story, broke my tibial spine in a car accident a long time ago. I can walk but impact hurts, a step, a jump, any impact hurts. I’ve lived with it long enough to have learned to ignore the pain. But if it’s really acute my legs shuts off and just buckles. Because of this I’ve been scared to do tricks, bonks, things like that. But I enjoy the ride nonetheless. But I wish I could do more.
As the climate crisis intensifies the storms lashing south Florida, it is imperative to design spaces that soak up the water. The 19.4-acre Bayshore Park is an example of how to design spaces that protect from and connect residents to nature
Continue reading...The Frame and Frame Pro TVs boast improved performance in lit rooms and access to over 5,000 artworks.
Valve's March 2026 Steam Survey shows Linux gaming usage jumping to a record 5.33% share -- more than double macOS's 2.35%. Phoronix reports: Steam on Linux was never above 5% and easily an all-time high for the Linux gaming marketshare, especially in absolute numbers. It was a massive 3.1% spike in March while macOS also jumped surprisingly by 1.19% to 2.35%. The Steam Survey numbers show Windows losing 4.28%, down to 92.33%. Part of the jump at least appears to be explained by Valve correcting again the Steam China numbers. Month over month they report a 31.85% drop to the Simplified Chinese language use and English use increasing by 16.82% to 39.09%. Other languages also showed gains amid the massive decline in Simplified Chinese use. The latest numbers for March show around a quarter of the Linux gamers are running Steam OS. Due in part to the Steam Deck APU being a custom AMD product and the popularity of AMD hardware on Linux for its open-source nature, AMD CPU use by Steam on Linux gamers remains just under 70%.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A 7-month-old baby sitting in her stroller was killed by an apparent stray bullet in Brooklyn Wednesday afternoon, in what's believed to be a "gang motivated" shooting.
Senate-passed funding plan for DHS languishes despite agreement between Republican congressional leaders
The US House of Representatives on Thursday took no action on a compromise measure that would end the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), raising questions about how much longer the record-long funding lapse will persist.
The department has been without funding since mid-February, after Democrats refused to vote for its appropriations unless Republicans agreed to new guardrails on federal agents involved in immigration enforcement operations.
Continue reading...The coffee chain said it will also pay its workers weekly to provide more financial flexibility.
Director and producer is co-creator of You Are Here, a one-day immersive theatrical event traversing 75 years of youth culture
Out of chaos come great cultural movements, according to the director and producer Danny Boyle, who will inflict a little curated chaos on London’s Southbank Centre with what has been described as an “epic, one-off pop culture spectacular”.
Boyle, whose 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony drew on the rich thread of British culture, is the co-creator and director of You Are Here, a one-day immersive theatrical event traversing 75 years of youth culture and social movement: think teddy boys, Lovers’ Rock, punk, Ziggy Stardust, rave, acid house, the spoken word, Brit pop, ballroom to name a few.
Continue reading...Lebanese-French man Ali Cherri demands investigation into Beirut bombing as possible war crime against civilians
A Lebanese-French artist has filed a legal complaint in a Paris court about an Israeli bombing of his family home in Lebanon that killed his parents and a domestic worker, claiming the attack could constitute a war crime.
The suit, filed with the French war crimes unit on Tuesday, is a rare instance of an individual pursuing war crimes charges for an Israeli bombing. It is also the first time a French court has taken a case over Israel’s bombing of Lebanon.
Continue reading...ARMONK, N.Y., April 2, 2026 — IBM today announced a strategic collaboration with Arm to develop new dual‑architecture hardware that helps enterprises run future AI and data intensive workloads with greater flexibility, reliability, and security.
IBM’s leadership in system design, from silicon to software and security, has helped enterprises adopt emerging technologies with the scale and reliability required for mission‑critical workloads. As AI moves deeper into core business operations, IBM continues to invest in hardware platforms such as the Telum II processor and Spyre Accelerator, which are designed to bring AI from experimentation into everyday enterprise use.
Through this collaboration, IBM and Arm aim to extend this track record of innovation by combining IBM’s enterprise leadership in systems reliability, security, and scalability with Arm’s own leadership in power‑efficient architecture, workload enablement expertise, and broad software ecosystem, to build flexible and scalable computing platforms for the future.
“As enterprises scale AI and modernize their infrastructure, the breadth of the Arm software ecosystem is enabling these workloads to run across a broader range of environments,” said Mohamed Awad, Executive Vice President, Cloud AI Business Unit, Arm. “Our collaboration with IBM builds on this progress, extending the Arm ecosystem into mission-critical enterprise environments and giving organizations greater flexibility in how they deploy and scale these workloads.”
“This collaboration is a natural extension of IBM’s leadership in hardware and systems innovation,” said Tina Tarquinio, Chief Product Officer, IBM Z and LinuxONE. “It continues IBM’s pattern of anticipating enterprise needs well ahead of market inflection points—developing capabilities early so clients are prepared as new workloads and business models emerge. Our aim is to expand software choice and improve system performance while maintaining the reliability and security our clients expect.”
“Enterprise infrastructure is entering a new phase where flexibility, workload portability, and ecosystem reach are becoming just as critical as performance and reliability. As AI and data-intensive applications reshape requirements, organizations are looking for platforms that can evolve without forcing disruptive tradeoffs,” said Patrick Moorhead, Founder, CEO, and Chief Analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy. “What IBM and Arm are signaling here is a meaningful step toward that future that could broaden how enterprises think about deploying and scaling modern workloads. While the full implications will take time to unfold, it’s clear this reflects a deeper level of investment in long-term platform innovation and ecosystem expansion than we typically see at this stage.”
A Collaboration Designed for What’s Next
The collaboration is focused on three key areas. First, the companies are exploring how to expand virtualization technologies that allow Arm-based software environments to operate within IBM’s enterprise computing platforms. This work is designed to expand software compatibility and further streamline how developers and enterprises bring Arm applications into mission-critical environments.
Secondly, enterprise infrastructure must support high-availability operations, as well as security and local data sovereignty requirements. IBM and Arm are exploring new ways to support the performance and efficiency demands of modern workloads, including AI and data intensive applications. The work includes enabling enterprise systems to recognize and execute Arm applications, with the goal of helping Arm-based environments align with the reliability, security, and operational requirements enterprises need.
Finally, the collaboration is focused on long term ecosystem growth. By creating shared technology layers between platforms, IBM and Arm aim to open the door to broader software ecosystems and greater flexibility in how applications are deployed and managed. This approach could give enterprises more choice, positioning them to adopt new applications and architectures while continuing to leverage their existing investments.
“IBM’s defining role in shaping enterprise infrastructure spans decades, showcasing the breadth and commitment required to support our clients’ most intensive and sensitive workloads,” said Christian Jacobi, Chief Technology Officer and IBM Fellow, IBM Systems Development. “This moment marks the latest step in our innovation journey for future generations of our IBM Z and LinuxONE systems, reinforcing our end-to-end system design as a powerful advantage.”
About IBM
IBM is a leading provider of global hybrid cloud and AI, and consulting expertise. We help clients in more than 175 countries capitalize on insights from their data, streamline business processes, reduce costs and gain the competitive edge in their industries. Thousands of governments and corporate entities in critical infrastructure areas such as financial services, telecommunications and healthcare rely on IBM’s hybrid cloud platform and Red Hat OpenShift to effect their digital transformations quickly, efficiently and securely. IBM’s breakthrough innovations in AI, quantum computing, industry-specific cloud solutions and consulting deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM’s long-standing commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity and service.
Source: IBM
The post IBM Collaborates with Arm on Dual-Architecture Systems for AI and Data Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer requested a major disaster declaration from President Donald Trump after tornadoes in Branch, Cass and St. Joseph counties killed four people and destroyed homes and businesses.
Microsoft is flexing its muscles with new voice, transcription and image AI models.
At a time when the populist right is on the rise, progressives are shooting blanks while history rushes headlong into an automated future
Canberra rolled out the red carpet this week to one of the AI overlords whose technology is driving the world down the path of creative destruction. Anthropic’s CEO Dario Amodei, the putative “good” tech oligarch, was spinning his version of a machine-driven future with the elan of a man who has untangled the mysteries of the universe – or at least built a predictive text model that can scrape the output of humanity and spit out compelling summaries of our collective consciousness.
He regaled the prime minister, assorted elected officials and the tech sector’s glitterati with his pitch for good AI that would transform the economy, before becoming the first to sign up to the government’s new datacentre principles, conveniently released just a week earlier. It was compelling shill and, to be fair, Amodei is not the worst of the gods. He created Anthropic after leaving Open AI when the company dispensed with its not-for-profit, “safety first” mission. He regularly shares thoughtful essays on the path of technology and has been open about his fears for the impact of his own products. He broke with the Trump administration over the limits to how his technology would be used to spy on citizens and enable autonomous weapons, turning himself into an enemy of the state.
Continue reading...Of course the vice-president is obsessed with extraterrestrials – look how bad things have gotten on Earth
I can’t fault anyone for looking around at the state of things on the planet Earth and pondering the existence of aliens. Who wouldn’t want to hop on the Starship Get-Me-The-Hell-Out-Of-Here right now? It costs me a vital organ to fill up my gas tank, everyone I know is unemployed and the cast of Bravo’s Summer House is crumbling before our eyes. Unfortunately for alien observer JD Vance, he’s partially responsible for two of the three. Pretty sure the vice-president isn’t hooking up with Amanda Batula, so he’s off the hook for that one.
On a recent appearance on The Benny Show, a conservative podcast you’ve never heard of, Vance outlined his “obsession” with UFOs. He might not be fully read into the current state of extraterrestrial discourse, but he does have a theory. Vance said: “I don’t think they’re aliens, I think they’re demons anyway, but that’s a longer discussion.”
Dave Schilling is a Los Angeles-based writer and humorist
Continue reading...Affected cars include models in Peugeot, Citroën, Vauxhall, Lancia, Alfa Romeo, Jeep and Fiat brands made since 2023
The European carmaker Stellantis has issued a recall for 44,000 UK vehicles after discovering a fault that could result in its cars catching fire.
The fault has been found in certain models across its Peugeot, Citroën, DS Automobiles, Vauxhall, Lancia, Alfa Romeo, Jeep and Fiat brands, produced between 2023 and 2026. Key vehicles affected by the recall include the Citroën C3, Peugeot 208 and Vauxhall Mokka.
Continue reading...Commentary: NASA is sending four astronauts farther into space than any humans have ever traveled. But there's a much deeper subtext about what it all means.
People broke matzoh, read from the Haggadah and sang — with no need to worry about when the next air raid siren might sound.
Two gay Iranian men seeking asylum in the U.S. could face execution if they're deported to Iran, a move the Trump administration has not ruled out.
BOSTON, April 2, 2026 — QuEra Computing today open-sourced its T-gate simulator (Tsim), a GPU-accelerated quantum circuit simulator that, for the first time, lets researchers simulate non-Clifford gate operations at the speed and scale that quantum error correction (QEC) development demands.
QEC is the essential bridge between today’s noisy quantum processors and the fault-tolerant machines that will deliver practical quantum advantage. Designing effective QEC protocols — including surface code experiments, magic state distillation circuits, and logical gate sequences — requires simulating circuits at the physical level across millions of shots. Because a real fault-tolerant, commercially relevant quantum computer is still in development, the quality of these simulation tools directly shapes the pace of progress.
Yet today’s toolkit has a critical gap. Non-Clifford gates, particularly T-gates, are what make quantum circuits universal: without them, quantum computations offer no speedup over classical computers. The most widely adopted QEC simulator, STIM, handles only Clifford gates. Other tools that support T-gates are limited in qubit count or are too slow for the statistical analysis that QEC research requires. Tsim closes that gap, supporting quantum circuits with 80+ physical qubits and producing millions of samples in parallel — approximately 600 nanoseconds per shot for an 85-qubit circuit on an NVIDIA GH200.
“We built Tsim for our own research and are releasing it because the entire QEC community benefits when researchers can simulate realistic fault-tolerant circuits quickly and at scale,” said Shengtao Wang, VP of Algorithms and Applications at QuEra Computing. “By open-sourcing Tsim, QuEra has extended its fault-tolerant momentum from hardware into software, giving the research community tools to design and validate the protocols that those machines will run.”
By enabling fast simulation of the gate operations that make quantum computing universal, Tsim gives researchers, quantum software developers, and hardware engineers worldwide a powerful tool to:
Tsim is compatible with the STIM circuit format and API, so researchers can extend existing simulation pipelines to non-Clifford circuits with minimal effort. It is also part of QuEra’s open-source Bloqade ecosystem, which provides a complete workflow from quantum program definition through compilation, noise modeling, simulation, and decoding.
The release extends a landmark year for QuEra’s fault-tolerant program. In 2025, four Nature papers — produced in collaboration with, and in several cases led by, QuEra’s academic partners at Harvard and MIT — demonstrated continuous operation of multi-thousand-atom arrays, integrated fault-tolerant architectures with up to 96 logical qubits, the first logical-level magic state distillation, and algorithmic fault tolerance that reduced runtime overhead by 10–100x for reconfigurable architectures such as neutral atoms.
QuEra will hold a Tsim webinar on April 28 at 1:00 PM EST. Register here.
Access Tsim on this GitHub repository.
About QuEra Computing
QuEra is putting quantum to work. As the scientific and commercial leader in neutral-atom quantum computing, we help enterprise innovators leverage quantum to gain competitive advantage, support HPC centers as they help users tackle classically intractable problems, and enable government programs to build national capability and sovereign capabilities. We do this through our quantum innovation platform, combining quantum systems available on-premises and via the cloud with application co-design and collaborative research. Born at Harvard and MIT, still advancing together, QuEra operates globally from Boston, Tokyo, and the United Kingdom. As quantum computing moves from “one day” to “Day One,” QuEra delivers practical impact today while advancing toward large-scale, fault-tolerant systems. See what’s possible at quera.com.
Source: QuEra
The post QuEra Launches Open-Source Package to Simulate Logical Quantum Circuits at Scale appeared first on HPCwire.
Ukraine has forged the defense industry the continent desperately needs.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court considered a case that could reshape the concept of birthright citizenship. During two hours of debate, the justices raised several key questions about an executive order’s definition of a right established in the Constitution’s 14th Amendment.
The justices heard arguments in Trump v. Barbara with President Donald Trump in attendance at the court for part of the session. At issue was Trump’s executive order No. 14,160, Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship, which claims birthright citizenship does not apply in several situations traditionally understood to be protected by the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause, which reads that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”
One question was the importance of the precedent of United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898), a long-settled ruling that defines the citizenship rights of people born in territory controlled by the United States. Another was the role of English common law as the basis for the Citizenship Clause—and how best to understand its lessons. And still another was how the definition of birthright citizenship fits in modern times within the contours of the prior two precedents.
The Supreme Court has long interpreted the Citizenship Clause to bestow automatic citizenship on a child born in the territory of the United States regardless of their nationality, with limited exceptions. The clause was meant as a direct rejection of the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott v. Sandford decision from 1857, where Chief Justice Roger Taney held that African Americans had “had no rights which the white man was bound to respect.”
In the Wong Kim Ark case, a divided Supreme Court held that Wong Kim Ark, who was born in San Francisco to parents who were Chinese citizens, automatically became a United States citizen at birth.
The administration argued in briefs that another Supreme Court precedent, Elk v. Wilkins (1884) applied to Barbara. In the administration’s view, Elk and other precedents limited birthright citizenship to children of persons “domiciled within the United States.” The administration also argued key language in the Citizenship Clause—the words “and subject to the jurisdiction thereof”—did not grant U.S. citizenship in situations where children were born in the territory of the United States to parents who were not legally in the country or where the parents were temporary visitors.
The arguments at the Supreme Court
The questioning at the Supreme Court on Wednesday branched out in several directions, from the importance of English common law to the ability of the courts and elected officials today to reconsider citizenship status related to situations that did not exist more than 100 years ago.
Link: Read the arguments transcripts
After Solicitor General D. John Sauer’s opening statement, Chief Justice John Roberts asked Sauer about his push to expand the list of birthright citizenship exceptions under the “jurisdiction of the United States.” “You obvious put a lot of weight on the theory of ‘the jurisdiction thereof.’ The examples you give to support that strike me as very quirky, you know, children of ambassadors, children of enemies during a hostile invasion, children on warships, and then you expand it to a whole class of illegal aliens [that] are here in the country,” Roberts commented. “I’m not sure how you can get to that big group from such a tiny list … of idiosyncratic examples.” Sauer pointed to the debates of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and other evidence supporting his case.
Soon, the subject of the English common law came into play, as first raised by Justice Samuel Alito, who wondered if a general rule based on the common law applied to situations that exist today. Justice Clarence Thomas also asked Sauer if immigration was part of the debate about the 14th amendment when it was considered by Congress.
Justice Elena Kagan noted that Sauer’s court brief sought to revise Wong Kim Ark, which she viewed as a precedent having a clear rationale as “a common law tradition … it came from England, we know what it was, everybody got citizenship by birth except for a few discrete categories.” Sauer did not agree with Kagan’s description of Wong Kim Ark, which he argued did not apply to the children of temporary visitors to the United States.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson commented that Sauer had “hurdles to clear” to establish a case that the framers and ratifiers of the 14th Amendment were not importing established common law rules when they crafted the amendment’s language.
Cecillia Wang then argued the case for the American Civil Liberties Union—challenging the administration’s executive order. She quickly faced questions from several justices.
Chief Justice Roberts asked Wang why in her arguments she downplayed the importance of the word “domiciled” in the administration’s case when the word was used more than 20 times in the Wong Kim Ark decision. Justice Alito noted that the concept of “permanent domiciles” was included in the opening and closing of the majority opinion in the Wong Kim Ark.
In response to both questions, Wang cited the English common law tradition, and an early Supreme Court decision, The Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon (1812), as establishing that having a domicile was not a factor in establishing birthright citizenship.
Justice Kagan later returned to a question posed by Justice Alito about how the Supreme Court should deal with a problem that did not exist when the 14th Amendment was ratified, and the circumstances of how the Court should consider birthright citizenship for children of persons unlawfully in the United States.
Wang dismissed the executive order’s domicile requirement and argued that it was “crystal clear” from Wong Kim Ark and prior congressional debates that “the framers of the 14th amendment meant to have a universal common law rule of citizenship, subject to a closed set of exceptions.”
Justice Brett Kavanaugh then asked Wang if the idea of considering exceptions to the 14th Amendment was “frozen” at the time that the 14th Amendment was framed and ratified or if the Court should consider exceptions based on “modern circumstances” such as non-citizens unlawfully in the country. Wong cited a case brief that said the government’s position was a challenge to the current rule and not promoting a new rule itself.
As the arguments unfolded, it became clear that the justices were considering the 14th Amendment’s text and history, as well as the context of the Wong Kim Ark’s precedent in modern times and the implications and complications of possibly expanding exceptions to birthright citizenship. Several justices also asked about the ability of Congress on its own to establish birthright citizenship exceptions through legislative action.
Given the complexity of the case, a final decision from the Court is not expected until at least late June 2026.
Scott Bomboy is the editor-in-chief of the National Constitution Center.
Both platforms are great cable TV alternatives, but which is right for you? Let's break it all down.
The coalition of organizations says Trump’s executive order restricting who can receive mail ballots is unconstitutional
A coalition of civil rights groups sued the Trump administration on Thursday, saying that a new executive order to limit mail-in voting is unconstitutional.
The order, which Trump signed on Tuesday, instructs the federal government to come up with a list of eligible citizens who can vote in each state. It also instructs the US Postal Service to only transmit mail-in ballots to people on that list.
Continue reading...Catch up on this year's Oscar winners and some great titles that are leaving soon.
Sen. Bernie Sanders endorsed socialist New York State Assembly Member Claire Valdez on Thursday in a Democratic primary shaping up as a test of how factions of New York City’s progressive wing will work together under Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
The race to replace retiring Rep. Nydia Velázquez in New York’s 7th Congressional District has put major progressive organizations and figures at odds. Hoping to capitalize on growing national frustration with conservative Democrats and lingering momentum from Mamdani’s win in November, national progressives and their counterparts in New York are fighting to succeed Velázquez with an ally in Congress.
They just haven’t agreed on who it should be.
Sanders, the Vermont independent, is giving a boost to the socialist wing behind Valdez’s campaign, which includes Mamdani and the New York City chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, the campaign shared with The Intercept.
“Claire Valdez is a union organizer who worked minimum-wage fast food jobs and understands firsthand how this economy fails working people,” Sanders said in a statement to The Intercept. “In my view, Congress needs more voices who come from America’s working class. Claire has the experience and vision we need to take on the oligarchy and fight for unions, Medicare for All, and affordable housing. I’m proud to endorse her campaign for Congress.”
Velázquez has endorsed Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, Valdez’s main competitor. Reynoso also has backing from leading progressive officials and groups in New York City like Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and the New York Working Families Party.
Already facing losses this cycle in races where competing progressive candidates did not consolidate their support, national progressives like Sanders are picking sides in the battle to define the future of the electoral left under Mamdani.
Velázquez endorsed Reynoso shortly after Valdez launched her campaign in January standing alongside Mamdani and United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain. Some local observers saw Velázquez’s move as a rebuke of the mayor and a harbinger of a fight between factions of New York City’s left, endangering a relationship Mamdani and Velázquez had built since she became the first member of Congress to back his mayoral campaign.
Velázquez left little room to speculate on that question in comments she made to the New York Times in January, when she said Mamdani had opened up conflict between groups in his coalition by involving himself in primaries; that she was unfamiliar with Valdez, who is originally from Texas; and that she was skeptical of newcomers to the city who think they know who should represent New Yorkers in office.
In a statement to The Intercept, Valdez named Sanders as a key inspiration for her political beliefs and career.
“Three things made me a democratic socialist: shitty jobs, the labor movement, and Bernie Sanders’ runs for president,” Valdez said. “His political revolution changed my life — and showed millions of Americans what’s possible when working people organize. I’m grateful for this endorsement and ready to join the fight in Congress against the oligarchs and for economic democracy.”
On Wednesday, the Valdez campaign announced that it had raised $750,000 from 11,200 donors in the filing period that just ended, though the Federal Election Commission has not yet processed and verified the figures. Reynoso had raised just over $317,500 by the end of 2025, before Valdez launched her campaign, according to available FEC data. His campaign has not yet announced its most recent fundraising figures and did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Valdez’s endorsements include PAL PAC, the new pro-Palestine group opposing the American Israel Public Affairs Committee; Justice Democrats; Leaders We Deserve PAC; Jewish Voice for Peace Action; attorney and political advocate Zephyr Teachout; Democratic New York state Sen. Jabari Brisport; and several members of the New York State Assembly.
Reynoso’s backers include Make the Road Action; New York Communities for Change; several powerful local unions including 32BJ SEIU and DC-37; Attorney General Letitia James; New York Democratic Reps. Jerry Nadler and Pat Ryan; and several New York City Council members.
The post Bernie Sanders Backs Claire Valdez in NYC House Race Dividing Left and Progressives appeared first on The Intercept.
Those in US given chance to have more professional usernames without losing access to account
Did your McLovin!1976!@gmail.com email address seem funny at the time but less so now you are applying for dozens of jobs?
Google has said it is giving US users a chance to appear more professional by letting them change their Google account username – whatever appears before @gmail.com in an email address – without losing access to their account.
Continue reading...New tickets released for some group games and final
Fans attempting to buy tickets encounter glitches
Fifa has raised the top ticket price for this year’s World Cup final to $10,990 as it released a new batch of tickets for sale on Wednesday.
The news, which came after the 48-team field for the World Cup was set, will do little to quell claims that Fifa is pricing fans out of the tournament. The most expensive ticket for the 2022 World Cup final was about $1,600.
Continue reading...Christina Marie Plante was reported missing in May of 1994 from Star Valley when she was just 13 years old
A woman in Arizona who went missing 32 years ago, when she was just 13 years old, has been found alive, authorities said this week.
Christina Marie Plante was reported missing in May 1994 from Star Valley, Arizona, after she “vanished without a trace from her community”, according to a statement released on Wednesday by the Gila county sheriff’s office.
Continue reading...Anger in France after US president puts on French accent and mocks Macron during private lunch in Washington
Emmanuel Macron has said Donald Trump’s comments about his marriage were “neither elegant nor up to standard” after the US president put on an accent and mocked his French counterpart and his wife during a private lunch in Washington.
Arriving in South Korea on Thursday, Macron made clear his displeasure at Trump’s comments, which appeared briefly in a video on the White House YouTube channel before being removed.
Continue reading...T-Mobile releases a cologne that smells like a phone (not really), Fortnite allows llama riding (yes, really), Warhammer: The Musical and more.
With gasoline topping $4 a gallon, it now costs almost $145 to fill up a Ford F-150 pickup truck, a new analysis finds.
Commentary: Foldable phones have been full of compromises for the longest time, but things are changing slowly and steadily.
Mastery of banal style is losing its usefulness – but language is more powerful than ever. It’s up to the writer to do what machines can’t
I recently heard an exchange at a playground that should worry the executives at AI companies more than any analyst’s prediction of a bubble. A boy and a girl, maybe 10 years old, were fighting. “That’s AI! That’s AI!” the girl was shouting. What she meant was that the boy was indulging a new and particular breed of nonsense: language that sounds meaningful but has no connection to reality. The children have figured the new world out quickly, as they do.
Artificial intelligence is here to stay, neither as an apocalypse nor as the solution to all life’s problems, but as a disruptive tool. The recent scandal over Shy Girl, the novel by Mia Ballard, was doubly revealing. Hachette cancelled its publication amid claims it was reliant on AI generation (Ballard has said that an acquaintance who edited the self-published version used AI, not her). But the book was originally self-published. Apparently readers and editors didn’t mind until the use of AI was pointed out to them.
Stephen Marche lives in Toronto and is the author of The Next Civil War and On Writing and Failure
Continue reading...Your home deserves the best floodlights. Here are the bulbs that impressed me the most.
Player was in rehab before lawsuit was filed, says attorney
Wide receiver’s lawyer says client innocent of wrongdoing
Los Angeles Rams star Puka Nacua is in rehab and was there before he was sued by a woman who says he made an antisemitic statement and bit her on the shoulder, according to his attorney.
“He was in [rehab] a substantial period of time before any of these allegations broke ... and he’s scheduled to be there for a while longer,” Levi McCathern told The California Post.
McCathern told the newspaper Nacua’s decision to enter rehab was not a direct response to the lawsuit his accuser filed against him by Madison Atiabi last month, but an attempt “to improve his overall behavior in every aspect of his life.”
Continue reading...NASA's Artemis II astronauts launched on a nine-and-a-half-day mission around the moon and back.
im 6' 205 lbs with a rally xl for my first onewheel. im getting about 16 miles per ~80% of a full battery charge. im riding around 18 mph on asphalt. does that sound like normal range?
thanks
Bank of England survey in March shows chief financial officers foresee 3.7% increase over coming year
Companies in the UK expect to raise their prices more rapidly over the coming months as the war in the Middle East drives up costs, Bank of England research shows.
The Bank’s regular survey of more than 2,000 chief financial officers conducted last month, after the Iran conflict began, shows they now expect to raise their prices by 3.7% over the coming year.
Continue reading...Bank holiday traffic predicted to peak on Thursday, as petrol and diesel prices surge from fallout of Iran war
Drivers are being urged to hunt for the cheapest petrol and “to fill up as usual” as UK travellers prepare to make 21.7m journeys on what is expected to be the busiest Easter on the roads in four years.
The average price of a litre of unleaded petrol rose by 20p from 132.83p on 1 March to 152.83p by the end of the month, raising concerns about the cost of filling up for Easter journeys, as rising oil prices triggered by the US-Israel war with Iran translated to higher prices at the pumps.
Continue reading...Once-hyped, celebrity-backed company snapped up by American Exchange Group for fraction of former value
Allbirds, the San Francisco sustainable trainer brand once valued at more than $4bn, is being sold for just $39m (£29.6m) after global demand for its wool-based footwear failed to materialise.
American Exchange Group, the owner of a string of brands including the fashion label Ed Hardy and the accessories maker Born, is snapping up the struggling company once touted as the future of footwear.
Continue reading...Thousands were killed and wounded during the Battle of Copenhagen, considered one of Adm. Horatio Nelson's "great battles."
Funeral director Robert Bush had previously admitted to dozens of counts of fraud at hearing in October
A funeral director has admitted preventing a lawful burial after 30 bodies and a quantity of ashes were found at a funeral home in Hull in 2024.
Robert Bush, 48, had previously admitted to dozens of counts of fraud at a hearing in October, after police raided the premises of Legacy funeral home on Hessle Road over concern for care of the dead.
Continue reading...Some schools in Minnesota have already announced closings or shifts to virtual learning on Thursday as another round of winter weather threatens parts of the state.
For examples of how little a team’s form in the World Cup run-in matters in the tournament itself, look no further than the US
The last time the United States men’s national team entered into the final stretch of their preparations for a World Cup on home soil, the results were dire. From January through April of 1994, the Americans, who were mostly sequestered in a full-time training camp, played 12 games and won just twice. They even managed to lose to Iceland, who were a total non-factor in global soccer back then.
Then, that ’94 team went on to survive the group stage and narrowly lose to eventual champions Brazil, 1-0, in the round of 16. They delivered on expectations in spite of their deflating run-in.
Continue reading...De-dollarization promises to reorder the world, reducing American power globally
The US-Israel war on Iran is expensive. It’s expensive in terms of human lives, first of all. It’s expensive too, in pure currency – about $12bn a week for the US. And it’s expensive in how it’s causing the tectonic structures that underpin our global economy to shift. De-dollarization, the name given to the process countries undertake in unwinding their reliance on the dollar, promises to reorder the world, reducing American power globally. Its impact will be felt domestically in what we pay to borrow and whether we can afford to borrow at all.
Iran’s near-total blockade of the strait of Hormuz has had a dramatic impact on the prices of oil and natural gas, which puts major inflationary pressure on the economy of every country in the world. Practically, inflation makes people and businesses poorer, a process that reinforces itself if it’s not stopped (which is partly why central banks exist).
Ahmed Moor is a writer and fellow at the Foundation for Middle East Peace
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: OpenAI hasn't been shy about spending money lobbying for favorable laws and regulations. But when it comes to its involvement with child safety advocacy groups, the company has apparently decided it's best to stay in the shadows -- even if it means hiding from the people actually pushing for policy changes. According to a report from the San Francisco Standard, a number of people involved in the California-based Parents and Kids Safe AI Coalition were blindsided to learn their efforts were secretly being funded by OpenAI. Per the Standard, the Parents and Kids Safe AI Coalition was a group formed to push the Parents and Kids Safe AI Act, a piece of California legislation proposed earlier this year that would require AI firms to implement age verification and additional safeguards for users under the age of 18. That bill was backed by OpenAI in partnership with Common Sense Media, which proposed the legislation as a compromise after the two groups had pushed dueling ballot initiatives last year. But when the coalition started to reach out to child safety groups and other advocacy organizations to try to get them to lend support to the bill, OpenAI was apparently conveniently left off the messaging. The AI giant was also left out of the marketing on the coalition's website, according to the Standard. That reportedly led to a number of groups and individuals lending their support to the Parents and Kids Safe AI Coalition without realizing that they were aligning themselves with OpenAI. As it turns out, OpenAI isn't just one of the members of the coalition; it is the group's biggest funder. In fact, the Standard characterized the Parents and Kids Safe AI Coalition as being "entirely funded" by OpenAI. While it's not clear exactly how much the company has funneled to this particular group, a Wall Street Journal report from January said OpenAI pledged $10 million to push the Parents and Kids Safe AI Act. Gizmodo notes that OpenAI's backing of the Parents and Kids Safe AI Act "could be self-serving for CEO Sam Altman," who just so happens to head a company called World that provides age verification services.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In week five of Rhik Samadder’s diary, our resident AI skeptic decided to let AI take the lead on a date. If uncanny valley was a conversational style, it’s this
I’m single. Is it because I am emotionally avoidant, waiting on a unicorn, or under 6ft tall? Perhaps a spicy meatball of all three?
Or could it be that I haven’t used the magic of AI yet?
Continue reading...Workers allege abuse, visa fraud and medical neglect during the New Jersey temple’s construction – and say two died from lung disease caused by inhaling silica dust
In the center of the suburban town of Robbinsville, New Jersey, sits the largest modern Hindu mandir outside India.
What visitors from around the world see is a breathtaking display of craftsmanship – hand-carved stone from Rajasthan assembled across a sprawling 185-acre complex. The temple has gone viral on social media for its intricate designs, which took millions of hours to complete. Baps Swaminarayan Akshardham, the religious organization behind the site, has built similar temples across the globe. But some workers say these monumental structures came at a high cost.
Continue reading...Simon Dudley fired after his comments were condemned by prime minister and families of fire victims
Reform UK’s housing spokesperson has been sacked from his role after he described the Grenfell Tower fire as a “tragedy” but said that “everyone dies in the end”.
Keir Starmer had called on Nigel Farage to sack Simon Dudley, a former head of Homes England, after comments which were condemned by Grenfell families and others.
Continue reading...US moves towards reestablishing working relations between two countries after abducting President Nicolás Maduro
The US has lifted sanctions on Venezuela’s acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, in the latest step towards normalising relations between the two countries after US forces abducted her predecessor, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife.
The couple were taken to New York after their abduction in January to face charges of alleged drug trafficking, to which both have pleaded not guilty.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
In recent years, the unhoused community in Wilmington has grown in size and in its need. In response, Mayor John Carney introduced a short-term plan to convert an Eastside park into the only sanctioned city area for its unhoused population.
A chaotic scene unfolded during a sunny Wednesday afternoon at Christina Park as Wilmington officials attempted to carry out a plan to move residents of a city-sanctioned homeless encampment out of their personal tents and into government-issued ones.
The effort drew protests from housing advocates and resistance from some residents, who feared the changes could threaten their property and disrupt the community.
The morning began calmly enough at the Eastside park as city workers prepared to place wooden pallets onto squares painted on the park’s grassy field, marking newly designated tent spots. Previously, residents of the encampment had chosen their own spaces, spreading throughout the park with tents, sofas, generators, and grills.
As the crews set up, several housing advocates also congregated, and could be seen speaking with encampment residents, city officials and police.
The mood was initially lighthearted but grew tense as the day progressed, with many advocates saying they became frustrated with city decisions to abruptly decrease the size of each tent plot, and to restrict the amount of belongings that residents could keep outside the tents.
Also inflaming tensions was a rumor that spread during the day that a city official said police would arrest anyone who refused to move into the new tents.
“They are threatening arrest,” housing advocate Shyanne Miller said through a megaphone as protesters gathered. “We are not having it.”
Eventually, several of the advocates began to demonstrate against the city’s actions. Some even placed themselves behind a forklift to prevent work crews from setting up pallets on which the new tents would be placed.

“As soon as all this stuff came to light, it became super evident that doing that work would be incredibly unethical and ultimately damaging to the community out here in the park,” said one protester who offered his name only as Gene.
Throughout the day, officials from Mayor John Carney’s office sought to defend their decision to move the encampment residents, stating that it was done out of concern for the park’s appearance, as well as to make it easier for paramedic crews to respond to emergencies in the community.
Asked if residents who didn’t move into the new tents would be arrested, Carney’s chief of staff, Cerron Cade, said that those who refuse to move to city-provided tents would have to leave the encampment entirely.
“We have to have some rules. And if folks don’t want to follow the rules, there’s no doors to the park. They can leave,” Cade said.

As Cade spoke, some residents of the encampment chided him for the city’s action. Still, most watched passively as the protesters and city officials engaged in standoffs and debates.
In interviews with Spotlight Delaware, six residents of the encampments expressed fear that the city’s mandate to move would result in the loss of their possessions – including their own personal tents.
Two of those residents also said they would outright refuse to move out of their personal tent, complaining that the city’s plan to condense the community onto a smaller footprint would spark conflicts.
“I don’t want no f***** neighbors, dude,” said one of them who didn’t provide their name.
“We’re not moving,” said another resident, Ron “Philly” Simmons, who has acted as a de-facto leader of the community during its first few months as a city-sanctioned encampment.
In contrast, one man who was settling into one of the new city-issued tents, called them “fantastic,” even as his move clearly exhausted him. The 67-year-old , Jerry Alford, said he has cancer, among other ailments.
But Alford’s enthusiasm changed when asked whether he knew that the table he had placed in front of the new tent was an apparent violation of new city rules.

The rules state that encampment residents can only keep a chair and a bike outside of their tents. All other belongings must remain in their tent.
“Why? What’s that hurt?” Alford asked, referring to his table.
By Wednesday evening, Wilmington officials released a statement again asserting that the park setup is intended to improve safety, organization, and emergency access for the community.
Officials noted that residents are being asked to consolidate belongings into city-issued tents to reduce clutter, trash, and pest concerns, with additional services like showers and laundry expected soon.
“This site has always been intended to be a temporary solution as folks move toward treatment and more stable housing,” the statement read.
City officials also asserted that no arrests were made at the park and that they were “disappointed” that protests delayed setup efforts.
By the late afternoon, city crews took their forklift and left the park with several pallets still in a stack and some tents not yet pitched.
The decision to move people out of their tents comes about six months after Carney first declared that Christina Park would become a legal homeless encampment in the city.
He did so in line with recommendations that had been issued by Wilmington’s homelessness task force, which Carney established early in 2025.
Following Carney’s decision, dozens of people moved into the park. By December, Spotlight Delaware reported that an estimated 50 tents had been pitched in the grassy field along the northern half of the park.
Despite the growth, Simmons told Spotlight Delaware then “there’s no way to really live in a public park” — particularly one that at the time had no showers or bathrooms.

By January, the city entered into a contract with the homeless services organization, Friendship House, to oversee the homeless community by coordinating donations, providing bathrooms, cleaning services and security, and by offering case management for residents.
That same month, the city also brought portable restrooms for the encampment – which residents had been requesting for weeks. Shower and laundry services are expected to begin at the park later this month, according to the city.
On Wednesday, the executive director of the Friendship House, Kim Eppehimer, told Spotlight Delaware that the decision to move park residents out of their tents and into new ones was a city decision. The Friendship House, she said, is trying to support residents while helping to facilitate the city’s plan.
“This is a difficult situation, and we truly recognize that,” Eppehimer said.
The post Tensions flare as Wilmington officials move the Christina Park homeless encampment appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
PlayStation 5 (version tested), Xbox, Nintendo Switch 2, PC; Deck Nine/Square Enix
Max and Chloe, the two teen protagonists of the 2015 game, reunite as adults – giving players the chance to finally finish their journey
In 2015, Life Is Strange stood out for two reasons: its female protagonists, a depressingly rare feature at the time, and its unique brand of millennial cringe. The thirtysomething Frenchmen who created this series may not have had the best grasp of the 2010s teen lexicon, but they did have a good gauge on what’s important about any coming-of-age story, and that’s the relationships between the characters. Max Caulfield, the shy, time-travelling wannabe photographer, and Chloe Price, the traumatised, punk-rock tearaway, had a memorably intense friendship. It was the heart and soul of that game, and now, 11 years later, they are reunited as adults in this final chapter of their story.
For a lot of players, Max and Chloe felt like more than best friends. The game’s original developers were not brave enough to make this explicit in 2015, but newer custodians Deck Nine retconned a romantic relationship between Max and Chloe into 2024’s Life Is Strange: Double Exposure. You can still play Reunion as if the two really were just friends, resulting in some awkward ambiguity in some scenes. Whichever way you slice it, though, this is a game about first love, and how it always stays with you, even when its object does not. And damned if it didn’t make me feel something.
Continue reading...President Trump said in a speech that the U.S. will complete its military mission in Iran "very shortly," and that U.S. forces have achieved "overwhelming victories."
Divers in race against time to unearth wreck of the Dannebroge before seabed becomes construction site
More than 200 years after being sunk by Adm Horatio Nelson and the British fleet, a Danish warship has been discovered on the seabed of Copenhagen harbour by marine archaeologists.
Working in thick sediment and almost zero visibility 15 metres (49ft) beneath the waves, divers are in a race against time to unearth the 19th-century wreck of the Dannebroge before it becomes a construction site in a new housing district being built off the Danish coast.
Continue reading...Democrats criticize speech as doing little to answer Americans’ ‘most basic questions’. Plus, how rap lyrics were used to help sentence a man to death
Good morning.
Donald Trump declared the month-long US-Israeli war against Iran a success “nearing completion” in his prime time address to the nation on Wednesday evening – despite the conflict wreaking global economic chaos, damaging transatlantic alliances and hitting his approval ratings.
What is the significance of Trump’s comments on HEU? The apparent decision to leave it appears to conflict with his assertions that a key war aim was to ensure Iran could never make a nuclear bomb.
Follow our liveblog for the latest updates.
What has Houston said about the rocket’s deployment? Flight controllers confirmed that all four solar arrays, which will provide the spacecraft with continuous electrical power throughout its lunar journey, were deployed successfully.
Continue reading...If you want a Galaxy S26 Ultra but can't quite afford it, shopping the older model is the way to go.
| Just click Confirm Order on Floatwheel website and it chucks an error I swear it was working earlier today and now that I have the crypto in my wallet it doesn't work :( [link] [comments] |
Whether in the thrill of victory or the agony of defeat, coaches and players at this NCAA tournament have found the fun in basketball again
Kara Lawson’s Duke team saw their Final Four dreams dashed with a 70-58 loss to UCLA on Sunday. The Blue Devils had pulled an impressive, buzzer-beating upset of No 2 seed LSU in the Sweet 16 days before, but against the No 1 Bruins in the Elite Eight, they didn’t give a repeat performance. They missed a few key moments in transition that could have changed the game and helped them to their first Final Four in 20 years.
In the end, though, it was OK.
Continue reading...The supreme court appears poised to reject Trump’s attack on a foundation of US identity. We must hope it follows through
American opponents of birthright citizenship – the right of all those born on the soil of a country to claim full legal rights and political representation in that nation – like to point out that many countries don’t have it. On Wednesday at the supreme court, during the oral arguments in Trump v Barbara, the case challenging Donald Trump’s attempt to end birthright citizenship in the United States by executive order, the Trump administration’s solicitor general, John Sauer, claimed that “almost every country” denies birthright citizenship. Trump himself made the unusual choice to attend the oral arguments in person, signaling his investment in the issue and perhaps hoping that his presence would intimidate the justices into ruling in his favor. But he left soon after Cecillia Wang, a lawyer for the ACLU who represented his opponents in court, began speaking. Not long after he left the supreme court building, Trump used Truth Social, his proprietary social media platform, to echo the rightwing argument about the supposed rarity of birthright citizenship worldwide. “We are the only Country in the World STUPID enough to allow ‘Birthright’ Citizenship! President DONALD J. TRUMP” he posted.
This is not true. The United States’ birthright citizenship – which was originally established in very plain, explicit terms in the 14th amendment, and has been reaffirmed twice by Congress and by more than a century of supreme court precedent – is typical of the Americas. In the western hemisphere, only a handful of countries deny automatic full citizenship to infants born within their borders. They are contrasted with the rest of North and South America, where the legacy of slavery led most states to adopt birthright citizenship.
Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...Exclusive: Pressure intensifies for Gabbard after president’s displeasure with Iran war testimony
Donald Trump has privately asked cabinet officials in recent weeks whether he should replace his director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, venting frustration that she shielded a former deputy who undercut his rationale for war with Iran, according to two people briefed on the discussions.
It is not clear that Trump will actually fire Gabbard over the episode. Currently, there is no standout candidate to take the job, and advisers have cautioned that creating a high-profile vacancy before a successor is ready could cause unhelpful political distractions.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
In recent months, rising operating costs and low sale prices have put significant financial strain on Delaware crop farmers. Fertilizer and fuel price increases spurred by the ongoing war in Iran have made the situation more challenging for local farmers, forcing them to make difficult choices about growing strategies heading into this year’s planting season.
Amid already razor-thin profit margins, fertilizer and fuel price increases caused by the war in Iran are putting more stress on Delaware farmers heading into the spring planting season.
While some Delaware farmers were able to forward contract their fertilizer and fuel cost, meaning they locked in prices months ago, those who waited will be forced to endure costs that have nearly doubled since the war began in late February.
In an industry that is already volatile, with corn and soybean prices low and operating costs for farmers high, many Delaware farmers say they don’t have much room to weather the costs of war-induced price hikes.
“The prices aren’t working,” Dover-area farmer Paul Cartanza told Spotlight Delaware. “Every time something happens, the farmers are the first to feel it.”
Fuel and fertilizer costs make up between 18% and 20% of most farmers’ total operating costs, said University of Maryland agricultural economics researcher James McDonald. While exact prices depend on the type of fertilizer, prices have increased by somewhere between 15% and 70% since the war started.
The price spikes stem from the Iran government’s shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz — a critical sea passage for oil, fertilizer ingredients, and other exports from the Middle East — in retaliation to American and Israeli bombings of the country. The fertilizer price increases, specifically, are a result of the blockage of nitrogen and phosphate materials, which are two key fertilizers for American farmers.
The Trump administration has said it is attempting to increase fertilizer imports from Venezuela, in order to offset the impacts of the lacking Middle Eastern supply.
But at a time when corn prices have dropped precipitously to $4 a bushel and soybean prices to $10.20, leaving farmers with less upside potential on their crops, Delaware farmers say they will need to turn to strategies like applying less fertilizer to fields and not tilling the crops in order to get by.
Not tilling, or growing crops without turning over the soil beforehand, saves on costs because farmers don’t have to pay for as much fuel to run their tractors and do the tilling.
Farmers say these fertilizer and tilling changes might decrease crop outputs, particularly if it also ends up being a bad weather year. But many do not see an alternative when fuel prices are soaring by 150%.
If crop yields are lighter as a result, it could also raise food prices later in the year – potentially leading to another burden for consumers.
“You don’t have much of a choice,” Harrington-based farmer Dave Marvel said. “This is a major issue. When fuel is up, everything is up.”
Adding to the challenging circumstances, farmers say, is the uncertainty as to when the war might end, and how long it could take for fuel and fertilizer prices to readjust.
“The fertilizer impacts might last for quite a long time,” said McDonald, the university researcher.” They’ll be facing higher prices, most likely well into the future.”
Even before the war in Iran skyrocketed input prices for the season, Delaware farmers were worried about scraping by this year with low prices and high input costs.
Jim Minner, a Felton-area corn and soybean farmer, told Spotlight Delaware in early March that he had adopted a mindset of “just get by” because of crop prices being so low and machinery costs so high in recent years.

A one-time farm bridge assistance payment from the federal government earlier this spring gave farmers a bailout amid the challenging circumstances, which many said they put toward bills they hadn’t been able to pay, or small machinery upgrades that they had been meaning to do.
Now, though, the fertilizer and fuel price landscape is adding another layer of uncertainty to an industry in which some are questioning its sustainability.
The price hikes also come just as Delaware farmers are beginning to plant their crops, which will begin in mid-April and continue through June for most farm operations.
Minner, who farms about 550 acres across Kent County, said he was able to forward contract most of his fertilizer this past fall, and pre-buy about 1,300 gallons of diesel at $2.60 per gallon – substantially lower than the current $5.79 per gallon that he’s seen at the pump.
While the early contracting has eased some of his financial stress, Minner said, he is still worried about having to refuel his tractor and combine tanks, and purchasing more nitrogen for his corn crops in June.
“You can cut back [on fertilizer] a little bit, but when you cut back, you’re going to cut yield back,” he said.
Smyrna-area farmer Jonathan Snow similarly said that he had already locked in the prices on some of his fertilizer before the war began. He will need to assess as the spring progresses whether he can get by with less fertilizer, or if his yields will suffer too much, depending on how wet or dry the weather has been.
Cartanza, the Dover-area farmer, has a different approach.
Cartanza did not forward contract his fertilizer this season, so he anticipates having to cut back on fertilizer and “rob the ground” of its existing nutrients, for which he said he might pay the price in future years.
Cartanza also said he intends to lean into the no-till or minimum-till crops, which allows him to save on fuel for his machinery and limit the amount of fertilizer he uses.
As Delaware farmers say they are keeping their heads down, trying to cut costs when possible and re-assess as the season goes on, McDonald said he anticipates the price impacts could persist for at least another six months.
Even if the war ends, or the Strait of Hormuz reopens, it will take significant time for facilities to repair from damages they have suffered and restart operations, and for prices to readjust, he 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 Delaware farmers feel increased strain from Iran war on fertilizer, fuel prices appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware labor officials and the Trump administration are at odds over whether immigration enforcement officials should have access to residents’ sensitive data. A Wednesday court hearing comes as a bill to restrict some state departments from sharing immigration information with federal officials is being considered by Delaware lawmakers.
Delaware’s top federal judge grilled attorneys from the state Department of Labor as they argued against complying with federal immigration officials’ efforts to obtain information about businesses suspected of employing undocumented employees.
Delaware District Court Chief Judge Colm Connolly interrogated Jennifer-Kate Aaronson, an attorney with the Delaware Department of Labor, during a lengthy Wednesday morning hearing, in which he questioned the legal basis of Aaronson’s argument for not complying with an administrative subpoena from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The case stems from a subpoena ICE issued to the Delaware Department of Labor in April 2025 seeking wage records for 15 Delaware businesses for the final two quarters of 2024, which the agency suspected of employing undocumented immigrants.
Connolly did not issue a ruling on Wednesday, and it remains unclear when one may come down.
Aaronson contended on Wednesday the subpoena is “overly burdensome,” and complying with it would hinder the normal operations of the state DOL. Disclosing the information, she added, would damage the trust between employers and the department.
Providing the information to ICE also would jeopardize the State Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund, which is funded by employer contributions and provides unemployment benefits to eligible workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own, she said.
Aaronson also argued that the DOL did not have to provide the information to ICE because the request fell under an exception in federal regulation law.
The subpoena, which originated from “hotline tips” that ICE received, sought employees’ names, addresses, wages and Social Security numbers from 15 Delaware businesses, according to court records. ICE’s subpoena efforts align with the Trump administration’s broader strategy of using federal and state agency data to bolster its promised immigration enforcement push.
Attorneys with the U.S. Attorney’s Office argued in court documents that wage records would help ICE further its focus on “worksite enforcement” and may help determine whether employees are using fake Social Security numbers or if employers are paying workers “under the table,” or using cash and without reporting it to the IRS, court records show.
Claudia Pare, assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Delaware who represented ICE’s case Wednesday, argued the DOL is legally required to comply with the subpoena. Connolly appeared to agree with Pare’s arguments.
The DOL is not exempt from complying with a federal subpoena, Connolly said as he read the corresponding federal regulation law statutes aloud to the court.
Connolly publicly dissected the regulations that Aaronson cited by projecting his computer tab onto a large screen at the head of the courtroom. He asked Aaronson where the law shows the DOL has “full discretion” to decide not to comply with a federal subpoena as he highlighted law text.
Aaronson was not able to point to a specific subsection of the regulations in response, but she maintained that disclosure of sensitive information to ICE has never been mandated by federal law.
Connolly, who was appointed by President Donald Trump in 2018, said it was not Aaronson’s “best day” when she wrote the legal brief presenting her case.
Delaware’s U.S. Attorney Ben Wallace said in a written statement that compliance with a federal subpoena is not optional, even when the recipient is a state.
“We are confident the District Court will see things the same way, and we eagerly await its decision,” Wallace said.
Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings sat in the gallery during Wednesday’s hearing.
The court case was first filed in July 2025 by Julianne Murray, Delaware’s former interim U.S. attorney who was appointed by the Trump administration that same month. Murray stepped down in December after Delaware’s federal judges rejected her as Trump’s handpicked appointee, and instead selected Murray’s first assistant, Benjamin Wallace, for the role.

Pare, with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, asked Connolly to seal the April subpoena when the case was first filed, arguing that ICE did not want to have the 15 business names become public and “prematurely alert” the targets of the agency’s worksite investigations.
Aaronson then filed a motion to unseal the subpoena in August. The 15 businesses suspected of hiring undocumented immigrants should have the opportunity to come to court and argue against their information being transmitted to ICE, she said during a previous court hearing.
While Connolly did not officially rule on the motion to unseal the subpoena Wednesday, he said it remained a good decision to keep the subpoena under seal. If suspected businesses are made public and associated with potentially hiring undocumented employees, it could harm their reputation if they’re ultimately found to be innocent, he said.
DOL officials received at least four subpoenas from ICE since February 2025, Aaronson said during an August court hearing. Department officials complied with one ICE subpoena that sought information about a single individual, Aaronson said.
In December, Rep. Sean Lynn (D-Dover) introduced legislation, House Bill 238, that would bar the Delaware departments of finance and labor from disclosing information about a person’s citizenship or immigration status included in any tax return, tax document or database within both departments.
To disclose that information, DOL employees would need to get approval from the Delaware Attorney General or a court order associated with a felony criminal investigation. House Bill 238 would also make the disclosure of the information, without prior approval or court order, a misdemeanor.
The legislation is awaiting consideration in the House Revenue & Finance committee.
It’s unclear how Lynn’s bill, if passed, would affect the subpoena case and any subsequent subpoena the DOL receives from ICE.
While Connolly did not issue a ruling in the case Wednesday, he appeared to support the federal officials’ arguments. It remains unclear when a ruling could come down.
The post Delaware’s top federal judge grills labor officials over ICE subpoena appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Last April, the president unleashed a tidal wave of tariffs on ‘liberation day’. Analysts say the policy has failed, even by the Trump administration’s own terms
Before Donald Trump declared “liberation day” on 2 April 2025 and shocked the world by raising import tariffs on nearly every country the US did business with, he had spent almost three months causing chaos in Washington.
The wholesale slashing of government jobs under Doge (the “department of government efficiency”) and the defunding of US aid agencies had shown White House watchers that the US president was in a hurry to upset institutions he considered profligate or useless.
Continue reading...Over 60 percent have used the tech in their work, a study found, even as experts say its unreliability could compromise judicial authority.
A Washington Post investigation reveals that a prolonged environmental review pushed back work on the Potomac Interceptor that was initially proposed in 2018.
As Iran’s retaliatory attacks hit regional centers of commerce, such as Dubai, the majority of the deaths have been among migrant workers who could not afford to flee.
Fake X account posing as his vet sparked global false reports of Jonathan’s death while soliciting crypto donations
At 194 years old, Jonathan the giant tortoise was a youngster when Queen Victoria ascended to the throne – and has now lived long enough to fall victim to a crypto scam.
News outlets including the BBC, Daily Mail and USA Today falsely reported his death after an X account posing as Jonathan’s vet broke the news.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 2, No. 1,748.
Our reporting started, like much of our work, in a spreadsheet. As I parsed through federal court data, I noticed something odd: Within months of President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, prosecutors began filing obscure charges related to trespassing on military property — so many, in fact, that more cases were filed in 2025 than in the prior decade.
Nearly all of these charges originated from cases along the U.S. southern border, where last spring, the White House designated large swaths of land as national defense areas. Putting them under military authority allowed troops to play an unprecedented role in apprehending undocumented immigrants; federal soldiers are generally barred from enforcing the law on domestic soil. If you were caught in one of these zones, the government could also now prosecute you for breaking federal laws, including one enacted in 1909 to keep spies away from arsenals.
In an investigation we published recently, my co-reporters Perla Trevizo, Abe Streep, Pratheek Rebala and I dug into what experts say is a major flaw afflicting these prosecutions that threatens to ensnare people for crimes they did not commit: Migrants didn’t know the land they were crossing now belonged to the armed forces. And many judges have ruled that you can’t be guilty of trespassing on military land if you had no idea you were on it.
Since April of last year, we found, at least 4,700 immigrants already charged with entering the country illegally faced these military trespass charges; at least one had to wait in jail for more than a month to stand trial. Most of the charges didn’t stick. In fact, we found that in 60% of the resolved cases, the trespass charges were dropped or dismissed. Yet prosecutors kept filing them.
Download the full data used in our analysis on our GitHub page.

As we visited courtrooms in West Texas and New Mexico and pored through case records, it became clear how hard it would be to prove that someone knowingly trespassed on military land. Some couldn’t read. At least one person didn’t speak English or Spanish. The small signs are spaced far apart and easy to miss, and many migrants were arrested far away from them.
A Justice Department spokesperson said the prosecutions have deterred unauthorized border crossings and cartel activity. And prosecutors have argued in court that illegally crossing is enough to prove criminal intent for the military trespassing charges. Senior officials in the U.S. attorney’s offices handling trespass cases declined repeated interview requests.
In November, Perla, Abe and I set out to report throughout southern New Mexico and West Texas to see for ourselves what information we could gather about where the zones were and how they were marked.
Abe and I arranged a ride-along with Doña Ana County Sheriff Kim Stewart, whose New Mexico agency shares jurisdiction with Border Patrol and the military in one of the zones. A sergeant from her office drove us along a dirt road that parallels the border as she pointed out 12-by-18-inch red and white signs opposite the fence. She told us her office hadn’t received specific information about where the military zone boundaries were; all they had were the signs. Even in broad daylight, it was difficult to read the words on them unless we got within a few feet.

On another outing in New Mexico — this time with the photographer Paul Ratje — I went to a spot in Sunland Park where Ratje said he’d previously taken photos of the border fence. The 2-acre dirt lot sat less than a mile from residential neighborhoods and a popular Italian restaurant. From the lot, we could see more red and white signs along the nearby border road.
While we were taking pictures, a pickup truck with a Border Patrol livery approached us. I was surprised to see that inside, instead of Border Patrol agents, there were two Army soldiers. The soldier in the passenger seat pointed to the signage along the border road and told us not to go past there. The border road was part of the defense area, he told us, though the lot we were standing in wasn’t.
The next day, Perla and I returned to the same location. This time, a Border Patrol agent drove up. The lot was part of the defense area, he told us. When I pointed out that I had been given conflicting information the previous day, the agent said he was told by the military that people couldn’t be in this area. We left. (An Army spokesperson said that the base responsible for the defense area in New Mexico published a map in December; the lot was not included in it.)
My interactions with Border Patrol and the military had so far only added to our confusion about these areas. Later that day, Perla and I drove south to a stretch of border fence along the Rio Grande near Tornillo, Texas. We saw a Border Patrol van near a gate in the fence. We thought we’d try to ask where the defense area was. Before we could do that, another Border Patrol van pulled up to us. Soldiers, including one with a rifle strapped across his shoulder, emerged from both vehicles. Another soldier told us he was “not at liberty to discuss” the national defense area’s exact location.
The response bewildered us. We asked him how we were supposed to know whether we were trespassing. He shrugged. (Spokespeople for U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Defense did not directly answer questions about these interactions.)
As we got back into our rental SUV, Perla and I wondered: If we, as reporters who investigate things for a living, couldn’t get a straight answer on where these military zones were, how did the government expect people crossing the border to do better?
In the four months between our reporting trip and the publication of our investigation on March 16, the government continued to file military trespassing charges in more than 1,300 cases. And it’s established new military zones, too, in Arizona, California and Texas.
The post Why We Went Looking for National Defense Areas Along the U.S. Southern Border appeared first on ProPublica.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 2, No. 1,026.
Gas is being stolen, and station workers in Bangladesh, Pakistan and India have been killed over shortages and high prices. Unrest is set to worsen the longer the war lasts.
The more people use social media, the less likely they are to believe democracy is the best form of government, the survey of over 20,000 Americans found.
Battlefield outcomes are connected by the sharing of weapons and intelligence as well as the damage to the global economy
The Iran and Ukraine wars are becoming more intertwined with every passing week – to the point that some analysts argue the two conflicts are beginning to merge.
Quite how each war will affect the trajectory of the other is hard to predict, but it is already clear that their interconnectedness is drawing more countries into both cauldrons, extending an arc of instability that straddles Europe and the Middle East.
Continue reading...The government looks ill prepared for the coming stagflation storm – its ‘keep calm and carry on’ approach won’t survive a blast of reality
Britain is facing the most severe energy shock since the early 1970s, but have no fear: the government has a plan. Details of said plan are still a little sketchy, but will be unveiled in the fullness of time. No need to panic. Keep calm and carry on.
It remains to be seen whether the UK is better prepared to cope with the fallout from Donald Trump’s war with Iran than it was with the pandemic six years ago. To be honest, that wouldn’t be difficult. Yet it is not exactly comforting that ministers are sending out a “we have your back” message to the public while at the same time seeking to reassure the financial markets that any help will be limited and targeted.
Larry Elliott is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Scientists say extreme March heat caused an unusually rapid collapse of snowpack across the American West that's leaving major basins at record or near-record lows. "This year is on a whole other level," said Dr Russ Schumacher, a Colorado State University climatologist. "Seeing this year so far below any of the other years we have data for is very concerning." The Guardian reports: [...] The issue is extremely widespread. Data from a branch of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), which logs averages based on levels between 1991 and 2020, shows states across the south-west and intermountain west with eye-popping lows. The Great Basin had only 16% of average on Monday and the lower Colorado region, which includes most of Arizona and parts of Nevada, was at 10%. The Rio Grande, which covers parts of New Mexico, Texas and Colorado, was at 8%. "This year has the potential of being way worse than any of the years we have analogues for in the past," Schumacher said. Even with near-normal precipitation across most of the west, every major river basin across the region was grappling with snow drought when March began, according to federal analysts. Roughly 91% of stations reported below-median snow water equivalent, according to the last federal snow drought update compiled on March 8. Water managers and climate experts had been hopeful for a March miracle -- a strong cold storm that could set the region on the right track. Instead, a blistering heatwave unlike any recorded for this time of year baked the region and spurred a rapid melt-off. "March is often a big month for snowstorms," Schumacher said. "Instead of getting snow we would normally expect we got this unprecedented, way-off-the-scale warmth." More than 1,500 monthly high temperature records were broken in March and hundreds more tied. The event was "likely among the most statistically anomalous extreme heat events ever observed in the American south-west," climate scientist Daniel Swain said in an analysis posted this week. "Beyond the conspicuous 'weirdness' of it all," Swain added, "the most consequential impact of our record-shattering March heat will likely be the decimation of the water year 2025-26 snowpack across nearly all of the American west." Calling the toll left by the heat "nothing short of shocking," Swain noted that California was tied for its worst mountain snowpack value on record. While the highest elevations are still coated in white, "lower slopes are now completely bare nearly statewide."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
NASA's Artemis II astronauts will spend about 24 hours orbiting the Earth and running checks on their spacecraft and life support systems before heading to the moon.
In today’s newsletter: Britain’s refusal to be drawn into the Iran war has triggered a backlash from the White House, with the president’s fury exposing the fragility of this once unshakeable partnership
Good morning. Another week, another tirade against the UK from Donald Trump. The US-Israeli conflict with Iran has further inflamed tensions in the special relationship, which was already under strain from attacks by the capricious US leader. So far this week, Trump has once again mocked the UK’s navy, instructed allies worried about jet fuel supplies to take it from the strait of Hormuz themselves, and announced that the US is considering leaving Nato.
The outbursts have become a pattern since the war with Iran began – and mark a departure from the unlikely friendly relationship Starmer and Trump have enjoyed until now.
Middle East | Donald Trump used a prime-time address to the nation to declare the month-long war in Iran a success “nearing completion”, despite a spiralling conflict that has caused economic turmoil across the globe, fractured transatlantic alliances and eroded the president’s approval ratings.
UK politics | The UK will seek an even deeper partnership with the EU because of the instability wreaked by Donald Trump’s war with Iran, Keir Starmer has said, adding that the moment called for a more ambitious deal with Brussels.
Nasa | Nasa’s moon rocket Artemis II launched on Wednesday evening, carrying astronauts to the moon for the first time in almost 54 years.
BBC | The BBC confirmed in a statement it was first made aware of a police investigation into historical allegations of sexual abuse by Scott Mills in 2017.
NHS | Claims by Palantir that concerns over the US data analytics company’s multimillion-pound NHS contract are “ideologically motivated” have been rejected by the chair of a parliamentary committee.
Continue reading...Markets sink after president offers little detail on how he intends to wind down conflict over next two to three weeks
Donald Trump used a prime time address to the nation on Wednesday evening to declare the month-long war in Iran a success “nearing completion”, despite a spiraling conflict that has caused economic turmoil across the globe, fractured transatlantic alliances and eroded the president’s approval ratings.
In remarks from the White House, Trump argued that the US’s “little journey” to Iran had nearly accomplished “all of America’s military objectives”, but offered little clarity on how he planned to wind down the conflict over the next “two to three weeks”.
Continue reading...Quake with epicentre west-north-west of Ternate island shakes cities and prompts regional tsunami warning
One person has been killed after a 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck Indonesia’s Ternate island, damaging buildings and triggering small tsunami waves.
The quake, which had a depth of 35km, occurred on Thursday at 6.48am local time, according to the United States Geological Survey. Its epicentre was 127km (79 miles) west-north-west of Ternate, an island in Indonesia’s North Maluku province.
Continue reading...Anyone have any recommendations for foot pad sensors for the GT? I currently have the stock pads with sensors but I bought a pair of Airpads from Craft and ride a while back that currently need sensors and grip tape. I’m a lighter rider on a GT so the more sensitive the better i guess but at this point I’m willing to look at pretty much anything especially if it has the tape and sensor combo. Thank you!
Two-thirds of secondary school teachers report a decline in core abilities such as writing and problem-solving
Pupils using artificial intelligence are losing their capacity for critical thinking, according to a survey of secondary school teachers in England.
Two-thirds said they had observed the decline among children who they also said no longer felt the need to spell because of voice-to-text technology.
Continue reading...Tempers flared Wednesday during a community meeting about a controversial proposal that would give New Castle County more involvement with the finances of Brookside Community Inc.
How America and Israel can shape a new Middle East.
The Cooch’s Bridge chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution honored a local student for winning an essay contest March 21.
Trump says he expects the U.S. war with Iran to end within several weeks despite unrelenting attacks from both sides and Iran's iron grip on the Strait of Hormuz.
Reuters reports that SpaceX has confidentially filed for a U.S. IPO, reportedly targeting a valuation above $1.75 trillion. Reuters reports: SpaceX puts more rockets in space than any other company and promises a chance to invest in humanity's return to the moon and attempt to colonize Mars. The company aspires to put artificial intelligence data centers in space, while running a lucrative satellite communications system that opens up much of the earth to the internet and is increasingly used in war. [...] A public listing at a potential valuation of more than $1.75 trillion comes after SpaceX merged with Musk's artificial intelligence startup xAI in a deal that valued the rocket company at $1 trillion and the developer of the Grok chatbot at $250 billion. SpaceX is hosting an analyst day on April 21, encouraging research analysts to attend in person, [...]. The company is also offering analysts an optional visit to xAI's "Macrohard" data center site in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 23, and plans to hold a virtual session on May 4 to discuss financial models with banks' research analysts, the source said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A coalition of major Democratic groups sued the Trump administration, seeking to strike down an executive order that would exert more federal influence over mail-in voting — including by creating lists of citizens who are eligible to vote.
The Korean automaker debuts gas and hybrid variants of the Seltos SUV and announces the arrival of the all-electric EV3 in the US.
The subcompact and, hopefully, inexpensive EV3 is a welcome sight at a time when many automakers are cancelling their most affordable models and small EVs.
Kia's combustion-powered Seltos has grown up and glowed up with more space and bigger tech inside.
Nasa’s moon rocket Artemis II launched on Wednesday evening (US time), carrying astronauts to the moon for the first time in almost 54 years. The launch marks the first time since the Apollo 17 mission of December 1972 that humans will have left lower Earth orbit.
The rocket is orbiting Earth and will continue to do so until Thursday, when the translunar injection burn will take place and send it on the rest of its 386,242km journey to orbit the moon
Continue reading...Trump has expressed growing contempt for North Atlantic allies as they refused to be drawn into his war on Iran – key US politics stories from Wednesday 1 April at a glance
Donald Trump has said he is “absolutely” considering withdrawing the US from Nato, warning that the matter was “beyond reconsideration” after the refusal of US allies to join the US-Israeli war against Iran.
Trump has long been vocally sceptical about the benefit of Nato membership to the US, but since North Atlantic allies have refused to take part in the month-long, faltering US-Israeli assault on Iran, the president has stepped up his rhetoric.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 2.
I am willing to pay for more for more performance, but I want to make sure I’m not paying too much for not much performance. I’m wondering if the XL really has $600 more of performance than the GTS, or if I’m paying that for just a little more performance.
Anonymous activist Martha Root on how she hacked into, and took down, a dating site for white supremacists. With reporting from investigative journalist Eva Hoffman
There’s a dating site for everyone: Jdate for Jews, Muzz for Muslims and Raya for celebrities. And for white supremacists? WhiteDate, “for Europids seeking tribal love”.
The mysterious hacker/activist Martha Root tells Helen Pidd how, live on stage and in disguise, she hacked into WhiteDate and exposed a network of thousands of neo-Nazis looking for Aryan love.
Continue reading...Agreement comes after Wellington halted millions in aid to its former colony after Cook Islands formed strategic partnership with Beijing
New Zealand and the Cook Islands have signed a defence and security declaration, ending a year-long diplomatic row that erupted after the Cook Islands struck strategic agreements with China.
The Cook Islands was a dependent New Zealand colony from 1901-65 but has since operated as a self-governing nation in “free association” with New Zealand. Its roughly 17,000 citizens hold New Zealand citizenship. There are obligations between the two nations to regularly consult on matters of defence and security.
Continue reading...I’m looking to buy a used charger for my xr. Looking at this option before I gotta spend $100 on a new one.
From what I’ve found, there is limited offerings for front footpads for big feet. I’ve seen some posts that people purchase their own sensor, footpad and grip tape and wanted to ensure I wasn’t missing anything.
Parts - kush wide (front and back), stoked stock V5, aluminum bottom plate to ensure no pressure on controller battery boxes.
Footpad connector, I’m unsure which one I should get since fungineers is sold out. I see float life has one for XR+ or for GT/XRC
Stock stock V5 - to cut or not cut. Mainly trails riding. From what I’ve gathered, having a single zone is better for activation, but you have to learn how to jump off board or toe lift out. Cutting to dual zone allows heal lift to disengage, requires sealing.
Stocked stock v5 - do they come with adhesive? If not is it needed?
Did I miss anything? I assume it’s plug and play with the fungineers box.
Board will be a vesc build using Thor400.
Thank you,
This live blog is now closed.
We’re starting to get pictures from outside the US supreme court ahead of oral arguments in Trump v Barbara, which will decide if the administration’s attempts to restrict birthright citizenship are unconstitutional.
Donald Trump has just arrived, and plans to listen to arguments at the court – the first time a sitting president has attended arguments.
Continue reading...CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., April 1, 2026 — EPB has joined the Southeastern Quantum Collaborative (SQC) as an inaugural member. SQC is an association of universities, technology companies and research institutions working together to accelerate the advancement and real-world application of quantum technologies across the Southeast.
Led by The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), the collaborative brings together organizations from academia, industry and government to strengthen regional leadership in quantum information science while developing the workforce needed to support emerging quantum technologies. The effort is also designed to help position the Southeast as a global hub for quantum innovation, supporting economic growth, national security and next-generation technology development.
EPB’s participation reflects Chattanooga’s growing role as a center for advanced technology and innovation. In 2023, EPB launched the EPB Quantum Network, the nation’s first commercially available, industry-led quantum network, lowering barriers to the development of a wide range of quantum technologies.
Later this year, with the completion of an IonQ Forte Enterprise computer, EPB Quantum Center will become the first U.S. quantum technology center to provide commercial access to both quantum networking and quantum computing resources. EPB Quantum Center will provide a destination to explore quantum possibilities while benefiting EPB’s customers in its 600-square-mile service area in and around Chattanooga.
“Quantum technology represents one of the most significant innovation opportunities of our time,” said Janet Rehberg, president and CEO-elect, EPB. “By joining the Southeastern Quantum Collaborative, EPB supports the development of a regional ecosystem that connects research, infrastructure and industry to accelerate innovation and drive economic development across the Southeast.”
EPB joins neighboring University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC), which joined SQC earlier this year. Through a partnership with EPB, UTC became the first American university to host a node on a commercially available quantum network through its connection to EPB Quantum Network, enabling new research in quantum communications and networking. Additional regional momentum continues to grow, including the recent announcement of the Institute for Quantum Innovation led by EPB and Vanderbilt University, which aims to expand research and collaboration in quantum science and engineering.
EPB’s leadership in quantum technology builds on its experience as the operator of the nation’s most advanced automated grid and the world’s fastest community-wide internet, which generated $5.3 billion and 10,000 jobs in the first 15 years of operations. EPB began working in quantum technology with Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory through an R&D 100 Award-winning collaboration that demonstrated how quantum security protocols can be deployed on power grids.
“Partners like EPB bring unique infrastructure and real-world deployment experience that will help accelerate the transition of quantum technologies from research to application,” said Dr. Rainer Steinwandt, Dean of the UAH College of Science and Executive Director of the SQC. “Their leadership strengthens the Southeast’s ability to compete in the rapidly evolving quantum economy.”
Through collaboration, research partnerships and workforce initiatives, the Southeastern Quantum Collaborative aims to strengthen the region’s position as a national leader in quantum innovation while creating new opportunities for economic growth and technology-driven investment.
More from HPCwire
About EPB
Located in Chattanooga, Tennessee, EPB is a nationally recognized energy and communications provider with a mission to enhance quality of life for the people it serves across its 600-square-mile service area. Starting in 2010, EPB gained notice as a national model for building and utilizing its 100% fiber-to-the-home network to deliver cutting-edge services such as the world’s fastest community-wide internet, now with service up to 25 Gig, and the nation’s most advanced automated electric grid. As a pioneer in fiber optic innovation, EPB also launched EPB Quantum to provide access to cutting-edge quantum technology platforms and help innovators bring paradigm-shifting solutions into the real world. With the launch of EPB Quantum Network in 2023 and EPB Quantum Computing (coming in 2026), EPB Quantum offers the most comprehensive, commercially available quantum technology platform in the U.S.
Source: EPB
The post EPB Joins Southeastern Quantum Collaborative appeared first on HPCwire.
United will now allow travelers to share the location of lost items equipped with AirTags directly with airline staff.
If you own a Fitbit, keep an eye out for these upgrades.
Scientists tested a semi-autonomous robot with legs and an arm to see how well it could travel on its own.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 2, No. 760.
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Houthi forces in Yemen have claimed responsibility for a missile attack on southern Israel this morning, saying it was a joint operation with Iran and Hezbollah.
In a statement, the Houthi movement said it carried out its third missile attack in the conflict “in conjunction with Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon”.
Continue reading...Nurul Amin Shah, 56, who was visually impaired, was left outside Buffalo Tim Hortons on cold night and later died
Authorities have ruled that the death of Nurul Amin Shah, a 56-year-old Rohingya refugee from Myanmar who was left by immigration agents at a restaurant in Buffalo, was a homicide.
Shah, who was visually impaired, died on 24 February, five days after US Border Patrol agents dropped him off in the parking lot of a Tim Hortons on a cold winter night without notifying his family or attorney.
Continue reading...It’s time once again for HPC Career Notes, our monthly feature that’s designed to keep you up-to-date on the latest career developments for individuals in the HPC community, including promotion, new company hires, and accolade. Check in each month for an updated list and you may even come across someone you know, or better yet, yourself!

Rosa Badia accepting the Honor Award at the 31st Night of Telecommunications and Informatics (Image courtesy David Oller)
Rosa Badia, the director of HPC software research at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, has been awarded with the Honor Prize at the 31st Night of Telecommunications and Informatics. The award, jointly presented by the Catalan Association of Telecommunications Engineering and Digital Technologies (Telecos.cat) and the Official College of Informatics Engineering of Catalonia (COEINF), recognizes Badia’s career and her pioneering role in promoting HPC and distributed systems
Badia, who is also a 2026 HPCwire Person to Watch, has been with BSC since its founding 2004 and currently heads up its Workflows and Distributed Computing group. where she has driven the development of technologies such as the StarSs programming model and the evolution of research in this field. During her career, Badia has published more than 200 articles in international journals that demonstrate the potential of supercomputing across a range of fields, including healthcare, biomedicine, and risk management.
The “Nit de les Telecomunicacions i la Informàtica” is the pioneering institutional event and a benchmark for the Telecommunications and Information Technology sector, held in Barcelona since 1995. The Honor Award granted to Badia highlights the BSC researcher’s contribution to the development of research and innovation, as well as her role in consolidating the center as a European leader in supercomputing.
Penguin Solutions appointed Ian Colle to the role of SVP and chief product officer earlier this month. In his new role, Colle will be responsible for leading product strategy, roadmap development, and lifecycle execution for Penguin’s AI Factory Platform.

Ian Colle
Colle, who was named a 2026 HPCwire Person to Watch, brings 25 years of experience to Penguin Solutions. He most recently was with Amazon Web Services, where he served as general manager of advanced computing and simulation. At AWS, Colle helped build a global HPC and AI infrastructure business from the ground up and scale it into a multi-billion-dollar portfolio, leading globally distributed teams across product management, engineering, go-to-market, and operations.
Prior to AWS, Colle held senior engineering leadership roles at Red Hat and Intel, where he led global teams through periods of growth and acquisition, and at various startups. He will draw on that experience to support growth for Penguin Solutions AI Factory Platform.
“Penguin Solutions has the experience and expertise to deliver innovative AI Infrastructure including hardware, software, and services designed to drive the next generation of AI innovation,” Colle said. “I look forward to working closely with our customers to help them harness the power of AI to achieve their business goals.”
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has named Budhendra “Budhu” Bhaduri its first Chief Data Officer. The newly established role unifies ORNL’s enterprise data strategy to accelerate mission impact across open science, energy innovation, national security and laboratory operations.

Budhu Bhaduri
As CDO, Bhaduri will report to the deputy for science and technology within the laboratory director’s office and work closely with the CIO and associate laboratory directors to optimize ORNL’s data infrastructure and execute a strategy that accelerates research, strengthens efficient operations and scales across ORNL organizations and facilities, the lab said. Bhaduri will chair an ORNL Data Governance Council and partner with leaders of facilities, initiatives and AI-intensive projects across the lab, including those contributing to DOE’s Genesis Mission.
An ORNL Corporate Research Fellow, Bhaduri joined the laboratory in 1998 as a research scientist and most recently served as Director of Science, Programs, and Partnerships for the National Security Sciences Directorate. In 2025, he was recognized as one of the “Top 50 Data Changemakers in the Energy Sector” by CDO Magazine and the Data Society. Bhaduri is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Association of Geographers, and he holds professorial appointments at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He earned a doctorate from Purdue University, a master’s from Kent State University, and a master’s and bachelor’s from the University of Calcutta, India.
“Establishing a Chief Data Officer underscores ORNL’s commitment to treating data as a strategic asset for science and operations,” ORNL Deputy for Science and Technology Susan Hubbard. “Budhu’s proven leadership in complex, data-intensive programs will help unify our enterprise data strategy, modernize our architecture and governance, and accelerate responsible, AI-enabled discovery.”
O’Reilly Media has appointed Julie Baron to be the company’s new president. Baron, who previously was chief product officer for O’Reilly, succeeds Laura Baldwin, who is retiring after leading O’Reilly for the past 15 years as president and guiding the company as an executive since 2001.

Julie Baron
Baron enters the president role with over 20 years of experience in tech and media, including nearly a decade at O’Reilly. Since 2024, she’s led the company’s product vision as chief product officer, positioning O’Reilly to take full advantage of the promise of AI. Prior to her time at O’Reilly, Baron served in strategic roles at NPR, Boston Globe Media, EnerNOC, and IPSoft/Amelia AI.
“Laura has been an inspirational leader who has navigated this company over the years through many transformations,” Baron said. “I’m incredibly thankful for her mentorship and honored to be chosen to lead O’Reilly at such an exciting time in technology. There’s so much that we can do with AI. We need to be thinking critically, disrupting ourselves, driving innovation, and reexamining what we’re doing to provide value to our customers in new ways. That’s what will take us to the next stage of our growth.”
Neocloud provider Nebius has appointed Dan Lawrence as its new senior vice president and general manager for the Americas. In his new role, Lawrence will lead the company’s North American expansion and scale its commercial organization to meet demand for its AI infrastructure.

Dan Lawrence
Lawrence brings quite a bit of experience building and operating cloud businesses. Most recently, he served as senior vice president of global sales for cloud at Akamai Technologies, where he built the go-to-market model and scaled its compute business to approach $1 billion in revenue. Prior to Akamai, Lawrence held senior leadership roles at Amazon Web Services.
“We’re at an inflection point in computing, and powering the next wave of AI requires a fundamentally different kind of cloud,” Lawrence said. “Nebius stands out for three reasons. First, the team has the rare engineering DNA to design and operate the entire stack. Second, the company’s strong financial position allows us to deploy capital and capacity at a unique scale. And third, the pace of software innovation here is extraordinary. I’m excited to help build our presence in the Americas and bring this purpose-built AI cloud platform to builders across the region.”
Hitachi Vantara today welcomed a new CEO: Akinobu Shimada. Currently the president of Hitachi Vantara Japan (a position he will retain), Shimada succeeds the outgoing CEO, Sheila Rohra, who resigned for personal reasons on March 31 after 38 months with the company.

Akinobu Shimada
Shimada has spent more than 30 years with Hitachi, leading key initiatives in business strategy, technical strategy, and product strategy and development for storage and related hardware and software businesses. His career has been firmly rooted in Hitachi’s storage business, and he’s credited with its evolution.
“In recent years, as customers face increasingly complex and mission–critical data management challenges, expectations for trusted data infrastructure—and for Hitachi Vantara in particular—have continued to grow across industries,” Shimada said. “It is an honor to take on the role of CEO at such a critical moment. By growing together with our teams and uniting the insight, expertise, and passion of our people across the globe, I am committed to building the world’s most trusted data infrastructure and delivering meaningful value to our customers and their most critical initiatives.”
Thirty-six Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) researchers have been named Distinguished Members of Technical Staff (DMTS) in recognition of their extraordinary scientific and technical contributions, as affirmed by their professional peers and the broader scientific community. As distinguished citizens of the Laboratory and their respective fields, DMTS honorees exhibit a long-standing record of exceptional achievement, service-minded leadership, and dedication to mentoring the next generation of researchers.
DMTS is the highest technical staff level achievable by a scientist or engineer at LLNL and is a prestigious recognition on the personnel ladder, the lab said. Appointment to DMTS is reserved for laboratory scientists and engineers who have demonstrated at least one of the following: a sustained history of high-level achievements in programs of importance to the laboratory; a sustained history of distinguished scientific and technical achievements, having become a recognized authority in the field; or a fundamental and important discovery that has had sustained, widespread impact.
The 2026 DMTS cohort at LLNL include: Armando Alcaraz, Jonathan Allen, Dan Badders, Lorin Benedict, Suhas Bhandarkar, Juergen Biener, Patrick Brantley, Peer-Timo Bremer, Trent D’Hooge, Laurent Divol, Jon Eggert, Daniel Faissol, Carolyn Hall, Cyrus Harrison, Stefan Hau-Riege, Denise Hinkel, Doug Homoelle, Yongqin Jiao, Michael Johnson, Ed Kokko, Tzanio Kolev, Sergei Kucheyev, Peter Lindstrom, Pierre Michel, Aaron Miles, Christine Orme, Catherine Percher, Jennifer Jo Ressler, Robert Rieben, Artie Rodgers, Richard Seugling, Brian Spears, Pete Supsinskas, Damian Swift, Mark Wittig, and Shaocheng Xie.
For the previous edition of HPC Career Notes, click here.
The post HPC Career Notes: March 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
This live blog is now closed.
There’s potentially alarming news from AccuWeather about a solar flare, which the forecasting service says could affect the Artemis mission.
While not an official Nasa source for weather and climate information or predictions, AccuWeather has been monitoring launch day conditions, and is reporting them on its own blog.
An X1.5 solar flare that occurred early on March 30 produced an Earth-directed coronal mass ejection that is now entering into the Earth’s atmosphere. As the day progresses, moderate to strong geomagnetic storm conditions are possible as a result of the coronal mass ejection impacting Earth’s atmosphere.
Communication between ground control and members aboard the rocket, and precise GPS tracking, can be at risk during strong geomagnetic storming.
Continue reading...NASA's Artemis II astronauts — three space station veterans and a Canadian rookie — stand out even in an astronaut corps full of super achievers.
Mass of spectators cheers dazzling Florida launch as astronauts head to moon for first time in almost 54 years
Nasa’s moon rocket Artemis II launched on Wednesday evening, carrying astronauts to the moon for the first time in almost 54 years.
The rocket is now orbiting Earth, and will continue to do so until Thursday, when the translunar injection burn will take place and send it on the rest of its 240,000-mile journey to the moon. Inside the Orion capsule, the four astronauts onboard immediately began tasks to assess how the spacecraft handled the 17,500mph ascent to orbit.
Continue reading...The Trump administration has lifted sanctions on Venezuela's interim President Delcy Rodriguez, according to the Treasury Department, as the U.S. seeks to rebuild ties with the Venezuelan government.
NASA's Artemis II mission has launched four astronauts around the moon and back, marking humanity's first crewed lunar voyage in 53 years and the first test flight of NASA's Orion capsule and Space Launch System (SLS) with people on board. Five minutes into the flight, Commander Reid Wiseman saw the team's target: "We have a beautiful moonrise, we're headed right at it," he said from the capsule. The Associated Press reports: Artemis II set sail from the same Florida launch site that sent Apollo's explorers to the moon so long ago. The handful still alive cheered this next generation's grand adventure as the Space Launch System rocket thundered into the early evening sky, a nearly full moon beckoning some 248,000 miles (400,000 kilometers) away. Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman led the charge into space with "Let's go to the moon!" accompanied by pilot Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canada's Jeremy Hansen. It was the most diverse lunar crew ever with the first woman, person of color and non-U.S. citizen riding in NASA's new Orion capsule. Carrying three Americans and one Canadian, the 32-story rocket rose from NASA's Kennedy Space Center where tens of thousands gathered to witness the dawn of this new era. Crowds also jammed the surrounding roads and beaches, reminiscent of the Apollo moonshots in the 1960s and '70s. It is NASA's biggest step yet toward establishing a permanent lunar presence. Visit NASA's Artemis II Launch Day blog for the latest updates. Developing...
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ofcom research shows people also concerned old posts could affect personal or professional life
Social media users in the UK are becoming less active on tech platforms due to the rise of video apps and fears that posts could come back to haunt them, according to the communications watchdog.
Ofcom said just under half of adult social media users (49%) now post, share or comment compared with 61% in 2024. The proportion exploring new websites has also fallen, from 70% to 56%.
Continue reading...An initial public offering could raise $75 billion, but the skies aren't entirely clear for launch.
US tech companies, including Apple, Google, Microsoft and Tesla, are being warned that they are being considered "legitimate targets."
The federal government may try to send 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos back to detention.
Woods focusing on his health and wellbeing after crash
Florida judge grants his request to leave the US
Tiger Woods has turned down the opportunity to captain the United States at the 2027 Ryder Cup, the PGA of America has announced.
The former world No 1’s decision comes after he announced he would step away from golf for a period to focus on his health and wellbeing. Woods was charged with driving under the influence after being involved in a car accident last week.
Continue reading...New Delta-class spacecraft promises more seats and more flights -- at an even steeper cost than before.
About to have to replace all the batteries on my onewheels. I looked on eBay and didn’t see too many options. Was contemplating making my own and just ordering a bunch of 18650s but never done it before.
What are the best choices for a drop in batteries nowadays? I have a pint, pintX, and a +xr. I’m planing on replacing them one at a time. I know going vesc is “the best” but that’s not in the budget atm.
Longtime Slashdot reader Elektroschock writes: When Ubisoft pulled the plug on The Crew's servers without warning, players were left with a worthless game they'd already paid for. Now, consumer watchdog UFC-Que Choisir is fighting back, demanding gamers' right to play regardless of publisher whims. Supported by the "Stop Killing Games" movement, this landmark case challenges unfair terms before the Creteil Judicial Court (Val-de-Marne near Paris), and aims to protect players from disappearing games. The lawsuit that UFC-Que Choisir filed against Ubisoft on Tuesday alleges that the video game publisher "misled consumers about the permanence of their purchase and imposed abusive contractual clauses stripping players of ownership rights," reports Reuters.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Most people fall far short of the savings they say they will need to maintain their standard of living in retirement, data shows.
Apple doesn't normally release a critical update for previous iOS versions, but DarkSword appears to be a serious threat.
Commentary: Is it too late to make a 2026 "in and out" list? I'm putting AI pessimism in the "out" column.
Bundy's full DNA profiled was entered into the FBI's national database, giving investigators a shot at solving potential cases linked to Bundy.
ZipNada writes: Two software researchers recently demonstrated how modern AI tools can reproduce entire open-source projects, creating proprietary versions that appear both functional and legally distinct. The partly-satirical demonstration shows how quickly artificial intelligence can blur long-standing boundaries between coding innovation, copyright law, and the open-source principles that underpin much of the modern internet. In their presentation, Dylan Ayrey, founder of Truffle Security, and Mike Nolan, a software architect with the UN Development Program, introduced a tool they call malus.sh. For a small fee, the service can "recreate any open-source project," generating what its website describes as "legally distinct code with corporate-friendly licensing. No attribution. No copyleft. No problems." It's a test case in how intellectual property law -- still rooted in 19th-century precedent -- collides with 21st-century automation. Since the US Supreme Court's Baker v. Selden ruling, copyright has been understood to guard expression, not ideas. That boundary gave rise to clean-room design, a method by which engineers reverse-engineer systems without accessing the original source code. Phoenix Technologies famously used the technique to build its version of the PC BIOS during the 1980s. Ayrey and Nolan's experiment shows how AI can perform a clean-room process in minutes rather than months. But faster doesn't necessarily mean fair. Traditional clean-room efforts required human teams to document and replicate functionality -- a process that demanded both legal oversight and significant labor. By contrast, an AI-mediated "clean room" can be invoked through a few prompts, raising questions about whether such replication still counts as fair use or independent creation.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Iranian American support for the U.S.–Israel war on Iran has plummeted, as euphoria over Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s death shifts into concern over the conflict’s growing civilian toll, according to a new poll.
Nearly two-thirds of Iranian Americans now oppose the war after opinions were near evenly divided at the start of the conflict, according to a Zogby Analytics survey.
“This is a war that is supposedly being fought in our name. There’s a lot of wish-casting and projection.”
The nearly 17 percentage point leap comes as the prospects that the Iranian regime will collapse seem to have dimmed, the conflict’s endgame becomes increasingly murky, and steady bombings have swelled the number of civilians killed.
Jamal Abdi, president of the nonprofit group that commissioned the poll, the National Iranian American Council, said the survey results show that the diaspora’s feelings on the war are more complicated — and more negative — than pundits have suggested.
“This is a war that is supposedly being fought in our name,” Abdi said. “There’s a lot of wish-casting and projection and voices from the diaspora claiming that there is this mandate from our community, and it’s not based on data or facts or reality. It’s based on a campaign for regime change no matter what the cost is. It’s dangerous for our community to be used like this.”
NIAC has long been one of the major voices in the diaspora expressing skepticism about war with Iran. In days leading up to the February 28 strikes that started the war, however, figures such as Reza Pahlavi, the son of the country’s former shah, were given prominent platforms to argue for regime change.
NIAC’s March 24 to 27 poll, which has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points, is the second that the group has commissioned from Zogby Analytics. An earlier survey was conducted from February 27 to March 5, a period that coincided with the final hours of U.S.–Iranian negotiations and the beginning of the conflict.
The survey results suggest that Iranian Americans are now more opposed to the war than Americans as a whole, after being more supportive at its start.
Iranian Americans are a sliver of the U.S. population, about 0.2 percent, making polling of the group more difficult than the general population. Abdi said that Zogby drew from a “significant list of contacts” in the Iranian American community to conduct the survey.
One prominent Iranian American, Ahmad Batebi — an exiled dissident who thanked President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after the war began but has spoken out against targeting civilian infrastructure — questioned the poll results.
“My view is that the reported decline in support should be interpreted cautiously,” Batebi said in an email, “not only because opinion may indeed be shifting in real time, but because the more basic question is whether this polling instrument can credibly be treated as representative of the broader Iranian-American community in the first place.”
In the earlier survey, Iranian Americans showed nearly a 50-50 split in their position on going to war with Iran.
Iranian Americans now believe by a wide margin that President Donald Trump should end the conflict, according to the more recent numbers. 70 percent of respondents said that it was time to end the war. Only a quarter believed it should continue.
Trump is scheduled to give an address on the war Wednesday night, with officials giving mixed signals as to whether he will wrap up the conflict or expand it with a ground invasion.
The recent Zogby poll also captured an increasingly pessimistic view of the war’s likely outcome. Many Iranian Americans celebrated on social media when Khamanei’s death in an Israeli airstrike was confirmed on March 1.
Hard-liners have held onto power in Iran since then, however, leading to a dimming view of the future among the diaspora. Nearly 60 percent of Iranian Americans believe ordinary Iranians will be worse off a year from now and more than half believe the Islamic Republic will remain in power.
“There was probably some initial exuberance in that first week,” Abdi said, “and that has trailed off as we have seen civilian casualties and a shuffling of chairs in the regime but not any signal that the regime itself was going anywhere.”
The post Iranian Americans Have Turned Against the War, New Poll Finds appeared first on The Intercept.
The rugged concept previews an SUV (and a pickup) that would be designed, developed and built in the US.
The vision presented at the New York Auto Show marks the beginning of a new, even more localized chapter for Hyundai's ambitions in America.
Laura Ann Aime, 17, went missing on Halloween night and was found on the side of a highway bound and beaten a month later
New DNA testing has definitively linked the unsolved death of a Utah teenager in 1974 to the infamous serial killer Ted Bundy, the local sheriff’s office said Wednesday.
Laura Ann Aime, 17, went missing on Halloween night 51 years ago after she left a party alone to go to a convenience store. About a month later, her body was found on the side of a highway, bound, beaten and without clothing.
Continue reading...A communications breakdown precipitated an announcement that immigration enforcement will occur at the service’s Parris Island graduation ceremonies in South Carolina, officials said.
"The scary scenarios are, unfortunately, extremely plausible" if the critical Persian Gulf waterway stays effectively sealed, economist Paul Krugman said.
Measure that would fund homeland security but exclude money for ICE could conclude lengthy funding lapse
An end to the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) may be in sight, after Congress’s Republican leaders on Wednesday agreed to advance legislation that would fund most of the agency’s operations, with the exception of those involved in immigration enforcement.
The pact may conclude the longest such funding lapse in US history, which last month caused security lines to stretch for hours at some airports as employees of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), a subagency of DHS, quit their jobs or called out of work after going weeks without pay.
Continue reading...NetApp built its reputation as a solid provider of network attached storage (NAS) for enterprises, which predominantly used Network File System (NSF) over Ethernet. Now, thanks to the extreme performance demands from AI adopters, the company is ramping up its investment in HPC technologies such as the Lustre and BeeGFS file systems and Nvidia’s InfiniBand interconnect as ways to maximize data throughput.
NetApp has supported Lustre, BeeGFS, and InfiniBand on its high-end EF-Series storage offerings for some time, according to Sandeep Singh, NetApp’s senior vice president and general manager of enterprise storage. EF-Series is block storage, and customers can expose a variety of parallel file systems on top of that, he said.
However, the experience of supporting Lustre on EF-Series storage appliances may not have been as smooth as it could be. That is why NetApp is making a big push with the launch of its newest EF-Series storage appliance to make sure that customers can expect smooth sailing when they adopt HPC technologies like Lustre, as well as BeeGFS and InfiniBand, he said.
With the latest line of EF-Series storage appliances, the EF50 and EF80, NetApp has completed interoperability testing to ensure that customers utilizing Lustre can get the full benefit of the parallel file system.
“We’ve built out a solution guide and done the interoperability testing for enabling our customers to go and deploy Lustre,” Singh said. “Obviously, we want to make sure that if and when customers go and deploy this entire solution, we are ready to help them in any types of troubleshooting scenarios.”
In addition to providing recommended Lustre settings as part of its solution guide, NetApp will set up their customers’ EF-Series box, test it and validate it to ensure that it’s working as planned, Sing said.
Lustre and BeeGFS offer very high read and write performance, which is why they’ve been adopted by supercomputing sites that are moving huge amounts of data for modeling and simulation workloads. As the AI boom kicked into high gear, organizations that may have started out using traditional NFS or parallel NFS (pNFS) file systems started adopting native parallel file systems like Lustre and BeeGFS to maximize the throughput of data into GPU clusters for AI training and to prevent the GPUs from sitting idle, which is a topic we covered in our special HPCwire series in October, “The Future of Storage for HPC and AI.”
NetApp started breaking out of its NAS shell while we were running that series. At its Insight conference held in October 2025, the company announced its fully disaggregated storage architecture, NetApp AFX. By ripping apart the direct storage connections, AFX enabled the company to blow past its previous limit of 24 storage nodes with the NetApp FAS architecture, which was capable of supporting a few hundred petabytes. With the disaggregated AFX architecture supporting up to 128 nodes, it could now handle 1 exabyte of storage within a single namespace, enabling it to better support its AI customers.
However, AFX is still limited by the throughput of connecting data over NFS and pNFS over Ethernet. With the launch of EF50 and EF80 appliances, NetApp customers are now able to enjoy the bounty of higher data throughput and lower latencies that come from saturating Lustre and BeeGFS links over InfiniBand networks running at 200 GBps.

NetApp EF-Series
The new high-end EF80 boasts read throughputs up to 110 GBps and write throughputs up to 57 GPps. The write througput, which is critical for checkpointing during AI training, is a 250% improvement over the previous generation of EF-Series appliances, the company said.
“Modern training workflows punish slow filesystems with dataset shuffles, small-file metadata storms, and checkpoint bursts that can stall pipelines for minutes at a time,” writes Priyadarshi (PD) Prasad, the VP and GM of AI Data Infrastructure at NetApp, in a March 17 blog. “In HPC, checkpoint/restart cycles are equally unforgiving: If scratch throughput lags, every save and recovery stretches runtimes and amplifies the penalty of failure. High-throughput storage and parallel file systems remove these bottlenecks and reduce the amount of power consumed, so GPUs stay fed, and jobs keep moving efficiently.”
According to Singh, the new EF-Series play an important role in providing part the three-ring architecture for customers. The first ring is the scratch space that’s closest to the AI or HPC workload and pushes the bounds of performance. The second ring is the “fast file” tier and that’s served by NFS and pNFS. The third ring is the very large scale object tier, which NetApp supports with S3.
“Where Lustre combined with our newly announced EF-Series fits in is bringing along this extreme level of performance for the most demanding workloads,” Singh told HPCwire. “In the AI training use cases, the write throughput is incredibly important. You pair that with a parallel file system, in this case Lustre on the front end, combined with EF-Series, and now you have a system that can scale massively, deliver just amazing levels of performance, and it gives you extreme density as well.”
Customer demands for higher storage throughput for AI training and inference was the main driver for NetApp’s decision to solidify its Lustre support, Singh said. However, HPC sites running more traditional modeling and simulation workloads may find NetApp a better fit for their storage needs as a result of these changes he said.
“We’re squarely, first and foremost, targeting on the AI front for customers,” he said. “We will see pockets … [of what] one would characterize as HPC, like weather simulation and other parts of the workloads, that will look like HPC where there will be an opportunity for this solution as well.”
And while NetApp previously offered support for InfiniBand with its EF-Series, Singh expects to see more interest in using Nvidia’s speedy, low-latency interconnect as they push the limits on their storage.
“We have had InfiniBand support for select customer use cases, going for the very high performance environments,” he said. “In this case, it’s again just the right fit where we see InfiniBand as a requirement in these AI use case deployments. Certain organizations absolutely need InfiniBand support.”
NetApp announced its new EF-Series during Nvidia’s GTC conference two weeks ago in San Jose. The company is embracing Nvidia’s vision for the future of storage for AI, which revolves heavily around its new Context Memory Storage (CMX) architecture. Singh said more announcements are coming that will see NetApp bolster its capability to provide large context windows and minimize the time to first token for agentic AI use cases.
The post NetApp Embraces Lustre as AI Pushes Storage Limits appeared first on HPCwire.
April 1, 2026 — MLCommons today released its latest MLPerf Inference v6.0 benchmarks, showcasing results across four key benchmarks for Intel’s GPU Systems. Intel’s AI systems featured Intel Xeon 6 CPUs and Intel Arc Pro B70 graphics, demonstrating accessible AI workload solutions across high-end workstations, datacenter, and edge applications.

MLPerf Inference v6.0 benchmarks showcase Intel Xeon 6 and Intel Arc Pro B-Series GPUs delivering powerful, low-latency AI inference for workstations and edge systems. Credit: Intel.
The results show a four GPU Intel Arc Pro B70/B65 system delivers 128GB of VRAM to run 120B parameter models with high concurrency, with the Arc Pro B70 providing up to 1.8x higher inference performance than the Arc Pro B60. Software optimizations, configured in an open, containerized software stack efficiently scales inference performance from single node to multi-GPU enterprise deployments improving performance and delivering up to 1.18x higher gains on the same Intel Arc Pro B60 hardware versus MLPerf v5.1.
“The combination of Intel Xeon 6 and Intel’s Arc Pro B-Series GPUs represent our investment to expand customer choice and value, offering real-world solutions that address both LLM models as well as traditional machine learning workloads, with leading performance and incredible value for graphics professionals and AI developers worldwide,” said Anil Nanduri, Intel vice president, AI Products and GTM, Intel Data Center Group.
As the demand for AI inference grows, the professional compute market is going through a major transition whereby graphics creators and AI developers seek out performance and value, without compromising data privacy or incurring heavy subscription costs tied to proprietary AI models.
Intel GPU Systems, featuring newly launched Intel Arc Pro B70/B65 GPUs, are designed to meet the needs of modern AI inference and provide an all-in-one inference platform combining full-stack validated hardware and software. With enhanced memory capacity, they aim to simplify the adoption and ease of use with a containerized solution built for Linux environments, optimized to deliver incredible inference performance with multi-GPU scaling and PCIe P2P data transfers, and designed to include enterprise-class reliability and manageability features such as ECC, SRIOV, telemetry and remote firmware updates. For example, when compared to comparable competitor GPU solutions the Intel Arc Pro B70 is able to handle significantly larger models and context windows in multi-GPU setups – powering up to 1.6x as much KV cache capacity when running larger models.
AI inference is increasingly defined not only by GPU throughput but also by CPU-accelerated system performance. The CPU, shaping overall cluster efficiency and total cost of ownership, is also responsible for critical functions such as memory management, task orchestration, and workload distribution, while ensuring the security, reliability, and operational continuity essential to modern AI infrastructure.
Intel continues to be the only server processor vendor to submit stand-alone CPU results for MLPerf inference benchmarks, underscoring its leadership and strong commitment to advancing AI inference across both compute and accelerator centric platforms. As the most widely used host CPU in AI accelerated systems—with over half of MLPerf 6.0 submissions powered by Xeon—Intel further reinforces its position at the core of the industry’s AI infrastructure. This leadership extends to the silicon itself: Intel Xeon 6 processors with P-cores delivered up to a 1.9x generational performance gain in MLPerf Inference v5.1, while built-in AI acceleration technologies such as AMX and AVX512 allow workloads like LLM inference, fine tuning, and classical machine learning to run efficiently without the need for dedicated accelerator hardware.
More from HPCwire: MLCommons Releases New MLPerf Inference v6.0 Benchmark Results
About Intel
Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) is an industry leader, creating world-changing technology that enables global progress and enriches lives. Inspired by Moore’s Law, we continuously work to advance the design and manufacturing of semiconductors to help address our customers’ greatest challenges. By embedding intelligence in the cloud, network, edge and every kind of computing device, we unleash the potential of data to transform business and society for the better.
Source: Intel
The post Intel Delivers Open, Scalable AI Performance in MLPerf Inference v6.0 appeared first on HPCwire.
A video shows the moment when the M/V Bandero, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, steams toward the stern of the fishing vessel.
The filing supports a plaintiff who alleges Monsanto failed to warn consumers about cancer risks tied to Roundup, one of the most widely used herbicides in the world.
The Supreme Court on Wednesday appeared open to invalidating President Trump's executive order that would end birthright citizenship.
In classic Cloudflare fashion, the CDN provider used April Fool's Day to unveil an actual, "not a joke" product. Today, the company announced EmDash -- an open-source "spiritual successor" to WordPress that aims to solve plugin security. Phoronix reports: With the help of AI coding agents, Cloudflare engineers have been rebuilding the WordPress open-source project "from the ground up." EmDash is written entirely in TypeScript and is a server-less design. Making plug-ins more secure than the WordPress architecture, EmDash plug-ins are sandboxed and run in their own isolate. EmDash builds upon the Astro web framework. EmDash doesn't rely on any WordPress code but is designed to be compatible with WordPress functionality. EmDash is open-source now under the MIT license. The EmDash code is available on GitHub.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Four states have now signed such legislation as Trump’s Save Act languishes in Senate with little chance of passage
The governors of Florida and Mississippi signed legislation on Wednesday to require documented proof of citizenship to register to vote and to begin a process that will eventually unenroll voters who have not provided citizenship documentation.
Four states have now passed proof-of-citizenship laws for voting this year, after South Dakota and Utah’s governors each signed proof of citizenship bills into law in March.
Continue reading...April 1, 2026 — The Research Council of Finland has opened a call for international collaboration in high-performance computing (HPC). The call is intended for individual research teams or consortia from all scientific disciplines. Each application must include at least one international collaborator and the proposed research must require access to EuroHPC or LUMI supercomputing resources. The total funding budget is approximately €6.5 million. The call closes May 6, 2026, 16.15 Finnish time.
The aim of the funding is to support the development of versatile future data management and computing ecosystem and the expansion of related expertise at both national and international level. Funding will not be granted for coordination or planning of collaborations.
The funding will support international research collaboration that makes use of:
The funding granted under this call is based on Finland’s strategic partnerships with the above countries/regions.
Researchers who were granted funding in the 2024 and 2025 calls for international collaboration in HPC are eligible to apply for funding in this call. However, the research topic of the planned project must be substantially different from that of the already funded project. The research topics of researchers who were granted funding in earlier calls than these are not restricted.
The funding granted under this call is based on Finland’s strategic partnerships with the aforementioned countries/regions. The projects to be funded must combine the following aspects:
Learn more and apply here.
Source: CSC Finland
The post Research Council of Finland Opens Call for International Collaboration in HPC appeared first on HPCwire.
Most Americans support the rule that anyone born in the US is a US citizen, and a majority of supreme court justices are skeptical of Trump’s efforts to restrict it
It was a surreal morning at the US supreme court.
For more than two hours, the nation’s highest court considered arguments over whether Donald Trump – via an executive order – could tear down an idea that has been fundamental to the story and trajectory of the United States: that almost anyone born on US soil is an US citizen.
Continue reading...GOP leaders unveiled a plan to end DHS shutdown, mirroring a framework that the Senate pursued last week before it was quickly batted down by House Republicans.
I don’t like to cover “current events” very much, but the American government just revealed a truly bewildering policy effectively banning import of new consumer router models. This is ridiculous for many reasons, but if this does indeed come to pass it may be beneficial to learn how to “homebrew” a router.
Fortunately, you can make a router out of basically anything resembling a computer.
↫ Noah Bailey
I genuinely can’t believe making your own router with Linux or BSD might become a much more widespread thing in the US. I’m not saying it’s a bad thing – it’ll teach some people something new – but it just feels so absurd.
If you thought about buying one of these games before, now you don't have to!
Google is doubling down on AI video and trying to make it less expensive and energy-intensive to run.
The Texas-based company could go public with a valuation of more than $1.75 trillion, making it the largest IPO in history.
So I’ve had my pint s for a little over a year now and it’s still just stock. So I wanna give it some upgrades. What should I buy?
Is it smart to open a HELOC this month? Here are three timely benefits homeowners should know about now.
President Trump says he's considering withdrawing the U.S. from NATO, following years of complaining about the alliance.
| I paid $325 for the one wheel at a pawnshop just needs a charger it’s my first one! Did I get a good deal? [link] [comments] |
Nearly 2,000 internal files were briefly leaked after ‘human error’, raising fresh security questions at the AI company
Anthropic accidentally released part of the internal source code for its AI-powered coding assistant, Claude Code, due to “human error”, the company said on Tuesday.
An internal-use file mistakenly included in a software update pointed to an archive containing nearly 2,000 files and 500,000 lines of code, which were quickly copied to developer platform GitHub. A post on X sharing a link to the leaked code had more than 29m views early on Wednesday, and a rewritten version of the source code quickly became GitHub’s fastest-ever downloaded repository. Anthropic issued copyright takedown requests to try to contain the code’s spread. Within the code, users spotted blueprints for a Tamagotchi-esque coding assistant and an always-on AI agent, per the Verge.
Continue reading...British Medical Association leaders say PM’s threat to cut 1,000 new roles makes next week’s strike action more likely
Resident doctors have accused Keir Starmer of damaging the prospects of a deal to end their pay and jobs dispute by threatening to cut 1,000 new jobs for medics in the NHS.
The claim from the British Medical Association leaders came just before the Thursday deadline given by the prime minister for the union to accept the government’s final offer.
Continue reading...War shows little sign of easing despite Donald Trump claiming Iranian leadership ‘just asked’ for ceasefire
Israel unleashed two waves of attacks on Tehran and said it had killed a senior Hezbollah commander on Wednesday with little sign of the war easing up despite Donald Trump repeating a claim that Iran’s leadership was seeking a ceasefire.
The US president, writing on social media, said that Iran’s president had “just asked” for a ceasefire and that American troops would be “out of Iran pretty quickly” as he sought to extricate the US from the war. He indicated that he was not concerned about leaving Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium (HEU) – often cited as a justification for the war - in its presumed underground hiding place, arguing it could be monitored by satellite.
Continue reading...The Noem policy meant the secretary was required to personally sign off on thousands of DHS contracts.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: In 2023, the Swedish government announced that the country's schools would be going back to basics, emphasizing skills such as reading and writing, particularly in early grades. After mostly being sidelined, physical books are now being reintroduced into classrooms, and students are learning to write the old-fashioned way: by hand, with a pencil or pen, on sheets of paper. The Swedish government also plans to make schools cellphone-free throughout the country. Educational authorities have been investing heavily. Last year alone, the education ministry allocated $83 million to purchase textbooks and teachers' guides. In a country with about 11 million people, the aim is for every student to have a physical textbook for each subject. The government also put $54 million towards the purchase of fiction and non-fiction books for students. These moves represent a dramatic pivot from previous decades, during which Sweden -- and many other nations -- moved away from physical books in favor of tablets and digital resources in an effort to prepare students for life in an online world. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Nordic country's efforts have sparked a debate on the role of digital technology in education, one that extends well beyond the country's borders. US parents in districts that have adopted digital technology to a great extent may be wondering if educators will reverse course, too. As for why Sweden is pivoting away from digital devices, researcher Linda Falth said the move was driven by several factors, including concerns over whether the digitization of classrooms had been evidence-based. "There was also a broader cultural reassessment," Falth said. "Sweden had positioned itself as a frontrunner in digital education, but over time concerns emerged about screen time, distraction, reduced deep reading, and the erosion of foundational skills such as sustained attention and handwriting." Falth noted that proponents of reform believe that "basic skills -- especially reading, writing, and numeracy -- must be firmly established first, and that physical textbooks are often better suited for that purpose." Further reading: Digital Platforms Correlate With Cognitive Decline in Young Users
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A plan briefed to Trump last week to insert ground forces to remove Iran’s nuclear material would be a very difficult endeavor of a type never before attempted in wartime.
Called Foundayo, the tablet becomes the second one to receive FDA’s green light after Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave the green light on Wednesday to a new oral weight-loss medication developed by the Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly.
Known as orforglipron or brand name Foundayo, the once-daily tablet becomes the second GLP-1 drug in pill form to hit the market in a short span of time, arriving after Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy pill received approval in December.
Continue reading...Almost 750 U.S. troops have been wounded or killed in the Middle East since October 2023, an analysis by The Intercept has found. But the Pentagon won’t acknowledge it.
U.S. Central Command, or CENTCOM, which oversees military operations in the Middle East, appears to be engaged in what a defense official called a “casualty cover-up,” offering The Intercept low-ball and outdated figures and failing to provide clarifications on military deaths and injuries.
At least 15 U.S. troops were wounded Friday in an Iranian attack on a Saudi air base that hosts American troops, according to two government officials who spoke with The Intercept. Hundreds of U.S. personnel have been killed or injured in the region since the U.S. launched a war on Iran just over a month ago.
President Donald Trump — who wore a blue suit, red tie, and a ball cap to the dignified transfer of the first Americans killed in the war — said casualties were inevitable. “When you have conflicts like this, you always have death,” he said afterward. “I met the parents and they were unbelievable people. They were unbelievable people, but they all had one thing in common. They said to me, one thing, every single one: Finish the job, sir. Please finish the job.”
On Tuesday, Trump teased that he would wind down the war with Iran in as little as two weeks despite not achieving many of his stated aims, such as “freedom for the people” of Iran, “tak[ing] the oil in Iran,” and forcing Iran’s “unconditional surrender.” At one point, the president even declared that the war would last “as long as necessary to achieve our objective of PEACE THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE EAST AND, INDEED, THE WORLD!”
“When you have conflicts like this, you always have death.”
CENTCOM has sent outdated statements on casualty numbers, meanwhile, resulting in undercounts, including a statement sent Monday from spokesperson Capt. Tim Hawkins noting that “Since the start of Operation Epic Fury, approximately 303 U.S. service members have been wounded.” The comment was three days old and excluded at least 15 wounded in the Friday attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia. The command did not reply to repeated requests for updated figures.
CENTCOM also would not provide a count of troops who have died in the region since the start of the war. An Intercept analysis puts the number at no less than 15.
“This is, quite obviously, a subject that [War Secretary Pete] Hegseth and the White House want to keep under major wraps,” said the defense official who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak frankly.
In 2024, during the Biden administration, the Pentagon provided The Intercept with detailed chronologies of attacks on U.S. bases in the Middle East that listed the specific outpost that was attacked, the type of strike, and whether — or how many — casualties resulted, along with an aggregate count of attacks by country.
The Trump administration’s numbers, by comparison, lack detail and clarity. The current CENTCOM casualty figures do not appear to include more than 200 sailors treated for smoke inhalation or otherwise injured due to a fire that raged aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford before it limped off to Souda Bay, Greece, for repairs. CENTCOM did not reply to close to a dozen requests for clarification on the casualty count and related information sent this week.
“CENTCOM and the White House should be providing accurate and timely information on the costs and casualties involved in this war. After all, it is American taxpayers who are funding it and U.S. economic prosperity and economic wellbeing that is being undermined by it,” Jennifer Kavanagh, the director of military analysis at Defense Priorities, a think tank that advocates for measured U.S. foreign policy, told The Intercept.
“CENTCOM and the White House should be providing accurate and timely information on the costs and casualties involved in this war.”
As the U.S. has relentlessly bombed Iran, that country has responded with attacks on U.S. bases across the Middle East using ballistic missiles and drones. CENTCOM refuses to even offer a simple count of U.S. bases that have been attacked during the war. “We have nothing for you,” a spokesperson told The Intercept. An analysis by The Intercept, however, finds that bases in Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and the United Arab Emirates have been targeted.
On Tuesday, Hegseth said that Iran retained the ability to retaliate for U.S. strikes but that their attacks would be ineffectual. “Yes, they will still shoot some missiles,” he said, “but we will shoot them down.” On Wednesday morning, officials in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar all reported missile or drone attacks from Iran.
Iranian strikes have forced U.S. troops to retreat from their bases to hotels and office buildings across the region, according to the two government officials. The defense official was livid about the Pentagon’s failure to adequately harden the bases and ridiculed Hegseth’s Tuesday prayer at a Pentagon press conference. “May god watch over all of them, each day and each night. May his almighty and eternal arms of providence stretch over them and protect them,” said Hegseth.
“Why didn’t Hegseth protect them?” the defense official asked. “Anyone with a brain knew these attacks were coming.”
Pentagon spokesperson Kingsley Wilson did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Retired Gen. Joseph Votel, a former head of Central Command, recalled that U.S. troops in the region have faced drone attacks for at least a decade. “At that time we identified a need to protect against this threat, and it has taken far too long for the DoD to respond and provide adequate protection for our deployed troops,” he told The Intercept, referencing drone attacks during the campaign against ISIS in the spring of 2016. “It was a known expectation that, if attacked, Iran would retaliate against our bases, installations, and forces, and I agree that we should have anticipated and been prepared for this inevitability.”
Kavanagh, who previously called attention to the vulnerability of U.S. outposts in the Middle East, echoed Votel. “It has been clear for years that the rapid proliferation of drones and cheap missiles would put U.S. bases and U.S. early detection radars in the region at risk, yet the Pentagon did little to protect them,” she said. “The failure to invest in hardened infrastructure was a choice. Congress should see this failure as evidence that simply giving the Pentagon more money is not a path to national security.”
“We would be better off if bases across the region were closed for good,” she added.
“We would be better off if bases across the region were closed for good.”
In public statements, Iran’s foreign minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi called out the U.S. for using civilians in nearby Arab monarchies of the Gulf Cooperative Council states as human shields. “U.S. soldiers fled military bases in GCC to hide in hotels and offices,” he wrote on X last week. “Hotels in U.S. deny bookings to officers who may endanger customers. GCC hotels should do same.”
Votel also expressed concern about troops using hotels and offices, noting it “could turn normal civilian infrastructure into military targets for the regime.”
Last month, an Iranian drone strike on a hotel in Bahrain wounded two War Department employees, according to a State Department cable reviewed by the Washington Post. CENTCOM did not respond to a request to confirm to The Intercept that those injuries stem from a March 2 attack on the Crowne Plaza hotel, a luxury property in Manama, Bahrain’s capital, but one official indicated this was likely.
Votel said that a failure to provide troops with adequate protection may handcuff U.S. operations. “I think this really complicates command and control and could affect unit cohesion and effectiveness,” he told The Intercept, referring to the transfer of troops to hotels and office buildings. “That said, we may not have many options if we cannot protect the military bases where they would normally be bedded down.”
At least 15 U.S. troops in the Middle East have died since the beginning of the Iran War, including six personnel who were killed in a drone strike on Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, and a soldier who died due to an “enemy attack on March 1, 2026, at Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia.” More than 520 U.S. personnel have also been injured, including those who suffered smoke inhalation on the Ford.
Prior to the current war with Iran, U.S. bases in the Middle East were increasingly targeted by a mix of one-way attack drones, rockets, mortars, and close-range ballistic missiles after Israel’s war in Gaza began in October 2023, most of the attacks occurring in the year following the outset of the conflict. At least 175 troops were killed or wounded in those attacks, including three service members who died in a January 2024 strike on Tower 22, a facility in Jordan. Other attacks targeted al-Asad Air Base, the Baghdad Diplomatic Support Center, Camp Victory, Union III, Erbil Air Base, and Bashur Air Base in Iraq and Al-Tanf garrison, Deir ez-Zor Air Base, Mission Support Site Euphrates, Mission Support Site Green Village, Patrol Base Shaddadi, Rumalyn Landing Zone, Tell Baydar, and Tal Tamir in Syria.
The casualty statistics do not include contractors, most of them foreigners who suffered non-combat injuries. Official U.S. statistics show that there were almost 12,900 cases of injuries to contractors in the CENTCOM area of operations during 2024 alone. More than 3,700 were the most serious non-fatal injuries, including traumatic brain injuries, requiring more than seven days away from work. Eighteen contractors were also killed, all of them in Iraq. The numbers are likely significant undercounts, but if even the fractional number of known contractor injuries is added to the tally, the casualty count for Americans and those on U.S. bases may top 13,600.
The post “Casualty Cover-Up”: The Pentagon Is Hiding U.S. Losses Under Trump in the Middle East appeared first on The Intercept.
LIVINGSTON, N.J., April 1, 2026 — CoreWeave, Inc. today announced landmark results in the MLPerf Inference v6.0 benchmark suite. Participating in the Datacenter Closed division, CoreWeave leveraged NVIDIA’s newest AI infrastructure, the NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 and NVIDIA GB300 NVL72.
The AI industry is undergoing a fundamental shift with inference as the new critical focus. As enterprises move AI from experimentation into production and agentic workloads become the new standard, inference has emerged as the critical measure of performance. At the same time, demand for inference is growing faster than the underlying hardware can be deployed, and the gap between theoretical system performance and real-world output has emerged as a defining constraint on how quickly AI companies can grow. CoreWeave’s MLPerf v6.0 results reflect the company’s continued investment in full-stack optimization, consistently turning cutting-edge hardware into real-world inference performance.
“Inference is the defining layer in AI. It’s where models are actually put to work and where performance in production shows up. Benchmarks like MLPerf help measure how theoretical performance translates into real-world output,” said Peter Salanki, co-founder and chief technology officer of CoreWeave. “These latest results reflect our ability to deliver exceptional performance for the most demanding frontier reasoning models at scale through full-stack optimization. That’s why customers rely on CoreWeave to launch, scale, and operate AI workloads in production, where real-world value is created and where it matters most.”
CoreWeave’s v6.0 submissions reflected NVIDIA’s reference configurations as a verified, production-ready baseline across two of the most demanding reasoning models available: DeepSeek-R1 and GPT-OSS-120B. Key results include:
“The gap between benchmark performance and production reality has been one of the most persistent challenges in AI,” said Nick Patience, vice president & practice lead, AI platforms at Futurum Research. “CoreWeave’s MLPerf v6.0 results, particularly on DeepSeek-R1, demonstrate the company is closing that gap through disciplined, full-stack optimization, which is exactly what enterprises and AI labs need as inference workloads move from experimental to mission-critical.”
CoreWeave’s MLPerf v6.0 results provide additional validation as the only AI cloud to earn top Platinum ranking in both SemiAnalysis ClusterMAX 1.0 and 2.0, which evaluate AI cloud performance, efficiency and reliability. These benchmark results reflect CoreWeave’s platform strategy: delivering infrastructure purpose-built for the demands of production AI, from high-performance compute through the software layer that builders depend on to develop, test, and deploy at scale.
More from HPCwire: MLCommons Releases New MLPerf Inference v6.0 Benchmark Results
About CoreWeave
CoreWeave is The Essential Cloud for AI. Built for pioneers by pioneers, CoreWeave delivers a platform of technology, tools, and teams that enables innovators to move at the pace of innovation, building and scaling AI with confidence. Established in 2017, CoreWeave completed its public listing on Nasdaq (CRWV) in March 2025. Learn more at www.coreweave.com.
Source: CoreWeave
The post CoreWeave Delivers Leading Inference Performance in MLPerf Benchmark appeared first on HPCwire.
Some underscore Trump’s unprecedented court appearance as protesters defend 14th amendment right
About 250 demonstrators packed the steps of the supreme court on Wednesday, chanting in defense of birthright citizenship as Donald Trump himself watched from the public gallery in an unprecedented appearance.
Beija McCarter, an eighth grade US history teacher, and Noah Goldstein, a New Yorker who was also at last month’s trans rights rally, both arrived at the demonstration with little optimism about what the justices inside might decide.
Continue reading...Party, which has neo-Nazi roots, will hold ‘important ministerial posts within immigration’ if four-party coalition wins in September
The Swedish prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, has said that he will allow the far-right Sweden Democrats (SD) into government for the first time – and give its members key ministerial posts – if his coalition wins the next general election.
Despite becoming Sweden’s second biggest political party after the Social Democrats in the last election, SD currently plays only a supporting role in the minority-run coalition.
Continue reading...American commandos joined Ecuadorian troops in a joint mission aimed at dismantling a suspected criminal hub along the country's coast.
Ignoring a debt lawsuit won't make it go away, but it can make things significantly worse. Here's what's at stake.
April 1, 2026 — Developing artificial intelligence (AI) applications requires expertise, computing power, and data – preferably a lot of it, and fast. LUMI AI Factory’s entirely new Dataset-as-a-Service (DaaS) solution brings data and compute closer together in a way that directly meets the growing needs of AI and data-intensive research.
Traditionally, large datasets have been moved from one environment to another based on individual use cases – from archives to compute services and back again – a process that consumes both time and resources. The LUMI AI Factory’s DaaS service approaches the issue from the opposite direction: it makes data visible at the very location where the computing power already resides. This shortens the distance from data to results and makes experimentation and research more seamless.
The DaaS user interface is a data catalogue in which data producers can publish their datasets in a controlled manner, and data users can discover them without manual searching or separate services. The service brings together metadata, access rights and data locations into a single whole, making datasets not only discoverable but immediately usable on the LUMI supercomputer. This is especially important in AI development, where training models require large volumes of data, and where the physical proximity of data to compute significantly affects performance and the reproducibility of workflows.
LUMI AI Factory’s DaaS creates value for two user groups at once: data users and data providers. For data users, DaaS streamlines the search for AI-ready datasets and eliminates the bottleneck of copying a large dataset elsewhere before analysis. For data producers, the service offers a clear publication path that makes datasets discoverable in a controlled, standardized way and available for broader use. A published dataset does not disappear into an archive – it gains visibility and utilization.
What is New About the LUMI AI Factory’s DaaS?
The LUMI AI Factory’s DaaS is not yet another data repository, and its primary purpose is not the storage or publication of datasets with citation information. A data repository and DaaS are complementary service models: the former supports long-term preservation and citability, while the latter focuses on use.
A traditional data repository is a place where datasets are archived and from which they can be downloaded elsewhere for use. DaaS, by contrast, orchestrates access to the data, guides users through permissions, and combines metadata, authorization and data location into a single process. Datasets included in DaaS may physically reside in different systems, but DaaS presents them as a unified selection and enables their use without requiring users to move data between systems.
Because DaaS is not an archive, it is also not intended for long-term preservation. Data is stored in DaaS only as long as it is in demand for AI development. When demand decreases, data can be removed from DaaS – but a preserved version remains available in an appropriate data repository if needed.
Architecture built on existing components
DaaS is a service, not a standalone IT system. Its value comes from the combination of metadata, access rights and technical integration. The service is built modularly on top of existing, widely used components. CSC’s Fairdata-Metax provides the metadata warehouse, and Fairdata-Etsin serves as the user interface and search tool. LUMI-O brings object storage close to compute, CSC’s Resource Entitlement Management System (REMS) manages access rights and related approval processes, and IT4I’s LEXIS enables data transfer and orchestration across different systems. This approach is cost‑effective and low‑risk compared to building an entirely new system: each component is already proven in practice, and combining them enables a flexible, scalable and sustainable service.
Modularity also means the service can be expanded piece by piece to meet user needs. The architecture is not rigid, and new capabilities do not need to be built from scratch – speeding up development and keeping costs under control.
Service available, functionalities advancing
The LUMI AI Factory’s DaaS is not yet a fully productized service, but its first pre‑productized version is already available to both data providers and data users. In this version, some integrations between service components are still under development , and certain parts of the service operate manually through support from LUMI AI Factory experts. However, the automation of functionalities is continuously progressing.
The set of available datasets is also evolving. Currently, the data catalogue contains ten extensive dataset collections, each composed of multiple datasets. One of these is the Open Web Search Index, a continuously updated resource comprising more than 1,000 datasets with a combined volume exceeding one petabyte. The Open Web Index consists of structured, indexed web document data collected using open methods and intended for reuse without the need to crawl the entire web independently. It provides a foundational infrastructure upon which search services, analytics, research and AI models can be built. It enables users to “slice and dice” web data according to their own needs, making it particularly valuable for search engine development and training large language models.
As the LUMI AI Factory’s DaaS matures toward a fully productised service, it will increasingly become a vital tool for both data providers and data users. The goal is to create a service that improves data discoverability, reduces manual work, and above all accelerates AI development. DaaS is not merely a new technical platform – it is part of a broader shift toward data that is immediately usable exactly where its value is created.
Explore the LUMI AI Factory’s Dataset-as-a-Service in more detail and contact LUMI AI Factory experts here.
Source: LUMI Consortium
The post LUMI AI Factory Launches Dataset-as-a-Service to Bring Data Closer to Compute appeared first on HPCwire.
Wage garnishment can drain your paycheck before you see it, but federal law limits how much creditors can take.
Former athletes like me know that in professional sports you can get away with most things … as long as you’re talented enough
When the Chicago Bulls waived Jaden Ivey on Monday, after he made a series of unprompted anti-LGBTQ and religiously charged comments on social media, the move was framed as a response to “conduct detrimental to the team.” On the surface, the situation appears straightforward: a player said something controversial, and the organization acted.
But there’s a version of this story where Ivey is still in the league. Where he and his publicist create a swift and thoughtful apology, where his overnight inclusion education uses all the key buzzwords to prove his newfound allyship, maybe he pays a fine or makes a small donation, and he’s able to go back on to the court and live out his dreams in the NBA, a league which has been pro-LGBTQ+ for more than a decade. Ivey’s words exposed his beliefs. What followed revealed a lot about NBA teams: not just their stance on inclusion, but how they decide which voices are worth protecting and which are easy to remove.
Continue reading... | I spy a mini Onewheel in MKBHD's April Fools vid in the background 🤣 https://youtu.be/Hc0aqOEU2w8?si=uC1yg7n96ko7Lv0H [link] [comments] |
Discussion on how to ease impact from Iran war coincides with Food and Drink Federation almost tripling forecast
Food inflation could hit 9% in the UK this year even if the strait of Hormuz opens within the next few weeks, figures suggest, as the Iran war pushes up energy prices.
The Food and Drink Federation (FDF), which represents 12,000 food and drink manufacturers, has predicted prices will rise by “at least” 9% by the end of 2026, almost tripling a forecast of 3.2% that was made before the Middle East conflict.
Continue reading...PM to focus on European defence and economic partnership for ‘dangerous world’, in pivot away from US
The UK will seek an even deeper partnership with the EU because of the instability wreaked by Donald Trump’s war with Iran, Keir Starmer has said, adding that the moment called for a more ambitious deal with Brussels to strengthen trade and defence.
His comments came as the US president again said he was considering pulling the US out of Nato, which he described as a “paper tiger”. Trump has frequently lambasted the UK and European nations for failing to support the US-Israeli strikes on Iran, and criticised their militaries.
Continue reading...Im looking for the pinlayout for the original BMS/XRV Bms
i have found Pictures of it but its always differnt. Every picture has a differnt layout. Does anyone know wich one is correct?
darwinmac writes: OnlyOffice has suspended its partnership with Nextcloud after the latter forked its editors into a new project called Euro-Office, according to a report from Neowin. The move comes just days after Nextcloud and partners like IONOS announced the fork as part of a broader push for European digital sovereignty. In a statement, the company accused the project of violating its licensing terms and international intellectual property law, claiming that Euro-Office uses its technology without proper compliance. OnlyOffice also pointed to missing attribution requirements and branding obligations tied to its AGPL-based licensing model. As a result, its 8-year-old partnership, which allowed Nextcloud users to edit and collaborate on office documents right inside their own instance, has been suspended. OnlyOffice also accused Nextcloud of not behaving in a manner expected of a partner, alleging attempts to poach its employees and influence customers against the company. Nextcloud said it forked the OnlyOffice repository instead of collaborating with the company because the project is notoriously difficult to contribute to. It also pointed out that OnlyOffice is a Russian company with Russian employees who leave code comments in Russian. In addition to that, some users may feel uncomfortable using software that could be linked to the Russian government.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Brutal past experience has taught us that a cost of living crisis doesn’t affect us all the same, because we don’t all go into it with the same income or wealth
Perhaps the most celebrated writer on oil markets is Daniel Yergin. His work has won a Pulitzer and his advice sought by every president from Bill Clinton to Donald Trump. Let’s start by looking at an example.
Fifteen years ago, before the US and Israel started their war on Iran, killing thousands of civilians in the process, before the strait of Hormuz became as infamous as the Bermuda Triangle, and before experts declared “the greatest global energy security threat in history”, Yergin published The Quest: Energy, Security and the Remaking of the Modern World. After hearing Trump announce a “very soon” end to the conflict for the second – or was it the third? – time, I dug out my copy. Just as I remembered, it devotes a chapter to the Persian Gulf.
Aditya Chakrabortty is a Guardian columnist
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Crown Prosecution Service confirms support on inquiries after arrests on suspicion of misconduct in public office
Police are receiving advice from prosecutors as part of their inquiries into Peter Mandelson and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s links to Jeffrey Epstein.
The former duke of York and the former UK ambassador to the US were both arrested in February on suspicion of misconduct in public office over their connections with the late financier. They have since been released under investigation.
Continue reading...Elon Musk’s rocket company could go public as early as June, Bloomberg reports
SpaceX has confidentially filed for an initial public offering on the US stock market, according to reports from Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal. The IPO is set to be one of the most closely watched and highly valued listings in market history.
Elon Musk’s company, which has become a dominant power in both space travel and satellite communications, could potentially seek a valuation upwards of $1.75tn. The confidential filing will give regulators a period to review and discuss the company’s financial disclosures before investors and the public are able to view them.
Continue reading...With oil prices rising and hiring already slowing, economists warn the Iran war could further weigh on U.S. job growth.
Distressed riders who were stranded for hours say Apollo Go customer service agents offered ‘useless platitudes’
A “system malfunction” has caused several self-driving robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China, police have confirmed, after distressed riders were stranded for hours.
Local authorities in the central Chinese city of Wuhan said they began receiving calls “one after another” on Tuesday night from riders reporting that autonomous vehicles operated by the Chinese internet company Baidu had frozen.
Continue reading...Michael O’Leary says UK’s reliance on Kuwait for jet fuel supply amid Iran war exposes it to possible shortages
The UK is the most vulnerable country in Europe to potential jet fuel shortages as the Iran war throttles supplies from the Gulf, the boss of Ryanair has said.
Michael O’Leary, the chief executive of the budget airline, said Britain would be the most exposed to jet fuel shortages because it relies on Kuwait for about 25% of its supply.
Continue reading...April 1, 2026 — MLCommons today announced new results for its industry-standard MLPerf Inference v6.0 benchmark suite. This release includes several important advances that ensure the benchmark suite tests current, real-world scenarios for AI deployments and delivers a comprehensive picture of AI system performance.
Five of the eleven datacenter tests in MLPerf Inference v6.0 are new or updated, and the release also includes a new object-detection test for edge systems. The major changes include:
“This is the most significant revision of the Inference benchmark suite that we’ve ever done,” said Frank Han, Technical Staff, Systems Development Engineering at Dell Technologies and MLPerf Inference Working Group Co-chair. “The decision to update so many benchmarks in this round was prompted by the extraordinary enthusiasm and collaboration from our members, who contributed an unprecedented amount of engineering effort and IP toward building new inference benchmarks. Adding these new tests allows MLPerf Inference to better keep pace with the breakneck pace of evolution in AI models and techniques so that our benchmarks are relevant and representative of real-world deployments.”
The open-source MLPerf Inference benchmark suite measures system performance in an architecture-neutral, representative, and reproducible manner. The goal is to create a level playing field for competition that drives innovation, performance, and energy efficiency for the entire industry. The published results provide critical technical information for customers who are procuring and tuning AI systems.
“We thank Meta, Shopify and Ultralytics for their substantial collaboration with us in making these changes to the MLPerf Inference benchmark suite and for contributing their datasets, task definitions and expertise,” said Miro Hodak, Senior Member of Technical Staff at AMD and MLPerf Inference Working Group Co-chair. “These partnerships were essential in ensuring that the tests include scenarios and workloads that represent the current state of the industry.”
“MLPerf Inference benchmarks play a vital role in driving transparency and accountability across the AI industry,” said Glenn Jocher, CEO & Founder of Ultralytics. “At Ultralytics, rigorous, reproducible benchmarking is central to how we develop and validate our Ultralytics YOLO models — ensuring developers and organizations can make informed decisions about real-world performance. We’re proud to be part of an ecosystem that holds the entire field to a higher standard.”
“Commerce is one of the most complex domains in AI, yet researchers rarely have data that reflects that complexity,” said Kshetrajna Raghavan, Principal Engineer, Applied ML at Shopify. “Shopify is uniquely positioned to address this, sitting at the intersection of millions of merchants and billions of products. Sharing this taxonomy allows the whole field to evolve.”
New Tools for Submitters and Consumers
With Inference 6.0, submitters have the option to use a newly available harness to complete benchmark tests. The new system, LoadGen++, allows LLMs to run with a serving-style software stack, which is familiar from typical deployments today. “LoadGen++ is a significant upgrade from its predecessor, and represents an important investment by MLCommons that will allow us to stay nimble as we continue to produce benchmark tests that track the state of the art,” said Han.
In addition, the Inference 6.0 results can be viewed in a new online dashboard <link> on the MLCommons site. The dashboard brings new levels of interactivity to viewing results, including advanced filtering and customized performance graphs.
Large-Scale, Multi-Node Systems Gaining Attention
The submissions to Inference 6.0 demonstrate that technology providers want to showcase the performance of scaled-up, multi-node systems running real-world inference workloads. This round recorded a new high for multi-node system submissions, a 30% increase over the Inference 5.1 benchmark six months ago. Moreover, 10% of all of the submitted systems in Inference 6.0 had more than ten nodes, compared to only 2% in the previous round. The largest system submitted in Inference 6.0 featured 72 nodes and 288 accelerators, quadrupling the number of nodes in the largest system in the previous round.
“As more AI applications have moved into production and wide availability, the demand for large-scale, high-performance systems to run them has grown,” says Hodak. “At the same time, multi-node systems bring a unique set of technical challenges beyond those of single-node systems, requiring configuration and optimization of system architectures, network interconnects, data storage, and software layers. Stakeholders are eagerly stepping up to meet these challenges and run inference workloads at scale.”
The AI Community Continues to Embrace and Invest in MLPerf Inference
The MLPerf Inference 6.0 benchmark received submissions from a total of 24 participating organizations: AMD, ASUSTeK, Cisco, CoreWeave, Dell, GATEOverflow, GigaComputing, Google, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Intel, Inventec Corporation, KRAI, Lambda, Lenovo, MangoBoost, MiTAC, Nebius, Netweb Technologies India Limited, NVIDIA, Oracle, Quanta Cloud Technology, Red Hat, Stevens Institute of Technology, and Supermicro.
“I would like to welcome our first-time submitters, Inventec Corporation, Netweb Technologies India Limited, and Stevens Institute of Technology,” said Han. “The AI ecosystem is large and diverse, and it continues to grow and evolve rapidly. On behalf of MLCommons, I want to also thank our members, our contributors, and our partners including Meta, Shopify, and Ultralytics, for collaborating with us to build and shepherding forward the most comprehensive and relevant performance benchmark suite for AI inference. Together, we are ensuring that stakeholders in our community have valuable, real-world information that helps them to make better decisions.”
View the Results
To view the results for MLPerf Inference v6.0, please visit the benchmark results dashboard https://mlcommons.org/visualizer.
About MLCommons
MLCommons is the world’s leader in AI benchmarking. An open engineering consortium supported by over 130 members and affiliates, MLCommons has a proven record of bringing together academia, industry, and civil society to measure and improve AI. The foundation for MLCommons began with the MLPerf benchmarks in 2018, which rapidly grew into a set of industry metrics for measuring machine learning performance and promoting transparency in machine learning techniques. Since then, MLCommons has continued to use collective engineering to build the benchmarks and metrics required for better AI – ultimately helping to evaluate and improve the accuracy, safety, speed, and efficiency of AI technologies.
Source: MLCommons
The post MLCommons Releases New MLPerf Inference v6.0 Benchmark Results appeared first on HPCwire.
Anthropic is using copyright takedown notices to try to contain an accidental leak of the underlying instructions for its Claude Code AI agent. According to the Wall Street Journal, "Anthropic representatives had used a copyright takedown request to force the removal of more than 8,000 copies and adaptations of the raw Claude Code instructions ... that developers had shared on programming platform GitHub." From the report: Programmers combing through the source code so far have marveled on social media at some of Anthropic's tricks for getting its Claude AI models to operate as Claude Code. One feature asks the models to go back periodically through tasks and consolidate their memories -- a process it calls dreaming. Another appears to instruct Claude Code in some cases to go "undercover" and not reveal that it is an AI when publishing code to platforms like GitHub. Others found tags in the code that appeared pointed at future product releases. The code even included a Tamagotchi-style pet called "Buddy" that users could interact with. After Anthropic requested that GitHub remove copies of its proprietary code, another programmer used other AI tools to rewrite the Claude Code functionality in other programming languages. Writing on GitHub, the programmer said the effort was aimed at keeping the information available without risking a takedown. That new version has itself become popular on the programming platform.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Following a stint in Congress and as administrator of the Federal Transit Administration in the Trump administration, Marc Molinaro has launched a campaign for a New York state Assembly seat.
Molinaro, a Republican, recently exchanged X posts with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, criticizing Hochul on her party’s record in office.
Hochul posted, "I’ll keep working to lower costs for New Yorkers and put money back in their pockets." Molinaro replied on Feb. 14, "You have driven NYers to the financial cliff! Highest tax burden in America, exploding electric & energy costs, leading in population loss."
Earlier this year, we looked at whether New York has the nation’s highest tax burden (it’s either first or second in most rankings) and whether New Yorkers pay 49% more than the national average for electricity (they do, though most northeastern states pay more).
Does New York lead the nation in population loss? There are a few different ways to measure it, so the answer depends on the method used.
We were unable to reach Molinaro’s office for comment.
Losses to other states. This metric offers the strongest support for Molinaro’s statement.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, New York saw 137,000 residents move to other states during the year ending July 2025. That’s the second highest raw loss of any state. California ranked first, losing 229,077 residents to domestic migration (movement within the U.S.).
And on a percentage basis, New York had the highest percentage loss to domestic migration, at 0.69%. Hawaii, Alaska and California ranked second, third and fourth.
Overall population change. New York didn’t fare well in this category either, but it wasn’t the worst in the nation.
New York gained 1,008 people on net between 2024 and 2025. This increase stemmed from the combination of natural growth (births minus deaths) plus international immigration exceeding New York’s losses to other states.
New York’s gain was the smallest percentage addition of any U.S. state that gained population — but fared better than the five states that didn’t gain population at all during that period. California, Hawaii, New Mexico, Vermont, and West Virginia all lost population from 2024 to 2025.
New York’s decline is not a new development. New York’s population is down by 119,835 people since 2020, the second-highest raw number behind California. Other states to see losses during that period were Illinois, Louisiana, West Virginia, Hawaii and Mississippi.
On a percentage basis, New York’s loss was the fifth-largest in the nation. New York lost almost 0.6% of its population from 2020 to 2025, behind West Virginia, Hawaii, Louisiana and Illinois.
Molinaro said New York leads the nation in population loss.
Population loss can be measured in two major ways. By one metric — migration to other states — New York has the second-highest raw population loss and the largest percentage of any state.
However, thanks to increases from births and international migration, New York gained a small number of people. Five other states had no gains.
The statement is partially accurate but ignores important information, so we rate it Half True.
Cannabis policy still divisive two years in, with SPD hailing it while CDU minister says it is risk to young people’s health
It was a landmark piece of legislation passed by Germany’s previous, centre-left-led government: a measure that legalised the personal recreational use of cannabis for over-18s despite warnings from critics it would cause a steep rise in the drug’s use, including by teenagers, and boost criminal gangs.
Two years on, controversy over the move has still not been stubbed out, with critics and proponents at odds over its impact on consumption, youth welfare and organised crime.
Continue reading...Hershey said Wednesday it will use classic recipes for all Reese's products starting next year, after getting criticism for changing the popular treats.
The US president issued an executive order in 2025 that seeks to undo constitutional right to birthright citizenship
The US supreme court on Wednesday appeared poised to protect birthright citizenship, the longstanding policy that babies born in the US are American citizens, in what would be a blow to a key immigration policy for Donald Trump.
The court heard oral arguments with Trump himself in attendance inside the courtroom’s public gallery. A majority of justices asked questions indicating skepticism about the government’s attempt to overturn birthright citizenship. But while some expected the case to be a clear-cut win for those challenging the government, it is unclear how many justices might side with Trump. A decision is expected this summer.
Continue reading...Footage shows a man windsurfing being forcefully thrown from his board as a whale breaches off the California coast
An unsuspecting windsurfer collided with a gray whale on the San Francisco Bay in a startling and rare encounter captured on video.
The footage shows the moment the surfer is forcefully thrown from his board as a gray whale breaches off the California coast, plunging him into the water.
Continue reading...Six teenage girls arrested after hundreds of young people gather in Clapham in ‘swarming the streets’ trend
Police have urged parents to “take responsibility” after scenes of widespread disorder in Clapham, south-west London, on Saturday and Tuesday. Officers said the incidents were caused by a TikTok trend for swarming the streets.
Six teenage girls have been arrested so far, and the Metropolitan police said there would be more arrests in the coming days as officers reviewed CCTV and body worn camera footage of the disorder. It urged parents not to allow their children to take part in similar events over the Easter weekend.
Continue reading...First fatal incident this year occurred hours after £16.2m ‘stop the boats’ deal agreed between Britain and France
Two people have died and another is missing after trying to cross the Channel from France to the UK on Wednesday morning. It is the first fatal incident in the Channel this year.
The deaths occurred just hours after an interim £16.2m “stop the boats” deal was agreed between the UK and France which will be in place until May. Negotiations will continue for a longer-term deal to replace the previous three-year deal, which expired on Tuesday. According to reports, the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, is trying to secure a “payment by results” agreement to reduce small boat crossings.
Continue reading...Donald Trump has said he is considering pulling the US out of Nato, likening the alliance to a ‘paper tiger’.
It comes after weeks of denouncements from the US president against allies for not helping to reopen the strait of Hormuz.
When asked about Trump’s comments, Keir Starmer said: ‘Nato is the single most effective military alliance the world has ever seen’ and ‘whatever the noise, I’m going to act in the British national interest in all the decisions that I make’.
Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s Europe correspondent, Jon Henley
Continue reading...Wilson hasn’t played for US since 2024 due to pregnancy
Davidson makes return after ACL injury last year
Hayes’s core crystallizes ahead of World Cup qualifying
Sophia Wilson will make her long-awaited return to the US women’s national team next week, as part of a 23-player roster named by Emma Hayes for a trio of friendlies against Japan.
Wilson last appeared for the US on 27 October 2024, entering as a sub against Iceland in a friendly. She announced her pregnancy in March 2025 and did not appear for the US or club team Portland Thorns that year. Her daughter Gianna was born in September 2025. The 25-year-old Wilson made her return from maternity leave for the Thorns last month and started her first game last weekend in a win over the Kansas City Current.
Continue reading...FDA planned to fast-track applications for authorization, but agency reviewers raise alarm over addiction risk
Popular nicotine pouch products have yet to be cleared for sale in the United States despite a fast-track Food and Drug Administration scheme, as agency scientists hesitate to authorize them due to potential risks to new users, including children, three sources told Reuters.
New tobacco products like pouches, which users insert under their lip to get a nicotine buzz, must be authorised by the FDA in order to be legally sold in the US, the world’s largest market for smoking alternatives worth some $22bn.
Continue reading...The COVID-19 variant BA.3.2, nicknamed "Cicada," has been detected in at least 23 countries and half the states in the U.S.
Oscar winners, indie faves and more are streaming free this month.
Ministers accused of being too fearful of offending Emirates to help Britons detained for sharing images of war
The families of UK citizens held in the United Arab Emirates over allegations that they shared images of the conflict with Iran have voiced frustration at the British government’s failure to help.
Several British citizens are among more than 100 foreign nationals who have been detained under draconian Emirate rules that outlaw publishing or sharing material that could “disturb public security”.
Continue reading...At 17, Cooper Lutkenhaus is the youngest world champion in track and field history – and potentially USA’s poster boy for LA28
Fire on the boards. Slack jaws off it. Last week, I was fortunate enough to be yards away from the 17-year-old American high school student Cooper Lutkenhaus when he powered away from a strong 800m field in Torun to become the youngest world champion in track and field history. But no sooner had the applause died down than the search for superlatives began.
“He’s like David Rudisha,” said Eliott Crestan, the Belgian who took world indoor championship silver behind Lutkenhaus. “In 10 or 20 years’ time, I’ll be able to say that I ran against him.”
Continue reading...Here are some highly rated films to try, plus a list of new additions to the streamer in April.
April 1, 2026 — Using molecular dynamics simulations to train a machine learning model, scientists developed software that predicts and could help to exploit the effects of gas particle impacts on satellites in the upper atmosphere.
Over the past decade the space business has been booming, showing a dramatic increase in the number of new satellites launched into Earth’s orbit for telecommunications, navigation, and observation. As this trend continues, many of these satellites will be deployed in very low Earth orbits (VLEO), a loosely defined region between 200 and 450 km above the Earth’s surface. Flying satellites at these altitudes has many advantages, including reduced launch costs and the ability to observe Earth at higher resolution. This approach also reduces the accumulation of space junk that jeopardizes spacecraft at higher altitudes, because traces of the Earth’s atmosphere present in VLEO naturally slow satellites down, causing them to re‑enter and burn up once their missions end.

Flying satellites in very low Earth orbits offers scientific and economic advantages. Gaining a better understanding of what happens when oxygen particles strike satellites could improve flight dynamics and potentially lead to new propulsion concepts that extend satellite lifespan. Image courtesy of the Atlas Collaborative Research Center.
This atmospheric drag is caused mainly by atomic oxygen. These particles continually strike satellites in VLEO, influencing their flight paths, causing surface erosion, and ultimately limiting their operational lifetimes. For this reason, a collaborative research center at the University of Stuttgart called ATLAS (Advancing Technologies for Low-Altitude Satellites) has been conducting fundamental research on interactions between rarefied high‑energy flows and spacecraft surfaces, developing concepts for utilizing the residual atmosphere, and exploring new design and operational strategies that will support improved VLEO satellite design, lifespan, and economic viability.
In one ATLAS subproject, Miklas Schütte of the University of Stuttgart’s Institute of Space Systems and Stephen Hocker of its Institute for Functional Matter and Quantum Technologies have been developing a method for better predicting how gas particles and surfaces of satellites interact at very low Earth orbits. “For us at ATLAS, the question is not just how we could optimize aerodynamics to minimize resistance, but how we could use the forces acting on satellites to control their orientation and orbit,” Schütte explained. In a recent paper in the journal Physics of Fluids (selected by the journal as an “Editor’s Pick”) the team describes a new computational approach that models how gas particles reflect off surfaces by considering these interactions at the smallest of scales.
HPC-Generated Data Used to Train a Machine Learning Model
Close to Earth, the aerodynamics of automobiles or airplanes are typically simulated using computational fluid dynamics (CFD), which treats gases as continuous flows. Because the atmosphere at VLEO altitudes verges on the vacuum of space, however, it is very thin. This means that individual gas particles are located at greater distances from one another and CFD principles do not apply.
Researchers commonly use a method called Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) to predict satellite drag in the upper atmosphere. Current DSMC implementations still rely on highly simplified models for gas–surface interactions, though. In most cases, models assume that reflections are either purely mirror-like or purely diffuse, with particles scattering in many directions. Experimental studies, on the other hand, consistently show that the actual distributions of reflected particles deviate significantly from these idealized assumptions.
A much more precise method for simulating particle–surface interactions is molecular dynamics (MD). Based on mathematics that accurately reproduce basic physical principles, MD simulates how molecules interact at the scale of individual atoms over very short periods of time. Achieving this resolution makes molecular dynamics simulations very computationally demanding, and they can only be done using high-performance computing (HPC) systems like those at the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS).

An oxygen atom reflects off of a block of amorphous aluminum oxide, a material used in satellite construction. The coloring of the reflected atom corresponds to the extend to which its trajectory deviates from a perfect mirror-like reflection. Image: Institute of Space Systems, University of Stuttgart.
In an ideal world one might use MD simulations to catalog every possible interaction of a gas particle and a surface, but this would be impractical even using today’s fastest supercomputers. Moreover, modeling an entire satellite with many surfaces and angles, traveling through space at 8,000 meters per second, would be impossible.
Instead, the ATLAS team used molecular dynamics to support a data-driven, generative machine learning approach. To create their dataset, they used HLRS’s Hawk supercomputer to simulate 225,000 particle–surface impacts in VLEO, investigating five different velocity magnitudes each at nine different incident angles. The dataset does not nearly cover all possible interactions, but provides sufficient coverage of a spectrum of potential angles and velocities that would be typical for a satellite traveling in very low Earth orbits. Using 128 cores on Hawk, it took approximately one month to generate the dataset.
Based on the results, the team then trained a machine learning algorithm on the MD data. The resulting model is able to interpolate and extrapolate from the dataset to automatically predict particle reflections for any other situation within the spectrum of the VLEO regime, including particle–surface interactions not specifically simulated using MD. When the investigators checked the resulting model’s accuracy they found that its results closely replicate those seen in training and validation data, suggesting that it is much more effective at making reliable predictions than current state-of-the-art models.
Schütte developed this model into a particle scattering kernel that he then integrated into the DSMC simulation method in PICLas. DSMC, in turn, can be used to simulate at a larger scale how rarefied flows (composed of isolated particles and not continuous flows) interact with surfaces in space. “Integrating a scattering kernel into DSMC methods brings these extremely precise simulations of particle reflections at the microscopic level up into the macroscopic or mesoscopic scale that is needed to actually simulate a satellite,” Schütte explained.
Simulation Opens New Opportunities for Improving Satellite Design
Schütte says that the successes he and his colleagues have seen so far make it possible to ask new questions that they plan to investigate in more detail within the ATLAS project. For one, they will look more closely at how impacts can lead to the adsorption of atomic oxygen on the satellite surface. Once adsorption has occurred, incoming oxygen atoms can react with the adsorbed species to form molecular oxygen that eventually leaves the surface. At the same time, the impacts can directly erode the surface. A second question concerns the effects of roughness on the scattering of gas particles. The work so far has assumed that surfaces are flat, but it is expected that a more realistic representation of surface topography could produce different results. And finally within the broader ATLAS project, researchers will be able to use the improved models of particle reflection to optimize materials selection for satellite construction, offering better reflection capabilities for controlling spaceflight and orbit stability. In the meantime, Schütte’s new scattering kernel is already being used by other scientists within the ATLAS consortium.
Another tantalizing idea would be to collect oxygen molecules in VLEO environments, and use them as fuel in propulsion systems to counteract the effects of drag. The improved model of physical interactions between particles and surfaces provides an important tool for developing this concept. “Having an accurate surface model is a critical step in being able to design an intake that could capture particles in this way,” Schütte said. “Right now this is still theoretical, but if it becomes possible it could be a real game changer that would could dramatically reduce the cost and extend the lifecycles of VLEO satellites.”
Related Publication
Schütte M, Hocker S, Lipp H, et al. 2025. A machine learning framework for scattering kernel derivation using molecular dynamics data in very low Earth orbit. Phys Fluids. 37: 093609.
Funding for HLRS’s Hawk supercomputer was provided by the Baden-Württemberg Ministry for Science, Research, and the Arts and the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space through the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS).
Source: Christopher Williams, HLRS
The post HLRS: Particle Scattering Model Could Improve Low-Orbit Spaceflight appeared first on HPCwire.
Iraqi civilians are paying the price of the Iran war Expert comment thilton.drupal
The US-Israeli war on Iran has disrupted oil exports, pushed up prices and deepened fears of electricity shortages.
Iraq has been increasingly dragged into the US and Israel’s war with Iran, with both sides attacking each other on its territory. Civilians have suffered as rockets and drones fall near residential buildings in cities including Baghdad and Erbil.
The war has also exposed the fragility of Iraq’s economy and society. Most Iraqis are facing this latest conflict with limited financial resources and minimal savings, and with low confidence in the state to protect them from the war’s impact.
For many households, the war has caused anxiety over whether they will keep receiving their salaries or be able to access food and medicine. There are also concerns over whether electricity supplies will continue as temperatures rise ahead of summer.
Suspected Iranian attacks on two tankers in Iraqi waters near the port town of Al Fao in early March have also highlighted Iraq’s heavy dependence on maritime trade. The disruption to Gulf shipping is already constraining imports and leaving Iraq-bound cargo stranded or delayed.
For a country that moves more than 90 per cent of its trade by sea, prolonged disruption in the Gulf risks hitting Iraq’s economy and depriving it of crucial oil exports that finance the majority of the state’s budget.
Iraq is confronting the war with weaker governance structures and less capacity to shield society from the fallout than many of its neighbours.
The Iraqi state budget is the main safety net for much of the population. It provides salaries to millions of Iraqis, and many households still rely on state spending for their day-to-day survival, whether through salaries, pensions or welfare linked to public expenditure.
Iraq’s economy is still heavily dependent on oil, with crude sales making up more than 90 per cent of the state’s income. When oil flows are disrupted, state spending is affected. In turn, this hits household budgets through increased rent, food, transport, medicine and education costs.
The war on Iran has exposed this reliance by directly damaging Iraq’s export capacity. Baghdad declared force majeure on foreign-operated oilfields after disruption in the Strait of Hormuz halted most crude exports.
Iraq still has about $97 billion in reserves, but much of that is not immediately liquid, and reserves can only provide short-term relief. Economists have estimated that Iraq has around two months before salaries are directly impacted, after which the government will have to resort to temporary fixes to keep salaries paid.
Across Iraq, basic food prices have risen by 15 to 25 per cent. In the Kurdistan Region, officials report that the price of vegetables usually imported from Iran has doubled, while fuel prices have reportedly risen by more than 20 per cent in some cities.
Meanwhile, the dinar has weakened on the black market from the official rate of 1,300 to about 1,550 to the dollar, adding further pressure on household purchasing power.
Electricity is likely to be the most serious way in which the war will be felt inside Iraqi homes.
Despite Iraq having large natural gas reserves, it flares most of this gas as it lacks the infrastructure to use it as fuel for electricity. Since 2017 Iraq has instead relied on imported Iranian natural gas to provide electricity. More than 30 per cent of Iraq’s current electricity generation depends on those imports, leaving it exposed to regional tensions.
Israel’s 18 March attack on Iran’s South Pars gas field disrupted a significant portion of Iraq’s gas imports. Gas supplies to Iraq have now resumed, but only partially, stabilizing the grid but leaving little margin for further disruption.
The electricity system remains fragile heading into the summer, when demand rises sharply due to the heat. With total generation capacity at only around 24-28 gigawatts and projected peak demand in 2026 at 57 gigawatts, any further disruption could quickly deepen shortages.
That vulnerability was already visible on 4 March, when Iraq suffered a nationwide blackout after a sudden drop in gas supplies to the Rumaila gas-fired power plant in Basra.
Iraq has previously explored alternatives to Iranian imported gas, including importing gas from Qatar and Oman and efforts to expand domestic gas production. But these are not immediate substitutes.
In Iraq, electricity shortages have historically sparked protests, with many citizens believing that years of higher oil revenues should have led to improvements to the country’s electricity infrastructure. The current conflict exposes how little has been done to make the system more reliable, despite repeated warnings.
Pressures from the war risk inflaming a set of pre-existing and politically charged grievances.
In Iraq, state legitimacy has already been weakened by years of corruption, policy short-termism and uneven provision. As the economic impact of the war ramps up, the public perception that the government cannot be relied on in a crisis matters almost as much as the immediate material impact.
Protests over jobs and services were already re-emerging before the war. Earlier waves of protest targeted the ruling elite over corruption and the failure to provide services. Historically, many protesters have also rejected Iranian influence as well as the wider pattern of foreign interference in Iraq enabled by the post-2003 political system.
How much do you know about the history of one of the most powerful computing companies on the planet?
In the 50 years since it was founded, Apple has long been seen as one of the most significant technology companies globally. The design and manufacturing decisions taken in Cupertino, California have affected product design across the world, helping usher in an era of ubiquitous touchscreen computing while insisting on exacting user experience design principles. How much do you know about the history of one of the most powerful computing companies on the planet? Test yourself with these 12 questions.
The Guardian’s Apple at 50 quiz
Continue reading...As launch time approaches for NASA's first moonshot in more than half a century, anticipation is building for the Artemis II mission. Here's how to watch today's liftoff.
This is not an April Fools’ Day joke! FactCheck.org is a nominee for the 30th Annual Webby Awards in the category for Websites and Mobile Sites: News & Politics.
Now our loyal readers can help us win the Webby People’s Voice Award, which is voted on by the public. Go to vote.webbyawards.com and sign in or sign up to vote.
This link will take you directly to our category. Or, to find us from the main page, click on “Categories,” then “Websites & Mobile Sites,” then “General Desktop & Mobile Sites,” and finally “News & Politics.”
Also, if you register with your email address, please be sure to confirm your account so that your vote will count. Click “Resend Confirmation Email” if one is not automatically sent to your email address. (If you still don’t see the email – which should say “Webby People’s Voice Confirmation” in the subject line – check your spam folder, as the Webby website suggests.)
The voting period ends April 16. The Webby winners, including the ones picked by a panel of expert judges, will be announced April 21. The Webby Awards are presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.
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 We Could Win a Webby with Your Vote appeared first on FactCheck.org.
We are paying more for a PlayStation so that idiots can use ChatGPT to mislead people on dating apps – something is rotten in the state of gaming
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When the PlayStation 5 launched almost five and a half years ago, it was listed at £449 in the UK. If you were to buy one at the recommended retail price today, it would be £569.99, or £789.99 for the updated Pro model. Sony has just raised the price of its console by another £90, the latest in a series of hikes. This is unprecedented: consoles have always decreased in price over time (until they become retro collectibles – the other day, I saw someone asking £200 for a SNES on Vinted). So, what’s going on?
Unfortunately, this is another case of artificial intelligence ruining things for everyone. AI data centres need lots and lots and lots of computing power to be able to present you with lies whenever you Google anything, and this has pushed up demand and pricing for RAM and storage. This isn’t the only reason prices are rising – the wars in Ukraine and Iran have caused global economic disruption, and rampant inflation has eaten into many companies’ bottom line. But AI is the cause that’s easiest to get angry about, because it doesn’t need to be this way.
Continue reading...April 1, 2026 — Researchers at the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) will share their discoveries and innovations at DOE’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) Energy Innovation Summit in San Diego, California, April 7-9. ARPA-E funds high-risk, high-impact energy technologies that can be quickly and meaningfully advanced to catalyze bleeding-edge energy research.

Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers will share their discoveries and innovations at ARPA-E’s Energy Innovation Summit in San Diego, California, April 7-9. Credit: Morgan Manning/ORNL.
The summit will convene nearly 3,000 global energy innovators, investors, engineers and industry leaders. They will access more than 400 displays of groundbreaking ARPA-E-funded energy technologies, define new areas of scientific research and drive the development of reliable, secure American-made energy for all.
Summit speakers will include U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright, U.S. Undersecretary for Science Dario Gil, who also directs DOE’s Genesis Mission to accelerate science through artificial intelligence, and AMD Chair and Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su, whose company is delivering next-generation computing and AI solutions.
Researchers at ORNL, the United States’ largest lab for interdisciplinary science and energy research, play an important role — often with collaborators — in turning disruptive concepts into impactful products through strengthening the following:
Energy Storage
Nuclear Fission and Fusion
Grid and Materials Supply Chains
Alloys in Extreme Environments
Partner-Driven Projects
Additionally, in a panel called “Powering the AI Revolution,” Prashant Jain, head of ORNL’s Advanced Reactor Engineering Section, will talk about the explosive growth of AI and cloud computing and their effects on today’s power grid. He and other panelists will discuss financial stakes, capital costs, timelines and, ultimately, what is needed to unlock the gigawatts that future AI deployments will require.
Other summit activities will further highlight the importance of ARPA-E funding in driving critical energy innovation and ensuring U.S. technological leadership. Tech demos from companies and universities will showcase the world’s first practical superconducting electric machine, low-cost utility undergrounding, and plasma electrodes for fusion energy and other extreme environments. Investor sessions will explore funding for furthering fusion and powering AI. Students will have opportunities to present ideas for partnerships and commercialization.
Source: Dawn Levy, ORNL
The post ORNL to Feature Transformative Tech at ARPA-E Summit appeared first on HPCwire.
US president’s claim that conflict is nearing end prompts 15% drop in Brent crude and stock market climb in Asia
Oil prices tumbled and stock markets have rallied across the world after Donald Trump said the war in Iran would end in “two to three weeks”.
Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil, fell as low as $98.35 a barrel on Wednesday, down more than 15% on the previous day and its lowest level in a week. It later recovered some ground, ending the day at $102.
Continue reading...Syrian President al-Sharaa on Iran war: ‘Syria will remain outside this conflict’ News release jon.wallace
In his first UK public event, President Ahmed al-Sharaa urged negotiations to resolve the US-Israeli war on Iran – and discussed elections, reconstruction and foreign policy.
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa visited Chatham House on 31 March for a conversation with Director and Chief Executive Bronwen Maddox – his first public event in the United Kingdom. The two discussed Syria’s reconstruction, its foreign policy, and its position on the Iran war, before the president took questions from the audience.
Asked by Maddox about his government’s position on Iran and the war with the US and Israel, President al-Sharaa said that:
‘There is no doubt that Iran… was at the forefront of the conflict led by the [former] regime against the Syrian people. However, after we reached Damascus, we did not have an issue with Iran in Tehran; rather, our problem was with Iran in Damascus, because it was occupying Syrian villages and towns, displacing people, and so on.’
‘We have held back from opening relations with Iran up to this point. Certainly, the war currently under way is negatively affecting the region by disrupting energy and fuel supplies, which in turn affects the global economy… What we had been advising was that they should look for a negotiated solution, rather than resorting to military force, because that carries major risks.’
Asked by Maddox if Syria would remain neutral in the war, he replied:
‘Certainly, unless Syria is subjected to direct attacks by any party, it will remain outside this conflict. 14 years of war are enough for Syria, during which we have paid a very heavy price, and we are not prepared to go through a new experience. Those who have gone through the hardship of war know the value of peace…’
Asked if his government was helping to prevent weapons being transported to Hezbollah in Lebanon, President al-Sharaa said:
‘We, too, have paid the price for Hezbollah’s intervention in Syria over the past 14 years. Hezbollah was also an active partner with the [former] regime in the killing of the Syrian people.
‘Nevertheless, after we reached Damascus, we tried to adopt policies that would not harm the situation in Lebanon. We were keen that the conflict should not extend into Lebanon, while at a minimum protecting our borders. Protecting the borders requires that those responsible for securing them prevent the entry of weapons and cases of smuggling.’
Addressing relations with Israel, he said:
‘We tried through dialogue and discussion. Indirect negotiations began and then moved to direct negotiations. We reached good points, but at the last moments we always find a shift in the Israeli position.’
Maddox also pressed al-Sharaa on his 2025 promise to hold elections within five years: ‘Are you still on track for that?’ she asked.
‘Certainly, Syria has taken initial steps. We held a national dialogue conference that produced recommendations. After that, we issued a constitutional declaration which stipulated that the first term would be five years as a temporary measure.
‘During this period, we also conducted elections for the People’s Assembly, whose first session will begin next month.
‘Of course, after five years, there will be further steps, as we have reviewed the laws and laid the groundwork for holding free elections in Syria.’
Here is a video clip of President al-Sharaa discussing the US-Israel war on Iran. You can watch the event in full here.
We need a 5% wealth tax on America’s 938 billionaires. Over a 10-year period, this bill would raise much-needed $4.4tn for public coffers
Never before in American history have so few had so much wealth and power. Today, the top one per cent owns more wealth than the bottom 93%. One man, Elon Musk, worth $805bn, owns more wealth than the bottom 53% of American households.
And that inequality is getting worse. Last year alone, after receiving the largest tax break in history from Donald Trump, 938 billionaires in America became $1.5tn richer. Since he was elected, President Trump and his family have become $4bn richer.
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Why Should Delaware Care?
Delmarva Power is the largest energy provider in the state, serving more than 300,000 customers. If its rate increase request are approved by regulators, customers will see higher monthly bills.
Electric bills for Delmarva Power customers in Delaware are going to increase, again.
Last week, Delmarva Power officials notified state energy regulators that they will raise the average home’s electricity bill by $15 a month, citing a need to pass along higher energy supply costs.
While the increase is formally characterized as a request to energy regulators, Delmarva Power and state officials say it will very likely be approved because of its pass-through nature.
The increase is one of two that will result in higher energy bills for consumers in 2026.
In December, Delmarva Power requested an increase in the amount of profits it can legally earn in the state, which will result in a 4% jump in electricity rates in July. Delaware regulators may ultimately reject the increase — or lower it — at a later date, which would lead to refunds of any excess payments.
Delmarva Power Region President Marcus Beal previously told Spotlight Delaware that the company needs the additional money to pay for upgrades to the utility’s aging electric infrastructure.
In an interview Tuesday, Beal noted that last week’s price increase differs significantly from the one filed in December because the supply costs are “the side of the bill that we don’t control.”
As a regulated, for-profit utility, Delmarva Power is allowed to operate as a monopoly provider of energy in much of the state. To have that status, the company has to submit formal requests to regulators at the Delaware Public Service Commission when it wants to raise electricity or natural gas rates.
Delaware Public Advocate Jameson Tweedie fits into the system as the formal proponent for the interests of electricity customers.

In a statement, Tweedie’s office said it will not oppose last week’s rate increase request because it “has no reason to think” that a previous energy auction that returned higher wholesale electricity costs was unfair.
Still, Tweedie has said he will oppose Delmarva Power’s December rate increase request, arguing it is unfair to increase the utility’s profits while customers are struggling to pay rapidly rising energy bills.
A typical residential electricity customer in Delaware sees an average monthly bill of $157, a Delmarva Power spokesperson said. The two rate increase requests combined would increase those bills by about 13%, or $21, beginning in July.
Delmarva Power supplies electricity to 344,000 residential or commercial customers in Delaware, making it the state’s largest private utility. It also provides natural gas to a smaller number of customers in the state.
GET INVOLVED
Delaware residents can make their voices heard about Delmarva Power’s latest request by submitting public comments online here. To do so, commenters should include the rate increase’s docket number, 26-0389, in the online form.
Comments can also be made at the beginning of Delaware Public Service Commission meetings. Commission spokesman Matt Hartigan said Delmarva Power’s latest request will likely be heard on April 22.
Customers struggling to pay higher energy bills can use Delmarva Power’s Assistance Finder search tool to apply for energy assistance programs and community resources.
Delmarva Power’s rate increase request follows an electricity supply auction that produced high prices that were the result of growing electricity demand that hasn’t been matched by new power supplies, Beal said.
In essence, the imbalance in supply and demand has driven up the cost of electricity, which is then passed on to consumers.
That imbalance has been growing over the past few years and much of the regional increase in demand has come from big energy users, such as data centers.
The latest rate increase request comes a year and half after another regional electricity auction sparked a backlash from state governors, consumer advocates and environmentalists who called on the industry-run grid operator — PJM Interconnection — to enact sweeping reforms, including faster approvals of proposed wind and solar projects.
Delaware is in the same regional electricity grid as Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio, which have all seen a boom of new construction of data centers because of the growing computing demands from artificial intelligence applications.
Separately, Delmarva Power said in December that it is currently working with five developers to build data centers in Delaware.
Of those, one is an “early stage prospect.” The others are showing “more advanced interest,” according to the company.
If all are approved, the data centers would nearly double the current electricity demand of all homes and industry in the entire state
Beal said Delmarva Power will have to provide power to any data center customers that come to the state, despite the staggering new energy demands they would bring.
“We are required by law to serve all customers. We cannot discriminate,” Beal said.
The post Delmarva Power electricity bills set to go up again in 2026 appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court marked International Trans Day of Visibility with yet another ruling that puts the lives of trans people at risk. The justices ruled that Colorado’s statewide ban on conversion therapy for young people likely violates a Christian counselor’s First Amendment rights. The decision threatens conversion therapy bans nationwide, which are currently on the books in nearly half of all U.S. states.
The 8-1 ruling has far-reaching, terrifying potential consequences. And not only for trans youth: It indicates that speech delivered by licensed health care practitioners in a professional capacity, no matter how harmful and debunked the claims, cannot be banned as illegal conduct, because it counts as protected speech.
Only Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the one dissenting judge, appeared to appreciate the grave stakes of this ruling.
“Before now, licensed medical professionals had to adhere to standards when treating patients.”
“Before now, licensed medical professionals had to adhere to standards when treating patients: They could neither do nor say whatever they want,” Jackson wrote in a blistering dissent. “Largely due to such State regulation, Americans have been privileged to enjoy a long and successful tradition of high-quality medical care. Today, the Court turns its back on that tradition.”
The dangers of conversion therapy to trans and queer youth cannot be overstated. According to the Trevor Project, a nonprofit suicide-prevention organization for LGBTQ+ young people, “LGBTQ+ youth who experienced conversion therapy are more than twice as likely to attempt suicide and more than 2.5 times as likely to report multiple suicide attempts in the past year.”
Conversion therapy, however, may not be the only potentially harmful intervention the ruling would apply to. As Jackson added in her dissent, the ruling “might make speech-only therapies and other medical treatments involving practitioner speech effectively unregulatable — not to be reached via licensing standards, medical-malpractice liability, or any other means of state control.”
It is a ruling, then, completely in line with our Trumpian moment of decimated medical care standards and eliminationist assaults on trans people. Indeed, it was done with support from President Donald Trump’s Justice Department.
As journalist and trans rights advocate Erin Reed wrote, the court’s logic in the ruling holds that “any medical treatment delivered through words rather than instruments could now carry First Amendment protection — a framework that could shield a doctor who encourages a patient to commit suicide, a dietician who tells an anorexic patient to eat less, or a therapist who deliberately steers a vulnerable client away from life-saving treatment.”
Reed noted that the decision risks extending constitutional protections to “speech-based professional conduct” in other fields, like a lawyer giving knowingly harmful legal advice.
The crux of the majority’s opinion rests on the contested line between speech that is protected against government interference, and conduct, which can be regulated.
“Her speech does not become ‘conduct’ just because a government says so or because it may be described as a ‘treatment’ or ‘therapeutic modality,’” wrote Justice Neil Gorsuch in the majority opinion, referring to the speech of Christian counselor Kaley Chiles, who sued the state of Colorado over the conversion therapy ban with representation from the right-wing legal giant the Alliance Defending Freedom.
Gorsuch’s opinion draws an extraordinary conclusion about the role of certain speech acts in professional health care settings.
The Colorado law did not ban Chiles from holding and expressing Christian views; the law, like regulations in over 20 other states, banned conversion talk therapy — that is, speech acts delivered with the specific aim to “change an individual’s sexual orientation or gender identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attraction or feelings toward individuals of the same sex.”
It is precisely professional conduct that the law regulates.
As Jackson noted in her dissent, “The Constitution does not pose a barrier to reasonable regulation of harmful medical treatments just because substandard care comes via speech instead of a scalpel.”
Every major medical and mental health association has condemned the practice of conversion therapy.
Given the danger posed by the court’s decision, it may seem surprising that the two other liberal justices, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, sided with the far-right majority. Their decision, according to their concurring opinions, related to the fact that Colorado’s law was not written in sufficiently “viewpoint-neutral” language.
“We need not here decide how to assess viewpoint-neutral laws regulating health providers’ expressions because, as the Court holds, Colorado’s is not one,” wrote Sotomayor.
With this far-right supermajority Supreme Court, however, even cautiously worded conversion therapy bans may not survive the conservative justices. In the last year alone, the court has bucked precedents and ignored medical expertise, not to mention basic humanity, in previous anti-trans decisions like banning trans youth health care and ejecting trans people from the military.
The court’s Tuesday decision did not in itself strike down the Colorado law, but in siding with conversion therapy, the justices returned the case to the 10th Circuit, where the highest form of judicial scrutiny will be applied. The law will almost certainly be struck down.
If existing bans are invalidated, those seeking to stop a further proliferation of conversion therapy may now have to use “creative methods,” Reed wrote, like tort law and malpractice law.
This is the grim legal terrain forged by the Trump regime and bigoted groups like the Alliance Defending Freedom, aided by too many negligent or complicit liberals. Medical malpractice and harmful speech acts are protected, whereas trans kids’ existence gets no protection at all.
The post Conversion Therapy Gets Speech Protections — But Trans Kids’ Existence Gets No Protection at All appeared first on The Intercept.
NASA launched four astronauts on a historic nine-day trip around the moon and back. Here's everything to know about the Artemis II mission.
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With the Pentagon potentially seeking a $200 billion supplemental package to fund the ongoing war with Iran, President Donald Trump defended that figure in part by saying U.S. ammunition “was taken down by giving so much to Ukraine.” He then exaggerated the amount of aid to Ukraine and falsely said that former President Joe Biden “didn’t rebuild anything” in the defense stockpile.

Trump has a point that the military assistance provided to Ukraine reduced the U.S. reserve of weapons. But that aid largely has not affected the military operations in Iran, defense experts told us.
Furthermore, Biden signed multiple spending bills passed by Congress that included funding to replace the older weapons that the U.S. gave to Ukraine with new items. Experts also told us that Biden’s administration put money into increasing the production of munitions for the military.
“Of course, the Biden administration built a lot in terms of military equipment,” Mark F. Cancian, senior adviser for the defense and security department at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told us in an email. “Whether it did enough is another question.”
The subject of the $200 billion request came up during a March 19 meeting in the Oval Office when a reporter asked Trump why the funding would be necessary if, as Trump had said, the war with Iran would “pretty soon” be over.
“Well, we’re asking for a lot of reasons beyond even what we’re talking about in Iran,” the president responded. He went on to add: “We want to have vast amounts of ammunition, which we have right now. We have a lot of ammunition, but it was taken down by giving so much to Ukraine. They gave so much. You know, Biden gave $350 billion worth of cash and military equipment to Ukraine, and he didn’t rebuild anything.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth also brought up Biden when asked about the potential $200 billion supplemental in a press conference that same day.
“As far as $200 billion, I think that number could move,” Hegseth said. “It takes money to kill bad guys. So, we’re going back to Congress and folks there to ensure that we’re properly funded for what’s been done, for what we may have to do in the future, ensure that our ammunition is – everything’s refilled and not just refilled, but above and beyond.”
He went on to say: “And I think, you know, we’re also still dealing with the environment that Joe Biden created, which was – which was depleting those stock holds and not sending them to our own military, but to Ukraine – which is when, every time we reach back and look at any sort of a challenge we have, it goes back to well, send it to Ukraine.”
But as we’ve written, the U.S. did not give “$350 billion worth of cash and military equipment to Ukraine.” Trump has made that false claim multiple times.
During the Biden administration, nearly $183 billion – not including a $20 billion loan – was made available for aid to Ukraine, after Russia invaded in February 2022, according to a report released in February 2025 by a special inspector general overseeing U.S. support for Ukraine. The vast majority of that money was authorized by Congress in a series of bipartisan appropriations bills. A portion of the funding was dedicated to military assistance rather than humanitarian or other financial aid.
Biden’s Defense Department said in a January 2025 fact sheet that it committed more than $66.5 billion in security assistance to Ukraine, including approximately $65.9 billion following the invasion by Russia in early 2022. Part of that military aid included the transfer of a variety of missiles, artillery, tanks and other armaments from the Defense Department.
Defense experts told us that aid has temporarily reduced the U.S. reserve of available weapons.
“It is true that U.S. stockpiles are badly depleted by aid to Ukraine,” Jennifer Kavanagh, a senior fellow and director of military analysis at Defense Priorities, a think tank that advocates a “restrained foreign policy,” told us in an email. “This long-term problem will take time to address. It is not something that has been resolved and is ongoing across many types of munitions and air defense.”
However, she said it would be “misleading” to suggest that military aid to Ukraine is responsible for most of the “current munitions concerns” in Iran because of the type of weapons that have been used in the war to date.
“With the exception of Patriot interceptors, most [of] the munitions in use in the Middle East were not given to Ukraine at any point,” Kavanagh said, referring to the PATRIOT air defense systems that can shoot down incoming ballistic missiles.
For example, the Washington Post reported, citing anonymous sources, that the U.S. used more than 850 Tomahawk cruise missiles against Iran in a month, raising concerns among some Pentagon officials about the limited supply. But the U.S. has not given Tomahawks to Ukraine, even though Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has requested them.
Cancian, at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, also told us in an email that besides “Patriot batteries and missiles,” which Ukraine has used “extensively” against Russia, the munitions the U.S. gave to Ukraine “were almost entirely for ground forces, which is not an issue in the current war.”
So far, U.S. ground troops have not been ordered into combat. The U.S. and Israel have conducted joint airstrikes since launching the attack on Iran on Feb. 28. But thousands of American soldiers were recently deployed to the Middle East in case Trump does authorize ground operations.
“So, it is fair to link Ukraine aid to shortages in U.S. Patriot missile stockpiles, but not limited magazine depth more broadly,” Kavanagh said. “That larger problem stems from years of low production and constraints on the U.S. defense industrial base.”
Cancian said that CSIS has estimated that the inventory of Patriot missiles will last through the war with Iran, but “will be well below what war planners want for a possible conflict in the western Pacific.” Exact figures are not available because inventory totals are classified.
Meanwhile, both defense experts told us that Trump was wrong to claim that Biden did nothing as president to try to “rebuild” the stockpile.
“The Biden administration invested heavily in the U.S. defense industrial base and began a massive ramp-up in the production of many types of munitions that Trump continues,” Kavanagh said. “Much of the funding in the defense supplemental appropriations went to this purpose and the Pentagon made a real effort to expand munitions production and stockpiles. Some would say that Biden did not do enough or acted too slowly, but these are judgment calls. It is not accurate to say he built nothing.”
Cancian said that Biden “began the process of expanding munitions production by investing money in facilities and signing multiyear contracts.” He also noted that Congress, under Biden, appropriated money to replace all the military equipment that the U.S. sent to Ukraine.
Biden made that point himself in an October 2023 address to the American public.
“Let me be clear about something,” the former president said. “We send Ukraine equipment sitting in our stockpiles. And when we use the money allocated by Congress, we use it to replenish our own stores, our own stockpiles, with new equipment. Equipment that defends America and is made in America.”
The issue, Cancian said, is that “it will take years before all of the replacement equipment arrives.” He said, “That gap constitutes risk if other conflicts break out.”
On Jan. 20, 2025, the day that Biden left office, the State Department said that Presidential Drawdown Authority had been used 55 times since August 2021 to provide military assistance to Ukraine “totaling approximately $31.7 billion from DoD stockpiles.” The February 2025 report from the Ukraine oversight inspector general said that Congress appropriated $45.8 billion to replace the materials the Defense Department donated to Ukraine.
Notably, when we asked about the $200 billion Pentagon request and Trump’s and Hegseth’s claims about Biden draining the U.S. stockpile, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that the U.S. has all that it needs for operations in Iran.
“The US military has more than enough munitions, ammo, and weapons stockpiles to achieve the goals of Operation Epic Fury laid out by President Trump — and beyond,” she said in an emailed statement.
“Nevertheless,” she went on, “President Trump has always been intensely focused on strengthen[ing] our Armed Forces and he will continue to call on defense contractors to more speedily build American-made weapons, which are the best in the world.”
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The post Trump Links Biden’s Ukraine Aid to Pentagon’s Iran War Funding Request appeared first on FactCheck.org.
When Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr talks about broadcast licensees serving the “public interest,” he loves to emphasize “localism.”
Localism is the idea that powerful entities (in this case, broadcasters) should serve the needs and interests of the communities they service. In the abstract, it’s hard to argue with, especially at a time when news deserts are spreading, small-town outlets are folding, and, thanks to the administration in which Carr serves, local public radio stations are reeling.
When you look at the fights Carr actually picks with broadcasters over the “public interest” requirement, however, a curious pattern emerges. They aren’t local stories at all, unless you consider Tehran and San Salvador local. They’re national and global stories that upset not residents of underserved heartland communities, but President Donald Trump, the man whose gilded face Carr wears as a lapel pin.
Sure, when he’s playing for the home crowd, Carr will openly admit, and even brag about, helping Trump reshape the national media to his liking. That’s what he did at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday, bragging about such “wins” as the Paramount–Skydance merger in Trump’s ongoing feud against media adversaries. Carr’s FCC approved that deal only after unconstitutionally extracting editorial concessions from CBS News and helping Trump launder a multimillion-dollar alleged bribe though the courts.
But in less partisan settings, from congressional testimony to mainstream media interviews, localism has become Carr’s go-to talking point whenever he’s pressed on his unconstitutional efforts to police news content or confronted with his past statements railing against the partisan suppression of news. He’s not censoring the airwaves, he claims; he’s just sticking up for the little guy.
Yet Carr has never threatened a broadcast license because a newsroom ignored city council meetings or local crime, or offered a biased take on a school board’s budget decisions. It would, of course, violate the First Amendment for him to do that too — the FCC, as Carr once said, “does not have a roving mandate to police speech in the name of the ‘public interest.’” But at least it would be consistent with his populist gimmick.
In fact, his threats arise from coverage on national news networks, not their local affiliates, which actually hold the broadcast licenses he’s threatening to revoke. In other words, he’s threatening to punish local news stations for national content they don’t produce, and sometimes don’t even air, that angers Trump.
Let’s play back some of Carr’s greatest hits; see if you can spot the localism.
Carr also likes to tell broadcasters what they should air, but he doesn’t implore them to report more or better local news. Instead, he launched the “Pledge America Campaign,” calling on broadcasters to meet their public interest obligations by airing “patriotic, pro-America content” celebrating “the historic accomplishments of this great nation from our founding through the Trump Administration today.”
And in an expressly anti-local “public interest” intervention, Carr enthusiastically backed Trump’s directive to give the Army-Navy football game an exclusive broadcast window. Carr said in a press release earlier this month that “such scheduling conflicts weaken the national focus on our Military Service Academies and detract from a morale-building event of vital interest to the Department of War.” Because, of course, the hallmark of community broadcasting is not letting fans watch their local teams because the Pentagon needs a morale boost for its illegal, unpopular wars.
As a prior version of Carr knew, the FCC cannot police journalism for ideological bias. Localism is a Trojan horse Carr uses to legitimize his attack on the Constitution.
His only serious effort to impact local news undermines it instead by consolidating more local licenses under conglomerates like Nexstar and Sinclair — companies that are ideologically aligned with Trump on national issues but have long track records of ruining local coverage through cost cutting. Carr even bent ownership rules to approve a $6.2 billion Nexstar–Tegna merger, which a federal judge halted Friday because of harms to local news consumers.
Nexstar is aggressively cutting jobs at flagship stations like WGN in Chicago and KTLA in Los Angeles, even as it lobbies for permission to expand further. Sinclair has decimated local newsrooms across the country, replacing them with centralized national programming — the exact opposite of the localism Carr claims to champion.
The real Brendan Carr is the unrepentant censorship czar who shows up at CPAC and openly threatens broadcasters on X, not the slicker version who rails against coastal elites to change the subject when questioned about his unconstitutional antics.
Carr is among the most shameless bootlickers (or Florsheim dress shoe-lickers) in an administration full of sycophants. The only localities whose interests he serves are the White House and Mar-a-Lago. He’s the last person who should be policing the “public interest,” locally or anywhere.
The post Trump’s FCC Chief Says His Censorship Protects the Little Guy. It Really Serves One Powerful Man. appeared first on The Intercept.
The majority of immigration arrests made by federal agents during President Donald Trump’s enforcement surge in Minnesota last winter were of people with no criminal background, according to The Intercept’s analysis of newly revealed government data.
The data belies a common talking point made by the White House during the massive immigration operation: that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were arresting thousands of “dangerous criminal illegal aliens.”
From December 2025 to mid-March 2026, ICE made 4,030 arrests in the state. Of them, a staggering 2,532 arrests, or 63 percent, were of people with no criminal convictions or pending criminal charges, according to the data, which was previously unreported.
“The data confirms what the American people have overwhelmingly known, which is that Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis was a complete failure.”
On February 4, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, “President Trump’s commonsense immigration enforcement policies are delivering the public safety results the American people demanded, with more than 4,000 dangerous criminal illegal aliens already arrested in Minnesota since Operation Metro began.”
ICE’s own data contradicts the White House’s claim that all 4,000 people arrested were “dangerous criminal” undocumented immigrants at a time when about two-thirds of them had no records. (The White House referred a request for comment to ICE, which did not immediately respond.)
“The data confirms what the American people have overwhelmingly known, which is that Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis was a complete failure,” said Elora Mukherjee, director of the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School and a faculty fellow at the Deportation Data Project. “Instead of targeting the ‘worst of the worst,’ it was ordinary law-abiding people who were caught up in the immigration dragnet, resulting in the needless and cruel separation of families and inflicting untold suffering on American children.”
The findings are based on The Intercept’s analysis of federal government data provided by ICE in response to a Freedom of Information Act request by the Deportation Data Project. The new tranche of data, published on Monday, includes information on all ICE arrests made nationwide till March 10.
The proportion of ICE arrests in Minnesota of immigrants without a criminal record increased sharply during the winter operation, dubbed “Metro Surge” by the Trump administration.
Between Trump’s inauguration in January 2025 and the end of November 2025, 44 percent of all ICE arrests in the state were of people without criminal records. From December until February 12, the date that border czar Tom Homan said the operation was coming to an end, 64 percent of all ICE arrests in the state were of people without criminal records.
The period of the surge also represented a giant jump in the number of arrests themselves. Nearly 4,000 of the 5,998 ICE arrests in Minnesota since Trump took office occurred between December and February 12.
In January alone, there were 2,530 ICE arrests recorded in Minnesota, underscoring the impact of the operation. In comparison, there were 177 ICE arrests in the state in November, the last month before the surge began.
A vast majority — 97 percent — of ICE arrests in Minnesota between December 2025 and February 12 were “street arrests”; all of those were listed in the data as non-custodial arrests referring to detentions where the person is not taken from another agency’s custody.
In contrast, only 52 percent of all ICE arrests elsewhere in the country in the same period were non-custodial arrests.
The enforcement surge in Minnesota began in early December, then ramped up in January following the killing of Renee Nicole Good by ICE agent Jonathan Ross. The Trump administration responded to the killing by doubling down and sending hundreds more federal agents to the state to intensify the immigration enforcement crackdown.
Now, The Intercept’s analysis of ICE arrests data shows that after Good was killed, the rate of ICE arrests in Minnesota more than doubled.
There were 1,225 ICE arrests, or around 32 arrests per day, recorded in Minnesota from December 2025 until January 7, 2026, the day Good was killed.
Since then up until February 12, when Homan said the operation in the state was coming to an end, the rate of ICE arrests shot up to 74 arrests per day, with a total of 2.672 arrests being recorded.
The rate of ICE arrests stayed high despite the killing of Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis on January 24.
Around the time that the surge was announced, Trump administration officials repeatedly spoke of targeting Somalis in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The metropolitan area boasts the largest Somali community in the country, and most of its members are U.S. citizens or permanent residents.
The ramped-up enforcement in the state dovetailed with a campaign by far-right figures with ties to anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant views against Somalis in the state.
YouTube videos made by a far-right influencer were reportedly responsible for the White House’s focus on the Twin Cities. The videos alleged widespread fraud by the Somali community, but many of the claims have since been debunked or shown to have been blown out of proportion.
According to The Intercept’s analysis of ICE data, however, only 112 ICE arrests recorded in Minnesota from December until mid-March were of people listed as having Somali citizenship.
Update: March 31, 2026
This story has been updated to include a response from the White House and a comment from Elora Mukherjee, a faculty fellow with the Deportation Data Project.
The post Two-Thirds of People Arrested by ICE in Minnesota Surge Had No Criminal Records, New Data Reveals appeared first on The Intercept.
Sudan’s volunteer-led aid network receives 2025 Chatham House Prize News release eoboko.drupal
Sudan’s grassroots mutual aid groups, the Emergency Response Rooms (ERRs), visited Chatham House to receive the prize they were awarded last year
Sudan’s volunteer-led aid network – the Emergency Response Rooms (ERRs) – were handed the Chatham House Prize 2025 at a special ceremony on 26 March.
The ERRs were recognised for their vital work in delivering humanitarian support during the devastating conflict in Sudan.
Since the start of the war in April 2023, over thirteen million people have been displaced from their homes, with more than thirty-three million requiring humanitarian assistance, making Sudan the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.
Emerging from Sudan’s local traditions of mutual aid, the ERRs provide lifesaving essentials such as food and water to communities across Sudan’s 18 states, as well as providing medical assistance, education and responding to gender-based violence.
The grassroots movement has been recognized by several international bodies particularly for their impartial nature and their aim to provide aid for all parties caught up in the war, despite facing harassment and attacks from the conflict’s warring sides and members being killed and injured.
Four members of the network represented the ERRs at the prizegiving event: Alsanosi, Alaa, Abdalla and Khalid.
In her opening remarks at the ceremony, Bronwen Maddox, Director and Chief Executive of Chatham House, said:
‘[The Emergency Response Rooms] have meant the difference between life and death for many Sudanese. They provide food, clean water and medical supplies in areas that are often inaccessible to international organizations. They help maintain and repair infrastructure, from power lines to water systems. They organize evacuations from areas under bombardment and siege. They design and implement projects that support women, children and other vulnerable groups. They pay attention not only to immediate survival, but to dignity and social cohesion.’
During the event a message from King Charles to the ERRs was read by Sir Simon Fraser, Chatham House Chair.
Accepting the award, Alsanosi, who is a volunteer member of the external communications committee of the ERRs said the Prize belonged to the 26,000 ERRs volunteers, ‘who refuse to be victimized or disappear in the face of war.’
He added that:
‘This Prize is also a reminder of responsibility that recognition must not stop at applause. Sudan’s civilians continue to face famine, displacement, and violence. Emergency Response Rooms volunteers continue to operate with minimal resources, immense risk, and shrinking civic space. We see this award as a call to all of us to protect civic spaces in times of war; so that they remain the baseline to rebuild and transform Sudan.’
After the event, Alaa, who drives the ERRs gender-responsive support in Sudan’s North Kordofan, said:
‘This award is recognition that the voice of Sudanese women has been heard. It tells the world: Sudanese women aren’t victims; they are fierce leaders. We have been fighting, resisting and speaking out for a long time. I am working to promote women’s leadership because I want Sudanese women to not return to the shadows after this war.’
Abdalla, who is a volunteer coordinator for the ERRs’ committee said:
‘This award represents an opportunity to bring Sudan to the forefront of international attention. We hope it will help shine a greater light on the daily humanitarian efforts carried out by the Emergency Response Rooms. We dedicate this recognition to every volunteer who continues to serve despite the challenges.’
Khalid, who co-founded the ERRs in Sudan’s South Kordofan said:
‘Winning this award is global recognition of the efforts and courage of the Emergency Response Rooms volunteers, and a tribute to the Sudanese community. It serves as an incentive to continue protecting civilians and upholding their dignity, and to emphasise the role of local leadership in bringing about change.’
The Chatham House Prize 2025 was generously supported by Dr Mo Ibrahim, Open Society Foundations and Quadrature Climate Foundation.
The Chatham House Prize is voted for by Chatham House members, following nominations from Chatham House staff and presented to ‘the person, persons, or organization deemed to have made the most significant contribution to the improvement of international relations.’
The Prize was launched in 2005. Previous recipients of the Prize include Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Sir David Attenborough, the Committee to Protect Journalists, Médecins Sans Frontières, and Melinda Gates, co-founder of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
| 200:The data retrieved from this URL could not be understood as a feed. http://feeds.feedburner.com/tomdispatch/esUU?format=xml |
| 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. http://udreview.com/feed/ → https://udreview.com/feed/ |
| 403:The feed has gone. https://www.mlb.com/mets/feeds/news/rss.xml |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. https://newsfactsnetwork.com/feed/ → https://newsfactsnetwork.com |
| The data retrieved from this URL could not be understood as a feed. |
| Feed | RSS | Last fetched | Next fetched after |
|---|---|---|---|
| 302 Onewheel on Facebook | XML | 2026-04-04 08:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| @econliberties on Twitter | XML | 2026-04-04 08:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| @rideonewheel on Twitter | XML | 2026-04-04 08:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| Arch Linux: Recent news updates | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Articles | smithsonianmag.com | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| Business | The Guardian | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Chatham House: What's New | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| CNET | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Constitution Daily | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Custom RSS Feed for The Latest | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| FA RSS | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| FactCheck.org | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Home - CBSNews.com | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| HPCwire | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| https://www.mlb.com/mets/feeds/news/rss.xml | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Kareem Takes on the News | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Lima Charlie World | XML | 2026-04-04 08:04 | 2026-04-06 08:04 |
| Linux.com | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| National | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| News Facts Network | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Onewheel -●- The Self-Balancing Electric Skateboard | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Onewheel Instagram | XML | 2026-04-04 08:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| OSnews | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| pev.dev - Latest posts | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| PolitiFact - Rulings | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| ProPublica | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| RAND: News Releases for 2023 | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| Recently Active Topics | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Slashdot | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Smart News | smithsonianmag.com | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| Spotlight Delaware | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| surfdado | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| Technology - CBSNews.com | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Technology | The Guardian | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| The Bridge | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| The Intercept | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| The RAND Blog | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| The Review | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| The Sideways Movement | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| TomDispatch - Blog | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Truth or Fiction? | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Udaily Newsletter Feed | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| Us - CBSNews.com | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| US news | The Guardian | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| USAFacts | Nonpartisan Government Data | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| VESCmann | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| wheel -●- Self-Balancing Electric Skateboards | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| World | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| World news | The Guardian | XML | 2026-04-04 12:04 | 2026-04-04 14:04 |
| www.newarkpostonline.com - RSS Results in news,news/* | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| www.newarkpostonline.com - RSS Results in regional,regional/* | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |
| www.newarkpostonline.com - RSS Results in sports/college,sports/college/* | XML | 2026-04-03 20:04 | 2026-04-04 20:04 |